PAGE FOUR Bus «: Msnday at ING CO. •IRant. I VANCE. ■<•***• * ( * M pUrtd M »• real uarc* a* Ualds t«i N. C,B* oacend class matter. .V «*q AilMMfcJ PltM i> owoiueHsir MWttlai U fhp' <M far rapublication ast othervfaa %r«d»w* la tMa popst. ' nfr < B | M tb* )a*al novro yobiisbad hers *J*. All right* al ssiprttieatlM °t vp*'** l t*-|- *-*■-- |mia ara alto reserved WEDNratIAtMOMtMIWL Nf>Y. I.W ■’ f ■ "z- ' —a— **-•**• ~ GET BEHIND THE FAIR ,2 . Perhaps fifty county fairs ex ist in North Carolina. Where ver one foes lo North or South Carolina he a«ea advertise •lent* of the local events and jnost of the communities take treat priis in them. In some counties fairs operate at ■ con siderable profit. The Wapne county fair it to lie made this year or ruinedjf It up to the people of G<Ms horo to tay hr their aetioos Which IfwS be. Wilaon. Craven, Lenoir and other coun ty fairs of this section ere Im portant events. Never before .were these- fairs more needed than today when diversified farming, animat husbandry, pMttry and hoc prowing are so badly needed There is the oppdrtunity to make the Wayne fair this year a njoet successful event. It is \ffk list of the fairs and for that IMaaon will fall heir to many attractions, especially in the racing events, the poultry and five stack exhibit*. But the fMr-caaaot go of its own w< ftrd. ls it is to be a , ftp people of Goldsboro must get behind ft ami at once. " The Woman’s .Club, *lw*ys Mmammlttn eaefying on when a affair is h«ing hand led, could find no field of useful jMMe more greatly needing its attention. Only two weeks re main. In that time the fair iPia ought to, be so popular ised that the public would be- IpEue enthusiastic on the suh and enough season tickets ■l*o insure it* goyig over pKi%p. This can be done. It oertaialy should be done. Goldsboro needs nothing more frau&y than going after some , iMug In aa energetic and de termined way so that the en thusiasm of the entire popula tion might be aroused. No other object tor the moment .presents so great an opportu nity for thia as the cukiaty fair Every ottisrn of Goldsboro ought to become an enthusiastic booster from now on. Urn fair this year, in tha light of what other counties have done and in view of the present condition of the coun trj.lt a challerige to Goldsboro --rii _ CHIOWNb AND OXEN The New» has had on its: dealt far some days an article from a feminine citiaen who write* gbout Cxars, Chickens and Raflifion. kis a very interesting «r S tifle, hdt alas, the writer has given ao imfkatios as to her fcdaptity. and that U why she 1$ perhaps wondering why her article has not been printed. Host newspapers have troub led enough from what thev wiffe*|J|emeelve» and hence nun* will lake umm them»e!ve* the burden* which might ariae frqnt printing an anonyinou* article. The paper print* ar tfcs»a without the •ignatur* of *tU writer* often, but never un lee* the name of the writer i* , gifien to tIM paper in tanAdenn- And m a pledge of good faith l (fear correepondent who tell* flyout the tapoeition of a relig ||pn neighbor who turn* her RHpajßMta upon, the neighbor- HHTw perhaps not aware of the rule, hut no doubt need* count'll and adriee. Striving nlwnya to please, we therefore aa w* know there is those which ■Mr Up the fhdghbor’s flower ■■e g** i e,> i * m Vwiiili' •> * ] th,y die. Urn the m shall sorely be sinned. end hi* S**k shall net be 1 cairn Bel the owner el Die ex shall |be prlt. But If tbe e* ware VMM to peak ' hi* hom in time peat, and it kntk been testiSed to it* owner, and be hath net kept kim ia, but that be bath kilted a man or a woman; tke ox shall hr itanrd, and hi* owner