TWO THE STATE PORT PILOT Southport, N. G. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY JAMES M. HARPER, JR., Editor Entered as second-class matter April 20, 1928, at the Post Office at Southport, N. C., under the act of March 3, 1879. | Subscription Rates ONE YEAR $1.50 j BIX MONTHS 1.00 J THREE MONTHS .75 ^JL^national editorial MSS) U ASSOCIATION ^SVLejnJijeA. / 9 3 5 Wednesday, August 7, 1935 When the cat's away the mice won't play?if the cat did what he ought to before he left. This is the season when chronic com ?nrintar Wrtllld hUlTV UP ! piamers wion men. and get here. The kind of English a man uses is a pretty sure index to his background and training. There are plenty of men who are not making a decent living for their family who can tell you right off the bat how to run the government. If the people of Louisiana had kept Huey Long home, chances are that Congress would already have been adjourned. The wise person is one who trains himself to do more than one thing well, thus providing additional outlets for his abilities. During the past week-end we traveled through several of the leading agricultural counties of North Carolina but nowhere did we see any prettier crops than may be found in some sections of Brunswick county. Charles VII. Charles VII, the prince whom Jeanne d'Arc had made king of France 32 years before, died in 1416, at 56, having starved himself to death! He so feared being poisoned by his son and heir that abstinence from food became an obsession. When he would have eaten he could not, for his passages had shrunk up. Changed, Attitude. In recent years a great change has taken place in the attitude of citizens of the United States toward their government. When it was first established by our forefathers, our government was set uj \ by the people to serve a common neei and to be supported by them. More re cently, citizens of our nation seem to hav? ; adopted the attitude that the government owes them a living and that one of iti primary functions is to act as an equal- , izing agency through which the financial , accumulations of the wealthy may be disbursed to the mass of the people. There are in this country 175,000 different governments ? city, township, county, state and Federal. There are 3,250,000 people employed in some branch of governmental work. Their total sal- \ aries are $4,500,000,000 each year. Every dollar that is paid out by the .rv-P 4-Urv TTv?,'4? A gwciIiixiciiv \jx cue uixitcu otaics iitt? uccn paid into the treasury in taxes. As the number of bureaus and employees increases, so does our tax rate. It is time 1 to remember that the government is ours to support and that it is to our own interest to see that its operating expenses are within the bounds of reason. Congratulations In Order. Members of the Port City Civic Club ' in their regular meeting Friday night ex- i tended their congratulations to Captain Fred B. Leitzsey upon his recent promotion from rank of first lieutenant. We join with them in wishing Captain Leitzsey continued success in his career as army officer. Captain Leitzsey and his assistants are doing great work at the local Citizens Conservation Corps camp. Visitors at the i camp are immediately impressed with the j cleanliness and good order that is everywhere apparent. Improvements are con- i stantly being made. These things are true of the physical 1 equipment. Even greater changes are i '< THE STATE POR1 made in the men who report for dut during' their periods of enlistment, varied program of vocational training being conducted during the recreation pi riods by Educational Director Zach 5 Williams, and some of the men in th camp who have had the advantage of college education are conducting sped; classes for their fellow-workers who ha^ never advanced beyond the primal grades. The men are willing workers and ai carrying out the program of forest pr tection and reforestation that was ma; ped out for them when the camp w; established in Southport. This work, t gether with the vocational training whi( the men are receiving, makes the woi of the local camp well worth while. After It's Sold. The border belt tobacco markets op< Thursday and during the next few wee! farmers of this county will be paid f< their crop they have spent months of hai work to produce. During the next fe weeks of agricultural independence thei are a few sobering thoughts they shoul bear in mind. Debts come first. The business futui of no man is any better than his credi Necessities are next?a new supply < clothes for the entire family, some fu niture, perhaps, and other things thi have been needed for some months, bi the purchase of which has been deferre until fall. Then there are certain luxuries thi will add greatly to life on the farm. T1 extent of these, of course, will be goven ed by the money available for the.things after debts are paid and necesj ' ' ^ A AI ties provided, m some instances, wicj may be money enough for the install, tion of a private power plant, with wat for the home. These things will be a j< to any farm family. And a radio. There something that will bring more actu; pleasure to the average family than an other thing. Nothing can do more to ke< rural inhabitants closely in touch with tl outside world. Usually it is the man of the family wh goes to market with the load of tobacc It is to him that the money is paid. Don forget, men, that you didn't make tl crop by