Newspapers / The Beaufort News (Beaufort, … / Aug. 9, 1934, edition 1 / Page 2
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. 1 PAGE TWO ---P.- M.-aa - . J THE BEAUFORT HEWS THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1934 A Newsy Trip Around The World Bv Elizabeth Saunders tin No. 207, cc;. i of which will be s-j-r.t ftee upun request to the Agricul ;u; al Editor, at Stat? College. LIBRARY CHATS Ily ICyde Duncan ! Lower Tobacco Tax. Would Help Farmers Tho number of icebergs in the rate is 120,000 couples annually. North Atlantic varies greatly from ' , year to year. In 1912 there were 1,- In Afghanistan the usual marriage' 100; in 1024, only 11; and this year a?es are 14 for boys and 10 to 11 for1 about 700. As they float slowly south, j girls. they keep their size until they reach Mark Hellinger writes about a doc the. Gulf Stream where they melt tor in a New York nudist colony who within a week or two. This warm wa- ,i3 gradually going crazy. All the- giil ter has even been known to melt , members of thee olony want to be eomnletelv. one of these of ice, hours. to mountains city block square, in 36 Arrested for intoxication, Mrs. Elizabeth Kelly of Chicafc pleaded "I have an Irish jusband and many other troubles." In Indianapolis, Ind., while John Dillinger was alive Ralph Alsman's resemblance to the outlaw was a nuis ance. He was arrested 17 times, shot twice and discharged from his job. Now he claims he has signed to play the lead in a movie based on the ban dit's life. vaccinated where it won't show. No Tugwell law was needed to ; handle the case of Willie McKnight, a negro of Jackson, Miss., who sold his "hair straightener" found to con tain lard, flour, and lye. Customers declared thes tuff was a poor straight lener, but as a hair remover it was a great success. Willie is in jail un der a fraud charge. kig'i, Aug. 0 A graduated tax , on cigarettes that would permit the I sale of five-cent packs was suggested at Farm and Home Week at State ' College by J. D. Hutson, chief of the AAA tobacco section. Such a tax would increase the sale , of inexpensive cigarettes and thereby (stimulate consumption as well us bring more competition into the man ' factoring end of -he ind'.istrv. he said. Greater consumption will enable the growers to sell more tobacco, lie pointed out, and greater competition among manufacturers will brine- weed nrice3 un. He suggested the present tax rate and Strachey's "Elizabeth of S3 a thousand on cigarettes to re-'Sex." dining the first month of th. Libiary K. Bishop of New Bern. iin its new headquarters, ana accord ing to the statistics the number to be 'checked out for the present month 'will far excee 1 that nuumber. Many children are patronizing the Library i,l -,,., Vinwinir tntiir interest in it- it is th. sincere hope of the Librar- Though tile body shackled be. ..'inn that there will fie a larger num-j r.. iv. jones. Hemingway's l e'' ot adults to visit tne uiorary Iriuring tne coming monm. .uaKe me, . , nl:.PP nf rnrrPHtion for ' n ,nlc,"l,"8 " mi.i4'. few minutes each day. II ill tvi fl . The Great i Among the donations this ;vcik tend to ' Over eighty new additions have K .:i made to tht Li:rary this week ; both fiction and non-fiction a who!;1 , storehouse full of enjoyment and en iligr.ttnment. Among them may be i found in the fiction class; Glasvor ; thy's "Swan Song, "Farewell to Arms." Ferber's "Cim ...arm-" rniiin. "v,,-au w.ii. Library a pole's "Rogue Herries," r.tnan rrome, Kooert s Ihe Meadow," and Lewis' "Dodsworth." ,are: In the non-fiction class arp included : No. 1 such titles as: Arams' "Our Business : Norris, "Slippy McGee" Marie Oem Civilization," Beard's "Toward Civi- ler, "If Winter Comes" Hutchinson; lization," Bowers' "The Tragic Era,": "Oh, Doctor" H. E. Wilson, U!1U10I Pu,! 