ekall able be |NM I# If there be laid upen him a turn el money, than hr shall glv# for Ihe raaaom of Si* life whateeever ia laid upen him By analogy, we would say that if the neighbor's chickens eat up one’* garden before the neighbor has been warned that one has a garden, it would be right for one to slay the chick en*, but not. to opt thorn or csium hubby to oat them, which our cerrespondeat seems to have dese. Or, if tha neighbor bath Ist liter chicken* out after their bad charaeWr had beau duly testified to their owner, than they may also be kjjled end the neighbor alee. But wheth er they may be eaten trader I such circumstances we know not. * But since it ha» become rath er bad form to kill a neighbor in these days, we Would counsel that, in Keu es her life, the ask! neighbor should be allowed to pay a sum in ransom thereof, say about the number of sheok-j els that wofld be neceesgfy to 1 replace the damage to the gar den and flowers, and somewhat j more by wey of peaitive effect, which eves the modern courts allow. As to Czars, >e find no men-! ition of them. While as to r«r ! ligion, that ia *noth«r story ’ upon which it doth not become S heathen to discourse. AT LAST SOMETHING FOR THE FARMER Many people have not caught , the full significance of what ia, : going qji in relation Jto the i American farmer. In Louis-: ! villa the other day there were gathered representative* from all the great co-operative mar keting association* and steps taken to bring them hU into an association with common repre •tici,iatjyes, common spokesmen and commoh objectives in thei .development of * co-operative j fmrfcitifig. These steps, says ;the Courier-Journal may prove a revolution in the fortunes of the American farmer. . *Thie is the first time.” any* Aaron Sapiro, the highest au thority in thia field, “that the' different tobacco growing aec tiona, raising every type of to bacco, have sent delegate* to discus* their common problem* and to take steps to meet themj in common. This the tobacco group* are doing in a large vis ioned way, and the Inter-Co-op* erative Conference Committee, in which the tobacco as*ocia-j tiona are represented, have the same ends ii\ view, but with a much larger field io which to work." Os IMh larger undertaking he sags: 'They era preparing for their *most important dag* by making arrangements for the Washington convention that will mark the beginning of national {cooperative marketing of all farm commodities. Through jsuen action, and by no other means, oan the farmer be guar anteed s fair aharei of the ma terial wealth he creates.” It is because the farmer, and the friends of the farmer, are! at last learning the truth of that last sentence that this movement has developed, with 1 nuist hoparf ul prospect* of suc-i cess. "Through *ueh action, stid by no other means, can the farmer be guaranteed a fair share of the material wealth he creates.’* Other means have ■ 111*1111111111 I , 111 111 ■■■Til T - *- L ■ BRINGING UP FATHER . . t r f BY GEORGE McMANUS \ *. • * ** ’ i • ■ ■ j- — been tried, time without mfjud; other means are being tried to day Rut their efficacy has .been only partial or nil. #Wher* partial it has been at the pro ducing end of the farmer’s op -1 emtio net Admirable provisions have !