THE PILOT Published every Friday by the PILOT PRINTING COMPANY Vass, North Carolina STACY BREWER, Owner ~ Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Address all communications to The Pilot Printing Co., Vass, N* C. Advertising Rates on Application Entered at the Postoffice at Vass, N. C., as second-class mail matter. GOVERNOR McLEAN’S BUSINESS POLICIES When A. W. McLean was a candidate in the primaries for governor The Pilot stood by his cause because he was an out spoken advocate of business policies in the government of the state. Good business manage ment is a far more important factor in local, state or national government than politics, for good public business is the only lawful purpose or legitimate ex cuse for politics or for party organization. McLean was elected on a busi ness platform, and by such a ma jority that the election of last fall emphasized the importance of good business methods in gov ernment. The example was in fectious and all over the state, in this county as well, better business practices have been in troduced. One of the first things the new governor insisted on was attention to the cost of opera tion, and making the income match up with the expenses. The fight over that matter need not be referred to. The final out come was a fixed budget, with definite amounts appropriated to specific purposes, and a tax laid to meet the expenses. The state was warned that it would have to pay certain amounts in taxa tion, and that it must not at tempt to spend any more money than it paid in taxes. In our old indifferent way we went forward on the presump tion that law is law and that actual practice consists in evad ing or ignoring the law wherever it is desirable to do either. The amount of tax to be laid was un derstood in the legislature. That defines the amount of in come the state is to have, and it can get no more. But many people and many members of the legislature thought to appropri ate more money than the state income from taxes would amount to and trust to luck for the ex cess which would be an excess of debt. Gov. McLean emphatical ly put his foot on this, foolish policy, and notified the depart ments that they must not exceed the sums allotted them, for he does not propose to go any further into debt. He argues most|sensibly that what we can not j^ay for from this year’s in come we do not care to try to pay for from another year’s in come when the other year has its own burdens. He has planned to have a clean slate at the end of the year. That is business. We will live within our income. It is fine to go on broadening out in our public affairs, spend ing money for one thing or another, but Gov. McLean’s in telligent business plan says broaden as far as we can pay, and then have sense enough to stop. If we can’t find the money to pay when we are levying the taxes it is useless to say we will find it a little later when we have to face the bill collector. It sounds nice to say we should do so and so and spend more money for desirable things. But the main thing to remember is that when we run out of money it is dishonest to incur debts that we know will be as hard to pay in the future as to pay now. Be- f o r e we consider spending another dollar the only course is to find where another dollar is to come from. And as the legisla ture went to the limit in laying taxes last January we must rea lize that unless we want to pile up more taxes no more dollars can come. The better course is t o inaugurate a n energetic economy in all state affairs, and that is what Gov, McLean is doing. The people who pay the taxes want lots of things they cannot get. The state must be conducted on the same basis. It must get along with what it can pay for, and realize that it can't have money to pay for every thing because the income of the state is limited. Gov. McLean has introduced a new idea into government and he is standing by it, and The Pilot is confident he has the nerve to stand by to the finish. And on the success of his administration on that basis will rest the future of the state for a long time, for if once established on a sound financial principle the people will keep North Carolina on that sound basis. A TOUCH OF THE HUMANITIES Over along the Midland road, just above the Mid-Pines club at Knollwood village is a pleasant modern cottage, and above the house is a greenhouse filled with flowers of various kinds. Man lives there who came down from Pittsburg a few years ago and made himself a home there. Nice wife, pleasant surround ings, jimmy pipe, seems to stand in well enough with the bankers to have a Buick or a Packard or something like that, but rides about in his truck considerable. Sizeable bald spot, pretty well put up, apparently free from many blemishes, fairly good hand at a smile and having been for years a judge of a Pittsburg court he has acquired the fash ion of drawing down his eye brows when he talks as if he was serious. Over at a hospital the other day two visitors had dropped in to talk a minute with two young women who are