'P3 ('BJ.. x,''fpo.u iv son's "All Our Yesterdays." Among the new biographies are : Maurais' "Byron," Fay's "Franklin," Young's "Marse Robert," E. I,ee. Wodoward's "Meet General Grant." and E Book? are like an open door, Out of which the mind can soar, Rove the world on mighty wing, Watch the stars and planets swing; Books can set the spirit free 'Storm House" Kathleen Diary of a Young Lady of Fashion t in the Year 17G4-tr" Clcon; Knox, I "The Heart of Childhood" Harper's Novellettes, donated by Miss Margar- et Hamilton, Beaufort. The Librarian ' j wishes to thank Miss Hamilton for iher generous contributions. verv Grey is now being published in the News. The story alone is worth a six months subscription to the News. Ball Came Restore Son Lost 30 Yean. Dramatic True Story of Child Kidnapped by Gypsies at Last Restor- A to Parents, in Tk Amirir.n WL ne If, the Magazine which comes on Aub ust 12 with the BALTIMORE AMER ICAN,. Buy Your copy from your favortie newsboy or newsdealer. More English is spoken in than any other foreign language CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to our many . t, c(v, manns ana appreciation to our many A recent expedition to the uthi, h Seas found that the natives of the in- . our gorr tenor of New Guinea still like to motherarah chad'ick. anH fnr tha hunt heads and will trade a highly, nv -ora . ,. ' . . , ana ior tnose wno lumished oars Their kindness will never be forgot ten. Mary B. Chadwiek, James Chadwiek, Lina Chadwiek. painted human skull for a mirror or pocket knife. Mrs. Agnes Calverson of Durham, England, was found dead seated at a( table on which was piled 1,000 gold, pieces. She had starved to death. For nearly a century an English j TIMELY FARM QUESTIONS family owns 150,000 chairs, placed in ANSWERED AT STATE COLLEGE the better locations. The tickets, , which are good for one day, sell for j Aaleigh, Aug. 6 four cents and entitles the owner to Q Wh .. mixtore should be move from chair to chair and from fed the fresheni cow? park to park as he pleases. I Ans The first ' tail at $4.25 or more a thousand.. I i . . i , 11 u. .1 i into THIS Class WOU1..1 oe (menaea vi ; cigarettes selling for 12 1-2 cents or more. : Next would be a tax of ?2 a thous and on cigaretes to retail for between $3 and 4.25 a thousand. This would include packages of 20 cigarettes sell :ing for 10 cents each. ! The lowest bracket would be a tax ;of $1.40 a thousand on cigarettes to China ' retail for less than $3 a thousand. In this group would be packages of Id cigarettes to sell for live centss. Mr. Huston said he was aware that 'some people were afraid that such a 'graduated tax would tend to reduce the price of the better quality weeds, but he said it was his opinion that the increase in consumption of cheap er cigarettes would not materially af fect the sale of the better grades. The cheap cigarette, he said, will draft many recruits from the smok ers who have been rolling their own own from various mixtures, many of which are of the cheapest grade. Over 500 boohs No.2. "Reader's Dicest" fur Mav. .civrec hecked out June ani July, donated by Mrs. E. Subscribe for the News and if af ;ter reading two of three issues you are not pleased with it your money ' ill be refunded. m mm :i ac3reEBcKsi-3n CONDENSED STATEMENT THROUGH A Woman's Eyes By JEAN NEWTON Mt-inir ni ng, the grain feed should be limited to bran mash. For the next four days When a nrettv cirl of Hallvwood .. . r lQ Dran masn for tne next four Calif., was asked her name by a fill- hj, fee(J ghoM inir stjihnn attpndant. sht renhed: . . . .M r ' ,V" tt tJj j i i,01 wneat oran and ground oats. On " m Miss Wiene Hottdogg and I feel ' . fif., , , . 