>een made for teaching the farmer scientific farming. Many books have bean written; many periodicals are published; schools are maintained; the Federal Government supports S Department of Agriculture for special research, experi ment and instruction—all for the benbflt of the farmer. Rat the benefits the fanner has thus received have been in the increase of Me products and the improvement of their quality. Whee he some to selling what Ihe grew ha wan at the mercy of the buyer. He has beep, the only factor ia big business who had no voice in hi* busineeei tbe only perty to contracts in which only tlie party on ~the [Other side counted. He has had to take what was offped for hie product.,or eat it, hura H, or allow it to rbt. The farm is the hisis sf all prosperity yet the farmer has had the smallest share df the prosperity of the country. That system, or lack of sys tem, ia gsing to become obso lete if the plans for general co operative marketing work out. And there Is every encounage ment fee confidence that they will Work out. At first there was an impression Shat co-op srative marketing organiza tion* would be practicable only when handling certain product* confined to limited territories But that has bees proved a mis take. Co-operative marketing i* by no means restricted to certain fruiia and hurley to bacco. It ia being effected ini other and wider fields; and if, the convention which has been arranged to meet in Washing ton shall not be the precursor of the application of the pRn to practically'the entire field of farm production, the signs of tb*’limes are misleading. ' -L Alatm ur with ' r.oon TIMES AND SAP • (Monro* Journal) If you want lo find out Ut* financial , condition of th* country, auk Mr. At) Joocpli. If (Ain*a ar* uCUI* Sadly hr l*t> t<»* a*i*a fkr*t. Nu riutomura ton** from *4l daa.o*. hi«b Mid law, ar* ■* outline th*m *«o<ta h* qnirklv Murn* IS* urn*r»l finnnriat aha** of th* mi inn My. TSM y**r. he fin-la, props ar* in pretty (o*d *irruM*to*«>a. > TSor« ia iitti* tampiuint of thr boil i <r*a>vi|. On* man did complain a IlUt* j (S* oth*r day about th* p«aky inx-cta, j and tSi* rolloquy took pfoc* bctw**n krm and Mr. du**uk t'uatom**) “Can't pay tkat priflU. Tk* Soil art.nl’, *atin( m* ap." Mr. Joarph: "You ar* wrong. Thr butt w*#*tr» a htolling." ’ * I aalomtr: "How'i that T" Mr. Jorcph: “It it hadn't b«*n f*r thr boll wrrvll th* South Would h*»* piad* *o Much rotlMt that thr gric-* wawld hat* b**n about I* c*nt» th* poanri. Mailn t you rather pick half a crop of rattan far twrnty-faur rent* Mian a what* rr#p for 10 c*nu?'' Cuitomrr; "You'r* right. I hadn't thought obout It that way.” HINCLK BI 1.1. ET KILUI TWO •aid to lla** p**a Vlrad By Man Mobbed of it Cent, tm Hold l’p / i VNMVNtbWN, Pa., Urt at -A-ntfi*' bullet, find aa th* r«a«lt of an *lto|M ; •• c*at hold-op, took th* llo*» of two woo h*ro today and Jakr MlM*d, traced by bUodhound*. la ia jail' at Point Mart** charged With tk* ahooting. I’olir* ray Joarph Brown held up Mth Irr i.*d obtaim-d M cent* and Millrr found flrown later in card gam* nt Near Uodc** aad fired St him. The ball pnatrd through Brown’* heart and cnntinorvd on throngh Mdyar Uuiru'r - head, killing both inatnntly. With th* *ar*ptloa of Waahlagtoa **h*r* a new pilot may b* plaoml at th** l»i-lm, oil of the big league club* M-ent likely to aland pat oa their pro mt utanayrr* ■ •• ~ii - . !•••#»• «.#,• • t • • • • • * - ! • HHTTfWY IN THR • MAKING • • I >i t M |l •)**.*•• *• J 11 ' Tr ‘ ‘ I j' TOUAT-S gVKNTS ■* t All Saint’a Bay. b On* h*nd*«4 y«or» ago today th# ' firM |irt**n*e w*a *a**i»*d In th* In diana Statu priaen at Jcff*raaavilt*., The Palmer hoy** ia Pklrago, *•* «g | th* moat hlWorl* of • *»»u*a AiO* r *«o hotel*, today om*ra span tia MU ! year. Bt. Bv« Moray J. Mihail, biahop of i tk* ProUaUnt Epi»e*p*l «\M*o* of ' Atlanta, today **Mbr*t*a hU fifth aq ! Mvi-raary In thr *pl»eopßt«. tmete, X. Iluekoo, H«o**tloy of Slotot to to *e*ok tonight la Coopog tiaioa, fa Ne« Varfc arty, ia koboff of tk* Bopaktroao State tacSot. loader a io .do* «a halt* 1 otrelo* tkraoghowt Mr Bomioh.