N;'€S: 217008 a HUB&ABD. >N^RAim: Stake ^1.50 . '.76 .60 12.00 per Year Sntena St tib« pMt oflies «t Nortti WUkaa- N. C.. M /MMsd dajs nstter under Act « Mwdi 4 187». MONDAY. JULY 8, 1986 Idke tke v»r. th« tivw desl wlU Ions bo ro- leBbored for the debt it leores.—Detroit Free Beet Opportunity C Dorinsr the past two years the neces sity of school buildings has been im- J^p*«8sed upon us by county school au thorities and most of us have become ^oimvinced that some school buildings '^'sre desperately needed while others are . too small to house the larger consoli dated schools. At the same time the financial con dition of the county is not so prosper- ' ous. However, we are going to have a iMtlanced budget and with a tax rate of mly one dollar, which is something to be thankful for. But in getting back to the subject of school buildings it appears that the county is faced with the necessity of q>ending some money for school build ings and the first step is to work out nranething that will be as light on the taxpayers as possible and at the same time take care of the needs. ^ It looks as if the possibilities afford ed by the public works administration offer the best opportunity. If the coun ty can secure PWA funds for school bnildings it simply means that we can get the buildings for only 55 per cent of their cost. The four per cent bonds which the PWA would accept for the money would be supplemented by a grant of 45 per cent of the total cost. The bonds would be payable over a poiod of twenty years. County authorities’ we understand, are working on this proposition and if architects’ plans for buildings meet with the approval of the county boards application will be filed with the pub lic works administration. i Miss You, Daddy” The following editorial was printed in the Rockville* Connecticut, Journal, about a year ago. Thereafter, to the editor’s surprise, it was reprinted by most of the other papers of the state, and was used by highway safety offi cials, insurance companies, accident prevention organizations, motorists’ publications and by others who are fighting the great war against the toll of automobile deaths. Here it is—and any motorist will surely think twice about taking chances after reading it: “Tuesday morning there was a fatal accident on the Minterburn Hill and when the medical examiner was going through the pockets of the dead man ... a telegram was found. It was not ▼ery long, just the ordinary ten-word length, but it was a message that would make any father happy. It read: WE IfISS YOU DADDY. WHEN ARE YOU COMING HOME? “That was all. It was a message sent by one of the children of the man who .was killed. He had received the mes- iMige and was homeward bound. The clothes were minus money but in his pocket he carried that message. “Those who have little children, and those who were once little children, can think of the great blow to the child y^en the father did return home— , ' ;«i '3 s®Ui. ^ Su Dnddy’ will be missed by those ■ children in the long years ahead. No longer will they have his support, his . and, more important, his com- ’ Y^idonship. there was a reason for people ig more carefully on the road, it they might get in an accident ^rive their own child or some l^d of their‘Da^y.’ he wri^n, but just 1^ NaUo^ i;e, which was 4jping the eWA regimefnas been Side a perma nent organisation wiih state and na tional governments cooperating in the expense and admiDistration. In making the temporary set^ into a permanent organization the scope of the service to be rendered the people has been enlan^ged and the organiza tion is supposed to serve individuals and indus^ seeking labor just the same as it serves the unentployed man hunting for a job. People who want a man or woman for any kind of work can usually get results by placing a call at the re-em- plbyment office, which is located in the city hall here and serves five coun ties. We are advocating more wii spread use of the service, not onl the unemployed but by the indi and individuals who The unemployed shgjppi^^w it. their registrationsjig^l^^^newed aS periodic intervak^fe required by the of fice and full iffinmation should be given as to ttJ^Knd of work the. appli- doing. railing situation op ii office has on a ntnn- difflcult'' to ir.