TAGE FOUR THE DAILY ADVANCE, ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. WEDNESDAY EVENING. AUGUST 7, 1935. iieuiher of The Associated Proa HEKBtKT PKELE Editor and Publisher By MiiU iba Aaudataa) PriH It axelilllvali antltla ta iba hh lor reukMMttn af nawa ritaaatetiaf ad'tta In this aauer and ataa ta tha lacal Mtta aubllahad tharaln. Entered at tha aoatofliai at llubetH City. N. C. mcvni liui Batter, IB Albamaxla, (In inc) 12 nonthi .00 In Aiaamarlt, (In advanca) ( mwittia 12.21 I Aiaamarla, (In advanca) 1 oKha . II.2S in Aibamarte. 1 aionth .50 klMwttaia, 12 aiontha 6. ClMktlaia, a aiontha $3 25 EMKhera, I nwcn I .7 By Carrier myla Conlea ( Canta U'.a at (pay eairlar) 12 Canta frua Moath (In adtanca) 50 Canta Inift Manilla (In adaanca) . $1.35 u Mentha (In advance) $2.(0 headed by a man who is a native of Dare, and of a Congressman who spends much of such summer vacation as he has on Dare's beaches, it may be that he has been able to start something of more tremendous and far reaching import to North Carolina than is Boulder Dam to the territory that it serves. I kaiie Montha (In advanca) $5.00 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1935. The National Whirligig THE NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS By RAY TUCKER and JAMES McMULLIN ill tun Today's August T 4&0RC' Battle of vghich Leonitlas anq his Greeks defend mountain pass against Xerxes ancl. JUS rtriaXdi'1' Great Britain. appoints first Minister to US. 1927' US.- Canadian In case potato control legisla tion tails at this session of Con gress, Albemarle potato growers would do well to consider seeking other crops for their potato acre age. o Yet There Is Hope Old residents tell us that back in the days when the Norfolk Southern was being extended southward from Elizabeth City, after having had its terminus here for a number of years, there were any number who were saying it was a sad day for Elizabeth City. Some folks were even looking for an opportunity to dispose of their property here. Elizabeth City was in way of becoming just a stop on the Norfolk Southern, they thought. ' But the old town survived that blow and had thereafter its best decade of growth and expansion. And The Daily Advance imag ines that despite this menace or that of this generation goods will continue to be bought and sold in Elizabeth City and the town will continue to grow for a number of decades yet to come. o Saluting Frank Stick Occasionally the man styled visionary comes into his own. So, it would seem, does Frank Stick, as the federal government prepares to spend a million dollars to stay the ravages of erosion on the Carolina coastal beaches, and preserve these barrier banks for the protection of the tidewater section behind them. For years Mr. Stick has not on ly dreamed of seeing this work of stabilization and rehabilitation un dertaken. He has worked to that end with a patience and faith and an enthusiasm that the practical man of affairs might well wish he could emulate. Today The Daily Advance sa lutes him and expresses the wish that he may live to see his long cherished dreams of the banks country all come true. There died in Arizona the other day a man named Anson Hubert Smith, who had spent 53 years as editor of a small town newspaper in the far southwest. Many years ago he saw the tremendous possi bilities of harnessing the waters cf the Colorado river and began to agitate for it. He talked it in season and out of season until he saw his idea take hold of other men's minds and finally take act ual shape in one of the great en gineeiing undertakings of this age. But Smith had a newspaper. Stick hasn't had that. But with the cooperation of a governor who had cherishi-d a similar dream and had appointed Stick on a commis sion to work for his ideas, and with the help of a department of conservation and development WASHINGTON By Ray Tucker DIGNITY: Poker faced George Huddleston holds a