.^cU Improved For cs C's" In Cafes And *s Of North Carolina . pi-patch Bureau. Waiter He tel. XI;\ WtiKII.I. '!• lYospeets .uv . :: ! ^I'rati'i com n.i's hi'U'ls. res .}«>:.!» l\ 1 'asker 1 lospitalitv . i>!l Ills rotlirii (• : laile ill the .alls the •• Huve U'I't. I'offee). Xocth Carolina :i;> Will be serv .t . > t>i' ; i\»i t ee v. ill in >'ti a par c • uitrv". I'.a.sUer i.mtU. V ait tee I lead "O till' wostoi'll "I hotei and an improved >irnl> unbe ;vision of >' > instruction, hostesses. . any North Caro . I v. rh hotel and ' v. A-heville a:ui :: each place c c made for • N. There has shove. V. : r.-Salem to ..i vany other •e interest; i < * '. t ' the demand ..•.■at *:iat the vo a \ -ion will al y . 1 illtime m • ie iind: while an :>e lound. »e e pi >i(l ;> fi;l! time instructor to give courses for restaurant managers, counter men :uul cooks. i In all meetings with the restau rant men, Baskervill stressed Ute growing volume ot tourist' business m North Carolina. He pointed out that in 1930 the state had more than 3.000.001) motor visitors who spent approximately $102,000,000 in this state. He called attention to the fact that this made "tourists" second only to tobacco as North Carolina's princi pal "cash crop". This year, he added, the tourist trade may produce for I Tar Heels an even greater revenue | than tobacco, because the tourist business is still on the upgrade, while there is likely to be quite a slump in tobacco prices. liaskervill commented on the great interest in better food and service displayed by Air. Wilson, who in spects eating places for member ship in the National Restaurant As sociation. I "He is much more hard boiled than any health department inspec tor and you ought to hear the way he gets those fellows told when their establishments do not come up to the required high standards." said the Hospitality committee chairman. Mr. Wilson commended the Char lotte eating establishment. Basker \ ill added. He pointed out, how ever. that only a very smaO percen tage >>t North Carolina eating places hav e so far measured up to the very exacting standards of the national organization. "I believe that we are on the right track in getting rapid improvement in all hotel and cafe service in North Carolina".-Baskervill said. "Certain ly the spirit of enthusiasm and co operation showed by hotel and res taurant men could not be improved I eat Wave Furnishes Most Of Week's Goofy Stories '•.v (.i \i»\vi\ mi l. . L':t -t.\P>—When _ .t'uiv h.hi: i'ii about • k«-T wt-tis.. here are - >" i : ii'.ht throw that— V' :/on polar bear died :•.in*; to keep cool. Wadena. Minn., lay ' «»itiih and Wouldn't ' was drained. n l-'armville. Va.. hi the sun and then l>oili;e. la., post ■ er's sentence until .• . Ia.. tanner shaved i he had worn tor 5U .'veivhody else was woman drove into lr.il na- station and. • hit !>J». ordered in her ear. - I:il><1 National ■ V.(Mm (ret up) had ■ auto radiators at :i ■ !: >iu freezing. • «>n a Warren. Pa.. jin-dicted a cold il . I'a.. city council . • oval budget! It- anil'eslations v.-ffian wrote the e---u»nis two boys. i' ke county. '» *:i»- sheritT that :u-!i the new jail Hero's Orphan !r ie Gordon Thompson !. r.d from his wicker rives at a Canadian ■ ship from Eng •> young to realize his .led at Narvik during ian campaign, that his ^iiid is waging a battle for Its life. (Central Prest) A Dos Moines. Ia.. woman pro tested vigorously when her pension was doubled. The president ot' Queens college, NYw York, refused a S3,000 raise. An Orangeburg, S. C\. firm posted a notice telling yeggs the combina tion of the sale. And a ghost seen only at a seance was named co-respondent in a Los Angeles divorce case—and a sub poena was issued for it! Heat gag of the week: As the temperature hit 100 degrees in Fny etteville. N. C\. a fugitive tried vain ly to escape from town in a wagon— swathed in blankets. The sheriff the AP correspondent added, pul him in the cooler. Villagers See Three Crashes Wantagh, N. Y.. July 29.—(AD — ; Private aviation waxecl chaotic in this Long Island bailiwick v'esterday. | with two cracknps and a forced! landing within a lew hours and a few | miles of each other. A private plane landing after a pleasure flight at the Fitzmaurice airport in Massapequa pancaked into some brush, critically injuring the • owner-pilot, John Graham, and hurt 1 ing his passenger. Harold Brown. Michael Winicki. a Hempstead air plane factory employe, was taking a spin from Roosevelt Field when his j i:u»tor failed. He glided to a neat landing on an open back road here Hut— A few minutes later Paul Sal tamos, a Roosevelt Field instructor flying with a student, observed Winicki's difficulty and decided to land and ! see if he could be of any help. He overshot the road and landed mack in a farmer's glass cold frames smashing them and the plane, but i escaping uninjured with his pas i senger. Hobson Declared Sane; Under Bond Dunn. July 29.