Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Jan. 26, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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ggg= ? Irving Glover Addressed Postal Employes on 16tlj At Winston-Salem Meet ' Reviews History of Postal Service from Early Begiiming. 1? t From the use of the dromedary in Biblical timejs to the swiftly flying mail plane of today, the history of the letter, as written means of communication between peoples, was traced by Assistant Postmastej General Glover in a speech today to postmasters and postal employees assempbled from all sections of North Carolina in the postal conference-conventiom at Wanston-Salem. Taking for ' his subject "Your Business and My Business." Mr. Glover compared the problems of the postal service from the time of Benjamin Franklin, first Postmaster General of the United States, when the yearly receipts wereonly $25,000 to that of Postmaster General Work 1 when the receipts have reached the * . high mark of $464,000,000. Referring to the status of postal Vfe.:workers and their relation to the government, Mr. GIover pointed out that ,none could be clashed as "owners" such a? owners of a factory or a fr* ;-v or other large bu n*\.s. p!l_ mws.j |t:;c > cii.. . ^ MZfismm' K?":i. ; ^LCO!:OL-o ruw"c^Ki*. J fa i\ /UWHauMriMw^i'Tii'ifw U J Sir':; <\ U'.elcadtyKc?uU- I r7 i*N tiu\ ;.>i;ac!isr.r.J!Wvl>ci''I j e&nami'jnssl1 L - ' ' Thcri' ^ fc't CIkn rf.lmbsandj nciI.VrC,ium.v: rptilr " ? I fj~_;. Miuoral. NotNai:<;jtic RS? j Jikj* yg\i/irS i ^ l.if.s i . , K'o; i ji**,. s.i:t 1 E?w - - i - - I Mil f ; ;.?? I i ffl I i , AhclpfuiRc; v > for | 5-:?T: CansIip.K..n..:.tlDiai"ihvo: , J It! : unci li-\vr:s:::n-N> a.U J | ----- -I.-Steep I | i fac-si-Jc i F.xuct Copy^of Wrapper. ? "-' r "yfifiHroiimlW I E i r' Is <- rt aA:i I ' r l?.rHjr. \ J*. j fWa&aea-5c: EMS G3 B Lhi -j 3B mi'-m " 1 .nd that, on the other hand, none | ould be classed as "help" comparI ble with the employees of a big in! ustry. ''Instead," he said, "we are "D co-workers in a giganic enterprise "On the postoffice job," he said, "nothing can take the place of the indidual. While in many great industries the human equation has been reduce to a minimum, no on* has yet invented anything to taka the place of a man in the delivery of letters. Today, as a hundred years ago, we are dependent on the nerve and the sense of loyalty of a human being for the punctual delivery of our mail regardless of weather and everything elsa. "There comes to me just now so fittingly the following words which ire en.blazoned on the front of the great post office building in New York City, which really tell the story of the postal service: '* 'Neither snow, nir rain, nor heat. nor gloom of night; St a ys these courier^ _f ro_m_t h e swift completions of their appointed rounds.' |* "The history of the postal service ' ?im back as far as the sixth cenury II. C. and may he called the ndma'd of civilization and. trac-r the dispatch bearer of the Assyinn a:..'! Roman times to the airplane ?v: o of the present day the postal 3AST0RIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always f . Sears tlie / %ir" Ugnature / y.lr -< W ? J" Usfi J* For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA Thr CCNTAUII COMPANY. MCW YONK CfTY. : r\ . .il l : ?IV.