Newspapers / The Yellow-Jacket (Moravian Falls, … / May 1, 1932, edition 1 / Page 3
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May, 1932 THE YELI.OW JACKET PAGE 3 I MORE PLAIN TALK (Continued Prom Page One! fraction of amoTint, tltero cam l>e CO reason, justification or ovem die'ce-n- cy and honesty, in perpetuating tihe 20-cent remunerations. A Congiessman living in mearhy Bul'tiuiore gets into a parlor .car, ri-des for just 40 minutes, airrivesi im Wash ington and receirvea a check fiom 'the United States Treasurer for $16.00. The entire ronm-di trip, Pullrnian and all, costs $4.38. Profit, $11.62. That’s mot much! But bow about this? An Idaho member si>en'd9 $239.56 for Lis trip—and draws $1,058.80, which makes Ms “rake off” just $819.24. Members from up around; 'the Great Xiake®, CSidcago section, clean up from $250 to $500 oa eacfli se^ion’s trip. Multiply these umjustifla'ble expense checks by tlio total cjuanber of mem bers of Congress, and you find that thens “patritic’* g^tieHmen get more than $150,000 of YOUR MONEY every year 'that dO'esai'’t by right belong to them.' Oh, yes! Tire money is theirs LEC^ALLY —hut NOT HONESTLY! They are the only ones who can change that old-time luw—and they aren^ fair and s(liiaa*e enough to do it! hut fliey hoUer flieir heads off about economy. WiMle they -are fllltog hundred® of pages of the OongneEsional' Record with thdr bot-aJr vaporizings' and Mgh-souiudfi'ng uotibdii'gB'—^it tioesi seem a shame that there isn’t ONE man out of a jhal’f-thousaiwi who really takes hia oath seiriously enough, and re gard® hims'elf reaWy a “public servant” sufficiently ^to make a move bo cut out this “OFPTCIiAL RACKKTEERING.” H,ow can: our national lawmakers expect to curt) racketoKring when they themselves are among the worst offenders? Tliicjy talk abo'jt cutting expenses here and' there but nicsthlng thus far has 'been done—or e\’’en. said—about cutting off the congressional payroll thie dozens of wives', son®, daughters, brc-thers, sdsters and- in-laws who are hein'g oaxiied! at go'Yernment expense, often doing no work at all in return. 'The practice exist® in both parties and- among not only first term-ers but am'ong some of the most eminent meoibbers. One of these is Senator Joseph T, Robinson, Democratic senate Leader, ■vice pnssddentia'l candidate in 1928 and a member of the American' delG' gation to the Lon'don naval conference in 1930. Seaiator Robin-son has five persons on hds senatorial .payroll as leader of the (minority conference. These are rela-tiwea One of these, a nephew, works reg- •Uilanliy in has offloe In Washington-. The second is Senator Robins(0(n’s agod! loother-ln-law who is paid $2,580 a year. She doe® not work but lives with her lelati-ves either In Washiii-g- toa or in Uttie Rock, Ark. The third is the Sen-ato-r’e brother- in-law, H. Grady Mlllie-r, president of the Southwiesi Joint Stock Land Bank. He spends aruost of Ms time in Little Rock. He made a ■visit to Wa£h;mgtoai las't winter. His appearance on the payroll of Ihe Senate while living in Arkamsias is explain'ed on the ground th-at he Is a "oontaot man.” for Senator Ro-binfiiooi. Senator Robinsoni is -a ane-mber of a leadi-ng law firm.', Robinson, House and Moses ot IltitLa Eoick. And, come to thinib of it: Why ^ould JOHN PUBLIC pay the expenses of a $10,000 a year Congressman to come to his work in Washington, any more than we should furnish street car fare for the $1,200 year cl^s who have to ride to their work at the Goveriu ment bnreaiu every morning? Figure owt dhe answer to THAT and' let us have iti For alj :thi© good they are doing