THE ALLEGHANY TIMES Published Every Thursday $1.50 Per Year Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at Sparta, N. C. D. C. SHORES, Editor Kill A Dogr and Get A Pig Mr. C. A. Miles informs us that arrangements have been made whereby any person on the relief fund list who will kill one of his dogs may get a pig in return. All claimants are eligible for this exchange, but Mr. Miles must see the dog killed or have a reliable in formant so that there con be no mis take about it. If a claimant has two dogs to kill then he can get two pigs or if he has three then he gets three pigs, or in other words, he gets a pig for every dog of his own that he will destroy. ^.^jTlus , should be interesting in rM^JUmnation to those who are relying on the relief fund, for a dog will eat about as much as a pig ajid when winter comes, those who take ad vantage of the exchange will have pork sausage instead of hot dogs. It has been rigidly discussed that i any claimant of the relief fund should dispose of his dogs already and this is a good time to make the exchange before the names of dog owners are dropped from the relief list, if it comes to -that point. At any rate, thtefe are hundreds of worthless dogs in the county and if you have them on May 1st you will have to list them for taxation anyway, and it would be far better to have a pig than a worthless dog. The county and people are always ready to help theme in distress pro vided they try to help themselves, so it would be ah'ideal thing to think seriously about swapping that old dog for a winter’s supply of meat. The Farmers’ Unnecessary Burden Hundreds of .thousands of over burdened taxpayers on farms and in villages are paying millions of dol lars per year in taxes that, by all rules of fairne.ss, should be paid by the residents of certain cities and towns. How has this happened? Simple enough. It is because of the entry of these cities and towns into busi ness ventures,., principally gas, elec tric and water utilities. The situation can be well Uustra ted by Ohio, for which complete sta tistics are available. In.that state is about §225.000,000 worth of property, owned.by cities and towns, which is used : entirely for business purposes and is free from taxes. The average tax rate for the state is 22.44 mills. A little problem ill ar ithmetic shows that these towns are thus escaping a tax payment of S5. 000,Ooo a year. The farmers and village dwellers receive no benefit whatsoever from the bpration of these business! s. There is an average. of sOOO.OOO worth of this tax-exempt business property in every Ohio county. If this were privately owned. It would pay state and local taxes of $6,700 a year. Municipally owned, it pays nothing. The 6,700. lost tax dollars must be passed on to other taxpay ers. and levied against other kinds of property. Residents of each coun ty. principally farmers, are thus pay ing the users of municipal business properties a dole amounting to $!>”■ 000 in a ten year period. Former Governor MeElvie of Nebraska, went to the crux of the matter when he said. “I have no complaint if municipalities want to own their own utilities, but I want the municipally owned utilities to pay their share of taxes. The farrn reeeives next to no benefit from this property, w'hy should he have his taxes increased on account of it?” The situation in Ohio is present, to a greater or lesser degree, in ev ery state. The courts have upheld the right to tax municipal property when it is used for business, as dis tinct from governmental purposes. And no amount of talk can escape the fact that this should be done, out of justice to private business, the in dividual taxpayer and the state at large. If municipal business can meet private competition only by; what amounts to a public subsidy, it’s time the public found it out.— Industrial News Review. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Meridy Hill, de ceased, notice is hereby given to all persons „holding claims against the estate to present them to the under- | signed within twelve months from! this date or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery. All per sons indebted to the estate are notified to make immediate settle-! ment. This February 4, 1933. J. K. TAYLOR, TODAY and fOMSSST J •MMCMRKER BDOCMUDOE NATIONALISM ... a kick-back A lot of the world’s present troubles are due to an excess of Na tionalistic pride. Every nation is trying to be self-contained, and then grouching because other nations won't trade with it! Every dollar we spend for foreign goods helps some other nation to buy our goods. I believe in Amer ica first, but I do not believe in the stupid doctrine whifch would prohibit me from buying something I wanted because it was made abroad. Nearly a hundred years ago there was an agitation in this country similar to the ‘‘Buy American” movement of today. The party which advocated non-intercourse with foreign countries got the nick name of “Know-Knothings.” Pres ently we will wake up again to the truth that every obstacle to inter national trade hurts everybody con cerned. JEWS ..... in Germany Jewish people all over the world are greatly disturbed over the policy of the new “Nazi” government of Germany, under the practical dic tatorship of Chancellor Hitler, in boycotting Jewish merchants, doc tors, teachers and others. I talked the other day with an in telligent y6ung German Jew who had been getting letters from home about the situation in Germany. He was not at all worried. His people had written him that they were not being annoyed and that the whole anti-Jewish agitation was directed at a Communist element, mainly com posed of Jews. Another German, a non-Jew, said t.n me:_"Here in