PAGE TWO
THE TYRRELL TRIBUNE
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT COLUMBIA, N. C.
allen j. green ::;.z.:.z..z::z.z:.En,TOß
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Ritered as Second Class Matter at the Postoffice at Columbia, N. C.
VOL : , I APRIL 10.. 1941 NO. 19
NEWSPAPERS CAN SERVE
* a newspaper can occasionally do harm with the
careless reporting of news, or the irresponsible advocacy
ot causes ot doubtful value, in many cases it can do a great
deal of good. One recent instance, which has been widely
praised, and has received favorable comment in many quar
ters, is this newspaper’s reference to the importance of the
fishermen weighing every shipment of fish they send out,
and keeping a record of the weights, to check against the
account of 3ales that come with returns.
All good honest dealers prefer to do business in a busi
nesslike manner. But there are dealers who shortweight
the fishermen of three to five pounds on a box of fish. When
shad are selling a.t 50 cents a pound, and fishermen lose on
several shipments, the loss runs into a goodly sum during
the run of a season.
Some fly-by-night dealers make a lot of money in this
manner, at the expense of our hardworking fishermen. They
occasionally bait the fishermen by offering a cent or two
more on the pound, than prices paid by old reliable dealers,
who for many years, have loaned money to the fishermen.
This inducement that a few fishermen fall for, is offset by
the chiseling on weights. Hence it can easily be seen, that
the fisherman who weighs his fish can have a ready check
on returns, and he will usually find that he gets more money
from the old reliable dealer, who serves him year after
year, in good season, and bad, and who lends him money,
and often makes donations to community enterprises.
Another matter the fishermen should take more to heart:
There have been many instances where fishermen pledged
to ship their fish to a dealer who has loaned them money
to finance their work, send their shipments in the name of
a child, or in the name of some practically non-existent
partnership. In this manner, the dealer is unable to deduct
the payments promised him. This is a practice entirely
unworthy of those who pretend to be good citizens. More
over, it works against the best interests of the honest fish
erman. and the industry generally.
In order to build up the fishing industry, much attention
should be given to correcting these abuses. Now when thje
industry is ailing, is the time to give it good medicine. Let’s
stick by the good dealers. This newspaper will help you
in this and other worthy causes. A newspaper can help.
BROUGHTON TALKS SQUARELY
Credit is due Governor J. M. Broughton for his Jackson
Day dinner speech in Raleigh in which he said labor racket
eers will be given no quarter in North Carolina. We need
more of this talk in the nation, and we need action to follow
it. Too long has this nation catered to wops, kikes, social
ists. and communists, and God knows what‘else who have
gained control of organisations and are robbing the work
ers, to their great loss and at the expense of the nation.
Led by gangsters, racketeers and money grabbers general
ly many laboring groups are striking for unreasonable
wages to come out of the. pockets of the public and be paid
out on defense projects. These same crooks are willing to
permit other and better citizens to be forced into compul
sory military service at a dollar a day. Unless this Govern
ment takes a hand and controls such unpatriotic labor and
drives from these shores their despicable leaders, it is not
worthy the name of Government, and will most certainly
fall and not be long doing it. When Government isn t big
enough to protect all its citizens it is a failure. Many such
leaders would serve thq country better if lined up before a
firing squad.
AMERICA USUALLY TRIMMED
Not only with labor, but it is an old American custom to
take a trimming particularly when it comes to dealing wit
foreign nations. In nearly every contract made with them,
many of them for the protection wholly of the other fel
low, “Uncle Sam has come out at the little end of the horn.
Witness the Spanish-Amencan war when what this coun
try took it also paid for in cash. In the world war, with
exception, the many nations that borrowed our
monev neglected to pay it back, but could afford to spend
v^rLms g on Ornaments. Unde Sam wins all the ware
he goes into by the sheer force and weight of his resources,
pays more dearly for them than anyone else.
OTHER EDITORS
PROPER FOOD CURES DISEASE
What you eat and the quantity
thereof probably measures the
length of your life.
The importance of diet in the
well-being of individuals has been
increasingly recognized in recent
decades although one easilj won
ders why, for so many years, no
one seems to have undertaken a
real study of the fuel content ot
the human body.
There are wise people who be
lieve that, given a proper diet, the
individual would avoid disease. 31
course, proper diet, spread over
several generations would be neces
sary because of physical weak
nesses that are transmitted.
