?r ??-r 1 HE GLEANER GRAHAM. N. C., JULY 24, 1930. I88UKD EVERY TULB8DAT. J. D. KERNODLE, Editor. 11.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. Entered at trie Posfofflce at 0 labam, N. 0.. as BtJcu.iU-olaBH matter. Italy Laid Waste By Quakes and Hurricane. Severe earthquake shocks shook a number of Italiau cities early Wednesday morning. On this account a heavy toll of lives was taken, numbering about 000 at lirst count with more being res cued from the ruins. Many large private and public buildings are wrecKod with losses amounting to many millions. Further esti mates place the number of dead around 2,000. On the heels of the quakes a | hurricane swept portions of the ill-fated country this morning, taking further tolls of lives and property. Fear is felt for the safety of n number of American tourists? a number from the south and some from this State, due in the stricken districts about the time of the quakes and hurricane. Tree-Sitting Craze. "Tree-sitting" is a new craze that appears to have got hold of youths in so.no parts of this State and elsewhere. Some are trying for records at tho prank. In some instances indulgent parents are humoring the truants by feeding them on their perches when ap parently unable to coax tliein down. These latter, maybe, never read the story in Webster's old "Blue Back": The farmer found a boy in his fruit tree. He gently called him to come down. This did not avail; the tossing of turfs also failed to get results. Then the farmer said he would "try what virtue there is in stones." The last resort was rather dras tic, but it was a stubborn case that called for heroic treatment. It worked, and tho youth, accord ing to the story, was glad to ca pitulate. "? It might serve a good purpose in the case of some of these youths to resort to harsher measures than honeyed words. For the moment the young hopeful might feel greatly and unnecessarily impos ed upon; but later, wheu "clothed in his right mind" and reason had assumed the throne, ho would commend the wisdom of the course pursued. The population of the Uuited States; according to the new cen sus, is nearly 123 millions. A re vision may bring the number up to that figure. Within the past 18 months Gov. Gardner has paroled 582 convicts ?to give them a chance. A re port says there have been few "traitors". Of economy preachment, there has been a-plenty. If the idea has "stuck" and any good is to come of it, there must be some practice. Rains have visited many parte of the South in the past few days and much relief is being expe rienced from the oppressing hot weather. The population of North Car olina increased 23.0 percent dur ing the last decade, leading the whole tier of Southern States in percentage increase, and the pop ulation, 3,165,140, is the largesl of any Southern State, excepi Texas. During \ that period the increase was 600,000. President Hoover is gratifiec that the London armament pad has been approved by the Senate It was ratifiied Monday by a vote of 68 to 9. The President hae signed. It puts the United State: on a parity with Great Britain but this parity will cost this coun try $800,000,000 in new nava construction, it is estimated. The North Carolina Press Asso ciation convened at Blowing Kock yesterday. Hon. Josiali William Bailey, Democratic nominee for the U. S. Senate, delivers an ad dresses the editors tonight. This scribe hopes the boys will have a pleasant and profitable meeting A log-sawing contest with cross-J cut saws will be one of the feat ures at the Farmers' and Farm Women's Convention at State t 'al lege next week. A chopping frol ic and log-rolling would add something to the gayety of (he oc casion. Then, to let the women in on the fun and as a reward for masculine efforts, they might pass around the giuger cakes and cider and serve a dinner or supper of old fashion chicken, peach and apple pot pie, baked in an oven like some of their grand-mothers did in ye olden days. Schaub invites Farmers To State Convention Toe twenty-eighth annual ses sion of state farmers' and farm, wouians' convention to be held at State College, July 28 to August 1, will not only give lite oppor tunity for a brief and enjoyable vacation to farm men and women of the state, but will also be a short course full of instruction. "As usual, we are offering the rooms iu the college dormitories free of charge as long as they last," says Dean I. O. Schaub, head of the agricultural school and secretary of the convention this year. "Meals may be secur ed at the college diuing hall. Vis itors must bring their sheets, towels and toilet articles. Our morning program of instruction begins each dav at eight o'clock aud closes at eleven when the general sessions for both men