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PAGE TWO THE TYRRELL TRIBUNE ‘0 - N ‘visiAimoo jlv AVQsynHj. Ay3A3 asHsnand \ ‘n;qmr»io3 }v ssap uojajir.| 3 0S st P Uo IV sm»u«k je >’A du o saivj] uoiiduasquc; aoucia nhsbo r xariv VOL. II JULY 24, 1941 NO. 34 REAL PROGRESS COMES SLOWLY Real progress conies slowly, but worthwhile things are worth Vv ox King for, and disoouragemeriis over iaia<«g to get tilings quickly are unworthy of true patriots, who have at heart the interest of their people. We have never had any doubt that the objectives of the Southern Albemarle Association would be accomplished in full. We know tnat this association began barely more than ! five years ago. At that time there was no organized effort, and no new spaper euort to get tnings due us, mat had been 1 denied us for lb years. We knew we had to start from the jump, and we had to get three and finally four counties united on a program. It is our opinion now that had not Hyde, Dare and Tyrrell united on a program of progress for their three counties, not a foot oi paving might have been laid in either of the counties on the routes connecting their county seats. The three counties working together through trie Southern Albemarle Association have kept attention centered on the prime needs of the counties, and finally the constant agita tion is about to get results. A demand for free ferries brought a promise from the Governor to free the ferries. It now looks as if bridges instead of ferries will result, certainly at least one bridge now, and another probably a few years from now. If we can get the Southern Albemarle roed program completed during the next four years, we will think great accomplishmeits have been done in the past ten years. We will be happy over the results. W T e believe now, that one of the two bridges sought over Alligator and Croatan will be built. We are not going to argue about the kind or the place, feeling that it is the responsibility of the Highway Commission. i But we will continue to ask that both be built finally and the connecting roads surfaced. It may take a hundred miles of surfacing first and last, between the three counties. But the needs of the people, and the potential development will warrant the cost. Meanwhile, we must always bear in mind, that our great est chance of success is a firm union between the counties of Dare, Hyde and Tyrrell, whose problems are the same. Each must stand by the other, and all stand together. Had we not been doing this, we would still remain in the same boat we were in years ago. I All indications are that the State officials have accepted the Southern Albemarle program as laid down, and expect to carry it out. The Association ought to feel highly grati fied, and encouraged to further endeavor in behalf of its member counties. j « A WISE MOVE 'VV - acuvm ul the County Board of .Filiation hsit- lootball from the schools under its jurisdiction unless certain requirements are met to insure the safety of the players, is a very wise move. Football is a rough game for | high school youngsters, and unless they are properly equip ped and properly supervised during play and practice, they are in danger of being seriously hurt, or possibly killed. The ruling can become an example of other school offi cials who are faced with the same problem of the Hyde | group, namely preventing numerous accidents due to a lack of equipment and proper supervision. This newspaper com mends the Board on the wisdom of the action it took in this direction. It is a wise move. ON RAISING MORE FOOD The advice of Mrs. Madeline E. Smith, Home Management Supervisor of the Hyde County unit of the Farm Security Administration, that farmers of this section should raise as much food supplies as possible by enlarging their gardens, poultry flocks, milk cows, and animals for other kinds of meat including pork, beef, and lamb is very timely, and farm families of the Southern Albemarle region will be wise in following her suggestion. As pointed out by Mrs. Smith, the average farmer can not afford to purchase all the food they need for a good diet for their family under the present rising consumer prices. On the other hand, with a little more work they can grow all the food they need and then some. Therefore the only thing left for the farmer to do is to raise more food, or go hungry. We suggest raising more food. DEFINITIONS, AND DESCRIPTIONS OF A BOY i A boy is a noise covered with dirt. A boy is a piece of skin stretched over an appetite. A boy is like a canoe —he s >uld be paddled from the rear. A boy is like a bic?ycle—he s only stable when in motion. { A bov is ilke an iceberg—most of him is hidden, waiting for some explorer to come along. A boy is a person whom Mothe* sends his elder sister to search for, with this admonitic- “Go see what Johnnie is doing, and whatever it is. tell him to stop it this minute.