PAGE TWO THE NEWS-JOURNAL, RAEFORD, N. C. THURSDAY, SEPT. 20th, 1945 POOLE'S MEDLEY (By D. Scott Poole) From bad to good is a long step. No: many make the stride not any, in :act, unaided. The reason is, I believe, the tendency naturally Is to ward bad. ' 1945 has given us many unusual oc currences. The first of the year looked like a long and continuously war. But brave, unterrified American soldiers by the help of the Lord, changed that state of affairs, and soon .won. We all dreaded the long war prospect in Japan, but Provi dence came to our help there speed ily, and the war is over. Tojo was the Jap who ordered the attack on Pearl Harbor. Now, he meets justice. There is no escaping iiBhts. teleDhones. the penalty for wrong doing. The days of good spring or well water have gone forever in towns and cities, and many country homes have running water and electric These services I: is reported in the newspapers that Congress has passed a law to re real War Time. We will be im patient waiting for dinner. Presi dent Wilson started that thing of running up clocks instead of going to work an hour sooner. He had an idea that factory workers would work in the garden a while if they got home while the sun was way up yonder. I: wis published Monday that the storm losses !n Florida were fifty Trillion dollar . There were other losses. Some it-ses are a S3'" to ether fellow c . zens. 1 : : . :5 S are not kept up in Raeford as they should be, and the owners might double their incomes in this town, easily. '"I see a hen. A hen can run. Cider is made of apples. Bakers bake bread and cakes. Botany is the science of plants. Riding on horseback Is good exer-1 NEW MINISTER The Rev. cise- .Thomas Lavton Fraser, who on Coevil signifies the same age. September 2, accepted a call to We often wait for the arrival of the , the pastorate of the Maxton Pres mail." 'bvterian church. Mr. Fraser, who These are lines f oil Webster's j ; now serving the Vineland. N. J. BluebBck SpelVf. For further In- fi!sl clu-rch, is a native of Hines formatinn see Sheriff Hall. vj,ie Qa t anc; a graduate of Davidson college. He will begin lhe present enormous pun::,- clr' his now work the first of Octo- The dark U.y Monday reminded me of the dark cjy back in Indepen- was created under great inflation of Uo the currency, ana t.ie same inriaiion should be n ainta::';'d until this in debtedness is adjusted. dence Days. One member of the Provincial congress ordered lights, saying, "If the day of judgment is at har.d. I want to be found at the post of duty." If currency :s ki'it : present standing of ir.'.ation ar.d the people have incomes like they have had for five years more, the United States will have something like four hundred billions income, and we can pay our war debt. I stated in this column last week that 1 never needed a dollar that I did not get. Do not understand me to be boasting. But, I do believe in a God of Providence, and in some way or another the Lord will provide. On Au" st 28, there was a b:E storm all J iy ari torrents of rain f.'ll. T'- re - ere freshets all over eastern" Xordi Carolina. In October, 1894, there was another all-day storm and. rain. On both these occasions the resorts on the Atlantic coasts were almost destroyed. But from news accounts, the storm the past week end did more damage than any p fvious storm. Reason: more to destroy. At Home I dreamed some weeks ago that the Day of Judgment haa come. I was not frightened in the least. I re marked to my wife, "The Great Day has come, and she said, "Yes." I awoke, calm and unafraid, and I was glad I had not had a nightmare. One reason we hear more bad news is improved news facilities. This state has a network of wires, for news, light, power and talk. Judge not the EorfTTryleeible sense, but trusf Him for His grace; Behind a frowning providence, He smiles a smiling face. Lt. (jg) Bertha McNeill, daughter of Mrs. Annie McNeill, who has ser ved 18 months with the Navy Nurses Corps overseas, is spending a leave with her fa!y near Antioch. Lt. McNeill's brother, William, visited her at Pearl Harbor just before she left for the States. n Reports To Greensboro Sgt. John D. McPhaul has reported to Greensboro after