aud women will be held at Pollen Hall. The afternoons will be featured by demonstrations, sight-seeing trips, music and contests An evening program will be held on the campus each night if the weather permits" The Dean extends acordial wel come to all friends of the college to attend. Much time aud care ful thought has been given to pre paring the program this year. Each lecture will be repeated aud some excellent speakers have been secured for the general meetings. Many of the visitors will have their first opportunity to hear Dr. Frank Qraham, newly elected president of the State University. The first general meeting will be called Tuesday morning, July 29, at eleveu o'clock. Class room work begins, however, at eight o'clock that morning aud those fartn women who wish to have their attendance counted towards a certificate should arrive and register Monday evening, July 28. A THOUGHT for SUNDAY By Amos R. Wells Wanted: More Pledges. A soldier, brought into a Dis trict of Columbia police court on a charge of intoxication, declared (that if the judge would give him a chance ho would never touch strong drink again. The judge gave him the chance. He bade him raise his rwht hand ami i solemnly swear that he would keep from intoxicating liquors 1 for the next two years. The sol i dier was earnest in the matter, , and God grant that ^ ho may keep i his pledge. It is high time for a new pledge i signing campaign in this country, ' a campaign that will summons all American manhood and woman ' hood to resist the devil's tempta tion to drunkenness. Only human will power, reinforced by the strength of the Almighty can . withstand the craft of the arch , | deceiver. And in many more matters than ' intoxication we ueed to exalt our 1 pledges. If we are church mein - bers, we have taken solemn pledges t'.upon us. Are we true to them? J Do we ever remember what they were? If we are married, we have ' made some vital aud sacred vows, i Art we true to them? In many other relations we have entered I into agreements. Is our word as t good as our bond? Have we for sworn ourselves before our God? s "Take not the word of truth utterly out of my mouth." Read Psalm 119 : 41-48. a (Copyrighted Christian Herald) Six farmers of Onslow county * made a cooperative shipment of lambs to eastern markets aDd re port fair prices. Did You Ever Stop To Think (Copyright 1928) By EdsouR.Waite, Shawnee, Okla. Colby M. Chester, president of the general foods corporation, says: That food regularly takes its toll of twenty-six percent of our national income, estimated to be 8'Jii,000,000,000, while the uear est approach to this in size is (lie textile industry, which absorbs approximately eleven percent of our national income. In an operation so vast, dealing in the most fundamental necessity of our existence, it was inevitable that mass production, having been tried and tested and univer sally accepted, should find its way into the food industry. Meanwhile, another factor has come into being that has an im portant bearing on the situation ?the acceptance which has been almost universally accorded pack age foods. They are sanitary, uniform, reasonable in price aud put up in qualities most readily acceptable to the consumer's needs. \Ve are on the verge of another great foruard stop in the (develop ment of package foods?the quick freezing of perishable food prod ucts as developed bj- the Birdseye aud other processes. It would seem that science has at last solv ed the great waste that now is j taking place in the processing aud distribution of perishable foods and that the day is not far distant when the housewife may purchase thorn in neat sanitary packages, stamped by a national brand that will carry with it the complete confidence of the consuming pub lic. Mrs. R. F. Collins of the Holly Springs community in Wake county sold $741.72 worth of homemade jelly, hams and other food products during the past winter. SUMMER COMFORT SECRET REVEALED Arc you going to suffer weary, sleep less nights during the forthcoming hot months of July and August, or are you going to be one of the fortunate few who even though they do not have a summer cottage alongside a cooling lake, will enjoy comfort an^ refreshing sleep though the night be torrid and sultry? queries the Holland Institute of Thermology. Cool, comfortable sleeping rooms regardless of weather conditions are no longer an idle wish of those who have homes of their own equipped with what heating and ventilating en gineers have styled air-conditioning systems. These are nothing more or less than the latest type warm air heating systems that function In such a manner as to render owners year 'round service and year'round comfort. In summer they produce Indoor com