THE ZEBULON RECORD, ZEBULON, NORTH CA ROLINA, FRIDAY THE SECOND OF AUGUST, 1935. Church News Tnr study class held at the Meth odist Church on Thursday of last week was both pleas 'rt and in formative. Different chapters were taught by ladies of both ♦he Meth odist and Baptist churches. • In addition to the Baptist w >men attending from Zebulon there were a number from Wendell, vvho came with members of the Methodist church at that place. A delicious and abundant lunch was served at ch* noon hour, all visitors being: guests of the local Methodist Socle./. The Northside Circle of the Bap tist W. M. S. met on Monday p. m. in the home of Mrs. Vietoiia Gill, chairman. The day’s lesson in The Personal Service Guide was taught by Mrs. Theo. Davis, lhe next meeting of this group will be held with Mrs. Les»-r Green as hostess. The Central Circle o fthc Bap tist W. M. S. met with Mrs. T. E. Blount hostess on Monday p. m. The lesson from The Cate to Asia was taught by Miss Linda dev ton. The Circle of the Methodist Church met on Monday p. nt. with Mrs. Chas. Flowers hostess- The discussion of the day’s 'opic: What Does the World Think of Me as a Christian? —was led by Mrs. M. J. Sexton. WAKEFIELD CHVRCH NEWS It is very important that all members of Wakefield Baptist Church be present next Sunday at Sunday school.An important, matter of business will come up. Fed Wells News .lack Eddins and sister Pansy of Momeyer snent Sunday with Miss Margaret Brantley and brother Carl. Miss- louise Weathersby has ac cepted a position in the Sanatorium at Townson, Maryland. Mrs. Edwin Mitchell of Spring Hope spent Sunday with her moth er. Mrs. S. 0. Mullins. Edgar Mullins of Smithfield spent Sunday with his father G. O Mullins. Mr Clarence Edwards and Miss Beatrice Denton of near Bailey visited in our vicinity Saturday night. Reynolds Brantley is a patient at Park View Hospital. His condition has been very serious, but he now shows some improvement. Under the act creating the TV A that agency is authorized to ... . do almost anything except coin money and make war.—R. L. Dnf fus. SCHOOL OPENINGS MAY BE POSTPONED There is more than a chance that parents will not he forced to keep children out of school to pick cot ton this fall; because it, now seems jr- bable that the sc *ools will not op( n until most of the cotton has been picked. The infantile paraly sis situation may make it appear best to health authorities to delay ola°s work until some ti;.*, see-saws and J swings are be'ng so monopolized i by parents that it ha* beer, thought: 'wise to put in cn.-°k;r boards and - horse .-noe pits to entertain *hem that the little one- may have a fair snow with the dev'-cos known is eh’o sh. Henrv Page Dead Henry A. Page 73, member of the prominent Moore county family of hankers and railroad men, died i suddenly at his Aberdeen home on j Sunday. During the war he was state food administrator. He had served in the state senate and was | widely known over the state. Individualistic in thought and manner and with a keen mi-c and a caustic tongue, he impressed ev ery circle in which he moved. Three of his brothers have also influenced the thought and activi ties of the state. The oldest, Wal ter Hines Page, was U. S. ambas sador to Great Rritain during the world war. Robert N. Page was I for many years in congress, later devoting his time to the families ! banking interests. Frank Page was I the engineer-chairman of the state highway commission during its i heavy construction period. The on jly surviving brother, J. R (called Chris, because born on Christmas day) is more interested in home life and farming and is not so well known as his brothers were. “Cvclone” Mack Reaches Calm Rev. Baxter F. McLendon, wide j ly known as “Cyclone Mack,’’ an I evangelist of national reputation died at his home in Bennettsville, S. C., last week. He had just re turned from a three week’s tent meeting in Oklahoma City. He was 59 years old. Several years ago he conducted a meeting in the old auditorium at Raleigh. ! German Flag Torn From Shin at N. Y. A group of Jewish* sympathizers in New York last week stormed on the decks of the steamer Bremen docked in the harbor there and tore down the German flag as a protest against Hitler’s treatment of Jews in Germany. Several of the raiders were ar rested. German newspapers aie de manding that the U. S. government apologize to the German govern ment. However, it is not expected that there will be any serious in ternational difficulty. A similar instance led to the “war” between the U. S. and Mex ico in 1914. A bunch of Mexican hoodlums tore down an American | flag from a small ship. Josephus Daniels, then secretary of the Na vy, demanded that the Mexican troops at Vera Cruz saliU*! the U. S. flag. Upon their refusal to do so American ships fired upon *he city. Out of lessed incidents have come bigger wars. George McNeil Is After No. 2 Tag George McNeill of Fayetteville has announced his candidacy lor lieutenant governor, bung third to announce. The others are Paul D. Grady of Johnston and W. P. Hor ton of Chatham. Mr. McNeil is a business man. He represented his district in the state senate in 1933. The Hole In Your Pocket Press dispatches from Washing ton state that in the la*t twelve months $7,375,000 000 has been spent, which, with $7,100,000,000 that was spent the preceding year, makes a total peacetime record spending of $14,475,000,000 for the past two years. Money has been been spent twice as fast as it has been collected from the taxpayers. 