- ror:- to Su-v-.*. r ? u; ... hi v - pvd i.. : I .: t - . - ol tui:; i > tun-.*. Write ; lor c..? /A, -JBI * HH S. -r Charlotte, N. C. .JUSjnja wia-wi PI 1 l , "A f'i' f"*V L. ] i'\ . v i ; h 'd rr"s< * J fernra : !1 fir' 1 ^ fl J- fcifijf ?- .i tlr-n I - ? a\fe i;?> ' / > f - 1 uVr.M CT ~ ? *; ? arm" afarm ; business has doubled in the last decade while the number of employees has increased only nine per cent. This indicates that to care for the etra loan an ever-increasing: standard of efficiency of the individual employee, as well as in methods of administration and mechanical equipment had to be maintained. "The use of postage stamps is now so common and the mailing of letters so general that it seems as if there never was a time when this practice was unknown. But the stamp itself is comparatively new. while the sending of letters i3 older than Solomon. How manw of us ever wondered how people used to send letters in olden times before the arrival of the stamp? "In the Book of Esther in the Btble you will find how letters were sent thousands of years ago. There it tells how King Ahasuerus, learning from Queen Esther that Hainan lad ordered the death of all the Jews :n the land, commanded Mordccai to call together the scribes and send j 'etters to every province of the kn;g . dom forbidding the massacre. This j is the verse that describes the send ng of the messengers: I "And He wrote in the Xing Alxasiieruj" name, aim seaa-a iw with the King's ring; and sent lettc rs by post on horseback and riders on mule-. camels and young dromedaries.' "The Unman-, too. sevi. th^r letters by mounted nu: pers. or couriers as they ere c:i!Ld. The courier carried thv me sage about twenty miles when he w? Id come to a *1 stu* where at e, nv son's r was stationed w'tfo a fr h hcifsie. ' ! He, in turn, would be v.>d by | :-il another courier whi p he reach j ed the nc::t t. Thus relay after i relay the 1. tier : d on a fast n an 1 hor ? v' 1 carry it tin- I ' ,rri\?d at last at it il? 1 , : s .I'.'on i i" : p ! f-hn . a d it is from that word that j i' -bta n the word *: t* a - found I : office ] curd, and many! "inliar w< rds. "At:.; on t!<?\ : t ? early lay f tb r\i 'n . v.!ry and in i ;ii?' t mes of lb nj: nun F.ankiiti | wh u, at fir t. en.h letter w.a, . hr.r: <1 for by si.t t in tend of by i welirht.. at rl also for the ?: . . ' was carried. Ton cent' \ . ch v.; j <1 fin- .'in* sheet, 120 o. r.ts for v: > 1 ' c. ts at;d so on and f<> every f fry an i.her ^ v. us a;!.!.- ' yh a distur. ? ? :* a!? >ut j !1 : . t' . l't p was tw . n: y ? . j, > li?v!- I\nv - were not I " f<i ;n :h :.-? \"y~, the let'-er simply : ; fo ' d a;vd s. tiled. "An ! ' >w we conit? to the , ieu" fipres show ! tr th pr*> th I of f :s :r. ea*. ^business. In ev . hot.::* of the 21 th to are in . | .-.1 1 .->?*'?,? ?><) letters in eve v any I of the 3l?f> of the year. 33.G?)0u"M) t :rtn t? - 'V..- ?* ' eoinji : the cr.?h ?f the earth. t. cany this great volume of letter*, j there was sold at the various post ofTic s throughout the country fourteen billion postage stamns, "?T mil. n m cbl Hni;.