Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / June 22, 1936, edition 1 / Page 8
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TO F. D. r; SIGNATURE A Prai^j; Lottg -.****?*^/^*f!**?C-i^v *ad ^w^irere JdMd to- Jn rusk y »i*>t sdj|daninie«t. by »9Md7 dtopoBal of ry lai^Iatlon after the flKI^^OO.OOd relief - deficiency bad been sent to the Rouse. almost without a strug- the House decree that the «*^’a ship canal must die, the 1—(e ended the long and bitter •■teawersy over relief by agret- *^*b a conference report on the than two and a quarter bll- •i» measure. Contained in it was w»jm ,^00,000 for relief, and ■■••rtiation for continuing the Ili^Ooiiald Say« Stands'^On *fel»yty T»Utf«gt ftrwth Maa Rtatya H r RveiTttaliiR As even a record vote was de- ^ 1^^***^ Senate on the re- •t •ni, as it went through with •• e^e that belied all the furore •tfc- £t for the past two or three ®Bator Adams, Democratic of Oifacado, who had steered the •I Arough before, moved that •» Seaate recede from its a- MMAnent to authorise additional •Wk lor the Florida ship canal n tts project should be approved Hrr K aew board of engineers. > Tliare was a brief protest from Jtomtilor Loftin, Democrat o f J*5mlia, who stood at the desk ifcsMciy used by Senator Fletch- ar, Qemocrat of Florida, the ca- azAe chief sponsor, who died SEiCecday. But Senator Robinson, hlie Democratit leader. v, lio liad •Rfered the ship canal amoud- meai to the relief hill, a.eroed to fe elimination and the battle was »*c: A Srief flurry also was occ.a.s- .vaBBOl by the Hoiuse refusal to arac>f Senate amendments add- iir Sl.200.otU) for new dams in Ate 'fennessee valley. Tts deficiency bill provides 2fcef- the $1,425,000,000 for next swat's work relief pcoaram should he Jttpended under the personal dBpetfioit of the Pre.sideiit. It also *«sy(ropriated OO.OOO.ooo for RlHUifilng a new public works iWemuB. Ust^'iitown, Secretary ickes im- iHttiteiy instructed I’W.A State AbwtOr.s to emphasize that cities RifikS t>T 45-per cent donations -would have first call on GoIfa^Chiiiip - . mould iupply the resStuirig «6pir cent themselvea, instead of -Aiin rln~ it from PWA.'a $600.- MRA0O construction program satLX he carried out. bwiaIists to tell Of SUMMER PRACTICES Aanr that rains have broken AMgbt conditions over a large gwiriri n of the State, farmers are tiling their efforts to pro- Rbw r crop this year. fcalTzing this, extension spec- MkA. who are to appear on the ttmCna Farm Features radio this week will place jlKBltiruIar emphasis on the pro- mB!T yeocedures to be following to ■acKits the largest possible yields. Arwtight seriously affected most VKK* and before rains fell, the aUCsMuttural .situation looked liRMtty. TuSaceo and cotton, the two 'mogtaa cash crops in Nortii Caro- Sac probably suffered the great- 6B£. JBt-backs. Farmers, now tar iMtftsd in their cultivation of tfcwr T,wo crops, are having to lU rapidly to produce eveu a Atw-^ed crop. A*orUing to specialists of the VBmavion Service, crop condi- the Coastal Plain section Mfotnch better than those in Ak IP.iednioiit where a smaller a WtDKm. of rain has fallen. ■Jlfe rains have also brought ■0Kt green feeds, which will help CMftoek and poultry raisers. fBe radio schedule in full for ‘Afe weuk of June 22-2, follows: at. C Kimrey. "Feeding for Milk ypmftction"; Tuesday, Dr. I. V. mSastk. "Water Plants”: Wed- MiUy, C. H. Brauuon. "Boll Atexil Control": Thursday, Miss litKfy Current, "The 4-H Short ^h*ne”; Friday, C. J. Maupin, *»^ing Egg Production up”: —jt Saturday, Agronomy Depart- Anmiation Decreases Qt N. C. Institutions BSJeigb, June 1^—The popu- Soir of North Carolina’s charit- penal and correctional lu- _^oirs decreased from 17,742 £K,98S during May, but all ex- J8 of the decrease was ac- for by holidays for the :wJi0(lren in the schools for SboT and blind. board of welfare released Rmtstfttics today.’ aM>ll'tTfour county homee re- total population of 3,058 end of April, a decrease of jmMKtaS the mouth, and there ■'ehlldion under 16 oTan la Ibe institutions. eooBty jail* redWred ta April, had 117 *«ad 11* perpoos af ago coolihett .~Dr. .Sal^h , W. averted m-^atforin nt the state tHunociatle party sto^od for “the very things for whicn I have been fighting Ip North Carolina,” jThe platform adopted Friday at. the state Demooyatic conven tion, pledged the removal of the sales tax "from all necessities of life.” Hb Interpreted ‘all necessities,’ he said, to mean everything ex cept items "such as oriental rugs, 12-cylinder automobiles, liquor, diamond rings and the more ex pensive cigars and Turkish cigar ettes.’’ McDonald’s statement came in answer to one Issued by Hubert E. Olive, state campaign manager for Clyde R. Hoey, the other Democratic gubernatorial aspir ant. Olive had asked “if Dr. Mc- Oon.ald intends Co stand on the Democratic platform." McDonald’s! Statement McDonald’s statement follows: “I have always stood on the Democratic party’s platform. I stood on the platform when J. C. B. Ehringhaus and the crowd now backing Clyde Hoey violated that platform and enacted a sales tax. ’’I listened carefully as the new platform was read at the state convention last Friday. The For syth delegation, of which I was a member, offered no protest be es use the platform pledged the pi’.rty U) llie very things for which I liave been fighting in North C. aroliiui. "The party i,latform pledged that the sales lax will he remov ed • from ‘all necessities' next j year when the (leiieral Assembly I is ill session. ‘All necessitie.s’ cer tainly includes food, clothing, fuel, nu'dicine, lumber, furniture, tools, plows, mules, harness, soap, brooms, oil, coffins, refrigerators, books, rugs, pots, pans, dishes, latiiig a.id kitchen utensils, and everyth! ig else that the average family buys. The average man in North Carolina has such little money to spend that everything he buys is in actual necessity. If the Democratic platform is fol lowed. the general sales tax will be replaced entirely in 19:i7 ex cept on a few items such as or iental rugs, twelve-cylinder auto mobiles, liquor, diamond rings more, expensive cigars '..I rrr. —.... . fVlOtt ■ V I ^2rL. - -r*. Stands on Flat form "I certainly stand on that plat form. it is e.xactly where I stood as a member of the 1935 General Assembly. It is nothing new for me to stand for these things. As a matter of fact, I am willing to go further and abolish all of the sales lax. ‘‘The important question now is this: Will Mr. Hoey now repu diate ihe policies of the Gardner- Ehringhans machine which is backing him and join us in sup porting this platform? "If lie will, then let him do as I have already done, and tell everybody in the state just exact ly where he v/ill gel the money j to take the place of the sales tax, at least .*3.0110,000 of which will he repealed nexl year according to the pledge of the party plat form. “Will .Mr. Hoey do as Gardner a n d Ehringhaus have done? Gardner violated the 192S plat form and brought about the state land tax. Will Mr. Hoey do the same? Eliringhaus violated every ' 'iMi. '7'y ■' s 'Egg prodttctlon In North Ckt- olina trill he below Rornul . .. this anil nnlegg’|fo^ egre .Aj givea the tloeks, the>Wt*^ be of inferlof *nailtjr.7’2:^b;^ To make the most .high «oib?4, mer -- - stjrne, partment at State CoU^e, ponl- trymea will need to take special paliia with their flocks and eggs. The first step, he said, is to P’ifpduce infertile eggs, as they are better for immediate con sumption and they also will keep period than fertile egg*. Keep the'nests clMn,“^ht add-t*™" tl*® atmosphero. iShger,. 'he ‘fiMs' fromTilti'ong ^ ^'eggs 'readfly absorb such ed. so'the eggs will not have tp be- cleaned ore »maritetlng.i mot. to be consumed imm^; .diately i^nM AM be Weshed.' as wkshlng ye^T^'Jfrom the sheiR; ^ ’tteditftd jiefent , head of the ponltry de- T j ip hot weigher, eggs**8houla be collected sbveral times a and. stored likmedlately?^4n "^a cool, moist pl^ce where there is plenty of ventilation^ i A spring bouse.or cellar is an ideal place. Air in the storage room should; ■ ■ r:"- Caadls eggs, eepeeially In anm- mer, to keep inferior one*'off the market. prices can be oom- RHndM onty by poultrymen who SSmtaln a reiHitatioB for selling ';|^-'e»gS,V’-'' ■ ' ^Deliveries should be made hR^ iCreduently in Summer thfif In ifihter. As this ik necessary to supply • the'Jtwde with stHetly fra«b oggs..^?.. '^’To ' bring,-- higb prtcikbV eggs must iMk good. Customers de manding high“ quality eggs will not pay top prices for smalli dir- fy,'»A*«S wa?neL .. ICE CREAM SUPH®. AT MAPl^fe . Everyone is invited to ^e ice cream supper to be gl't ^ Seturday evenihg, J«he 87V; ileple Springe school. The pro ceeds will be need la painting the lAwis Kirk BaiHht lAttwh- . ; DR. CIM W. MOSI ClSBMErOP THE 81 Office « M. ^ North/Wilkesboro, 1 Mondays only, Jime IS to .Sept. HonreS A, M. to 5 P. M. -V rr / # y/ i' $ ^ - I 'Tony Manero, national open golf champion, who is to be hon ored by a huge celebration on his return to hi.s home Sedgefleld club, Greensboro, on July 1. Ad mirers of the champion will have the opportunity of seeing him in action in an exhibition match over the Sedgefield course at 2:.'