' v' I H IB t^H Y5 gr- - ssacaaaa^-g. li.00 A YEAH IN ADVANCE IN TH1 " THIS WEEK IN~~ WASHINGTON Washington, August 34?The South in general and the State of Georgia in particular have become the focus of attention here. In GeoJrgia, the mo& clear-cut political issue so far between the President and the anti-New Deal Democrats of the South has been brought to a head by the President himself, in his nublic declaration of opposition XT io Srnsator Walter F. George and }# appeal to the voters to elect Federal District Attorney Lawrence Camp to the Senate. The whole South has been pictured as the most backward and ecoeco nomic ally handicapped part of the Nation in a sixty-page report by ,t,he Nat|im ception that by electing him twice to the Presidency, the people of the United States have ^given hifr a mandate to1 take definite action 1.* rro/?t nil pponomic inequalijties He said that Senators and Representatives of the Democratic Parfy who do not befceve in his objective and will not /fighit wholeheartedly for them, do not belong" in the party. No such direct and personal attack upon a Senator of his own part}-' has ever been made by a President, so far as the memories of the oldest political correspondents here go. If Senator George is defeated at the September primaries, it will be a clean-cut, personal victory for the President. If the Senator does win a renomination, Washington observers do not see how that result could be interpreted as anything but a stunning blow at Mr. Roosevelt's personal prestige, and otne which would still further widen the breach between the two wings of the Democratic party. The indications are that the m: .' t'' " ? ?- ' ' JI^B 5011 SYLVA, NORTH CABOl TENANTS CAN BOY FARMS BY SEPT II Jack son County has recently boon i fied vefceri?rian,M Dr. Moore added. | THE PRIMARY?NOT ELECTION o??i Tnmnlrins Djr van m. winy...... , President Roosevelt, and the course I ?T events have focused the attentior of the people upon the direct pri jnary. The primary, heralded a fev j y? ws ago as a Teal pollt cal i form j is coming more and motre into disrepute, thrughout the country. Charges of fraud, manipuIation,~"cfcercion and the lake are heard from North, South East and West. Wijth the dwindling 1 hopes of -the minority party greatly increasing its representation in the House or the Senate, it is reported far and yide, and even in North Carolina, that great numbers'Of men and women of the political party that is not in the majority, have swarmed I to the polls and deliberately fcaken Parl in the nomination of candidates, not of their political party. Some of Jthdse, perhaps many of them, have actually changed their political1 affiliations, and expect to vote for the nominees in November. But it is openly charged that the par ticipation of Republicans in Democratic primaries, in many of the states, was a deliberate attempt to " " * 1 v ?-vP fhA maioritv deteat m cities participating in the \VfA suf l vey of municipal government, spon> sored by the North Caroling League of Municipalities and the Local Gov - emment Commission, Mayor H. Gib i son announce'i1, yesterday. The Mayor fs a member of . a state wide committee of municipal officials who will assist in the survey, add is chahman of the local adindnistratibc ' committee. City eletrk M. D. Cowan ' i8 secretaiy of the committee, and the L other members are Leonard Golden 1 and Dan K. Motore. Ti e research workers -wilt transfer 1 information from city records ai.d will cover every phase of municipal ' government. The project's experts S :-*ill-anslyze, digogbmadfthm all 4he 1 data obtained by the' survey and X' U mAni. a /irtYYvrvrnTiPrVssive mil IIVIII It pt tjji t* VVIU|/A 1 nicip&l reference book fqfr city officials. A college text book and a righ scrooi text book will be based upon " the facts revealed by the survey. I NEWS SUMMARY IF : JULY EMPLOYMENT SERVICE ACTIVITY Slight Decrease Shown In Placements For July L Raleigh, August 22?Job placements, which have been mounting steadily since last January suffered a slight decline in July, according to ' | R. Mayne Albright, Director of the 1 State Employment Service. The ' 6569 placements made by the 45 of1 firers of the State Service represent > i ed a drop of 9 percent from the previous month. The regular increase during Janu' ary-June when placement records ' were, January 3362, February 4020, ^ March 5903, April 6595, May 7192 and 1 June 7222, charted the course of business pickup throughout the State. 