THE PILOT Friday, August 20, 1926. THE PILOT Published every Frida’*' by the PILOT PRINTING COMPANY Vass, North Carolina ^ACY BREWER, Owner Subscription Rates: One Year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Address all communications to The Pilot Printing Co., Vass, N. C. Advertising Rates on Application Entered at the Postoffice at Vass. N. C.. as second-class mail matter. ON BEING AWAY FROM HOME This is written in the northern part of Pennsylvania, prompted by the things encountered away from home. After nmning around in the country between here and North Carolina the con clusions forced are that the things left behind are about as good as the new things encoun tered up this way. The strang er who did not know the fussy habits of mankind might think the chief end of men is to buy gasoline and run about, and he would not be far wrong. For of all the incessant running up and down the earth that is seen on the great highways even the Devil in the Book of Job was an example of staying quiet at home. From a front porch on a country road one evening last week I counted 198 cars passing in about 25 minutes. It looks as if the whole uneasy world wants to get to some other place in the next three minutes, al though the flow of traffic the other way indicates that every body at the same time wants to get back. Pennsylvania has a traffic po lice system. The traffic could not exist without such a sys tem. Here are three states, New York, Ohio and Pennsyl vania, that together have over three million cars on the roads and enough to move probably one-seventh of all the popula tion of the United States at one vania is seen where the passing of narrow places or detours or obstructed new work is met. In our state everybody wants to crowd into a tight place and hog the way through. in Pennsyl vania the man who tries to cut in out of his turn or on the wrong side, or who makes a wrong play to the disadvantage of other travelers is liable to ar rest, and the penalty that fol lows. So the traffic is easier and much safer. One thing partic ularly noticeable is the absence of that effort to run around a car as it is about to meet another. It is permissible to pass a car going the same way only when no car is coming the other way, and the way that rule is observed is striking to a man from North Carolina. I will go back home a positive enthusiast concerning a good law for the creation of a state highway police. One that will be enforced and with a good force of patrolmen under a good head. Our road system is the best one I have seen. Our roads are better located and better engin eered than I have seen in any of the states from Carolina to Can ada, and in that respect I be lieve we lead the world. But Pennsylvania and New York set us an example in safety, brought about by good road laws, rigidly enforced by capable police, which we can follow to great benefit. A Pennsylvania man tells me that it is cheaper to hire police than to pay hospital and funeral bills, and a New York man says police are also cheaper than automobile repair bills. North Carolina is so keen in seeing that a bad road is too great an expense to tolerate that I have hopes that our state will also see that reckless and lawless driving is also too ex pensive. To arrange a funeral a day from automobile accidents in North Carolina, would pay the hire of a lot of highway police. The thousands of injuries to peo ple by the accidents cost enough to pay all the rest of the police. time, or six times as many peo- _ ^ pie as are in all North Carolina. | And the damages to cars is big That all this traffic could move | enough to pay double the fund under the hap-hazard system of, that would be needed, our state is impossible. So A highway police for North traffic laws are rigid, and they Carolina will be not only a great are therefore simple, and what step forward in making our is important they are obeyed. I highways safe, but it will next have not seen a traffic policeman to the good roads themselves be in the two weeks since I left home, but I can see clearly that their presence is felt. All that idiotic recklessness of driving that is so common on North Car olina roads seems up here to be the greatest money saver of any new thing recently established, for state police will cut down by hundreds of thousands of dollars the present great outlay for fun eral bills* hospital bills and re held in check by the knowledge i pair bills, a thing few have that while the police are not vis- j thought about. Automobile ac- ible they may pop over the hill i cidents form one of the big costs any minute, and that they stand | of automobile operation. A no monkey business. | good state police system will cut The whole atmosphere of the | that cost by hundreds of thous- road is different. You do not! ands of dollars, besides saving see that wsmart fool cut in ahead! many lives and thousands of ser- as you are about to meet a car | ious mjuries. from the other direction. He j am confident we have the knows a traffic policeman may, system of roads in the un catch him at It and arrest him j j f^^r we have one of Drivers keep their own sides of; ^^rst systems of operat- the road come around curv^es un-; ^nd after seeing the der control, down hills at safe ^jety^ods followed in Pennsyl- speed, and observe the cross, ^ew York. I can im- road rules. You stay on the | reason why in our state right of the road, and watch the tolerate our present right side of your side. The left inefficient murderous system is watched by the man going the ! ^he next legisla- other way Slow down signs; provide a really are v\am. Danger signals mean efficient state police, one that will what they say. And drivers 1 enforce good road laws, stop the ha^^ a decided respect for the; slaughter on the roads and the traffic police, who do not argue | destj-uction of cars, and make the case. 1 ^^ore of a pleasure and less of a danger and dread. And there is the whole bene fit of the Pennsylvania traffic police .^stem They have the ^om Tarheel says that old rocky and everyone knows j of stumps, just back of the ^ \ I barn is now one of the best pieces of The> have the one job and it is farm since he blew out o ma e the road safe, and if | rocks and stumps with explosive. they fail they lose their 30b. So j their authority is respected, and it is safer to drive in Pennsyl vania with over a million cars than in North Carolina with less than half as many. But the driver in PennsylvaJnia cannot ra^ke'd'tXyMt™Kh“"lS|Flag Stone For Walks not he gets his lesson, and the' Farm timber is a good crop and helps in one’s credit rating at the bank. result is that the driver feels safer in Pennsylvania and he is not in the least discommoded, for the law, is made to make driving safe and enjoyable, not to hamper or vex. One of the most striking ex amples of the good results cf en forced road laws in Pennsyl- F*or Sale Colin G. Spencer CARTHAGE, N. C. Jbr Economical Transporta tion i New Low Prices iTonTnick^Q C reduced to %ToiiBrud^J7? reduced to«J^ (Chassis onfy) fo.b.JUnt,Muhigan Chevrolet trucks have won worldwide accept ance on the basis of low first cost, low opepting cost and slow depreciat ioci- This spectacularly grow ing popularity has made I necessary a greatly in creased production — the economies of which are now being passed on to Chevrolet truck buyers in the form of a drastic price reduction. Standard Stores, Inc. Aberdeen, N. C. 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Minimum friction. 3. Less “breaking-down” under load or at high speeds. 4. More miles per quart of oil. 5. Better hill dimbing— smoother operation* 6. Negligible carbon. 7. Actualsavingingasoline. ^Quarter aQfictrt STAN DARD MOTOR OIL Friday, I Vass Rev. ^ again Su cation, ai ments at was the Mr. and afternoori Mr. and Clarem recent ca Mrs. G. Misses Dowd, of and Mr. Miss An nooon. Mrs. daughter week wit Mrs. J( turned S tives in Miss ( of the w€ tain. Mrs. V the gues Thursday ing of la Mrs. I . returned Creek. Mrs. Can Kay, wh day. Mrs. and Dan Christina the home Monday Miss Point, ai Olive, w Mildred Miss I Greensb( summer witi £ri< B. F. inburg, s J. H. I spent St J. S. from a v C., and Mr. ai daughtei ing: frien Miss I came Th with Mis Mr. ar Saturday Tyyson ment foi Severj oil of thj the StatJ in Sanfol Miss days in cle, Tha( Miss ^este, Margarej jTioon in