full house in the scrap over the "death sen tence," although administration ites say he deals from the bottom of the deck. Messis. Byrns and Rayburn are still trying "to play up to the in iquities" of holding companies as revealed in the Black investiga tion. But the Alabama member pits the dignity and prestige of the House against the unwanted presence of Outsider "Bennie" Co hen at conference sessions. The House has been snubbed too often by the Senate not to respond to that appeal. He also gave his col leagues the abilbi that they were turning thumbs down on "Black Derby Bennie," and not on FDR. You can imagine how that imper tinent issue will help at election time. The New Dealers' showed igno rance of Congressional psychol ogy. They promoted the Black ferreting in the hope it would shift votes in the House. But members feel they cannot afford to back down for fear it will be accepted as admission of a guilty con science. VOLUME: Although Attorney General Cumimngs expresses sat isfaction with the modified ban on gold suits, the government's legal defender is simply making the best of a bad bargain. Competent legal authorities maintain that the six-month's leeway accorded prospective litigants in the Sen ate bill will permit the filing of enough test suits ot embarrass the Department of Justice for years. President Roosevelt has placed the gold suit ban on his "must" list, but the inside story is that Mr. Cummings was its chief ad vocate. Treasury officials have carefully avoided any definite commitment to this effort to deny citizens a day in court. They sim ply state that it would not injure the government's credit. The Senate committee's vote of 11 to 7 for the revamped bill does not reflect sentiment against ad ministration proposals to close the courts to aggrieved litigants. The seven in the minority registered opposition to any attempt to safe guard the gold devaluation act. WOES : President Roosevelt is not pressing his constitutional amendment vesting new power in the central government, but his aides still speak feelingly of the results of the Supreme Court's blockade. A private survey re veals that the New Deal's major troubles date from May 27. Four legislative bulwarks of the New Deal were progressing nicely on Capitol Hill until that day. The Public Utility, the Social Security, the Omnibus Banking and the AAA bills had passed the House in jig-time. They were on their way to speedy enactment when the the court sounded off. Then doubts arose, these measures were subjected to scrutiny for consti tutional defects and revamped where necessary. Now, more than two months later, they are still in conference and controversy thanks to the Supreme Court. The Guffey Coal bill is not even out of committee. The NRA, of course, has washed up. The legislative stalemate tells only hp.lf the story. Processers have begun a bombardment of the AAA through suits to recover taxes. The Republicans have dared to assume the offensive. Conser vative Democrats have become unruly. And new tests of the New Deal's constitutionality start toward the Supreme Court each day. AVIATION: The War Depart ment has quietly taken steps to insure that there shall be no repe tition of the fatalities which' befell its flier when they were called on to carry the air mail over moun tains and through snowstorms. On private calendar days House and Senate have passed a bill au thorizing the department to inves tigate strategic areas for perma nent Air Corps stations. Although carefully worded, the plan is to train aviators in cold weather and fog in Alaska and the Atlantic Northwest; in the mountainous regions of the Rocky Mountains; over long water jumps in the Car- nbbean. Nobody mentioned the air mail fiasco during consideration of the measure. They didn't have to. It was passed without a dissenting voice or debate in both Houses. With its provision for establish ment of training fields and depots on