fort by means of an electrically op erated air propeller unit installed in the top of the furnace Jacket. In op eration, the effect of this fan Is to pro duce a definite yet draftless current of air that circulates througli the The Operation of the Air-Propeller Unit in Heating Plants of the Vapor Air Type Eliminates the Sultry, Stuffy Atmosphere That Character, izes Bedrooms en Hot Nights. house by way of the heat ducts and the cold nlr returns. This gentle air motion suffices to carry away bodily heat and moisture, and the sensibility of comfort thus produced is equiva lent to a drop in temperature of 15 fo 20 degrees, though in actuality the decrease in temperature is but two or three degrees. The comfort factor is further aug mented by the elimination of pockets of stngnant air so oppressive nnd stifling in muggy weather. During the heating season, the function of the nir propeller unit Is to uniformly distribute warmed nir throughout the house. In this respect it is highly efficient as it virtually eliminates the wide differences in temperatures at celling nnd floor levels so generally characteristic of artificially heated homes. Though standard equipment with warm-air systems of the humidifying . or vapor-air type, the design and con . structlon of the air propeller units is such that they may be installed in most types of warm-alr heading sys tems now in use. STATE TAX MEN AND BANKERS IN ACCORD Months of Negotiation Lead to Agreement on Changes Broad ening Method of State or Local Taxation of National Banks. NEW YORK.?Months of conference j and negotiation between an American ! Bankers Association special committee and the Committee of the Association of States on Bank Taxation have re sulted in an agreement on a form of amendment* to the Federal statute dealing with state or local taxation of national banks that "maintains the In tegrity of the protective principles of the section and is satisfactory to the commissioners' committee," says the American Bankers Association Journal. Thomas B. Paton, the organization's General Counsel, in making the an nouncement says that previously pro posed amendments to the statute, { which is known as Section 5219, have I been opposed when it was felt their I terms would enable any state to place banks in a tax class by themselves. "The law as it stands today," Mr. Paton says, "permits state or local taxation of national banks or their shareholders in one or the other of the four following forms: the share holders upon their shares,?a prop city tax; the shareholders upon their dividends,?a personal income tax; the bank upon its net income; the bank according to or measured by its net income. Only one form of tax can bo imposed, except that the dividend tax may be combined with the third or fourth form if other corporations and shareholders are likewise taxed. "The conditions permitted are: the tax on shares must be at no greater rate than on other competing moneyed capital; the income tax on sharehold ers must be at no greater rate than on net income from other moneyed capital; the tax on bank net income must be at no higher rate than on other financial corporations nor the I highest rates on mercantile and manu facturing corporations doing business within the state; the tax measured by net bank income is subject to the same limitations as the tax on net income of the bank but may include entire net income from all sources." States Seek Broader Law National banks and their sharehold 1 ers are taxed In different states under a diversity of systems, he says. The U. S. Supreme Court has held that the i low millage rate on intangible person al property la in violation of the pres ent law where it results in national hank shares being taxed at a rate greater than that assessed upon com peting moneyed capital. A number of j states, unwilling to use the income methods permitted, had the alterna | tive of either repealing the intangible | tax laws or limiting taxation of na tional bank shares at the Intangible ?rate. Therefore they sought a broad i cning of the permissive provisions, j Also, Mr. Paton points out, a Su preme Court decision held a state's excise tax on corporations invalid where it Included income from Federal and local government bonds in the ex cise measure. This created doubt as to some state bank excise taxes. "Conferences have been held to reach Borne agreement which would protect the banks, satisfy the tax com missioners and avoid a contest In Con gress," Mr. Paton says. "From the standpoint of the tax authorities, the main objectives have been an amend ment which would permit certain states to retain their low rate tax upon intangibles and at the same time de rive an adequate, but not excessive, revenue