Newspapers / The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, … / Sept. 1, 1922, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE DUNN DISPATCH IihiMii Afrf 1. MM •UEUSHED TWICE - A • VIU TUESDAYS AMD WDATS -rssOnsr —■■■ ■ - at -jj———— suBsetumo* satesi On. Tmi..fS.OO S i Kntb___1.0S Thraa Madhi--- M CASH IN ADVANCE «** At taodar af __ tfaaa mart (w*iA o> with hb aam« IliiMt aaraartry that tha aama ba • pabUrtMsI. bat wa teabt that * ba (Iw* aa an avidraca af road faith. Shart axoaaU af wadilagi, aatar bamnti, dab laaattaai. aU., an iari(ad. ACTION NEEDED What la the attitude of Chinn bua» — men toward the eo operative aa >oc latiena formed by the farmara of North OaroUaa ia aa <f«t tt h ether roadttiane under which they market rheir cotton and tohaccoT The Cotton Craven Co-operative Avoclatioo and the TvheKco Grow in Co-operative Association want aa aaeanr to that qaadBou. They nay •hat they have been received with lew era rath ia Dana than they have been ia any other Important market Int center ia North Carolina. They have a way ta paniah lack of warmth, but they tireltate ta vldt paniah a—at upon as yet. They met to know whether the coUneae hi a malt of anlmevlty ar af Ignorance ft»4 dnintercetedaeaa. I| It la aahao Aty they will retaliate. If ft ia ignev ahee, they will aeett to inform aa. The ameeiatiea wants the endorse meet of all the hoataem mew here. Tt already has that of the Waken, ft enema to ne aa aa organinatiou af fume*M seeking la help thoaa farm er*. Aa yet the organisation con tains piehably ne mere than a fourth at 'he cotton farmara la Ike Dean Dis trict. Eventually, however, if the eo / ami there U every reeaea to teUcn / that it will be aocooesfal—at leeet W per cent of tktM who grow cot ta® win he numbered aawig Ma aew ha. When that ft—e ta reached, arhat win be the attitude e t the fam or* toward Doan If Daaa doaa aot new «b«w a dnyoeitioa to aid the movementt ft ia pomible that the tamers may •galoot Deen that they mow an ne leg ageink earns of ' - The DiapeUh has found ao very rerioat eppoaitkm by the u—» men agdbut the ee egeretiva idea. Cxeept for the beaker®, however, h has foaad few baaiaeaa mca who are actively at work for lit > ta aa epos reel doe* aot look well to working for Vie movement. Thi» acaeoa Dana wfll ha aaad aa a concentration paint far much of the Vet ton grows ia dampaeo. Rare nett, Caaberiand aad Tebneton This :» ao bocaaan the eoanrlotian -riratl dad atorago space in more friendhr towaa. Unleas the attitado ad ear boonaw men change*, it ia aot ha probable thet next year win mm tfds cotton diverted to other A. W. Daughtry, of ty. has bom appointed MmU agent for the cotton grower* emaciation in thio dlctrkt. Re ha* Jest darted to week .sad now I* striving to hrtareot Aa hntfnee* man ot Du* ia the move ment Hr hoe aokod ailaen of the Chamber ot Coamtrm to ao* a amoting moa end *®d*avar to gat tha • •dnreramnt ot tha marvban**. if cen time, ho is p tone big to exp lain to an merrhaats jam what Ms ooeeclo •'an k trying to do and what K-ri to them ao koala— man. The Chamber ihoali act at onoo. my^ < k*N n ta a *• viH MM ml i .taw, ■ '. s?l V.