^ A boy is a fellow whom Mother should call Cyclone , because he comes at the most unexpected times, hits the most unexpected places and leaves everything hind him. “CLEANUP” BEEP DRIVE AFFECTS £3 COUNTIES Raleigh, July 24.— The beer in dustry’s “clean up or close up ’ campaign in North Carolina has resulted m disciplinary action against 433 retail outlets in 83 counties. Edgar H. Rain of Goldsboro, State director of the Brewers and North Carolina Beer Distributors Committee, announced today that the committee had cooperated with local authorities in the elimination of 181 objectionable outlets —132 by revocation of licenses, two by surrender of licenses after revo cation petitions had been filed, and 47 by refusal of local authori ties to grant licenses on informa tion furnished by the committee. ' >' Tn addition, 13 dealers have been > placed on probation. The State director warned 244 dealers to ‘clean up” or face more drastic ; “close up” action. Twelve revo , cation petitions are pending in ’ 1 several counties and probably will 11 be acted upon at July and August meeting's of local boards. The committee’s field staff has ' investigated 2,174 retail outlets in f<4 counties in North Carolina, Bain reported. Retail beer sales banned in two counties, and the field inspectors are scheduled to visit the other four counties dur ing the summer minths. The industry’s self-regulation program has won wide acclaim rfom public officials, law enforce ment agencies and the press of the , state during the past two years. 'mproved | SUNDAY | International I! SCHOOL • LESSON -> By HAROLD L. LUNBQLTST. D D. Dean of The Moody Bible Ins'JtMte of Chie..go. Released by Western Newspaper Union.* Lesson for July 27 Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se t jtfted ;no cop;, ricnt‘d by lr.tcrr.;.,t .nl Council of Relicious Education: used by I permission. i I THE ROLY SPIRIT INSPIRES NEW TESTAMENT LETTERS LESSON TEXT—Ca'.atians 1:11. 12; 1 ' Tbessaionians 2:13; II Timothy 3:14-17: , U Peter 3-K-16; Jude 3. GOLDEN TEXT—AiI scripture is riven by inspiration of Goc. arri is pr ffitr.ble i tor doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.—ll Timothy 3:18. Letters are usually interesting, frequently very important, and al ways revealing as to the character and interests of the writer That is generally true of ordinary daily mail, but how very true it is oi the letters of Scripture, the epistles o: Peter, Paul. Jude, and John For in them "holy men of God spakt as they were moved by the Holt- Ghost” (II Pet. 1:21). 1. The Gospel (Gal. 1:11. 32; I j Thess. 2; 13). The good news (for that is the j meaning of "gospel”) of salvation I by grace through faith in Jesus | Christ as Saviour lias from the very 1 beginning of its proclamation been subject to attack. Men are net con tent to receive God’s way of salva tion, but want to add something to it. adjust its requirements to meet new situations, to tinker and twist, j 1. A Divine Revelation (Gal. 1: 11, 12). Paul was not presenting some- j thing which he or some other man | had ‘‘worked up,” "but a message j that he had “prayed down.” Paul j : was only delivering that which he I had received from God (see I Cor. 15:1-4. He was careful that it should not be confused with or by the teachings of men. so he “con ferred not with flesh and blood” (see Gal. 1:15, 16). | We too are privileged to proclaim a divine revelation which has come to us in the inspired Word of God. How delightfully sweet and tremen dously powerful is the message which we may thus bring forth. It has no human frailty and weakness, no human error, and no misleading i philosophies. It does not need to j be revised every year or two. It is ! God’s eternal message of redemp tion. 2. A Message oi Salvation (I Thess. 2:13). It works in those who believe. ! Yes, it does —blessed be the name of God! God’s Book says so, and the experience of hundreds of thou sands of men and women over a period of almost 2,000 years agrees. | Note, however, that to work, the message must not only be “re ! ceived,” but also “accepted” as the Word of God. The message of the Bible may be received as a matter of fact, but for salvation it must be accepted and believed as a matter of faith. n. The Bible (II Tim. 3:14-17; II Pet. 3:14-16). Near the end of a life given in utter sacrifice to God’s cause, Paul is ready to be used of the Holy Spirit to speak concerning the writ ten Word. 1. It Is God-Inspired (II Tim. 3: 14-17). Be sure to read