* ar* io Ot to** today far th* annaaal *o*«dntioo of thi Canadian EdocatfoOol Aaao ciatK>a Th* Oral* Vator* Aat. *M«b pr*- vido* for th* aoptrolahm By tk* Sec retary *f Agnrultur* of th* trading to grata fotaro* on thr *Mhang*» throughout th* United State* cornea into opetalion today. •* , COM V BNTIOffU OrmflHG TOO AY \ of St. Lout*- Nation*! Awoofatian Os Practical SrfngrlaUng Kagfooeru Golumbu*. Social Welfare Coof«r*n**. Portland, Uregoo- Oregon Hamnt Hyglrn* Aaooctntfon. Tnrrlngtoa, iIoWK- Cwartiailt * Son day School Aaaoejotion. , (iilhiMt, K. C.*—North Cartdina Confer*nc* M. B. Church, South. Burfreraboro, T*an—Tran*»o** Sr clety of th* D. A. R. x D«* Moin**. la.—Uw* Stat* T*a«k --| hr*' vAaa*cioti*«i. I •• TODAY'S CALENDAR Os SPORTS Saariag—Mrotfag of taatafky Jorh iry Clab, at Latania. Mwting of Mary land Jochoy Clab. at Piailtco. . Cycllag Socoihl day *4x-da» rar* ia chidng*. Wmailing—Btanialau* Zbyatko *a. j Cffil IlinrhWy, at Bouton. Boxing 4m) Britton **. Mickey ' Walker, ID romada. at N*w York. I o r t- IR TIB DAT’S NBWS • A* director of th* Metropolitan Mo arum'of Art, of Now York, Edward Sobinaon. »h* todoy *nt*r* upon hta *sth Year. i» th* interpreter and guard ian of on. of greoteat repoai- Torle* Os artittl* prop*rfir in th* world. Mr. Rohlnton it a natl.r of and a graduate of Hafrard in the rtaa* ] of *7*. After l*a»ing the anlreralty hr apent flVe yqar* In Kdrop, ttudying the work* of fii<* rifit |R» H**H for t fifteen month* w» 1 G**«r* and »pr«t three aaiuvrU-ra ht th* Upl«*r*lty of Berlin. B*turntai *# AkerW*. ho b*-| ram* curator of claaoiral aatiquilic* at th* Bo«l*n Mureqna of Bin* Art*. In, limit h* waa mad* dinfetar of that in - alitution. Several >*ar* later ho Waa called t* th* Metropolitan Muaaum of Art* a* aaalatanl to Sir Pardon Clarke,' who W*a than *1 tha head Jt th* mu ***m. In tStt) Dr. Bohlnoko **• mad. director, being th* firct native Ataer-' iooa to be ahoaea to that -fmaitieti . 1. ,aar't O * TOBAVW ANMIVIBSdkBIBS tahs John Tat lo*. th* aooocaoar of Brtghoui Youag u hood of th* Mormon cMeeh. hora la Sagland Ditd July U. tsef - liZt—Thr Cairndonian Caual in SratlanA ronaerting th* North , Sam with the-Atioalie, waa opeaod. IM7- Fiva ikosiSß* worr rtotanrrd to death for th# murder of a poltao officer in Manrhoater, England. tm At I'urtlaad. Ore, 3h lien* were loet whra an eloatrlo oar went through an opea drawbridge into the rteer. UWi Th* new Conemaaieaal Ll braay in Waabingtoo waa opened to th* pohlit. Ihot—The Heath Carolina aad We»t Indian Eapoauion at tSartoaton. S. C., waa apeaed. I*l* Th* Ngtr Slleorance ia the liniled State* waa increased to 8 pound* per prnon per month. l*l» Cardinal Morrer, the Belgian ! prelate, nailed from for hom*. ONE YEAR AGO TODAY King Alcxaadrr of Jwgo-Slavia Waa welronied ia Brlgrad*. Senator Wataoa of Ooorga charged that Anirnran soldier* have booa hang.,l without trial. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Dale of Ahcrcura, th* premier peer -- - ---so* ***- , VKia. .V ; r -- —?*.•":. of Heroic Cha^ains mm* ,-Jft * " > a wwm - .i j^r AW, „• *' j ora .*?