1 But all the spendings and all the borrowed money must eventually be extracted from the taxpayers pockets. At the end of the new fiscal year ! it is estimated the national debt will be approximately $35 000,000,-, 000. or a per capita debt, of S27C i on every man, woman and child ir. j the country. These figures are so staggering in size that one cannot grasp them. But the individual tax bills of va rious kinds that will soon be com ing due, can be readily understood by every taxpayer whose pockets will be emptied in order to pay them. MY EXPERIENCE And the food it tasted sorta flat; A few years back my wife and I The man didn’t say anything about Some modem things went out that. to buy, He said the air was always dry. And when we went into a store I wonder if that’s the reason why A salesman met us at the door.. That every meal we try to eat “An electric ice box.” he says tc There’s the taste of bananas in the “That’s the thing you ought to see. Said wife, “The food’s so dry today They’re trouble-proof,” he told my I had to throw a lot away.” wife, Upon my face there is a frown, “And will last you all your life.” - B.*♦rn Again that thing has broken down. “The iceman”, he would then as- :j The darn thing sprung a leak. sert, they Say > “Always tracks in a lot of dirt. Jto 1Y * * We coudn’t get nack in the house For what you pay you don’t get J all day. half. My wife wept then for hours ar.d The dirty iceman makes me laugh. JM hours. The folks that live next door to K as killed her birds and T,, . , , B j ma( j e m y mind up there and then Thev came m and bought one too.’ , , 1 . , „ . as TK&sr ’JH To call the iceman back again. Mv wife then turns and says tc me. M k||p Iff’ ... . If they can bnv one, so can we." IB « He “ W of lce; w were Neat day thev came, and brought ' * ftSCSST ' To *> modern.**). “The men and the service, re .... .... says to me, And that is where our trials begm. ‘ They’re neat and clean, now. wait Every time we cooled a drink an( j se€ » We took the ice tray to the sink, No more breakdowns, no more re- Warm water o’er the pan we’d pairs, pour, And now my wife to me declares The cubes would fall all over the That all the food is kept so nice floor. Since we went, back to using ice. Coolercttor Coni: Little River Ice Co. Colonel Robinson, of the Yakima (Wash.) Republic, in answering a ‘reactionary” citizen who asserted that taxpayers should have a voice in how their money is spent and that it should be spent as eeonomi |cally as possible, said: “The idea that tax money should tie spent economically is just as far out of date as the other. If tax i money were spent economically, , there wouldn’t be more than half <>f it spent, and that fact alone is sufficient to condemn the idea. The prevailing thought is to spend pub -1 lie funds uneconomically, so that more funds can be raised and ( spent, thus putting more money in to circulation and increasing the purchasing power of the people.” Sarcastic as this paragraph of ’he Colonel’s, it states a distress itively flawless. Some day the peo ingly plain truth. Its lucidity is pos ple will wake up to the fact that they pay the bill foT all the “polit ical presents” that are given to them. i Labor: Latest tr< üble has occur ml in New’ England textile mills, where the union recently called a strike on one large operator, is threatening others. It is said to be inveitable that there will soon be a strike of cloak and suit workers in the east. Potential labor troubles have most big industries nervous. Colored Column Mr. T. L. Ellis, Mr. J. A. Gresh am and Miss Catherine Harris at tended the Sunday School conven tion last Saturday and Sunday at Fuquay Springs. They all report a very nice time. Next meeting of the County Convention will be at Wake Forest. The revival will begin at the Ist Baptist Church the first Sunday night. Rev Johnson will do the preaching. Everybody is cordially invited every night and mothers’ meeting will be there Wednesday evening beginning at 2:30 o’clock. Preach ing Sunday mornin gby Rev. San ders. Business meeting Friday night , August 2nd. Allmembers are asked to be present Sunday School at 10:00 o’clock each Sun day. Preaching at 11:00. A laTge crowd attended the children’s pro gram at Zebulon last Sunday and enjoyed the spread and singing. Mrs. Jennie Harris of Wake Fof est is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Gresham. Mrs. Mattie Daye of Route 2 has beenvery ill but is much better at the present writing. Miss Elizabeth Watson who is taking treatment at Duke has been dismissed. 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