MA d : . . : TOO MANY that farm DUtrtot wfll aat fat ed their aaaghbon of taking ana with the holt woariL tha fameta of thU Mould profit fxaaa the end of the farmer* of other who failed to hoed the waro I wore "cleantl op" by the woovg. Tho Dispatch would not advise the Amin af tha Dana District to (top rowing eettoat altogether, hat it weold advise thorn to plant plenty of aetoa In food and feod eropa to ia , «a*a an abundance ’for home ecn . tumptloa .and t<» plant cotton only • aa a sarptua crop. Growing cotton to J buy the fond and feed needed to op i ***** • f*r» that win produce theaa aoeemitles to a mighty bad policy, • rruu whan the hoU weevil to not to be ' ***honed with, aad the farmer who ; **tempto U under boU weevil ccndl Hone to beaded for bankruptcy. The fact that tha farmer* of the Dana District produced a good crop of cotton last year will, it to to bs feared, have a tendency to cause them to toko too great a chance this year. It to likely that tha ball weevil will do modi damage In this section this ysor. They worn horn in «■( num bs™ !»«* year aad will bo here in mocb larger number* next summer. JCnay farmers la the counties border Ing along the South Carolina lino aude a bale to the am In 1M1 and la IMS, tha fallowing year, an the “pronucea jets tnan 100 pmunU of Mod cotton por acre. This Is not written to scare the farmers of the Dunn District, bat as • warning to them of tht danger* of taking ton muck chance with the rot ten enemy—boll weevil. Govern* Mention'* ship bill ho* apparently gono to sea. "1 TOU» YOU SO." When n fellow goo* astray and ■aad* the sympathy aad help of hi* friends It is a rntber sum spirit that crisu -I toM you so.” It is simply boasting of on*’* wisdom and fore sight on the misfortunes of oca's fel low man. It betrays a lack of the milk of human kindness and reveals tbo vanity aad conceit of kim who gives utterance to the miserable tenti wont. He matter bow guilty tbs poor fellow who Colls My be or bow unfit for the position he has held, when he is overtaken by We aine, aad goes out In disgrace, silence la the word on the port of those who may have opposed him aad area fought his promotion to a plate of honor and trast. Tbo fore goiag reflections ore Inspired on the nreaaiiu of the retirement of A. D. JEMfc.TM Hwn ifih ously opposed Watt* appointment by President Wilson to the Federal Bevenu* Service, aad openly condem ned bis political methods But Instead of lambasting him in his humiliation that paper refers to his hoaeat and cMctcnt administration of Ms office and Ma slant refusal to dodge the consequences of hi* sin. That is most Vedhnblo to the paper, as any other course would have been unworthy. It Is neither brave nor honorable to kick a man whoa he is down and oat. tt i* th* easiest thing in the world to say "I told you «o,” which betrays a half bidden hilarity at the man's downfall. Tbo strong ought to boar the In firm! tie* of the weak and not phwse themselves. "I told yon so" not only mfnaas to boar the Infimt •*** of the wank bat pandora to the ignoMa pliamsro of self. Nano of us arc freed from weakness and sin. All of ua am liable to be overcome by temptation. To raise .the fallen and •Boor the faint 1* not only the duty of the Christian, but of any man who is manly aad brave. To rise on step ping stones of oar dead setvos to higher thin as is fins, hot ta make tk* attempt «o ria* on ateppiay atone* of •them, kewever feeble end fealty, ia deapienbla.