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PAGE TWO
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MECHANICAL PENCIL and Lord Batimore Portfolio 84c vave 99
REXAU GYPSY CREAM takes “burn” from sunburn. .8 ozs. 59(:
| DAINTY MIST DEODORANT 10275 Vae 49C
COCOANUT OIL SHAMPOO kel 6oz, . ......Reg 53 39
FAC'AL "SSUES Klenzo extra-soft. .............boxof 300 246
THERMODEX TABLETS saltand dextrose . .. cooveosorss 350
SERUTAN for daily regu}anty.....,.....‘....‘......4025. 54(:
COLONNSE brightensyour hair. . .......... e 25(
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CAESAREA-BY-THE-SEA today draws eastern Mediterranean '
fishermen to its ancient Roman harbor. ;
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SHE Chacoiogisis
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Rediscover Caesar ea-By-Sea i
BY ERIC GOTTGETREU
AP Newsfeatures
CAESAREA, Israel. — About
2,000 years ago this ancient place
on the eastern Mediterranean
coast was the capital of the Ro
man province of Judea with its
own temple, its hippodrome and
amphitheatre,
Built from 25 to 13 BC by Herod
the Great, Caesarea-by-the-Sea
had a fortified harbor as big as
that at Athens. The 200-feet wide
sea mole reached into 20 fathoms
of water. :
St. Paul sailed from this har
bor to Tarsus, his birth-place in
Local Belk Store
Takes Part In
Profit Share Plan
One of the South’s oldest and
largest collective savings accounts
is growing rapidly in this area.
Officially called the Belk Profit
Sharing Plan, the account is actual
ly a nest egg planted and tended by
the Belk group of stores for their
employees.
Locally, all Belk employees who
have been with the store for one or
more years continuous service bene
fit from the plan. Belk employees
in other cities also share in the
distribution of profits.
In the past few years rising liv
ing costs have focused attention on
profit sharing plans which seem to
point toward more secure futures
for employees. In the face of high
cost living, it is admittedly hard to
save money, Under such economic
conditions a saving plan established
by emplo{ers naturally finds favor
with emg oyees.
The Belk Profit Sharing Plan
continues to grow each year, Its
growth depends entirely on the
efforts and sales of the individual
employees—not on the size of their
g:cketbooks. This is one of the
sic and unique ruling principles
of the plan—the fact that em
ployees cannot contribute one red
cent out of their own pockets. The
fund must be supported entirely by
the profits of the individual stores,
such as the one located here. This
factor provides extra incentive for
each store employee to render a
more effective service; for, though
he possesses no shares of stock, he
actually earns a dividend each year.
Each store manager appropriates
and allocates a percentage of his
store’s net profit (before taxes) to
the Profit Sharing Trust each year.
The amount of each annual contri
bution is deposited in the American
Trust Company of Charlotte, N. C,,
trustee under the profit sharing
trust agreement. Each individual
employee’s proportionate share is
placed during the year to his or her
own individual account. In addition,
the amounts resulting from the
forfeitures of the amounts in the
individual accounts of resigned or
dismissed employees are also placed
to the accounts of the remaining
participating employees.
The funds resulting from these
contributions and forfeitures are
invested in various types of inter
est-bearing investments authorized
by law. The interest thus earned on
these investments is then properly
divided and placed annually to the
individual account of each partici
pating employee,
The Belk plan is arranged to give
each store employee a share of the
profits in lpmportion te his re_flalar
pay and length of service. ese
benefits are awarded at & time and
in & manner most beneficial te the
individual.
Observation has shown that the
oreatest need for financial assist
ance arises after an employee's
active business career has ended.
To meet this need and provide a
comfortable financial cushion for
retiring employees, the majority of
trust benefits are awarded to par
ticipating employees after they
reach the age of 60 years.
Since most employees have shown
a preference for continuing their
work until they reach 65, according
to various Belk store managers, the
income from the Profit Sharing
Trust may be combined with Social
Security Old Age benefits to pro
vide additional financial security
ind self independence.
Each store manager supervises
‘he Earticipating employees and the
Profit Sharing Trust contributions
of his immediate store; however the
operation and administration of the
Trust are guided by a special Profit
Sharing Trust committee. Serving
on this committee are K. G. Hudson
of Raleigh, N. C.,, Hudson-Belk
Company, chairman; A. L. Tyler of
Rocky Mount, N. C., Belk-Tyler
Company; H. G. Leggett of Lynch
burg, Va. Leggett's Department
Store; and W. H. Belk, Jr., of
Charlotte, Belk Stores Buying Serv
ice.