Doctors have learned that lacK
of certain substances in food are
rerponsible for some of our ills.
discovery may be made
about other scourges that inflict
suffering aH death upon human
beings. ________
LEGALIZED DOODLING?
Perhans it is the beginning of a
trend. In West Orarifce; New’ Jer
sey, a telenhone booth has been
lined with blackboards and equip
ped with chalk. For doodlers it
now has all the comforts of a res
taurant tablecloth. Doodling, a
some doodlers may not know,
though many who doodle do, is
something that the Pharaohs seem
to have encouraged—if one can
judge by the hieroglyphs on pyra
mid walls—as an honorable pro
fession; but its practice nowadays
has become surreptitious.
It has been driven underground,
onto subway walls; or
corners Hkte telephone booths-
Host people doodle in solitude. But
a few still enjoy scratching a pad
>wjth a pencil while listening to lec
tures, or waiting for trains. They |
only ask that no curious or criti-;
cal eye may watch the progress of j
the elaborate designs-upon-designs;
that their uninhabited surrealist
fancies conceive.
The doodlers who doodle on
scratch pads have always been j
above reproach but now it seems
even the doodler who is inclined to j
mar walls, chairs, tables, menus, |
napkins, or anything else he can.
get a pencil on, is looked upon as,j
if not forgivable, at least inevit-.
able. That seems to be the mean-1
ing of the blackboarded booth. I
Possibly the thought behind such j
conveniences is that if you give a |
man enough rope he will hang
himself, and if you give a doodler (
enough space he will get himself
so involved in those never-ending,
ever-curving, quite unnerving lines
of his that one doodle will last him
a lifetime.—Christian science Mon
itor.
lots of dodging
A medical scientist hopes to do (
something to bring about longer,
life. He will be satisfied with'
about 125 years. It seems that it’s
a question of arteries and he’s go
ing to do something with or to
them to keep them young.
But something would have to be i
done about all that leisure. If one!
should retire at 65 and begin his
pension he would have about. 60
years of solid loafing to do, going
around worrying people. That
would be simply too much spare
time. . ...
Beside, while the scientist might
be able to do something about ar
teries* he couldn’t do anything at
all with traffic accidents. As the
arteries improve, the death toll on
street and highways increases.—
Shelby Daily Star.
MAYBE RECALCITRANT
SENATORS CAUSED IT
North Carolina Got Mighty Small
Proportion of Federal Ex
penditures
Some think that because our
Senators were at loggerheads with
President Roosevelt during most of
his administration, we got over
looked in the distribution of Fed
eral relief expenditures, so that
North Carolina got a mighty
small part. Others think maybe
the money went into doubtful
states, and to buy off Republican
states, inasmuch as the South is
solidly Democratic, but this is dis
counted by South Carolina and
Florida having gotten nearly twice
as much per capita.
j We don’t know the answer, but
! the following editorial from Carl
i Goerch’s State Magazine is inter
esting at this time:
j North Carolina and Relief
Per capital expenditures by the
federal government for relief and
relief work in North Carolina for
the period from April 8, 1935, when
funds became available under the
Emergency Relief Appropriation
I Act, through 1940 were the lowest
tin the nation.
| We doubt that many of our read
jers knew this. So far as we our
selves are concerned, we were in
i complete ignorance of it.
j But it’s a fact, and here are the
figures to prove it:
Dist. of Columbia $361.74
Montana 251.26
|New Mexico 157.82
Washington 134.73
New Y'ork 116.91
i Illinois 108.36
California 101.31
West Virginia 98.37
Florida 89.40
South Carolina 80.76
Tennessee 59.45
I North Carolina 48.46
j Those are just a few states, pick
jed at random. The national aver
age for relief expenditures per
capita in the country is $102.28.
I You’ll notice that the expenditure
: in North Carolina is less than half
that amount.
Altogether there are twenty-
I eight states which get more than
■ twice as much as North Carolina
' does. There are ten states that get
more than three times as much.
! When we say “relief expendi
tures,” we include many agencies,
among them being Works Projects
Administration, Public Works Ad
ministration, Civilian Conservation
Corps, National Youth Administra
tion, Department of Agriculture,
Farm Security Administration, and
so on.
There are two conclusions to
draw from these extremely inter
esting figures. One is that North
i Carolina is in better shape than
any other state in the union; the
other is that North Carolina hasn’t
been receiving her rightful share
of funds.
Frankly, we do not know which
conclusion is correct, hut regard
less of that, it would appear that
North Carolina is having to sup
port its sister states to a greater
! extent than does any other state
jin the union.
