PAG" TWO
THE BEAUFORT NEWS THU R5DAY. JUNE 20, 1935
MECCA FO R TOURISTS
i i.;iiHv lii-i.vv. is tf IVrlii.-itu Conn- to the acre.
A Newsy Trip
Around The World
By Elizabeth Saunders
Harvard Uuivei'suy T'.ii? average Ainevican haw'.".!
foot'ial! coach, has a collection of l.'iOO miles in his auto last year, c
:bird f's, the third largest in the na- timans based on gasoline consump
tion, valued at $30,000; a stamp col- tion revealed. There are 15,000,
lection worth $20,000; and at his 000,000 gallons of gasoline sold in
summer home in Pocono Mountains America annually.
jpf Pennsylvania has a collection of
"eeveial thousand rare plants set in' Professor R. H. Beamer, of the De
Jhe midst of 50,000 rhododendrons, paitment oi Entomology, University
jof Kansas, user shot guns and rifle?
1 i loaded with "dust" or birdshot to
1 In Benton, Ark., a 10-pound bahy collect specimens of cirados, coinmon
girl was born to Mrs. Everett Yates, v known as locusts. He shoots them
lG-pound daughter was Dorn to (wn from the branches of trees.
Mrs. Yates six years ago. i
1,
t Of all the people in the world to-
Annlvinsr for a marriatre license.
I I o o -
it... j. i-i n,i,.j oi .itli fVia fhm-cra wnnlil Iip " VntViin w . spa turtles, locs'prhoads and leatherbaeks from out of the ocean
Cay, not more man uut-winu !" 0, --- , -
1 j ..!, a,v,01. third iisp ' iloinn-" ivnlied thp hrideeroom. "I ling the past month over 1,000 people have visited the laboratory
KUlJ.tf ilUU XKJin.. .-wivin. l - o --r.--- - - c-- r i , , r, , . ... , x.
ill
-
!ty report yields of 50 bushels of pr:-.in
SUMMERTIME
IS DINE AWAY FROM HOME TIME
TRY OUR DELICIOUS MEALS
COOKED JUST RIGHT
SPECIAL DINNERS 45c
Lunches Prepared For Taking on
Fishing Trips
MA'nilS CAFE
Opposite Postoffics Beaufort, N. C.
U. S. Fisheries Laboratory, Fiver's Island
With the completion of the bridge fium the Heaufor: Moivhead Cause
way to Fiver's Island more tourists than ever before are visiting the Fish
eries Museum at the Loboratory. Of especial interest to visitors now will
be the salt water pool recently competed which will contain live reptiles,
inn -
Thir,
v
rTinnstioks. And the final third still : know where I can get one for ?3
jeat with their fingers.
I f!pi-man and Austrian war veter
ans now living m Lorain, u., weie
recently the dinner guests of Amer
can soldiers they opposed in the
Frenches during the World War.
Clubs Declare War
On Roadside Signs
Raleigh, June 19 a boycott of
nrnrlnrta advertised on unsightly
In Haverford, Pa., millionairess ! roadside signs in North Carolina was
Margaret Dorrance, whose monthly ! recommended the other day at a
income is a mere $10,000, blushed meeting of home demonstration club
...:t.i kr Aiiffftiir wj members in Pinehurst.
stopped by a policeman for speeding
3he reached for he.r purse and found
no money to pay the fine. The
rf-miifTpnr dii? in his nockets and
paid the fine for her.
In a resolution adoptd, the mem
bers appealed to farmers, merchants,
chambers of commerce, woman's
nl..Un nnl A Vmw Anfron!7iitinrio f r on.
I list in the war against signboards.
J W. Miller, 90, of Barboursville, Many of the signboards not only
.West Va T shaves With a razor that ! m.r the landscape but they ..re a U
; , , i. ...!.. f icii a source oi uanaci uin.-mi".u
nas neen useu leKiuany iui i
week. Laurens E. Calvert, news editor, of the Xew York Times was
theie, gathering: materia! for a feature story he plans to write. Those
who do not care to walk across the recently completed bridge to reach
the Laboratory may be rowed across by Capt. Jack at the end of Front
Street who still maintains his service of ferrying visitors across the chan
nel to the island.
