10,000 EXPECTED TO ATTEND GREAT SINGING CONVENTION (By Fred Houser) Atlanta, famed throughout the | nation as “The Convention City of j Dixie,” will be host to her largest j convention in October, when the Southeastern Singing Convention meets there the 9th, 10th and 11th of that month, according to R. L. Stuckey, Dalton, Ga., president of the association. More than 10,000 people from the six Southeastern states are expected to attend the con- j vention and participate in its three days program of songs, it is stated. Famous song leaders and compos er* of church and Sunday school mu sic from all parts of the oountry are expected to be at the convention and their presence will be a great draw ing card for lovers of community singing throughout the Southeast. Among the world-famous musicians who are expected to be there are Charles H. Gabriel, T. B. Mosley, C. R. Mullins, John M. Dye, J. A. Lesley, J. N. Rodeheaver, V. O. Stamps and McD. Weams. The first session of the convention will be held on Friday, October 9, at the Southeastern fairgrounds, at Lakewood Park, and will be a spe cial feature of the Southeastern fair, SEPTEMBER 15TH OFFERING OF I'nited States of America 3 1-3 Per Cent Treasury Certificates of In debtedness —Series TJ2-1926, Dated Sept. 15, 1925, Due June 15, 1926,' Bearing 3 1-4 Per Cent. Announcement of the Secretary of the Treasury, September 8, 1925. To All Banks, Trust Companies and the Public of the Fifth Federal Re serve District: “The Secretary of the Treasury, under the authority of the act ap proved September 24, 1917, as amen ded, offers for subscription at par and accured interest, through the Federal Reserve Banks, Treasury Certificates of Indebtedness of Series TJ2-1926, dated and bearing interest from September 15, 1925, payable June 15, 1926, with interest at rate of three and a quarter per cent per annum, payable on a semi-annual basis. “Applications will be received at the Federal Reserve Banks. “Bearer certificates will be issued in denominations of SSOO, SIOOO, $5,000, SIO,OOO. The certificates have two interest coupons attached, pay able Dec. 15, 1925, and June 15, 1926. “The certificates of said series shall be exempt, both as to principal and interest, from all taxation now or hereafter imposed by the United States, any State, or any of the pos sessions of the United States, or by any local taxing authority, except (a) estate or inheritance taxes, and (b) graduated additional income taxes, commonly known as surtaxes, and excess-profits and war-profits taxes, now or hereafter imposed by the United States, upon the income or profits of individuals, partnerships, associations, or corporations. The interest on an amount of bonds and certificates authorized by said act approved September 24, 1917, and amendements thereto, the principal of which does not exceed in the ag gregate $5,000, owned by any in dividual, partnership, association, or corporation, shall be exempt from the taxes provided for in clause (b) above. “The certificates of this series will be accepted at par, with an adjust ment of Eccured interest, during such time and under such rules and regu lations as shall be prescribed or ap proved by the Secretary of the Trea sury, in payment of income and prof its taxes payable at the maturity of the certificates. The certificates of this series will be acceptable to se cure deposits of public moneys, but will not bear the circulation privi leges. “The right is reserved to reject any subscription and to allot less than the amount of certificates ap plied for and to close the subscrip tions at any time without notice. The Secretary of the Treasury also re-' serves the right to make allotment in full upon applications for smaller amounts, and to make reduced allot ments and allotments upon a gradu ated scale; and his action in these respects will be final. Allotment no tices will be sent out promptly upon allotment, and the basis of the allot ment will be publicly announced. “Payment at par and accrued in tf rest for certificates alloted must be made on or before September 15, 1925, or on later allotment. After allotment and upon payment Federal Reserve Banks may issue interim re ceipts pending delivery of the defi nitive certificates. “Any qualified depositary will be permitted to make payment by credit for certificates alloted to it for it which will he open on the Bth. It »■ expected that the attendance of the fair that day w.ll pass all previous records as fair officials are co-oper ating with singing convention com mittee to make this the greatest con vention in the city’s history. Spe cial railroad rates are being given by all roafis leading into Atlanta, and connecting lines are co-operating so that every one who desires may at tend the convention at a minimum of eost. Sessions on Saturday and Sunday, October 10 end 11, will be held at the City Auditorium. Special session will be held late Sunday