Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / April 24, 1930, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR REJOICES OVER SARGON BNEFITS “I was in an extremely nervous condition and finally had a nervous breakdown. I’d have pains in my back and sides nearly all the time, /■Pr MRS. AMANDA LADD and Pd almost go frantic with headaches. A terrible rheumatic condition in my arms and hips near ly ran me into hysterics. Sargon is the only medicine that ever gave me lasting relief, and I’m filled with rejoicing over the new health it gave me. Every trace of indiges tion is gone, my appetite is fine, and the rheumatic condition and the pains in my back and sides are gone. I’m fast regaining my lost weight and Sargon Pills are the finest treatment I ever found for constipation and a terpid liver.”— Mrs. Amanda Ladd, 59 Vance St., Asheville. C. R. Pilkington, Pittsboro; Wig gins Drug Stores, Inc., Siler City, Agents. —Adv. Poultry Will Increase Your Farm and Back Yard Income Easily Prepared by FRED P. ABBOTT Agricultural Agent, S. A. L. Ry., Hamlet, N. C. t In these times when money is so hard to secure and generally so badly needed, the only answer an intelligent or progressive man, woman or child could give this question would be in *the affirma tive. If you are doing a general farm ing business, you have your regu lar income in the fall of the year, providing seasonal conditions are conditions conducive to the mak ing of your crops and that mar ket conditions will per mit dispos ing of them at figures greater than the. cost ojf growing and harvesting. The foregoing, of course, would similarly apply to those who special ize in fruits or vegtables, or other special crops. / Now let’s continue with our general farm plans, providing they are economically sound and you are following approved practices; then in addition, supplement your in come with the daily, weekly, or monthly sale of poultry and eggs. The United States Department of Agriculture Year Book shows that lowa and Illinois are among the leading states of our Union in the ' production of poultry and poultry products and that the greatest per centage of poultry of these two states comes from farms having flocks ranging in size from 176 to 450 head. j If every farm and backyard , poultry flock in your State could be built up to the proper size, your own state would soon assume the i lead in this most profitable enter- , prise. This would be the means of ] bringing into your community, a ( vast amount of outside money and . your own section would again enjoy |, ti e prosperity that it has once j known. ( Set five more hens or buy the , equivalent in day-old chicks and ; let’s really get started in the poul- • try business. Remember with the regular cash market offered you through the medium of carlot poul- ; try sales—having poultry on the ‘ yard is the same as having money ] in the bank. The hen is now con- . sidered a cash crop. Your Home or County Agent, Vocational Agricultural Teacher, or j the Agricultural Department of ' the Seaboard Air Line Ry., will ! * gladly assist you with your pro- ' biems in this and other matters. . —e IF PARKER IS DEFEATED ( , (Greensboro News) If Judge John J. Parker is de- 1 seated in a Republican senate for j confirmation as associate justice of the Supreme court of the United < States, the effort to build up the i Republican party in North Carolina, ] in prestige and in numbers, may as well be abandoned. It may as well be abandoned in the states of the southeast where not nearly ( as much progress has been made toward the establishment of the ( party on the sure foundation of public respect as has been made in ( North Carolina. . If the nomination of Judge Par- . ker is not confirmed, the enterprise of the American Federation of La bor, of unionizing those industries which contain the bulk of the wage earners of this section, may as well be abandoned. # Whether or hot there is either tions, or the people of the state and section concluded it is a communist inspired effort, is a consideration of secondary weight. The things standing out with force and clarity would be, as affecting the Repub lican party .particularly, that a protest of northern negroes, on racial lines, had contributed to the result; and as affecting organized labor that it had prosecuted the successful effort to lay a terrific rebuke upon a United States judge for having held that a decision of the Supreme court is the law of the land. If Judge Parker’s nomination is defeated, the. senate referring to the demands of the Society tor the Advancement of the Colored Peo ple, it will also be a signal defeat of the hopes and the labors of those men and momen, white and colored, who have striven most earnestly for justice to the negro, good will between the races where they dwell side by side, opening the door of hope to millions of black people. It would turn back the ebbing of prejudice. It would render greatly more difficult the preven tion of violence, of terrorism, whcih have been in the past the fearful incidents of prejudice. Here is a sowing that may look to a sinsister harvest, for both races, in this part of the country. This protest of organized labor which was begun apparently for the purpose of emphasizing the contention that extreme conserva tism ought not to be permitted an overbalance in the court——a sympathetic attitude towards which emphasis the Daily News has many times expressed—was early shown to be without a justifiable basis. It ought to have been abandoned when that fact emerged. For Judge Parker to have ruled, regardless of the connection, otherwise than that a decision of the Supreme court is binding upon the judiciary of the United States in any clear application, would have been as tounding, revolutionary. The people who are more directly concerned in this matter have indeed a high regard for the principle of the in dependence of the judiciary, but not of judicial independence of the laws and the rulings of the courts of final appeal whereby laws are construed. This newspaper is convinced that the strengthening of an opposition party in North Carolina and other states of similar political complexion is necessary to the best govern ment the people are capable of giv ing themselves, and has often tes tified to that conviction. It re joices in the growth of racial good will, the benefits that flow from it to both races; to contemplates with deep satisfaction that enlargement of opportunity that has come to the