—Charity and CM Aren ^^^^* HOMB-iniCTt YOU* ' CHAAACTE* “A In* reflect* the ahem*ter of thorn wko live within it," aeya Wee Aysoo L Atbater, diatrict ham* dem f*t«n nyowtwf the Ylerida Ayr! cotta rat Ealonatoa DMrion. Wa nr* told nlao that too annoy P»m*o da* to* little thoayht to Urn boom. A farmer will pay a hundred (Mlsrs far a ridtay plow bat wffl looo* hi* wife to aantb doth** with her band* when mntb laaa money than bit ririiny plow coat waald opy bar * dnakte* ha do th* wiehtny and 4m* toko • beery load off her aheaJ “*« wonder aw find to mot? home* raflactiny lock of order sad baoaty whoa Ik* heaaawlfe U cowynlloil te •h«ri her enoryy to wrabbrny and —ahlny and cnehbay O'.ro her tree kkaatawa work b* do aad-ahe wfl ted mar* time Id attend U the IWr tkinya of ted bona," film Arbiter __ _ Akcaariaw of •to all Imputed! aabjaat tka follow A team teoaM sod bo o ptao* to •teply abater. dote* and load Ik* bate# bat * ptao* whom the adnd ia TOWt TOWN It yo« **nt to llv* la the kind of a town That's the kind of a town yoa nke, Yoa don't hare to slip your clothes i» a grip Ahd start on a tong, lapg hike. , Youll oaly Bad what you've toft bo bind, For there's nothing really new. It's a knock at yownelt if you knock jroor town; Fhr It isn't your town, it*I you. Retd towns are not made by nrn afraid. Last somebody atoao geta ahead; tforcvyone works and nobody shirks, Yoa can raiso a town from the dead. bo secured from the G. 8- Department c( Agriculture. Washington. Comfort and baauty do not hecea aitaio the expenditure of a great deal of money, but may result from a small amount of money wisely spent. A little la (Tenuity, a hammer, a nail, and a paint brush will go a long way (n making a shelter a home.—Farm ing. IN MEMO* 1AM The Grim Beeper to no reapoetor of persons. He calls indtocrtminaUty * ih* cabins of tha poer and at tha palaces of the rich. The high and tha low, the young and the old, ha rWta them all. He teaches £helr eyelids with dreamless slumber and they **n aaleen. On Ptbruary i, 1021, he naaos c<l John Pipkin W ash born from tha flinty path of human hardships and •lecreod that his years here should b* bat twenty and three. Verily— "We live in doeda, not years, sot hroalhs; In feelings, not in figures on tha dial. We should count time by heart throb*. Be most Uvea Who thinks moot, fools the aobleet, *cU the best.” Tho subject of this eras born in Pollock, La., September 9, 1600. His parents are S. H. and Mattie P. Washburn who moved to Harnett County, North Carolina, wtth their, ton in the year 10OT. The de ceased received his early education In the public schools at LUtimrton, N. C. In lha fall of 1916, be entered tho University of North' Carolina, from which Institution ho graduated wtth high honoru in tho spring of 1999. At tha University he uses a favorite among his fallows, ami raaiHlj found pleasure in all the activities of college life, as witness his following college statistics: Philanthropic Literary .So ciety, Vice-President (9), fheoMoat County Club, See rotary (3), Pruar dent (4); Latin-Amo tic an Club, Vice President (4) North C^roHna Club; Y. MT C. A. ftabinot (4>; Secretary Trvasurvr Class («), President Stu dent Council (4); Campos Cahlnot (4); Class Baseball (1, S), Captain <S); Clast Tennis Team (f, a, 4). Captain* (3, 4); Commencement Mar shall; Associate Editor Tar Heel (4); Herman Club; National City Bank Scholarship; Assistant In Economics (4); Ampltolerathen; Epsilon PM Doha. Immediately foltewiog graduation r<”»*g Washburn went to London Ragland. in the employment of th< National C.ty Bonk oI New York About eigtil Months later lie wu tmnrlemtd to Chios, where he con troeted tuberculosis anil waa force: to rut urn home in Kay, ltH2. . Hi spent the remainder of tie year a the North Carolina Sanatorium Moore County, from which lnatitutioi ho was discharged on <8 December 1922. He Hied at hit home in Harriet County, os 5 February, l#28, site a brief lUnam—-slightly lew than twi weeks of influense pneumonia. ! In addition to his parents, the do * ceased Is survived by too sister* Mn. Arch McDavid, of Brookfipld Mo., and Mias Martha Washburn o Lillington, N. C. John Pipkin