afternoon and Sunday evening at the fair grounds. City Organist Charles A. Sheldon very probably will be the of ficial organist for the convention and play the accompaniments to the songs on the $50,000 pipe organ in the cuditoijum. Mr. Stuckey is making a special effort to have church choirs from all the leading churches of the South at tend the convention and contribute to its success as well as receive the benefits to be derived through con j tact with the world’s great leaders of church and Sunday school music. self and its customers up to any a mount for which it shall be qualified in excess of existing deposits, when so notified by the Federal Reserve Bank of its d.strict. Applications to become depositaries, or to increase the amount for which any bank or trust company may have been desig nated as a depositary, will be re ceived and promptly acted upon. “Treasury Certificates of Indebted ness of Series TS-1925, maturing September 15, 1925, will be accepted at par, in payment for any certifi cates of the Series TJ2-1926 now offered which shall be subscribed for and alloted, with an adjustment of the interest accured, if any, on the certificates of Series TJ2-1926 so paid for. “As Fiscal Agents of the United States, Federal Reserve Banks are authorized and requested to receive subscriptions and to make allotments on the basis and up to the amounts indicated by the Secretary of the Federal Reserve Banks of the respec tive districts. Respectfully, FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF RICHMOND, Fiscal Agent of the United States. ENGLAND CONTINUES ITS “CRUSADES AGAINST POVERTY” What statesman in Amarca today, for example, is genuinely concerned about waging such a “crusade against poverty,” as Lloyd George in 1909 summoned all England to join him in, when he presented his famous “Budget of 1909” with this declara tion:— “I cannot help hoping and be lieving that before this generation has passed away we shall have made a great advance toward the good time when poverty, with the wretchedness and squalor and hu man degredation which alway fol low in its camp, will be as remote from the people of this country as the wolves which once infested its forests.” When Lloyd George said this he was a leader of the then dominant Liberal Party, a party rather corre sponding to the Democratic Party in this country. Today England is con trolled by the Unionist Party, a par ty representing most of the great wealth of England—and yet English statesmanship has vision enough to see that the “crusade against pov erty" must go on. So we find Win ston Churchill, the Unionist spokes man and Chancellor of the Exche quer, presenting to Parliament for its almost certain adoption a “nati onal insurance plan” of which he may rightly say: “No such scheme covering the whole wage-earning pop ulation exists or ever has existed in any other country in the world.” Changing his British money fig ures into their American equivalents, we will let John L. Balderston of the Baltimore Sun tell just what this “national insurance plan” shall mean to all the people of England, Scot land, and Wales:— “From now on every male wage earner must pay 8 cents a week into the new insurance fund, each female worker 4 cents, and the employer must pay a similar a mount. This contribution starts at the age of 16 and continues as long as the worker earns wages. “Beginning next year under the new scheme, all men and women coming under it, amounting to the whole wage-earning population, will receive a life pension of $2.40 a week at the age of 65. This they will get whatever their means and THE ZEBULON RECORD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18. 192 S whether they l eep on working or not. If an insured man dies at any age, his wife gets $2.40 a week for life and $1.20 for the first child until the children reach the age of 14. The state will pay $2 a week for maintenance of orphans.”— Clarence Poe, in The Progressive Farmer. HAS THE FARMER HAD TOO MUCH CREDIT? Said a farmer in a farmer's meet ing we recently attended: “I believe the farmer has had too much credit instead of too little.” This is another place where a wrong opinion may lead a farmer to a wrong policy. Holding the view just expressed, a farmer may fail to use credit when he should really do so. The man who holds this sort of view has part of the truth, but not enough of it. The whole truth is that the farmer has had too much credit of the sort that more than eats up the profits on the farming oper ations for which it is secured—too much credit of the crop lien, “time prices” sort which often makes a farmer pay at the rate of 70 per cent a year for credit in states where business men get credit for 7 per cent or less a year. Credit which in volves ruinously high charges is com monly known as “usury” and it is regarded as the duty of every state to prohibit it. But while our states have been careful to