V olume VII. Tree Planting In keeping with the bicentennial < lebration of the birth of George V. ashington, a nation-wide tree plant ing project is being sponsored by the national bicentennial committee. Schools, churches and organizations oi all kinds, all over this great coun try of ours are taking part and thousands of trees will be planted in cities and along highways in the next weeks. Could there be a more fit ting way to celebrate the bitrh of the father of our country. In Zebulon, the Woman’s Club is taking the initiative in this campaign. All organizations in town; churches, Sunday school Casses, lodges, civic clubs, social clubs and the schools ar< ir.vii.cd an ’ urged to take part. It is planned that at least 200 trees shall be planted within the city limits next week. And it is hoped that every child in Zebulon will partici pate in the planting of these trees. They will watch them grow to ma turity and will enjoy their beauty and shade long after many of us have gone. One hundred and fifty water oaks have been offered by Mr. C. H. Cham 1,1,e. Crepe Myrtle and dogwood are recommended for planting. They Further announcements about the grow rapidly and flower beautifully, tree plantings will be made in the churches Sunday. “AS MAN TO MAN” The following letter was written to young Theo. Robert Potter by an un married uncle. “Speaking as man to man,” it is rather unusual, and for this reason is published. Mr. Robert Potter is preparing to go as a teach er in a missionary college on the foreign field. Dear Sir:—“But he that is born on the Sabbath Day I 1 lithe and happy and good and gay.” May it be so. . . Only this morning ! learned through a letter from home of your arrival. I am writing this to bid you welcome. Congratulate your dad and mother for me also. You will have to be quite an excep tional fellow to even hold your own; for it is an open secret most folk wanted you to be of the so-called weaker sex. I'm glad you were f-expressive enough to be a man in this woman-dominated world. Moreover, you face a tough prob lem in tath you have such a model i, .ther. Nearly everybody certain ly, 1 among them —is an ar,ient ad mirer of Jackie; consequently the de mands upon you will be all the great er. But I feel sure you are fully equal all of them. In this country Feb ruary is traditionally a month for me birth of great men; and I believe in your coming we have further con i':! mation of the tradition. \gain welcome! Uncle Rob. •{OK E.N ALARM VPPARATUS IS CAUSE OF RIOT SIGNAL Kinston.—The first riot call this . :>\ has heard in many years was sounded yesterday and caused citi zens to wonder if the county jail was >• nu stormed or the nation had gone , war. A erowd that foleked to the city hall was allayed by officials who explained something was wrong with he fire alarm apparatus. Fire broke out in a clothing store m the business district. This wrong nber was registered at the Queen ireet engine house. The gong langed out the number seven and repeated it several times. This was automatically transmitted to the elec tric light plant, a mile and a half away. Persons at the plant remembered that repeated “sevens” were a riot cal'. They started pulling the whistle on the plant. Then someone recalled the riot signal. A crowd quickly gathered. The fire in the store of H. Abdal lah. Hid $2,000 damage. CHAPEL HILL The student newspaper at the Uni versity of N. C. has taken a poll of the girls on 17 college campuses and finds that th* composite “ideal man” of their choice is big and ugly. Other requisites listed are neatness, hon esty, ambition, kindness, energy, generosity, and a sense of humor. olhr Irlminit Simi rh Milk And j Health Campaign 1 VII.K \M» IIK.AI.TH (AMI-AKIN ! Sponsored by the State Board of Health and endorsed by Governor (). Max Gardner, with many county and state officials cooperating, a state wide Milk-for-health campaign is being launched for the week of March 14-20. The state is far below the average to one keeping abreast with its ranks in other lines. A cow, like a garden, is one of the best invest ments on the farm. Around Zebulon, many farmers and tenants havi a collard patch and a small summer garden. A very small per cent of them keep a cow. Yet no one other invest ment next to a good garden is more profitable anil conducive to health i than a good cow. We hope many will secure a cow just as soon as possible. During the late spring, summer and early fall, one can keep a cow with little expense. Even in the heart of winter, she more than pays for her