Newspapers / Zebulon Record (Zebulon, N.C.) / Aug. 11, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOLUME IS, THIS, THAI AND THE OTHER —■ . % Bv MRS. THEO. B. DAVIS % Did you notice what our Union Hope correspondent last week said canning tomatoes in tobacco barns? If I only had the tobacco and the barn I’d certainly try that method. A daily paper tells of its being used in .the section around Goldsboro. And aren’t these the busy days for farm women! Besides the to t,; matoes to be canned and the ap ples to be dried there are jars to be filled with peaches—not only canned, but pickled, preserved and jammed—melon rinds to be made into the best possible substitute for candied citron, cucumbers to be put into brine —and the folks still want and need three meals a day. At least there’s no monotony on the farm. And when we look at our shelves filled with rows of jars ready for winter we feel repaid for the long hours of work that put them there. * I have about come to the conclu sion that the main reason every home does not have a plentiful sup ply of fruit is our tenant system. Few land-owners care to go to the expense of buying and setting out trees that may be ruined by a care less tenant or a greedy cow or hog. Even the lack of care in plowing near a young tree may ruin it by injuries to the bark. On the other hand a tenant will seldom put ottt trees that he may not stay to see intp bearing. It must be another of those vicious circles we hear about. (Sometimes I think if we could see' all those circles our lives would look like the long lines of interlocked ovals we used to make in our copy books.) And what’s to be done about it is more than I can say. Last week I heard a man talking about the enjoyment his children have had this year in going to a tree near the house for peaches. It | seems that they have not known this privilege before, which is a; pity. Every village and country! child should have the inalienable right to the pleas ire, and perhaps the pain, of eating fruit grown at home. Mrs. J. B. Outlau has a fine re cipe so making yea it-at home. She sent me some and it looks and acts much like Magic yeast. I am ask ing her for the di'ections to be printed and hope yt u make some, if the family likes rolls. Along about this time of the year farm folks are likely to be-1 come more than ever popular with relatives and friends in town and 1 city. If they don’t come at any other time, you may be excused for wondering whether it is the charms of the family or t ie farm that draws Vhem. Still, y< u usually en joy their visits, un ess they say too much about “h >w calm and peaceful it is out here.” However, if they are the kind who tell you over and over that you don’t know how fortunate you a -e to be out in i the country where your fruit, vege-1 tables, milk and bu ter, eggs and chickens don’t cost you anything—• well, if they are th.it kind, I only hope that you are able to keep from putting poison into their food. Mrs. Hoyle [ Honors Guests On Wednesday night, Mrs. Star-1 key Hoyle was hostess at a buffet supper in honor of Misses Louise! Martin, of Mount Olive; Ernestine Sherwin, of Greensboro, and Olive Spence, of Goldsboro, house guests of her daughter. Jane. After supper the guests motored to Lake Myra for a delightful swim. The guests were: Misses Lou ise Martin, Ernestine Sherwin, Ol ive Spence, Clarice Fowler, Ethelyn Greene, Ruby Temple, and Messrs. Wallace White, Douglas Finch, Ro-1 bert Greene, Glenn Joyner, RuVsell Temple*. Henry and Frederick • Hoyle. ©hr Zrlmlmt Strrorh No Sales Tax When Tobacco Is Sold Raleigh, August 7.—Sale of to bacco by producers on warehouse floors is exempted from the pro visions of the 3 per cent general sales tax, Harry' McMullan, direc tor of the sales tax division . 1 the department .of revenue, ruled to day. Many inquiries had reached leigh on the subject, McMullan said, ■ from tobacco centers where, it was feared. the law* did not’ exlempt' the weed. A 'movement had -been launched at Reidsville to call upon Governor Ehringhaus to issue a statement on the question. “The sales tax act exempts en tirely from taxation products of ’ farms, forests and mines when sold by the persons or members of their ' immediate families or by employees forming a part of the organization of persons who produce such pro ducts in the original state o» con ' dition or preparation for sale,” Mc- Mullan ruled. Under this provision the sale of tobacco by farmers on the ware ; house floors through North Caroli na, is totally exempt from the sales tax. both wholesale and retail.” Sale of cotton and tobacco by other than the producers will be 1 considered a wholesale sale, McMul lan said, and the wholesale rate of $lO on each $2,500 sale will be le vied with the minimum being $12.50 for each six months period.