enact many and varied statutes to protect townspeo ple against usury, these very same states have permitted the wholesale exploitation of farmers through usu ry disguised at “time prices.” The farmer certainly needs less of this sort of credit, because it is not only absorbs all the profits of farm ing operations but leaves the farmer much poorer than he was before. On the other hand, one of the farmer’s greatest needs is for more credit on reasonable terms to take the place of the high-priced credit which has ruined so many farmers in the past. Again, the farmer has had too much credit for “consumptive debts’ 1 —too much credit for purchases which are merely “consumed” with out yielding anything to pay off the debt. Credit for consumptive debts should be systematically discouraged, while credit for productive debts is often a good investment. Many a town business has grown wealthy by borrowing money at 6 per cent and making it earn 10 to 12 per cent. But town businesses could never pay the interest rate farmers are asked to pay in the form of “time prices” and escape bankruptcy.—The Pro gressive Farmer. TO NAME SPONSORS FOR NEXT REUNION Direct Descendants of Each of Con federate Generals To Be Invited Direct lineal descendants of each of the Confederate generals of full rank who left issue will compose the staff of sponsors at the United Confeder ate veterans’ reunion at Birmingham Ala., next year, if plans now under way by General W. B. Freeman, of that city, commander-in-chief of the veterans, work out. General Freeman announced that he plans to get together for the first time the grand daughters or great grand-daughters of the men who held the highest commands in the Southern service during the War be tween the States. One descendant of each of the full generals would be named to his staff of sponsors and all other direct female descendants would be especially invited to attend the reunion. One of the two grand daughetrs of General Robert E. Lee will be invited to serve as sponsor-in chief for the entire South. There were seven generals of full rank in the Confederate Army, but one of them, General Joseph E. Johnston, died without issue. The others were: General Lee, commander in-chief; General Samuel Cooper, ad jutant and inspector general; and Generals P. G. T. Bureaguard, Al bert Sidney Johnson, Braxton Bragg and E. Kirby Smith. General John B. Hood is sometimes regarded as a full general, but he held that rank only temporarily and is officially listed as a lieutenant-general. ARRIVALS OF TRAINS IN ZEBULON GOING EAST & WEST Nortfolk-Southern Railroad. Arrives at 7:22 a. m., going east. Arrives at 11:59 a. m., going west. Arrives at 4:08 p. m., going east. Arrives at 7:27 p. m., going west. Arrives at 5:48 a. m., going west. Arrives at 10:48 p. m., going east. FOR SALE—Ford Roadster, in fair running shape. Will sell cheap. 11., care The Record office. WANTED—To buy good sceond-hand Ford roadster. Must be cheap. H., care Zebulon Record, | “The Advance Will Not be CUT- gs B THE GRADE Will NOT BE CHANGED I” I | 9 [j This is General Manager RICHARD R. PATTEDSON’S | £ Pledege to the members of the Tobacco Growers Co-opera [■ tive Association. |j § a YA Last week Mr. Patterson, with the bankers’ valuation experts, made a g] j M survey of the markets in Eastern North Carolina and from them he received 4 assurance that the Federal Intermediate Credit Banks will continue its sup- Q ! fj port of the Assocition to hold the price of tobacco up. [l< U Growers who wil l receive full value this season have pooled their to- s| j bacco. Conditions responsible for low prices on auction floors are bound to 9 adjust later. The tobacco which is marketed in an orderly way will be the K tobacco which will show a profit when this adjustment comes. R ■ ■ i 0 ■ 1 WHAT IS THE ASSOCIATION GOING TO DO? B| 1 0 READ MR. PATTERSON’S REPLY TO THIS QUESTION: M fj “The Association is going to do just what it has done since organization: $ Provide for the grower a service corporation which will enable him to market || his tobacco in an orderly way. UNLES AND UNTIL THE GROWER ANI) |fj | THE BUSINESS MAN AVAIL THEMSELVES OW THIS SERVICE, NO j 9 * POWER BENEATH THE BLUE CANOPY OF HEAVEN CAN DO ANY | THING ABOUT THE LOW PRICES THE GROWERS ARE NOW RE- | & CEIVING.” ( | 1 m 1 I I Tobacco Growers Cooperative | | Association 0 f" ] “THE FLAPPER l \ GRANDMOTHER” § | A MUSICAL COMEDY | ! » | To Be Presented at ■ | The School Auditorium 0 3 FRIDAY NIGHT, OCTOBER THE 2ND I 3 0 Under the Auspices of the | Woman’s Club of | 1 Zebulon. ■ g BY HOME TALENT 8 3 Laughs, Thrills, Peppy Music, Costumes, « Chorus Girls and Everthing || * J'he Woman’s Club of Zebulon is working up 8 J Home talent in a clean and wholesome play with a S 3 Laugh on Every Line. p I With a Chorus of Jelly Beans, Debutant Flappers, R J Rag Dolls, Door Knobs and Little Grandma k Matron. g i DON’T FORGE DATE 81 n ■ 0 II 0*