-. aBu tw* « •*• 91 mLT MCTlM. * to Mr Hi)m *> pet **»• shove method of oeilvctisg into laalag October lit. that d nkeribm will with n la tide matter aad tj at suspend lag *• FOOT or TABLE Eeary time tha State Highway Comm Mon sits down to pass tha TMd dish areaad tha tahte, wa kind of sit ap, assuma Mr plaoaaatda* aa tielpetery smirk aad modestly wait tOl tha head #f tha boose requests oar plate. It's a had Ideal Our modesty may ha heroraing hut it alat gettin- us no-where*. - The other day the "aid ms," with hU family ef fa to red sunt shoot him. aal dawn to a amah Ha helped 'am all. aad left our plate empty. That has heea the case for many moose. Tha only ran! read construction that has came oar way eras tba Clin ton-Dann highway—aad that fattly ■ hacaoting a “low" way. True, tha cammimlon has taken over tha main tananca of some other roads, taut captain Jeon Cate, the eBcvsnt <V keeper,” mob wOl have nothing to maintain anted tha cohnateajon doos •oow nal work. The Dispatch would ha the test member of «>e community to contort Its Chamber of Commerce for In action. That body ia ana of oar pete and we kaow bettor than dees. any body else what ito bardene are. Bat the road fetter is a thing which sheald concern the chamber above moat everything dec. There ia some reason for the eom m Man's neglect of oar community. Wooid U not bo well for the men who make ag the Chamber of Commerce to get baey and see what they can do shoot the met ter? FARM DAMAGE Ia another column The Dispatch prints a story tailing of tha reealta foand by the United States Govern meat when Its agents examined the twenty-five hales of cotton aaat here la* Dee amber to be tsaatod ta tha waya farmers treat tha cotton they hold from seaeoa to season. The teste show that under sense conditions cot ton can bo kept safely sad with Kb Ue damage. They also show that un der other condition a great damage is suffered by tha owner. Ia eae instance, eae bate of the three left flat upon tha ground, aa covered, and never turned, weighed SOI pounds when it was pieced When fcai increased to IMS. That bale m practically a I aaavaan Little damage waa dona to tfct cotton plaeed aa Umber• and laft oncorarad bat tamed after each rain. Large dam ago waa donate all balaa toft on the ground. CHASLOTTK PLANS NIC EXPOSITION THIS MONTH Charlotte, N. C.. Auguet >1.—The Made-in-Carottnaa EjrpoelUon which ia to ho hold hara September SSth to October 7th la rapidly eaeaming the pi«portion* of a complete whole. The Board af Directori has racaatlp boat ed itself with perfecting the person nel af the organisation which will cart far the actual details of the uadertAfcmg* Wade H. Winn— has boon named General Malinger and with tha coop eration of Encwtira Secretary J. C Patten wtU from thU tint* forward bo netiralp in thargo of the Prpnal Han't preliminaries. A steering earn* attics coniiralng of Provident Juba' L. n>»«, Eucathi Secretary Pat-! toa, Messrs. J. B. Efinl and David OWM. kai bcah selected by' the’ Board to aattla all matters of pal'cy erhfch may arias, to handle all retail emergencies lucfc mm are inevitabe. on ' Ac cut of »o large aa undertaking aad in general to act with the full authority of the Board front now un-1 tit Aa final curtalb falW on the Kaposition on October 7A. Annual meeting of Aa Little Biver W. M. O., Beptiit Church. Bale's Creek, Sept. 7A. Thwredey Merwleg IOiSO Devotions]—,Mm. B. P. Merab hanks. Be port of Superintendent. Report of churches. Minion Study— What Ae Campaign hai moant to: 1- SAta, Home and Foreign Mta Au—Mrs. K. N. Johnson. S. Orphanage. Hospital aad Min bterial Relief—Mn. J. A. McLeod. Comparison: 1. The First MiaMenary Socictie* —Mta. Joel -Leytoa. S. The Mission flooidfiae n? Tea. day—tin. W. P. Byrd. What Our Society Has Done in Personal Service Mrs I. M Wal lace. Address—Miaa. Mary Warren, Ra leigh. N. C ' Announcements. Aftaraeaa Seedca SiSO Devotional—Miaa Velma Pattnaon. Young People's Work in Associa tion ; The Needs and How We May Moat Them—Mr* Ed. Snoddy. atrwarddxp—Miaa Ada Oveihy. Impressions of Southern Baptist Convention—Misa foy O'Quinn. Between the Years — Mias Oeta May lor. Report of Committee* Thursday Evaaiag SiOO Devotional—Bev 8. A. Edgerton, Bale's Creek. N. C. Pageant--“Aan of Arm”_Coate T. W. A. B- V. P. U- Pragraaa, Monday Sept 4. Mack M. Jemtgan, Gsosp 1,coder. Subject: •‘Christ Oar Hope Dr tpite Past Failure. !