keep. By looking ahead most tenants could save enough crab grass, or grow a patch of peas or other hay ‘crop, sufficient to feed a cow through the winter, with a minimum of cost. We commend this campaign for milk and health that is being sponsored by the State Board of Health. CALL FOR CEMETERY CLEANING Another call to arms has been is j sued by the cemetery clean-up-com -1 mittee. Work on the lots, driveways and walks has been going on for some time and with gratifying results. But the committee believes there are any number of citizens who have not yet done their part, but who want to. Monday. February, 29th, will be donation day. Citizens are asked to bring trees, shrubs, bulbs, any kind of flowering plants and flower seeds to be planted on the cemetery grounds Members of the committee will he at the cemetery from 10 till 12 o’clock to receive the donations. They want the citizens to come and see what has been done and to offer sugges tions for further planting and beau tifying. It is the aim of this committee to make the cemetery a real beauty spot in Zebulon. MARRIES OFF LAST DAUGHTER Greensboro. —Austin Jones, Quil ford county negro, has just married : off hi« last daughter. R. H. Wharton, register of deeds, was faced by the Negro who wanted a marriage license. During the con versation Jones explained: “This is the 28th chile T’se had t ( , net married. This is my last arftl she’s 21 years old.” ' $5,000 FOR SHAW Raleigh. Dr. Robert Tylbr, an I alumnus of Shaw University, (color ed) has donated $5,000 to he used for the development of the University’s •library. It is to be paid in five annual payments. He is a practicing physi cian of Washington City. NEW PRESIDING ELDER Bishop Edwin D. Mouzon, of Charlotte, has announced the appoint ment of Rev. F. S. Love, pastor of Client ,n Street Metthodist Church, Raleigh, as presiding elder of the Raleigh district, to succeed the late Dr. Harry M. North. The Rev. Mr. Love, a native of Monroe, came to Edenton Street Methodist Church over three years ago from the First Methodist Church of Elizabeth City. He is a graduate of Duke I niver sitv and Columbia University and has been in the ministry for 22 years. Appointment of his successor will be made within the next two weeks, until then he will continue at his present post v \NDAI.S WRECK TOMBSTONES Mt. Olive. A piece of rather un i usual vandalism and the first of its kind known hen was perpetrated Iri jHr night when parties whose identi ty had not been definitely establish jed this afternoon entered the Mt. Olive cemetery and overturned about 30 tombstones, some of them of con siderable size. Blodohounds were procured and put on the trails of . the vandals and two or three ar j rests were made but late this aft | ernoon officers were not sure that : they had the right parties. Zebulon, Wake County, N. Friday, WORK BEGINS AI GOLD j MINE IN STANLY COUNTY | H. Burwell Reid, of Washington. 'D. C., who recently leased the i Hearne-Hathcoek gold mine owned by R. L. Sibley stated to the News and Press yesterday that 15 assay runs had been made already, and I that he was very much pleased w: h the results. Assay runs show the ore to run at between SIOO and SOOO per jton. Mr. Reid feels sure that the mine will net at least SIOO per ton for the ore. Mr. Reid plans to sink a shaft at the mine, and work at the present time, but this number will he in | creased at an early date. i WILL NAME AIRSHIP FOR GEORGIA CITY j Washington. What the navy hopes jti make the bigg';', airship in Ihe j world for some year- to come will be i rained for a small Georgia city- Ma con. In two years or so the floating giant will take its place in the skies ; alongside the 0,500,000 cubic foot Akron, which now is its sister ship. Naval officials hope to make the Ma con 1.000,000 cubic feet larger, how ever. : A German firm is building a 7,000- 000 cubic foot airship. Rear admiral William A Moffett, chief of the navv’s i aeronautics bureau, and other naval officials hope to veil the airship Los Angeles and use the money to make | the Macon just 500.000 cubic feet bigger than that. ’j T j CUTTING SALARIES!' The farmers have had their cut in salaries or income or whatever it may be called a long time. They have taken a seventy per cent cut, with * cotton dropping from seventeen to I six cents and tobacco prices falling 'jin the same proportion. Now the i railroad workers, aft n r considerable I discussion, have agreed to take a ten ; per cent cut. In reality, however, their income has been cut much more ! severely