r ' Thursday, Nov. 9th, 1939. 1,400 People Per Hour Visit Exhibit of "South Self Contained" At N.C. Fair In! 7 " . .v '.'V ' f J7l e i MUMtMUn, .winUbAWUM tUiafeMa:JU&g ? M BUY EVERYTHING PROM HOME FOLKS A record of 1,400 visits per hour was set by the exhibit of Arcadian Nitrate, portraying "The South Self Contained," at the North Carolina State Fair, on its peak day, a Satur day. On other days the attendance averaged 1,200 per hour, the com pany announced today. "The South Self Contained" pre sented the story of the importance of home production of the essential materials needed to carry on agri culture in the South. The exhibit, mounted on a huge truck, consisted of a map of the Southern states, with all spots contributing to the i Obituaries ; CLIFFORD LEWIS, JR. Funeral services for Clifford, the 5-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Lewis, were conducted here Sunday afternoon at the home on Pollock Street. He died on Friday at the James Walker Memorial Hospital in Wilmington as the result of complications fol lowing an appendectomy. The untimely death of the little child cast a pall of gloom over Beaufort and the many persons here shared the sorrows of the parents. The services on Sunday, were conducted by Rev. L. D. Hayman, pastor of the Methodist Church, as sisted by Rev. W. Y. Stewart, pas tor of the Core Creek Community Church. Impressive ritual music was fur nished by a choir composed of members from various churches of the town and a male quartet. In terment was made in Ocean View Cemetery. Bearing the many beautiful flo ral tributes were: Miss Selma Ma son, Miss Hazel Dill, Miss Mary Sue Rudder, Miss Mabel Truitt, Miss Sadie Moore, Miss Ruth Lew is, Miss Elizabeth Thomas, Miss THE WORLD'S GOOD NEWS will come to your home every day through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newpaper It records for you the world's clean, constructive doings. The Monitor does not exploit crime or sensation; neither does It Ignore them, but deals correctively with them. Features tor busy men and all th family, Including the Weekly Magazine Section. The Christian Science Publishing 6oclety One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts Please enter my subscription to The Christian Science Monitor for a period of 1 year 12.00 6 months $6 00 3 months $3.00 1 month f 1 .00 Saturday issue, Including Magazine Section: 1 year $2.60, 8 issues 250 Name Address - Sample Copy S II 1 1 3t r IH mm I K J iTWwl i 11 H I WINTER tjirolina. I vT tV ill 1 HANES WINTER SETS 50'tJ9C THE Pick the combina tion that auita you heat. Wear a alfwve leaa or ahort-aleeve undershirt. Then elect li pair of Crotch -t.uard Short (fimire ftbote), tlrotch Guard Wind Shields, or Knit Kilt Starts CrttckGial ,arn...orlOwool. Wlll-SUlUt IT'S A KNOCK-OUTI HANES UNDERWEAR SOLD BY FELTON'S "Everything to Wear" CatMf ..iJKii in V, production of Arcadian illuminated by tiny electric lights. ' Particularly numerous among the visitors to the exhibit, the company reports, were agricultural teachers, county agents, FKA students, and 4H Club members. Arcadian Nitrate is observing this year the tenth anniversary of the shipping of the first load of American-produced soda from its plant in Hopewell, Virginia. A part of the observance will be the show ing of a motion picture entitled "The New South" in all Southern states. Evelyn Norcom, Miss Eleanor Way Miss Annie D. Foreman, Miss Irene Sabiston, Miss Thelma Dickinson, Miss Frances Mason and Miss Julia Thomas. Pallbearers were William Way, Roy Eubanks, Will Arrington, Ru fus Sewell, H. S. Russ and Nat Thomas. Surviving are his pa rents and many relatives of this county. CARL G. WADE SMYRNA Funeral services for Carl G. Wade, 60, were conducted at the home here Thursday after noon, November 2, with Rev. C. W. Guthrie, pastor of the Methodist church and Rev. Israel, pastor of the Baptist church officiating. Mr. Wade died early Wednes day morning November 1, follow ing an illness of most a year. He was a builder, and for the past several years had been employed with the Bell-Wallace ship building Company at Morehead City. Pall bearers were men from the ship yard, his friends with whom he had worked so many years. He suffered patiently until the end. The assemblage of friends and a profusion of flowers, attested the esteem in which Carl was held by his friends. Surviving is his widow, one daughter, Mrs. Berkley Simpson, on Kequett TXS. cam T llll mm "Winter blasts used to raise the bumps on my ekin . . . so that I looked and felt like a polka-dot tie. But now, when the geese