tor the COMMON FOLKS, Uncle Sam would make a better deal- if he paid the great nuacK^ity of the natitwial legi^atona to STAY BACK HOME, Th»ei«di he seal eoonjomy la THAT! Econoimixe at home, eo you can) pay heavier taxes! That’s what our sahxjlfiirly geatiemen legi^tors ane fixing up tor Mr. and Mra Public. Fne! ! But wtoat about this? One Mttie group “experts” as signed to invest-igatie the oonservatiem of wild life tor a Senate committee, spent—of YOUR money—$261.30 IN TIPS in two mointihs. “TTiis did not mcLude -tips lumped to with- $1.50 and $'2.00 nveals,” aioeondlrtg -feo a recently pu-bldshed; analysis by W. P. Heim, who has been makanig a study of how Gon- gres® is “Throwing Money Away to Wias-hington:.” There weire seveqi to the group of investigators. They spent 17 days at a "lodge" or hot^ and paid $90 to tips, totoudtog $20 tips each to wait- nesstsesk $10 each for icooks, Cih(am.be]s naaldis, etc. iLodglng and- tips tor the sevecn tor 17 days totaHed $588.99. Senetone must ba-ve ssulendl'd appe- tit-es, as -wett as toweisUgatcrs. Helm dtug up fihto rtoh bit of totorznahion from afi "es^eose acoMintf*: “Breaktost find Scimtor Pit&. miaTL and self, $S.50ii valet $A Tips to seivlce malda gynd: hell boys, $8. Tips ti> yatost for Senator IPit-tman, $^" etc. Tliese inrvestigaitog committee^ in- icQuding- Oongness mjember,^ have been (Continued on page i, wltmio 51 ‘Is Communism An American Menace?” Writers to -this- paper frequently ask us if we think Oommiuni-sm is a •m(einiace to the UnJtedi State® mow. The answer is that Oo-nunimism. is alW'ays a menace everywhere, after it •gets- its .stra-nigle-hoM. Just how 'far Communism has, in vaded- Amei-dcain life i&. a question. But eveidence in pQ-enty ha® been re vealed to prove that it already has- a widespiea-d- hand) in the affairs- of ^is oou-ntiy. A U. S. Arm-y officer says- that in Charlotte, this s-tate, the le-ad- ing church-go-inig city in 'the world, there are NOW 2,000 acti'vie' Com- miuiiisits. If so, then this country is in worse conditto-n. ithan we like to imagine. The open s-ea-son for snake® i® -any time you S'ee one wriggling to the grass; 'and the -proper ti-me to swat Russtani Red Gommunism is- •befoi'e it gets a toot-hold. We easy - gO'to'g Americans have a happy hahiit of l-oilling along on our ease and “letting thintgs .stl'ide”,—until a crash comes and comditi-em'S- call for an open figt-h. Everybody knovTs- 'that Sovietism is the airch enemy of Civilization.; that the fight Lie© between Atheism and Christum culture. One, or the other, must eventually rule this. laud. Cdmmiunism’si brK),od® of erimina'l oonsparaci-esi crawl llkie snake© in, the gras® and spawn their offspring while CmlizatiOTu sileeps'. It isi never too 6'oon to Scotch Communism, but it is O'ften too late. Ruseda felt itself too fortified for its downfall, -but Com- mun'ts-m bored vT-th-to and wi‘ie.cked Rusisda. Chinia, the old'est empire to recorded: hiisitory and ,the most peace ful, ha® been slit to sh-reds b-y Red Commun-ifiim and wallow-s in- its own ruin. Japan, always alert and ag- gr>e£(siive, listened' to the ©iren) of Sovietism, iaiii,d' i® tO'day a :hot-bed of Hate and Hisil-L. Gennany, strong enough to sustain the 'Sho.ck of the gi’eateeit war defeat in h'Uman. history, ha® just be(eai trampledi und'er thie hoof of the Red d:ragiOin. Only the fragile life of 'Ven Hindenhurg holds Genn;iny out of Chaos now. With him .gO:ne, it wild be Hi-tlier and HoM. Here in the Undted Statesi, where Sovietism hopes to make its grea.te.