jioaiiial wimmBmf m pouncs MMAcd IfondaTB and Tharsdaya at Nortii WmoAon, N. C. J, CASTES and JUUUS C. HUBBAM). PabUskan ' 8UBSCSIPTI0N SATBB: tt* State OM of the Stote .$1J9 per Te per Tear Bafeered at the peat effiee at Neith Wflkea- OM N. aa aeeaad daaa matter under Act t March 4, 187P. MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1935 The Bridge Builder An old raan> traveling a lone highway. Came at the evening cold and gray, To a chasm deep and wide. The old man crossed in the twilight dim, For the sullen stream held no fears for him. But he turned when he reached the other side, And builded a bridge to span the tide. "Old man,” cried a fellow pilgrim near, “You are wasting your streng^th with building here; Your journey will end with the ending day, And you never again will pass this way. "You have crossed the chasm deep and wide. Why build you a bridge at eventide?” And the old builder raised his old gpray head: *XJood friend, on the path I have come,” he said, “There followeth after me today A youth whose feet will pass this way. “This stream, which has been as naught to me. To that fair-haired boy may a pitfall be; He, too, must cross in the twilight dim— Good friend, I am building this bridge for him.” —Miss Will Allen Dromgoole. Anything that contains an eternal ruth will never grow old. The poem reproduced above has been copied thousands of times and yet it is new because it inspires one to a realization of the high qualities of life. We have the picture of an old man bridging a chasm after he had crossed, knowing that he would never need the bridge for his own use but having in mind the youth who would follow the same route. In order to carry out the truth of this poem we do not have to have the identical experience and literally build a bridge. There are millions of w’ays in which we -can live up to the taching of the poet. Governor Aycock was not a schoolboy, and yet he founded the public school sys tem on a sound basis, knowing that fu ture generations of boys and girls would pass along that way and need the facili ties of an education. Dr. Pasteur did not expect to be bitten by a mad dog and yet he worked untiringly to perfect a serum to prevent people from going mad. Other 'we could name in which the extent -sacrifice for posterity has been marked with distinction. The extent of the success of the life of an individual will ultimately be measured by what contribution he makes to the well being of the people who are to follow. This does not necessarily mean that the man who leaves millions in order that his son may be a useless drifter and leach, is a success. One of the greatest things a man can leave to posterity is the influence of a true and wholesome character. Not all of us can start educational systems or in duce serums to prevent death and disease, but it is within the power of all to leave in their wake the wholesome remembrance of a self-sacrificing life. cas^we orself-s Spring Gardening A good cure for the “spring fever” at tacks of recent days would have been some work in the garden, but inclement weather has caused a delay in starting home gardens for this year. With the fewest exceptions everybody can grow a garden. There are some peo ple, however, who do not have enough initiative to get their garden plowed, to say nothing of planting and cultivating vegetables. For the person who has a substantial income and is able to buy everything his famUy needs, there is little use for a gar den, because the more he buys the great er the farmers’ and grocerymen’s market. iBut, on the other hand, there are hun dreds of families who are looking to the government for sustenance, and it is es pecially this class of people that need to grow gardens. The man who gets started on time is the one who is likely to have a good gar den for his eagerness to work in the dirt is evidenced by his early start. March is the month to get started on a garden by planting potatoes, onions, peas, and several other desired vegeta bles for ewiy tiWe we.' month for planting the bulk of the gar den with sudi vegetables aa com, beans, tomatoes, cabbage,'and others. ' p It is a commendable step the rdief agen cies took during the past two years when they prescribe that all rural famihes on relief rolls must make honest efforts to produce food or be cut off from further relief funds. THE BOOK the first line of which reads, “The Holy Bible,” and which contains four great treasures. By BRUCE BARTON ^ NORTH S i MONDAt im and. Tomorrow Dogs and Laws The most recent legislation cbncerning dogs is an act to compel everybody to have their dogs vaccinated against rabies. The measure has its good points and its weak links. While we are in sympathy with any thing that will minimize the danger of be ing bitted by a mad dog or contracting ra bies in any way, it seems that the law is going to be just as hard to enforce as some other statutes relating to dogs. For many years we have had a law pro hibiting people from letting their dogs run at large, and yet there is at least 200 stray canines in Wilkes county, this state ment being based on information and be lief. We have a law requiring a certain amount of tax to be paid on each dog and we believe