- ' * .V . ' ? ? ? ' * . * ? ' " v v ;'.s-.;~*:r I Patronize Our Advertisers, For ?; t You To Trade With Them. ? .......v i > fc w > > *< t ? r FSA Extends Farm Tenant Program To New Counties ?? ^ AH Counties Eligible for Tenant Purchase Loans : Every county in North Carolina I will receive loans to help farm ten- J ants become owners under the j Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act, J according1 to information received I here by FSA Supervisor Z. T. I Koonce, from the State Director of I the Farm Security Administration, I Vance E. Swift Blanketing the entire state, fifty new counties were designated by I Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. I Wallace upon the advice of the State I Advisory Committee. "The FSA has helped 389 tenants! in North Carolina to become J ana owners during the past two years,'" I Mr. Koonce said. "Congress, in its! battle to keep the American farmer j on his farm, appropriated $40,000,-1 000 recently to be used under the! provisions of the Bankhead-Jones I Farm Tenant Act to help stop the! alarming trend " from farm owner- I ship to tenancy." These loans are made for a 40-year I period at three per cent interest 1 However, the act provides that after j five years payment in full can be made at any time. Under a variable j payment plan farmers may make larger payments in good years with! smaller payments due in years of j partia crop failure or low prices. Mr. Koonce said repayment ofl these loans all over the United States is reniarkable with borrowers repaying 136 per cent of maturities.! * '* twvnr tn 11 former uuuriuauuu ouvu* ^.. ? ? mifj fnr fhirr Trunin will be given by the County Supervisor whose of fice is located, is -the Post Office Pitt County ofKte is on- the second floor of the Guaranty Bank and Trust company building on Dickin son Avenue, Greenville, N. C. The Pitt County office will be open on Tuesday and Friday of each week. Arrangements are being made to have a Greenville. Office open daily. A three-farmer advisory commit tee will assist the Supervisor, exam tee the applications, appraise farms applicants wish to buy and recom mend tenants for successful term 1 ownership. Borrowers will have the help and guidance of the Farm Se curity Administration in building or repairing jtheir homes and in making plans to do.better fanning. Although land purchase loans are limited, Mr. Koonce said the regu lar rehabilitation loans for. items such as feed, seed, fertiliser, live ? stock' and farm equipment are avail able to eligible tenners unable to se cure. adequate credit elsewhere. Fifty new ?; counties added to the I ?< progranfindude Pitt. ? ?? ? Triple-A Distributes 50^91 Tons Of lime ?; Orders for 60,891 tons of ground agricultural limestone and 2,585 tons of triple-superphosphate have been placed under the grant-of-aid. plan of the Agricultural Conservation AAA executive officer of State Col* the materials la deducted ftom 193? conservation payments. ed limestone, and that 26 have or dered triple superphosphate. He ex !^-peets every county^in the State to & obtain ground limestone under the M The Thjpjpig eountjes m apphca ^?/^yidso^4^r j?,isi; also being Jfratauga 3 .I* is second with 329 tons, follovred by v I' Bun combe 192' Yancev IT* AOcchsbv I.4 ' 'Swiilvvi AT6WT tAII, (?niflWKil liOii ifldr* JUL. Iforavwi ?7 f alfjiuJ ao l * jaaywoou oi, Muuora -mm TaBdngTurkeyWin Be Seen At Congress Among the interesting exhibits that will be seen at the Seventh World's Poultry Congress in Cleve land, Ohio, July 28-August 7 is a "Talking Turkey" that gives a lec ture on nutrition of turkeys. C. P. Parrish, extension poultry specialist of State College, says that thousands of North Carolinians have made arrangements to attend the Congress. A number of them will have birds on exhibit and in the contests. Parrish is secetary of the North Carolina Committee for the Poultry Congress. He has helped to secure six teams of 4-H Club members who will represent the State in the youth division of the exposition. Three of the teams are white boys and girls from Johnston, Durham, and Guilford counties; the other three are Negro teams from Alamance, Wilson, and Hertford counties. The Durham and Wilson groups will compete in judging contests while the other teams will partici pate in demonstration contests, showing the production of poultry and its preparation for consumption. Parrish says that other interest ing phases of the Congress will in cnde a carving contest for bride grooms, hens from Chile that lay blue