Vlacon County From Near The following very interesting let ter has been received by The Press ' from1 R. E. Berry, who is located at Central, Alaska, 50 miles from the Arctic Circle : . Central, Alaska, February y, V)S). Editor Franklin Press: Having been born and reared in Macon county, I always look for ward to receiving The Press. I thoroughly enjoy reading your in dependent editorials which cover such a variety of questions, both of domestic and national importance. As. they are of an independent na ture they give both sides of the question. I have been in Alaska for about three years, and have been employ ed by the C. J. Berry Gold Mining comoanv. of California practically all of that time. 1 find the gold mining business very interesting. There are two types of mining quartz and placer. Quartz is where tVm rrrAA Ic ctill in thv mrc ( nuarty state and therefore has to be crush ed and separated by different pro cesses. On the other hand, due to the action of glaciers which moved along the valleys possibly thousands of years ago, and literally crushed the gold out of the quartz and de posited it along the valley floor, we have placer gold. A prospector would pan these streams and know how much the gold bearing gravel was worth per square yard. If it was worth enough he would install either a hydraulic plant or a dragline. In late years, with the higher price of gold, they are using still another method the dredge. Hydraulic plants cost about five to ten thousand dollars. Draglines (which are somewhat like a steam shovel) cost about fifty thousand dollars. Dredges, cost from one hun dred thousand to five hundred thousand dollars. In rare cases they may cost three-fourths of a mil lion dollars, like the mammoth Goodnews Bay platimum dredge. Gold Ruth Days Are Con Gone are the days when '& bum could become a millionaire almost overnight. Rich strikes now are al most a thing of the past. Therefore, the ' business is changing more to expensive draglines and dredges, I might add that where they took out millioas of the yellow metal by hydraulic methods in the old days, they are dredging the same "ground today and taking out more millions. In the old days they mined only the richest and highest grade ground, and they paid exhorbitant . prices for supplies, wages, etc. , The following prices will give you an idea of what they paid during the cold rush davs comoared with the prices of today: Flour, 100 lbs., $85 to $100, (today's price is $10) ; tobacco, $5 per lb., (today's price is $0; eggs, $1 each, (today's price is. 60 cents per dozen.) The smallest coin used here at that time was 25 cents, therefore if yau bought a five cent pencil, cigar or anything priced at a nickel you paid 25 cents, and were glad to get it even at that price. A Lucky Swede A true story known throughout the Klondikes (Canada) and Alaska, concerns a Swede we shall call Mr. Samson. A couple of gamblers made Mr. Samson drunk and sold him a mining claim they owned 'for $800. When he sobered up he tried to sell it back to them for almost any one else, but since everyone thought it was worthless he had no takers. At last he .said, "Well I tank I go up and sink a shaft on my claim." So Mr. Samson did, and when he reached bedrock he began to shovel out gold. After working out his claim, he took out only two million dollars worth of gold. I'll bet the gamblers left the country. Scores of creeks have each pro duced from a few thousand to thirty million dollars worth of gold. The richest was the Eldorado in the Klondikes (Canada). I would like to mention at this time that u- Ty 1 l:i '. j i . . urc iviuiiuikcs in vanaaa nas oeen the world's richest and biggest placer district. The Nome and Fairbanks districts in Alaska have also produced hundreds of millions of the yellow metal. Dawson, (Klon dikes, Canada.), Nome and Fair banks during the gold rush days each had populations of forty thou sand. Today each has a population of only two thousand. Man Writes Arctic Circle Beautiful Display of Light As Alaska is so far north, we have the midnight sun in summer and beautiful displays of northern lights in .winter. .Imagine a giant curtain with all the vivid colors of the rainbow .stretched across the heavens. They are continually mov ing as if a gentle breeze was blow ing against them. - Great Temperature Variation Most people in the. Southern states invariably think or Alaska as a place of snow and ice, but this is riot the case. We have some real hot days in summer and tre mendously cold days m winter. We are able to see the sun 24 hours a day during June and part of July. During part of December and Jan uary we cannot &ee the sun at all as it does not rise above the south ern horizon. Of course it is light for three or four hours during the day. As it is dark all day during December above . the Artie Circle they close the schools until it be gins to lighten up again. The temperature varies from 100 degrees above in summer to 72 de grees (record) below in winter. The coldest we have had this winter has been 52 below. Last year the cold est was 60 below zero. Since we have such cold winters, rivers and lakes freeze to a great depth. In fact they use the rivers and lakes for hauling and freight ing instead of the highways. Important Alaska .Industries Some other important Alaska in dustries are coal, copper and plat imum mining. Her biggest industry is fishing, with an annual value of thirty million dollars. Gold, which ranks second, has a value of 26 mil lion dollars. - Alaska's purchase from Russia in 1867 by Secretary of State Seward for seven and one-half million dol lars and was called by many at that time "Seward's Folly." Since that time she has proven to be one of Uncle Sam's best investments. She has