the continent and foreign pos sessions the measure marks be lated recognition of the import ance of aerial defense and offense in the next war. SIZE: An undercover dispute between steel manufacturers and New Deal economists illustrates how far apart Big Business and the administration stand over the soak-the-rich tax bill. Both use the same figures to boster con trary viewpoints. In the July issue of "Steel Facts," the house organ of the Iron and Steel Institute, there ap pears p. statement of the 1934 earnings of 154 steel companies. It shows that the smaller the cor poration, the larger its earnings. Forty-eight companies with less than a $1,000,000 investment av eraged earnings of 6.94 per cent. Six corporations with investments of more than $100,000,000 had losses averaging 0.09 per cent. Tho manufacturers contend the rtport refutes presidential argu- z-.ei.i3 icai oigness means exces sive profits. The New Dealers en thuse over it as evidence that a breakup of industry through taxa tion will help rather than hurt in dividual corporations. ' PROOF: J. F. T. O'Connor has b-en "resigned" or "transferred" so often that he has become su perstitious. So the Comptroller of the Currency has placed an adver tisement on his desk to warn all comers that he stands in "right with the bigwigs. It is a full face photograph of James Aloysius Farley, Postmast er General, National Democratic Chairman and Chairman of the New York State Democratic Com mittee. In Jim's famous green ink there is written a delicate and re strained eulogy of "Jeftie": "To J. F. T. O'Connor a fine friend, a capable official, and splendid American." That ought to make the job safe for awhile. NOTES: The Senate lobby-committee may take a jaunt into Ten nessee and other southern states,' where pay dirt is reported . . . Some tourists criticize the new U. S. Supreme Court building interior "too gaudy," they say . . . Sev eral big industrial plants have laid in supplies of tear and naus eating gas . . . Roosevelt is incu- Stones m 1 I AMP-S I i i S. Kisrifi GODS,. HpO symbolize the speed wit A which mail is carried, man nations have adopted that rascal ly messenger of the gods, Hermes for some of their stamps. Greec particularly has drawn upon th! fleet son of Zeus and Mala foe it stamps one of which is show; .here, for he came of Greek my thology. The Romans knew hin as- Mercury. Besides acting as herald to tlu gods, however, Hermes was prom iiient as giver of increase to herd and as guardian of boundar!. and of roads and their commfve He was god of science and iuvei. tlon, of cunning, trickery nnri theft, of luck and riches, youth and athletics, and he even be came conductor of the dead to Hades. On many of the stamps he Is represented with his wingea cap carrying a cadu- ceus, a wand or staff of his office as a herald Two wings top the MthM 8taff anf two jtfetaliiiSH j serpents are MH I pnllori nUl I. (Copyright. 19.15-, NEA Service, Inc.) NKXT: What country' stumps picture the "eighth wonder of the .world"? f 7 bating speeches to be delivered on hU western trip. NEW YORK SCARE: Labor's ilriv for' stricter federal supervision of in dustry hasn't yet borne fruit but conservatives are decidedly ner vous about it. Well-posted New Yorkers predict that a bill for this purpose will be one of the major issues at the next session of Con gress. The groundwork is being carefully laid for legislation which would control business not mere ly regulate it. Expert legal talent is working on the problem of how to make it constitutional. Meanwhile there will be a few preliminary gestures. FDR is not supporting the licensing bill backed by the Federation of Labor or the textile bill he can hardly afford any more irons in the fire but neither is he opposing them. Insiders understand he wants to see how far they will get in Con gress under their own steam. The Connery licensing bill has no chance for final enactment this year. But