— Greensboro Daily News. Local Company To Open In Wendell ►* - a-*——i- -*•. . The. J. .M. Chevrolet Company plans to operf a branch of the Zebu lon Company in Wendell within the next few weeks. TEey’ are to be lo- I cated in the building formerly oc j + * ) cupied by Todd Motor Company on the main thoroughfare. Z. J. Robertson, head of the local concern, will, for the time being, officiate as general manager. Chev rolet cars and trucks will be sold and serviced at the new garage. . . Fogleman - Electrocuted Protesting to the last his inno cence of the crime for which he was executed, Clay Fogleman went s o the electric chair in the State Prison in Raleigh Friday morning. One of the lawyers who represented him during the trial, having ex hausted all mesns in his efforts to ! secure a commutation of the sen ; tence by Governor Ehringhaus, ! walked with the condemned man to ! the chair and stood by as he died. Mrs. W. J. Car er, wife of the ! slain man for whose death Fogle i man paid with his own life, identi i Tied him as her husband’s murder er. In his last message before elec trocution Fogleman claimed to have been elsewhere on a liquor deal at the time of the killing. Car ter, a filling station operator, was shot in April of last year. Secretary Named Norman Y. Chambliss, of Rocky: j Mount, has been named secretary treasurer of the State Fair, to be held the week of October 9. Mr. Chambliss is a banker. He has se cured leave of absence to enable ' him to accept the new position, and 1 will take charge next week. I War In Cuba j It is reported that President Ma chado, of Cuba, will resign by re quest of Cuban political leaders. There are rumors that President Roosevelt will be asked to help clear up the situation in the island, where the uprising may prove to be a revolution. President Machado has attempted by arms to control the strikes and opposition, but has net succeeded. A demonstration in Havana, where the people began rejoicing because they thought the President had resigned, resulted in | the death of more than’2s and the wounding of more than a hundred •by submachine guns, pistols and Y . , used by the police. ZEBULON, NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 11,1933. HOM E S # So long as there are homes to which men turn At close of day; -So long as there are homes where children are <• * Where women stay, . If love and loyalty and faith be found Across these sills, A stricken nation can recover from Its gravest ills. , - So long as there are homes where lamps are lit, And Sprayers are said; Although a people falter through the dark, And nations grope, With God himself back of these little homes, We have sure hope. —Home Friend Magazine. Receives Large Tire Shipment The Phiiett Mottfr and Parts f ompany recently received a large shjpm<ent. of tires.. They are able to l offer you these tires at truly low prices. Due to a tax which goes into- effect next month, tire prices will rise soon. Mr. Privett, head of the firm, states that those who wish to save on their tires must buy before the first of September. The Phil-Ett Service Station, lo cated in the fork of 90 and 91 high ways, has just been cleaned up and painted. It presents a shining front to the passerby and is truly an as set to the appearance of our town. Within the next few' weeks the Company will take the agency for Plymouth and Dodge cars. Plans are now underway to expedite the necessary business deals so that the cars may be placed in the show room within the next two weeks. Mr. Privett invites you to visit and inspect his new arrangement. Revival At Hales Chapel Rev. E. G. Willis, of Nashville, N. C., will assist the pastor of Hales Chapel -church in a revival meeting commencing on the second Sunday in September and running through