1 The slight decline in July may be at> tributed more to seasonal factors than to any cessation in the stady improvement of business conditions. With 16,733 new registrations of 1 job-seekers during the past month ' and 11,938 renewals of the applica' tions of persons already registered, the active file of job-seekers totalled i 170,584 as of July 31 as compared to ' a total of 79,267 as of July 31, 1937. 8OURCE8 OF UNEMPLOYMENT Since January 1938 each month has shown manufacturing to be the chief source of unemployment as reflected by Employment Service registering of new applicants, accounting in some instances for as many as 1 90 percent of the applications. While manufacturing is still the chief source of applications, agricul> ture follows it a close second. During July 8,648 of 30 percent of all aplications were last employed in some type of maunfacturing; the largest Al_*. number 3,963 representing ICAIUWt represented 23 percent of the applications received. DI8TRICT SUMMARIES A comparison of June and July registrations by local areas would be misleading since die July figure includes renewals as Well as new ap J J. ' ^ .'^ ' ______ t ' f $240 A TEAR IN AI :' 4? ? f C TODAY and 5 TOMORROW 1 ( By Prmk ^kir Stock bridge) HELIUM . \ I. . advantages By the aid of helium new records o x?r deep-sea diving were set in July. . ThiA gas, ywAjBinHti airships to * soar, also enables human beings tP ^ go deeper in the ocean then anyone has ever gqne before. . S , The triek is to pomp a mixture of f hefum and oxygpn into the diver's s helmet while hej is submerged. Wit- * Ham Baddars, Master Diver of the. tTnitdd. Btdtes way? went' down *401 I feet frt^m the U. S. S. Falcon and re I m&ined submerged at that depth for 1 haHf an bourn, with no ilT effects. . < The greatest fdanger to deep sea J is the necessity of keeping the < air pressure inside the diving suits J as great ah that exerted by the se&v J water from outside, which increases ?"*!? +l?n ilai#)) TTndrtr mp.h hicrh. TV Al/U VUV UV^Jjwui w a?wv? ^ pressures the nitrogen of the air pumped in penetrates the bloodvessels and causes a paralysis which ] 1 is often fatal after the diver has been 1 hauled up. With he$um substituted j for nitrogen that danger in eliminated. " ( TREASURE ? . . recovery < Fdr nearly 150 yean efforts have been going on to recover 10 million dollars' worth of gold bars which f were sunt when the ship "Lutine" I was wrecked off the coast of Hoi- * land in 1790. About a million dol- a Ilalrs have been salvaged. Only a few weeks ago divers brought up an* a other bar worth about ten" thousand n dollars. , n ; Off the colast 'of Portugal divers have recovered nearly half of the r 4 million dollars of gold which went c down witli the ship ^ " a few years ago. The ^Lufiitania" carried two or three million in gold when she was torpedoed by a Ger- jj man submarine in 1915. The wreck ^ has been located off the Irish coast, r an(^ sooner or later that gold will be j brought np. v la AH along the Atlantic coast of the L United States are wrecks of ships thpft carried gold or silver, but which a fl* too deep'to be l^acHed by ortfinaryt means. There is a million dollars.or E so in copper bars in the hnll of the "Pontiac" 300 feet deep at the bOt- * of Lake Huron. Improved diving ap- 1 paratus will make the recovery of * the most of such sunken treasure pos # 1 sible. . \i i( SUNSPOTS . . . predictions ( Whenever astronomers see through 1 their telescopes an inft-ease * in the * number and violence of magnetic J ' storms on the surface of the sun, they (( which so far have come true. TEcv 1 predict that there will be serious * drotugUte over a period of years, and 1 that in that period there will be eij- c cessive static interference with radio ^ signals. 1 Suflspot cycles run about eleven ( years; five or six years of activity. ( then an equal period of ruiescencc. * The present cycle began in 1931, and until 1937 there was an almost con I stant succession of drought years. n Now, astronomers say, the magnetic n storms on the sun are subsiding. c Thtre have been only two flare ups c since last Summer, the latest in c April this year. Simultaneously, He e 'past yew has been marked by the t] heaviest and most wide y, dispersed C rainfall in years. In the finf, half of j 3938 the average rain and snow was * 12 percent above normal' for the j i) whole United States. The "dust v bowl" is green once more and the 1 largest crape in years are' growing o in the wheat and corn country4 ii ed by its coffee crop; the Central a MILK .... refrgeration h It must have occurred to everybody at one time or another that it w would foe a grand thing icf milk could a f< plications. However, a comparison ai of placements and present active tl file will retain its significance. c< ASHEVTLLE DISTRICT: Place- t ments in the Asheville District during p July, 791, represented a drop of 4 per- p cent, placing it fourth in the number of placements for the month. The ac- b: tive file increased 13.4 percent and stands at 28,151. ai Asheville, Placements: Private;334; ai Public; 68; Registrations 867. \ Bryson City, Placements: Private; n 28; Public, 74; Registrations 701. d ? - ?TV-! ... A Hendersonviiie, Jr'iacemenxs, rnvdic, A 9; Public; 49; Registrations, 371. fl Marion, Placements, Private; 4 ,Public n 69; Registrations, 624. 