Uranium Rush Starts In Alaska Spurred By U. S. Offer Of Bonus By JOHN J. RYAN United Pre·» Siaff Correspond ent ANCHORAGE, Alaska (U.P. —A $10000 bonus offered bj ^ the Atomic Energy Commissioi to any prospertor locating a size able deposit of uanium ha: started Alaska's biggest "stam pede" since the gold rush day: of '98. Prospectors roaming Alaska': wilderness have discarded thci; gold pans and sluice boxes They're hunting the hills fo: signs of pitchblende, gumite carnotite and other uranium φ bearing minerals. B. D. Stewart, territorial com missioner of mines, siad his of fices have been besieged bi prospectors seeking informatior (in uranium. He said pamphlet; prepared by the AEC givint methods of locating and reco^ nizing minerals containing ur anium are being distributed. Gold Doesn't Pr.y 'The prospectors are hittin; φ. for the hills in great numbers but they aren't looking for gold,' he said. "With the price fixe' and production costs soaring you can't make gold mining pay "But a uratiium strike woulc certainly pay. In addition to thi bonus, the government is guar anteeing minimum prices an< even paying transportation cos4s of the mineral in some cases " Stewart said he expected the rush to hit full swing next sum mer when all prospectors v/ill have assembled the necessary gear and studied up on method? of locating uranium. "We know there are uranium bearing minerals in the ter ritory, but we don't know how large the deposits are," he said If uranium is found in large quantities, future generations of Alaskans may reminisce on the "uranium rush days of '49." Fisherman Lands Deer Far Out On Lake OSHKOSH, Wis. (U.P.)— An' Oshkosh angler failed to get any fish but he didn't come home empty-handed. R. J. Striztel was having lit tle luck on Lake Winnebago one morning when he spotted p. young doe swimming several miles off shore. He rowed over, hauled her in the boat and took her to shore He turned the deer over to a game warden. Mukden has 300,000 starving because of Communist blockade. Japanese Pupils And Teachers Play Hookey TOKYO (U.P.) — Japanese school children who play hookey have to be careful or they will run into their teachers at the swimming holes and pool halls The situation is deplorable, ac cording to ministry of eduction officials, who made a private check on schools and found 40 per cent of the teachers absent. In one prefecture, 60 per cent of the principals were playing hookey the day the officials dropped in unexpectedly. It's probably embarrassing for all concerned when the teachers and pupils meet on the street during school hours. Of course, there always is the possibility that they got together in ad vance and decided to go to a ball game. High education officials give ι the teachers an "out" by sug gesting that some of the in structors might have to skip ' school a few days each montn and work at other jobs to make a living. However, it is admitted that even school teachers probably don't like being indoors when the grass is green and the wat er in the village pond is warm The thing that really upsets the ministry of education offi cials is a report that teachers in one school have been thi ow ing sak2 parties during school hours. Japanese sake is a potent rice wine that gets quick re sults when served hot. Ministry of education offi cials said these sake parties have got to stop because it is undem ocratic for women teachers to wait on male colleagues by serv ing drinks to them and "obey ing their orders as though men were supersior to women." Pirate Gold, If Any, Eludes Charleston CHARLESTON. S. C. (UP.)— Rumors and stories of buried treasure here are as perpetual as the gulls still wheeling over harbor waters which once float ed pirate ships of Teach, Bon ney, and Bonnet. Yet, a single copper coin of the colonial government of South Carolina is the only booty ever located in this historic city. Family treasures, buried in haste during the Civil War, have been turned up. But the gold and jewels of pirate days re main unaccounted for, except in words. During WPA days, workmen on a street paving project re portedly unearthed a pot of gold. The treasure was said to date from colonial times. It lat er developed that only a few coins were found in a glass jar. It had been buried on the sito of an old, abnadoned race track. The story that silver "bits" (the eighth part of Spanish pieces of eight) were dug from a drain was never proved. Only the single copper coin Is evidence of buried treasure. Nobody Knows Horses So Thay Have To Go ROCHESTER, N. Y. (U.P.)— The days of work horses at the Monroe County penitentiary farm are numbered. The penitentiary superintend ent, Thomas Owen, says the farm's six two-horse teams are on their way out because it's a rare inmate these days who knows how to handle a horse. In past years, Owen says, in mates assigned to the farm han dled the horses competently. But times change, and Owen thinks he'll have to mechanize the farm. Excavators Find Picture Of Life 7,000 Years Ago BAGHDAD (U.P.)