the third Sunday. Mr. Willis is a very successful pastor evangelist. He assisted in the meet ing at Lees Chapel last year and, many of the people of Haies Cha-! pel heard him and were greatly pleased and helped by his mes sages. He is a young man, well prepared for his calling and an earnest and interesting preacher. Fire In High Point Store > I Fire that caused damage esti-’ mated at $20,000 to the Belk-Ste-j vens store in High Point on August | 7. was said to have been caused by, an electric iron in the alteration j room. The iron was found after the j fire, still connected to the socket, J although the worker ir charge of the room felt sure she had discon rfeeted it. Convicts Captured Lester Trippe and !>*<-' Mclntosh, convicts .escaped from Georpia, have been arrested and arp in jail at Nashville./Mclntosh has con fessed that he helped rob the Bat tleboro bank. He say* Trippe had no part in the bank robbery, but did hel to kidnap J. C. Lyle, Geor-: gia mail carrier, who w'as brought to Wake Foresf"and releasg<|. A ne-! gro, nol yet apprehended, is said | to be implicated in this and other* crimes. Barn Stands— Tobacco Burns | ’■ i On last Tuesday Mr. O. N. Bry j ant had a very narrow’escape with his tobacco barn. He had just start j ed killing the leaf and was sitting \ under the shelter when he heard a j roaring and upon investigating he found the noise to be in the, barn. Rushing to the door he found that a stick of tobacco had fallen on the tee and was afire. Looking up into the barn he saw that the whole room of tobacco above the tee was in a blaze. Before he could break the news to his neighbors the fire was spreading rapidly. It was not long however, before the people be gan gathering, for the smoke was raging. They went to work with all their might, both men and women, some carrying water, some tearing off the top. They were very busy for a short time, but their efforts were not in vain. Three rooms of tobacco was all he lost—not even the sticks. The fourth room was slightly schorched on the ends. The barn still stands on its same old foundation and is curing more to bacco. We consider it very fortunate for Mr. Bryant that his loss was no greater.—Union Hope Corre spondent. Sees Sights Would you have thought that in North Carolina there lives a man who had never seen a town, an au tomobile, a movie show or a negro until two weeks ago—and that he is 72 years old ? The man is Edward Gladstone j and his home is 13 miles from Murphy in the extreme south-west ern part of the state. He had taken* some earn to have it ground at a mountain mill when J. H. Voyles and I). A. Silver, both of Murphy, drove up in a car and offered to take him to town. Overcoming his fear that the automobile would jump down the side of the moun tain, Gladstone accepted the invi tation and had the time of his life. * He has decided to malae (mne changes in his way of living; so it I is presumed that he will go to | town again. Lost— One Arm Henry Meimar, of Oregon, was riding with another man in a car when they passed a truck. Meimar, on the right side of the car, had his aim on the window sill. He com plained that he was hurt by the j truck as they passed, but had gone! for five miles more before he real-! ized that his right arm had been torn off. He was rushed to a hospi-1 tal for, a blood transfusion and, physicians think hp? has a fain chance to recover. Seaichers found !• s oi m in the road. Marine Corps Has Openings The Savannah Marine Corps Re cruiting Station, located in the Post Office Building will have va cancies for graduates of high school or from institutions of high er learning during the months of August and September, according to an announcement by Lieutenant Colonel A. # B. Drum, Officer in charge. Men accepted will be transferred to Parris Island, S. C., for a few weeks intensive training before be | ing assigned to some school, ship or Marine Barracks for duty. The Marine Corps offers many educational advantages both schol astic and scenic. Some men are selected for aviation, radio and clerical work upon completion of preliminary instructions. Many are assigned to ships and stations in the United States, and a few to foreign lands. Applications will be mailed high school graduates upon request. Diseased Animals Are Stolen