W ask burn was a nsai of strong character and unusual at talamanu. He was the seal of hono highminded, strmigkt-farward, clean cat and un re Ian ting fighter for thi right Hs believed la a gospel of Jus Men, in a religion of morality and il the virtue* of right living. The lie* of many have been, ranched by thi rare sham of hid friendship, and, li the hearts of thoaa who knew hin beet, his immortality will abide It is impossible to think of an .on finished Ufa or that the usefulness of one wall tpan^ Miould be lo*t It th« democracy of death. There Is as indescribable eaenes, ay something that live* on. It refuse* to die In thi hour of darkened shade* and In thi evening of twiMgfct shadows. Proa the grave, where “Victor's wreath and monarch’* gems all blend In com non dust,” it flies away and becomes an aseet of priceless measure—thi full sheaves of g golden harvest My friend is dead, but the value ol hit friendship stBl pros. His lip* an voiceless, but his Immortality mil mcaka. HU work Is dtue, but the In On race of bis life M* on. "Death is the veil which Those who live cell life; They sleep, and It Is lifted.” Strong In action, loyal W hU pur poeee, pun of heart, upright of life 0 noble soull kail and .farewell. A FRIEND C E. Gsrganaa, a brakeman ot the Norfolk Southern between Win ston-Salem and Roan eke, Va, ami who lived in Winston-Salem, died I Thursday from injuries received ■ | few hours before when he fell front | a freight train, near Perrum, Va. it Factories Have Advanced Prices on Tires -And Tubes We have on hand about 100 Urea, all first grade, i we carry no second* in oar4took.) These run in sizes UomJ-bmh Fabric tires to tie 5-inch Cord tire*, with itch. I v ing these atjuie old price, for a limited w is tba ttm la bur* V (G STATION * .... R ' t.!.’.’" ,'«aga!S« TH* NEXT WAR It Is high time that writers cMK 1 making reference to the next world war ai tf It wore a cortalnty. W# k cannot believe there will be any next ' «rorM war. tf there should b* It would ■Mian th* annlhiliatloci of civilisation I th* wreek and rain of Uie whole ( world. Vaat progress has been mad* ' in tho improvement of deadly rauni 1 bon* of war ataee th* armistice wa* 1 signed, “Lewisite" ga* the Invention • Of as American, mekae the German ga* pale into Insignificance. It spreads 1 far more widely than th* gas Used by Oenwo* and poison* the person • it touches. It fill* the atmosphere, and . Uk* a cloud tetri** down where it , is projected and destroy* people, not by the hundred, but by the acre. Not aoIdler* but civilian* win tp the ehtof i victim* ,n th* next world war. The . rule* of civilised warfare will not stand in the way of thl* wholesome , destruction of non-combatants. G«r , many violated every rule of war and . waged it* battle* like the barbarian* 1 wf tho early cuntune* The airplane in i the last war was In its infancy. If another world war should come this deadly Instrument would become one of the most awful meane for the do etruction of human life that can be conceived. The dropping of high ex ’ plosive* on crowded cities would slaughter men, women and children by the thousand. What th* terrific ex plosive* left would be burned op, aa a fire has boon iarented that water will not extinguish, and this fire can be dropped from the airplane* with the bomb*. New York by this mean* can be wiped out in a day. We e»n not believe that men are so inwuio, | aa to engage In such a war aa the "next world war" would be, for any cause. They tay that under certain conditions a nation ought to Sgbt W* do not believe It. Thorn can be no Justification whatever for the de struction of the haman race; and with the advancement in scientific njunitions of murder that baa been made, that is exactly what the next world war would mean. A very good book to fend on this subject Is "The God of War," by J. J. Taylor, which takes th* ground that srar is never justifiable for any causa. Another horrible but santible and reasonable volume It “The Next War," by Will Irvin, the famous war correspondent Whether Gen. Sherman defined war or not the definition credited to him is the unvarnished truth.