Newspapers / The Beaufort News (Beaufort, … / Oct. 24, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Beaufort News (Beaufort, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
TAG TWO THE BEAUFORT NEWS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24. 1935 .V A Newsy Trip Mrnim By Elizabelli Saunders I In Sioux City, Mrs. June Stitt, 'dumb. Superstitious country-folk fled j health department inspector, receiv-, snneking that it was an ill omen ior: Sitms f-rrtT farm near Manhattan. Kansas, does i not subscribe to the adage that light- j ning never strikes twice in the same j place. One year aj?o lightning killed one of his cows. This year two cows were struck and killed by a bolt in exactly the same spot. . In Santiago. Chile. Clark Gable! 'screen idol, was mobbed in his hotel1 room by 100 girls, who left his face! I smeared with lipstick, and collected any souvenirs they could carry away' including his pajamas, ties, handker chiefs and sox. able leaves nearby, Graeber statad. If there is no water available to quence the fire, he continued, the embers should be buried beneath a small pile of earth in which there is no combustable materirl. The danger of smoxing in the woods will be reduced, Graeber ad ded, if hunters are careful not to drop lighted matches, throw away glowing cigarets, or empty the ash es out of lighted pipes. I Another bad practice is that of I building fires to smoke 'possums or ! rabbits out of hollow logs or trees, j woods. ttliu leaving ntc uia w uui" the hunter3 have gone. j rabbit out where they can shoot it, 'often starts fires which spread rapid ' ly through the underbrush and Similarly, the firing of a bri. patch, as is sometimes ucn by thoughtless boys or adults to get a The difference between careless ness ani little precaution, Graeber emphasized, often means the difer ence between a good forest and a burned over wasteland. ed a request for quarantine placard that would keep relatives away. The man seeking the placard pleaded his wife had so many relatives he wanted the hea)th department to post a placard on his house to scare them away. Health department autnorams, although expressing sympathy, refus ed the request. In Kittery Point, Maine fired with excitement, a fireman hurried to Geo. Colby's carpenter shop to help fight flames. The blaze quelled, he felt a bit chilly. Investigation showed he wore only his underwear. the marriage. In Fairview, Kansas, Orville Lance 4-H shorthorn calf recently won two ribbons at a county fair, but Orville has only one ribbon to sow for it. The calf reached into Orvilles pocket and ate the second ribbon in front of the judge's stand after the youth had pocketed the reward. In Davenport, Iowa, Mrs. Anne Wemzweig left her husband because he tried to make her sign an agree ment not to use rouge or to have vis itors at home, and to dress like her stepmother at all times. Eddie Finklcy, Milwaukee bey, will ; fee ii.i Marquette s home games free, ' this fall because .a was honest. He ! 'found a brand new football a fresh-! man had kicked over the stidium wail but he didn't take it home. SATURDAY, NOV. 2 In Bath, N. Y., a large fish v.cigh ing 2 pounds, leaped into a canoe and landed in the arms of Ruth Scrip ture. She tossed the fish to the bot tom of the boat and proudly display ed it as her "first catch without line or net." Forest Fires Started By Careless Hunters Raleigh, Oct. 23 Careless hunters, dropping lighted matches and failing' to put out camp fires, start hundr.'.'s of destructive forest fires in Nouh Carolina every year. There is no harm in making small Tony Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., " " " "V" "V" I ' street cleaner, has not touched a coin L?,. w wY" v , ! ' , u u 1 DUt leaving tnem unquenched is dan or currency in four years, because he. 1 urt" i . i tt- , jgeious. cianns inat money is evil, xie accepts ; rvQ tv. a i ... f Je fJi. Even when the flames have died e 6 I down, and only a mass of glowing em- t - i w x. t hit bers remain, there is danger of the In lakima, Wash., Ian Maclvor .:j i . . . i , ' , ., . md whipping sparks into inflamn- scratched a match on the side of a j "ukuih.i uuuuing as ne stroae aown a street. There was a flash of fire and flames ANEW The only complete low-priced car Anna Zaesek, Los Angeles, Calif., shot two stories up the side of the j noted woman lawyer, was recently building. Maclvor was burned slight- disclosed as the famous Olga Grey of stage and screen fame, who played the part of Laura Keene in D. W. Griffiits's Birth of a Nation and of Mary Magdalen in Intolerance. More than 50,000 U. S. grocers have gone out of business annually since 1929. Slightly less than that number have started up in the samo period. In Nebraska City, Neb., a foot high Mulberry tree growing out of the crotch of a big cottomvood tree on the lawn of the Glenn Pope re sidence is vouched for by tree sur geons, who assert it is the first such oddity they have seen. ly. Investigation showed a leakage in gas pipes. Mason City, Wash, with a popula tion of more than 300 persons is a town without a chimney. It is heat ed with electricity. William Sayre, who lives on Dr. L. W. Moore GENERAL PRACTICE Office Potter' Emergency Hospital OFFICE HOURS: 9-12 a. m. 2 to 4 p. m. and by appointment Pbone: Office 46; Residence 58-J YOU'LL SEE HER AT THE CIRCUS In New Orleans, 52 people were gathered for the funeral services of Mrs. Lawrence Ingarhiola, when sud denly the floors gave way, and the people within plunged with the corpse and a piano to a concrete floor 20 feet below. Twelve of the people were injured, and the other 40 shaken up, Each "kid" at school thinks his dad is king of the roost. Several dozen of the 181 children in the Government engineer's town school at Grand Coulee Dam, Wash., registered their father's occupation as "chief field en gineer." There is only one such position. In Chicago, John Hoekstra became worried when his wife had been miss ing for 24 hours and notified the po lice. They found her in a Chicago de tective bureau sell, held on bad check charges preferred by department stores. In Budapast, lightning struck a wedding procession recently, killing two guests and rendering the bride Forward Steps It is a genuine thrill to us to see how quickly our profession is advanc ing, both in skill and in public prestige. Hardly a day goes by without some new discov ery, pome new device to make our service even more perfect. Long ex perience assures correct-EC..- in every detail. .UU .. IM,-Wm.y,,.!l,,:jllMll,tltlJJll,t(,J,tMM.l) III 1 . 1 ""W 4v M iss StLeon of the nationally known family of bareback riders and one of her Arabian Stallions who presents her most daring feats on the bare backs of these equine beau lies twice daily with the Walter L. Main circus which will exhibit in Beaufort for one day only, Tuesday, Oct., 29th, on the Ann Street Extension Grounds. beyond all previous standards of safety WILL BE ON DISPLAY AT jGQSF ALL CHEVROLET DEALERS ...but, after all is said and done, it's the cigarette it self that counts . . .the question is, does it suit you? : :9-J Beaufort, Adair & Rice Funeral Director Paul's MACHINE SHOP G. M. PAUL Headquarters For Marine Supplies and 5 1 Paint SEE US ABOUT AN ENGINE FOR YOUR NEW BOAT Address ' BEAUFORT. N. C. TVT 11 fit r--x X LMtt , , i - ' Py a r i?35, Lwcm at Mfmi Tomcco Co, looy rw iV oms to a cigarette that will suit you . . . you want to think whether it's mild, you want to think about the taste That Chesterfields are milder and taste better is no accident . . . The farmer who grows the tobacco, the warehouseman who sells it at auction to the highest bidder, every man who knows about leaf tobacco will tell you that it takes mild, ripe tobaccos to make a good cigarette In making Chesterfields we use mild ripe home-grown and Turkish tobaccos. r i t ior mildness for better taste
The Beaufort News (Beaufort, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 24, 1935, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75