A Nebraska hospital reports the theft of 30 rabbits and 6 guinea pigs which had been inoculatted with dangerous infectious diseases. Newspapers have been asked to publish warnings of the danger in curred. In addition to the probable risk of those involved in the stealing or handling of these animals, their loss means that more than a year’s : work in making tests will be de- I stroyed. Mrs. O’Berry Named Director Mrs. Thomas O’Berry, of Golds boro, has been named director of federal relief to succeed Dr. Fred Morrison, who resigned some time ago. Mrs. O’Berry was vice-chair man of the State Democratic Exe cutive Committee. She is also ar. ex-president of the federated wo man's clubs of North Carolina, and is both energetic and capable. Attempt Fails ' i Lieutenant-Commander T. G. W. Settle after elaborate precautions, was sealed in a balloon am' started from Soldier Field, Chicago, to ex-; plore beyond the atmosphere into the stratosphere, hoping to bring) back valuable scientific informa tion. A leaky top valve is said to have been responsible for *he balloon’s descent after nek g al . . . ten minutes. Lieut. Settle hopes t< ;:ta! another attempt soon. Three Cars In Wreck A wreck itt which no one was fa tally hurt occurred at 11:30 last Sunday night-on highway 91. one and a half miles east of Zebulon, when the driver of one- car cut into the other two. , The three cars in tthe wreck ! were: a Ford coupe, 1930 model, -a * Buick seda;u and a 1933 Chevron I let sedap.. The. Buick, was driven b v Dr. Freeman, of. Bailey; the Chev rolet by Jphn p.. Grimes,..of Salis bury; the. F,ord by a youngs lady Whose name .is not known. . . The wreck, which completely de-» irlolished one car apd wrecked the other two, occurred when Grimes, meeting the Ford, which was close ly followed by the Buick, cut into it and then side-swiped the Buick. When the noise of the crash sub sided and the dust settled the Ford was in the middle of the road, the Buick in a ditch on its side and the Chevrolet! bottjom-side-up in th*? ditch on the other side of the road headed in the opposite direction from that which it wifc going wheq struck. Grimes, driver of the Chevrolet, suffered two fractures of his left leg above the knee and cuts on the face. Dr. Freeman, driver of the Buick. has two brokn ribs and was severely bruised internally. The young lady is in a Wilson hospital. None of the three isjn serious dan ger, but recovery for Grimes and Freeman is expected to be slow. Teachers’ Salaries Not Yet Fixed Salaries for school teachers in the state have not been finally de cided upon and will not be before August <l7, although schools have already opened in 12 counties. It is supposed that salaries will be approximately 70 per cent f the 1930 schedule. A new ruling is that children not six years old by November 17 wili not be allowed to begin school this fall. Plan For Color Schemes Urged Motor vehicle commissioners of the country believe that it will be best to make changes in the exist ing custom of states selecting their own color combinations for license tags, since this frequently causes confusion in identifying cars, es pecially those in motion. North - Carolina’s colors for this year are j used also by Georgia, Alabama, j Maryland, Vermont, Illinois, Kan-i sas and lowa. Washington’s traffic director has I proposed a color zone system which would allow certain states, too far distant Trom each other to overlap, the use of the same colors. It is said that tests show that light figures on a dark background are more easitly read than the re '.'-'r.- e .-.nbination. Waylon Alford Dies Waylon Alford, son of Mr. ami Mrs. Mallie Alford, of neat- Zebu lon, died in a Raleigh hospital at live o'clock in the morning, Thurs day, August 10th, after an illness of several months. Funeral services will be held at the home on Friday, at two o’clock in the afternoon. The family has the deep sympa thy of the entire community. Boy Shoots Father Purvis Dillard, ten-year-old son j of Cliff Dillard of New Light town ship, shot his father on last Fri day night, because, he said his| mother was being badly beaten by! the man and called to him for help., He said that he ran and got the j gun and shot his father in the right j side of the abdomen. Jiillard was i• i c s1! - - wounded and was taken to a Raleigh hospital for treat ment. The boy told officers that his! father had beaten the mother many ' r.us before. Dillard did not know 1 t it was that shot f. is in the sixth grade :'s Yoni. NUMBER 8. ; [YE FLAPDOODLE By The Swashbuckler t | ..I :t 1 I “The tinje has come,” the walrua * I t said, “to speak of many things.’