»!.»•
AMUNDSEN TOILS TO
FEED SCIENCE TO W
Arctft Myelerlee tl» Lan
The word wn, "Science!"
"Te Mfnd the (ronticn of Um
uptiMl frofitkn— tad
M truly intsrestinr and thrilling," he
MmM toMi, yet with I dw and
HwowrlM left to Malta. But the
acientific tUa of expUratiou offers a
splendid field far May year». AU
the young adventurers, the young
men who wish to travel far afield will
find plenty to occupy them in perfect
lag ear acieatific knowledge of balk
the Arctic and the Antarctic ti|l«aa.
There are thousands of afuara miles
•round each pale of which we hare
otfy the vagueat taewMft
And Capt. Roald Amundaan. the
world has now aaen, would isl leave
to the young adventurers such wuHu
For the heart of Capt. Roald Am trod
aen, daapite th? thick layers ot
Seandharian imparairlty with which
he has covered It. l»—atM the heart
of one of "the young mi who wish
to travel lar afield."
He a poke in detail of what ha hoped
to do on hie forthcoming trip with
the nine other acientiata.
"We a hall investigate everything,"
ha told ate. "The temperature of the
Arctic watera and their currents, the
magnetic forcoa, Arctic flora, the ani
mal life, the mineral depoaita, the na
tives, the movements of the ice—of
all thaae matters we shall bring back
a scientific report.
Treasure). Beneath the Ice
"Take that one matter of acientific
atudy of the Arctic currents. That
la of the highest importance from the
viewpoint of practical navi^atian.
Take again the possibility of grant
mineral wealth in thaaa unexplored
regions No on* can say bow much
at it may be there, but the possibility
that it ia very great at least exiaKs
We may confirm such a poaaibility."
"But could large atoraa of gold or
coal be withdrawn from the Arctic
regions, even if you diacovered them
there?" I asked.
"They could he In aught out—'hey
wmrid ha Uuugbt out—If we abowad
Ammmtmm "WW H b 4m
i y*m tWnk. to mI» finri tnptM
pole," IM replied uWr ^fM «4Ml
!■>.I>MItiling fct mMM "Tee f
Mr fc H mjmM "
life hi ■■iilinHmr- I mM 'dto
LiSH REPORTS
! ♦
majr pyfcHrit «MmM kUrann froai
tlM iiiiwwiiiI or anyone aha, any
official information which Ciaariea
m»k« available to |wbHe ia«pirti-.
two en* bivoHimr Um pub
lication of Incawe tax Hate apwri to
inspection last (all at tlM office* of
internal revenue >allac<«n.
TM opinion, wMrh waa nrttrri
bjr Jutin Sutherland. waa unanimotta
atruction of the law, Ikt court find
ing that it waa eat unwiy to peaa
the (mdMi of the preaa. TIm caaae
wm bf ottfht by |W fovwHMll
•faiMt the Kanaaa Cttjr Joereel-feet
and the Baltimore Poet. which aui
•uatained in their contentiona by the
lowtr courta.
"Information which a»arybady ia at
liberty to arqairr and the acquiaHion
of which Coafma anaiii aapacially
Heairoua of facilitation can not, in
tha absence of aoBM-ciaar aad positive
proviaion to the contrary, he re
garded otherwiae than aa public pro.
party, to be paaeed an to othara aa
freely aa the pnaaaaanr' of it auy
■hooee." Justice Souther land atated.
"The contrary view require* a wry
dry and literal reading of the aetata
quite inconaiatant with Ha iegisla
tive hiatory and the known aad da*
dared object* of Ha framera."
Acting on the mart find iocs, the
bureau of internal revenue immedi
ately begun ronaideratian of plana
for a aimilar relaaae of the current
ra4h> for public inapection through*
out the country, but Commiaaianar
j Blair waa of tha opiaion that they
could not be Bade available until af
| tor July 1.
King Break* Rule Sanding Man
To Die
Sofia, May W.-King Boria. of Bul
froria. an enemy of capital puniah
ment, today confirmed the death aan
tencea of three men who took part |
in the Svetl Krai cathedral bombing i
in which 160 people ware killed. Theae
are the find death aentoncea King
Boria ever haa approved. He declar
ed the plot juatified the court-mar-'
! tial'a extreme Judgment. .
Now that King Boria haa broken
hia rule of never aanetionb^r the
death penalty, the atate'proeecutor
> hopea he will apprtave other death
1 sentence* given bolahevik plotter*
who have aotight to apaat hi* t^roae
Two Staters Howe Twin* mm
Same Dor
Franklin, Ky* May N.—-What i*
partiapa without a parallel ia the
birth anna I a of Kentucky waa report
ed hy Dr. W. L Vickera, Franklin
physician, yeaterday who laid he at
tended the dell»ai> of twlaa on the
1 same day of twe aiatera. Mr*. Galea
1 Steamer* and Mra. Dillard Dawea.
|betlf Wving near bate. Brother*. ai»
i tor*, mother*, aeeto and eoeahw en
to to hi tto aria*. Row mM two.
others H high M ft**.
The hortiu of mine* ear toft the
Seaboard train at MM tonight. Oaa
or two of tto export* win ruin over
for two or thro* day* to gat the mja«
ing (n*i fairly itutol as tWir
work of rokabtttatetfec tto mine
Whether the company wilt now
iperatiem ha* aot been definitely
earned Some expree* tto opinion
'hat tto company ha* tooa hard kit
by tto diaaater and totter* that it
will aot to able to weather tto atona.
Thi* of ronrw is tto purest *pee
olation, a* only time can tad whether
it will he reopened or aot.
