NORTH CAROLINA’S GREAT PROGRESS Department Records Give an Interesting Insight Into the Ktsis For This State ment. He:b?rt 1' > v r recoraiy r:«r«rted th 1 1: "North Carolina ha : made a printer economic advance in every 1 phr cos !if•» in the !a ;t fifteen years than ary other State in the Union.” I Dvp rtmer.t r-cords give us an in ter e.'ljnp insight into the basin for this statement. In 1900 the value of North < aroli a property was f>B2 mil li in 192’ i* va 4 billions 500 mil lion'. Jn i >•) th e value of manufac ture: was 85 millions; in 1923 it was 950 ni iiions. lii 1900 the crop values r.< >.) millions, in 1923 they were 436 millions. In 1900 hank resources were less than 15 millions; now the;/ are over 500 millions. In 1900 the State was spending less than a million a year on public schools. For 1924-5 this was increased to 33 millions. , North Carolina is making wonder ful rirides in every direction and with out the 'aid of real estate boomers. ANDREWS WANTS MORE LAWS The Problem is One Which Will Engage the Attention of the Country For a Long Yime to Come—Many Ob stacles in the Way and the Task Gigantic. ... • 1 t r > cures concerning prohibition en- , forcement progress were made public by the Department of Justice a few day ago, showing that,durih£ the fis cal year endfng June 30 of' this year 44,022 persons were*sentenced-by fed- 1 eral courts alone for violations of the Volstead ret. Fines totalled $7,336,505, while jail •lentenees imposed aggregated 5,666 years. A trend toward more sen- i tenet's-of imprisonment was noted, and the number so punished was greater than in any previous year since the prohibition law has been in effect. | If figures were available showing 'iie penalties inflicted by state and I Ideal authorities for violation of the law-, the grand total wou’d no doubt be surprising. i Just Avhat this increase number of ' convictions reilly means as an indica- i tion of the progress of enforcement is I difficulty to say. It will doubt he Sell Your Tobacco Where Prices Are Higher ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. “THE DEPENDABLE MARKET” ' “ w' | the FARMERS OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA HAVE REALIZED THE TRUTH | | OF THIS SLOGAN FOR THEY HAVE SOLD MORE TOBACCO ON THE ROCKY X | MOUNT MARKET THAN EVER BEFORE IN IT’S HISTORY AND ARE SATISFIED. I ▼ AAAA A. A A.AA.AA AAAAA AA A AAAAA AAA A A A A A A A a a aaaaaaaa.aa.aaaaaa.aa.a a a a a Ask Any Farmer Who Sells In Rocky Mount BRING YOUR NEXT LOAD TO “THE DEPENDABLE MARKET ” ROCKY MOUNT, - - - N. C. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE jconstrued by those favorable to the' law as showing the success of enforce | ment. Those opposed may contend 1 that it is evidence of more numerous • -datums than ever, and proof that > real headway is being made. GenenJ Andrews, in charge of en rcement, while admitting that re 19' have not been satisfactory in the i t, declares that with the enactment • additional laws proposed to Con s : his camp-ogn will be «greatly :•!. (I. On? point upon v.h eh all must agree i ii l til? probl. .i Is one which will • ’gage th • attention of th" country •'or a long time th come. In view of he many obstacles in the way of en 'i'orccr.K nt, and ihe magnitude of th • ; si;, it is not surprising that *ji: ? i.; so. LIVING FAST AND FURIOUS (By Iviary Vaughan) In reading a receent issue of Char ity lnd Children, which is so ably edited by Mr. Archibald Johnson, of Thomasville, I saw a shbrt article he reproduced from The Uplift. It cer tainly is apropos of the times in which we live which are fast and furious. Some claim that the young people are headed straight for the demnition bow wowh. 1 don’t know. The fact in I ■m on a subject now I don’t know a 'bing on earth about. A mother told ftie not long ago that the boys and girls are not really half as bad as they pretend to be, and I am inclined to be lieve that about a great many. On ! the other hand, why pretend? It’S all I a. muddle to me and somebody else can ' unravel it. | A friend of mine invited her niece ito visit her. Being wise in her day and generation she hid a plain talk with her upon her arrival, and this is ! what she said: “I am delighted to have : you, and want you to make a long visit, but there are four things I must' insist that you do not do—You must 1 j not take a drink with a man; you must | not drive all over the country at night with a man; you must under no cir- ' ! cumstqnces be out of this house at night after 11 o’clock; and you must not walk up and down the streets in a i bathing suit.” There you are. Is it their raising? I don’t know. I never raised one. But j here is the article: i . Solicitous Standing on the roadside Sunday j afternoon, an observer was impressed i' with the thoughtfulness of young folks I as they went leisurely and some sw-ift- |; ly by their machines. II the girl was driving, the boy sat; THE ZEBU! ON RECORD near-by practically in the middle of I the seat; if the boy or young man was driving, the girl sat close up, in the middle of the seat. In each instance the driver had the comfort of an arm around or about h:m, or her. The i.i-j nocerit observer was impressed with the solicitation about the