T hPRSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1930 4,************* * ** ** Antioch News * * **£*&********** Mrs. John Poe of Bynum was a , . < Vt visitor in the home of Mr. p B. Oldham. 1 y .. Eugene Burke who is work .. .• it Siler City spent the week-end •it home. \[r and Mrs. Oren Dorsett of (;>-oensboro spent awhile last week . x ’ the former’s mother Mrs. Alice T) v^ett. y\- : . and. Mrs. C. C. Poe spent .week-end with relatives in the \Jiury community. A1 . Oscar McDaniel who was vkinsr in Virginia but died in the h* of his brother at Durham < day morning was brought to \ o-h Christian church for burial h i’V afternoon at three o’clock. Bradley of Siler City conducted •T. funeral* services, in spite of the weather a large crowd was pres . pay their last respect to the dr eased. was fifty one years of age, married, seven brothers and ~'-ter survive. *************** * * Brown’s Chapel News* j * i ..************* ;e l a t weather a fair crowd I Pastor Dailey’s last sermon j going to conference. It is: table that the church failed! paying its pastor’s salary] \ than that of paying its j for the mission fund. Mr. ! •nd Mr. J. J. Perry were ] Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Dar- 1 dinner that day. Amos R'chardson of Alamance | t e week-end with his friends ; : rmer neighbor Mr. R. 11. 1 Lir. iloy. I deaths of Mr. Jim Atwater i Mr. Jim Griffin are keenly ! t memory of their kind ' ie lives will long be cher- j »y many friends in this com- i League meeting will f o'low ! s school on the fourth Sun-J and we suggest that the men t e Sunday school will find it ■c profitable and helpful to re ; ; ? r the League meeting than go out and talk of mattters that ct do much for the uplift of j ;!u c mmunity. The program con- , :a:::s much that will help them. h was mistake as printed that J .vo Durhams would soon be on the mi k route. It should have been Mat we hope to be within the year. Jmiius Durham has harvested 30 bus els of stock befits from a very j small area and a fine lot of kaffir j ,rn sun flower seed, all which he i is using to feed his flock of Bar red Rock pullets, which are beginn ing to lay very satisfactorily. Mr. W. J. Durham has received a letter from his son Grover to the effect that he is improving. DOWN BOARDS; UP SCENERY (From The Hamlet News-Messenger) A recent billboard decision of the Indiana Supreme Court is heralded as a blow to out door advertising interests. And rightly so. Much has been said against outdoor advertising, but less has been done. I'tow the Indiana court speaks in no { uncertain terms. A portion of the decision is worthy of note. It says: “Under a liberalized construc tion of State and Federal Con stitutions there is a trend in the modern decisions (which we approve) to foster, under the police power, an esthetic and cultural side of municipal de velopment—to prevent a thing that offends the sight sense in the same manner as a thing that offends the senses of hear ing and smelling.” In the decision referred to, the court upheld the right of the city of Indianapolis to pro hibit billboard erection and maintenance within 500 feet fNOW SAMUEL, YOU MUSH _l not say "gwyin* YOU MUST SAY X "GOING". THERE’S W® )NO SUCH J wy Ts RD _ fjm [MR hawenSeR THf ) FISH MAN 50LD us Ti SOME STAIEF'SHI VJHAVE roREI^^X v~ v i LET'S GO A "WEEK" ARGUMENT* of any park, parkway or boulevard; it being in that case that the boulevard was a part of the park system of the city. The law is merely following the sentiment expressed by an indignant public concerning the despoilation of the land scape- The cry has been to put down the billboard and thus put up the scenery. But billboards, as a nuisance to the eye, soon will become on the same legal par as those nuisances offending the other [senses. Billboards do not and can not carry advertising in the ; full meaning of the word. Billboards are a menace to public safety; first by obstruct ing the view; secondly by dis tracting the attention of mo torists on their most important job of steering a motor car. Billboards are a mere screen ! for rubbish, and a protection to immorality and wrongdoing. Billboards make possible the exploitation of selfish interests i and hence the exploitation of! j the public’s right to enjoy the j scenery. | Billboards are in no sense! | artistic; they are neither the | (subject nor the product of art !or esthetic realization. Billboards destroy the beau ty-value of millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money spent in highways. j Billboards are a further nuisance because their carry in their train by equally sup posed right the further menace of signs tac,ked on trees fences, bridges and wherever] else they should not be. Billboards are a growing in jury to advertisers who use them ; first because of an I aroused public opinion against! their use; secondly, because many persons are refusing .to buy products mentioned on them- There is a place for adver tising. There are, indeed, many places for advertising. But the out-of-doors is not the place. ® When a man gets rich he; usually does the things the | poor man thinks he would not j want to do if he were rich. | ® i ; 1 Christmas Cards SI.OO Ten Beautiful Christmas Cards that sell from Fifteen to Twenty-five Cents Each. With Envelopes. Cards that are Distinctive and Different- Send Money Order or Check. MARYLAND CARD CO. 2622 Huntingdon Ave. Baltimore, Md. /iam "goino\\ fYOU ARE "GOING*. I we are'Going: I THEY ARE I /"going: now/ /MRHAUS£NfEFFFFC\ MOM -SAYS TFWS ( VpSH 15 PRtTW/ ,^^-0 V jgN|>J ■v EDITOR CLARENCE POE SAYS: “When making payment on a note or bill y with cash, let’s always be sure to get a receipt for the amount paid and file it. “2- Paying by check is always safest and best, especially in case of a bill that has been charged. By putting in the lower left-hand corner what the check is for, a complete re ceipt is the result. And let’s be sure to put this information also on the stub.” That is good advice from the distinguished gentleman who grew up in our own community, but let us add a word to it. Start your account with the Bank of Gold ston and think twice before you draw a check for some thing you can do without. THE BANK OF GOLDSTON HUGH WOMBLE, Pres. T. W. GOLDSTON, Cashier GOLDSTON, N. C. i \ . —. ■ —> I | For NEURALGIA prompt relief from HEADACHES, LUMBAGO, COLDS, SORE THROATS, RHEUMATISM, | NEURITIS, NEURALGIA, ACHES and PAINS SDoes not harm the heart. BAYER ASPIRIN Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer boxes of 12 tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 100—All druggists. /oh sure/ ) ( M’AM! / I EV’RYBODY / [mL mm, & mt) MY FAIiIT ? I TRIED] r\ ' TO 6ET HER TO / TAKF IT L M] y rW^S r r^Mi bcj KB. BY M. B. PAGE THREE