—Mack Hobson, 20, student leader at University of North Carolina, held for an attempt to kill his sweetheart who he claimed "jilt , ed" him. and the wounding of two | others, was released last night on bond of $1,000 furnished by an uncle \T. F. Hobson. and O. T. Wilson. Bond was signed before Sheriff W. K. Sal mon and the youth was returned t( his home after a stay in jail of a week ' and a day. His release came at the end of a day which had seen him undergo a mental examination at the hands of ! two physicians, both of whom de I dared him mentally sane. FAREWELL SERMON Chapel Hill. July 29.—Dr. Donald H. Stewart, who has accepted a call t<> the First Presbyterian church in Frankfort. Ky., in his farewell ad dress Sunday warned against "tho danger of becoming preoccupied with i purely theoretical ideas." HEATHER NOTE j Columbia. S. C.. July 29—(AP)— A youngster about three years old I was the envy of all who saw him as he nonchalantly strolled down a I busy thoroughfare in 100-degree j weather. The little fellow, unaccom Ipanied, had on no clothes. - Vacations in Cuba Gen. Alma/an His appetite unaffected by wrnn plinp: over the Mexican presidential election, General Juan Andn-u Al mazan, one of the candidates, is shown in Havana, Cnha, where ha is vacationing,-, lie claims an over whelming victorv in ih«» hallolinf (Cmlral /'/>•** Climbs From 82,675 to 100, 327 Between 1930 and 1940, Bureau Reports Washington. July 29.— (A!')—Two cities climbed into the 100,000 popu lation class between 1930 and 1940 while two others fell below six fig ures, preliminary tabulations of the census bureau indicated today. Sacr.imento, Calif., climbed from 93.750 to luf).f>;ii) and Charlotte. N. C.« from Pi2.(>75 to 100.327. Lynn. Mass.. dropped from 102.320 to 98.072 and HI I'aso. Texas, o il from 102.421 to 9<>,(i77. between 19^J<» and 194!). This left unchanged at f><> the number of cities between 100,000 the 250.000, but a possible decline of one remained because Gary. Ind., which on the borderline with 100, 12(5 in 1930 has not yet been reported. The only city to climb into the 250,000 class was San Antonio, Texas which rose from 231.542 in 1930 to 253.143. Akron. Ohio, declined from 255.040 to 243.130. There are 37 cities over 250.OO0. ARMS PROGRAM PI TTING MANY .lOBLUSS TO WORK Washington. .July 29.— (At')—The C. I. O. estimated today that 2.500, >00 unemployed would find jobs in he next 12 months as a result of the •earnament program. Actual defense expenditures in this period, the organization's eco lomic outlook said, are expected to be Sfi.400.000.000. Ksti ma tiny tin number of unemployed at lO.'IM.OOO, it said an annual arms expenditure of fifteen to twenty billions would lx rumored to emnloy all til them. Capital Gossip BY HENRY AYERILL I Raleigh. July L'fl.—For the next two I works, your iialeigh reporter is go : iiix tu seek soiim1 place where there i is i lit n the Iheorv that some within | the borders may never have read , them, and on the very practical' 1 grounds that Ihev will lili the rest J ol this column for the day. they are herein appropriated and pa.- , ed j along. Mrs. W. A. Wilson, a grandmother, is mayor and lliree out of fi.ur of 1 the hoard of aide! men are women in I the town government of Dover. The governor of North Carolina is oil'' of two who cannot succeed hiin ] self. The olher is Virginia's. North Carolina has iiio l;irs*o>-1 imi— j iMi*t>i"|><•r.*it* d town in the United St.lie- ( l\'iin;i|>..li. , ] >< ■ | > 111.11 i < 111 !!;>. jliiiU) and liic • i i*i;i! It I (I >cllview. I |>• >|>11i:11i<•!i il). | North (';iri»lin;i is tin- largest ;11 *11)iin111)i producing state. Fawns ;ui' riiiscd on baby bottles | ;i1 ft :iriiiti station in the I'isgah | National Forest. in ar Asheville. There are 12.~> niount;iins in Norlh . C:irolin;i over >00 l'< et high. and II! ; ol' these are over (>.0011 feet. North Carolina contains more lhan ].fifiii mile oi co:isl;il waterways unci over 3.000 square ^niles of coastal j sounds. The largest denim mills in the world are ,;l Circenshoro. Wihon sells more tobacco lhan any | other market. ; More goll is played annually in the Sandhills section ol North Carolina (I'inehurst and Southern Pines) than | anywhere else in the world. The largest textile school in the | world is located at Raleigh (North I ('arulina State College). j \VARKK\TO\ !)F.CII)FS ON Sli'K FOIl ARMORA j Wanvntoii. July 20.