THE ZEBULON KICORD MEMBER NORTH CAROLINA PRESS ASSOCIATION PuMLhed Every Friday Ry THE RECORD PURLIMHIKO I OM PA Jf V Zahaloß, North Carolina THEO. It. DAVIS. Editor Entered as second class mail matter June ”6, 192i>, at the Post office at Zebulon. n» Subscription Rates: 1 Year SI.OO 6 Months 60c, 2 Months 40c. All subscriptions due and payable In advance Advertising Rates On Request l>palh notices as news. First publication free. Obituaries tributes, cards of thanks, published a minimum charge of 13c per column Inch. PLANT A TREE o He who plants a tree is a benefactor to the race. In a moment one may destroy a tree, but it takes years to replace the loss. At this sea son is the best time to set trees —any kind. With little trouble and no expense the people of Zeb ulon might dig from the woods the most beauti ful shade trees and transplant them now. They would immediately begin growing a root system so when summer comes they would not only keep right on growing, but withstand the drought. In a few years our town might become almost famous for its shade trees. Any home may have fruit trees. It takes very little space for a few plum trees, a pear tree, two or three peach trees and a grape vine. The cost would be from 10 cents to 35 cents for any of these. Tenants often refuse to plant trees because they winn not be benefited by the fruit, yet we know farmers who have lived on an other's land for a quarter of a century. Then if every tenant would plant a few trees, no matter where he moved he would likely find fruit. Let’s make 1938 a tree planting year in and around Zebulon. Nothing is better and cheaper to grow than fruit. Most any sort may be grown in this section. On our place of less than three •i acres we have pecans, walnut, fig, apple, peach, plum, cherry, and a number of shade trees grow ing. We also grow strawberries, blackberries and dewberries successfully. So no one need be lieve he cannot have fruit. Good fruit may be grown in this section if one is willing to expend a little time and money. It requires less cultiva tion and fertilizer to grow fruit, but it does need both as certainly as any other profitable crops grown on the lot or farm. Yes, plant a tree, several of them. o —“ER-A”—by Dr. Widmer Doremus o A friend once said, “The only thing 1 cannot forgive is being bored.” The remark was not directed at anyone in particular, but the follow ing sentiments are: A gentleman giving a talk to the Rotary re cently, used up nine of the eighty minutes of his forty-minute discourse with “er-a.” There SEEN AND HEARD HE WANTED TO MAKE IT RIGHT Into the RECORD office on Tues day afternoon came G. S. Ferrell. He wanted to know whether it was the editor’s car which had its bump er hit by him as he backed from his parking place on Monday. The editor was not in, and Mr. Ferrell was told that no one here knew anything about any damage to any car. He was worried considerably • saying that his wife was with him on Monday, they were in a hurry, and he saw no one around whom he might have asked about the car. It was an old model sedan and he thinks he bent the bumper, which is of the two-piece variety. He is anxious to know who owns the car, and wants the owmer to know that he is ready to pay for any dam age done. The c*r was parked in front of the RECORD shop. Whoever he mav be, the owner of that car is nrobably not nearly so much worried as is Mr. Ferrell, 1 HE ZEBULON RECORD, ZEBULON- NORTH CA ROLINA, FRIDAY, JANUARY TWENTY-FIRST, 1938. j who wants it understood that he is j no hit-and-run man. We are also , sure he is not. 1 & U In a letter written jointly to the editor and his wife Mrs. Helen Whitley of Siler City remarked that her father used to say it is no won der a person always thinks himself right and others wrong; that even in the alphabet all the I s, both cap itals and small letters, are straight, while all the U’s, both capitals and letters, are crooked. This proof is new to us, but we can readi ly see its logic, and pass it on to be enjoyed by others. A BIG LITTLE PIG C. F. Wrenn, Zebulon Rl, was in the Record office a few days ago told about a pi? he had just killed. It was 9 months and 12 days old, and weighed 380 pounds. He said he h*d not bought a pound of feed for P— home grown, home fed and would ,be home eaten. were two or three in each sentence. I had met him on the sidewalk just before the meeting and there his speech was fluent, but when facing the audience his sentences scraped against the ori fice of their exit with “er-a’s” that sounded like a cart-wheel on a dry axle. “1 er-a take great pleasure in er-a speaking to you tonight about er-a salesmanship.” And so on. Meanwhile we all fiddled with our spoons, hitched our chairs, and looked at our watches under the tablecloth. Here was a man of brains, a man who had writ ten a highly successful book, a professor of a major subject in a distinguished university. How on earth could he teach? A person who has this miserable habit al ways tempts me to cup my hand under his chin, slap him between the shoulder-blades, and cry, “Spit it out!” His trouble is in trying to construct a sen tence after it is started, groping in the dark for the other end of the strand. One should culti vate the habit never to utter the first word until the whole sentence is clear-cut in his mind, even when in conversation. Such cultivation pro duces clear thinking. It may make for slow and deliberate speech, but that is infinitely less exasperating than hesitant speech, with the chinks filled in with “er-a.” The brain is an obstinate servant; it does n’t like to work unless its owner forces it to. The er-a habit itself provides it with an excuse to be lazy. The brain says to