6 . , T ... ., , , , . , , the nftn day of the animal may be like a cannibal whenever I eat a frank otQrf . , .,, . . started on the regular milking ration Iul'ter' and gradually brought to full feed ur . . Jover a Period of three weeks from "Rum rot and rumble seats are ;freshenim? date, The im . d theg reatert peril for the high school to bri them to fu feed : Si" ;.f'ted by the. physical condition ..,. of the animal and the owner must be l am, ,i, ,.,,.J rr, .; . . : juuj;c, xnc unit; iven is a gen eral average and will serve as a i guid. WHEN PEOPLE PRAY ents and Teachers at College Md., the other day. In a tumble-down little house ov erlooking a backyard dump in Pitts burgh, newshawks found a tattered sexagenarian living on relief funds, identified him as Wiliilam Andrew Mellon, firts cousin of one time Sec retary of the Treasury Andrew W. Mellon. Said Cousin William: "I need this place because I can read, study, think and dream Andy has been sending me money monthly." I Q. When should the laying flock be culled for low producing hens? Ans. The most riid culling should j , be done at the close of the laying j season which usually occurs from ! July to November. However, the' flock should be closely watched thru the latter part of July and all of j August. It is at this time that the non-paying hen goes into a molt and these should be eulle-J from the flock ceases. Get rid of all early molters. Los Angeles is testing a new appa ratus for fighting fire with carbon id oxide gas, which is not damaging to merchandise upon which it is spray-, n . . . j 1 y. Can tobacco mosaic be controll , ed y plowing in the stalks after the t , huh is narvestta: ,i, v. 7-il Ans- Removal of the diseased A NEWS dispatch from Moscow saya that drouth lias turned the thoughts of Russian peasants to re ligion. In the rich black eiirtl district of central Uussla. a drouth comparable to that vvlileh turned parts of our own country Into desert ht3 threatened t!,' irrops and therefore the lives of the poop!e. And as tilings get worse it st;-::is t!n-y are brg:n:ilx:g to pray. That the p.:op!p v.iio outlawed re l:g!on ai:d denied CnJ should turn to Ii in when they are parched for rain. Is not so unusual. It is n common resource of Imnmii nature when in trouble to turn to prayer. And this is true not only of those with whom prayer, in humility and faith, Is a part of life. It Is true of many who have novir prayed that, when dire need or stark terror grips th-ui, out of the In oermost recesses of the sml of the man or woman comes that bond with Its maker that Is like the cry of a child for Its mother. Wh'.'n all else fails them, they pray. I once heard a man boast that only twice In his life had be prayed: oni-e when his dearly loved young wife was , being carried, at death's door, into ! the operating room, and aenln when he himself was suffering Intolerably agonizing pain! It seems to tne the Joke was on him. 6 Ball Syndloats. WNt' Service i,. . . ., Ans. Kemoval of t . , . . ., - plants or cutting up the land and tain markings on the tail fins often . ... , , , . ..t- wl c, plants with a disk 3oon after the suggest Arabian letters. Some years . , . . .,, " , c f tu uj !CrP 13 harvested will greatly reducs kings so arranged that they appeared dlS.ease "su lng from 8011 con" II takes sorts ' People to make to spell "There is no God but Allah," ' experiments - a world but the Uramtrusters know and "The warning sent from Allah."" .nfontro1 of th'3, disease together ; they could do a better job just by I ...... iiuivi jiutm.w ni c , HICII13C1V.3, First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co. AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE 30, 1934 RESOURCES Cash on Hand and Due from Banks $ 597,951.60 United States Obligations " 304 084 00 State Bonds and Notes l,39-!oOo!oO Municipal Bonds and Notes 351 932 26 