eggs, Japanese chickens with tails 17 feet long, Canadian Mount ed Police doing their famous drill on horseback to the accompaniment i of band music, carrier pigeons de livering messages for the .U. S. Ar my, and 7,000 birds competing for blue ribbons. North Carolina will have a large exhibit at the Congress. It has been designed to show a cross-section of the poultry industry in the State and the advantages offered prospec tive poultry-raisers. Gompromise Bill I On Wiges Sought Sab-Committee To Con fer with Andrews and Barden on Proposed Changes Washington, July 19. ? Acting Chairman Ramspeck (D-Ga.) of the; House Labor Committee named a Sub-committee today to confer with Elmer Andrews, wage-hour admin istrator, and Representative Barden (D-N.C.) in an effort .to work out compromise amendments to the wage-hour law, ' Barden is the author, of amend ments which Andrewg has estimated would exempt from the act 1,000,000 workers in the agricultural field an M?7 in the Fountain- csnifitcry. Sor* Ww-"' W?]i ? * ? f**t *?^yiP. ' *5 ? ? - I ?? Invites Internation al Committee to Join In COitt^eftceaitWhite House ?? London,' July 19.?President Roose velt, in a new effort to solve Europe's refugee problem, today Invited offi I cers of the International Committee on Refugees to meet, him in a two I day conference at the White House I the first week in September. I The invitation was conveyed to I representatives of Britain, France, I Brazil, Argentina, and The Nether J lands by Myron C. Taylor, the Amor I ican delegate, at a meeting of the 1 committee in the Locarno room of I the foreign office, j Officers of the committee come J from the five countries and the J United States. Acceptance of the j invitation is expected as soon as the I officers obtain approval of their gov j ernments. j !; j The year-old committee owes its (inception largely to the America* | President's initiative. In response to | his summons it met and organized at | Evian-Les-Baines, France, July 7, 11938. | | Its principal efforts then were in (finding refuge for Jews and others (fleeing from Austria after the art J nexation by Germany. Since most (of Czecho- Slovakia also was absorb (ed into the Reich, the committee's | efforts have been extended' to that region. | Besides the Roosevelt invitation there were two other inportant de velopments in connection with the j committee's meeting. First, the unusn goreiomepi of fered to take the lead in devising a scheme under which the 80 par i ticipating governments would con tribute by direct grants of money to the expense of transporting and main taining refugees. Second, the committee approved a plan to form within a few days a I private, rion-sftetarian organisation to I be known as "the co-ordinating foun dation," to co-ordinate the work of fexistxng refugee Organisations. Committee officers expected to sit in the White House- conference are Sir Herbert Emegson, director, and Lord Winterton, chairman, both of Great Britain. "The co-ordinating' foundation" is to have a-capital of about $936,000 and to be controlled by a council whose American members are ex pected to include Dr. Bufus Jones, Haverfond (Pa.), college professor; John W. Davis, former Ambassador to Brittain; Dave Hennen Morris, former Ambassador to Belgium; Na than L. Miller, Rabbi Stephen S. "Wise, Owen D. Young, and Joseph [ Prosbauer. wmm ?Geciiunation Of V6tch ? Seed Should Be Tested continued. "Be snre that the vetch if a J ili ft 1m a 4m ? M Aaj?X XTAM W?M 1 1 | a recent gemination test, iou win I Carolina Crop .1.mprovouifint Associfl** I fied by the association this year or J able for distribution with the gnar I bushels of .barley, 5,641 bushels of j MISS ISABELLE MOSELEY APPOINTED Miss Isabelle Moseey of Kinston, who has been appointed dairy mar keting specialist by Commission of Agriculture W. Kerr Scott to con duct a state-wide program looking toward the increased consumption cdT milk and dairy products in North Carolina. She is a , graduate of the Woman's College of the University of North Caroina in home economics. ~.i,.,;. V uiri (Hugo S. Sins, "Waohlftgton Corree -psaat) - >?, U. S. "SENDS BtRD ^OtJTH TO ASSERT AffrBenC CLAIMS LENDING |Jr CONGRESS DP A^REE" MONETARY RATTLE ENDED NEUTRALITY IS SHELVED : ;, ' ? The United;"States will rimke a, definite move this fall to extend its claims in the Antarctic areas by dii^ patching Rear-Admiral Richard E?, Byrd on a South Polar expedition intended to substantiate American clmlnra to territory within the sphere of influence of the' Mt>hroe Doctrine. : ?"