Virtually all the bodie* have been
either buried locally or Mat to their
former hoses in varioa* portions ef
tto coaatry. Sis went oat late thia
afternoon .on a southbound Baa board
train far Alahaaia. oaa of ttom be
ing draped in tto American colors,
denoting that he waa a former scr
ew man.
Rescue operations were tern por art
ly halted today and all crews called
from the mines so that tto pnmpe
•nuld be started aad the water which
had accumulated at tto bottom of the
■dope could be moved. Many believed
•hat the body of Hudaon lay in thia
water bat identification by Us friends
removed this doobt.
Shortly after noon the mine ex
parts began their careful and pain
staking exploration which r»suited in
the assertion at about 4 o'clock that
no more bodies remained in tto ill
fated mine.
Oppoaa High Salaries Paid to
Officials
Greensboro, May 29.— Guilford
County Tobacco Cooperatives, at a
railed meeting of thair branch of the
Trj-State Association, this afternoon I
bitterly denounced what they called
high paid officials of the concern.
Tto time has coma, John Groom**,
leader among tto co-operatives said,
when officials of the association have
got to work cheaper. B. T. White, of
Raleigh, field worker, siWresssii the
■Meting and it waa following his
«peech. in which he omiaslHsd loyal
ty to the association, that the attack
•>n the high salaried offlehfe was
mads.
Guilford has always been loyal to
the association, with only an* in
stant* of emrttact breaking, and while
still affirming their loyalty, msmkin
of M
fa the ibailh VH the pti
tle loqahsd that
tahemarle, fa the vteMty of
bia University, be provided.
Hi* third proposition «u that
bo allowed to rotafa his pro
ship fa the Union Theological
nary, and that his salary ho not
than tMM.
Tho doctrine of
church
ternary ritual of
"Why NatT"
"If I had My way r .
bo an individual affair," Dr. Fo
has oaid. Anyoao who wanted la ha
Anyone who waatad to be sprfakiod,
I would gladly sprinkle. If anyone
fcruploo against aay rituals.
gladly without baptism
oa confession of Mo faith. Why
not?"
Tho Park Avenue Baptist church
will change Ha name the trastooo in
dicated, when tho new char eh io oc
cupied- Tho now iiiio, It was Mid
will make no mentioa of tho
nation, omitting the descriptive
"1*ptist" from its title.
Hag* Tax P«U kjr Mrs.
son's EaUU
Raleigh, May 23—Tho «Ute de
partment of rrvenoe today received
first payment on the inberitaace tax
for the estate of Mrs. Katharine Rey
nolds Johnson, of Winston-Salem, an
item fa ex com of 9200.0M and a sec
ond check for a corresponding xmount
within • few days.
The average amount of the tax
will be between $400100 and $450,
MW It was indicated
That will be one of tho biggest pay
ments on inheritance the stale ha* re
~eived. . The valoe of the estate i
not be aooortained at the
owing |o the facomptotoaeta of
Inventory, which fa yet to he
Owing to the vastly higher rate
Imposed by the federal
It was eat h» tad that
Statoo department of
and *1.
mjm a* tax on (I
WINSTON-SALEM GIVES
TO MR SUNDAY
tha fart that da growth ud wm Wli
of North Carolina lavt baaa a Mat
tar of ntriiN c t ia aawa
"TW taa MttaHrMrhf (tatas of
tka Sooth, inrltxiinc North Carolina.
Ian of thatr cotton axmay la tha
Waat far mk and Hiwlidi. IV
tha rah* of oar farm pradorta ha*
inrraasrd naarly »l> hundred par
cant within tha oaat twaatv nan.
■till rtllMllM for
No r»m tiliii on tHJKTI
No hay or (oral? raised on IJtZ,
•I® fHM.
No eata rtiwd mi t.lMJM* firms
No egga prifalsi on 100.4 U
No gardens grow on 597.247 farm.
N« dairy cow* kept on
\ No chkkaas raised on 960
tew.
No hitter prodimd on 1.172.72#
farmaL
No pi«s raised on 1JMM4 farm*.
No itwt potatoes raiaod on ljMr
297 farms.
No Irish potatoaa raiaod on 2,006,-'
of To
7 Miles Lomg
Dublin, Ga., May 24.—J. A. Wolfe.;
who Ihrcs near Dublin, has a row of
Ui'eacro 7 t-4 miles In length. It is
planted on a hillside between tar
raeea in a perfect mas* of turns, but
it never breaks the continuity of the
row. This row of tobacco is in ex
cellent condition and the crop is 'pro
mising it continues to steadily.
ML E. Fart, county supervisor for
tobacco, states this row of tobacco is
th- longest he ever has seen.
Datum Griffm Parfacta
Raleigh, May SO —Henry Dennis
Griffin, sentenced to serve SO years
for the alleged mutilation of Joseph
been released from State'* prison oa
bond fat the sum of **0.000. Prison
officials stated that the papers pre
sented for Griffin's raise ss had been
approved by the attorney general of
the state.
Although Griffin's bond was ftaad
by the coart at MMN K waa
by his attorney. H. M. Stubba. of '
Washington. May »^Operstio<i of
the steamship Urittkw mt the
United States Government » Ion at
approximately 11.000.000 test jmr
and it b estimated the loss will ha
the tme for the pending ysar.
This estimate was made today h)r
Ul|k C. Palmer Presidmrt of the
Emergency Fleet Corporation
The loaa no die six hi* ships oper
ated as the Usited States Lines, In
cluding the LMathan, Glscpt Wash*