produced almost one-half billion dollars worth of gold alone inv addition to almost pne-half bil lion dollars worth of other products. Journalistically speaking, the gold rush days' papers have had colorful careers. During the Klondike stam pede a couple of newspaper men from the states brought a printing press into the district. They had to haul it over dangerous snow covered passes and across frozen rivers and lakes for hundreds of miles at thousands of dollars of expense. After reaching Dawson and installing it they began to turn out a paper of only two or four pages, selling for 25 cents. They paid for the press and the freighting cost after one year of operation. Alaska is much larger than the combined area of all the southern states. Her population is only sixty thousand (1930 census) with about one-half this total being natives (Indians and Eskimos). I would like to correct an error which appeared in a recent issue of The Press. Central is about 140 miles northeast of Fairbanks and 50 miles s0uth of the Artie Circle. In closing, as I look out the win dow and see the theomometer which reads 50 below zero, I think of "Sunny Dixie." Very truly yours, R. E. Berry. Every Farm Family To Get Publication Each person on the farm needs three bushels of wheat, two bush els of corn, 1.8 bushels of Irish potatoes, two bushels of sweet po tatoes, 85 pounds of pork and lard, 30 dozen eggs, four gallons of sorghum, and quantities of about 15 other foods to maintain health throughout a year. This information is contained in a new publication prepared by E. W. Gaither, analyst of the State college extension service, and now being distributed to every farm family in North Carolina. It is de signed to aid the farm family in planning its food and feed re quirements, and crop rotations. Dr. I. O. Schaub, director of the extension service, is having the pamphlet distributed through the county farm and home agents, but he announced that copies are also available upon request to the Agri cultural Editor at State college, Raleigh, for Extension Circular No. 235, "Facing Farm Facts." In Addition to tables listing the THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACONIAN Key Buildings of the ' - ft '- ' v', J?"WC t f ' , If C x - r ' v ! ; - f. I r '.' 1 Artist's sketch of the 200-foot Perisphere within which visitors to the New York World's Fair of 1939 will view, from a revolving platform 'suspended in mid-air, a dramatization of the World of Tomorrow. Clusters of fountains will screen the piers supporting the Sphere so that the great ball will appear to be poised on jets of water. The 700-foot triangular Try Ion at the left a unique archi tectural form will serve as a Fair beacon and broadcasting tower. food requirements for one person, there are tables showing how much feed is required for one hen, one dairy cow, one beef animal, one hog, one sheep and one horse or mule. The circular also contains a garden . calendar, showing what, when and how to plant dozens of vegetables adapted to this section, and a crop rotation table which iJuXIS BEER BUYS OF 3 MILLION .AM Good crops at good prices . . . Isn't that the kind of farm relief that farmers really want? Since 1933, the brewing industry has bought 15 billion pounds of American farm products . . . paying good prices, too. Add to that, the million jobs that Beer has made ... and the fact that Beer pays a mil lion dollars a day in taxes: local, state, national To safeguard these BEER. ..a beverage of moderation 4 New York World's Fair lists the general crops, and other crops which follow best to conserve and enrich the soil. Dr. Schaub said, "It is not pos sible to predict definitely in ad vance what price farm products will bring. Those depending upon money received from the sale of farm products .with which to pur chase food for the family and feed sBoJocThat Concern You -here. MR. FARMER, is A BICNEW CUSTOMER 5 THE PRODUCE FARM ACRES advantages, the brew-, 40th St., New )nVu o xt THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1939 for the livestock often find them selves without the necessary funds. The farmer who produces his liv ing largely from the farm and who conserves the fertility of the soil usually lives well every year and in the end has more cash as a re sult of his labors." RELIEF A new plan of distributing food to relief families by issuing them stamps good for commodities in grocery stores will be tried as an experiment in a limited number of cities. AAA Dnrirxv U ind rmt VMT th& agricultural adjustment administra tion program was applied to 282, 629,000, acres, or almost 65 per cent of the total crop land of the United States. HOME TALENT . State College's, annual farm and home week, to 'be held July 31 August 4, will feature more farm ers and farm women on the pro gram, announces John W, . Good man, assistant extension director. Bryant Furniture Co. EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME AT REASONABLE PRICES I Phone 106 Franklin, N. C. v. BOTHERED with Rats, Mice, Roaches. Use Bestyet. Guaranteed. Sold by Henry D. West, FRANKLIN, N. C Loyal Order of Moose Franklin Lodge, No. 452 Meets In America! Lesion Hall Every Thursday Night 7:30 O'CLOCK Billy Bryson, Secretary ANOHfRE.MR.WORKMAH ARE A MILLION JOBS madebyBEERV BEER. PAYS A MILLION lDOLLARSaDAYintaxes NATI0N-WID5, AND HERE.KAR.TAXPAYER. IS A HUGE SUMT0 LIGHTEN YOUR TAX BURDEN! m . m a m tern. ia Ing Industry stands ready to cooperate fully with , all law enforcement authorities. The brewers can enforce no laws . . . but they do insist that retail beer outlets should give no onense to anyone. . Would you like a booklet that describerthe ?feWefi program of direct action? Address: ert ,ustr,al foundation, 19 East York, N. Y. ..m --1. 3