we are safe in saying that there are hundreds of dogs not even listed for taxes. Stray dogs recognize no boundaries or geographical lines of any kind and enforc ing dog laws presents a big problem. In urban centers efforts are made at times to kill a number of stray dogs, but the supply continues to increase. If all worthless and stray dogs could be kiUed the problem of rabies epidemics would be largely solved, especially if dogs owners observed the vaccination act. Peo ple who have dogs they care for do not let them run all over two or three townships. They keep them up or in good care. It is the stray dogs that are common car riers for robies. motoeb ^... ■«# i»d8 wrhat may turn out to. be tie most eignificaiit news'of recent years Is the announcement from Germany that means have been dereloped for driving motor cars with Illuminating gas and wood. One type of truck now widely used, it is reported, uses gas dia- tllfed from wood. It carries wood In a rear compartment, and Is said to cost SO per cent less to operate than If driven by gaao- llne. Other cars have been quick-' ly and cheaply adapted to use illuminating gas instead of gas oline, a tank of gas being car ried in place of the gasoline tank. Also there have been de veloped new types of steam-pro pelled automobiles, using a va riety of fuels, while a new sta tionary motor for farm use can he operated on coal dust, vege table dust, dried leaves or pul verized corncobs. There never has been any question in my mind that the problem of the future supply of petroleum was no real problem at all. The time will come, when ever It is economical to do so, when we will again get our pow er from vegetable products. I hear from other sources that aviators have not abandoned the idea of steam engines instead of internal combustion motors for stratosphere flights. I may not live to see it, but soma day, I believe, men will fly around the world between sun and sun, with steam-engines pro pelling their planes at a height of ten miles. JUDAS MACCABEUS Judas Maccabaeus’ record falls between the Old and the New Testaments and is told in de tail in the books which formerly were printed in the Bible in slightly smaller type and called the Apocrypha. Alexander the Great was kind enough to con quer the world at one of the easiest of all dates to remember, 333 B. C. When he was asked, “To whom do you leave your kingdom?” he answered, “To the strongest” In the division which follow ed, Palestine was under the domination of Ptol emy, who ruled Egypt. He caused the Old Tes tament to be translated into Greek. The ancient Hebrew was no longer a spoken language and most of the Jews who could read at all read Greek. In the subsequent redistributions of authority, Palestine passed under the dominion of a Greco- Syrian dynasty. Antiochus Epiphanes endeavor ed to unify his little empire by instituting a kind of emperor-worship, or worship of the state. Many thousands of Jews accepted this bastard form of idolatry, including most of the priests. But there was one aged priest. Mattathias, who revolted and withdrew from Jerusalem, taking with him his five sons, Jochanan, Simon, Judas. Eleazer and Jonathan. Even that retired coun try village was not secure from the invasion of the new paganism. To his horror, the old priest saw one of his summer neighbors come to render the detested worship, a priest of God leading him in the new idolatry. Full of wrath, the old man killed both the idolater and the priest, and he and his sons fled to the mountains. There they rallied a band of revolutionists. They gathered strength till they were able to meet the armies of Antiochus in open battle, at first with no faintest hope of winning but only with the de termination to die fighting for God and their country. Never was a truly noble cause more valiantly defended. In 166 B. C., Mattathias died, but hot until he had seen the struggle on the high road to success. He counseled his sons to make Simon their political leader and Judas their captain, and they did so. What followed is brilliant indeed. In 164 B. C„ Judas actually defeated the imperial armies and captured Jerusalem. The temple was cleansed and rededicated, and the worship of God re-es tablished. For more than thirty years the broth ers fought their good fight, establishing again a Jewish dynasty in Jerusalem and making it possible for Jesus to come to a people who still worshipped the God of Abraham. Judas was killed in battle in 161 B. C. CJODDUXG all wrong One of the troubles with mod ern youth, as I have often re marked oefore. Is that they have too much done for them and are not thrown on their own re sources early enough or emphat ically enough. They grow up ex pecting society to provide a soft cradle for them to east their way through life. That is why I applaud the re fusal of the New York State Commissioner of Education to order a school bus to make a half-mile detour to pick up one thirteen-year-old boy. Any boy of thirteen who is not a cripple or an Invalid ought to be able to walk half a mile to the bus stop, remarked Commissioner Graves. The first school I ever attend ed was more than half a mite from our house. I was under five when I began to walk to