Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Aug. 31, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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frrU" 31. 1923 ISOl good CIGARETTES lO* | GENUINE ||. ? "Bull" DURHAM f, E Llv TOBACCO ! ' r! _SLI TO THE SCOUT n ii f v ~ Ml nan. ! I I m . . ,, .... ' | :i v QUARANTEJ7 I o Eczema and Itch Lotion I Destroys r W \. ITCH. TETTER. KIN WORM. AND OTHER SKIN DISEASES. .1 GlAKANTEKP T O GIVE t s \TI:-1-ACTION OR MONEY KK! . NDED. ?Sold At? ^ R. 5. Parker Drug Co ? And? rDr. J. VV. Crawford I & Sons j GUARANTEE REMEDIES COMPANY ASHEV1LLE, N. C. Write us about our Distemper and Black Tongue Remedy (or Dogs. duct of tmainMi Hnl orrvprnmi to direct the conduct of businei baseball game are there to m forced; but they do not attemp the battiug order of the team, o I make four runa or nine in a sf umpires attempt to tell a losing should be sent to the bat to obt a suggestion here which could w tionship the Government shou Hi here are n x 99 regulatory b i I who are directing the ope rat: , * _ are 48 State Legislatures, t Utility Commissions, Congress, Board, and the Interstate Commt Toads are now struggling thru a 1 poeed by these different agencies. ? their burdens lighten* their burdens be not _ijS ipaSk = ? ' PENNSYLVANIA GOVERNOR GETS IN PUBLIC EYE inchot Tell* Miners and Operators They Must Settle Their Difficulties President Coolldge and hederal fficiu. have \\I >rkfd out an agreelent with Governor Pinchot and othr Pennsylvania authorities about le rights and responsibilities of the oder:d Government and the State of en n sylvan ; i in the controversy bcvec-n the coal miners and operators i th-' anthricite coal field and the lovernor is proceeding to settle the ontroversy without a strike, if posble. At the conference with miners nd operators the first of th^ week le Gove rnor told them in no un;rt:iin terms that the public would ot stand for a strike of the coal liners at this time and that the dificulties would havo to he etthd ithout resorting to the strike. TV, controversy arose ovtr the | efusal of the niine operators to jrree to the "check-off" 'system, rhich is the forcible collection of he dues of union mine - by iv oprat ors. Operators claim that it Is 1 at it i< n< t th- ir dutnor is it | ight, to withhold part <-f the salary f th miners t opay into thc coffer* ' if th? anthricite coal miner? union nrl Fresdent L-u:* of the Miner?'j derated unions threatens to mil n tr'k<" unit-?? the operator? agree to uci, ar. arrangement. Washington officials are hop? ftil hit the strike can ho averted, hut o efforts are being r par id to tike' are of the ituntion should the strike autally he called. The department f f. inmerce and the Ce il Coir.m'supply bituminous coal to users of inthricite, should the strike cut off he hard coal supply. Pendergrast. Our Sunday school of pond rgrast s progr-:ng nicely und- r the manigenunt t" Mr. \V. It. Bingham. Mis. Bet tie S"t i vi : njf rola\? s in North Carolina this week. The cot ten mills tof Poiidergrast iat suspend* d| operation this week or a short vacation. Miss F.lva Umphres and Lizzie 'arroll \i-:ted their sisters-in-law on. Saturday of the past week. Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Umphres are banning on spending Sunday in Ath-. ns, Tenne. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Umpire *cessary But a.*" uiuuriL noting c ams ** ford, Chairman of the the Standard Oil Comw Jersey, in an address ssociated Advertising he World, in a recent i at Atlantic City, said: nents should lay down which insure fair-play [ opportunity in the conenta should not attempt as itsel? The umpires in &e that the rules are ent to say what should be ir whether a team should >edfic inning; nor do the team what pinch-hittera ain victory. Is there not 'ell be applied to the relaid assume to business?* odies in the United States ion of the railroads. There he same number of State the U. S. Railroad Labor jrce Commission. The railnetwork of regulations imThey are not asking to have ?d, but they are asking that made heavier. reasonable request/ THE CHEROKEE SCOUT, ' FARMER GOT NEWS BEFORE CITY FOLK THIS TIME, BY RADIO Since4radio started to equalize things in the matter of keeping folks posted as to what's pointg on. farmers have not only been placed on the same footing with city dwellers, but ou occasion they Lave even "beat 'em to It." One such case occurred on the evening of July 4. when a party of city men. returning from an automobile trip in the Adirondack*. began to speculate on how the Dempsey- j. Gibbons prize fight resulted. i Passing a farm and noticing that there was a radio antenna stretched between the hoOse and the barn, they stopped to Inquire If any news had been received. The farmer was found Just coming in from the barn. lie listened to their question calmly. and immediately answered: "Dempsey won I on points." lie had heard the report of the j fight as broadcast by WGY, the General Electric Company's Station at Schenectady. N. Y.? and he had got the news as quickly as anyone In the United States. Even the metropolitan newspaper offices I ] did not have it any sboner. j