since the decline in railway business began several years ago. I 'i hev now labor many hours less and jn e often idle. In discussing the 1 jton per cent cut in the wages of the ! laborers, and also in discussing loans Jto the railroads from the new Fi • nance Board, there has been a strong demand that the enormous salaries i of railway officials be cut also. 1 his J w ould seem only just, but the de imand for it was successfully resist -led in both houses of Congress. The cut in salaries that is uppermost in IMe minds of people in North Caro j lina just now is the cut in the sal- i ar ies of State officials and of those j whose salaries •’re provided for in J whole or in part 1 •" appropriation - from the State Treasury. This cut ' ecemes effective on March 1. Along with the announcement of the cut : there was given to the press a list j of those to whom the cut applies, and •the amount of the salary of each. Some of them, even after the cut. will receive salaries that many would covet. Governor Gardner again takes 'a voluntary cut in his salary, which j for the salary of a Governor of a 'Great State was already small. His i salary and that of other constitu j tionl officers are not necessarily af fected by the cut. but several others : have also voluntarily cut their sal- I aries. Some of the salaries of our j important elective officers are so small that no cut could reasonably }expected. They are smaller than '♦hose of many of the appointive offi i eers of no more ability and no more ; responsibility. It may be said that this cut was rendered necessary by the fact that the State is not raising enough money to pay the budgeted salaries and cannot borrow the money to pay them. —Biblical Recorder. DEATH VALLEY LAKE Death Valley is several hundred (feet below si a level and usually as dry las the Sahara'. Recent rains and j flood waters have covered the bot tom of the valley with water over a ; fifty mile stretch. When spring jcm i-k-s, the vail-, y will become a gar jden of great variety of colors. Ihe I seeds that have lain dormant lor two j years will soften and the desert will j become a wilderness of Columbine, ' blue larkspur, delphinium, bluebells, 1 daisies, wild geranium, buttercups, I poppies, Indian paintbrush and cac * tus flowers. READ THE ZEBULON RECORD February 2K, 19.52. Garden Plan For Charity The Governor’s Council on Unem ployment and Relief in North Caro j lina has a Garden Plan which is de-j signed to supplement charity and re- j lief funds next winter. The council believes that if nothing unforseen oc curs, there will be a greater distress load to be carried next winter than r ,/v.; because history of past depres-j sions shows that much time always i elapses after the up-turn before the greater part of the unemployed find gainful occupations. The gardens as planned fall into two general classes: First, gardens for those people who 1 may be unemployed or partially un 1 employed, and who need a food sup plement for the family, but who have! not applied to any charitable organ!- zation for reliel. Second, gardens for those people who ai'e able-bodied and who are now receiving aid from charitable organi zations and who should be forced to cultivate gardens as a part of the re : lief program of the community. The plans also provide for securing land, fertilizer, seed and for supervision i of labor and division of produce. The l surplus is to be canned and saved i for the relief work of 1932-33. ? These gardens would doubtless be 3 ol untold benefit, wherever grown. And surely it would be best for every one to work this year, if not in his private garden, in a community enter . prise. We should be glad for some organi zation in our community to investi gate and learn fully what is propos ed by the Governor’s Council; and, if it seems to be what we need, to sponsor the movement among us. (It may not be out of place to remark that the Organization we have in mind right now is the Rotary Club. Any desired information may be secured fixim R. W. HenningeT, Ex ecutive S«r., Raleigh, N. C. VOODOO POWER GETS MURDERER New Orleans.