negro to work out his destinsy in security here, and has been glad of, veery opportunity offering to help in these things. It is deeply concerned that labor may have and enjoy, in tranquil assurance, its fair share of the good things of life. And so it must regard the situation developed by ill-advised politics out of this judicial ap pointment as a grave one indeed. _<♦> WHITE HOUSE MAIL “GIMMES” If President and Mrs. Hoover granted every request made to them by mail the White House would be denuded of objects and the Hoover fortune, great though it is, would be no more, Hard though it may seem for the chief executive to de cline some token or other, it is necessary in this day when so many people pester him with such re quests. For instance, the prisoner at St. Quentin may feel hurt be cause Mrs. Hoover did not buy one of his made-behind-bars purses and the Home Mission Society of Dillon, 111., is disappointed because Mr. Hoover did not send it some of his old clothes for a charity bazaar. But if the President and First Lady granted such appeals there would be no end to solicitions. Thus it is easy to understand why the White House has to write such polite re fusals. Mrs. Coolidge once had some prints of the White House made to satisfy the demands of those who requested her to send them pictures of the executive mansion, but the fact that she was giving them out spread like wildfire and she soon had to forego such generosity. In the eyes of those who love them, the unfortunates behind bars are always innocent and the White House mail is filled with requests for presiden tial intervention. But nothing doing; the chief executive has no power to interfere in state penal matters even if he wanted to. Every mail brings quotas of tickets from opti mists who think the President will buy them for this and that affair. Again disappointment. And the same awakening goes for parents asking presidential help for child prodigies and for families only to discover that Uncle Sam does not pay a premium on the same.—The Path finder. , S> THE BIGGER THEY ARE THE BETTER WE FEEL “Lions are friendly if you treat them well.”—Sunday Dispatch head ing. Personally we have always re sisted, in a humane manner, our impulse to enter their cages and kick them around. —Dublin Opinion. €> SEE AMERICA FOIST Black—“So you have had a chance to see the king’s palace in England, eh? What did you think of it?” White—“ Well, after seeing our own movie houses, filling stations, and hot dog stands, it isn’t very impressive. ” —Cincinnati Enquirer. 1 MUZZLED “Hullo! Bought a saxophone?” “No; I borrowed it from the man next <loor.” “But you can’t play it.” “Neither can he while I’ve got THE CHATHAM RECORD. PITTSBORO. N. C. j 1 DID YOU EVER STOP TO THINK? 0 By EDSON R. WAITE Shawnee, Oklahoma I 1 Frank T. Carroll, Business Mana ger and Advertising Director of the Pittsboro Press, says: “Did you ever stop to think that the newspaper of today, as an ad vertising medium, must keep more than a step ahead in the march of progress? “In this modern age—with so may interests bidding for the leisure time of all classes of people—-the progressive newspaper which intends to stay in the front rank as an advertising medium must sincerely endeavor to make all newspaper ad vertisements more attractive, more interesting, more truthful, and, con sequently'. more productive. “The modern newspaper can ac complish this by assisting advertis ers in the preparation of copy, lay out, art work and typography; offering suggestions to create read er-interest; and by cooperating with merchandise managers, advertising managers and copywriters in calling their attention. to trends of retail advertising as exponded by acknow ledged advertising experts. pours fragrance LONG BEFORE the choice leaves of golden Turkish and velvety brown Domestic tobacco are selected for Camel Cigarettes, nature’s own alchemy has worked a miracle in them that no effort of man can hope to duplicate. Every tiny leaf-cell is irradiated—stored full of goodness by the clean, pure vigor of the sun! Our share in the making of Camels is to see that all of the fragrance, \l!/y/ mildness, mellowness, aroma—in a word all of the natural goodness of these sun-ripened tobaccos is preserved and developed—then to combine them into the smooth, delightful harmony of the famous Camel blend, , an d manufacture them into cigarettes by the most modern methods known to the industry. ///il \\ You can taste the natural goodness in every delicious puff of a ** ‘ Camel Cigarette. Camels for real smoke pleasure ];' © 1930, R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C» _M ' “The Retail Advertising Institute, originated by The Pittsurgh Press in the fall of 1928, was a step to ward establishing an understanding and cooperative spirit between ad vertisers and the newspaper. The prophetic need of such cooperation is manifesting itself in the sponsor ing of similar retail advertising in stitutes by newspapers in many me- l tropolitan cities. / The success of the newspaper of tomorrow must be founded on ser vice and on cooperation, and this can be realized only when the news paper and the advertisers recognize the necessity of employing modern advertising methods.” —# COMING CLEAN Mrs. Corntossel —“I’ve been ex pectin’ a package of medicine for a week and haven’t got it yet.” Expressman —“Yes, ma’am. Please fill in this paper and state the nature of your complaint.” “Well, if you must know, it’s in digestion.”—Border Cities Star. DISPLAY BECOMES UTILITY Tokyo Official announcement was made today of the approach ing marriage of Prince Takamatsu, younger brohter of bhe Emperor, to Kilkuko Tokugawa, granddaughter of the last of the Shotguns.—New York Times. Learning is not nearly so hard as unlearning. | A lie has short legs.—Slavic proverb. When an official is charged with serious misdoings he simply has to run again to be vindicated. .CUT COFFEE COST IN HALF You get as many cups from one. pound of “Gold Rib bon” Brand Coffee and Chicory as you do from two pounds of ordinary coffee, because it is Double Strength. Cut your coffee bill in half by using “Gold Ribbon” Blend —one pound lasts as long as two pounds of ordinary coffee—and you pay no more! BLE STRENGTH 8 GoldßiMnm Ss?—Coffee I aggfc Chicory J THURSDAY, APRIL 24 iQgn
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
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April 24, 1930, edition 1
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