J. B. Simpson of Charlotte, N. C.,
formerly with the U. S. Bureau of
Interna{llevenue. serves as Execu
tive Seecretary to the Profit Sharing
Trust Committee, and David M. Mc-
Connell of Charlotte, N. C., form.
orly an attorney with the U. S
Bureau of Internal Revenue, acts
as Legal Counsel.
L+ THE BANNER-MERALIL; KTPENS, GEORGIA
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FISHERMEN AND — 2 cuts ...
ROMAN GODDESS — Missing
head may have been gold.
Asia Minor, and nrany other im
portant events relating to Chris
tian, Jewish and Moslem history
in the Holy Land took place here.
Later, Caesarea by the Sea fell
into ruins, the place was forgot
ten, and it seems that the Crusad
ers were the last to regard it as an
important strong-point,
Today, Caesarea has come back
into the news. Jewish immigrants
are working on its sand dunes to
make them into fields and tree
land again. And while the bull
dozers rumble over the area, new
archaelogical evidence comes te
light to tell of the past.
Among the latest finds was a
huge polphyr statue of what was
apparently a Roman goddess. The
head and forearms were missing.
Experts think they were of gold,
probably stolen in the Middle-
Ages.
There are no plans for another
town at the site of Caesarea, but
the harbor and the mole are be
ing rebuilt as an Israel fishing
port to serve . the many Jewish
fishermen who have resettled this
region.
* There is also an official fish
ing school here and a big Sea
Fishing Research Station, founded
four years ago by the Jewish
Agency and now supported by the
Israel Government.
Scientists “tag” insects with ra
dioactive materials to study their
travel habits.
Funeral Notice
MASSEY. — The relatives and
friends of Miss Dorsey Leo
Massey of Madison County, near
Danielsville; Miss Henrietta
Massey, Mr. T. Lester Massey
of Danielsville, Ga.; and Mr.
John B. Massey of Detroit,
Mich., are invited to attend the
funeral of Miss Dorsey Leo
Massey, Sunday afternoon, Au
gust 12th, 1951, at three (3:00)
o'clock p. m. from the Lystra
Baptist Church, near Comer,
Ga. The minister and pallbear
ers will be announced later. In
terment Lystra chiirch ceme
tery, near Comer, Ga. McDor
man Funeral Home, 220 Prince
Avenue.
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f CONGRESS NOT (OMPETENT T 0 PROBE
'SERVICE ACADEMIES, SAYS SENATOR
By U. 8. SEN. WILLIAM BENTON
(Written for NEA Service)
WASHINGTON—I have sent to
President Truman, General Mar
shall, Secretary Pace and the su
perintendents of the military and
naval academies, my recommen
dations given in a speech on the
floor of the Senate Aug. 6. In these
I proposed:
(1) Abolishing intercollegiate
football at our service academies.
(2) Concurrent with this action,
letting the 90 accused cadets at
West Point remain in the insti
tution, on probation and subject
to the strict discipline which they
themselves would be the first to
admit should be theirs.
(3) Undertaking an immediate
investigation, by the most compe
tent people in the academic world,
looking toward the reorganization
of the curriculum, the tfeaching
standards and the faculties of our
service institutions,
If these recommendations are
followed, I see no reason for a
Congressional investigation into
the West Point football scandal.
I do not believe the Congress is
competent to investigate the aca
demic standards of the service
academies and I would urge the
creation of a committee of high
level competent educators.
* % -
So-called “big names” are not
what is required here; too often
they are window-dressing and the
committees they grace are public
relations fronts designed to justify
current programs. I would like
to see a committee drawn from the
most competent men in the field
of college curriculum-building,
I do not believe the Congress
itself can be expected to do a con
structive job on the question of
the abolition of football in the
service academies. It is too much
to expect Congressmen to stand
up against the pressures of the
alumni bodies and other groups
which have developed vested in
terests in big-time, professional
ized college and university foot
ball.
If Congressmen are susceptible
to pressures from veterans, from
doctors and other groups, how
much more susceptible will they
be to organized pressures in de
fense of the vast paraphernalia
which has developed around the
college football spectacle?
One of the most interesting ar
guments advanced on the floor in
defense of Army-Navy football
was by Senator Francis Case
(D., S. D.) who alleged “that
many of the offensive tactics and
the matter of deployment of
troops and airplanes have been
learned in the offensive tactics of
football.” My answer to that was
that if this is right, football
should be compulsory for all stu
dents—and West Point should
have 50 teams—yes 50 teams.