and from school. In my grade school days it was a mile walk each way; when I got to high school it was a three-mile walk. No body had ever thought of provid ing free and easy transportation for schoolchildren in those days. We didn’t get even free school books. And we grew up with a pretty clear idea that anything we got out of the world bad to be paid for, with money or with labor. INQUIRY to all I would like to hear from any body who knows of an actual in stance of anybody who has re ceived money from the Federal kyriinunM basto or cotto4 or ieors or hi^ or iriitot. wkb haft sot ||r0pto» ly boen In the bnsliMtrm Ing those tblhgs. ' Every little .. while somebody tells or prints a story of'some man getting a check from Uncle Sam who has never been engag ed in the line of agriculture for the control of which the money was paid. Those have always seemed like fairy tales to me. I can believe almost anything a- bount the stupidity or eareloss- neas of Government employees, this or any other government, but these yarns have strained my credulity. They have come to the front again by a statement made In all seriousness by an eminent historian, James Truslow Ad ams, who told of three* such In stances. Chester Davis, the AAA administrator, came out with a prompt denial. I have no doubt both men believe they are right. It would be a real public service to get at the facts. I would like to hear from any reader of this column who can furnish the name, date, place and amount of any such pay ment to any individual who was not entitled to it under the law. FOOD sky high Costs to city folk of the prin cipal articles of food have gone up 34 per cent In the year end ing last month, the Department of Commerce reports. Eggs are up 80 per cent, meats 41 per cent, dairy products 29 per cent, and so on. I don't know how much of this increase has filtered back to the farmers who produce the food stuffs, and how much has been absorbed by middlemen on the way from farm to consumer, but I feel certain that city people won’t tolerate much higher pric es. Salaries and wages for the general run of city dwellers have not increased in anything like that ratio, many not at all. If Government would turn its attention to the cost of distri bution of food prodnets the cost of living might not rise so fast. ENOOURAOEMENT . . to caidtal I think the most encouraging news of the past fortnight has been the announcement that two great corporations. Swift & Com pany and the Pacific Gas & Elec tric Company, are about to offer - -vx • m ■ r'w' -■ ^ •'v ' ‘• ' ' \ 4 _ Announcement Metor Service Store WILEY BROOKS Phone 335 PAUL BILLINGS North WQkesboro, N. C. to Investors more than $100,- 000,000 of new securities, to pro vide additional capital and re tire higher-cost bond issues. This is a clear sign that some, at least, of the big industrialists have got over some of their fear of the future. If these new issues are readily sold, it will indicate that capital is beginning to come out of hiding. If that sets in motion a general movement of capital into industry, then it will be safe to say that the back bone of the depression has been broken. It takes more money than the Government can raise to set the wheels of industry running and keep them oiled. Once money Is assured of a chance of fair profits, it will go to work. Bennes, Brittany, France, Mar. 21—Six persons were killed to night in the wreck of a giant French naval seaplane which crashed in flames near Brest harbor. Rdns- Sturdivaiit Inc. THE FUNERAL HOME LICENSED EMBALMERS AMBULANCE SERVICE North Wilkesboro, N. C. Phones 85 - 228-M BreBfone Now is a good time to equip your car or truck with a new set of tires . .. and with FIRESTONE, of course . . . New shipments have just been received so when you buy your tires fro(m us you are assured of fresh rubber and fabric which will give you many additional miles of service. We want your tire business and we appre ciate you giving us the opportunity of making a trade with you. We Carry a Complete Stock of... The “manager” of Oliva Dionne, father of the quintuplets, trying to persuade the On tario government, as guardian of the babies, to do more, financially, for the rest of the lamily, says “Mr. Dionne was bewildered about Bverythlng when the babies were born.’’ It seems quite credible.—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. In a single week recently, Huey Long re ceived more than 64,000 pieces of mail. His clerk must envy the New Englander, who has to shovel out only during the winter season.— Hartford Courant. It is intimated that the old Republican ele phant has been so well trained that It knows Ita cue to lie down and play dead.—Washing ton Evenii4i Star. TIRES and are in positiwi to fill your or der for any size of truck or car tire you need. We want you to de pend on us for your tires and tubes ... We will do our best to give you the very best service possible. All Attractively Priced If you do not wish to pay for all of your tires when you get them, just pay a part and we will be glad to extend to you the advuntage of our we^ly or monthly Budget Plan Dick’s Service Stations ALL OVER TOWN The Service Stations That Ahrayg Extend You a Hear^ Wdcome ri