yourself?that had it not bee for other members of the family thei were times when your tobacco might ha\ been a total loss. So include them whe you celebrate your seasonal prosperit: Let the luxuries that result from your t< bacco crop be things that every membe of your family can enjoy. Reduce It Further. During the past few years there ha been a slow, but steady, decrease in th nation's fire loss. The decrease is extending into 1931 according to figures issued by the Nj tional Board of Fire Underwriters. Du] ing the first six months of this year, los totaled $136,460,000, as compared wit $158,064,000 during the same period i 1934. The trend is encouraging?about a d? cade ago the annual fire loss ran in es less of $500,000,000 a year. However, i is still much too high. At least eight per cent of fires are unnecessary?i least eighty per cent of them could b prevented by thought, care, perhaps th expenditure of a little money. Every citizen should voluntarily enlis in the fire-fighting army in an effort t further reduce this useless waste. H should periodically inspect his propert; and correct any hazards that exist froi basement to attic. Piles of papers, in properly stored inflammables, old or ami teur electric wiring, defective furnacei pipes and flues?these are among th great causes of fire in dwellings. And prolific outside source of fire that is e: pecially dangerous during summer month is dry, uncut grass. Any local fire marshal or fire depar ment is glad to give a citizen assistanc in the matter of discovering and elimir ating fire hazards. Insurance companh are equally cooperative. Ignorance < hazards, like ignorance of the law, is n excuse?the knowledge that will prevei fire can be easily obtained. In the long run, fire loss determines th post of inanrnTipp. and if we lower lossc it will be reflected in our premium rat as soon as it is proved that the waste j going to stay down. Fire loss increase taxes and is a burden to every membe of the community. Fire prevention shoul be regarded as both a privilege and a di ty?that saves lives and money and pre serves irreplaceable resources. r PILOT, SOUTHPORT, NOOT y I i Washington 1 I Letter lej ^ Washington, August 7.?With 3.1 hopes for adjournment growing e brighter, ambitious legislators are T | following the inference of the old :hymn "rescue the perishing." re I Legislative measures, vital to the j political future of their sponsors, are being dragged from commitP" tee pigeon-holes in an effort to as breathe enough oxygen to secure their passage by the Senate and House. History shows that in the -h mad rush of the last days many rk important measures are lost in the shuffle. Committees, which for one reason or another, have bottled up many of these proposals, are now subjected to pressure from the particular lawmakers or groups interested in their enactKS ment. As the time grows shorter, ar compromises which were rejected .j are now gladly accepted in an effort to expedite the consideraW tion of controversial measures, re One of the favorite sports of the U day is guessing as to the exact date of the Congressional adInnmmonf Thp hPJ?t ODlnlOIl IlftS re doped out the adjournment bei. tween August 15 and 24. The extent of the current warfare of against the Administration tax r- program is the real uncertain feature. A brief survey of the political it an(j legislative fronts reveals a id jittery condition. Promised a short and probably uneventful session beginning next January, it Congress is inclined to get the le big chorea done before adjournment The idea is to give assurances to the lawmakers that they 3e will have plenty of time to comii paign for re-election next year. re Veteran solons are not deceived by the rosy promises, for these war-horses know full well that a er five-months vacation among the )V home folks may upset the best , laid plans of political leaders. Un1 s able to read a portion of letters al from their districts, the legisla|V tors will be obliged to listen while building their fences for JP the coming campaign. A wise ie Senator or Representative follows the winds in his own bailiwick more than the orders of his party 10 chieftains. 0. The public reaction to a prol>? posal restricting the power of the Supreme Court as retaliation for declaring the NRA unconstituti>n onal has effectively sidetracked a e national referendum on the issue. The New Deal is, however, trye ing out the machinery for anil other amendment to the Constitu j tion, which would wipe out exemptions now given to Federal, State and municipal securities ;r and make these items subject to taxation. An amendment of this sort has a popular aspect as the average citizen is not interested as an investor. The question of financing local projects requiring cities and counties to issue bonds e j figures prominently. The tax exempt feature is always an in ducement to buy and without this ' marked advantage, these securi1 ties may find real competition p_ from bond issues. Searching around for ideas ' which will give employment to h millions of men and women is n not as easy as it appears to the layman. The President has nearly five billion dollars to spend on i- work relief projects. In order to [. insure the utmost care in the allotments, an application, submitted by a municipality or state, y must go through many critical it hands before it is approved, Already rumblings against the requirement of taking