fly south, I say good-bye to Summer underwear, and switch to comfortable llANES middleweight SETS." Hanes Winter Sets give you protection when you go outdoors. And you don't fool hiindk'd-iip and overheated indoors. They iiIho provide the gentle, athletic support of the llANKSKMT Crotch-Cuard with its con venient, Imttonlcss vent. Choose one of these fopulur WINTER SET styles. See your Hanks dealer today. P. II. llanos Knitting Co., Winston-Salem, North GARMENT HANES HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION i Heavy mi warm for. dnkle-length lent. Long or ihorl ileerei. Cut to match your measure from shoulder to crotch. You cm tit or bend without binding. Buttons, buttonholes, cutis and teams all securely tewed. Ms two sons, Blakely and Glen Wade, one sister, Mrs. Albert Lewis. NEVEL E. MORRIS STELLA Funeral services for Xevel E. Morris, 74, were conduct ed at the home in Stella on Mon day. He died at his home on Sun day. Final rites were conducted by Rev. A. L. Benton, pastor of the ! Eaptist Church of Swansboro. Interment was made in the ceme tery there. The deceased is survived by his widow, Mrs. Hattie Morris, one son, David R. Morris of Swansboro and one daughter, Mrs. Fannie Simpson, of Stella. E. V. WILLIS PUXTA GORDA, Fla. Elvin V. Willis, 62, for 47 years a citizen of Puma Gorda, died at his home Saturday afternoon, October 14, 1939. Cerebral hemoihage was given as the immediate cause of his death, but decease;! had been in ill health for a period of several nmnths. Funeral services conducted by Reverend J. H. Sutley, pastor of the First Baptist church of Punta Gorda, were held Monday after noon at three o'clock October 16, and were followed immediately by interment in Indian Spring ceme tery. An assemblage of friends that filled the church, and a profusion of flowers attested the esteem in which Mr. Willis was held by the friends he had acquired during the years he made his home in Punta Gorda. He was born at Smyrna, N. C, October 9, 1877, the son of the late Russell Willis and wife Susan Fulford Willis. He followed the sea in his active life, serving for years as one of the commanding officers of various trans-oceanic liners making numerous Atlantic crossings during World War days. He was married to Miss Eliza beth Linquish of Punta Gorda, on December 1, 1907. The widow, one daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Wil lis Gregory, of Punta Gorda, and one son, Russell Willis, engineer on a ship enroute from European service. Other surviving near relatives include four brothers, Guy Willis and Capt. H. C. Willis of San Juan, Porto Rico; Charlie S. Wil lis of Marshallberg, N. C, and Grady Willis, of Atlantic, N. C; two sisters, Mrs. Maggie Hancock, of Smyrna, N. C, and Mrs. Bessie Webb of Morehead City, N. C, Charlie Willis of Marshallberg was the only one able to go to Florida to attend the funeral. He return ed to his home the following day The son Russel Willis, whose location at sea were un known, counld not immediately be advised of his fathers passing. Pall bearers were: A. C. and Dr. V. G. Jordan, Betram McConn Matt Weeks, E. M. Parker and Leo Wotizky. CARD OF THANKS To our many friends who helped and sympathized with us in the illness and death of our husband, father and brother, Carl Wade; to Reverend C. W. Guthrie and Rev et end Israel, to the choir, and to all who gave flowers, we extend thanks. Mrs. Carl Wade, Mrs. Berkley Simpson, Blakely Wade, Glen Wade, Mrs. Albeit Lewis. The Transaction Tax! A Business Transaction Tax is not a tax on profits. It is a tax on sales. In 1933 and 1034, the U. S. collected a 2 cent tax on each bank check; this was a trans action tax on checks only, a very unfair tax; all men paid 2 cents on each check regardless of the amount of the check. The small checks paid the most of the money The U. S. collected more than 79 millions dollars in these two years. During the same years the Federal Reserve Board reported that its brunches and agencies alone han dled over 76 billion dollars wirth of checks. If the tax had been 2 per cent of total check transac tion instead of 2 cents on each check, the U. S. would have col lected from F. R. Board agencies over 1,500 million dollars, instead of 19 million. To show unjust taxation: All corporations in the U. S. paid in come taxes in 1934 of only 387 million dollars. The users of to bacco alone (chewing, cigars, and cigarettes) paid a total tax the same year of 425 million dollars. The Townsend Plan will tax big and little alike. A dollar trans action will pay 2 cents a man selling a hundred thousand dollar yacht will pay two thousand dol lars; the man selling a 10 dollar row-boat will pay 20 cents.N Every body will pay according to the vol ume of business that prosperity brings to them. The tax will ap ply n Wall Street speculations as well as on the sale of aBox ot lace" powder.