* . *
I deny Senator Case’s high opin
ion of football. I should like to get
from the Military and Naval
Academies the figures on (a) what
percentage of winners of major
football letters in past years have
become generals or admirals;
and (b) what percentage of those
finishing in the top 10 per cent
or 20 per cent of their classes aca
demically have become gen
erals or admirals.
But whatever these percentages,
1 predict that 30 years hence they
would be even more emphatically
on the side of those whe have ap
plied themselves to their studies.
Bigtime football has thrown the
football players wholly out of bal
ance and this is a tragedy in which
these young men are merely the
victims.
My feeling is that the only rea
son for a Congressional investiga
tion would be the failure of the
West Point officials to reinstatei
these young men who are, as I
said on the floor of the Senate,
more sinned against than sinning.|
As further indication that their
punishment has not been fitted to
the crime, I submit the following
two paragraphs from a letter from !
Dean William C. DeVane of Yale
College. |
This letter is dated Aug. 1. It is
addressed to all the students of |
Yale College. It came to my at-'
tention because my oldest son isl
entering his junior year at Yale:
“One other matter considerablyl
troubled the faculty at its finall
meeting. This was the amount of !
cheating that, if the evidence is .
to believed, takes place in un- |
dergraduate classes. Such a crime !
against one’s self and the com
munity, the College cannot and
will not condone. It seems clear
that the students are opposed, as a
whole, to taking this matter into
their own hands, and I am afraid ’
that community disapproval for
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3 pairs of Vision 51 gauge, 15 denier nylons
; plus a beautiful hosiery case
at no extra cost 0
OR—one pair of Hose — $1.50
A wonderful gift for your week-end hostess! A wonderful gift for yourself! For the
price of 3 pairs of Vision’s beautifully made, beautifully fitting nylons you get one
of the prettiest hosiery cases we’ve seen! It’s rayon satin in Vision violet lined with
silvery gray. Visions come in 3 made-to-measure lengths: short, average, tall;
sizes 814 to 11. In flattering taupe and beige. Mail and phone orders filled.
P.S. This offer is so special we must limit it to only 1 case to a cu;‘;tomer.
S a2y
‘TO ORDER BY MAIL USE THIS COUPON
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: Please send me 3 pairs of Vision nylons in the special value hasiery case. :
: GAUGE sizs LENGTH coLor :
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I BUORINE. ...l il e L I
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Accounts % Clayton
Invited Athens, Ga.
BY ). R. WILLIAMS
easy moral standards of the so
ciety about them. But that is not‘
good enough for Yale College, 1
am sure that fierce punishments
are not good correctives for this
malady, but I hold it my duty to
warn the student that punishment
up to and including dismissal will
be meted out in those cases where I
the cheater is caught. And I wish |
to remind you that a record of
cheating, a single incident, in
deed, upon the record effectively
prevents the student from enter
ing many of the most desirable
professions and businesses after
he leaves college.”
Dean DeVane rightly says that
“the easy moral standards” of our
society are not good enough for
Yale. Neither are they good
enough for West Point. Never
theless, I believe these West Point |
Cadets should be given a lesser
punishment than that which is to'
be meted out to them, and that.
the Defense Department and the |
Administration of the Service |
Academies, should take the far
reaching steps required to prevent
a recurrence.
U. S. markets sold 28,500,000
Christmas trees, valued at $50,-
000,000, in 1950. § \
The sturgeon uses its pig-like'
snout ‘to root in ocean mud {for :
worms and small shellfish. |
CUR BOARDING HOUSE
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~ OCEAN FLOOR LIFE
LA JOLLA, Calif—(AP)—Bac
teria found in sediments deposited
on the floor of the Pacific severa]
millions of years ago are still cap
able of reproducing themselves
according to Richard V. Morita, of
the University of California’s
Scripps Institution of Oceanogra
phy.
Whether they are, as has been
claimed, “The oldest living things
on earth,” is as yet impossible to
determine, says Morita.
One theory is that the bacteris
in the lower layers of sediment
have existed in a state of suspend
ed animation for some millions of
years. A contradictory theory i
that they have been able to carry
on normal functions, reproducihg
and dying, throughout the eons
they have been locked in the muyq
at the bottom of the Facific. Neith
er theory can be proved absolute
ly as yet, Morita states.
CURRENCY TREASURY—
CONFEDERATE, THAT IS
COLUMBIA, S. C.—(AP)—Syd
ney C. Kerksis, wno believes by
has the largest private collection
of Confederate bonds and eurren
cy in the world, has 3,500 varieties
of Confederate notes and 150 types
of bonds and other fiscal paper. He
is an Army warrant officer sta
tioned here.
MAJOR HOOPLE