safety ihrso young people manifested for e;:cli other. The observer thought it a spirit of caution to keep the occupants from 1 falling out of the car should the door of th<- car come open or the steering g- ar become locked or a telephone pole come in contact v i h the moving car. Sixty per cent of the numerous joy; riders a they pa ; sed were maintain ing this attitude ar.d posture of great caut’on. .All these boys may have sisters— * I j what would they feel were their sis- ; 1 -i s manifesting such caution against l 'ailing from ihe car. \A!I these girls have mothers what would they think, if they knew how considerate their daughters are of the safety of* the young men with whom they are tiding, j Has modesty become a discarded j quality in the lives of many of the young? The observer concluded as much.—The Uplift. BUSINESS HABITS PREVAIL • It seems impossible to swean Sec rotary Mellon away from the business habits of a lifetime. There has been ! a clamor to add what will apparently j be a $200,000,000 surplus in income tax receipts this year, to the $370,000,- 000 surplus of last year, and make a further total cut of some 5500,000,000 a year in taxes. This might be good politics for a ! temporary period. But Secretary Mel- ' ; lon is running the Government Treas ury the way he would the treasury of | a private company. Heavy cuts have already been made { ' in our federal income taxes, and Sec retary Mellon says he is as anxious y |as others to see taxes cut to the low- ] est safe limit, “‘but we have to look 1 |to future years. We are enjoying tax i returns now on unprecedented pros- {< perity, and any change in this would 1 j wipe out the anticipated margin.” i He points out that while the income taxes are greater than expected, this i increase will be partly offset by a l drop of about $80,000,000 this quarter, i in miscellaneous tax receipts under | 1 the new law, and that altogether the ' l Treasury believes $200,000,000 less i will be collected this year than last I year, from miscellaneous taxes which i were reduced or eliminated. c Also, Secretary Mellon points out t that the $370,000,000 surplus of 'ast; year was used to pay off public debts, and that, furthermore, as a good busi- i ness proposition, it should not be ad • ded to the 1926 surplus as a gauge for ! tax reduction. s , This all sounds like business advice rather than political capital, and the people of the United States can be thankful their Treasury is run on a business basis, instead of as a .political machine. This practice should be ex tended to sttte affairs. j WIVES BIGGEST BUYERS OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS An Elkhart, Ind., dispatch says: Sixty per cent of musical instrument ? sold to women are purchased !<> ■ housewives, it is revealed in p. survey 1 made by the Conn Music Center h- re. j Tlie survey was made through music, instrument dealer; in twenty cities, .r.d covered 320 actual transactions. ; • One out of every ten instruments ; ! sold were purchased by women, and , j their preferences for instruments w’tre , ver ymuch along the lines favored by j the men, according to the survey. Os [ > the total number of transactions, 52 j per cent involved the purchase of a | saxophone, 16 per cent that of a turn- j pet, and 9 per cent that as a trom j bone. I That youth will be served, especial-j |ly in music, was well illustrated in ! the ages of the purchasers. Fully 34 i per cent of those purchasing instru ments were between the ages of 21 ! and 25, and 21 per cent between the ages of 25 and 30. Only 26 per cent of all transactions involved persons jof 30 years and over. NORTH CAROLINA AGAIN HAS HIGH DEATH LIST An increase of 15 in the number of persons killed and a decrease of 37 in the number of persons .injured in the past seven days, compared with last week, was shown in traffic accident re ports to the Associated Press Sunday from 11 Southern states. Seven deaths resulted from grade crossing acci- j dents. The total casualties for the week were 53 persons killed and 204 injured. . North Carolina topped the list of states in the number of persons re- j ported killed with 16. Louisiana was j next with nine, while Georgia and i Florida reported five each. Kentucky reported no fatalities, while Arkansas and Mississippi had only one each. | Louisiana was high with 35 persons i injured, with Florida and North Car- j olina coming next in that column in j the order named. M. C. MEDLIN, CANDIDATE FOR TOWNSHIP CONSTABLE I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of Township Constable for Little River Township. If elected I promise to perform the duties of the of ficp to the best of my ability. I desire to thank Mitchell’s Mill and the entire Township voters for their support, in advance. Yours traiv, M. C. MEDLIN. Zebulon, N. C. ... yvm- W ;,v .u W ■ % *•' * * :«• -V • 4 FlK w&l v/nDlf' •. a, •* i mjM ¥-W .*>> T?-.?' .1 J ’fir / l . A '*<*•■..* PmSkty ' ' i ' We have engaged “MR. STYLISHSS to work for us. He will appear in this paper EVERY WEEK and tell you about the goods we sell. Each time you see him he will remind you that we sell GOOD, HONEST MERCHANDISE at FAIR and SQUARE PRICES. We Invite YOUR Business Zebulon Supply Co.