The Zebulon Record Published every Friday by THE RECORD PUBLISHING CO., Zebulon, N. C. G. W. Mitchell, Own^r. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Year f 1.50 Six Months .80 j Three Months .50 Advertising, per inch, .'lO cents. Address all communications to The j Record Publishing Company, Zebulon, N. C., j RECORD TELEPHONE NO. 27 Entered as second-class mail matter June 26, 1025, at the Postoffice at Zebulon, North Carolina, under the Act of Mav.h 3, 1878. FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1926 LET US KEEP IT THE LAND OF THE FREE After declaring that excess legis lation is a basic cause for present law lessness, George W. Reiily, Pres., Pennsylvania Bankers Association, said: “Another dangerous and growing tendency of govenin “/it in this coun try r the disp , etii r of legis’ i m r - to pass laws, and of governmental agen.-ies to make and enforce regula tions that are jnm ee airily bar: .- ing and restricting to business and the individual. “We have developed a passion for lawmaking and govermental super vision. Unless this disposition is checked, every movement and action of our lives will be supervised and corrected by some government agency, bureau or commission, whose salaries and expenses must be provided by us j in taxes. “We boast that ours is a land of 1 liberty, and yet the curious fact is. j that the American people are, by law. forbidden to do more things, and or dered to do more things than was the case in Russia under the Czar, or in Turkey under the Sultan.” MUTT AND JEFF MEET The largest electric locomotive over built and the smallest were recently brought together and photographed 1 side by side, making a modern ver sion of the old “Dignity and Impu dencc” picture. The giant of the clan, built for heavy freight duty, is 152 feet long and weighs 637 tons. It parries mo tors of 10,000 horsepower and can haul a two-mile train over heavy grades. The pigmy locomotive is forty-one inches long, less than one-forty-fourth the length of its big brother, and weighs thre e thousand pounds. It motors are rated at four and one half horsepower, and it has been built to work in a mine, where it will dis place a more picturesque hut lc industrious mine mule. SPEAKS OUT FOR RURAL CHILDREN Philadelphia, June 29. “Any pr<> gram of education for country boys and gii-ls is inadequate which does not provided for them opportunities approximately equal to those pro vided for city children,” declared John C. Lockhart, superintendent of Rural Education at the Nation::! Education Association here last week. “Certain conditions in the citi< and towns,” Mr. Lockhart added “have been favorable to the develop ment of school systems which offei advantages superior to those which, the rural schools provide. These superior advantages are due to: (1 > larger schools which favor speciiiza tion on the part of teachers; (2' longer school terms; (.1) better pre pared teachers; (4) better building and equipment; (5) more adequate financial support. In order to im prove the opportunities offered rural children it is necessary that these far tors be made the basis of the plan for improvement. How can this be done? “The answer is to be found in making the county the unit of sup port and organization. For example the question of how large an area i to be served by one school must be answered, not in terms of district lines established a quarter or half century ago, but in the terms of the needs of boy» and girls of today. !!: school unit must be large enough to provide the conditions which has made possible the development of adequate city schools. Such schoo units can be provided for mo : ad vantageously by a county wide plan of school organization and con-olida tion as distinguished from th ( . small district type of organization. ______ e "The responsibility for working out and putting into effect a county wide plan of school organization should rest with the County Hoard of Education in the same way tha; the responsibility of organizing ell schools rests with city boards o education. This is the principle un derlying the reorganization of the schools of Wake County. In short, it is our purpose to put into effect a county-wide plan which will givi to the rural boys and girls modern educational advantages under mod ern conditions.” A London woman recently wa: ••warded damages of $2,220 from a* air dye concern for injuries claim d to have been caused to her hair y its preparation. ICE (KiAM FOR THIS SI XI) \Y DINNERS Sue Br ges lives on a large dairy farm. a few miles away from a j »d zed town. One Saturday, while r-h ping, she hoard a stranger say i i tr- woman with her, "I wish we ci ; ! have ice cream for dinner tomorro. put my cook can’t make it : /I 1 don’t can* for :he bought kind.” S > had been longing for a lh«s.i nakc money, hesitated only a m 'iv.en before she went up to the lady :ir.■ ’ ffered to supply her with the fr< dessert. Tb: day she delivered the very best am she could make of pure cream, -h eggs and fruit straight from the tome orchard. The custo mer flighted and when Sue call on M ' for the b'.s kct and meld, she order’d more for the following week. She told her friends about it at