PRISONS The State government
is hoping to ge an allotment from the
federal relief program to construct
modern, fireproof prison camps in all
sections of North Carolina. Prison
conditions have been greatly improv
ed since the State took over the old
chain-gang system but housing con
ditions in many camps are still bad.
years; he has used it for 70 years.
Ten thousand people recently paid
to witness the roasting of an ox at
Tottenham, England.
One of the world's oldest sights is
seen at the summer festival in Pun,
India, when the god of Vishnu takes
his annual one-mile ride along Par
adise Road. In order to solicit pity
and alms, hundreds of holy men
each equipped with a secret breating
nhp hnrv themselves along both
divert the drivers' attention from the
read, the resolution stated.
; The women also commended the
Agricultural Adjustment Administra
tion fo.- its he.icnts to agriculture.
a h'u-h are be in.-? felt by the clu'
women and business houses of tho
nation as well as the farmers thi-m-elves.
After throwing their support be
hind the world peace movement,
: they turned to the moving picture
industry to endorse the improvements
i , ii. i i. f n;n4-,,..nc.
"... , . , . .. i mane in tne- moral eone ui wu-mica.
Sides of the highway, no part oi mem, of mQtion icture thea.
showing above the ground except ..nursuries" for children while
their upraised arms. events sro about other activities
r t 'was deplored as being bad for the
::f mental 'and physical development of
cum miu 'ehild-en
of only two timber wolves to feed 1, j 'resolution adopted by the Cum
xne zoo nas '" '" ; belaud County farm women prior
residents produced quintuplets last pinehurst request.
wcck jed that rural electrification be given
.,'.. !a prominent place in the public
rVl nlfl t n'l n I I 1 1 I MM VH1 ' 1 M il S U t' K 1 t - i
I'l t tin II AUW ..ji,
ported gravely ill in Amiens, France,
after attending the annual banquet
of their medical society. Police be
lieve the doctors were poisoned by
food eaten at the banquet.
Larderello, Italy, is a city that lives
on and oft' an active volcano. All light
heat and power is procured from the
hot interior of the mountain and
sold to outlaying cities and factories
thus eliminating all taxes and im
provement costs.
work:, nrtwam
I Copies of the resolutions hsve
been ?en: over the Stat; for study jy
ub women so that del-.'gntps to Farm
and Home week at St.
; rummer may be prepa
them at that time.
,t. College. tsi
c-d to act upon
On.1 thousand tons e.f paper are
required each year to print postage
stamps of the- United States.
EXECUTIONS July 1 is almost
lere and all persons sentenced to be
put to death for crime in North Car
olina will die in a lethal gas chamber
instead of the electric chair under
direction of an act passed by the
General Assembly. It has not been
decided just where to locate the gas
chamber at the State Prison in Ral
eigh but indications are that it may
be located atop the main building.
Two or three towers of unique con
struction are thought by some pris
on officials to provide ample quarters
for the gas chamber.
FOR STUDY SMOKING
I CHOOSE CAMELS.
THEY ARE SO MILD
THEY NEVER GET MY
WIND!
5 .Mm
I SMOKE THE SAME MILD CIGARETTE
THAT LOU GEHRIG DOES.... CAMELS.
I'D WALK A MILE FOR A CAMEL !
lip
imSI - amh' jr -i I,, i f
lOU GEHRIG, "Iron Man of Baseball"
r Mim r YOU CAN SMOKE ALL YOU WANT!
SOMILDI...YOUCMV" COSTLIER
lib
TOBACCOS !
Hereditary enmity was forgotten!
when a mother eat in Chicago heard j
the hungry whining of a litter of pup- j
pie.; whose mother had died. The j
cat promptly adopted the pups and
is caring for them as if they were
hei.- owe offsprings.
THROUGH STATE
Capital Keyholes
By BESS HINTON SILVER
j Continued from page one)
Dated March l, inn, a post caret IRKED Governor Ehnnghaus is
to a woman who has been dead 33 a mild-mannered man but once you
years has just been delivered in ly-! get his ire to the boiling point
mouth, England, to Mrs. P. H. I watch for the steam to pop off. Down
Blake, her daughter-in-law, who had at the Governor's conference at Bil
to pay 4 cents excess postage. ox;; Mississippi, a representative of
'Harry L. Hopkins, head man of the
Black tulipj may be a rarity m j federal relief program, said the mon
themselves, but three blooms on one,ev ;3 not being spent politically,
stem are an achievement in garden- North Carolina's own Chief Executive
ing. James Eastep, an ardent flow-'replied that such was rapidly becom-
er fan of Ogden, Utah, has proved ng the case, or words to that effect.
his progress by displaying a boquet
of them.