from national bank shares, and an amendment which would per mit certain states to tax corporations on their net income, excluding Income from tax-exempts, and at the same time derive the same revenne from the banks as heretofore. From the standpoint of the banks, It has been deemed imperative to maintain the protective principles of Section 5219. The Changes Agreed On "In the proposed amendment the ex isting provision permitting taxation ot bank shares no higher than the rate upon competing moneyed capital has been modified with respect to certain intangible tax states only by a provi sion under which, Instead of the moneyed capital limitation, the rate shall not be greater than the rate upon the shares of other financial corpora tions, nor upon the net assets of indi viduals, partnerships or associations employed in the banking, loan or In vestment business, nor higher than the rate assessed upon mercantile, manufacturing and business corpora tions with head office In the state. "Also an added fifth alternative per missive method, designated as a spe cific tax, permits a state, in place of an ad valorem tax on bank shares, to add together total dividends paid the proceding year and the Increase in capital, surplus and undivided profits, less additions to capital or surplus paid In by stockholders, and to divide this total by the number of shares. The state may tax the shares based upon this amount, but not to exceed the rate on other corporations in pro portion to their net profits. "This method Is designed fqr states which hare heretofore taxed national banks upoh their entire net income from all sources at a proportionate rate to that assessed upon business corporations. The amount which Is tho basis ot the tax Is the equivalent of the entire net Income from all sources, but being assessed against the shareholder upon his property in the shares and not a tax upon the bank. It is not open to tho objection as an indirect tax on exempt Income." PREPAREDNESS IN BUSINESS By R. 8. HECHT, American Banker* Association. My observations (or many yeara, both as an employee and as an execu tive, have convinced me that the rea son some men and "women go ahead and others do not Is that some keep themselves constantly prepared to ac cept and fulflll larger duties and re sponsibilities as they offer, and some do not. Grant, as we must, that there is a certain element of luck in the condi tions under which opportunity for promotion comes to different men and women, we nevertheless must also see that It Is each Individual's own state of preparedness which determines his ability to seize opportunity if and when It comes, and having seized It, to succeed In meeting the greater de mands which It Inevitably places upon him. Real advancement never means go ing ahead to easier tasks, hut always to harder ones. Opportunity for ad vancement Is worthless unless in ac cepting it you are able to carry wittt you the abilities and qualifications that prepare you to meet the heavier exac tions that are an Inhered! part of op portunity. It Is tar better to go Into action in the field of enlarged responsibility prepared and qualified, rather than that you and the Institution you work for shall be exposed to the hazard of your having to build up to new re sponsibilities after having assumed them. The new spirit of all business seeks to prepare Its people In pdvaneq through education for the duties It holds In store for them. ' j Let The Gleaner Of fiee do your job work. BROADCASTING Their Convictions on PROHIBITION. Heury Ford, Thomas A. Edison, Senator William E. Rorah, Gifford Pinchot, Lady Aator and other inen and women of like promi nence will tell you what they think of prohibition in the next 16 issues of the New Christian Herald. Othera you will hear from are Educators, Judgt-s, civic leaders, workiugmen, prominent women. Cartoons and comment, News Di gest and Editorials?page after page of every issue ot Christian Herald will tell the story of the success of Prohibition. Read the next 16 issues of Christian Herald and you will see for yourself that when the advan tages and disadvantages are add ed up Prohibition is a glorious success. Use the coupon below for the next 16 issues of Christian Herald at the special price of 50c. The Alamance Gleaner:? For the 50c. I am handing you with this coupon please send me the next 16 issues of the new Christian Herald. Name Address CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears ttCuimre of Commissioner's Sale oi Valuable Land. Under and by virlue of an or der of the Superior Court, made in a Special Proceedings num bered 1320, whereto all the heirs at law of the late George W. Crawford were made parties for the purpose of selling the lands