• Scripture reading—Luke 6: HI, Matt. l:ta-S>. Mark 1;L84»— E;ldia Cannady and Roger Brook* *• Talk: Christ teaches the disci ples a leaser of hops and what the lesson must have meant to the disci • r »k»—Ma. Myrtle Brooks. *• Talk—What the lee*on must mean to us—Paal Strickland. 4. Piano Soto—Mias Inea Sugg*. 4. Talk—Wa may hop* to socccod in character build lag — William Fraro*. , 4. Talk—With Jesua there is hope of success In our Ohrlatian work —John 0. Harris. T. Solo—Mrs. R. L. Denning. 1 8. Talk—With Christ there 1* suc cess in soot winning—Mrs. Sam1 Broughton. | 9. Talk—Visible results a,re not neeaaaary for sac cede—ITaa Ovolla Britt. 10. Durtt—Mrs. C. N. Jackson and Mias BaJU* Naylor Intermedia to B. Y. P. U. Program— Tuesday, Sop t am her gth Croup 1—Eleanor Hatcher; Lead er. Subject—"WWt Jeaoa in Ooiil*e".| Announcement of Topic—by Mar-1 garct Pope. Introduction sad memory verse by' Burehei Altman. Map talk by Layton BmrtSv. . **>ng by Unite—Sweetest Nint I Knew. T^ka. 1—f'Early ICaiatry" by Alton Naylor. 2— "Jeeu, Tim. of Popularity" by Malllr A dim. 3. "Jsau* the Friend" by Alden We*. ^ 4—“Jeeu the Leader" by Leufce running. > • 3— "Jem, the Prober" by Her man Stricklaiuffi UluetmtUn by Dario* Ennia Song by-Union—"Draw Me Near er." • 4 • Vtriton ..are. Medially invited to attend they* meetings every Tnaeday night at the FI lit Baptist eh arch. --*-*— moving from n. r. to the u. a. Aocntaiy of -*Far Weeks tees the cooDtry yelling* for booze. The um of the vori i**eee" in that connection is unintentionally correct; Secretary Week* does nof hear the country, be only "*a*e" it throng*, the picture* that are drawn for him by gentleman who know enitty what they want Mm to tee. * It lent prohibition nor beer that is discussed here;.It is the Inability of publicfato land officials to oes >be United Statu straight- Here ia a New York editor, fot example: maybe the editor of a “libaaa ” znignsine sup. ported by soma International Pnlan — -..-at.-j ■ — ~3 _ • \ ei«r. Thip editor Urea in the midst of hip flaeko and hooey humor; ha dawdles and pen os and violates the Constitution in a club where all the dub members aasars him over and over Spain that the country is simply yelling its hoed of for boose and that unless something is done to sup press the “blue law tyrants” that are overriding the country we shall hare s revolution hare, man—a revolution here, man, sure as shoo tin.. Clnbe are poor places to boar the country think; yon cannot gangs pub lic sentiment by hip pockets, simply beesuss these things prevent editors Basing straight the things that they ought to see straight. And they pre vent officials, too. One much needed reform is to take Kew York and atrip It of editorial offices, transporting tin editorial ttaff; to the United States and settle them down in the midst of the nation. %her» the jroie© ©f the American peo pl« will reach them. The ease Should be done with Washington officials. Men who have oscillated between New York end Washington all their liven, who think according to the ta teretu of thoie placoe, era foreign minded men and cannot help being foreign-minded. They represent a itato