T*m**r. ' - 1 r Tftfe \ CHATHAM RECORD a—— i * '.it.l ■■ »■ '■■■" —■ O. J. PETERSON Editor and Publisher SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: Otoe Year $1.50 & Months .75 Thursday. February 14, 1929. Kinston has become famous for the fre. k stories reported by Mr. .-JfcDevitt, correspondent of a num ber of the state’s papers, but here 1* repoit cr the deattj of a man whose character is as unique as any of McDevitt’s freaks. Writ ing at Kinston, the correspondent A friend of the destitute passed on when Fred Pulley, “barbecue Jaaa,” died here recently. Acquain tances are telling of Pulley’s kind ly feeling toward tr nips and oth ers down and out. Many asked for food at his place in the edge of tfce business distric:. None was ever refused. Pulley never swore an oath in his was s_id. His .smile was fa- i mous. He greeted the penniless beg gar with a smile and served him as graciously as the patron able to pay. No ma n needs a finer tribute. .I* 1 ® aver age enthusiast over the t-Jd blue back” missed the point of its excellence. Few. if any. learn the spelling „f a sufficient vocab- Warly m school, and even the cele brators of the “blue back” ?e, but to have him i cut his life’s quota of wood under . its direction. In mo/t cses, we | fear, the axe is left unsharpened, land the teacher-directed wood-chop- 1 ; *s dor*' with a dull axe and j i without the interest of the pupil. ! Till the Georgia Tech can pro i ciuce its graduate who can beat Mr. j C amp raising cotton or producing a ! profit from hens, we feel that we j stall have to ccns’der "Mr. Camp’s | education a praet’C 1 one. Bv the i wav M"r. Csn- v ' was not verv well and i h d to hire all his v.o k dene in the | cotton. i ; THE VATIC \N .STATE The pope has at last r. little state lto play sovereign over. But this is '■net significant of s pos'icility of his : grasping the rule of the world, or ' ‘ oven of the United State- On the contrary, it suggests the silliness of those who fear the claim-of‘the pone j to temporal power, since Ire is court j ecus’y givc-n the privilege of erect , ing rli :*le state of r. few city blocks c mens on in Romo, wheuoas the james ruled a large part of Italy for 1100 ye r-. f-H the igntv vas taken rvav f ’om him in 1870 upon the unification of Italy and v -s taks-n way from him bv Coth cl r cs. and Italian Calhol’cs at that. There is 1 u'o" !’on that the pope wo 1 1 ’ like to hve domain again, but even Italian Cathol ; cs a e opposed to such temporal do n a’n ard will ’not hve it. Than. | how foolish it is to think tha. a> rni i mralively few Catholics in America, horn rrtd hr°d a free . actively participating in the affairs of government, would. if ley could, throw America unde - ' F-e domain of the pope, or could if , v ' e v would! Not onlv did the Ital i ns take away his domain but th° Catholics of France, Mexico, and other countries whpre they are in j overwhelming majority, have entire- j hr separated state rffairs from the; Vatican. Clearlv. whatever j the pone would like,' C tholics. here | and abroad, h-ve no desire to | , him dominating governments. and, there has been no country in which ! the pope has exertecUlesn influence I in the state th n in Italy., -right where he reigned for 1100 years. A1 Smith was no exoonF-~< - declared that his ‘.attachment tc the Pope would have' no bearing unoti ftis activities as president should be be elected. It is to be feared that the .reduc tion in taxes i>y the addition of mi , oth er cent on gaspline tax for the use of county will not result in the relief Chatham’s t xes will be the extent of $35J)00, . will r*itrqads. the j pm W/ffj-rtfc ejr #ht«r arises which jmmL incomes l'egul ted I basis. Prac tically -every payer of tax on land has a car, and the extra cent's tax upon gasoline will, in many cases, overbalance the reduction in taxes upon his land. The reduction in the t x will amount to a relief of some thing like 20 cents on the hundred dollars, or less. That on a farm as sessed at $3,000 will be $6.00, and i: t kes only 600 gallons of gaso line purchased in a year to add that add tional z mount to the cost, or little more than eleven gallons a week. The holder of SISOO worth of property will balance his t x re lief by the purchase of 5 1-2 gal lons a week. The C. P. & L. Co., w'hich pays about a fifth of the tax es of the county, since it uses corn par tively little gas, will save a j handsome sum; so will the railroads. . But the doctors, truck drivers, depu ty sheriffs, etc., will have it soaked to them. But, fortunately,, the jov riders will have to pay for part of ; the relief afforded the railroads ahd the "power company. It should be somi? satisfaction to the taili- | road , comp nies to realize that the cars racing along the highway? par alleling their tr cks are helping pay the tax from which they have been relieved. It is evident that if the property tax should be largely abandoned for a sale tax, the corporation commis sion should immediately get busy and seduce the electric power prices, ) the railroad ticket prices and freight j rates. The present prices of elec- j triicity and railroad service are sup- ! posed >to provide for the payment j Jof liberal taxes. In case the proper- ! jty tax should be greatly reduced, i | the entire burden would fall upon j I the people they /would still be pay- J j ing rates to the railroads and pow- I I er companies that are justified on- j I ly by expectation of a heavy 26. at Dr. Thomas’ 1 off tee Thursday, Feb. 28 |