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PAGE TWO Get Set for Sunday School Gonvention Within the next month or so, the' Ashe county Sunday school conven- • tion will assemble somewhere in the county—the place and date to be named later. In view of this fact, it ( is urgently requested that every Sunday school in the county begin to make preparations and contribute in some way or other to this conven tion and make it the best ever held in the county. As I have heretofore done, I want to emphasize the fact that this con vention is under the supervision of the state and that it is absolutely “non-denominational,” Every church organization in the county has a cor dial invitation and is asked to attend. I would suggest that each and eve ry township in the county meet at some convenient place and elect a township president and secretary and report same to Mr. Dell Good man, secretary, West Jefferson, N. C. It is needless for me to say to thinking people that one of the best known means to impress important truths upon the minds of the chil dren is in hte Sunday School, and in view of the fact that our whole civic and moral structure seems to be tottering, it behooves us all to make every effort possible to save the situation. Hoping that our county will put itself on the map at this convention, I am, Sincerely yours, C. M. DICKSON, President. Scientists Study Exploding Star The exploding star in the noth eastern sky last week mystified astronomers by adding iron to the blazing stuff it hurled out into space. The iron appeared in the spectrum bands—color pictures of the star’s light—observed through Yerkes ob servatory telescopes as the star grew brighter. The metal’s significance was dif ficult to explain, Dr. Otto Struve, observatory director, said. Dr. Oliver J. Lee, who also was watching the star at Northwestern University’s Dearborn observatory in Evanston, 111., added that Iron was not unusual in normal stars but was not seen in novae like this one. If enough new date—such as the appearance of the iron in the spec trum—can be obtained from these “explosions in the making” scientists may get a definite clue to the cause of the blow ups. Exploding stars are a 4,000 year old mystery. The ancients called them novae in the belief they were new heavenly bodies. They were seen as early as 1155 B. C. Rains in Carolina Help Crop Recovery Frank Parker, Federal-State crop statistician, said during the week end that rains general over most of the central and eastern North Caro lina since June 10 had caused “very fine recovery of crops which had suffered seriously from drought.” ’ After a trip into the Piedmont section last week, and from reports on conditions in the East, Parker said he thought the drought had definitely been broken except in scattered areas such as a strip along through Union and Mecklenburg counties. Stands of some crops were weak but replanting of corn is underway,” Parker said. “Cotton and tobacco are coming out nicely. Late corn is do ing well. Pastures are recovering rapidly. Estimate of $50,000,000 drought damage in the State in my • opinion are fading fast.” BONUS CHECKS GONE ALREADY Two World war veterans, Albert Nichols of Sims, and Mark Timmons of Piedmont, S. C., have their bonus worries all right, but it’s not about how they’ll spend it. A neighbor’s cow took care of that for Nichols by eating the check, Nichols reports. It was relatively paltry but pleasantly palatable. Timmons saw his check and bonds for $767 go up in smoke with in 12 hours after getting them. Tim mons left the bonds inside a news paper he had been reading. Mrs. Timmons used the paper to start the kitchen stove. There is practically no ice in Ice land even in winter. World’s Largest Insect Arrives , K i i / -'P K ■ • ' < ' kV 3 \ / Km | ■ \ ] 'ii—r B \ \ I / K i \W/ HI aDfEOpWj; I MI ’ I The world’s largest Insect, a 15-inch “walking stick” from New Guinea, ar rived recently at the general science department of the New York University School of Commerce, Accounts and Finance. Miss Vivian Walsh, a sophomore at New York university, Is measuring the giant “walking stick.” One Chance in Ten Thousand feoff > jh IE wOMw <. ijlilKii ’-J-' OTw'W-.- S I- >sg? •x-.^'WiSx.ziE>?' w ■ A Siii tHI 1 'lllibrn. ■ ‘tMI? y Ms 118 r ® WiilP ■ f Pictured above, with the mother, is the second pair of twin Belgian colts foaled in the United States. The dam is Lucille, prize brood mare, and the sire s Dr. Crotti, .Jr., champion Belgian stallion and winner of the Yser cup sent to ■he United States by the king of the Belgians. According to records, the case it twin colts occurs only once in 10.000 foals. Cripples Ask Aid of Hopkins ' yx- a ..... , % MB *!