employees ? for these projects off relief rolls rather than on a selective basis are heard in official circles. These 5 complaints are particularly loud 0 among the Federal agencies re e ; quiring a high type of technical | skill when the same is not usu' ally available from the relief rolls, f For instance, several projects 1- which require skilled engineers are being held up because the i administrators believe it a waste 3> of time and money to employ une | skilled laborers now on relief. a ; The untrained worker fits into certain activities, but prelimi5" nary surveys are out of his line. LS Business men who ordinarily would not object to visits of com, petent tax officials are protesting invasion of unskilled investie gators into their private affairs. The Treasury Department has instituted a delinquent tax survey 'S in the twenty largest metropoli)f tan areas. l0 The possibility that the Federal . old age pension bill, an unemployment insurance measure, will soon become a law creates some e concern as to its ultimate effect upon relief rolls. All governments ' since the days of Queen Elizabeth e have been puzzled as to ways and IS means to stop voluntary pauperism. The fdhr is felt that many individuals, driven from state and !r Federal relief rolls under the edd ict of "work or starve," will attempt to "chisel" on their elderly relatives who are beneficiaries of old age pensions. For centuries, it has been proven that the H CAROLINA drone was usually better lodged and fed than the worker, a condition which is causing Federal relief administrators no end of trouble. Some local officials seeking to put a stop to lucrative loafing at the taxpayers expense are adopting drastic methods while others are utilizing psychoI logical means of persuading the unemployed as to the dignity of labor and self-support as against pauperism. A survey of the Federal Em-1 ergency Relief Administration of rural workers showed that of the employed heads of rural housej holds on relief, 29 percent had ! shifted from the occupations they had usually followed before the depression, and most of these men had gone one or more steps downward on the occupational ladder. Men who usually had owned farms now were renting them or working on their men's farms as laborers. Some were performing: unskilled work in non agricultural industries. Farmhands and skilled artisans had left their usual occupations more often than had unskilled laborers, who naturally tended to stay at the bottom of the ladder. Farmers were least inclined of all workers to change to other occupations. Relief administrative officers called upon to assign men and women to new Federal projects would like authority to make tests in order to weed out the unfitted. However, politics enter the picture and this practical policy will probably never be adopted. 6 Ta ALL LAf HAVE NOT 1 TISED FOR! I PAY Y 1 AND i J. Tax Collec /g ., = Peopl( s Will Api i ? i Maximu J. W. RU/ Presider WEDN Ask Six Millions : , For Public Works 1 j wa Forty-One Applications Are a?' Made In North Carolina; ooi Baity Urges Haste 001 1 Chapel Hill, August 7.?Forty- ga one applications for loans and j fuj grants amounting to $6,248,577.02 thi under the new $4,000,000,000 thi work-relief program have been 1,5 received today by H. G. Baity, thi acting state director of the state i tin PWA. In North Carolina there are 39 _ non-Federal projects estimated to i H cost $5,467,417 now under con- I struction, Mr. Baity stated. Thir- I ty-seven non - Federal projects L built at an estimated cost of $3,- J OUR CITY TAXES /AVOID EXTRA CO! E. Can tor, CITY OF SOU! es United I outhport, N. C. jreciate Your A $5000.00 in uiauiaiitc a uj DEPOSITOR ? $5000.00 iRK J. W. it Ca 630,925 have been completed and are now in use. Twelve additional Ge [projects amounting to $1,665,250 I have received allotments and soon will be under construction. W: Applications for projects should be got in the State office with tu: all possible speed, Mr. Baity urged. Nt More than 4,500 Federal and non-Federal PWA projects cost- th< ing nearly $1,800,000,000 are Til now under construction in the nation, it was announced. Mr. Baity said that the July report shows that 13,238 projects cost- fir ing $685,421,693 have been completed and are in use, that 4,- to: 514 projects costing $1,787,187,135 are under construction and U' that 1,426 projects costing $321,026,225 have received allotments Final x Noti IDS UPON WHICH 1 BEEN PAID WILL E SAl.F. AUGUST 14th ESP AY, AUGUST 7 H ^ 3 are in various >gress preliminary to istruction. Expenditures for maw^B a reported, amount to (jS 1,000, for wages UmIJ d other expenditures (tyS 5, making a total of tjJH How the PWA has filled p until the new program lly under way was revejjjJH j announcement by Mi. J at PWA has under consti^^H 155 non - Federal roughout the country, nated cost being S729.am? Weekly QiJ 1. Who was the orge Washington? 2. What is entomology' I 3. What is the capita Isconsin ? 4. In which state ia the ral Bridge? V 5. When did the Leagal itions come into existence;! 6. How many persona eir lives in the sinking tanic? 7. How much is a 8. What is a filigree! ! 9. What is another name fl e-dog? 10. How far is it from ? i to London? 11. Who is president of H Uversity of North Carolina?^! 12. What is a weald? H (Answers on Page 5) I ce I 1934 taxes i !e adver- i now i sts. I :hport i Bank ccount r Each YATES t /?1 AlP