- The town ol j Warren ten has taken an option on I seven acres of land on the Warren ton-Liberia road near Neal's Saw mill. with the idea ol' purchasing it for the new Government armoiy. At a meeting held recently iu tin . court house, the county agreed t< appropriate SI7.500 to he used in con struction of an armory, with a Fed eral fund to be added. The property on which tin1 town took an oplioi J can be bought for $75 an acre. I The puzzle of this age—why, with the increase of wealth there should be a corresponding increase of want? May Be French State Despite olficia! German denials, re ports from Berlin persist that plans are under way to form a separate autonomous state of Brittany (shaded), jutting northwestern corner of France. The peninsula was annexed to France crtder a ' •< iity in !"::2. K' a (nil Fress) Funeral Held For Man W ho Predicted I ime ol His Death Dunn. .Inly l!!>. A largo throng of "ill', ited guests" .itlended tile fun eral nl Carson ('. Sink's here Sun day allcinooii an event which lit h;is been planning lor the past lfi I years. The f»9-year-old man's prophecy that he would «I it • in July. 1940. canit I triH1 Saturday afternoon just as lit had planned. and In- was ready anc: Friends who paifl no attention t< j him I'isl week when he went aiounc j and told them goodbye ayd invitee i them to 11 if funeral saw him bin iec I "according 1o instruclions," which hi j left. has! week Surles finished up busi ness matters, cleaned off his come ; lery lot and made other arrange ! molds. Saturday lie quit work ant j went home to die lit- became ill anc j died two hours later. Physicians sail they couldn't understand what caus ed his death. Surles had told Iriends since at i illness years ago trial the Lord spa ret < him. I>111 told him then lie must gi before his (511th birthday, whicl would have been next month, an< he's been getting ready ever since. Many people attributed the Strang* oceuraneo to the strength of "mini over matter" while others said hi I strong belief he would die on a cor I tain date common among member | of the Primitive P»aptist faith—jus ! happened to conic old right. Coroner Melvin McLean was no til'ied. but no inquest was held. Tlier was no ev idence of suicide or fou play. i i Aim delegates to need A TON OF ICE EVERY DAI Raleigh, July 29.—(AP)—N. C State College officials are preparini lor hot weather during the .T/tl I annual farm and home week whicl will start Monday and conlinu j through Friday. Dan M. Paul, secretary and Ireas . urer of the convention, said fiv i tons of ice had been ordered fo j barrels of drinking water which wil 'be placed under shade trees on thi [campus. He figures the farmers am farm women will need a ton of ice j I day in their water. i The final proof ol' self-control i to eat six peanuts and stop or qui bidding before* you offer too mud • t an auction sale. North Carolina Farmers Plan Green Blanket Over Land College Station, Raleigh. July 29. —North Carolina farmers are plan ning to spread a green blanket over their land again this winter, K. Y. | Floyd, AAA executive officer of State College, said today. Up to the present time. Tar Heel growers have ordered -140,000 pounds I of vetch seed and 1,561.DUO pound-: | of Austrian winter peas. They will |plant these seed this fall to provide cover for their land during tin- win ter. Throwing a green cover over the l land will ward off some of the ravag ing effects of soil erosion. The amount of seed ordered by |North Carolina farmers is part of ! more than 5,000,000 pounds of vetch |and winter peas ordered by growers in six of the seven states of the AAA's East Central region. Floyd explained the Pacific north west, particularly Oregon, is sup plying American farmers with seed lor these valuable winter cover crops. ,These supplies are taking the place | el European imports which have been cut oil' as a result of the war. However, the State'College AAA 'executive officer urged those grow ers wln» wish to use these legumes tn place their nrders promptly, lint weather has led to an early harvest in Oregon, anil storage may become a problem. Orders for vetch and winter pens under the AAA grant-ol-aid plan may be placed in the same manner as 'orders for lime and phosphate. The winter peas are charged against con servation payments at the rate of five cents a pound and vetch al nine and