I And the reason we’re calling this
to your attention is not in the way
of comnlaint, but merely to let you
know the position which North
i Carolina occupies in connection
I with the financial stat us of the
nation.
i It’s worth paying a little extra
i just for the privilege of living and
doing business in North Carolina.
j
GAMBLING ON THE TIDE
(Statesville Landmark)
! The New York Daily Times,
| heartily approving Senator Iley
jnolds’ stand against the lease-lend
[bill, reminds that “Senator Rey
nolds does not come up for re-el ec
ition untill 1944, and it is surmised
jhe thinks that by 1944. the senti
! ment of the people will have chang
ed; that those who now think we
should be a Sir Galahad and St.
George combined, slaying the
dragon without getting hurt our
-1 selves, will have a different outlook
on war and intervention.”
j Senator Reynolds may be right.
| Ninety per cent of his constituents
i could be wrong, of course, but it
{will be just too bad for the Sena
| tor if he is no lighter than when he
scrambled out of Europe to avoid
j the war which he solemnly prophe
sied wouldn’t eventuate.
| We wouldn’t say that the voters
of North Carolina would crucify
i Senator Reynolds at the polls simp
ly because of his stand on the lend
lease bill. We are a tolerant lot
and can forgive a lot of things if
convinced of the honesty and sin
cerity of conclusions that run coun
ter £o those of a majority of us.
But when the voters are called to
dump all of their objections on the
scales and weigh them against the
I merits of their Senator, it’s liable
! to play the dickens with any ambi
tiofrf Senatbr Reynolds may have to
succeed himself.
Senator Reynolds admits that
public reaction in North Carolina
to his stand on the lease-lend bill
iat first was quite unfavorable but
! contends that “Sentiment in North
Carolina and throughout the nation
is changing rapidly,” and that this
shift in indicated in the mail he re
ceives from his constituents in
North Carolina. According to his
tabulation, sentiment is split 50-50
in this State. Which will be news
indeed to most of us.
If fifty per cent of the people of
North Carolina are willing to
string along with Senator Reynolds
on this issue, then we need to be
bond tor tb* hollow horn.
THE TYRRELL TRIBUNE
| improved | SUNDAY
| International I SCHOOL
LESSON
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D.
Dean of The Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.i
S. S. Lesson for April 13
i
j Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by Internationa'
i Council of Religious Education; used By
i permission.
CHRIST SHOWS HIMSELF ALIVE
j LESSON TEXT—Luke 24:13 17, 25 35.
GOLDEN TEXT—I am he that liveth
and was dead; and, behold. I am alive
for evermore.—Revelation 1:18.
Certainty and assurance these
are at the heart of our observance
of Easter. We declare with Paul.
“Now is Christ risen from the dead”
(I Cor. F5:20), and that He is “de
dared to be file Son of God with
power . . . by the resurrection from
the dead” (Rom. 1:4). We would
join the apostles who “with great
power gave .?./. .'.witness of the res
urrection of the-Lord Jesus” (Acts
4:33). ‘
Someone m,ay say, "That’s well
enough for you who have faith in
God, but I’m bewildered, uncertain,
fearful, in a disordered world. Whal
shall I do?” Come with us as, in
our lesson, we join two men who
had become bewildered, who felt
that all their- hopes had been
crushed, that the future was only to
be feared.
We join them as they walk wearily
along the road from Jerusalem to
Emmaus. Suddenly there is Another
with the little group. Let us listed
to their conversation. First we find
I. Holden Eyes and Slow Hearts
(vv. 13-17, 25, 26).
The two sad men who had left
I Jerusalem to go to Emmaus were
1 disciples of our Lord who had just
been ihrough the crushing experi
ence of seeing Him crucified. Now,
as the jeering mob held triumphant
sway in the city, they left the dead
Christ (as they supposed) in the
\ tomb and went their way. True,
there had beenjsome reports on the
morning of the third day that the
women had seen Jesus alive (vv.
23, 24), but their hope and faith was
at such low ebb that they could not
—or did not—believe. Even when
Jesus appeared to walk with them
and question them, they did not
know Him.
Eyes closed by unbelief; faith hin
dered by doubt and fear; a despond
ent heart slow to believe God—how
very effectively these shut out the
blessing of God and of His Word,
even to the believer. Even deeper
is the darkness in which the un
believer finds ) imself.- But all is not
lost, tharc is v here who can open
unseeing eyes and warm cold hearts
—even Jesus.