- The traisaction tax was endorsed by the largest business organizations in America in 1921. An advocate of Townsend Na tional Welfare Act. Geo. Ireland. THE BEAUFORT NEWS BEAUFORT, Ads On Hanes Is Largest In Field Of Underwear This fall, the P. H. Hanes Knit ting Comp.iiy of Wir.son-Sa!em, Xorth CE.olina, launches their 28th cons', .utive year of under wear advertising. Appearing in The Beaufort News and in 865 other newspaper? throughout the nation, this Hanes newspaper advertising is easily the largest in the underwear field. The total circulation of the news rapeis used reaches 19 million. Over the years, Hanes has found 'hat newrpaper advertising is the retailer's best medium. It reach es customers and prospects direct ly and quickly. Sales-results are gained on the day the advertise ment appears. The middleweight Hanes Winter Sets which have proved so popular with men and boys everywhere are being particularly featured in this Hanes advertising. These middle weight garments provide indoor comfort with outdoor protection. . . just the weight for modern winter heating, both in office and at home. Hanes Winter Sets have the Hanesknit Crotch-Guard which gives gentle athdetic support with the convenience of a buttonless vent. Hanes Heavy weight Cham pion and other union suits are al so included in the advertising. The advertisements, themselves are breezy in tone and speak the language of the average man. Such headlines as "I gave goose flesh back to the geese", and "As comfortable as a bird-dog by the fire", supported by humorous il lustrations, capture the attention and invite a reading of the entire advertisement. The advertising department of The Beaufort News has a number of these attractive small-space ad vertisements, available with free mats. A telephone call will bring our representative. He will be glad to show you these advertise ments, tell what they have done for other Hanes Dealers in this terri tory, and give you the very mod est figures on their cost. GEMS FOR YOUR SCRAPBOOK "Herosm" "All actual heroes are essential men, and all men possible heroes." Browning. "If Hero meai sincere man, wny may not every one os be a Hero?" Carlyle. "The reformer must be a hero at all points, and he must have conquered himself before he can conquer others.". "There is no king nor sovereign state That can fix a hero's rate." Emmerson "Wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and he shall strengthen thine heart." Psalm. "Heroes have trod this spot 'tis on their dust ye tread." Byron. SWANSBORO LEGION POST SPONSORING SQUARE DANCE FRI. One of the biggest square dan ces ever presented on the coast is expected to take place in Swans boro at the Tarrymore Hotel on Friday night, November 10. Spon sored by the newly formed Clar ence Meadows Post of the Ameri can Legion of the Onslow commu nity, the squaredance has been given much advance publicity and it is. expected to draw persons from many miles around. Good squaredance music will be fea tured. Subscribe to The Newi $1.50 yr. J Uncle Sam Hoards vmjySU'A uM.'mi mm. -h Vt Some of the $12,000,000 in gold bullion that arrived at New York re cently. The outbreak of war started an influx of cold to this country from European capitals. This bullion was sent by British banks for safe keeping here. N. C. Central 4-H Service Club Certeret County Central 4-H Service Club held its ymonthl meeting in the Core Creek Com munity House on Wednesday evening, November 1st. Thirty tight persons were present and four new names were added to the roll. The Rev. and Mrs. W. Y. Stewart of Beaufort and Mrs. Howell of Smyrna, were visitors at ;he meeting. After a brief business session, presided over by Elizabeth Simp son, newly elected vice-president, of the club, team demonstrations and suggestions on "Everyday Courtesies", the topic for study and discussion for the month. civen by Odell Merrill, Jewell Eu banks, Bryan Sprinfrle, Arnecia Wiley, Paul Beachem, Virginia Staton, and Lillian Williams, mem bers of the club. At this time the meeting was turned over to Miss Clark, Home Agent, and Ornecia Wiley, who led the group in an evening of fun. Lemonade was served by the re freshment committee and the meeting came to a close with sing ing of "Taps." The happy group adjourned to meet