THE ZEBU LON RECORD M«*mbor North Caioliai Press Association Published Every Friday By Tin ;!i;roKn itbushing company Zebu lon, N, C. THEO. I!. DAVIS Editor MRS. TLKO. B. DAVIS , Associate Editor Entered as second-Mass mail matter June 26/1920, at the Post office U. Zebulon, North Carolina, under the Act of March 6, 1878. SUBSCRIPTION PRICK One Year $1.50 Six Months . . ... .80 Three M >nths .50 ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS MUST RK PAID IN ADVANCE (Some Good Second-Hand Editorials) AH, HATS! Sometime ago this paper mentioned the high cost of privy construction in Wake county and the super intendent explained to his own satisfaction at least that the cost was much less. Now we would like for some one to come forward and explain if it really did cost the government, which is us, the pitiful sum of 570.00 each to destroy a few rats. But why not? All the Pied Pipers of Hamlin are dead. Here’s what an exchange has to say about this rat killing business. We don’t blame Brooklyn for dropping its GW A rat campaign. Seventy dollars a rat is entirely too expensive for skilled workers, and it is evieient that the workers were ne>t very skilleel when 2(>l CWA workers could not even averse a rat apiece per day. The sum of 5218.000 was appropriated for this very unusual CWA project, but after a trial of 45 days, eluting’ which time only (50 or rats per day were tiv.ppcd, it was decided to drop ; t. PAID FOR PREACHING Here is another item from an exchange which we would like for you to read. After reading it. you may see you pastm in a different light -maybe so. j Let’.* 1 hope so, am way, if you are not seeing your duty to your pastor ai.d church definitely and. directly. A business man in a Southern city, who writes for a number of newspapers an unusual and usually humorous column, states in his extravagant style— behind which there is a very sober suggestion—that if he allows his payments to the church to lapse for three or four Sabbaths, he begins to question the sincerity of the men in the front pews; if he lets his dues get three months behind, he finds fault with the preaching, and if be so neglects his obligations as to owe on his nb'dge for a large pail ot the year, ! he begins to suspect that the preacher is a hypocrite and that there ought to be a change. This brings to our minds tiie saying of an old deacon: “Preach ing that ain’t paid fur don’t sound good.’’—Stanly t News and Press. LIQI’OK IS NO RESPECTER OF PERSONS The Record wishes to commend to its readers the following clipped from an exchange, because of the truthfulness of its statement in regard to all classes of people without respect of person: If liquor is no respecter oj' persons and can take a prominent man with too much under his shirt and cause him be unable t<> handle an automooile with danger to all in his path, why should an officer make any difference between them and those who are not so prominent? That is one trouble and the reason why so many accidents occur and the road is dangerous to venture on with a machine. A prominent drunken man can see double as well as the man who has little money and influence. The way to handle the situation and stop all of them, and every one who has so little sense as to get in a car under the influence of liquor and take hold of the steering wheel, should be stopped at once, and be made to understand that it will not be allowed. Licenses should be issued, and the reputation of those who aie in the habit of imbibing too freely and trying to drive a car under the influence of liquor should be taken into account when the licenses THE ZEBULON RECORD, ZEBULON, NORTH CAROLINA, FRHLUfJMARCH RECOVERY DEPENDS UPON INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY The heading to this piece is taken from the state ment of General Johnson, head of the government recovery program. 1 am glad that Uncle Sam has at last seen s me r'ayli h* and is awake to the fact that much of what has been done to bring back conditions to the normal has had a radical tendency to destroy indi- I vidual responsibility and weaken self-help. Gen ral Johnson’s statement is fine, only it should have been made a year ago and then he should have set up a program that would relieve only the urgent '.mm - diate needs and provide self-help. I believe much of the CAVA has aided and abetted the disposition of mom people to become mor do- , pendent. “There are national perils and emerge- :ies in; which individual responsibilities multiply, and this happens to be one of them. “The real objection of the few enemies oi the Blue Eagle goes much deeper than they are willing 1 to admit. They are of an ancient, Tory school of j thought. Although we call ourselves a democracy, their idea is that the people must never be trusted i to think or act for themselves. Alexander Hamilton | said: ‘The people' are a great beast’, anti proposed J a system under which all their affairs would bo! taken care of by the good, the wise, and the great. “The'trouble with that has been that the good, the wise, and the great have fallen down on the job. j Education and training have so evened up things \ that nobody has r, monopoly on goodness and wis- j dom any more. Times have changed. The news- j papers and the