???; ? ? Backed by *340,0Q0; made availab^ by Congress just, before July 1st, Admiral Byrd ^liuis to leave this country in October. He contem plates the establishment of '"tints' permanent bases west of the 180th meridan in order to put this coun try's claim beyond any question Of international law. The expedition will incude three ships,-one- of which wiU he the Bear of Oakland, in Which the Virginian made his (earl ier trip to the South' Polar regions. , .. Announcement that - Germany would send a party to the Antarctic sector this summer had something to do with the American deC&ion to take steps to assert cbdhis taiShe territories surveyed by Admiral Byrd and Lincoln Ellsworth.: Con iflncedthat areas in Antarctica af ford suitable bases for future aerial operations, .and told by - Admiral Byrd tiiat it is rich in certain- min eral deposits, including anthracite, this country decided to take imme diate action in order to prevent Germany, or any other power, from 'securing a foothold within the area covered, by the Monroe Doctrine. The development of aerial trans portation makes the remaining un claimed areas of -the globe impor tant. Back of the United States' Islands, lying along the Pacific air important in this respect Other countrieAr,;^cludingi*^Cb^^Britafe and Norway, have claims on tim basis of Sdiscovery ffcj&tiiatfl explore era, brought about an agreement relative _ ?. 1? - .. # ll ? A - , J, r 1 ?_ " era iio ii ox inc hhw iciiqiiik orukraiii brt th ^ ^r-h' . j. _ % O, ??Lifl * V^T . #?a that it engendered Denounced by ? - ? * ? \ II | >ji n i| j *". > u' I |l"'"'T^.7j^ ? ?? r'j'.U?nV"*? - I viS* ' 13 inste^f^if the Stita Te Boost of Kinston as dairy marketing spa. xitm to wnduet ? program for fa*, creased consumption of milk and dairy products. ?: the GomtnjbMnoner illustrated the need of hither milk consumption by. declaring that dietitians recommend a' minimum of onequart per child and a pint' per adult My, while North Carolina consumption aver ages only one-half pint per The new program is supported by the State Dairy Industry Committee composed of representatives of the N. C. Dairy Products Association, dairy specialists of State College, the State Board of Health and three major dairy breed associations. Miss Moseley received a bachelor's degree in stance at Woman's Col lege of the University of North lina in 1937, taught'home economics and science at Rocky Mount in 1937 88 and was elected president of the vocational group at he N. C. Tfeiai ers' Conference this year. She was born at Kinston March 9, 1917. Her father, L.-O. Moseley, is a dairyman, and; master farmer. At W. C. U. N. C., Miss Moseley was a member of the student government oouncilr and class day speaker chosen by the home economics department. She was assistant hostess of Spencer . Hhll at the University of North Cairo-, lina in the' summer of 1935 and taught in the Chapel Hill High School home economics (lepairtineiit. She served on the staff of the 4-H: Club Camp at White Lake in 1986. f; I . I Farm And Home fl&ffers Much Variety 1 1 ? ; rf'Mention almost any subject on farming and homemaking, and you'll find it on the program of State Col lege's Sflth annual Farm and Home Week, the rural family's "education ist -vacation." [a JVora the registration on Monday -Jtdy 81, until the closing feature Friday, August 4, the program has been comfortably filled with a wen blended mixture of entertainment and instruction. MWe don't want those who have pever attended a Farm and Home Week to get the idea that the pro gram is stiff and formal/' John W. said, "because we have tried to strike Officials are looking for a larger attendance of men at this year's event, the program for this group has been changed considerably so as to include topics ahd exhibits closely associated with the ?v#*s: grower's work. For example, an excellent dis play of farm machinery will be on various farms of the cortege have been arranged at which the visitors will see fine-blooded cattle, swne, sions of men and women during the ; mornings. Some of the topics include farm income, building Soils, fertfliz For five dollars j>r less, not includ ing transportation, the average far tiori/Ralfeigh. ^ WHICH wvw iiruwiiu oU|Vw ?*- ' w ?*^*7', ^AiW"i!yi&ryiEnQ4 v Acxiviwy n&o ?' j ? , ji 1 luf) - ~~'4 ,7 i,; < ? ??." ?*> ?' I ?'? StLMSiOcTCM ?~? Passes At Age of 86 fwg^ao^w, iwre conducted Than day, JulyralS.it three.