11. Burning Hearts and Opened
Eyes (vv. 26-32).
Although they did not realize it
(how slow we are to appreciate our
blessings!) until after He was gone
(v. 32), their hearts began to burn
within them as soon as He began to
expound the Scriptures to them.
What a Bible exposition that was
as Christ Himself opened all that the
Scriptures taught concerning Him!
Bible teachers have talked about,
and it makes one’S heart burn just to
read their suggestions (see for ex
ample Morgan on Luke, page 278)
Little wonder that these men were
“strangely warmed’’ as they lis
tened.
The way to have a burning heart
is to read God’s Word or to have it
expounded by a Spirit-rilled teacher
or preacher. Especially is there
blessing in reading and studying
what the sacred Book teaches about
our blessed Lord.
With the heart “strangely
warmed,” as John Wesley described
his Aldersgate experience, comes
the opened eye. “They knew him”
(v. 31) in the breaking of the bread.
Perhaps they saw the scar in Kis
hand, or possibly they identified a
familiar gesture or something in His
voice; but until their hearts were
warmed they did not see. Paul knew
that truth when he declared: “But
the natural man receiveth not the
things of the Spirit of God; for they
are foolishness unto him: neither
can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned” (I Cor. 2:14).
Some reader who has trouble be
lieving in the resurrection will find
the problem solved when he meets
Christ and has his heart changed in
regeneration. What follows?
111. Quickened Feet and Glad Tes
timony (vv. 33-35).
The seven miles (sixty furlongs,
v. 13) which had passed so slowly
were now quickly retraced. They
had glorious good news to bring to
the disciples at Jerusalem. How
swift are the leet of the one who has
good tidings to bear (see Rom.
.10:15). One wonders why so many
professed Cnristians are so slow
about carrying His message. Can
it be that they do not yet know the
risen Christ? For if we know Him,
surely “we do not well” to keep
silent in a day of good tidings (II
Kings 7:9).
Note in verse 34 that before they
could speak, the others gave them
the good news of the resurrection.
It is proper and delightful that be
lievers share spiritual blessings
(Rom. 1:11, 12). That’s why we
come together in, God’s house.
Brother in the Lord, Christian sis
ter, how long is it since you had a
new and stirring experience of the
presence of Christ? Not necessarily
spectacular or exciting, but a real
spiritual experience. Let’s ; a*k Him
for It!
CHURCH
PROGRAM
BAPTIST
REV. WALTON B. GUTHRIE
COLUMBIA BAPTIST CHURCH
First and Third Sundays: Morn
ing worship service at 11 o’clock.
Evening service at 7:30 o'clock.
Sunday school 10 a. m. each Sun
day, R. S. Knight, Jr„ Supt.
Midweek prayer meeting 7:30 p.
m., Wednesday (Choir practice fol
lowing ).
SOUNDSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH
Morning worship 11 a. m. second
Sundays.
Evening worship 7:30, fourth
Sundays.
Sunday school 10 a. m. each
Sunday, Colan Snell, Supt. i
GUM NECK BAPTIST CHURCH
Morning worship 11 a. m. four
Sundays. j
CHRISTIAN |
REV. L. B. BENNETT
COLUMBIA CHRISTIAN !
CHURCH I
Morning worship, 11, second
Sundays. ‘
Evening worship, 7:30, second
Sundays.
Sunday school, 10 a. m. each
Sunday, D. M. Sawyer, Supt. i
Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m.
each Sunday.
EPISCOPAL
REV. B. W. GAITHER
ST. ANDREW’S, COLUMBIA
Evening prayer and sermon first
and fourth Sundays, 7:30. i
Holy Communion and sermon 11
a. m. second Sundays,
Sunday school, 10 a. m. each
Sunday, Donald Selby, Supt.
METHODIST
REV. ALFRED L. CHAPLIN
WESLEY MEMORIAL CHURCH
Columbia
Morning worship service at 11
o’clock, second and fourth Sundays.
Evening worship, 7:30 o’clock
fourth Sundays.
Sunday school, 10 a. m. each
Sunday, W. H. MeClees. Supt. <
Epworth League, 6:30 p. m. each
Sunday. I
WESLEY CHAPEL,
Alligator
Worship service at 11 a. m. and
7:30 p. m., third Sundays.
Sunday school 10 a. m. pach Sun
day. Ernest Brickhouse, Supt.
Epworth League, 6:30 p. in. each
Sunday.
CEDAR GROVE CHURCH
Gum Neck
Worship service at 11 a. m. and
7:30 p. m., first Sundays.