of mind that aiweyi been reel riant, of the mind of the United-States. It is too bad that we cannot arrange branch capital* throughout tke country, to that the government might ride circuit aa the older courta once did, and thus come in contact with all parte ef the coun try, not on the rare oecaeiona of pub lic celebration, but in canon waps end ae Integral parts of our plain po pulation. , ' ‘ It cannot be assuredly mid that this would ha cf vary great uae to the country, but it certainly would be moat valuable to the editors ead the officials, aad not only on the pro- I hibition qqpetion, either. There isn't sny prohibition question—in the Uni ted-States! There may ha in New York and in Wnehiogton. The Dear born Independent. VK3LATO«^ OF LIVE-STOCK LAWS MUST TAT FINES Violation of regulstory lama rs letingto live stock and neat, fins* war* recently Imposed In 48 oeaos, at IDT ou Weed by the Bureau of Ania«l Induntry in its Service and Benda* tory Announceaienta lor July. The lie* of violators includes railway and express companies, seat dealers, and live-stock owners. Moat of the vio lation x ware for the quarantine law which restrict* the interstate ahip mAt of diene ltd, tieky, or uninapoct ed stock. Several live-stock owner* eseounUrad the Federal law whsa law, Incladod the offering of unsound mast, sbtyping uaInspected meat and lard, and, In oaa east, wing a wrap per bearing the meat-inspection leg <nd for wrapping uninspected meat Die majority of Anal range from |2t ■o 1200. Although the federal laws ind regulations relating to Livo stock tra for the most part well understood uad complied with, persons nnfumit ar sdth the regulations axd with the mportanea of preventing Interstate shipment of diaeaeed animals end un sound meat* say obtain copica of re gulation* by applying to tha depart ment. I Min Minnie Taylor left Wednesday for Tarboro where she will teach thi* rear In the graded echoola. s SBLA B declared. “ cold and family if ft dollar* . . oat It i I* tb« bouse, new without lt“ At aa druggiata. Accept fei£ I / ^J?£§£r I Jf >Yo^/JnoL you - f / f II /if EPWORTH LEAG MONDAY EVEN INO^O’C EXTf^A S^ECIA “A PROGRAM THAT IS DIFFE! Do not miss i .I Be sure and come to the program that is < fferent. Be on time. Divine Stn «-t Methodist Church Begins Promptly at Eight o’clock k".-....mi 8C—Ma—eas ~~ u-.t-—-- - ■ - ■■ ----- — Wanted Farm L^nds! Do you want to Mil your farm ? We nJjo turn it into «•«-». or interact bearing papar. Wa mxJnot beginner*. Our Company haa bi d 18 yaara experience in celling both farm landa and < Ity property d auction. Wo know bow. Our auctio wara and r/ound aaloamon are the Ter7 beat. Wa ci rry our owe organisation and lira wire brace band. Wa wodf on a eamraiaoion. Wire or write oa and our contract man will call on you. Wo are now booking aab a for September, October, and Nov ember. We take ilmXt i^referring you to any of our Pact cuitomen o /Coj of th«\5 banka or any lnninaii kouae bora. | _ Grosland-Tyson Realty & Auction fr™ 1 " ■‘,r‘ || Company <v - - • Beonettsville( Sooth Coro. mn~i-■—im—T hi i i iihiiil^— | FURNITURE THREE CAR L0ADS JUST , RECEIVED This lo of furnip ire was .bought right and we a *e able lo offer it at prices that should hi attractive to you. The lo ; includes— BEDROOM DIN/NG ROOM LjyiNG ROOM aM PARLOR suits add ODD PIECES ' of all kinds WE WANT YOU TO SEE IT t The Barnes and Holliday Company Dunn, North Carolina v— -:) __ t
The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1922, edition 1
2
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