‘ . If to.. , MS flTon lto Voyt oa Capitol fllH something imI to thiak about in his proposal that th«y ought to draw up and enact eomo new tax bills before they go home. SP«cl- tically> he proposes that, icy ad dition to the present estate hUM, Congress should put e tax upon iBherltatteaa at well. The estate tax Is taken out before anything goes to the heirs.nt is the Pres ident’s idea, in the ease of targe estates, to further redistribute weaUh.by,taxing toe hsiiw on whatever they get. Anl, for good measure, he sugg^ed Uutt it would h#. some hiihMr^,4BI^':on the lu( of big eoririrathmSi The Feder^ Cerpotatlon Tax how is Iff l-‘ ’..cent; the President’s idea i A this might run up to 16 1-: cent on corporate earnings lor old - S^ve some unspecified but large the To annuel figure.® do Many peoide'lare professlug to month for be surprised at what they regard nVoh an old cant is capabi Despite the Unemployment tl ber of occasions fotl^ it supply some calls for the part of Mr. Roosevelt Any body who studied his politl- .pest end. read his speecbee during the Preeldential cam paign, Including his inaugural -‘^ address, has no real ground .for surprise: for the idea that Not so long ago there was a call for garment workers for regular employ ment in factories. With a full registra tion it is possible to place a consider able number of men and women on jobs but if many, who should register fail to do so the public in general will not reap v the benefits to which it is entitled in the organization of the service. One thing that needs stressing is the fact that the NRS is not only for the purpose of selecting and placing men on pub lic works projects but in private em ployment. (The French government’s motto seems to be: “Not so fascist. . . —Louisville Times. We RNA fix with NRA.—Birmingham News. The Democrats ought to be able to hold a tail-corn conference.—Indianapolis News. Hitler has learned nothing from either Bon aparte or Hohenzollern—but which would he prefer as a home, St. Helena or Doom?—San Antonio Evening News. THE BOOK the first line of which reads, “The Holy Bible,” and which contains four great treasures. By BRUCE BARTON STORY OF THE BIBLE As these chapters have appeared in serial form a surgeon of national repoitation sent this reduest: “1. How were'-the books of the Bible gath ered into a collection and distinguished as a group by themselves? Who selected them and how do we know that the right ones were se lected? “2. By what means were these chosen books preserved and handed down? Who de cided that they ought to be translated into modern languages and who did the translat ing?” Let us deal first with the Old Testament. It would be very pleasant if we could say that some one group of men, meeting in Jerusalem about 400 B. C., selected the books which we now have and certified for all time that these and no others should be the Old Testament. But such is not the case. As the writing of these books was an evolution, so was their se lection. Largely, they hav© been preserved to us by the process known as the survival of the fittest. The ancient Hebrews held many of their books in high regard; of which nearly thirty are referred to in the Old Testament. Twenty- four of these are sunk beyond all knowledge. The story about the sun standing still for Joshua is quoted from an old book of war songs known as the Book- of Jashor or the Book of the Just (Joshua 10:18). David’s Song of the Bow” (II Samuel 1:18) is from the same kook, but except for these fragments the Book of the Just has perished. So also has another old song book. Tile Book of the Wars of the Lord, of wlch we ave a fragment In the Slst chapter of Numbers, 18th verse. The books of Kings are largely compiled from more extended records, which sometimes are referred to by name. This le not the book of Chronlclee that we hato, which was written* long after the book of Kings. We see, then, that the Old Testament is the Bvrvlvlng portion of a much larger number of books. It doto hot comprise sicred ** opposed to secular books, bnt Is the whole body of ancient Hebrew Uteratnre now extant. PhUp, an Alexandrian Jew who lived Ih the second century before the ChrlsUan era, gives a list of books nearly identical with those we have bnt wnlU sevente^ that are In our list. Jeans, the the ton of Slrach,^closely parallels onr list but does not stop with It^e recog-' nises the work , of a oOTJtemporaryr^igon, as worthy to be included Yhat fg ®iSer re- wealth Is concentrated In a fdw potea Bill slips hands and that the great'pools Of the fadt Jbhat _ of wealth ought to be broken up Washington believes j for the benefit of everrbody. Is couatHutlonaL There is one that h» has frequently and here again emphatically' expressed. C&pitcd Hill QnertioBS Up on capltol Hill the Sena tors and menibers..,of Congress are asking three questions. Can we or should we try to pass it A this session? What would be tfig I^oa,^ o. a p. It la beeouafrtF' more cic]^ tyom day to day that the cle«Si Ige between the two partlea in ty86 wiHjbg sharply defiped, with the Republican Party dis- tlnoUy on the Ckinaarvathw aile. Following the action of toe “Qraas Roots” ipHomitlon In j^pringtield, Illinois, the recent meeting of^he “Tonng Repnbll-' cans’* of New* Tork went on rec ord tor a distinctively Conserva tive platform.