this passage in the Authorized Version. The Re vised has taken liberties with this verse which the finest scholarship does not countenance. It properly reads, “All scripture is given by in spiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine (teaching), for reproof, for correction, for instruction,” etc. Other books may claim some kind or measure of human inspiration— this Book is inspired of God. If there were space, proof of the truth of that statement could easily be given. It is available for all who want to believe it. 2. It Is Not to Be Wrested (II Pet. 3:14-16). If permitted to do so, God’s Word will bring peace of heart, make a man spotless and blameless (v. 14). But its salvation (v. 15) is not for those who ignorantly, or because of their ignorance, or because they are not steadfast in their lives, wrest its truth. Let us receive the Word with gladness, not twist it or distort its meaning to our own destruction. ID. The Faith (Jude 3). 1. It Was “Delivered Once for All.” It is a final revelation from God. There is no other gospel, and there never will be another. What assur ance that gives us both in believing it and proclaiming it! But the world hates this gospel, and attacks on it are to be expected. Therefore 2. It Is to Be Earnestly Contend ed For. No matter how peaceable we may be, how loving and tender hearted, “if and when attack is made upon the Lordship of Christ, when men make light of sin, and so seem to minimize the- vital im portance of holiness of life—then, however unpleasant contention and controversy may be to us, it is time we cast our self-regard aside and contend earnestly for the faith once for all delivered to the saints.” (J. D. Jones). I THE TYRRELL TF JNE MARKED MAR b» H. C. WIRE ® D. Appleton-Century WNU Service SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I—Summoned to the C C ranch in central Nevada, desert-vase Walt Gandy is on his way to help his old range partner. Bill Hollister. Riding through unfamiliar country, Walt is stopped short by a girl—who holds a rifie in firing position. She knows him, tells him how ;o get to the ranch, and tells him that they will meet again. Walt is allowed to ride on. CHAPTER ll—Within a quarter of a mile from his destination, Walt is stopped again This time by a grotesque, mis shapen man who tells him to grt out and then tells him the C C crew i; tn Emi grant, the closest towm, tor at inquest. Someone has been murdered. i j CHAPTER lll—Riding to the Inquest I in Emigrant. Walt leaves his horse at the livery stable. Before attending the I inquest he asks a few questions Cash Cameron, owner of the C C ranch, is in j trouble. A hard but h: r.est man. Cash I has mary enemies. Gandy’s eye is | caught by a roan horse tied near the doorway. It belongs to the girl who stopped him earlier in the day. CHAPTER IV—Chino Drake, former cook at the C C ranch, has been mur dered and Sheriff Ed Battle is trying to pin the blame on Cash Cameron. The girl is called to the stand. She is Helen Cameron. Cash's daughter. She seem ingly faints and, as Gandy rushes to her aid, slips something in his hand. It ia the bullet Ircm Drake’s bodv. j CHAPTER V—Walt rents a post office I box and leaves the bullet in it. Leaving i the pest office he is accosted by a dark, | swarthy man who offers him a job. He i draws the mar, out, finds that he wants to usurp Cameron's public range land, j Gandy then turns him down in biting fashion. The man leaps at Walt, who I whips him afier a hard battle. The man is Pete Kelso, foreman of the 77 ranch, an outfit hostile to Cameron. CHAPTER Vl—Gandy is called to the sheriff s office, where he meets Hollister and Sheriff Battle. Hollister, this time, is really glad to see him. Battle tells Hollister that Cameron is through! CHAPTER Vll—Hollister and Gandy return to the CC. There they find Cash Cameron and Bent Lavic, the crippled man who stopped Gandy on his previous visit. Paul Champion, a young cow puncher, is with them. Later Hollister borrows two hundred dollars from Gandy CHAPTER Vlll—That evening Walt meets Helen Cameron In the kitchen. From the first he has been drawn to her. Then she tells him that Bill Hollister is one of the finest men she has ever known. The words, though he has known her thoughts before, hurt him. CHAPTER IX—The bawling of cattle that night brought Walt out to investi gate. He thinks that bawling is caused y the smell of blood! Curious, he steps into the saddle shed. Then the shed door opens slowly. In the darkness he smells perfume. It is Helen. Angry, she leaves, but not until she warns him to ‘ forget the C C. CHAPTER X—Walt tells Hollister that he wants information. Hollister tells him that