—The pos sibility that monogamous mar riages were the order of the day in South Irak 7,000 years ago is indicated in discoveries made this season by an Iraq Museum expedition._ The Iraqui archaeologists re sumed excavations begun last year at Tell Abu Shahrain, sit2 of ancient temple-dotted Eridu, 15 miles south of Ur-of-the Chaldees. They came upon a cemetery with tombs large enough to accommodate more than one body. Liben (baked sand) built, thr 200-odd graves so far excavated were, in many cases, found to contain the remains of a man and his wife, and sometimes their child. The tomb ecidently was re-opened after the firjt burial to admit the others. Pet Dog Buried Aiie CALdvuiuis luuuu in υ 't; instance upon the grave of a 15 year-old boy the perfectly pre served skeleton of a dog, per haps his favorite hound. In a tomb containing a fem ale's body they discovered for the first time in the history oi archaelogy the male version of Woolley's famous "lizard" deity, consisting of humand body with lizard-shaped face, apparently placed there to protect her in another life. Another tomb yielded what is perhaps the ear liest clay model of a sailing boat. The discoveries show that the people of the region at that time believed in a new life atter death. They also indicate chat monogamous marriages existed then. The dead in the cemetery were found lying at full length, their feet pointing south-east ward, with beautiful, painted pottery as food containers, and other possessions around them. Once Island City An ornamental waist-band, the head-fringe of a dress, providea some idea of the clothes in j which the dead were buricc when Eridu was an island city | Legends contained in tablets : excavated at the site show the ι place, now surrounded by mileô] upon miles of desert, to have I been a Persian Gulf port in its | day. One of them tells of Adatn, legendary Sumerian fisherman, whose sailboat was caught in a violent storm· and he "summon ed the wind and broke it wings." It has hitherto been assumed that the earliest settlers in the drying delta of South Iraq were those associated with A1 'Ubaict period, 4500 B.C.-3800 B.C., de riving their name from a mound, near Ur, where traces of their culture were first discovered in 1924. But the Iraqi excavators came this year upon an older culture. Digging in the ruins of the stag ed-tower temple, they came at a strata some 30 feet beneath the surface where the familiar A1 'Ubaid pottery disappeared all of a sudden, giving place to a completely new class of ela borately painted vessels. Northampton Court To Start Jackson—Northampton County Superior Court will open for the August term the week of August 2-7, with Judge W. H. S. Burgwyn of Woodland pre siding. At a meeting of the North ampton Board of Commissioners Thursday afternoon the follow ing jury list for the term was drawn: Gaston: Mrs. B. W. Rook, Wal ter A. Owens and Burley P. Wheeler. Jackson: James Pierce, Rob ert G. Summer, Raymond Parks. Kirby: Garland D. Barnes, A. M. Daniels, R. E. Turner, An drew Vann, C. H. Revelle, Rog er M. Futrell. Troy Martin, Ralph Davis, L. T. Vinson, R. J. Warren, L. E. Boone, Irvin Mann, W. E. Martin. Rich Square; H. K. Burgwyn, R. C. Duke, C. V. Mitchell. Roanoke: Vernice C. Davis, Kermit Barnes. Seaboard: W. L. Norvell, JB. G. Long, John C. Edwards, ** John Whitehead. Wiccacanee: C. W. Burgess. Laurence Wheeler, R. S. Overby, Rufus Rose, Woodrow W. Da vis, H. H. Davis. Occoneechee: R. D. Taylor. Ζ. L. Davenport, Jr. CHILD COLORED BY CRAYONS San Mateo, Calif.—Diane Pas torelli, 4, was rushed to a hos pital when she started turning blue. Investigation proved that it was because she had been eat ing colored crayons. Her condi tion was said to be serious. Genuine Panama hats are not products of Panama, as their name implies, but are made in Ecuador. Newport Socialities Cherish Memories NEWPORT, R. I. (U.P.)—Or.cc a $9,000,000 Vanderbilt sho \ place, "The Breakers" has bee/ given to the Preservation Soc iety of Newport County to be come a sort of museum of higl· society. The big stone mansion over looking the Atlantic once wa: staffed by some 60 servants. I has been unoccupied in recenl years. It contains many valuable paintings and a famed mosaic ο Pompeii. Countess Lizio Szechenyi, wi dow of a Hungarian diploma and niece of Mrs. Corneliu< Vanderbilt, gave it to the socie ty. Sheriff Told To Take His Railroad Away SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (U.P.) The Greene County court rulec that John T. Pierpont mus stick to sheriffing and give uj engineering, at least on the court house lawn. Sheriff Pierpont installed £ toy train on the court house lawn. He planned to operate i for profit, the court said. The sheriff said he