spending a 60 day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. McPhaul near Red Springs. FOR SALE The News-Journal Has In Stock "Land Posted" Signs-size 11x14 At the low price of Ten Cents each or $1.00 Dozen. Get Your Notices NOW! It Pays to Advertise From where I sit ... Joe Marsh Lawn Mowers ar Versus Fei'. Will Curry Isn't lulling f;. those pictures of a pjstwar life cf ease. He was sweating over his lawn mower the other day, when somebody shows him pic tures of a mower that runs vn der its own power. "Shocks," says Will, "I Uk a law n mower that Rives you some barktalk and exercise. It gets the old blood circulating and works up a wonderful thirst. "Then," Will adds with zest, "tl'ere's i-ithirs in the. who'' v.r Id that tastes as Rood rl - -rful glass of beer;'' From v. hero I -J.., a .t or good sense in what Will says. A little honest effort never hurt anybody. And there should be :nore to our post-war plans than how to make life comfcrf.ble and easy. Outdoor work work yon do with your hands and your back -ought to be part of everybody's post-war plans. And on a hot day, as Will says, there's always :Sit s;iar!;!lng glass of beer as a a ve 1C :, UNITCO STATES BRJWE... fOUNDATION, North CoroKrr ! -.1 H. Cain, $tal Director CS (07 Insurance B!-x RAEFORD LADY SPIT UP ACID LIQUIDS FOR , HOURS AFTER EATING ! For hours after every meal, a Rae ford lady used to spit up a strong, I acidulous liquid mixed with pieces of half-digested food. She says it was j awful. At times she would nearly, strangle. She had stomach bloat, daily heauaches and constant irregular , bowel action. Today, this lady eats her meals and enjoys them. And she ; says the change is due to taking I.N-NER-AID. Her food agrees with her. No gas, bloat or spitting up after eating. She is also free of headaches now, and bowels are regular, thanks to this Remarkable New Compound. INNER-AID contains 12 Great Herbs; they cleanse bowels, clear gas from stomach, act on sluggish liv er and kidneys. Miserable people soon feel different all over. So don't go on suffering! Get INNER-AID. Sold by All Drug Stores here in Hoke County. (adv.) The News-Journal Published Thursday At Raeford, North Carolina Subscription Rates $2 per year For Servicemen ....$1.50 per year DOIXJALD COXE, Editor-Manager Entered as second-class mail mat ter at the post office at Raeford, N. C under Act of March 3, 1870. NOTICE! ADVERTISEMENT OF REAL ESTATE FOR UNPAID 1944 TAXES Will be Made beginning Oct. 1-45 AND SALE OF SUCH PROPERTY FOR UNPAID TAXES WILL BE MADE ON THE FIRST MONDAY OF NOVEMBER, 1945 PROPERTYOWNERS MAY SAVE THEM SELVES THIS EXPENSE BY PAYING THEIR 1945 TAXES BEFORE THESE DATES D. H. H0DGIII, Tax Collector for Hoke County te6, ft&jbea udk . cua RlDINu THE RODS or running a business, it's easy enough when you don't have to pay the freight. You simply get a free ride at somebody else's expense. Maybe you run a store or service station or dress shop. Would you like to have a next-door competitor who has little or no rent, or taxes, or interest to pay, and who is kept in business partly by your tax money? Yet this is what happens with govern ment and municipal electric power sys tems. They are not required to pay . federal taxes; often get money from the public treasury at little or no inter est; make up losses out of your pocket as a taxpayer. Meanwhile, on the average, Amer ica's uiitnrij-managed electric com panies turn back to the people as taxes about 25c out of every dollar received. And these companies owned and operated by millions of folks like you meet all other obligations without bene fit of special privileges. Today, these tax-paying, self-supporting companies supply over 80 of the tremendous amount of electric power produced in America . . . enough to meet the gigantic demands of war and still take care of civilian needs. Better yet at a time when most things cost more fcuiincjj-managed companies still deliver electricity at low pre-war prices. This record is your as surance that cheap, plentiful, depend able electric power will be yours in the post-war era ahead. Hr N El SON EDDY to "THE ElECTIIC HOUS" wH iofcerf AmbrMtef'f Orctoitrv. trfy Smday mllttmum. 430, fWT, CM HHwti.