Sunday school 10 a. m. each Sun
day, D. H. Parrisher, Supt.
Epworth League 7 p. m. each
Monday night.
HOLLY GROVE CHURCH
Cross Landing
Worship service 3 p. m. fourth
Sundays.
Sunday school 10:30 a. m. each
Sunday, J. F. Furlough, Supt.
GUM NECK CHRISTIAN
Service at the Gum Neck Chris
tian church. Sundav, and each see-,
ond Sunday, bv Preston Cavton.
oastor. Church service at 11 -00
subiect, “Peace be unto you. ’ This
will be an Easter sermon. Sunday
afternoon at 2:30 Bible school.
Sunday night at 7:30 church ser- 1
vice, subiect. “If God is for us.”
You in the Gum Neck community
are invited to attend all these ser
vices. And those in Tyrrell Coun
tv, and visiting friends.
PRESTON CAYTON, Pastor.
INCUBATORS TAKE OVER
JOB OF “SETTING HEN”
The old “setting hen” is being
put out of business by artificial
methods of incubation. Commer
cial and semi-commercial poultry
men now depend almost entirely on
incubators as a source of baby
chicks. i
In recognition of this trend, the
N. C. State College extension ser
vice has published a circular (No.
249) entitled “Incubation.” It de
scribes both natural and artificial
methods of incubation, and points
out the advantages of artificial in
cubation from the standpoint of
disease and narasite control, and
mass production.
A copy of the circular may be
obtained free upon request to the
Agricultural Editor, N. C. State
College, Raleigh. County farm
and home agents also will have
supplies of this publication.
The text for the circular was pre
pared by Prof. R. S. Dearstyne,
head of the State College poultry
department, and C. F. Parrish, T.
T. Brown and C. J. Maupin, exten
sion poultry specialists. The 12-
page publication is well-illus- f
trated.
In discussing the adv*ntages of j
the two methods of incubation, the
State College poultrymen wrote:
“While much has been said, pro j
and con, about replacing stock by
the use of setting hens, there has
not as yet been developed an arti
ficial incubator that will hatch a!
higher percent of fertile eggs than
the hen.
“However, the chief disadvan
tages of this system lie, first in the
fact that broody hens are not al* \
ways available at the time they are
desired; second, large numbers of
eggs cannot usually be set at the'
same time; and third, the possi
bility of lice spreading from the
SHARKS CREATE
NEW INDUSTRY
ON WEST COAST
War Brings Large Demand
For Sharks; Formerly
Worthless
(From The Fishing Gazette)
A new industry has sprung up
on the Pacific Coast almost ove
rsight.
Fishermen who, just a few days
ago, threw away the small “ground
sharks” that intruded into their
catches of salmon, albacore, rock
cod and flounders, now save the
sharks and eliminate the fish.
$200.00 a ton is the reason.
This thriving shark business has
taken the Pacific fleets by storm.
From Crescent City to Fort Bragg,
• in California, the docks are receiv
ing Blue Fin, Soup Fin and Cow
Sharks by the ton, and their over
i size livers are selling for SI.OO a
I pound.
j Sharks have long been the curse
!of legitimate sea-going business.
,But now there is a pay-off. It is
lno uncommon sight to witness a
fisherman pocket from $2,000 to
$4,000 on his catch. It is small
pickings indeed when only a ton
or so are brought in. One young
man in Fort Bragg, broke, borrow
ed a boat, then bought it in a
! week, and by the end of the mouth
had cleared SB,OOO.
j The Blue Fin and Soup Fin
| species run fro.n 35 to 60 pounds
' apiece. The Cow sharks, weighing
! from 200 to 300 pounds, yield very
large livers. It is said that the
| shark livers grow so big that the
other internal organs are crowded
, back, until the “killers of the sea”
finally die from lack of breathing
, space.
These denizens of the ocean bot
tom are caught from 40 to 160
fathoms down. They are not fight
ers, for the great pressure of the
! water apparently takes all the fight
out of them as they are brought to
the surface.
■ Specimens such as these are
caught with regular halibut equip
ment. This means that a long
, anchored line is dropped from a
float, and a similar one is dropped
,100 to 250 yards away. A heavy
connecting line, attached near the
anchor and known as the “ground
line,” is equipped with 5-foot hook
lines about every 6-foot interval
along its length. These use shark
hooks, the Twelve-0 size, larger
than the customary halibut hooks.