—Charity A Children. * DUNN'S REST PEOPLE SEE DELNORA DAILY Many ef Dunn'* better-class ef people are daily taking advantage of msmsmam HIKE SIGN SHOP / [d Mil high* BUY COfD SIGNS IT COSTS BO MORE 228 Hajr St i.F«y«ttovUU, N.C. ■_HIH 'IJ-II . --- ' — —■wi.!-........... B . the great woil that tor Great Debtor* U doing. She hga eond^ior many .n tho paat mptjOT andLudfdtdcd great aerreta tj£t yfa*^\ perplexing queitlonf wiUr’frT'y Ulyttia art. X%o*e yet been to *ee her better To w ait one# at ah* will only be here Ull the tatter part of March. She copce bare from Philadel phia, where aha waa permanently lo cated for two year* She ha* acorcs of tetter* from all over the United State* prailing bar wortt. Located on Magnolia Avaane, ju*t beyond and acroaa the street from New Grammar School—look for bar banner.—Adr. JUST ARRIVED ame Can ^ field fence Any S le you Want The Barnes & Holliday Co. Dunn, North Carolina / _ _ / ' _■ I WE SERVE * The record of this institutiorraTnce'ita in ception has been one of service to ita commu nity, its state. Upon that solid foundation has been built a structure that is a matter of pride to our citizens and. to those who have , had a part in its mal Every employe is filled with that spirit of it makes it agreeable t • The First National Bank DUNN, N. C. J. W. DRAUGHON,-Acting President II. B. TAYLOR,..Cashier^ J..O. WARREN,-Assistant Cashier* LI N C O L o \ \ iwji SERVICE *]y* owner* know ihai Lincoln cir* m ordinary usage demand little attemgSr. other than the replenishment of Jflvy hoe, od laJ water. That iabectfeTihr service requiretnenta of motor ta arc in inverse ratio to the quality MA char < *cter built zmo tbem by Jt lAariu (acturtrs. \ W Periodic inspection, propetyubricatam and minor adjustment*. whfe necessary, ye essential to tfa^prnper afd ptnloftfjcd funcoomng of anAp.tee f machinery With quality aa a mime (fetor, i.. is the secret of eronoeraAl anf dcprtiddje transportation. 1 I To insure the operarAi <# f jraJ.-i cam •» a source of untnterLpfe.-J safwf xt-xi and enjoyment, thruuA lie Mcthuca ci adequate and. oritivt-nn^M ac.* . er fict'i tie*, it is the purpose pfe Pu>J *.i -Vr Company that in eittirBdctVr o* .mj. tattoo be equipped lu feeder ;f,, ,.„t and intelligent service ;o ■r,r*Ai -yi /.vrs Thousands of Ford I-ealcAi the i inited States arc being equipped *n!i spna-ilty trams*) Lincoln men, co*rpI*ro» to make ■•M adjustments and c< prov.ding fee ordinary service requirements Under Uus arrangement a Lincolo owner, whether touring a continent or cw-mg hia own city. may with confi dence enter a ford Dealer's place of busrnrw and he assured of prompt, cour teou* and intelligent treatment by an 1 mpniatm with a personal interest in his welfare . It it not intended, or necessary, that al Focd Dealer* be equipped to do major r'f-i r v/urk or overhauling on Lincoln car* Adequate provision is made, how <r.-«r. whereby such work will be done w cadi territory, when necessary, by‘ who *i« rtpecally e-pupped to ro Jsr !i£h grade i-rvtcw in keeping with flttficUT of th< product v. c. .xlieva that the Lntcolit will run fniiher .rod require lew atcdunral st*ntf<»t than any other car in the »v>»'-L It M significant ahd a matter of uta.ott imprexance to prnspcct we own rsof quality cam that the incmnpaisble, wrrlJ wide facilities of the Tord Motor Oumpany should make the ownership of a Lincoln even store desiraisle than ever lie fort. ) <t t, • '■ * ' . '

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