Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 31, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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| Headed Air Armada HONOLULU . Commander E, W. Tod (above), was in ehazge of the 43 U. 8. Navy flying boats which made up the greatest air armada ever to make a I488 mile water hop. The feat was part of the Navy's radio war game maneuvers, veOed with great eeeree> Boll Weevil Warning Issued By Brannon A warning that boll weevil in festations in North Carolina may be heavy this year was issued last week by C. H. Brannon, extension entomologist at State College. Climatic conditions during the winter and this spring have been favorable to boll weevil develop ment, Brannon pointed out, and if cloudy, rainy weather occures frequently during the cotton grow ing season, weevils will be numer ous. During the latter part of 1934, he continued, the weevil infesta tion in this State was heavy enough to leave a large supply of weevils for this season. Winter tempera tures were not low enough to kill all the hibernating insects. The weather so far this spring has been conductive to their deve lopment. All cotton growing counties of the State will probably be affected, Brannon said, and in dications are that damage will be heavier than usual in the Piedmont area. jne is urging cut tun giuwcn prepare now for controlling the weevil. "Boll weevil poisoning is recommended by both State and the Federal agricultural agencies, and it should be considered a regu lar part of making the cotton crop,” Brannon said. "Do not wait until the weevils attack the cotton in great numb ers. Get your machines in order now. Lay in a supply of poison. Prepare to fight the boll weevil— and pick all the cotton allowed you under your government contract. "When tlie squares begin to form, make weekly examinations of the squares. As soon as weevils are detected, start spraying or dusting. Don’t raise your cotton i for weevil food.” ! - i Say, "I Saw It in i THE WATCHMAN ” \ THIS WEEK IN WASHINGTON (Continued from page one) Wagner Labor bill is one of those, whose constitutionality is seriously questioned even by those who voted for it; so, also, is the Social Se curity bill, which Is all set for Senate enactment. The amendments to the Agricul tural Administration Act will un dergo a good deal of change before this measure gjets thrp'ugh. As drafted, the bill would make all distributers of agricultural pro ducts practically public utilities and subject to Government regula tion. Washington has been quite stir red up over the question of who paid the expenses of the several thousand farmers who came to Washington to demand continuan ce and strengthening of AAA. It can be stated definitely that their expenses were not paid out of Fed eral funds, though the movement may have been encouraged. Looking ahead to next year s Presidential elections ,as everybody here is doing with one eye, what ever he seems to be looking at with the other, the most interesting de velopment is the talk of a conser vative coalition of Republicans and anti-Administration Democrats, under the leadership of A1 Smith. Your correspondent passes the gos sip along for what it is worth. It is not as absurd as it may seem to many at first glance. There is little hope that the Re publican party alone and under that name can challenge Mr. Roosevelt with any great hope next year, especially since the La Fol lette crowd of Northwestern Pro gressives seem ready to come into the Roosevelt tent. Perhaps a Coalition or Fusion Party might get somewhere—provided anybody could get them to coalesce in the first place and that they would stay fussed up to election day. ^GeoigVT^^teeved^^ NEW YOKE . . , Maybe it was he strain of haying his famous fly ng wife, Amelia Earhart, aloft for ifteen hours in a 2100 mile hep from Mexico City. Anyhow, George ’aimer Putnam (above), Amelia’s mbby, said 1 ‘ he never saw such dis graceful scenes,” when thousands >roke police lines here to greet her. MAY WE HELP YOU STAY COOL THIS SUMMER BY CLEANING AND PRESSING YOUR LINEN SUITS Our Methods of Handling Your Linen Suits and other Summer Wearing Apparel is Approved by Leading Manufacturers and we believe we can give you the Best Service | and the Best Looking job at the LOWEST COST. We have a complete stock of buttons and other accessories necessary to keep your garments like new. PHONE I483~ BENTON DRY CLEANING WORKS ^ DENTAL DIVISION^-ba [J NORTH CAROLINA STATE P ^ Mouth Health leaching Popularized Public Health In Pitt County By J. H. COWARD ■! County Auditor 'J'HE effectiveness