of which he died seized for division, the undersigned will offer for sale to the highest bidder, on SATURDAY, AUG. 9, 1930, 2:30 p. m. the certain tract of land in Alamance County, known as home place of said George W. Craftvford, in Thompson Town ship, adjoining the lands of W. C. Crawford, AnnieWebster, T. N. Freshwater, Chas. Pender graph, Dan Foust and others and lying on both sides of State Highway No. 54 and contain ing about 125 acres. This farm has been subdivid ed and will be sold in sub-divi sions or lots suitable for build ing lots and in lots of suitable size for small farms. The lot upon which the home place and orchard are situated contains 81 acres. , All this property is convenient to schools, churches, lays well, is well watered, in a good neighborhood and soil is adapted to grain, grasses, cotton or to bacco, and State Highway No. 54 runs througs it. Time of stile: Saturday, Au gust 9, 1930,?2:30, p. m. Place of sale: On the prem ises. Terms of sale: One third cash; balance in equal sums at six and twelve months time, de ferred payments to carry inter est at six per cent from day of sale, till paid. Sale subject to confirmation by Clerk of the Superior Court. This 3rd day of July, 1930. J. S. COOK, Commissioner. Mortgagee's Sale of Land! Under and by virtue of the powers contained in a certain mortgage deed executed by D. C. May and wife, Chloa May, to the undersigned, on the 25th day ot May, 1920, and recorded in book 115 of M. Ds. at page 103, to secure the payment of a certain bond therein described, default having been made in the payment of the same, the undersigned will offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door at 12:00 o'clock, M., on SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1930, one fourth interest in the fol lowing real property in Haw River township, Alamance county, adjoining the lands of Holt-Granite Mills, C. P. Al bright and others and bounded on the North and West by said Holt-Granite Mills and on the South and S. E., by highway No. 10 and said Albright and is the same property occupied by Mrs, E. F. May as her home and upon which there is a dwel ling. Said mortgage deed conveys and there will be sold all the in terest of Dace May subject to the life estate of said Mrs. E. F. May, widow of E. F. .May. Place of sale, Courthouse door: Date of Sale: July 26, 1930. at 12:00, M. Terms of Sale: Cash. This the 24th day of June, 1930. J. F. THOMPSON, C. D. MAY, Mortgagees. J. S. COOK, Atty. Notice of Sale Under Mortgage Deed. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a mortgage deed duly executed by E. E. Pennington and wife, Minerva Pennington, to the un dersigned, dated the 25th day of June, 1929, recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for Alamance County in Book of M. D. No. 113, page 272, de fault having been made in the payment of the indebtedness se cured thereby, I will, on MONDAY, AUG. 4TH, 1930, at 12:00 o'clock noon, at the Courthouse door in Graham, Alamance County, North Car olina. offer for sale to the high est bidder for cash, the follow ing described property: A certain piece or tract of land lying and being in Ala mance County, state aforesaid, in Burlington Township, and defined and described as follows: A certain tract of land in Burlington Township, being on East side of city of Burlington, facing 50 feet on Rainey street and running back 150 feet, the same beiug lot No. 86 in Block "F" described on the map of the Real Estate Investment Company, made by J. W. Haeden, Civil Eng., and re corded in Book No. 1, Plat No, 38, of the Public Reg. of Ala mance County, North Carolina. Second Tract: Being lot No. 85 in Burlington Township, be iug on the East side of the city o? Burlington, N. C., facing 42 ieet on Rainey street and run ning back 150 feet in block "F" described on map of the Real Estate Investment Company, made hy J. B. Harden, Civil Eng., as recorded in Book 1, page 38 of the Public Registry ot Alamance County, North Carolina. This first day of July, 1930. JACK BROWNING, Mortgagee. LEO CARR, Atty. 666 Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three days 666 also in Tablets. I The Southern Planter Semi-Monthly Richmond, Virginia The Oldest Agricultural'Journal in America 50 CENTS FOR ONE YEAR $1.00.FOR THREE YEARS $1.50 FOR FIVE YEARS TWlCE-A-riONTH 200,000 TWICE-AflONTH MOTHER? Fletcher's Castoria is a harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups , prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation Wind Colic Flatulency To Sweeten Stomach Diarrhea Regulate Bowels Aids in the assimilation of Food, promoting Cheerfulness, Rest, and Natural Sleep without Opiates ^ ? To avoid imftitinns. always look far the signature of &cu