THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY; HERTFORD, N. C, FRIDA, NOVEMBER 19, 1937 PAGE THREE I i;u7Asiii;:stq:i I WHAT IS TAKING PLACE BY UNITED STATES SENATOR ' ' Although thia is being written in advance of the convening of Congress, ,it is already evident that 'the special session will have a very definite bear ing on the trends in business, indus try and agriculture during , the months ahead. In fact, whether the present lull will continue into 1938, or pick-up with heavy holiday activ ity, may largely rest on what Con gress does or does not do. The result is that members of Congress are returning to Washing ton with a new determination to par ticipate in making the session run as smoothly as possible and devote to the purposes for which it has been called. This opinion is shared by many of my Senatorial colleagues. If there is one thing that stands out in the pre-session discussions, it is that the big job before Congress is to give business and industry new assurance through relief from taxes that are proving burdensome and at the same time find the necessary funds to give needed assistance to agriculture. The word assistance is preferable to relief. With hearings completed in all . parts of the country, it is not unlikely that the members of the Senate Com mittee and House Committee on Ag riculture will report to the Congress very early in the session, perhaps during the first week. Considerable thought is being given to finding an effective compromise between those who favor compulsory crop control and those who favor voluntary con trol. How to accomplish either with legislation that will be branded as constitutional is, of course a majoi problem. But the farmers have more reason for hope than they hove had In re cent) years. Their views have been . Congressional committees ;t. , There will be no delav in the cha'racterVof shunting -farm legisla tion aside for less important things. Whether tax revision will be thown into the special session 1s problematic. The decision on whether to tackle the tax problem now or at the regular session convening in January, may depend a great deal on the progress in drafting a farm program that is workable. If that nioves along swift ly, the highly controversial and im portant tax question1 may come up. There is much evidence that those engaged in actively working on a tax program realize that business and industry, and in turn agriculture, are greatly affected, by a national hesi tancy. It is a hesitancy of business and industry to expand and create more jobs. Thus assurance that the capital gains and undistributed pro fits taxes will be modified would un doubtedly have a , stimulating effect oh the whole country. How soon it can be given is the question of the hour. On the whole, there is reason to believe that every effort will be made to unify the thought on important subjects to the end that the White House and the Congress will finally work together with a great deal of harmony. While business, industry and agriculture look first to Con gres8 to give the national reassurance needed, the President will undoubted ly attempt to make recommendations that will find sympathetic attention in the Congress. This would assure speedier action on all legislation. At this early date it looks as if the special session will assume great im portance from the very first and at tempt to end what is well described as "national hesitancy" in the march to improve our whole economic struc ture. Mr. Nobles at Walker's A. A. Nobles has accepted a posi tion at Walker's and began his new duties this week. DO YOU KNOW . i r-Tha t in the earfv days of baseball many of the bat meri must have been Babe Ruths. Nineteen or twenty home .runs in a same was nothing unusual The Ath letic of 1665-66 played eight games in which the score passed the hundred mark, cntom Hmnw a Mil m L I J J IT CIRCULATES HEAT i 1. hi It: HEAT-REFLECTOR v DOORS vKHUIHIE . " HEAT Moating Service at Lour Cost THEY RISE AND FALL TOGETHER Farm Cash Income V Income of Industrial workers NTj- 1 I i i ; i i i i i i '. i Firm Cash ncomf'b j m l i rrrrV;TTT 9 Mfc nWw Ifftt ItM IMt Ml MM Guests from Wrightsville, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. George E.,Filbey, of Wrightsville, Pa.,' are expected to ar rive in Hertford on Saturday to spend a week as guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Malles. Visited at Chapel Hill Miss Carolyn Riddick, who attend ed the Duke-Carolina football game at Durham on Saturday, was the week-end guest of friends at Chapel Hill. m msi mi ii is nn nji" Pntmlj tttlmtt, - The interest of farmers and city consumers in balanced larm produc tion are directly related. The chart shows the close relationship between farm cash income and the income of industrial workers. Estimates for both groups place 1937 income at about 90 per cent of the 1924-1929 average. In 1932 the income for the two groups was about 45 per cent of the 1924-1929 average. "Souls At Sea" Is Dramatic Thunderbolt ( , - yj 4 . When you heat with a ColemanOil Burning Heater you get the advantages of Coleman's 2 WAY HEATING SERVICE--and other fine features; '. , K " ' -r -1 H 1. A FOCUSED COMPORT ZONE OF RADIANT - HEAT When Heat-Reflector Doors are open. - -'2. A TREMENDOUS VOLUME OF CIRCULATING 1 IIZ AT When Heat-Reflector Doors are dosed. - 3. i:r.T-RADIATINQ FINS-Prbvlde greater . heating , r e. t -k . .,.rV.S'.Ut.!it'. 