--. pr. 2* ...! on newspaper w uppers, G2 mil i v. trge due stamps u-cd on short I word ?ere was a billion postcards tainted and sold, and. ad . aid mail matter and for the hur counted, we used and sold over 1 ** billion units during th* last BHi JBiMflB.. ilimBmCUIMI * c::r. \r:d. again, to carry this vast lantity of mail we operate a very i motor truck service, having i operation tod y 4.433 mortor ve smm 'j k \ { '"1 "1 ' V | M r j ' I: 1 mI i1 v ^ \' 1 ] ,J I . <. If \ , , ' '.:Jk L T. rr ,2fi? ^ r^l ^ -4*K tiiil & ? n 3_b.? * _p a r? m finnrii'TmftfiBTi' S. C. I. School News. Dear ^Editor: May I find space in j your paper to praent the news from S. C. I. and to represent the S. C. 1. ' Christian school to every reader of The Cherokee Scout? The S. C. I. and^prof. R. F. Hough are dearly loved by every member of the Cherokee County Club. S. C. I. basketball team defeated the Cherokee Indians in a game Saturday, January 13th, with a score of 40 to 1*>- Every player played his best, and each team wanted victory. Mr. Kermit Lovingood doesnt smHe much since he heard that Jasper Rhodes beat his time at Bob Johnsons. Ernest Adams is wearing a smile since he heard that Miss Davis incoming out here. i roi. nuuirn saiu mat 11 .Mr. urns hadn't taken Ralph Adams in charge he was afraid re would lose one of the jrirl students. Room No. 1 seems to be a vary lucky one a3 all the boys, try to stay in there. Come *?n boys, if you want to fiffht Adam is on the job. Wiiiard Hall would make a jr <1 minister as he likes to visit and talk. Lewis Murphy doesn't have any th i.ir mtu*h to say about, thi s ri- us ac dent with his best g-iri the other i nm Quinton Lovingood hasn't snvlxl since he has been out here, but he ? .ys if be do. n't it't sick he will b" ..'if '* smile by Easter. Vernon IWkery -a <1 that when he j V * postage ciionuii he wa ;y>iner t writ - mc of the Grandvicw jrirl . i \\a h for Rayless Dockery and D via in the next issue. Cnm< S. !. and Join the polly i ... . and ha\\. some fun. \ jfL'iil snfi* ?nit fnrse head- | ** t 'it . - } ;ive li. cn devoted to nti aff: - if I! :: {i that probably will turn i be f minor Importance. When a undeitoo'.: to remake the : ;tp i ' ml Euro; t !i**y a ptod t ie s: 'i\ of W < lr.?w WiN >n and : * the apnrt of M-anel ? ? 1 s : adjacent territory a tertpomrily n.as 1 vr . under the control of tl T. . . Nrtler s. It was claimed by 1 1 Itmnbi ai d Prussia. bei' h It lies. A few days i_;? tic fiian pen - ?. living in this xodc, 8m?y ar11.. ; i-i'lvos ' ! ' vTl : > t!i*? City . f Mi-ii'"', wh:- :' > ?. t! s:rali r. 'xlwh j;:i> . ::i_r ii-vilile ' J" < <t - :un T | :I. ,??- i \" 1 tij t ' ! ; five . annoui ced hej vvi re li n v..IT : ,,r , th?? I : \ti> - Jit apninst the German a-'ndnist *] :in?! Gfrni:m money i S?*\or::! I h \v; -? Vi it" ' : d: ,t. 'r ! t?* M r ! ami th?* .TIi?- ! ounoll of aml'Hs-.i h?rs <! '-i ri.li'.l ! I son11 a !! .><)' ' T i !!: ;* oifV to ; establish a provisional inter-allied orrhnent on dor the authority of the Btriggti, } ! '.- iii-v, Itn-sia w. ! ( rtnany wore each blamed for t! i:i-iirrvetiOn hy <??aio !* t!< * others. ?; many bein^r ? peolaHy vehement in i:s eharire thai it v. as framed up by the Freneh with the | Jnimiynnt-e of the IV . While, as was relat voly sinall imj'ortanee. some !