America the Jews work like other people. In Germany a lot of them don’t do anything but try to make trouble for the Gov ernment." But, of course, the German gov ernment has handled the situation stupidly, as it always handles any situation. More than a hundred years ago the great French historian Guizot, wrote: “There is some thing in the German temperament which makes them utterly unable to understand the point of view of oth er peoples.” MACHINES ... can't work When these hard times are over— arid that won’t be long now—we shall not go backward but forward. And one thing we may look for is more and more perfection of ma chines to do our work for us. When I was a boy I used to ad mire the muscular development of the men who worked in my uncle’s machine shop. Not long ago I vis ited the same plant, now tremend ously changed, and found one ot those old-timers still working. He was sitting in a rocking-chair watching an automatic machine do almost exactly the same sort of work he used to do by hand, only many times as rapidly and accurately Every once in a while he would take a finished piece off the machine "iid put a new block of metal in its place. “They say the machines will throw everybody mu of work," he said, “but I notice it still takes a human brain to tell the machine when to stop and start.” That is something people overlook. Nobody has yet made a machine that can ihink. and nobody ever will. TKliKl’HOXK . . . another step Everybody who has a telephone must have wished for some sort of an attachment which would answer automatically when the subscriber is away. Word comes from Vienna that just such a device has been invented and is in use there. When one is going to be out of telephone reach he sets the imminent to the hour when he expects to be back. Then, if a call comes through in his ab sence the caller hears a gong ring to indicate the hour when the per son called will return. When he returns he finds a record of all calls. It will be easy to develop that idea into a phonograph record which would say “Mr. Smith has gone to Florida but will be back on the fifteenth,” or whatever other message it is desired to convey. Something of that sort will come some day. TYPEWRITER . . has birthday I have a vivid memory of the day when my mother received a letter from her younger brother in Buffalo with the w-ords printed instead of written with a pen. He said: “This letter is written on a new kind of machine we have got in the office, called a typewriter.” That was almost sixty years ago; about 1876, I should say. The type writer was only three or four years old then, for the sixtieth anniver sary of its invention by Christopher Sholes has just been celebrated. There was quite a celebration or ganized by '#he Young Women’s Christian Association. The type writer, they held, had. emancipated women by making it possible forj them to do work in offices. I don’,1, j think that is sound reasoning. Hard-j ly anybody but men used typewrit ers for at least twenty years after the machine was invented. The rush of women into business began in the early 1890's, afteri the telephone people had broken down the barriers that kept wome out of offices. MONEY ..... a definitioi I think we are going to come ouj of our economic troubles with much more general understanding ol the unimportance of money, thaif most of us had before. Millions of people have learned how to get along with substitute! for money. A lot of them hav| learned that money is not wealth but is merely a symbol of wealtlj Real wealth is commodities that ca be used, and nothing else. The best definition of money have ever seen was written by German economist. Paul Helffericj He said: “Money is a medium for storil commodity values and conveyi| them through time and space.” SCRIP.just as go Any money is good money whi^ everybody is willing to accept such. Practically the whole natid has gone on a scrip basis, and uni we try to spend some of it outsil I of the United States it is just as goj as gold. The only thing that makes go the best money is that it is the ol substance which everybody in tl world accepts at the same value. B1 when everybody in Ilopfrog Cornel accepts the local scrip at its faq value, the scrip is just as goq money as gold money. .Neither scrip nor gold is wealth both are merely yardsticks wit| which to measure wealth. FLAGS . . . In Get'inum The German flag has been change! again. Instead of the red, wlvifl and gold stripes of the Republic, tlfl new Nazo government has gone bacl to the old flag of the empire, reel white and black, with the swastika or hpoked cross, imposed upon it. Since the Great War there is hard ly a national flag which has not beet changed. The Stars and Stripe stands out .today as one of the oljes flags in the world. Only the banner of Denmark and Switzerland are old ! er than Old Glory. We still think of the United States 'as a young nation. As a matter of 1 fact, our country is about the only one in the world which has not un , dergone revoltionary changes in its j form of government in the past 150 years. It seems to me that Ameri cans ought to shake off the idea that other nations are older and i-therefore wiser than we. and assert our rights to tell the rest of the world where to get off, since we i are not only the richest but the oldest member of the family of na tions. XKGRO • faithful public servant Eddie Savoy has retired. Eddie is the colored man who has been door keeper in the State Department in Washington for sixty-four years. He was a little boy of thirteen when he first went to work under Secretary of State Hamilton Fish in 1S69. Ed die is 77 years old now. He has served faithfully under 21 different Cabinet