it's quite possible that this measure will be passed by the House before adjournment. That would scare industry plenty and make it more amenable to subse quent concessions which is pre cisely the idea, TREND : The textile bill hasn't had nearly the public attention it rates. In some respects it is the most drastic proposal for govern ment supervision of private enter prise ever offered. The measure is sponsored by the United Textile Workers a very strong union. It would establish sweeping federal control of textile mill output and would clamp rig orous restrictions on excess pro duction. Of course it includes liberal la bor provisions more detailed than usual. Man hours and work load would be subject to strict limita tions. The bill will get nowhere at presents-but it represents a significant legislative trend and will undoubtedly be revived later with probably a better chance for passage. CONTENTED: Farmers who have been getting AAA benefits need not be uneasy about legal ac tions to avoid payment of process ing taxes or for recovery of those already paid them. They will get their dough regardless. New York sources say the only question the administration is bothering about it how not whether. A proposal was made some weeks ago to pay these benefits out of work relief appropriations. Or the Treasury's general fund might be drawn upon for the pur pose. But either of these alterna tives would cramp administration spending plans in other directions and informed New Yorkers und erstand that New Deal advisers are racking their brains for some other solution. One scheme that ia being con sidered would be a break for the silverites. It would consist of buy ing the metal more rapidly in ord er to cash in on the seignorage. The bookkeeping profit from such operations could be used to keep the farmers contented and thus strengthen FDR's chances for a repeat victory in 1936. SAFE: A vital point has been overlooked in most discussions of whether the Supreme Court will dump AAA in the ashcan this fall. The cases to come before the Court in 1935 all originated before the new AAA amendments were enacted. That means there will be nothing final about the forthcom ing decisions no matter how they turn out. If the New Dealers are defeated they can simply say the rules have been changed so what ? Conclusive Court tests of the new powers about to be conferred on the Secretary of Agriculture will be almost impossible before eighteen months. That will be aft er the '36 election so AAA is safe until the voters have a chance to confirm or reject New Deal policies. SPEEDED: One of the best fea tures of the present mercantile situation is the absence of large inventories. Stores and fabrica tions are not handicapped by sur plus stocks. Department of Com merce figures based on 1923-25 figures as normal show that manufactured goods inventories are now about 102 per cent of normal as against 12i per cent a year ago. Foodstocks were hf per cent of normal in the middle of 5934 now they are 75 per cent. Iron and steel have dropped from 105 per cent to substantially normal textiles from 160 per cent to only 120 per cent. Leather and non ferrous metal inventories are vir tually unchanged and rubber stocks have risen slightly. The general aecline in inventor ies should speed up recovery con siderably as consumer demand in creases. BROAD: The Business Advisory and Planning Council is laying nw tlv-S'- days hut it's still in ex istence. After all the threats to dissolve it and leave the New Deal flat unless FDR paid more atten tion to its advice only a few mem bers have uropped out. Those who remain still feel tney will have a j chance to function usefully as the j i nly right wing group to which i the Piesident pays any attention j even though he hasn't exactly em braced their advice in recent months. The Council in general is taking a recess until October 1 but a special committee on taxation is busy preparing a report for the President's guidance. It's a safe (Continued on page 5) OUR BOARDING HOUSE 19th Century Writer HORIZONTAL 1 Robert Louis , author of "Treasure Island." 