its owner when he emits an er-a, "It’s all right, old man, you’re saying something anyway,” and, satisfied with its er-a armchair, it sits back complacently and resists all prodding to make it do aught else. The most polished speaker I ever heard, read his sentences from the air. He printed each one there before he uttered the first syl lable. The very thought-out completeness of each sentence gave him time to organize the next. His discourse, in consequence, was some times almost painfully slow, but it was decisive, concise, and convincing. You believed him be cause his deliberate speech was a token of de liberation. His words went from his mouth into the public print without revision. The way he did the thing was not difficult for him, for he had trained himself into what became the easi est way, and can be the easiest way for anyone who will take the trouble. He always finished on time, when he finished he had reached the end, and his hearers had a clear idea of what he had said. The er-a habit takes all the punch out of personality. I have a professional friend, well gifted, but only a mediocre success. He always says, “Er-a,” before, “Hello,” in the telephone. New patients calling him get the idea that he lacks decision. All I remember of what the distinguished professor and author said the other night is _ it er-a. —Shining Lines—Mergenthaler Co. ALL MEAT TO BE INSPECTED As the associate editor of this paper walked in the City Market on Tuesday morning she overheard a part of a conversation between an employe and a representative of some state department. This was regarding all meats to be sold in this and other North Carolina j towns hereafter. It must be in spected and pronounced fit for hu man food or the butcher is liable to prosecution. No more butcher ing locally and selling the meat. The idea is that it may be all right—but may not be. Zebulon butchers must take their meat to Raleigh, if locally owned, and have |it passed upon there and certified before it may legally be offered for sale. A farmer may still kill his own stock and eat it, but may not sell any part of it, unless it has been inspected. Ix>cal meat markets are glad to co-operate with the regulations. The first recorded Chinese im migrants to the United States ar rived in 1848 in San Francisco. Death Is Coming By Mrs. Myrtie Baswell Text—“ But God said unto him: Thou fool! This night thy soul shall be required of thee.” —Luke 12:20. The year 1937 is passed and gone; it is in eternity. As we are living in such an awful day we wonder what the year 1938 will bring forth if Jesus should tarry. Sin is abroad in the land. The devil is hanging around, seeking whim he may devour. He is de vouring souls by the thousands. So many people seem to care nothing about God and His goodness. THi devil has them bound. He is teH ing them to take their ease, eH drink, and be merry. You haH many years yet. Just have own good time—enjoy but you must remember the deviflj a liar. He will get you in trotHl and leave you there. HI Death is abroad in the 1: Some are shooting and kill some are drowned; some are over on the highways; some' from heart failure; some dij the electric chair; some coil suicide, and the trains kill s| Some die one way or anol They seem to take no heed tol warning that any one gives ■ and death comes so quickly I don’t have time to call onß Luke 12: 16, 17, 18, 19, 20: 1 He spake a parable unto ■ saying: The ground of a cH rich man who brought forthH tiful and he thought withilfl self, saying: ‘What shallfll because I have no room bestow my fruits?’ And said, ‘This will I do. I wH down my barns and build Hi and there I will bestowHj fruits and my goods. Ann say unto my soul, thou haHB good laid up for many yeaiHß thine ease, oat, drink, and HB ry.’ But God said untHl| ‘Thou fool; this night shall be required of thee’.HH So many people today jdjtt ting off their soul’s salvaHH thinking of a good time. fl| girls, mothers and fatherHH ing, playing cards. cursinHH ling, and car-riding. Oh,H going to have a good titHflj God said, “Thou fool! thy soul shall be thee.” How sad to see mothers thers wasting their tim Some even go so far in they don’t seem to care thing. They are saying: take thine ease, we hai years yet.” But God sai< fool! This night thy soul required of thee.” Oh, so sad to see you and girls wasting their sin. They seem to thi have plenty of time yet. 4 going to have a good time, on girls, take a drink and a What a good time we are f have.” What a sad sight to s drinking and som edo t drunk. “Come on for a go —we have many more yearj thine ease, eat, drink, merry. But God said, ‘‘Tin This night thy soul shal quired of thee.” How awful it will be so to come. You will have to and meet God unprepared you stop for just one m Look and see that broad r< are on and where it will le And how terrible it will b you get to the end. It will hell and damnation, and th will have to burn forever ai When you have been tl thousand years, you will less time to stay there, continue on, and on, and oi thew 25:41. “Then shall also to them on the left from me ye cursed, unto t fire, nrennred for t and his angels.” Tocr sinners, Jesus is knocking az you- heart. Will you let him in ? Or will you turn him away and keep going on in sin, thinking that you have plenty of time, when you have no promise of to morrow ? Listen to his tender pleading to day. It will be sad, very sad, if you wait till it is too late. You owe every minute of your life to God. Will you serve Him or will you serve the devil? You can take your choice. Dat please remember death is on your track. It is com : ing to th’e rich and poor, high and low, free and bound. Death is » coming. (ixi ’