-rt staiud, our co-LLeges and universities ?iPe literadly packed wifJh “pa.rlor Pi'nk” professors who are in the service of Sovletisim to destroy Americ^in culture and freedom-. In- the -old'est state uni versity in the Undted S-tates, our own here in North Carolina, rampant Reds are being royally enter,tatoied and in- vLted to address the students. And Professor Archibald Henderson, the popular idol of the campus, hails G. B. Shaw, the slavering Socialist Soviet, a© "a miartyred knight whose Life beiLongs- to the whole comm’unjity.” And! Shaw .proclaimig thejd.oc-trine. that "marriage, while it is raade an indfe- pensable cooiddtion- of mating, ■will de lay th'e ad-venit of th^. ®uper-inan.” Thus the future citizens -of our country aa^e (taught to -hail -and h.on.co' a man who in-siults virtitous marriage as being inferior to sexual debau chery. In another of our ou-tstaniding ediucational centers, Professor Haavy Elmer Bainnte® affirmed:. “It is better to resort to an- abortion.' thian to, bear an unwanted child.” If that is not teaching the doctrine of m'Urder as- a virtue, plea'&e 'say just what it does m^can. -ProfiesBor Ward'openly advo cates' 'the theoiiy t-hat “it would he a great gain, to m-orali-ty, were there adopted a- ©y-s'tem of fr^e as-seclati-on of the ©exes -ba-S'Cd on mutual- incli nation, termiji-abLe at the w-il'l of either party.” Which is atabblng the heart of the American, home and making opon senisiuallty a “great moral gain.’' And putting woman, who has slowly surely achieved :palltical 'a-nd social equality with man in thi® country, at the tem-porary whim and fancy of every 'lecherous parvenue who lusts atter hen form. And, under this pet Soviet sys'tem, every woman-, after be ing victimized- by her piaramour, woiild -bo pitched to tlie junk-heap and the Soviet theory would' lioense the; brute of her sexu'al wrecker to take on and tos® away as many fair women as his lU'Sfei craved'. Bebel, the god of Com- m.uni'sm, m-ade sneh sllm-ey -dogma the keynote of hls' Gommund-st creed. “The sexual inettoct demiamdis, satis faction,” he- (leered, and of conrs'e his Communistic creed would pe,r'mit its satlsfacti-on' on the ruined bodies o-f our mothers and daughters'. Pro fessor Gidd'in-gs, formerly -of Columbia University, America’® m-os't popular institution of Leainin-g, taught: “The spo-nitaneou-s union of a man and a woanan is morally superi'Or to a tech nical legal relati'CtnisMp”—plainly pro claiming .that our church sa-n-ction and •legaii- restraints on wedlock are to be destroyed if SovLoti'Sim has its s'ay. .lohinl D-ewey, amot'her arch-prie&t of Comm-un-i'sm, says; “Religi'Oin is the king of illusion.” And Presl-deint Gle'nn Prank, “this b:oy prodigy” of the University of Wi-soons-i'n, syndicates •his sii'ush all over the (X)un-try to as sert that love between a man and hls wife is “'(he slime of sentimentality from which sex should be rescued.” Those are merely a f'ew insitanceis. of the trend of our teachers in great American' school'®. The stream can never rise high'Sr tha.n its source. And if we conti-nue •to toll -back on our ease-, the next gen- oiation wi'il be 'tainted and tinctured by -these teachings-, -and: Am-eri-ca, once proud i-n her pu-nity, will be the- moral -kiaughte-r-hrO'Use of the- world. f Not Fair to the Veterans We are for glvin-g the real American sol'diisiv; wh'O fought in- t-he war Wood- row W'iil'S'On ppoTO-ised to' keep tis out of all- (the fi-nancial and -physical help they need'. We were the ft-rst to advo cate, agitate an-d' aoceleia-te the Bonus and' 'we sitil'l s'tarad where we stood then. But those light-weight Congressmen who sl'ip "s-peidal peneion bills” over CongrieBa a-nd the ta-x-^payens aren’t doing the gen-uiue s(oildaer boy© any good-. For tos-baince, the other d'ay -a S-outh CaTollma Democratic Oonigrossman. and am Indiana Republican Congressman ©I'ipp-ed thiru a, “special” bil-l to give flmainci-al aid to ' 367 sup-pos-edi ex- eoMl€TS(. Pres-id'ent Hoover tovesti- ©atoii the Maamiants am-d vetoed the Will P. D. Q. 