>servers profess to see iii it a ^r.ivo flm-at :" :ii;;st the ] i?v of ontnil Farope. The Lithuanian diet was inh !e and, then ?n the earryinjf of i thisuf inair by Railroad t<> Its many points of u -tinat. >n. it requires 21,000 railway mail clerks who cover 215.000 miles daily on t '.he onrushinpr trains." r,r ^ ^ nic s " "s r! r, a sjb it ; ^ "bner&~er*re"s[' *> t -t y* ? " *> formed toy the premier that the gtrr prument would not accept any declalor 9t the cooncl! of ambassadors regard l:?f Mem el unlesa It .effected the will af the Inhabitants of that territory. Late dh>put< hea from Meiuel carrj the story of Anthony I\as, an Amer lean citizen from Boston visiting hb parents In Lithuania, who says that be both instigated and financed th< Insurrection. Hv declares the Llthu anians would accept an English ant Italian administration of the toot until a plebiscite could be held, bu would resist the return of the Freud because they have been trying to tiut an excuse to give Meniel to Poland. Although both the i?riu?h an< American war debt refundinj commissions ore still apparently confl dent of the success of their negotla tions, the sessions were broken of teni|>orarlly last Thursday by thi Englishmen, who announced that "th? conversations had reached a stng< making desirable a (tersonal rep.?rt t< and to obtain further Instructions they sailed Saturday for London. Tb( difference in views between the com missions is not believed to be great relating mainly 'u tlie interest rate The Washington administration ii ful tlie entire Question can be set tied In time for a,'Hon during the pros ent mssloii of congress. and the feelini In England ah" is q lite optimistic. SAMPHL COMPEItS i d tlie genera exe-uthe board of tlie I'.rvwer; Workers' union have arranged itin mobilization of the forces of organize' labor to obtain a modification of tin Volstead act so tl at the mnnufactur and aile of light wines and beer ma; be permitted. Said Mr. Compere: "W> plan to make America once more th home of the sane and the land of thi free. Wine and beer of light alcohol! content are sure to come buck, an they will come hack soon." If Representative 1 I? ' aw of Cc-orgli sought notoriety by tic rather elien] means of charging that many member of congress and high government ofll clnls were liquor drinkers, he ha nehieved ills purj>ose. W:i>l. 'ugtoi seems unduly annoyed, and Congress man Ilill of Maryland lias denuindoi that the ' '?'1sp investigate the charge* Coventor Silzer >v J? i s,-v. 51 ! is inaugural address, made some ver moist re" Miunoto'a' as to the legisl; lure. isnd t. -veitiOr Pir."i?ot of 1'ent sylvnnia. on l-eing ins; iv<1. made a equally dry s: > < !i. The , pronoun,-, tinfiis were e,,;-.. Idcnt v i*!? the ;hir anniversary of the pr Jiii.iti??n aim ru no at. [?r-Rcafhs from p ?'son? us n.-uishin and bootleg get's* boo;** are becomln so numerous that the _ vcmricnt ha decide 1 to curtail the d- lings In d? nature,', and industrial alcohol, it als w .. i i < i ? . j< -r !'. i .uai : * ! < - -. bulk liquors now ! ? :<l in tn-n I an guarantee theni'as t" proof and qualit; PRESIDENT OBIJEllON, it is re per against tl?t' < 'ath-Hics . ;j M < .. .1:; an |?i>**nln.ir -uii; ho last . . from ' I'uutry M ! i' . ; BBaHHHHMHHBBBBSI Tl.i t nuivliniMi. w.i" i- ! \ to l tl iiisti;:. *?.r ml <0 ; of the la <istl niovotoo! t in MesC ?. was . I:nr;with hol?i t g a ar- i> :I?1: r? meeting til Slla vary to ! < la. 11ml wiili refusing : "fofv the or ". rs < the governor of c.u inn.h atn. Mar. 1 lippl. who ra;m? to ? t'n i state ilrnits that tlo? 