4 I Murphy, Placements, Privatje;34; 8 Public, 2; Registrations, 296. fc Rutherfordton, Placements, Private; * 10; Public, 92; Registrations, 494. j f Waynesville, Placements, Private; 66 8 Public, 1; Registrations, 267, x j t t^;. , ^ *^|mB - ^InUltmrRl ""^ ^' Y:^ MMMMMMW * 3 Sylva and Dillshoro schools wiU j pen far the tall term cm tfwlaj '] f next week, August 28. It b believed that fthe enrollment I F^?lfctajto is thq principal of i There are but tyree change in the j I lenonnel of the teachers . Claude LI lamiltokvand W, A* Hatfield, M * ? al? !- ** * ..UaaI mm> JB tte lip | sancy caused by tie resignation of J *ias Leah NieWa^now^Mrs. O'lWI 1 Bankhead, in the eLanenlary acbeoi. | BALSAM * |f| Dr. G. A- Cox, of Dellg?h)de, Ha., | las purchased Balsata Lodge. Ha | expect* to remodel it and he and tfrs. Cox will operate iit neatt year. / Mr. Hoy Dundan and family, oh | Hade Springs, Va., arrived Surv- j lay, and are visiting Mrs Duncan'a J J 3mothidn, Mrs. W. S* Christy. Mr. Claud Thorne of Phoenix Lj izona is visiting fa&s brothers, Mr. Robert Thorne and Mf. John Thorne, II nd bis sistorsT^ffisTtfyr^e Thome J J nd Mrs. Stanley. 3 1 Mr. and Mrs. Bill Giessler of Hew fl ik, N. J., are occupying their sum 2 9 mr home here vfhich has been amed 4'Ft. Oeissler." 4. j Many Balsamites are attending tho evdval at Mt. Pleasant Baptist bur eh, near Willits. ?r . New Fun program The 1939 farm program, as out-' - - . ?j ii- a . ?? . nect oy use AgncuAUinu nujuBmicui n administration, is similar in most H espects to the 1938 program, says I L Y. Floyd, AAA executive oflfeer fl t State Collage. Cattle owners of Beaufort County I re cooperating satisfactorily with the ; ? Jangs disease. . >e kept sweel and pore indefinitely, I vithoi^t refrigeration. Weil, that *9 I lappened. Out of on? of the largest: I jheraical research laboratories has I some a process, which has been patented, for preserving whojj? tmitk ak oom temperatures for as long as hree or four months. The ithing is done by adding by- I Irogyeu peroxide , and potassium iodide to the freteh milk and then I leafing it to 13l degrees for fifteen ninutes to an hour. As iitthe Lrcfps of peroxide and a third of *. | Irop of the iodide to a gallon of I nilk so treated are said to bt enough to kill all the bacteria which ;ause milk to sour, more effectively I han pasteurization does it. According to the Ubqr^tory re- I lofts the taste of the milk retains unimpaired for weeks, and o trace of the hydrogen peroxide an be found in it by the mdst deliate chemical tests. The slighte trace >f iodine makes tre milk ben- Ul ficial, especially in regions where he wafer-supply is lacking in iodine HOPS . . . . pile ::1 Nothing is more certain in the long an to starve the farmers who grow H b than a high-paying crop soiled o a particular area, for which. .11 here is a brisk demand. That is one f )the paradoxes of agriculture* and a it lies the reasota. for much of the gricultural distress of which we ave heard so mneh in recenft years. A single "big money" crop is ally's a temptatiQft. to farmers to Danaon everyrajng exug iu use ort to get rilh quick. But as soon s it haa been demonstrated thak?^ here are bag profits to be mad<\ smpetdtian becomes so vigorous hat prices fall below the cost of roduetion and the farmer who has ut his land and his capital into a peculative one-crt(p vemture goes rake. Cotton is America's classic eg* rrfple, but citrus fruits, tobacco ad many others have rained communities into which they poured wealth when trey were first intranced. Brazil has been all but rainmerican republics which once I ou risked by growing bananas are I ow impoverished to the point [where they have to impost food applies, so many & their farmers II ave neglected everything else to prow bananas. Like abotumxa gold nine, the How of wtattfc fr4* % I] ingle-crop fanning system is tarn* o peter amt in tine. H