BEST ENERGY IS ' POWER LINE KIND I Agricultural Engineer Says This Sort Gives Farms Volume of Power Needed. IS FLEXIBLE SERVICE, TOO i Steadily the trend of electrical development In the 1'nltod States Is r? -aching out to embrace the anelectrified rural sections and the great farming cr- an. according to C. A. Athcrton. chairman of the power lines committee of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers. Mr. Atherton, who Is 1n th-- engineering dep?riin*3at of the General Electric Company's National Lamp Works, is positive that the various uifflcultics now retarding the extension of electric transmission lines into fanning districts by electric light and power companies will be successfully met. "American farms." he said, following the recent annual convention cf the National Electric Light Association. "are now using three hundred ' thousand isolated electric light and power plants. Such plants will probably always he used in the more remote districts. But it is only natural that what the farmer really wants is the convenient, flexiblo and less limited service from tho big city power houses. Farming a Big industry "The electrical interests 'hemselves want to know how far electricity can he economically carried into the rural j districts. Fanning Is the blticit unit I most Important Industry In every country. Not only does It employ more people, but It uses more power man any other. It Is comparable !u alza with general manufacturing of all commodities. "Undoubtedly the chief factors In creating the present strong demand for electricity on the farm are ths growing realization of the labor taring which may be effected for the farmer's wife and a newly awakened pride In having the most up-to-date living conditions. Yet the part of electricity In the Industry of agriculture Is by no means small, only there must be adequate farm machinery for electrical application. "Electrified farm machinery must be quite different from the heavy farm machinery of the past, intended for use a few hours each year, and th?u allowed to atand without attention until tho next aeaaon. It must be made small, efficient, probably operating at a higher speed, and muat be automatic. Division of the Energy "It muat be arranged so that each morning the raw material may be ted In, a switch turned and without more attention the finished material piled ! or stored automatically. An entire process with such a machine might 1 consume several weeks, demanding a quarter horsepower to do what formerly took four or five men and a sixty horsepower steam engine two days! to do. "But sixty horsepower, two days a | able on en electrical line, whereas j eight week* of a quarter horsepower : 1* quite practical and may be made a' profitable part of the producing equip- ] ment of the farm." Better Than the Mine Mule In a Wyom'ng coal mine there 1* an electrical mine locomotive that 1* still going strong after 27 years. It was | built by the Thomson-Houston Elec- j trie Company, predecessors of the ! General Electric Comprny, and has hauled 3.712.500 tons of coal an average of 15 miles. Many a mule has gone to a quiet grave In that period, for mules may come and mules may go, but an electric locomotive goes all the time. MURPHY. WORTH CAROLINA "QiVe these c , a loo, toe When the experienced fleet boss a< to tighten up the spring clips after y a new car a thousand miles or so, his advice and give the nuts a tun save a broken spring. Hundreds ol ready hints stored in his mind m; "safe man to follow, Potarine is the up-to-date result century of practical lubricating e collected from actual use in evci the world, plus all that constant 6tudy can add in the way of foremc You can as safely trust this cxp< give you absolute motor protectioi STANDARD OIL COMPA ^Nqw Jersey^ <Po{< kind of car an J rt for youri. Const Big! The new Overland Red seating capacity and bi{ mobile for so little mo America. The wheelbase is lcngc EThe bigger engine is rr of Mandalay maroon, an ing nickeled trimmings Red Bird stops your eye At $750 f. o. b. Toledo, from a gallon of gasolii Red Bird is, in our est mobile buy today. W Touring $525. Roadster $525, Cot We reserve the right to change pr t. C. MOO OAe'BiV 1 THE HIT Ol T ?/" ^ir J vises you V this live I ou vc run V experience I you trust \ t . I n. It may j\ / /I : just such ike him a rT> -* of a half ^ xpcrience ry part of Say technical " Pnjrtrmp f W istquality. X UlUtUUZ, . rience to ?JllSt a. "a quart of oil" iNY nine irt Soils down years of experience with every ;coinmen<ls the rinlit consistency of Pola-Lie Bird is a big car with big ; power! So much auto ey has amazed and won ! r. The body is roomier, sore powerful. The finish d the khaki top and gleamare more beautiiuL The on the street! getting 20 miles and more re, the big new Overland imaticn, the biggest auioe shall have only a few. \ t ipe $795. Sedan SS6O1 f. o. b. Toledo. 1 ices and specification* without noticm, i >nr r\c A 1 CD ;d bird'ZSO F THE YEAR r
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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Aug. 31, 1923, edition 1
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