officers but his legs are get ting rheumatic, so he told Secretary Hull the other day that he thought he would retire on liis civil service pension. ' Every foreign diplomat who has been in Washington since General Grant was president, knows Eddie Savoy, and he got to know them all. His unfailing courtesy and natural dignity never failed to impress all who came in contact with him. “A faithful public servant.” said Secretary Stimson, as he said good bye to Eddie Savoy. That cannot be said of every white man who has held office in Washington. STROTHER . . . his death a loss No finer gentleman, no abler jour nalist, no more faithful friend ever lived than French Strother, whose sudden death in Washington at the age of 4 9 put an end to a career of high promise. A native of Missouri, a newspa per man in California, for many years an editor of World's Work, author of half a dozen books, French Strother attracted the attention of Herbert Hoover by writing some ar ticles about the work of the Depart ment of Commerce. One of Mr. Hoo ver’s first appointments as Presi dent was that of French Strother as his Administrative Assistant. It was Strother's task, hidden away in an obscure office in the White House basement, to gather the data the President needed to prepare his mes sages and public addresses, then to polish their language after Mr. Hoo ver had roughed them out. Dike everybody else who knew him, Mr. Hoover formed a warm per sonal attachment for his able assis tant. French Strother was my friend of years; his passing is a real loss to the world of journalism. Canada .... good banking There are a good many things we could learn from Canada, and one' of them is banking. Canada has been going through just as difficult an economic crisis as the United States, but there has not been a bank failure there in, ten years. Only two Canadian The Modem Miracle =By Albert T. Reid producing WHAT WE EAT, ^FOR LESS THAW COST' (JOLLY' ! i’t see how^ KEEPS OP . It looks a little fishy when every ailment the world has requires bleed ing Uncle Sam.—Palatka (Fla.) News. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the power contained in a certain Deed of Trust, j executed by Cleo McMillan to D. C. Duncan, dated the 18th day of 'March, 1931, and duly recorded in Book 16, page 165, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Alleghany county, North Carolina and there having been a default iii the payment on the indebtedness secured by the said Deed of Trust and at the re quest of the holder of the evidence of indebtedness, the undersigned Trustee will sell for cash at the WANTS Sewing Prices Reduced. Compare work and prices before having your sewing done. Mrs. R. M. Osborne, Sparta, N. C. For Sale—On Saturday, April 22nd I will sell on the premises 250 acres of grazing to the highest bidder. Grazing located on prem ises of W. H. Billings, at Piney Creek. P. C. Collins. _—— Attention Mr. Farmer and Poultry Raiser! Now is the time to get your baby chicks. We are hatch ing 5,000 per week. For the next ten days we are booking orders at $8.00 per 100 for blood-tested State Accredited big healthy liva ble chicks guaranteed to live and grow. We also handle a full line of Purina Poultry feed and have the best display of brooder and henhouse furniture ever displayed in this section of the state. We have recently installed a Mam moth All-Electric Buckeye Incu bator for custom hatching. Bring us your eggs and we will hatch them for you at 2c per egg for full tray of 120 eggs. Phillips Building , Tenth street. Wilkes Hatchery, North Wilkesboro, N. C. Reins-Sturdivant FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Day or Night. Phone No. 22 SPARTA, N. C. Courthouse door in Sparta, North Carolina, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 28th day of April, 1933, the follow ing described property: Bounded by the lands ot Charlie Edwards, Bud Edwards, Mack Jones and others, containing 45 acres more or less. This land is known as the R. A. Doughton land and a part of the Alex McMillan land in Prath ers Creek Township. Reference is hereby made to a deed recorded in Book 3S, page 315 in the Register of Deeds office, Alleghany county, North Carolina, for a full and- com plete description of this tract of land. This March 27, 1933. D. C. DUNCAN, 4-20 Trustee. Dft. M. A. ROYALL Elkin, N. C. SPECIALIST in diseases of the eye. ear, nose and throat GLASSES FITTED | EXPERT RADIO SERVICE Here is what you get: t. Work done by trained and experienced repairman. 2. Modern methods and equip ment used. 3. Best quality of replacement parts. # 4. Prompt and efficient ser vice. 5. Special attention to out-of town calls. 0. Full line of batteries, tubes and supplies. 7. Our prices are in keeping with the times. J. M, CHEEK, Jr. Phone 45 — Sparta, N. C. It paye to advertise in The Alle ghany Times. FINE REPAIRING Two Expert Repairmen In Charge i c. W. STEELE Jeweler E. Main St Elkin, N. C. PROGRAM LYRIC THEATRE ELKIN, N. C. Tlic Home of Good Pictures Fri.-Sat.— TOM KEENE in “Ghost Valley” Also Colortone Revue—Serial Admission 10c—30c Next Week, Mon.-Tues.— The big hit picture of the year “Strange Interlude” with Norma Shearer and Clark Gable News — Cartoon — Comedy Admission 10c-30c Wed.-Thurs.— FAMILY SHOW “Man Learns About Woman” Also News — Cartoon Admission Only 10c COMING MAY 8-9— WILL ROGERS JANET GANOR in “STATE FAIR” TO OUR CUSTOMERS We carry a complete line of dry goods, notions, grass seed, plow repairs and feed stuff. We specialize in giving the farmers the highest market price for all produce. Get our prices before buying. When quality is considered, we will meet all competition THE PEOPLES’ STORE J. A. Osborne, Prop. Sparta, N. C. \