Cash Cameron, thought to be worth a fortune, is flat broke. The mur der of Chino Drake may be his finish. Gandy knows that any one of three peo ple may be responsible for Drake's death. He also points out to Hollister that Ran ger Powell, Cameron’s alibi for Drake's death, has disappear*^. CHAPTER Xl—Riding the range, Hol lister and Gandy meet Pete Kelso and two of his hired men. Hollister wants no gun play, but in self defense Gandy Is forced to shoot one of Kelso's men. chapter Xll—Walt and Hollister meet Cash Cameron as they leave the scene of the shooting. He is considera bly upset when he hears of the gun duel, and tells Gandy that he wants no gun fighting, and that he may be forced to allow the 77 ranch to have Its own way m regard to a water hole dispute rather than risk gun battle. CHAPTER Xm- -Cameron, Walt and Hollister find the body of Ranger Pow ell, Cash’s alibi. Hollister insists that Cameron hide out He knows that evi dence points straight to Cameron as the murderer of Drake and Powell. CHAPTER XIV CASH CAMERON had built early on the Emigrant Bench, and he had put up a house with the thick log walls and deep windows of a fort. The kitchen wing with storage shed and foreman’s quarters had been added later. That was mod ern; of mill-sawed boards, battened on the outside, painted white with in, But as Walt Gandy passed from | the kitchen, through a short hallway into the great front living-room, it was like stepping back half a hun dred years. For this main part had kept the look of Cameron’s pioneer ing. By the glint of rifle barrels he made out a gun rack near the fire place. Dark outlines of chairs showed against the plastered wall. A Navajo rug woven in an old four comers-of-the-earth pattern made a long gray patch upon the floor. Oth er pieces of furniture were no more than vague forms, grouped mostly around the chimney end. From the moment of entering here Gandy’s eyes had been pulled re peatedly to the fireplace maw. Now he stood squinting at the black square; until suddenly his nose brought definite knowledge before sight registered what he was squint ing at. The red eye of a cigarette stub glowed in the fireplace ash. Lavic? Had he circled from the bunk shacks and come in by the front entrance? But Gandy had watched from the window, and no one had crossed the open front clearing. Besides that, Lavic wouldn’t matter; he was deaf. His soundless movement carried him on to a door which must lead into the family wing of the house. By this time he knew the front room was empty. He paused. “Walt! Listen to me!” Appealing hands gripped his ri,ght arm. Whis pering, Helen begged: “Don’t! You can’t help. I’m working this out, » everything! You must not go any I farmer." But Gandy shook his head. He freed his arm from her tightening fingers. The door gave more easily than he expected, as if it had been closed not quite far enough for the latch to click into place. It opened wide al his touch, and before him was a small plain cubicle with a desk, a chair, and a cot; Cash Cameron’s i office, disordered, empty. i Immediately on his right was a door leading to the inner court formed by the house wings. Gandy sprang across to it, found it un locked. Whoever had been here was j gone now. But there was still another pas- i sage ahead. He moved rapidly along this, seeing a bedroom on the left of it, and then the last room of the family wing at the end. i Helen Cameron was no longer be- . hind him. In her father’s office she ' had turned back. Walt stopped, for the doer was open, and he stood 1 motionless, brought up short on the | threshold of the girl’s own four i walls. H was a large, airy place, with windows on three sides, cur tained, a fleece rug on the floor, in timate with her things that revealed i unguardedly the girl who lived here Horsethief Fisher’s voice blarec suddenly outside. Gandy jemr j back along the passage. By the time he had reached the kitchen the old krone rider and Paul Champion had tramped in. Helen was putting plates on the dining-room table. 