In Utbana, 111., this announcement
was chalked on a blackboard in
front of a drug store:
"For sale on slightly worn Blue
Eagle, sired by Roosevelt and damn
ed by the Supreme Court."
The male and female Negro popu
lation of the United States in the
last census showed that there were
6,855,669 males and 6,035,474 females.
Of course, Mr. Hopkins nor his rep
resentative liked that, but they pick
ed the right man to get them told if
they do start in to playing human
miseries for votes in 1936.
3 t s a
AH0 IP,
F.G.B.
DETROIT
uMffBJMJCE Mm mm umm mm
illfglJ
HORTON Senator W. P. Horton,
of Chatham, complicated things for
one or two people when he definitely
announced that he will be a candi
date for Lieutenant Governor.
Senator Paul D. Grady, of Johns
ton, already has his hat in the ring
and in addition to Lumpkin Senator
Carl L. Bailey of Washington, and
; former Senator George McNeill, of
Howard Ballew, farmer living near j Cumberland, both are considered
Moulton, Iowa, uses his flock of 1,-j real threats for the post. Some peo
600 sheep for road repair work. Re-'ple are wondering why the Number
cently, after heavy rains, he "rolled" (Two post in the 'State Government
to boulevard smoothness a stretch of I has suddenly become so popular.
impassible country road by driving!
the flock over it several times until ROADS The State Highway Com
their feet packed the mud. (mission is making visible use of the
$3,000,000 emergency approprition
Seventh-year-old Mrs. Murray 'passed the late General Assembly and
Dodd, widow of a Canadian judge, as you ride about over the State on
has arrived at Tilbury, England, af- j secondard roads you will find many
ter crossing the Atlantic for the fifty-j holes newly patched. But it will be
third time, a j0b for somebody to keep them in
' .shape with big, heavy trucks beating
Believe it or not, Dr. V. Palomo of them to pieces and the highway
San Antonio, Texas, has never eat- fund diversionists already planning
en a bite of sea food of any kind in their campaign in the 1937 Legisla
his life. ture.
O The first cost of the Ford V-8 is at low as it is possi
ble to make it and still give you a high quality, modern
automobile with the comfort, roominess and safety fea
turesthe performance, dependability and economy of
the Ford V-8.
This inbuilt quality is evident in the very low cost
of maintenance and operation of the Ford V8. And
throughout many thousands of miles of service, main
tenance Is kept to a minimum because Genuine Ford
Parts and service are priced so much lower. In addition,
upkeep Is further reduced by the Ford policy of exchang
ing factory reconditioned units even to the Ford V-8
engine a big economy only Ford owners enjoy.
Ford quality again comes to light in the high resfe
value of the Ford V-8. The manufacturer may set the
price of a new car but the public lUelf decides what it
will pay for a used car.
And it is a very significant fact that the public has set
a high resale price on Ford cars... The reason Is simple.
Precision-built of the finest quality materials, Ford cars
last longer, and therefore the market for used Fords is
always good.
What else can you buy that will give your family as
much enjoyment as a new Ford V-8? What other car
offers you so sound an investment? With your old car
applied against the down payment you may have to pay
no more than $8.00 a week to be driving a new Ford V-8
tomorrow. Just ask your nearest Ford dealer about the
Authorized Ford Finance Plan . . . And remember, as you
thrill to V- 8 performance on the highway, that this is the
most economical car to opetate that Ford has ever built.
tm DEALERS OF EASTERN VIRGINIA and NORTH CAECUM
ORDV-
$495 and up F.O.B. Detroit
Eur Ttrtni TVongh Unjrcml Cr4K Company
Tin Autboriwd Ford Fisaact PUa
ON THE AIR Ford Symphony Orchestra, Sunday Evening! Frgi Wsriogi Thurday EvnUgs Columbia Network.
LOFTIN MOTOR COMPANY
BEAUFORT,
Authorized lord Sales and Service For Carteret County
Support the Chamber of Commerce
N. C.