'a-v wn^ violated I the meeting. ?>' 01 de.-lu ! :\\ . - ho v. I si that li:_rt* dignitaries o:' the rol. clergy siIOt!hi not e to .Me\' ' ? : J direct the church of >i \ .?n Cut! t hureh. Mgr. F'.'Mpi N an Italian. 1 Hi,-Sal circles In M \:? ?> City this 11 teranee Is t.? nvan that n?? futu: papal (li'.i ,:ite will be allowed to ??n to Mexico. I A r"' " r ' '' ' ' '-'at ",lu \\ : : 11 11. M .re. ti : tlonally famous :is finane;. r uml hor> I man, is noteworthy. He leaves, an , tute valued at nboyt $30.<>oO,?XK), all which goes to his family. The Atr.ei ; an puhli.- heard w deep regret of the Heath of Walla :;,h. in.- 1 1 -i -wr. n tight to regain h .:!:h alter break i, away from the drug ha It had be AUtehcd w ith .!? , a.paihy. _ Pr. I'a.11 T'illssiop llnaUacho. T-. 7- TV,. . the h. W w-- fc-'J rfa.v> Nov/s th? tin1 to Start ; j r .1 3 . lii".. ih < in on c;r5s. p: j f?it ox crrar. Go 4 d r.iii-.it organs with iac Dr. Hes PAN-; a j It T>ut- the egg organs to '.j It start ; tho feed tho cc.: * It. i'.vos rod o. nib; and re ; ! a it i - - back the rang ;.r | '{. P.-v-r-re n rives hens p?i> That's tvh RICHARF Dn >'c have a r:t!ii-sizt X jl .1^ I j A** RICAN T3MK0 CD BlLv^jjB j g nmo? IC^WI 1 ^N REMEO^- i ^ FOR THE RELIEF OF 1 Pairi in the Stomach and Bowels. Intestinal Cramp i Colic. Diarrhoea f - SOLD EVERYWHERE j i* L< ' I" Saturday niirht Waldcmar p Ch:. n ar?l Locket. Finder return PM to JVr- rn I 'i! and gret reward, e f NOTICE?Have some good work slock, mult't, mares, and horses* ' Will sell cheap or would trade for 'I tl "* c*>od one-ton Ford truck. s j p 1. DiCKEY. L ' /H | ? ?ijs 1 S ^ 9 " THE IMPROVED 1 ;j ASPIRIN TAb ] ? \ I Lax? Aspirin J 1 Asrdrln rlhofl fcy phjr-1?i tU iktis T.nif ite.i than any othork V .:--t and quickest!*, M -om i nuvstion, pain anfV i v\.i.iaumnirHa.i : \ ' n w } lcn*iH<- . plrln tablotr3 * ; i - nt : ltlvo, <l?*?fisfnic I j j *: tern or p t-wvcs which ax* 4 : ?uw ( .iu?4 ot" p.ilu. n..e* i i c rtbiarn or Indices- * i (>! <;.: iry 4aspirin does. ? a i'l ? r. niov?* the r o pain of ? : li ritua and lum1 s alinu. i Instant re- k , n ..? M?? and neuralgia. *. ::r .?t Tor TrXGLU'S ' \ i? - a >M !;IN in tbo three ,J \ or matl?d postpaid for '. ! P'-Titlo. Kesear.'h TaSK. Catarrh Cnrnot Be Cuffed** w: L Al n.n A'. VS. as* the* jsz, * r n u? it \ , a ? tako^lfh ijv- . al s C'atArrh Medi:: - i; .: ally .and acts thru t?- ! ; el < e* of the v-i , Wa3 v: . . ' . ,t physicians " : t U It is coin. f . .-s Known, ; v f 11 beat blood* .-luri.t-Ti; - \-t: i .thina-ion of v. f'.e ered'f r.'s ft ' a ?* i*arrh Medlrine is w j>t l;:i * Furh wonderful r. aults i* ' .itarrhal .y millions Send for J k' J <"Hf NKV CO . Prpps., To:eJo, O. All nrr-'-isT'. 7" Ha'iVs for C ","*t'D9tiOI>. 1! \w_ _.s._ j ii d': j w aniea m FIFTY MEN FOR LUM- j| = l \?R CnCVV .1 of ?GRA.DF. CREW 9El FLUMiNG CREW p| Pays f rojti $2.25 to S3.0<>>1|, gj , F"*r dry. No labor t ?2 I hies, good camps sn4 : 'y jJ 25 V I hoard at 75cents per dhji* 5& y ;; Noves Land St jj ^ Lumber Co. H OLD FORT NORTH CAROLHN KB _ _T J the poultry ^
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 26, 1923, edition 1
3
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