radio and the moving pictures have enabled the people to know 'instantly what is going 1 on. and more nearly every year to think and act as J ore. Given a trusted and able leadership, and with i such a medium of unified action as the Blue Eagle,! our people, for what l believe to be for the first lime, have the opportunity to solve a national eco- j nomic problem by their own action. Instead of sit ting hopelessly and helplessly under the impact of | forces of disaster, every person has an individual 1 and important part in a symphony of action.” —Gen- 1 eral Johnson. THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER While the Record has its subscription campaign on, perhaps the following from the Christian Science j Monitor, one of the'best edited newspapers in Amer ica, vc ill be of interest to our readers, and incidental- , ly help them to a better appreciation of country newspapers and especially The Zebulonßeeord: Turning from city newspapers to small town press exchanges that come to the editor’s desk is like step ping from the slums full of vice, into an old-sash- i ;..r>p ( i garden sweet with lavender and thyme and the scent ot perennial flowers. The pages of big dailies are so full of murder, thievery, immorality and sel fishness that the better news is obscured by these glaring shatterings of the Decalogue. One puts the . papers aside with a feeling of depression and heart-» ache that the world is so full of terrible and un- * happy things. I Then picking up the papers that record the hap- ( peniugs of the little towns around us, one gains re- ! newe.i faith in life. Here are set forth only that which uplifts a community—the activities of the business men, the church items, the happy social gatherings of the people, the marriages, births and deaths, farmer’s item.--, and all the thousand and one daily occurrences that make up the simple an nals of the great common people, who are really the foundation this broad country of ours. Sometimes people speak lightl yof the country newspaper, nut it is one of the most potent and up lifting factors in our national'existence. SEEN AND HEARD AN ACCOMMODATING OFFICER Chief of Police Baker is a man of varied duties in his official Ife. The other day he was seen diving a two-horse wagon through town and back towards the town jail. With him was a citizen from ( the country. Later the chief told me that that the , fellow was drunk and asked him to drive for him,, that he could not find his way out ot town. In the otherwise empty wagon was a half-gallon of liquor, j So the chief accommodated him. driving around to the jail, hitching the team and loekng the man up. Yes, Chief Baker is a very accommodating officer. SAFE |>R SAVED DRIVER? I went to Durham last week to see a young man from a nearby community w'ho was in Duke hospi tal. Passing another car rather closely, my friend on the seat with me said: “I am somewhat like a nan I know about riding with preachers. He said they are mostly thoughtless or careless drivers and he does not know' why it is unless it is because they are better prepared to die than most folks and so don’t mind much what happens. Anyway," said he, “I am not so well-prepared to die that I am willing *■ -* *- *greet n »• ' * j. •**4. »*• ****s*#{• 4*4*4*4* ** 4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4- •!*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4*4* v4*4*4*4*4*4*4* % # | |To Our Customers and Friends: | * ? ❖ M + % WE are now in position to offer you quality * f % hardware at the lowest price? possible. % | . , % * WE carry in stock a complete line of plow * * * J t castings, plows, horse collars, bridles and pads, + * t * traces, single trees anti many other things need- -i* 4* *" *** % ed on the farm, such as: shovels, hoes, rakes, * *> .t bush axes, mattox, picks, handles of all kinds * j * and garden wire. * * * WE cari<y a complete line of tin and enamel * | ware; also locks, hinges, screws, nuts, bolts and % * fishing tackle. * 4* 4* IF it’s hardware, we have it for you. * * HERE are a few of our manv other articles * 4* * V 4* 4* * in stock: Lowe Bros, house paint; Peerless 4- * 4* 4* + hour Enamel, 10c and 25c per can; Alcatraz * 4 4 . 4* * roof and barn Paint. | I OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT i- <' l DEBNAM HARDWARE STORE ! * t Zebulon, N. C. | Now Is The Time — FOR YOU TO PLAN “What Crops Shall I Put Mv Idle Acres Into?” * Korean Lespedeza Common Lespedeza Sericea Lespedeza Field Peas Soy Beans Latham’s Seed Corn Neal’s Paymaster Corn Seed Potatoes, Cobbler & Bliss Hay (Choice Timothy) Garden Seed Seed Oats Feed Oats Plows, And Casting for All Make of Plows Chattanooga Plows and genuine parts for them All numbers ‘Hot Supper Flour Cannot Be Excelled' Nitrate of Soda, Sul Soda, Calnitro best nitrate ever used by actual tests. AGENTS FOR INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER CO/S LINE OF IMPLEMENTS AND FARMING TOOLS Page Supp'y Cj. INCOKPOKATKI) Zebulon, North Carolina M. W. PAGE SMITH-DOUGLASS FERTILIZERS ORANGE and JAMACA for Tobacco Cannot Be Beaten Also fo* Truck —Gardens —Cotton—Peanuts—Grain Plants at Norfolk, Va. — Murfreesboro, N. C. Kinston, N. C. —Danville, Va.

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