again on the evening of December Seventh at the same place and at the same hour. Answers To Timely Farm Questions QUESTION: How can I keep skippers and other insects out of cured meat? ANSWER: Be sure that the meat is protected from flies and you will have no trouble with meat insects. If the smokehouse is screened with no. 16 copper wire and well ventilated, the meat may be allowed to hang there until used without danger. If screening is not possible, as soon as the meat is smoked each piece should be wrapped in heavy wrapping paper, dropped in a thin cloth bag which should be tied securely, and hung in a cool well-ventilated smoke house of cellar. This should be done as soon as the meat is smoked to suit the taste. ffiQUESTION: What are the best size and age trees to plant in start ing a peach orchard? ANSWER: One-year old trees three to four feet tall and measui ig seven to eight-sixteenths arc preferred as these trees can be headed higher at planting time than smaller trees and will devel op the main braches at a greater distance from the ground. Some growers plant June budded trees, but these often branch so near the ground that the scaffold limbs cannot be established high enough up to permit of propper cultiva tion. Trees having enlargement or wart like knobs on the largei roots or main stem just below the ground should not be planted. QUESTION: How many old hens should be carried over for ths next laying flock? ANSWER: Many farm flock owners follow a practice of not keeping any hens more than two laying years, but breeding farms sometimes keep an average oi from thirty to sixty per cent of the hens from one year to the next. Select old hens usually are superi or to medium pullets, and from breeding standpoint are very de sirable to have in the flock. Un der no conditions should hens with short, shallow, and narrow bodies be kept in the laying flock as these birds are poor layers and wil! tiansmit these qualities to the off spring. ,,,,.,4- ,., i... t ......, i;., i on an acre of pasture on the farm of Mack Hall of Jackson County, broomsage grass and yellow top weeds have been cut 50 per cent. European Gold T "ft -Si j AT " f I JL TT . Y Burley Burley growers of North Caroli na and the Nation will vote in a referendum on Novemher 51 tn U. cide if they want quotas placed on tneir next year s production. When You Buy Anything . . . Your first thought is in which you'll make When You Buy Beer . We're sure that you will want to patronize a dealer who conducts his business legally and reputably. That is the kind of cooperation North Carolin ians can give this committee, if they will. We want to cooperate and our record of action bears us out by giving aid to authorities in "cleaning up or closing up" those few licensed beer retailers who permit conditions of which both the public and the industry disapprove. Respectable dealers merit your patronage. Oth ers don't I Brewers and North Carolina Beer Distributors Committee EDGAR H. BAIN, State Director SUITE 813-17 COMMERCIAL BUILDING RALEIGH, N. C. BP. o.' Fir Si THESE men are engineers in Sinclair's Burner Labora tory. They test Sinclair SuperFlame Fuel Oil in every type burner. You benefit from these tests when you buy SuperFlame. It is especially refined to give maximum usable heat per gallon in your type burner. Before you order another drop of fuel oil, phone us. You'll like our reliable delivery service. T. T.(Tom) POTTER Agent, Sinclair Refining Company, Inc. Morehead City, N. C. Protect Your Family With A Trust 01 IR Trust Department can act as your adminis UUlltrator, executor, guardian, or trustee, be assignee or receiver, take care of all your finances, under a Living Trust, or afterwards . . . for your family. We are competent . . . responsible . . . per manent Come in and let us explain our Trust Ser vice. START SAVING REGULARLY NOW We Welcome Your Banking Business "A COMPLETE BANKING SERVICL" MEMBER FEDERAL REPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION TVATTr!?? e pay w per cen Per an- iivllvli num on savings accounts and certifi cates of deposit for six months and longer begin ning July 1st, 1939. FIRST-CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Time- Tried-Xested BEAUFORT, PAGE THREE Beautification Residents of Roanoke Island are realizing that they can make this resort spot more attractive to visi tors by beautifying the grounds of their homes and buildings. a'ocut the kind of place your purchase. 4S& Y I i 1 I :i V ' m. i o i i , OILS NORTH CAROLINA rs.'SSg-mSti

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