£7 I physically aW •> 'M h4 E ’ Habopped ß« 500oAu mkK iill Wobs MsW ■ ;O. J* • Protesting against what they declare to be “discrimination” and an “un sympathetic attitude” on the part of WPA officials, a delegation of 33 New York cripples, representing the League for the Physically Handicapped, journeyed' to Washington in an open truck and besieged the office of Federal Relief Admin istrator Harry Hopkins, to plead for jobs. He told them that if their complaints were justified, which he doubted, the wrong would be rectified. Lindbergh Estate to Be State Park '■ S■. i <. > flMgiißll k » : ' ■' "'' ” >.i z wKBI.3KW : j^W.w ; '4 On the ninth anniversary of CoL Charles A. Lindbergh’s non-stop flight to ?ariß, WPA announced its final plan for the project to make the Lindbergh jstate at Little Falls, Minn., a state park at an expenditure of $23,777, The residence is shown above. THE SKYLAND POST, WEST JEFFERSON, N. C. Cash Balance on Hand Pleases Officials of State ■ t Candidates for Governor See Surplus as Grounds for Argument RALEIGH, June 20.—North Caro lina’s cash balance in the general fund June 1 was $1,972,427.11, mak ing certain a July 1 surplus is the first year of a biennium which is booked to produce slightly less than the second year which ends the fiscal part of the Ehringhaus administra tion. While a state campaign rages about the governor and the gover norship the sturdy overplus pleases mightily and seems to make a solid appeal. The cash balance fell nearly a million from $2,918,687.11 as of May 1, to the $1,917,427.11 mention ed. Heavy warrant disbursements demanded by the season carried the surplus and receipts for May from $4,981,135.59 to slightly less than $2,000,000. The expenditures were $3,008,798.42. The fiscal year began with a cash overdraft of $2,310,407.25 on July 1, 1935. That deficit has been absorbed without resort to borrowing and swallowed up in the healthy reve nues of the succeeding 11 months. The sales tax of course, has done the work and the new biennium begin ning July 1, 1937, unquestionably will be financed without an exemp tionless sales tax. The recent Demo cratic state convention in its plat form pledged repeal of the sales tax on “all necessities of life.” There is at present a terrific verbal prize fight over “necessities,” the opponents of the general sales tax contending that “all necessities” means all things that a poor man buys and the advo cates of exemptions arguing that “all necessities of life” means essential foods. The legislature will have to define “necessities.” It may have to elucidate “life” it- 25c FREE in Trade at I E. E. Jones Cash Store Rhodes Furniture Co. Central Radio Co. Richardson’s 5,10 c & SI.OO Store Quality Cleaners Graystone Service Station Burgess Furniture Store Miller’s 5 & 10c Store Roten’s Store Brown’s Service Station Bare’s Fair Store T. G. Miller’s Cash Store Smithey’s Store self, for Dr. R. W. McDonald, a great necssitatian, calls coffins necessities of life, but the average man who occupies one of these things regards them as “necessities of death.” Dr. Dr. McDonald also regards mules “necessities,” because poor men have to buy mules. Necessarily, the 1937 general assembly will have to enact some law interpreting “necessities.” But barring that loss of revenue the state stands to make substantial gains. It goes into July, 1936, with a clean balance, probably less that it had June 1, but a good one which will grow, because trade picks up mightily within the next 90 days. The highway fund grew slightly over May. There was a cash balance May 1, of $14,476,555.69 and that grew to $14,623,835.27, about $150,000 during the month. The cash balance in this fund July 1, 1935, was $9,- 651,517.25. The state Democratic platform pledged a further reduction in the cost of automobile license plates. And that will take a small, perhaps a considerable sum, from the fund. Receipts for the 11 months of the fiscal year reached $29,151,- 966.74, and disbursements of $24,- 179,648.72. Cash in the treasury and reserved for account June 1, was $20,460,407.42. And the total state debt has been reduced, without any help from the accumulating retire ment funds, to $167,368,000. The net debt with these credits is millions less. WORK ON NATHANS CREEK CHURCH PROGRESSES NICELY Rev. J. C. Swaim reports that the work on the new Methodist church at Nathans Creek is progressing nicely. The foundation has been completed and all the lumber sawed and on the yard. The form work will be completed soon. Mr. Swaim is working hard to meet the requirements to get help from the Duke Foundation. $300.00 raised locally will entitle the church to $525.00 from the Foundation. Mr. Swaim states that he would be glad to receive any contributions from the public for this good work. If You Subscribe to THE SKYLAND POST This Month june 25, me BONUS MONEY PAYS 18-YEAR- OtD DEBT TO WAR VETERAN SPARTANBURG, S. C., June 20. It was 18 years ago, and in the trenches members of the Rainbow division were indulging in a fast game. This week in the Spartanburg post office, they met, to draw their bonus bonds. Said one to the other, “Here’s something I’ve owed you for 18 years. May it bring you the same dam luck you had that night in Maychoss.” FOUND Spirit of Youth Returns with Youthful Hair CIMROIi Makes Your Hair Look Its Youngest Helen Twelvetrees, Star of Republic Pictures If your hair is drab or streaked with gray, Clairol will impart natural color or change its shade gradually... secretly.. .quickly. 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