1 “Man an’ child!” Horsethief burst out. ’’Give us grub!” He hung his battered black hat on its own particular wall peg and reached under the sink for the wash pan. i “Say, Miss Helen,” he called. “Someone leave here just now? Paul . he was ahead of me coming along the north pasture and thought a rid- j er took off southwest.” From his position, entering the kitchen from the living-room, Walt Gandy could not see the girl. Wheth- • er she signaled Fisher or not, he couldn’t tell. i Without pause nor change in his conversational tone, Horsethief fin ished, "But the kid he gets ideas | sometimes. I guess he didn't see no one.” j In another step Gandy could look ! l at Helen Cameron. She was mo- I tionless beside the long ranch table, , a dish in her hands. “Walt,” she j said quickly, “I haven’t told them, j You’d better.” ! He nodded and went to the wash , bench where Fisher and young : Champion were bent over, dissolv- j j ing gray dust from their faces. “We ; i found Ranger Powell this after- ■ noon,” he said. “Been dead some j i time.” j. Two dripping faces turned. Horse- I thief Fisher looked up, made no re- I ply, bent again and went on wash i ing the back of his neck. ! Paul Champion stood up full height and opened his mouth. ) . “Jeez,” he said, drawing it out. j ! “Where’s the boss?” I “Cameron won’t be around for, awhile,” Gandy told him. “Hollister j will be back some time tonight. ; l Horsethief, after we eat I’m coming j down to your bunk house. Wait ; I there, will you?” ! : | Fisher and Paul Champion were! in the middle of the bunk room, near j an iron barrel stove that had no fire. A single oil lamp gave dim i yellow light. j So savagely was he gripped in the urge to smash through ary more | barriers and evasions, that Gandy’s | stride carried him on close to Horse j thief Fisher, and before the bronc rider had gathered what was hap pening, an elbow was hooked around his neck, and a hard fist was Jkish ing against his nose. “If you don’t open up and talk to; me.” said Gandy, “I’m going to , crack your skull and see what’s in It!” Then he grinned, dropping his | '! arms. “Horsethief, for Lord’s sake ! let’s go at this thing fifty-fifty! “I think you’re the only man on ! the C C that has nothing to hide. * I’ve listened to a lot of talk that tells i nothing; now I want to hear some without a joker in it. What do you say?” Horsethief Fisher stared, blinking | i sun-squinted eyes. Then the round ! face wrinkled with good humor. It lasted but a moment. Sober-1 Ing, he said, “You’re right, Gandy, j j Plenty of side-mouth talkin’. Nothin’ j I straight out.” j He wiped an open band downward i over his face as if to iron off the I wrinkles; a slow movement, consid ering Walt Gandy during the proc ess. “I’ve been aflgurin’ on you,” j he admitted. “Maybe you’re the ■ man I been lookin’ for. Hollister, | well, something’s happened to Bill lately. Cash he’s kept away from gun-fightin’ too long. And Miss Hel en; shucks, I don’t know, she’s all balled up somehow,” Gandy propped himself against a post supporting double bunks and took papers and tobacco from the side pocket of his coat. “Paul,” he asked, turning to the boy whose ears were visibly stick ing out, “rustle some wood and build us a fire, will you?” “Sure!” As young Champion went out he took his belt and big forty-five from a nail next the door. “Now then, Horsethief,” said Gan-! dy, “tell me who rode off when you j came back to the place tonight. I ; know it’s true, because somebody was at the house before I got there. Who was it?” “Man,” Fisher declared, “I don’t j know but I sure wish I did!” His squinted blue eyes shone with honest eagerness. “I do,” he ex nlained. “because 1 been figurin’ myseil tnat it was t.me to quit mis game of guesswork and see jus; who had stacked the cards! I owe Cash Cameron a debt that I’d like to pay back by fightin’ for the C C. But where do a fellow begin? When the cock was found dead I had my hunch. But now with Ranger Pow ell . . .’’He raised hard hands and let them fall. “Make a guess,” Gandy urged. “About tonight, I mean. Who could have been there in the house while the rest of us were away, and who might have been taking off across the bench when you came in?” Horsethief shook his bald head. “I didn’t see. It was Paul who caught sight of someone on a smoky blue, thought he did anyway. But the only man that rides a smoky blue in these parts, couldn’t have been on the CC. Leastwise he’d be a fool if he did come sneakin’ around now.” “Who’d that be. Fisher?” Gandy asked. “Jeff Stoddard.” In the act of rolling a cigarette, Walt Gandy’s fir.gers stopped move ment, and h»s brown eyes lifted for a long studying look at the man be fore him. “Stoddard. Owner of the 77?” Horsethief Fisher noddeff. “Only i -,r»p i ■ f rid'n’ such an animal. But Stoddard ain’t set foot on the place since Bent Lavic began takin’ pot-shots at him two year ago. Leastwise, I always figured it was I Lavic. And now with Cameron and Stoddard on the peck over winter I range in the sink, it don’t seem no way sensible that Jeff should show up here.” He looked along the bunk at Fish ; er, who had backed against the edge and sat down. “What was Bent Lavic shooting at Stoddard for?” “Judas, I don’t know! Except that j the old fellow is nuts. Hasn’t i lister told you about him?” ! “Some. Lavic aimed to be king