^ In the meantime, Oongrese hag, passed the biggest tax bQl ever* inacted In the United States, the Secnrlty Act, which taxes >U of every employer envelope of every >r, t» provide a fund doyment insurance, and ■pensions. Instead of ind Plan of. |20fr a lent haa embarked irybody over 66, :e pension plan tor swing toward the left on persons over A 6 who have no re- ■ ■ ■“ beginning tins session; wnai wouia oe v-.-y-.w- practical effect upon the nations. ^^The^utlook for the Public .. . _ J1.I . ....w mITftiM Holdina Comnanies Bill al income if w^ did enact such laws? And, third, but paramount ■in the minds of the members of both Houses, what will be the political effect? The strong inclination of all but a few extremists in Congress is 10 let the matter lie until the next session, which will begin in January, 1936. The boys want to go home. The children are out of school now, and their wives want to get back to their home towns; besides, the Washington weather is getting hotter and hotter. They still have an awful lot of business to clean up be fore adjournment. To work out anything that will meet the Pres ident’s idea of taxes seemingly will lead to endlees debate and discussion and maybe keep them here until Fall. So, for that and other reasons, it does not seem likely that they will do much on tax plans except to talk about them. The answer to the second qnestion, as to what the practical effect of the new taxes will be, is generally that they will not go very far in making up the budget deficit. At all times the great bulk of taxation is car ried by the middle class, and this middle class, the practical economists in Congrtss and Ad ministration circles say, would still continue to cairy that load. Very wealthy men who have ac cumulated large fortunes can af ford to hire very expert lawyers to show them 'how to distribute their wealth where they want it to go, it is pointed out. Good Ptdltical Move The paramount qnestion in the minds of everybody in Wash ington is, really, as to the po litical effect of the President’s proposal. That, in the view of the smartest political observers, should be very good for Mr. Roosevelt and his chances for re- election. In effect, it cut% a good deal of the ground out from under the feet of Huey Long, the LaFollette Progressives, and oth er radical elements whose slogan is “soak the rich.” These radical Democrats and Progressives seiz ed upon the new proposal, aild their threats to “show up” the President as insincere unless he demanded immediate action, are believed to have influenced him in bis insistence upon tacking the new. taxes to the bill extending the "nuisance taxes.” As a bit Of political strategy. Rid Yourself of Kidnev Poisons y* t>Mm fc—ts> sesrir «r Lf Ma iwgssri sdsifiwi jbsflisdhs^ IMmIw, A(sM6, twoMa* fast 4wl n^?Afay»ft>4—ww" laal al iiftwi md donlJaiow vAal li tire $om dtougik to yom |y,la» lareMarel krtw ■dtascaMWaitotoitoy toltob)«e mi to ptim «*ol# mm. UlB now’s fitt ^ — t—*y. UAMVtIpiy- Ikay an iiaaaMtartarf At ssaiMW Yoo «w Oow’kri % Aat toiNt. Bonroes of till at 680 a month, by the Oovernmeni^ tho .mpectivd stat contribute more if tt Undei^'^ressare of^ Lobby tl^e Wagner to be paid ind kalf by States can y want to. Labor Dls- ,ln spite 'eryone is nn- sag- good political strategy, as it '^7 Hue dp organised labor . I^lnd a movement to amend Consti tution,' a movemejlt.-YRilch looms np stroQgdr tkom week to week as a probable Issue In the 1936 canpatao ^ 'UtllRiee Holding Companies Bill now is that while it will be gen erally drastic it will not contain the “death sentence” whldh Pres ident Roosevelt has asked lor. This Is one of the few instances in which the lower House ha/ WANTTO SAVE !,m SUl SEE WILEY BROOKS ^^n«335 PAUL _ WQkesboro.': and apparently dnst the Presl- (likewise, material ITdttS-kre expected to be made In the Administration’s Banking Bill before it is finally enacted, although its general pur pose and effect will not be materially impaired. 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