'The Goii'gressmen' who ©reaenbed' the -biM should have looked into those clai-m® before torcing them on! the bax-paye(rs, but -thiey passed the buck to -th-e Preisiidient, played- po-iitic®, perhaps searertdy hopin-g the -Presadent would- came in for razzing insteaid of them. Out of the "(Aaima” (tm which these “special .pemsdomens” were ■voted- .fimaaih cdail help, Mr. Hoover nm’eaJed a few seainples he tound: One 'wa© a drunk "who had done six months in- the .guard-house and who was fi-naliy -discharged dls-honiorably firom t’he Aim-y, given- "the y-e'liow ticket.” Another w-as' a soldier’s “widow” whom the soldier had never taken- the trouble or time to m'a-rry. Tw,o were rank deserters; -three hiad inflicted the ■wound® on thesmsieilves they claimed th-ey got ini the war; another was the 'VTidio-w of a veteran wh'O s-ei-veidi but eight days', and was discharged in good physical con'dition-; another was the ■widow of a man' who serv-ed ni'ne days in the State -militia; another waa a “vetei-an” who got drunk, vTent to sleep on a s(ireet car amid had' hi® leg cut off; and the whole numiber -showed- absolutely no merit to t(he Claim’S' they s(OUght. Giving- -miO'ney to S'uch scurvy, -S’neaking scatowag® who w-ould rob '■th-e tax-payisi's and- '(he genuine sol diers, wtoile withhoiMing it from -the real woa-'th'y veteran® i®, a deuce of a way to stand by the men who stO'Od behi-nd th(e guns. To thie- honor of -the American Legion it did n-ot back nor favor -thi© legis-- latlve ©teal, but we’d like -to oskewry- body what they think of a set of Con- gr-es-smen who rushed th-nu such fool legl'sla/tion. without leven ope-ni'ng -their MHEEE the money GOES It's an old saving that every penny coun.ts, and If they would stop sending so many m'illion© of our American doLlans to these foreagn oountirie!? 'wc would have more prospeaity and nxmey in cireulatioii than we now have. The Vatlctm City cables gurgle with glee to in'tofrai' us a perfectly good- check tor Onfe Million Dollars an-d another tenth of a Mllion' has been sen* to the Pope-King by American Gathsoliosi and (they oonjpiaiin. (that this i3 twenty per oeint) than -the American OathoMcs sent to their Holy ■E^apa Last year. The use—so they say —of tMs money (is to ‘’iBX)paga.t& the fiai(th," whatever that Is. ■We have out owm private opinion (Of Altbericart! citisjen'S, eo-oalibed, per- mltttog th^naeilyes to bo gouged this extent every year to mainitam an, Italian bachelor Hring to luxury tn a lL009oiomi {xa^ce with a gritted wine^eBlian) OQdernmth it, cmd we all aramud 09 haaest, bBiO-WDriias Ataeriaan zoos efkUking the streets Ibbtess and the&r wlvies ahd goisg hm&tJ 6w toeaidt ,..... 1. . .. . Let’s Go, Folks! “And the Lord said, If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then will I spare all the city for their sakes.” Gen. 18:26. Some time ago we promised a per manent 10 cent club rate if our subscribers would shoot us in one hundred thousand subs, for a basis to work on. And as Abraham in terceded for Sodom, likewise our readers went to work and while they have not reached the goal, (we are moved to recognize their splendid efforts and so again ex tend the 10 cent rate for another two months, or until June 20th, Now, friends of The Yellow Jacket everywhere, we invite you to help pile up circulation for the little paper by all sending clubs. The big 1932 political oampaigu is on. We’re loaded with facts and figures. Ton’ll need the “hot stufl?’ and so we are inviting one and all every friend of the T. J, who reads this appeal—to show your faith in oor efforts by rolling in the dubs in big faehbm in the neist two months* “TO PBOPiaATE THE FAITH*’ (Continued Prom Page One) Company of New Y-or-k, and B-rotbe-r Sir John J. Ragkob is a di-recto-r and fo-rm-er Gov. Al Smiith is chairman of the Go-mpan-y’s Board of Dl-rRcto-rs. Aocordang to the co-Iid courts, there are cha-rgesi th-at the note signed tor these funds aoid- endorsed by Sir John Ras'- k-ob himself, ais Chairman of the Demtoci-atic National Commi:ttee, "WAS PART OP A PLAN AND CONSPI RACY ON THE PART OF THE C01:NTY TRUST COJIPANY TO MAKE CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE DEMOCRATIC PR-ESIDENTIAL CAM PAIGN IN 192-8.” Unfortunately for everybody incl’u-d-mg the Pope-crowd, c-ne c-f the supposed l.onoTs, Tim J. •Mai-a, t-r(i:C‘d' to get the hank President in court and on tlie s(fand. Mr. Mara a© much -a-s- admits that he 'vv’as me-rc'ly oaie of the dummies' of th-e Po-pe-cro-wd, and -that he &ign-e(d up just to cover up the real donio-rs, supposed to be the Pope’s bank. Pat P. Ken(n’ey, another dummy and bosom . co:m>pain.ion' of Al, actually reared up on his holy hin-d hunkers an-d refU'S[ed kerdab on -tihe S'pot to “remew” his 'n(0(te for $25,000.00 bucks-. It is .somewhat guspiclous that when soms'bcd'j- tum-ed the light an-d a(i'r on (.hi© furaadiOOidie businefi®, of the tb-ree big offlci-als vitalily int'crested- in -the 1928 campaign', Al Sraiith, John J. Ras-kob and (the -then President of the b-aink, James J. Rior-dian (who “do nated” $50,000.00) ju-st Al and Sir John Rasikob -remain. FOR the bank Presd-dent Riordan walked out on- the co-u©piracy by killti-ng him'Sie'lf plumb dead in November, 1930, to avoid the light. There's so much to this- polittoal stench it wiculd take- a year’s space in this pap(er to reveal it. But what ■we have toild- you, a-nd WHICH YOfi HAVE FAILED TO SEE IN ANY OF YOUR DAILY PAPERS, is siuffloient to show how the Holy Daddy prooeedo to “propagate the faith.” And we pret-en'd* -to have “oorrupt pr-actice” la'ws to invesitigate retten pol'i'ticai m-eddtMng in this country. DEMOCRATIC PRAYER (Continued From Page One) world) depressiioni, but we’ve managed to make the people believe that Hoov-er is to blame, sio we thank thee more and' more and faster and louder till o-ur voice® are dro'wned in the reverberatiions o-f thy happy and hill- arious' hee-iha'vv which in the past has landed- maniy thousands of h'Ungry Democrats in office and- we hope and pray m'ay l-andi many more. Beloved Dem-oomtic sm'blem, we ad- m-lre thy Donkeyship because of thy stubborn indepe'ndenice, and m'Ule- hieiaded devotion to personal- liberty. We admire thy dispos-itio-n 'to kick and bray when Ibings don't go thy way. Pers'o-nal liberty to most of us means the l-ibei’ty to di'-ink ai.l- the li-ckicr we wo/nt, raise all the hell we want, and if anybod-y gets hurt or killed while we are sn-j.oyd-nig our liberty it is j-uist t-hrir hard' luck. What we desire is to gi:t these -pesky Prohibitionists con'- veited- to' our si-d'e sO' lhat we can- elect Al Smith or Roosevelt and have the Eighteenth Amisndment repealed in order that we lover® o-f personal lib erty ca'ni walk into a saloon at any 'time or at all -tim/es and pirt our feet on the brass rad'l a(nd( drink as mu-ch iickier as we "want withO'Ut sneaking down back ali'ey© or