^dockfrom the home of her daughter, Mrs; Anna "" " . ????? " - ? - Belle AUed?TOo^Farravilerby BSwr. Gibert Iftvii,pastor of the Christian Church at Bell Arthur. jfgpf^f ; Her ^passing-roeinot unexpected an she ha:?' ' , ?iS"i. ?1 i^propnmately 1,000 rural bpys and girls, representing the 46,000 4 H dub members in North Carolina, ^ gather at State College July 2*, ^or .the annual 4-H Short Crane. l>e event will continue through July 29. L. R. Harrill, state 4-H Cub leader, and Mta Frances McGregor, assist ant state leader, are in charge of ar- J Pes, ,, ^ Registratron^, willbegin Monday I morning at 10 o'clock, and the first Pullen HalL It.will be an informal |s?g?&!mm; rfter which g?"Pcoherences and clan instroction will bogta. Dr. Stanley Smith, director of mu- : ?Sfe:fr" PW& schools, wfll have charge of the musical program dur ing the Short course. He will, train i a chorus at 100 .voices to participate in al^gesnt offtogresswhicli will be staged in Biddick Stadium en Thursday evening. Among the principal speakers during the week, will be Dr;. Gad Taylor of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture, Washington, and Dr Jane 8. McKimmon, assist* ant of the State CoUege Ex tension Service which is sponsoring the Short Ctaase. Team demonstrations, recreation* al programs in' the eveningB, and tours of the college campus will ha a otter features at the week. No# j officers of the f State 4-H organiza tion will be elected and installed in a^ C^dle^Rghting ceremony , en I THdsy evening in' Riddick Stadium. radio programs, ^hdet tte I direction''o^^HSeneP' Knight, extension; * rtdf* teditor, will^Mpreeented dailyt . from the porch of"th* college Y. .1 ;M.^ A., With deegates partidpat- J . PROMOTE LIVESTOCK < ation h^pro^ded *700 to^be^od ^ bers to* receive aid from this fuiM } m mmA j and'- :: rp w * | i the hens have kept him on a cash^ ~ I ? *.*>?? ij *f,.i' r ' " iff#1^ f u!wj Vr' lJ| m?%SZl '''T" ? ' ? ?. (lai,*' )? ... ' J.V 'j 'iA. Fr* City of lWSf/ July 19^ poMc?f *th? ;:i mi 1 been jailed on charges of treaa^&I Offlger* were so confident that all ?|] oppoeition had been overcome that they declared only three more men actively hostile to the Nazi plan for j|l reuniting Danzig with Gemanyware. Btill A large. ' ^y?l "T 6 Authorities said the arrested So cialist were die-hards who refused to recognize changed conditions when . the Nazi became dominant in 193b. The authorities asserted they had ?&] evidence that the Socialists reon spired to bomb bridges and public buildings in event of a dash- with FolamL ~ jThey, added there were indications that those arrested had "relations with a hostile foreign po wer and ? in rir?-jp? tw- pffrtrt "anfff rmaflf to conceal an opinion that the "fecdgn power" was Poland. Evidence of military acftrfty meanwhile, increased in OMtodg.^ Several small detachments of hel meted men were seen in -the streets. Military trades appeared l'lMiMtadri moving between barracks on die Danzig-Zoppot highway andJBan zig's two hills?Biahofsberg and Ha gelsberg. Several German: aba? of ficers, were observed on the strattii and h?lw^H diapaich-be&rers sped about on. motorcycles. But by and large, Danzig appeared normal On the streets there iwere H about as many uniforms as are to be , seen in almost any German dtp, * "But we are ?> confident ;vrthab'>^p4he . protective measures are adequate fori defense against any comsftalria attack, an official said. - "We know that in event of aggression from Po- ?L land, we shall have to dtfmufwix selves only a. few hoa?,b*rere we get ? assistance from the German Reich. L >:ln a message to Warsaw, the Dan zig senate complained that five car loads of Baltic sea herring, caught by .Danzig flshaitsiui and intended, for the Polish market, had been held uponasidetrick at the border. The Benato contended that ?*> cording to traOties; and estabiiahed commercial practice, fish cwnghfc by ??'B Daindg citizens might .|fe "stepped?; freely into. Poland. Senate officials said tonight thdtPblnd bad prom ised to rdoasethe shipment. " - - ' \ m, . : Although practical farmers ard Mm women ^ ^ portant place than ever on the Farm and Home Week program at Si*ce College July Sl-Aagort 4jf a tentative list of speakers announced by John W. Goodman and Mia* Ruth Current, officials of the Extension Service in iharga of arrangements, shows that ? .Gova^nor < Clyde &; Hoeykenjfethe iat, which nbo incladee Dr;aY;?e QuUom, head of the School afcflj *?d Public Health of Jdinl fopldni ^vOT^i^T^Hut. lit'i,,, "T%- -L-- ~ r* ? 1 - . S?to, por&tor oi tflfl, rveeay " o-k - r arm ihflp Finn Iti ('uilfmtl Opiintv .hi? vilb^^^owft as a