{() o’clock the afternoon of July 1. The celebration will also include a parade in Greensboro in the foreifoon of the same day, and' a ,big testimonial dinner to the'-champion at Sedgefield at 7:30 that evening. Unfortunate Man Ably Rehabilitated Raleigh.—It ha.s been said mil lions of times but a Sunday school class up in Lynchburg, Virginia, has just given mute testimony that it isn't the intrin sic value of a gift that counts— "it’s the spirit behind it.’’ Moreover, blessings still come disguised. R. C-. Searcy, Acting Farm Debt Adjustment Chief of the Reseltlement Administration, reports that in the late winter of 1934 the tenant farm home of a Dinwiddle county family was de stroyed by fire. All that the farm er had left was a wife and three small children. His plight was explained to a rehabilitation supervisor of the Resettlement Administration. His industry and sobriety plus a yearning to "stay off’’ relief proved sufficient collateral for the government to find him a farm, buy him a mule, fertilizer and seed and food enough for the family to subsist on until a crop was grown. Under the supervision of Re settlement representatives, a shack became a cozy cabin, kept scrupulously clean. Many quarts of fruits and vegetables were canned—enough to sell some. -All told, the little farm yielded .suf ficient income to pay off most of the advance made by the gov ernment. When the Lynchbur.? class heard of this winnin.g fight a- platforn. and advocated the sales gainst adversity, four members made up a purse tor the family —small in size hut a big splritu- lax. Will Mr. Hoey do likewise? Is it true that Mr. Hoey will ad vocate a transaction tax? “Is Mr. Hoey any different from Gardner and Ehringhaus?” al boost to another family help ed first by the government to beat back the humilitation of a public dole. NOUTH CAROLINA BAR H I1.L MEET JULY 9-H j Eag^.r Hooker Raleigh.—Patrick Healy, '7iv of Raleigh, executive secretary of the North Carolina League of Muni cipalities, said J. Edgar Hoover, director of the bureau of investi gation of the U. S. department jf justiq^, had been invited to ad dress ^the league at its annual coQ^^tjon in Wilmington July 16 and^Ilt Af5^%lvitation to speak also has been extended to Frank Bane, ex ecutive director of the federal so cial security board, he said. Raleigh.—Carroll W. Weath ers, of Raleigh, Federal Judge Jo'.in J. Parker, of Charlotte and Professor Walter W. Conk, of Northwestern University L a w- .School at Chicago, will be the prim-ip-al speakers of the 3Sth annual meeting of the North Car olina Bar .Association, to be held at .Asheville. July 9, 10 and 11. Macon County 4-H club boys will finish and exhibit 15 calves at the Fat Cattle Show in Ashe ville this fall. The Home of A SIZE FOR EVERY CAR OR TRUCK ... A PRICE TO SUIT EVERY POCKETBOOK (ifIRAL SBtVKI mnON H. P. EIJJ.R, Prop. Phone 27 North Wik«^o, N. C. 'V: IgiiMla - .:«iSK: -YU Get the Most For Your... VETERANS, to what better advantage can you spend your Bonus Money than to buy needed furniture for the home—an investment that will not only make your home more attractive, but one that will give you comfort and service for years to come? Our furniture stock was never more com- I pletei and we now offer you— Livingroom Suites, Bedroom Suites, Dinmgroom Suites, Stoves, Ranges, Tables, Kitchen Cabinets, Beds, Mattresses, Rugs addition we are and many odd pieces at most attractive prices, and in giving to every veteran presenting his bonus card ... A Most Liberal Discount This store appreciates most sincerely the sacrifices made by oui veterans during the World War, and to show our appreciation we are going to price - our merchandise so low to veterans that only a large volume of business will enable us to make any profit. We invite you, we urge you, veterans, to pay our store a visit for we certainly will sell you furniture at the great est bargain prices of your life. B6 Sure To G6t Our Coufidcutiul Prices Before You Buy Anyibing In the Furniture Line For Your Hwne 'J • •r NV\-’ **Your Home. Should Gome First'^- AND lOTH STREETS^NOinTi
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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June 22, 1936, edition 1
8
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