cowman here, and isn't, and seems to hold it against Cameron. That ; it?” ; “Hates Cameron.” said Fisher j flatly. “Hates H' Lister, too. I've seen it the last couple cf months. Man. I wouldn't trust that old roos ' ter the other side ox a fence, lest I could watch him! j “But then, there’s Helen. Bet he burns candles to that girl like a fel low does in church to one of his j saiKts! He sure worships the kid. So ; when Jeff Stoddard took it into his | noodle to come courtin’ a couple of \ year ago, I figure it was Lavic who | used to singe his ears with a rifle | bullet quite too frequent when night \ time came and Stoddard started \ home.” : Silent for a moment, Walt Gandy j rolled the paper ball in tightening j fingers. Then he looked down and me* Fisher’s gaze. “Helen in love with Stoddard, was she’’” “Naw, schodl-kid stuff,” the man i declared. “She was nineteen. Stcd j dard must have been thirty-five. ! Cash, he didn’t like it so much, and I the thing was ended.” j Walt Gandy said nothing. He stood j motionless, leaning with, a shoulder I braced against the bunk support, ; but with a body gone all at once cold j from more than the chilled air of ; the room. For it was plain to him ! now who had been in the house with Helen this afternoon. (Continued next week) AVAILABLE An inexpensive and efficient homogenizing- machine for small dairies, operated by a quarter horsepower motor and weighing only 137 pounds, is now on the market. NCEAN^" HARDIHOOD, AS FOUND IN JOHN PHUL JONES SON OF A GARDENER. IMMORTAL ADMIRAL. * FATHER OF THE AMERICAN NAVY Thursday, July 24.1941 STREET AMPLIFIER GETS A DEFIANT PREACHER IN JAIL Near Riot Follows at Frank lin as Mob Tries to Free Jailed Minister In Macon County--Frankin po lice and members of the sheriff’s department were faced with a fal se situation Saturday afternoon when a crowd gathered and threat ened to invade the jail to release a preacher who had been lodgd there on a charge of violating ‘he recent!v-ena- ted town or li 'ance forbidding use of loud speagers on the streets of the town. Police said that the Rev. M. D. Garret of Athens Ga., a Baptist evangelist, edified the ordinance and began speaking through an am plyfying system from an auto mo mile in front of the court house on the public square at 3 o’clock this afternoon . Deputy Sheriff John Dills and Chief of police C. D. Baird arrest ed the preacher and took him to the jail where he was locked up. Soon a crowd estimated to be be tween dOU and 1,000 persons, gath ered at the jail, and the crowd, of ficers said, threatened to go in and release the prisoner. Deputy Sher iff Dills, with a pistol in his hand, told the crowd not to enter, that he wouid not release the prisoner un der threat of violence. | Officers decided that measures should be taken to disperse, the 1 crowd, and called upon the fire de ' partment which sent a truck to spray the crowd with water. Os , ficers said the crowd scattered, and that the fire hose was slashed by knives in several places before :he . water couid be used . ] Gerald Ashe, chief o fthe fire de partment, was jerked from the fire i truck, and his right leg was brok ; on. I After the crowd dispered, offi cers released the preacher under i bond which was posted by W. T. ! Moore of Franklin. I Soon after being released, the •j preacher mounted a truck and started preaching again, hut with j out the use of the loud speaker. \ Another crowd gathered, cheered ■ the preacher, and sang “The Old | Time Reliedon*’ rjr ><] oth°r songs, j The Rev. Joe Bishop of Macon j County, obtained an American flag I and the crowd cheered as he waved it . BONNER TRIES TO HELP POTATO GROWERS’ PROBLEMS Congressman Herbert C. Bonner this week introduced in the House, a bill to amend the Agricultural Adjustment Act for the purpose of regulating the marketing of Irish potatoes. The bill is a tentative draft prepared by the Department of Agriculture and will be reported to the Agricultural Committee of the House. The bill as introduced is merely a guide on which hear ings will be held and discussed by growers. Mr. Bonner stated that in Iris opinion, no crop is in great er need of legislation. He stated that he would be glad to send to individual growers, a copy of the bill, and would be interested in re ceiving any comments and sugges tions as to the bill’s perfection. COBS Inexpensive substitutes for novo cain, antiseptics, and possibly sul ! fanilamide and its derivatives may soon be made from corn cobs, oat hulls, and other farm waste ma | terials.
The Tyrrell Tribune (Columbia, N.C.)
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July 24, 1941, edition 1
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