Sole or sardines are used for bait,
and on this “skate” or gear, the
“ground sharks” are caught.
At the dock, the catch is de
livered to the fish company, weigh
ed in and the livers quickly re
moved. They are placed in cold
sto age or are immediate]y iced
down and trucked to market. San
Francisco is the headquarters for
receiving the shark livers, and here
the East Bay Fisheries, the Cali
fornia Packers, Consolidated Fish
eries, Incorporated, A. Paladini,
Incorporated, and the San Fran
cisco International Fish Company
receive the catches. Sharks caught
in Oregon waters are usually land
ed at Eureka, California, then
trucked south from there.
Shark livers are now highly de
sirable for two purposes.
One of them is the remarkably
fine oil the livers yield, unsurpass
ed for lubrication uses. It is stat
ed upon good authority that the
i United States Government is buy-
hen to the young chicks.’
The publication puts stress on
the use of suitable eggs for hatch
ing purposes.
Mr. Tyrrell County
Business Man
Let Us Print for You
. Everything you want in the printing
line, can be obtained right here at home.
Leave your orders with our agent in
Leave your orders with our office in
Columbia. You will find our prices right
MERCHANTS SALESBOOKS
LETTERHEADS, TICKETS
TAGS, RUBBER STAMPS
SOCIAL STATIONERY
PERSONAL STATIONERY
CIRCULARS, ENVELOPES
BILL HEADS, STATEMENTS
Send your order P. O. Box 282, Phone
office in Columbia Hotel, and have a
representative call on you.
THE TYRRELL TRIBUNE,
COLUMBIAN. C.
r
Thursday, April 10, 1941
ing 90 per cent of the oil, so de
rived. It is excellent for high pre
cision mechanisms, such as air
plane bomb sights, machine guns
and intricate equipment demand
ing high speed and accuracy. Shark
oil is guaranteed not t<i break'down
at any high temperature, nor will
it freeze at any low degree of cold.
For combat motors it is a godsend.
The other purpose of shark oil is
its use in the medical world, for its
Vitamin “A” content. It is a new
ly discovered source, the richest
yet revealed to man. This vita
min is necessary to human exist
ence in bone formation, tissue
growth and blood cells. It is abso
lutely necessary in maintaining qs
well as correcting the health of the
eyes, lungs, gastro-intestinal tract,
kidneys, bladder and internal se
cretion glands.
Following the removal of the
livers at the dock station, the shark
carcasses are trucked to nearby
tallow works and there converted
into fertilizer.
Tackle Saver
Hooks and artificial baits by the
thousands are lost by becoming
snagged on submerged logs and
other debris. As a tackle saver
and a cuss preventer, we’ve found
the following effective: Fasten a
strong rubber band between bait
and line. Ordinary heavy bands
will do for small fish, but an inch
wide band cut from an inner tube
should be used an rigs for large
fish.
Now when vour bait snags, pull
the line taut, then let go. The fully
stretched rubber band, upon being
suddenly released, will snap back
and automatically loosen the snag
ged bait.
Paper
A Federal program to encourage
the use of low-quality raw cotton
in the manufacture of high-grade
writing paper has been announced
by the Surplus Marketing Admin
istration.
AIR TAXI SERVICE!
■; . ...... • • .... , ;y.- r . r .v,
v<:
f \ ANYWHERE,
I I 1 ANYTIME.
for as little as
10c PER MILE PER PERSON!
For business or pleasure, flying » the
modern, sale and sane way to go places
and do things. 3 - passenger Stinson
plane, piloted by famous Dave Driskilt,
who has earned national recognition
from many years of safe flying. Want to
see Paul Green's "Lost Colony"? Call
Air Taxi and you're there in a flash!
Want to hunt and fish on picturesque
Ocracoke Island, relax at the delightful
Wahab Village Hotel? Call Air Taxi and
you're therel Want to put more hours in
the day for work or play, wherever,
whenever you go? Call Air Taxil
IMAGINE
Norfolk to Manteo in 45 minutes!
Raleigh to Charleston in 11/» hours!
Manteo to Beauiort, N. C. in l*/i hours!
Norfolk to Ocracoke in 1 1 /* hours!
Raleigh to Richmond in 1 hour, 10 min.l
Richmond to Washington in 45 minutest
Washington to Baltimore in 25 minutes!
Next trip, fly with Dave Driskiil, Pilot
and General Manager. For service, call
your nearest station. Manteo—Phone 9;
Norfolk—Day Phone 23141. Nights 46546.