wanted tc charge fares to pay for the elec· tricity. Pierpont packed up his trair and moved it to a skeet-shootini range, which he also operates United States study urge· plant dispersal for safety in war !i News Of Soil Conservation By M. W. Shugart, Jr. A. C. Wilcox of near Brinkley ville, a cooperator of the Fish ing Creek soil Conservation dis trict, has recently had a fish pond built on his farm. Mr. Wil cox plans to stock his pond with bream and bass. Technicians of the Soil Conservation Service as sisted in locating and surveying this pond. J. T. Cook of Brinkleyville is another Halifax County farmer who believes in contour culti vation. Mr. Cook runs all his rows parallel to the erraces and says that by doding this he is saving both his top soil and fer tilizer. W. B. Carroll of Tillery has made application to the district for a soil conservation plan to be developed for his farm. W. T. Clement has had a soil conservation plan worked up for his farm near Enfield. Mr. Cle ment has seeded some of his land to permanent pasture, terraced his cropland, and is developing an improved rotation for his farm. These practices are in cluded in a complete soil and water conservation program. Claude Warren, Sr. of the Bowers Cross Roads section seeded two acres of land to per manent pasture last spring. La dino clover and orchard grass was seeded on this pasture. Roller Skate Device Fixes Flat Tires NEW YORK (U.P.)—Ever find yourself in the middle of no where with a flat tire and 110 jack? Mildred George did. She was I determined that it wouldn't hao-1 pen again. Mrs. Georgt announced her antidote for that "get out and ; walk to the nearest telephone ' I business. She's invented a de- ( vice called na "auto skate." It looks like an elongated rol) 1 er skate. It weighs 18 pounds and has six wheels, with a cra dle in the middle. There is alsc a small detachable steel ramp. When you get a flat all you have to do is: Put the ramp In front of the flat tire. Attach the skate to the front of the ramp. Drive on. De tach the ramp. Drive to the nearest gas station. Texas Citrus Cheap But Not Its By-Prodiicts McALLEN, Tex. (U.P.)—Citrus prices with grapefruit going for as little as $2 a ton, were down this season. But not citrus by-products, es pecially molasses made from cit rus peel. "When the Citrus By-Products Co. opened its plant six years ago molasses sold for $12 a ton,' its manager, R. B. McLeash said. "Now we get $47." So far the molasses has been used for animal feed but the company is experimenting with Northamptonians To Decide On Beer, Wine Sale Jackson—Registration for vot ing in the beer and wine refer endum which will take place September 1 in Northampton County will begin August 7 and will continue on August 14 and 21 at the various precincts in the county, it was announced by Chairman of the County Board of Elections W. H. S. Burgwyn Jr. The election on September 1 will decide whether or not beer and wine shall be sold legally in Nortthampton County. The referendum was called after a petition was presented to the County Board of Elections, sign ed by 888 registered voters. Chairman Burgwyn stated that August 28 has been de signated as Challenge Day. No special registration will be inaugurated, the chairman said. Voters already qualified and registered who voted in the last election for a member of the General Assembly may vote in the coming election, he stated. Those persons who have be come of age or who in other way are qualified to vote and who are not registered, may do so at the time set. Meat production under Feder al inspection for the week end ed June 5 totaled 270 million pounds. processing it for human con sumption. SUGGESTED SCHEDULES FOR BEACH TRIPS FROM ROANOKE R. TRAfLWAVS TO VA.BEACH RETURNING Leaving Va. Beach 5:00 P.M. 7:00 P.M. Midnight ONE WAY $2.45—ROUND TRIP S4.45 (plus lax) CALL UNION BUS STATION For Schedules lo Moore's Lake at Dutch Gap, Va. THE WELDON JUNIOR ° CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Presents THE SECOND ANNUAL "MEET MISS WELDON" WEDNESDAY, JULY, 21 5 'Til 6 American Legion Center, Concert by Jimmy Livingston and his Orchestra. 6 P. M. American Legion Center — Brunswick Stew Supper, $1.00 per plate — All you can eat. 9 'Til 1 YVeldon High School Gym — Crowning of "Miss YVeldon" and . . . DANCE To the Music of JIMMIE LIVINGSTON ' AND HIS ORCHESTRA Admission: $1.50 per person (including tax) SEMI-FORMAL ELFIN CAP—Sustaining the mood of this summer's pop ular close-cropped hair-do, milliner Mago Hayes de signs a pointed red felt hat that sits far back on the head with its brim at the back. It is trimmed with black braid and silk cord, which ties beneath the chin DON'T FAIL TO SEE MADAM GAIL American Palmist Tells your past, present, and fu ture. Gives never failing advice. She CAN and WILL help you. 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