one-half cents. No money i> required from the i farmer at the time the seed are !delivered if he is cooperati " in the Agricultural Conservation i ograin. I Vance County Weekly Extension News Sponsored by J. \V. Sanders. County Agent; Mrs. Ilallie F. Plunimer, County Home Demonstration Agent: .1. T. Kiehard son. Assistant County Agent; and Josephine U a ties. Assistant Home Demonstration Agent. Kive Vance county Home Demon stratum club women will attend the Kami and Home Week at Stale Col lege .July 2!) to August 2. The Sequoia Irish potato. one of N. C. State College's latest contributions to the field of horticulture, is receiv ing abundant praise in many s< lions where it has been tried on an experimental basis. This potato was tried on an experimental basis in . Vance county for the first time this year. ; This new variety has out-yielded 1 established varieties consistently din ing a five-year test period in tin; state. During this time, the Sequoia 1 averaged .'■i47.fi bushels to the acre. In 1 the same test. Cobbler yielded 224 ' bushels, Katahdiu 21!1, and Cliip [ pevva 263. The high yielding ability of this potato is attributed largely 1<» il-; . marked resistance to leaf hoppers, flea beetles, and blight, all deadly enemies of thi.-> crop. It has been es timated that leaf hopper alone re | duce yields in western North Caro lina each year from one-third to one I Ample ('are I'rpcd for I'ullet Flock. Poultrymen caring for their pullet flock during the late summer and fall should keep in mind that a little neglect now may be costly later. The good poultryman will see that his birds are well fed on growing • mash, whole corn, whole oats, and ' green feed. Here's why these items 1 are so important in the pullet's die): 1 The growing mash helps to build a ; good egg factory. Corn puts weight on the bird and lays on a reserve of ■ fat for the heavy laying period. Oats ? furnish fiber, and help build resis tance against disease, leather-pick - I ing, and prolapses. Green feed fur ' nishes succulence, minerals, and J vitamins, and is rich in other essen 1 tial food factors. A liberal supply of green feed cub feed bills and aids in growing a more > healthy pullet. While green feed i> 1 more important during the growing i I stage, it does have a definite place in II the bird's diet alter laying starts. Fur late Milliliter grazing and i»r«*t,n feed. .•-«•l<* graz ing h:is mil already been provided, ;i green feed crop >11 ■ • 111>I In- planted llo'.V. Because egg prices j»fi»«*i":illy list* sharply in August. many poultry pro ducers ruin tlu'ir pullets i>v rushing I them u'ith hiving mash. The best plan is to let the pullets mature noimally oil grow'1: mash. corn oats, and gn-en ;V. il. i.efore the birds , aie eliai.i.'il to laying mash. Ihey i should have leached at least "ill per j cent product inn. — 'Scientists Solve Mystery of l>;ilil Mount Rumblings Lake l.ure. July :!!» (AIM The mystery of rumbling I'.ald mountain has been solved. Members o| the National Spccleo logical society, who show scant re spect lor the laws of gravity and the tempers of sleeping copperhead snakes, came here Irom Washington and exploded the myth that the mountain's rumble comes from the depths ol' the earth. The scientists crawled through the precipitous fissures that honeycomb the huge rock a thousand feet above Lake Lure, and found that the noise is caused by boulders which break loose from the top of subterranean crevices and thunder down to the I bottom of the caves. The shape of several of these caves is such that they act as sounding boards, and the rumble can be heard in lite valley far below. The caves never had been explored fully before, the state news bureau said. Law can embody and realize the j conscience of the better half ol' u j people, and can force the wor.ser ■ half np 1o its standard. The reason smokers find Chesterfield com pletely satisfying is their Right Combination of the best cigarette tobaccos that grow in all To baccoland, U. S. A. and in Turkey and Greece. You can look the country over and you won't find another cigarette that gives you anything like Chesterfield's Cooler...Definitely Milder... Better Taste. Jgfo seb* j|| BETTER TOBACCO FOR BETTER SMOKING Every pound of tobocco that C5me» from the oudion room floor g0#» under Ih. fiflid infection of men long trained in requi-J menu of Cheiterfield » Ri«hf Com binotion of the fineil loboccoj gco*" in oil Toboctolond. (Puturt tram lh« new Mm "TOBACCOIAND, U $ A "I r _ BETTER - TASTING DEFINITELY MILDER Copyright 1949, Liccitt 4 Mrm Toiicco Co.