8 Solid paraffin. 9 Knock, it) And. 12 Mountain. 13To exhibit. lETChristmns carol. 17 Growing out. IS llu was a by birth. 20 Striped fabric. 21 To secure. 22 Membranous bag.. 24 Uncooked. 27 Reign. 30 Like. 31 Dukes' wives. 34 Myself. 35 Infant. 'Mi Riches. J8 Theatrical piiiy. 40 Inlet. .2 To trifle. Answer to Prevlon Puzzle TIL 19 Sword guard 21 He wrote "A Child's of Verses." 23 War flyer. 25 Snake. 26 Obnoxious plant. 2S Form of "be." 29 His book, "Dr and Mr. Hyde." 31 Stream ob structions. 32 Great lake. 33 Lath. 35 Company. 37 Half hinge. 39 Fowls' perch. 40 Compass poinl 41 Kxcuse. 43 To acquire knowledge. 45 Heart. 4(i Grandpar- eutal. , 49 To mrfntion. 61 To be sick. 53 Hour. 55 Musical note. THS NOTE WAS IN TH BOX- "MA3,OR ROOPLE: TOKTHfc CONSECUTWE: VEKR, YOU HAVE HELD 1ST "PLACE AS THE NE.3HSORHOOtS BCbbE-ST NUV6ANCE , AND WE PRESENT YOU WYTH THIS ' LINOLEUM VvETjALr SKbtMED, NEIGHBORS. COArAVTTEEV YOU CfU SUE EfA ! -"BUT TH" ONLY THNG S, THEY rAGV-VT "PROVE i i M V K 1 If j w 1 r i.i. v. ii i in a i i'i.hi; i.vt. - lorn r ----- --tii W.V -v-i roCnaULTTiig . - 25 snake. AL Mli .I 'ft i !a) imm W I P sBHAk A ftHe 23 Form of "be." fV l VM: ErAlTTOOLlAfeZA 29His book. " VrVoi IP O V EI S U NfcSD P A LI UUI OUR WAY By rar 6M sit up- in W oh .wmv veu t,ih-m :. r&JZS USIT UP.' r TH HOUSE DOM'T PFnPI iV that rnM ?a iWtf-J 4 Ages ,. accompany. $ WER COME Yf AN' ROAST Y JUST 5 AY f OUT ON ' V'l 45 PnKerlike "er of- h! 37 Half hinge. THE DAKiNSjW TO DEATM MOWDE DO, SUNQAV 0rgan- :!9 Fow,H' ,,e,Th' I AN0 0ON1T " I'LL NEVER AN' PASS BOTHERS "lSJ 47 Chinese weight VKRT1CAL 40 Compass poinl k 1 READ WHEN , rcr OM STFin tmJmtuat ' 48 To bow. 1 Aquatic bird. 41 Kxcuse. f THEY'RE suWfwLD o ' i7wj UtS 49 French coin. 2 Hexoaes. 43 To acquire TALKING - b SUNDAY MAPi Oh STANDI N ASTAY HOMe 50 Bugle plant. 3 To anticipate. knowledge. A IT'5 RUDPSV OUT HeFE A ' y' . ' 52 Chum. 4 Before. 45 Heart. Jif s rS -s S W i A-k , , ' 53 Damage. 6 Hub. 46 Grandpar- mm- V7i- vNf Mf )A'-' JJbhS; 54 Lure. f Pot Herb. eutal., MKRpV ' . :i ( Y' -? i7-i-P V'' 66 "Treasure. ' Gods' drinks. 4 To mrfntion. J i A ftjv V . Island " is a 11 Golf device. 61 To be sick. r-' V ' 3 Wi boy's . i H Part ot a lock. 53 Hour. KetT A? YV B7 He was the 16 Behold. 55 Musical note. fMjVv E33a. ' i . By Ahern T-fW Ll COULD TELL THE STLlP.D OAFGTHAT I HAVE SEEN TREES T-ULLOF APES, IN THE GONcjO,WHO HAVE rAOTE NTELLOENCE THAN THE DOfAFATlCKTEr ONES - . ----- j OY TH "DULL I VlQNTVl PAP) BEES i "BROUGHT THS ON- WW 3S BV NCA SERVICE. INt iWI T. W. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. i Williams Freckles and His Friends Danny Hands Out Some Advici IF D,AMMY GETS ThEIR MOTORS STARTED,"lHEY GAM TAKE OFF, EASILY, AMD LEAVE US WITHOUT A, PILOT , M L DOKIT WORRY ABOUT THEM klDMAPlN' DANKIV I'D SOONER TACKLE A PASSELO' WILDCATS-, IF "THEY GET TDU3H . DANMY CAN TAKE IT DAWMY CAW WAVE it; if T ' SOMEBODY CUT OFF bUR MAIN GAS SUPPLY.....YOUVE BEEKl USIMG THE m f. nrAuxiLiARV neau'RE okay; Jipl my-, now Jt: DON'T 'TRY IP FOLLOW US'...TURN BACK ....WE'RE ARMED, AND YOU'RE NOT.' THAT PUTS US AHEAD, SEVEN TD NOTHING, EVEN BEFORE THE GAME STAR15.1 SO WATCH YOUR h-STEf! C I. M RtC U. 8 PAT. Cf F. ' ? , 19if. til MA SLKvtCE INC. By Blosser CTij--i a j. ir n' I i'l L 1 1 A OW HOW-HAVE- NEVER POKES HiS U-BEEN .' HEAD INTO A HOLE NOV, WHAT j IF HIS WHISKERS DO WE SCRAPE 1HE SIDES. ' DO IV BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Happy Landing I aW AfM"" nuic St JV 'ift.V.vs?,rJ mwfr ' I Sf IS t II U iu' "77v 1 SOOO. 6VE MNtt VT - As 6W"ELL ADW',TOOl SORE HrXVdE A. PLrNrvE a'rVWJE. THM TOV mm x 'XV 'v By Martin WtLL ,1 WNCiEO T tEE o WHERE LrXOtO'. I'LL COME HOW 6Ht'e 6.TT!' rXLONG . ' -iiu 19J6 BV MEA StftviCE, INC. T. M. RfcU. . PAT. Of.