4. CCI' !AN FUEL-8AVINO BURNERt-Botiui aU the Cufci i e v ztei. Produces more heat' Colcr.;.T II- iters ' provide extra Cornfort, cleaner, rr.;rs L. ".Mul, more economical heat Operatir cczt h I -3, because Coleman Heaten . recover I J to 3 r r c:r.t cf the heat produced from low cost furnace cIL Trj?y this low-cost heafc; r 1 , tythir.2 In 11a: Z. J Supplies' Gary Cooper and Prances Dee In a dramatic moment from "Souls at Sea," at the State Theatre, Hertford, Monday and Tuesday. "Souls at Sea" is the motion pic ture treatment of the famous trial of "Nuggin" Taylor, sea, captain of the '40's who assumed command of the brig "William Brown" when that ship caught fire in mid-Atlantic shortly after her master died. Taylor is played by Gary Cooper, who hardly performed as well in any of his long string of credible adventure stories possibly because he was re-enacting a story from history's pages for the first time. The "William Brown" was equipped with only two life 1 boats and Taylor realized that he could never bring the entire ship's company to Bafety in the frail craft. He ordered trial to determine who should be per mitted to go aboard the lifeboats and .who should be ordered at pistol "poiftt-tb remain aboard and go to the bottom with the ill-fated vessel. He included himself among the sur vivors not because he wanted to save his life, he later told an admiralty court, but because he knew he was the only man who could bring the life-boats safely through to land. There followed a trial which is now epic among sea trials. Taylor was accused of manslaughter on the high seas not only by most of the survivors, but what hurt most, by his sweetheart, played by beautiful Fran ces Dee. This powerful picture lists in its cast George Raft, who is superb as the hard-boiled mate of the vessel who would steal a kernel of corn from a hen, but who would follow his captain to the grave; Henry Wil- coxon, Harry Carey, Ulympe Bradna, Robert Cummings, Porter Hell and a roster of supporting players culled from Hollywood's most noted feature players. Cattle And Lambs Bring High Prices Prices for well-finished cattle and lambs are likely to continue near present v levels for the next few months, according to L. I. Case, beef cattle and sheep specialist' for the State College Extension Service. Prices farmers receive for hogs are expected to go down Borne as tney usually do during the fall and winter months. But even with this usual decline, hog prices are expected to average at least as high as a year ago. ' Many sections of North Carolina produced a bumper crop of corn this year, Case said. Therefore, with prospects for lower corn prices and a relatively high' level of hog prices, the corn-hog price ratio will be fav orabie for swine leeding and pro duction during the next few months. The improved feed-grain situation also points to- an 'increase in the number of cattle and lambs fed this year, the extension specialist declar ed. The outlook for sheep and lambs has changed but - little during the past ' month. - Marketings will be larger-this fall than in the past summer,, but the effect, of these in creased marketings on prices will be offset largely by an expected strong demand for feeder, lambs in the Corn Celt. . In mid-September cattle - prices reached the highest level in about 7 years because of the marked shortage of grain-fed cattle in the slaughter supply, Case pointed out. Prices-of well-finished cattle are expected to continue relatively high, or at least until increased si ''es of pram-fed cattle become av lie next winter Winter Weather Is Good For The Soil TAYLOR TEIEHTEl EDEN TON, N. C. WE HAVE THE SHOWS "Give the weather a chance to work your idle land for you this winter," said E. C. Blair, extension agronomist at State College. Fields that are plowed deeply this fall will be more exposed to freezing and thawing through the winter, which will pulverize the soil and kill harmful insects, he said. All lespedeza sod, clover sod, and land on which no winter cover crop is growing should be plowed in No vember if possible, or at least in December or January. Plow the land good and deep, Blair urged, and leave the surface rough until it is harrowed next spring. Rough plowed land, he pointed out, will get greater benefits from the freezing and thawing, and will also accumulate moisture that will be helpful to spring crops. There will be very little erosion on fields that are plowed deep in the fall and left with a rough surface, especially if the furrows run along the contours. Such furrows will act as miniature terraces to hold the water until it is soaked up by the soil. And the more water there is in the soil near the surface, the more effective will be the freezing actfon in pulverizing the earth and making it 1 Today (Thursday) and Friday, November 18-19 Gladys George and Warren William in "MADAME X" SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION "THE CORONATION" In Technicolor Saturday, November 2 GENE AUTRY in "BOOTS AND SADDLES" Robinson Crusoe No. 11 Comedy Monday and Tuesday, November 22-23 Joan Crawford and Warren William in "THE BRIDE WORE RED" With Robert Young ALSO NEWS OWL SHOW MONDAY NIGHT 11:15 Boris Karloff, Beverly Roberts and Ricardo Cortez in "WEST OE SHANGHAI" FREE Two Large Turkeys FREE Will Be Given Away at This Show Also POPEYE CARTOON Wednesday, November 24 Ramon Novarro and Lola Lane in "THE SHEIK STEPS OUT" ACT COMEDY BANK NIGHT Thursday, November 25 For Thanksgiving Irene Dunne, Randolph Scott and Dorothy Lamour in "HIGH WIDE AND HANDSOME" a 1 !?' 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