going into the bustoies for i-t. Precious He'e-Hawing Em-blem, we com® now to the closing words O't this political .prayer. With o-ur eyes torned toward WiasMu'gto-n and our h-earts set oiii the Treasury arsd our heels aimed toward the Hooverite®,- wie enter the 1932 cam-paign We are agains't all salary cuts' for "We are coming back” to the tro-ugh. We're against the 18th Am-en/dment for we want mo-re l-icker. We’re for Al Smith because he ha® proniiisied' to give it to us. We’re for the Pope because he will forgive all our sins an-d save us from held by parboiling u® m Purgutory. So let th’e lightning flash and the thunders roll',, but miay our hee-haws echo from pole to -pole, ‘ We’re com'ing back.” So mote -it be. Amea. [:See June issue fO'r tbe best political pmyer of Uie campaign.—Ed-itor.] WHAT WE’D ALL LIKE TO KNOW Bishop Manning, who is the Epiaco- .pai Church head in New York, -say© he “would lake -to 'know •why Governor Roosevelt doe® nothmg (aibout corrup tion in the government of New York City.” Yes, Bishop, no id-CKubt you -do. And that’s precisely what 133,000,000 otiher patri-otic Americoin-s who may -be called on -to-make a ch'oice bet'ween Roose velt and Herbert Hoover for Presi dent next No\'-eraiber, (would be piumb pleased to know. But it is OUT Sdea that the Bishop, Ttioft the nest of u-s, ■wild have (to wait a tong time a-nd theu -some to have th-:- ad-onable Gov-emoT ex-pladn it to us. The maiD who Is ‘ashamed to labor ought to be asthamed to live and- toe man who n-egleot.© hi© duty in trying to pnovidie work flor the Idto ought to be b^ted over toe head with a dead pole-cat. Look out, Congre^mm. TAIHEBS! KOTHK&S! Srotefit Xvenett] B«ad “HELl, AT KIPNIOHX'’; See Air. A SAMPLE OF ROOSEYELTS “SELF-GOVERNMENT” Probably the toudipist noise made by/ (he R-oosevelt-for-Pr-esiid'ent booster©-’ is The ©(atement that -he s(tonds for' “self-govieirame-n'.” Well, Roosevelt has furn-ished us a( nieat sample of howhi-s big -idea worksU It ic called his “CM-vil Right® Law”J and here’-s h-ow it came to be a law:| An app'licant for a school-tea.ohcr’s;' job in a New Yccrk .public school was' iPo.H4eIy asfce'd by the commiittee wh'at her neligiou© faith happened to be.' Na-turally, being a public sichcoil cem-^ mittee, they wouldn’t like -t(he idiea of ineialling a rank Athieist or a-U' avowei enem-y to o-ur cons-tttution and fonn of goveirnment in a teachier’® position' where the -teacher might lead the sus ceptible yo-ung future citizens to be lieve ou'i' g’-overnment sihoul-d be de- stroyeid. Well, becaus'e this teacher happened to be a “true” Roman Cath-o-Mc, she siet up a h'owl, and Governor Roosc-' ve.lt ha,d the -s-ehool principal dis'- oha.rged from his job. That not b£in,g sufficient soip -to the public s'chooi- hatmg Pope crowd, Roosevelt had a law enacted -by the Ntew York legis'- lature making it a high crime fO'T any sch.ool' comml-tteema-ni to ask a pub-Mc school tea-cher what her religiou® be lief is or is not. If they call that “self-gover’nmic-nf’ —w-ith everyb'Ody froim the Reman CathioHc Hierarchy down to the Gc-v- em,or and the legislature lam-bastin-g -thie local school committee for tiying to pro'tcct our A-mericon' ideals-, we be lieve we (don’t -care so much tor any of Gov. Roosevelt’s) “self-government” in- ouis-. You’d call) a Republican a slmple- m-inded' boo'b if he put a Democrat at' the h'ea-d of hisi party, and vice vers-a, and if putting Cath-oJlcs; to tieach in Proitestarut public school®, which the Catholics are siworn to destroy, isn’t even worse, please keep what you thank it really is to yourself. A GOOD WORD FOB LABOR