—Trembling lips in the Negro sections of New Orleans are whispering about the terrifying powers of the Voudou serpent god which they say drove Elijah Wheat'ey to the line watery grave tea* claim ed his sweetheart last Sunday. A night watchman told polic • he sa w a Negro answering the descrip tion of Wheatley push I.ucilla Wil liams, 19 into a canal and flee. Her body was recovered and rela tives buried with the Congo Vou lou j rites prevalent in the old slave days jof Louisana. The ritual included a I ceremony whereby the Serpent God i was askd to bring the murderer hack to the scene of his crime. In keping with the Voudou creed, the young Negress was buried face j downward in her coffin with a fresh | egg clasped in each hand and a rope 'tied around each wrist, j Kinsmen of the girl told police of the ceremony and advised them to watch the canal for Wheatley’s body. Meanwhile, they also spread news of the rites through the Negro section jso that he would hear of it. Early yesterday Wheatley’s corpse 1 was found floating in the canal at the exact spot the girl was drowned. • Police said they have no doubt he heard of “Gris-Gris,” (petition to the Serpent God) and went forthwith to i fling himself into the water. GOVERNMENT LIQUOR CONTROL While wet organization - in the I 1 United States are asking Congress !to repeal prohibition for economic j 'reasons, the Woman’s Christian Fern-j perance Union, of Ontario, in con junction with religious bodies is ap pealing to that government to stop 1 its million dollar a week sale of | liquor and divert this large sum to I industries suffering from business de pression. A communication to that | effect has been received at the World’s W. C. T. U. headquarters I here. I’he petition declares the On tario government spent $58,000,000 for all purposes in the last fiscal year ; and in the same time the expenditure ( for alcoholic liquor was approximate ly the same amount. The petition de clares that “this enormous expendi ture is unquestionably a contributing cause to the economic depression.” N. U. Christian Advocate. I Much Robbery At Bunn It is reported that several places of business in Bunn were robbed one right this week. The thieves got about S7OO. from one place of business. | Ford Announces A lew Car Soon He announced that within the next few weeks the Ford Company will bring out an improved four and a new “V” eight cylindi r model and coupled with it the statement that he had deti rmined to “get the price of an automobile down to the mark where the public can buy it." At the same time Mr. Ford ex -1 pressed the hope that “raw r> d'r < supply men” would not begin to raise 1 Detroit.—Henry Ford today disclos ‘ ed his latest plan for breaking loose the jam that for nearly two years has retarded the automobile industry. 1 prices coincident with the effort of manufacturers to “start the wheels jot industry.” Such action, he said, might “throttle the whole effort.” “In times like these,” he said, “every one has to take some risk, make some sacrifice, and even he wil ling for a time to do business with I out profit in order to start the nor jmal processes of industry and busi ness again.” “We’re not certain of the market j for the new cars,” Ford said, “but I were going to risk it. Some one jhas to risk something to get things j started and you know, faith is eatch- I ing; if we have confidence others will too. The chief thing to do is to meet the publics demand for I something new and better at a price the average man can pay.” In automobile circles Ford’s re mark that he was determined to bring prices down to the point where the public can buy was interpreted as indicating bis intention to initi ate a period of ’the keenest competi tion in the low priced field. Disclosure of the Ford plans serv ed to dispel much of the uncertainty that has surrounded the industry for many month . Their real effect, how - ever, will not he fully felt until ! the trade knows the price of the ! new cars and exactly what mechani 1 . d advances are incorporated in ! them. Included in the specifications for ( the new models is a single ehasis capable of carrying either a four or jan eight cylinder engine. The cars are to be of wholly new design. ! longer wheel base, heavier frame 1 and lower hung chassis. No definite date was set for the ! formal presentation of the new mod jels, other than a statement that, the (new four will he ready for delivery • “early in March.” The eight cylin der type will be introduced some I time later. The Ford statement gave no inti mation of what plans had been made for recalling workmen, but if de liveries of the new four are to be made early in March, many t.hou >ands of mm are expected to be brought back to work within the j next few days. Coincidentally the release of large orders for parts and raw materials is expected. News & Observer. N. 0. ( ASH BALANCE Raleigh. The stab of North Car olina has a cash balance in its treas ury January 31 of $6,550, 1 17.79, the