Other Marketable Securities 374480 00 Accrued Interest on Bonds 28287 54 Loans Secured by Marketable Stocks, Bonds and Commodities 255,785.26 Utner Loans and Discounts gl6 393 51 Overdrafts ' 71 Banking Houses, Furniture and Fixtures"""" 81.49L37 $4,204,966.25 Capital Stock LIABILITIES (Preferred $250,000.00 425,150.00 Q , common 175,150.00 Surplus 7- .Art n Undivided Profits """ " iS'SSoS Reserved for Preferred Stock Dividend " fwtn Reserved for Interest, etc. 20 7?i na Other Reserves " q?!2 - :::::::::::::::::::: zMillil $4,204,966.25 DEPOSITS UP TO $5,000.00 INSURED BY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT B.V. (i I II ..V.V.V." NEWS OU PA So a superstitious Mohammedan bought it for $1,600, of 80,000 times the price it would have brought in thi native fish market. tained in Experiment Station fell the Walter Moulton of Chicago into an onjn eK-vitor shaft at tenth fbor, hut saved his life by grasp in? a cam 3 and si king down. "I'll teach you manners," said Jus tice Benham of London, as he fined Robert Lurman $50 for putting his hat on in court. For 20 years Joseph Goditt, 65, has lived at the boarding house of Ida M. Pearson, 68 in Danvers, Mass. Noww, he has built a five-room, bun galow and they will be married. Says Goditt: "Ida sure knows how to cook." Aluminum -which cost $90 a pound 10 years ago now sella for a cents. few About 6,000 persons in the Phil iipine islands are afrhcteKl with rosy. In the British Navy, rum is cere moniously served every day to each man who wishes it. Those who pre fer money are credited with a daily cash allowance of four cents, Today, 57,000 of these sailors, or 68 per cent of the entire force take the four, cf.its instead of the liquor. Some Swiss watches require ten years in their manufacture by work men who make every par; of thes? timepkers with hand tools. Fifty years ago America's divorce rate was 20,000 couples. Today the Bulle-1 . I j! AMAZE A MINUTE j . SCIENTIFACTS BY ARNOLD J ivM f 3 i$.r ; pau possible mm I (f Vy L I 'ME FAtTItT A MAN J I yl l 1 Wl 'wwtHto nMAowt J f. X Jr I I MOP It IIO MILU ?jS -S0rt I I mov. At that SfJ - i JVJstZA J I Wtt UHliTAMd J ' ----v Hat TtMMHATuRi- " JlZS. SMMATUM INIDf UU. 1 VciST' W HATS WtRt TAKlH ON A 4T iJk " WOT tOMMIR DAY IN lOMOON. m ZZ Vtis 1" f ) A PERPETUAL CLOCK 1 I . 1 fT Spit-' '7 A PERPftUM.LV RON- B j i S--v m a T-1 rvy clock in switz. js M, M ri( f$M tRIAND 6ETS TME SMAtl S f II ,11 INtROY IT NEEDS tROM S I J ' M l) 11 THt 6AILY CHANCES aa i. . VJmmmmmmmJ -- m.,,, lep- The following was taken from a circular sent to re tail merchants by a large wholesale house: "The value of your local newspaper to the success of your bus iness cannot be overestimated. It's worth all the sup port and co-operation you can give it. For the news paper is a mirror reflecting the life of the community in which you and your store have an important part. Your advertisement is the reflection of youur store in the mirror. Everybody sees it there. If it is not there, the mirror is dark where your store should be. You are there but you cannot be seen. Your store is open for business as usual but 'out of sight, out of mind.' To keep in step .with the progress of your community, to get your share of business, you must advertise regular ly. Take your newspaper publisher into your con fidence; he can give you valuable assistance. Estab lish an advertising budget. Plan a regular schedule for your advertisement. It's a policy that is followed by the most successful stores: It's an idea that will be profitable to you." Michigan Press. He Beaufort News h ..... a """"Ha"H "ViViVf.ViWiViV.V.VAVAV.
The Beaufort News (Beaufort, N.C.)
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Aug. 9, 1934, edition 1
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