UNIOVS During these -drab days of mdustnal; uncerta-inity and eoouora-lc chaos-, th-d America'n Pederatioiu of -Labor de-j serves commendation tor its loyal! S'ta-nd. It has- held firmly for the Amerioani worker, advocates -the ousting of’ cheap al'ieu -laborers, and- in- many other ways ha® -taken a patriotic st:and. “The laborer is worthy of Ms hire”, said' the Saint of old, and the union of the woirking-classesi in a ■wisely con trolled com,pact means m-uch for the betrtermient of the counitry at large. The United Stat-es 'is 'a working ma'u’s Paradise, aind the better the laborers li'vie the more they csin afford; to inve.st ini home-prodiuaeid) materials. And the mo-re our h-ome-producer© sell the more wealth is put iiu circulation-. In- ta-king a firm stand agai-n-st alien anarchy and R,ed ruthlessTife©©, the American Fed'eration of Labor hag done m-uch to prevent l-nd-ustrial wax* in th-i© countiy. In the lan'guage ,of Gotham’s little lady, “let’s give them a hand’.” FOR SALE! Valuable Fruit Farm! PARTIES DESIRING TO ENGAGE IN THB FRiriT BUSINESS, HERE’S AN OPPOR TUNITY’ YOU MAY NOT HA'VE AGAIN IN A LIEE-TOIE. Tills splendid track of land and frnit farm,. contains about 1400 acres. Abundance oC run-» ■ning watei-. P'ane springs. Several hundred acres of excelleait fruit land in native forest. About 5,500 apple trees already bearing, all of tba finest 7«rlelies, including Champion, Magniinv Bomim, Starks Delicious, Arkansas Black, King David, Winesap, etc. Borne of these troe.s bear 33 buahel.s per tree. Sisc teuamt honses on Lracl, Two packing hou.ses. I'wo stock barns. J>arge bouiid.ary of line a^wroill timber, pine, poplar and aah, anid thousands of valuable locust post tree.s. 'This property is located in the finest fruit section of North Carolina. Above the frost line. Good roaiis all over Oie farm. Only three miles from the famous Boone Tniil Highway and .six miles from Soutlicrn Railway. Located upon a picturesque plateau with a panarama of farms and cottages in the background composing a thriving popolation. Here some industrious in dividual could plant a colony of -wotkere and create a veritable Garden of ISden, with beauti ful drives among orchards of apples, peariiea and cherries; luxurient forests and cool springs. Reason for selling: To settle up an estate in wliich two of the principal stock holders havq recently died. Tills f.arni is easily worth $50,« 000.00, but can be bad fc* much less money. For full particulars. Address: P. 0. Box 70, Moravian Falls, N. C. Ne-w Life Insurance Policy for 3 l-2c a Day Amazing Policy of Old Line Doe«; Away With Agents and Med ical Examinatiou. One of America’s sitrongest old linb^ lito insurari'ce com'pande® now hrtoss' life 'rn'surarboe -vrith'in. to© -reach alh^ They are offering a Bberal poiley^j' which foiT 3V^-c a day up, dependin^j on, your ago, covers dteath Irom cause anidi pays -full -benefits of; $1000.00, alfio pays $5000.00 for aoed-! dental death. lAnyoiie from ten- sixty y-ear© may be eliglbto, 'ThiS' new! poltoy pTio\ddes full ooverago .based oni- toe net cost with-aut med-ical examl-* nation or agients’ fee® and save® 60%’! ■of ordSnary selling expiense of life in-j ©uraibce. Anyone ■who ■will write totooj UndoH! Mutual Life Company of lowia;' 190 Teawjhoul Bldg., Do© Moinesi Iowa,’ will receive absolutely free a copy of: their imm-derful policy that 'toodisi^ni^ 43t petite h£).vie already takeiu just! Writ'S to-ern today.—Adv, ;
The Yellow-Jacket (Moravian Falls, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 1, 1932, edition 1
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