hanging round there waiting for the time to come when they can be sent back home again with recovered health. On their tables was a stack of posies, some of them of rare varieties, and all of them of exceptional vigor and type. Women 'somehow take to bou quets, and when they happen to be sick, and have to stay in the hospital, and visitors are in only occasionally, and the hours drag by with heavy feet, a bunch of posies looks about as friendly as any time in the world. Natural ly these girls had a word to say about the bouquets. Anybody would feel a bit proud over such a display. When you have ar rived at the point in the hospital where the world begins to take on a brighter hue, and you have passed the apprehensive stages, and the sun has been able to attract attention once more, it is not so hard to appreciate a big bouquet of choice greenhouse offerings. So they talked about the con tribution. And it seems that from that greenhouse flowers go out many a time in many a di rection. It seems to be a bit of common gossip here and there that the old codger who lives in that house above the Mid-Pines club has a fashion of cutting posies and shedding them around among people he never saw or heard of. Just has that way about him. Pittsburg folks who know him say the old tyke was always that way. And listen, brothers. Don’t think stunts like that get by without the Recording Angel making a jot on his big book once in a while alongside of that baldheaded geezer’s name. NAIL STRIPPERS— A SUGGESTION Last week the Pinehurst Warehouses in a small adver tisement notified the peach men that a supply of nail strippers had arrived ready for the sea son’s business. A nail stripper may not be well known to the ordinary individual, but it is an important factor in packing peaches, and it is also a sugges tion of the difference between modem ways and those of the older time. A nail stripper is simply a contrivance to assemble nails in a strip of metal, heads all up, so that when a crate builder reaches out for nails he can take a dozen or so between thumb and finger the points all down and ready to be hammered into the job. He holds his strip of nails so one is in position for the board he is nailing on the THE PILOT crate, taps the nail with the hammer to start it to place, and then hits it another crack with his hand removed and the nail is driven home. That operation is repeated at the different places needing nails, and as fast as he can hit two strokes he drives a nail in each place. He can build crates so fast that it is wonderfully interesting to watch the operation. Peach packing is systematized in that way all through. The packer makes every box of fruit a systematic thing. If he is packing a certain size that size alone is put in the box. Bigger or smaller sizes go in another package. The packer knows at the beginning how many peaches will be needed to fill the package and that many go in to it. Each goes in its place. The peaches are siorted in sizes before they reach him so packing peaches is simply a job of putting so many in each row and so many rows. No time is lost hunting anything to fit out a row, nor to make the proper number of rows. The crates at each particular table in the pack house will have a known number of peaches in each crate, for the crate holds just so many of a certain size, and the table packs that size. The nail stripper calls up the fact that peach growing is a systematic operation. O r d i- narily a man nailing crates would hunt up a nail, hit it three or four times to drive it to place, and fool around hunting another one. The stripper gives him enough nails to nail up his crate at once, and expedites the job. A man with a nail stripper can make two or three crates while a man without it makes one. Peach packing wastes no move ments and no time. Could the farms all the way through follow the example of the peach men twice the work would be done, for the farm wastes a lot of motion in every thing that is done. The farmer puts in long hours at low wages, and does a great deal of hard work. If he could hunt up something that would do more like the nail stripper, which cuts out wasted effort, farming would be a more enviable (occupation. The nail stripper is a pretty good thing for folks to watch a little in its time and effort sav ing work. It is only a small machine, but it is big in its sug gestions as to the value of tak ing a short cut in doing things. ACKNOWLEDGING A JUST OBLIGATION The Pilot has always enjoyed a reputation as a fairly well printed paper. A couple of years ago an advertiser wrote that he would be glad if other papers in which his advertisements ap peared would get up the material in the same tasty style The Pilot always reached. Commercial printing commanded the ap proval of patrons, who freely commented on the taste shown in printing^ of all sorts. Much of the credit of the satisfactory work done at this office is to be laid to the account of George W. Baker, who died last week at Carthage. Baker was an oldtime printer. He had a