I combined statement of the auditor and treasurer revealed Saturday. The general fund showed an over draft of SI. 190,281.62, a- compared to a deficit of $114,569.74 on January 1. and the highway fund had a balance of $5,758,281.65, as compared to a balance of $7,324,472.08 on the first of the mnoth. It was shown that general fund bond interest aggregating $95,182.19 bad been me* by obligating the high way or other pocial funds a the gen eral fund was overdrawn. The funded debt of th< State jan uarv 31 was $175,509,000 and tem porary loans increased the total in debtedness t’ $181,811,371. HE DOES A woman is like a railroad crossing sign. When a man sees one he stops and looks. When he marries her he I listens.— -Florida Times-Union. Number U7 Chino-Jap War Furious fighting continues around I Shanghai as the Japanese strive to force the Chine to evacuate the po_ sitions held. Forty army and navy plane ; ar** used by the Japs in the greatest conflict that has yet raged. I The Chinese have warned foreigners shipping away from the Japanese • military base on the Whangpoo, j which may indicate a determination | to stop with guns the landing at j Japanese reinforcements. Foreign consuls have ben asked •to get their nationals out all sec tions of Shanghai close to the Hong kew strongholds. Japanese casualties during the last three days are said to have been 500. The Chinese claim to have lost in the last four days, 1700. Japan has put a censorship on movements of troops and the Japan ese people are said to he given only meager account ■ of the events that jure taking place. They are said to be be— ■ nxious concerning the reactiol abroad, and fear that Japan may Is harshly judged. It is thought that Japan would consider a blockade and act of war. The Chinese general, Tsai jTing- Kai, states: "My army could force the Japanese out of Chinese territory quickly, but we are not taking the offensive because we want peace, and we want to preserve the neutrality of the international settlement.” Gen eral Tsai further says: “The Jaj >ane«e may win after a long fight, hut we shall he winners in principle. We will resist to the last bullet and the last minute.” VANDERBILT’S SCHOOL OF RELIGION IS DESTROYED Nashville, Tenn.—Fire swept | through Wesley Hall, one of the old |est and largest buildings on the iam pus of Vanderbilt university, yester day destroying the theological library and leaving the school of religion without a home. Chancellor J. H. Kirkland said the building loss would amount to ap proximately $350,000 and the loss of the library, one of the finest in the South together with destruction of personal property of students and professors, would raise the total dam age to $500,000, or more. Cause of the fire was undetermined. SALVATION ARMY REPORT •■O Raleigh.- In its report for January, 1932, the Salvation Army in Raleigh shows that it had 1230 applications for aid. 311 beds were supplied, and 1932 meals were served. Assistance to me Is, bed or clothes, was given to every call for help. In addition jto the above, there were 160 families I investigated and assistance render led with gin,-cries, fuel or clothes, making a total of 20' (I person ; "*■ ed by the army during J r-’i' '•• also assisted the Red Cross, churches, vchools and welfare workers in min istering to 73 other people. VIOI KNURS FLEE AS dead body sirs i p i Goldsboro. —The corpse sat up «ud jdenly at the funeral and all the mourners left, a Goldsboro man who recently attended the funeral of a negro woman in Robeson county re lated. T>, woman had been drawn with rheumatism so that he: body was bent at the hips to an angle of almost 45 degre. The undertaker, in trying to niaki the body lie in a natural looking position, in the coffin, used straps, "lie across the chest, another across the lower limbs. During tha funeral th* strap over the woman s chest broke loose and the body rose t, •• cpth •' position, which was more than the i .ngregation could stand, so they made a hasty exit. N. C. News From Oregon. The following news item is taken from the Industrial News Review. Portland, Ore. Zebulon community Hatchery operating in new location near Wakelon school. Daytonna Beach, Ha., Feb. 24 Sir Malcolm Campbell. 47 years oM. has set up another automobile speed record, making a speed of 267.733 miles per hour. He expressed himself a not at all pleased with the new record, and declared that the strong wind slowed him up considerably. Sir Malcolm’s wife declared her ! husband’s success made her the hap piest woman in England.