of a county health department is deter mined in a large measure by the number of people served in a j actical way. They must see the personal benefits to be de rived Not a great per cent of adults are inclined to seek this type of service for themselves. With most of them it is dire necessity or some health problem affecting their children which takes them to their county health <’ partment. It is the preference of far too many of them, it seems, that health "tment activities be confine' ldren. Even so, this is O! ■ best mediums through \ to disseminate County Health Programs. Bene fited children become, in due season, adult boosters. Conse quently, mouth health programs, in my opinion, should be one of the principal activities of a county health department. We take much pride in the fact that the Pitt County Health Department was one of the first established in the State. It has been liberally supported and efficiently operated. We are so well pleased with its work that the appropriation for this year is more than double that of last year. However, not until 1929, when we instituted mouth health ___ j:_fk„ x uxuuj uu vvvvv* - State Board of Health, did we find a medium through which the masses could see direct results of supporting the County Health Department. In this year, we contracted with the State Board of Health, the county agreeing to pay a part of the expenses, to send a school dentist to the county for a given number of weeks, this varying with the amount appropriated. This year we have increased our appropria tion to double the amount pro vided for dental services in 1929. The school dentist takes mouth health messages to all children attending school, white or col ored. With members of the County Board of Commissioners I have visited schools where mouth health programs were in progress, and have seen the school dentist teach health so that chil dren could understand. We have seen him relieve suffering of chil dren from poor families, some of whom very likely had never be fore heard of a dentist. We have leen him instill in the minds of ihildren of parents who were able to pay for dental services, but had themselves not been taught the importance of mouth health, the immediate and con itant need for periodic [visits to Tony Came Back NEW YORK .. « ., Lightweight champion, Tony Canzoneri (above), proved the exception to the rule, the only man ever to regain the title in the lightweight division. He regained the crown by beating Lon Ambers in 15 rounds here. WANTED —MEN TO QUALIFY FOR GOOD PAY POSITIONS Will personally interview men willing to work hard for good pay positions in Elec tric Refrigeration and Air Conditioning business. Pre fer men with fair education, mechanically inclined, now employed. Must be willing to devote some sjJare time at home to preliminary train - ing to become installation and service experts. Write, giving age, phone, present oc cupation. UTILITIES ENGINEERING INSTITUTE 404 N. Wells St. Chicago, 111. the family dentist, as well as the importance of personal care of J. H. COWARD the teeth. We were particularly impressed as we saw the dentist explain every correction and show to the patient and those looking on why certain correc tions were necessary. He was teaching by illustration and these illustrations remain with the children as constant reminders of mouth health. Further, it was concln ve evidence to those officials pre it (members of the appropriat i■•> body) that reports which the se’nol dentist rendered to them told only in part of the good results aecompl:shed. 1 believe the service is dennite ly improving the health condi tions by removing diseased teeth, relieving infections, saving the permanent teeth of those chil dren whose parents are unable to pay for dental services; teaching the value of proper foods grown at home; the value of milk, and the value of cleanliness inside and out. Repeaters in school are being reduced, thereby saving the taxpayers many dollars. Mouth health teaching is pop ular with the masses in Pitt County. It is demanded by their children. Unusual as it may seem, I have seen several chil dren receiving treatment, each demanding in no uncertain terms that no one else get his turn, and not one of them complained of pain. They will be health-minded men and women tomorrow, and boosters for public health and the County Health Department. There is no better way to build a successful county health depart ment than to make it popular with the masses—there is no bet ter way to make it popular with the masses than through mouth health teaching. The new, improved strain of Porto Rico sweet potatoes develop ed at the Coastal Plain Branch Station will be tested by H. T. Watkins of Caswell County. Lady’s Painful Trouble Helped By Cardui Why do so many women take Car dui for the relief of functional pains at monthly times? The answer is that they want results such as Mrs. Herbert W. Hunt, of Hallsville, Texas, describes. She writes: “My health wasn’t good. I suffered from cramp ing. My pain would be so intense it would nauseate me. I would just drag around, so sluggish and 'do less.’ My mother decided to give me Cardui. I began to mend. That tired, sluggish feeling was gone and the pains disappeared. I can’t praise Cardui too highly because I know It helped me.” ... If Cardui does not help YOU, consult a physician. RADIATOR REPAIRING \ Let us check your radiator for spring driv ing to give your motor m o r* e power and pep. We flush, clean and repair all makes of radiators. We sell or trade new or second hand radiators. We are the most reliable—see us. EAST SPENCER MOTOR CO. Phone 1198-J N. Long St. EAST SPENCER Life, Not Wife, Can Remake A Man If women can’t hold their men these days, it’s not the fault of the newspapers. There’s hardly a pub lication from the big city daily to the country weekly that lacks a column guaranteeing to teach them all the tricks. They are told the proper method of approach to their game, how to set the snare and what to do with the catch. So it seemst hat any girl who reads her paper well should have no trouble getting and keeping a hus band. And that brings up the ever plaguing question: Is man a man ageable animal? All the facts dis prove it, because in spite of the study we’ve made the male remains exactly as recalcitrant as before. He goes on repeating his age-old sins against us—wooing and then wav ing good-by; vowing eternal love and vanishing. He resists every effort to alter him. No girl can learn this truth too early. The reformation of hus bands is a stone wall against which millions of women have beaten their fists in vain. Man is intract able, and quite as much so now as he was in the Ice Age, altho in a different fashion. When he is re formed, changed, made over in any way, you may be sure it is life, and not a wife, that accomplishes the feat. Hardened arteries have converted more men to the good life than all the pious women. The philanderer seldom forsakes his primrose paths unless health forsakes him, while t|?e spendthrift will be a spend thrift until he falls into his grave. Years only increase the close-fisted ness of the stingy husband, and no gambler was ever beguiled from his cards or his races by the tears of a loving mate. 'T'l . C x nv «uintn ui gtutiduuns have labored mightly and accom plished nothing. I hope the girls now coming on will not permit themselves to be so deluded. Here’s a point to remember on the subject: If a boy’s mother has failed to make something out of him, no wife can ever succeed in doing so. Twenty farmers in Green Coun ty who do not have milk cows say they will help their sons and daughters to buy heifer calves. Shoes rebuilt the better way. All kinds of harness, trunk and suitcase repairing. FAYSSOUX’S PLACE Phone 433 120 E. Innes St. I f Chavez Now Senator | i i Santa Fe, N. M.... Dennis Chavez above), former Democratic repre sentative,-is the new U. S. Senator from New Mexico to succeed the late Senator Cutting, killed in a recent air crash. Senator Chavez announces that his suit for the Cutting seat which was pending will now be dropped. —Buy In Salisbury— SALES GIRLS— ZEETA IS YOUR BEST FRIEND When you Buffer from perspiring, tired aching, burning feet, water blisters Zeeta’ 18 as welcome as the boy friend For in just 3 minutes it brings relief—cool, soothing, healing comfort Get a can to-day and rub Zeeta on yonr feet, sprinkle it in your shoes and yon won t mind the long hours you stand on your feet. u Zeeta, the antiseptic deodorant now der, is recommended by doctors, chiroD Odists, leading druggists everywhere. STAR LAUNDRY "The Good One” Launderers and Dry Cleaners Phone 24 114 West Bank St. ONE DAY SERVICE —Buy in Salisbury— FRESH MEATS and GROCERIES WE SELECT CHOICE MEATS AND GROCERIES WITH CARE ... WE PRICE THEM NO HIGHER THAN THEY WOULD COST ELSEWHERE . . . AND, WE ARE REWARD ED BY HAVING BEEN GIVEN THE TITLE OF ONE OF THE FINEST MARKETS IN TOWN. WE DELIVER FREE E. L. 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Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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May 31, 1935, edition 1
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