sincere liking for his work, and no patience with stupid handling of a job, or shiftless or indifferent typo graphy. Every piece of print ing that came into his hands was designed in his head or on paper before a letter was set in the type. He figured on the charac ter of the letters to be used, and the proportion of the printed page, and the balance of the lines. He had the ambition and the honesty of an artist, for no matter what a man’s work may be it gives ample field for artistic handling if there is one inch of room for creative construction. Baker had the initiative. He had the judgement and intelli gence to arrange his types har moniously, and the enthusiasm to struggle always for the best effects. Many advertisements that were printed in The Pilot and in other papers in the state were set by Baker and proofs from his work sent to the others that his judgement and skill could be followed. In that way he set a good example over a rather wide range. And so he left a good in fluence. The old printer was a reader and a philosopher, and always keeping a little ahead of yesterday. He liked to look over what other progressive printers were doing, so that he could gather the new ideas that came up, and he had the faculty of adapting and utilizing the new things. He tried to make good printers of the boys who worked in the office with him. In spite of his impatient disposition the boys profited much by his in struction, his criticism, and some by his somewhat severe notes at times. The boy who passed through Baker’s hands gained by it, even though at times the road had some rough spots. He did a good job, and his influence will last a long time in Central North Carolina. An honest, intelligent, industrious printer hangs his work up before the world, and it is seen of many men, and has a powerful effect. Friday, May 22, 1925. J. VANCE ROWE Attorney and Counselor at Law ABERDEEN, N. C. Subscribe to The Pilot. Dr. F. H. Underwood DENTIST Carthage, N. C. Office next to Jennings Motor Co. NOTICE The undersigned having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Sam W. Robbards, deceased. This is to give notice that all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to the undersigned at Pine hurst, N. C., duly itemized and veri fied on or before the 7th day of April 1926 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Any person indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This April 7th 1925. J. A. WICKER, Administrator of Sam W. Robbards. ARTS & CRAFTS SHOP We are ready to make any piece of Furniture that you may want. CEDAR CHESTS OLD FURNITURE REFINISHED AND UPHOLSTERED Expert Workmen—Best Machinery Prices upon Application Frank S. Blue, Manager, Carthage, N. C. fi»;»»lt««HK»H»»««»»»H»»H»»«««t«»»H«»:»»«»«H»tK»H«t»»m«H Fords For Sale Roadsters, Touring Cars, Trucks and Coupes Are you one of the lucky ones? There were several last month. Why not you? I have just the Car you want and the price and terms are right. No cars driven over three months. Some only thirty days. Write for Demonstration. Ralph Caldwell Care Carolina Discount Corporation ABERDEEN, N. C. hxxxxxxxxxuxtnxxxxttxxxxxxxxxxxxxtttxtttxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxtxxxttmxxxxxxtxuiuiuxii Franklin Said Tis a Wise Man who plans for Winter blows while he enjoys Summer breezes.” Shrewd Men look ahead. They use our Bank Account plan for accumulating for the future. A cordial invitation is exten ded to you to come in and open an account at this Bank. The services and facilities afforded you make this invitation worthy of your very careful consideration. I Page Trust Company Aberdeen, Carthage, Cameron, Hamlet, Raeford Sanford, Thomasyille. Friday» Ma] VASS Mr. A. M] in Raleigh. Miss Rul visiting her| Mrs. R* Frances, ar^ boro. Mr. and Raleigb, spj Vass. C. L. T: tended comi Thursday. Mrs. Am visiting Mi Mr. and spending a I They went Mrs. Thom] the gradual Obera Davi| Mrs. D. from a moi Manteo. SI by her sist cott. Mrs. T. Lula Gadd: of Camero| Thompson, get YOl Printed no^ in full swi| minute, ths Let THE PI the job forI Mrs. A. Marian, wei It has be( and parcel in town Fric school buil( to the Rosj Southern C| be held ii the theatre. I Mr. and visited Mr. Sunday aft( GET YOl Printed no^ in full swii minute, thal Let THE Pj the job for Mr. and baby, Paul, Sunday in parents, Rei Mr. J. Thomas, of week-end. !0f course night—at “A Souther^ Mrs. N. James Ray,| A. A. McGil C. L. Tys Carthage thl Miss Jen^ Rockinghai short visit Vass. GET YOl Printed noi in full swii minute, thaj Let THE P] the job for Rev. and to Red Spi commencemj College. Mr. and children, oj Sarah Mai afternoon. Miss Maril flight and cousin, Misj Cameron, Mrs, Lerc Mary Spem Mrs. J. A. I Alton Th stopped ove Sunday. Miss Eolii day in Faye Miss Edn visiting her at Hotel Va Arthur T versity, spen Mr. and 'h tractive chil A., Jr., of Sunday, atte convention a K. Gunte; Rev. and Aberdeen, w and Mrs. W. GET YOU I^rinted now full swii >ninute, that Let THE PI the job for Mr. G. W. Sunday witt Mr. D. C.