*' But he neglected to mention Me 5 sales tax along with his cabbages. Maybe, as the Polocks say, he mea.nt “skeneila kapobtfca.'* which . means those cabbages which are in a state of decompose. If that be , true, then the walrus wasn’t an ass after all, but merely some half-cen tury ahead of the times. Youse [ guys dort’t knbw 'nothin’! 'Why don’tcha get wise to the fact that you’re payihg the merchants a dot ( lar and sixty cents for every dol lar’s worth of merchandise you pur chase? Still, if you want to contin- I ue it, don’t bother about voting for me at the next election of repre sentatives. I plan to run on the treadmill platform. That seems to I have been the main plank in most ( of our last bunch of legislators.— The editor has been running The Record from his bedside and likewise doing some dining-room cooking. Quite a few of our | young-squirts-about-town are mak ing gigolos out of themselves now. The ever increasing stag lines are on the up. Prime tobacco all day and dance all night. How do they do it? Whatta man!- —Someone referred to Pete Gill as a super mechanic and someone else misun derstood and passed it on as soupy mechanic. —ln my morning’s mail I find a letter from Sgt. Thew li> of Hawaii, who generously in forms me that the recently publish-: ed “bone-meal-and-glass” mixture was not orig'.tal with Mr. Fite,.but that the so, mula belonged to one Sailor Dan/of Philadelphia. Furth ering his description of Gob Daniel ho states that Mr. Daniel was also the famous hedge-thief of the fore mentioned city.. The way he worked is described as follows: Dan would on a certain day plant a hedge for some patron of Filly, receive com pensation and depart. Upon awak ening the next day, the buyer of the hedge would find his shrubbery gone. Investigation would later re veal Sailor Dan planting a hedge of the same variety and size on some other victim’s premises in an other part of the city. That, I be lieve, is another form of the Chi nese game consisting chiefly of: “Sellum doggee, doggee him come back, allee samee sellum doggee, gin him come back, allee timee makee money still got poochee”— Speaking of Chineks, reminds : ti <nc v o came into a pawn shop in San Diego whilst I was bargaining with the loan merchant on a mandolin. Thus ran the con versation: "What can I do for you, | my good fellow?” You gottum go> ! frum-me come-to-me?” “Have I I got what?” “You jcatchum, go frum-me allee timee makee noisee, o—o —o —w —a —ah, o—o —o —w —a—h?” “Do you mean an accordian?” asked the pawn broker, as he took from his shelf a battered instrument and carefully wiped from it the accumulated dust of ages. “Yeh,” replied John Chinaman, “Him I want. Pullee pusiiee, pushee-pullee, allee timee o—| —o —w —ah, o—o —o—w —ah.” • Read in one of our dailies where a couple were divorced be cause “she” let dust accumulate on the mantels and his bureau. I sup pose his marriage vow read some thing like this, “Till dust do us part.” And Bert, that versa tile grease-washer of the J. M. Chevrolet place, advises me that the new concern in Wendell will ! probably be called “J. M., j’r.” ! '’raven Blown, erstwhile soda-jerk er, now man of means from Mary land, has again “blown” into town with the crack that if Dr. Freeman had not been in his car when it ■.. as viecked, he probably wouldn’t have been hurt! Quite an astound i ing conclusion, eh Gaston? From various and sundry places I have gathered information that is of interest to auto owners. The ways to keep from running out of ! gas. 1. Don’t drive any. 2. Sell your car. 3. Keep your tank full. 4. Keep your tank empty. 5. Junk the dam thing.—And, did you hear about the gent who had eaten so much s*4_ food that his teeth were covered i ith barnacles? You didn’t? That’s funny; it must have been the same i s jy •
Zebulon Record (Zebulon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 11, 1933, edition 1
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