**>>■ 'J / w tr* y P y'• ” Wrts prog** iiman win I tablet. liy Yilaa Itaorhka I’aeff of Beal on. waa uw vMU, l an the wail of the third fbair of'the Maasiichuaettu utuMhuOM hi Boa ‘Tl I* th * ,n, ? Bty ot *** S ""* r dtorgymeo fXitMoSc aad Prt.MOtuUi wa* Hies hi tarrb'o-As .hardalim during th* World War. tm* of th* Bgure* ** J*** l ** FnUwr Joha M. DeVallm. t atl.rdh print hf Now Bodford, aad tb* if??,**. y ,llw Dnahef. Proleirtaat rlorgyiaaii of Yhiwrqotrr. of Ireland, born £>* year* ago today. Hon. Kodotph* Unßcux, speaker of tht Dominion House of Commons, horn in Mohtreal, M yt-ars ago today. Hon. Newton Wealey Rowell,'long a prominent figure In Canadian public Ilf*, borg rt" County Middles**. On tario. N> year* ago today. Huston Thompson, former Assistant Attorney Ocneral of th# United States, n*W a member of the P*der*l Trad* CoMmiaoion. bom at LowMburg. Pa.. 4T year* ago today. Georg* W. P. Hunt, Democratic nom inee for governor of Arkansas, born In Leuleville, Ky„ tut year* ago todoy. Cart Mays, pitehtr of the New York !***•• bnaehall team, born in Louis ville, Ky., 30 yesra ago today. •ELATED HONEYMOON IS BRIEF. FOB DEATH CALLS BMIDEGHtNIM PITTSBURGH, —After let* than three, day* tbe hrtd# of th* man who way her iweetheirt at lg and who married her at 7§. Mrs. Amanda Danku ia a ' widow again, for when phe awok* la | their hofa* 4n Ea*rch*r street ■ hjy morning she dla*ov*r*d her husbaiM lying dead it her aide. Death wn, u|. j Arlbated to opoplexy. The, romance of the two began mot* than three seer* year* ago, wheri thdy were li-oraing the three R’a in a little | school house. They planned to marrfc. i fRr el'll »«r eame naif yndng'Juhn Itnnka Joined the colors and fought throughout the struggle in the army of thy North. When he ww« ma«teivd out. the bqy, caught by the spirit qf «d --ventpre, went West to ahek his fortune. RventunHy he apimrevttly forgpt His sweetheart in the East and married m. Oregoti, where ho settled down to | lag. ’ Th* girl left behind married an other. Beveral year* ago Danka, who had prospered, retired from hi* Oregon farm and- returned to the aecnq> of his boy hood. Ht and hi* wife established a home in Norfolk ajreet. Mr*. Dank* died last December. Shortly afterward Danka ascertained that hie first *w*«t heart, then Mr*. Thomas, wax alone like hiiaieif, her husband having died. The obi-lime mart ship waa renewed and th* two. Danka, 7*. and Mrs. Thomas, 7d, were married Thoraday. 0 pr- MEX MAhEH A BOFFT AI T t-OOD LANDING ________ ■’■t ' DALLAS, Texas. Out. 31. flannel Ucrnaadcs, labou r foil- JO stories ilewq, aa elevator shaft, landed ia n wbcdl barrow es motur, and stepped oat ufi hurL Through a iaiswralerrlanding of Sig nal* the ekvator on the thiqeonih floor wkcn- lie;uarules was working Waa > towered unknown to him and when he Stepped fur H, dowa he went. He Cauabt up-witb tke elavaAof at the third floor, landed in the soft aiortar. lie steppvd oat uahutt at tha betloxn flair and cpnlinued working after she bad scraped off some of th* mortar. ( Th# Calaxily of golfing stars in and arauad Bosloa has bean strengtheaeJ materially by the adsiitma of Bobby lone.*. Ok* i* n«w a student at Mar-: card ‘.Hatgrrt* recent mutest* seem to indicate tkat Foeltr Stanford's grldrrs k*v* lost their eld-time punch. _i : ! V 'CASUAL -'.I ENCOUNTERS B> LEABV W AKKhh ABAMff! ’ J. •%J t’ I , 1 I I ; % -nr r-I--T- - The name qf Jy« Simmons, alino "Rab bit,” who *4* foqnd .by tbe police ixa • i the 4hrly bbbrl ot Monday morning l ' I with a stick of dyoamito ia each hand, | boat an blowing up tha northern end : of Goldsboro and incidentally the City! Hall, has been changed to "Dynamite,” I OBeers Nick Gwatm-y and H> \* urd said yeaterdny. They consider tlilt name quite appro priate now, although Chief E. J. Tew who arrested Simmons doe* pot seem ; to, think it Is quite expressive enough. | Opinions of others seems to be that TNT Would be a more appropriate name. ; Nevertheless, in th# word* of the late Ben Dixon MacNVill, of the New# and I Observer, "It I* 4 ‘far cry' from ‘Robblv’| ;to TNT." It In entirely too far. tcp-Tio ' dolt* frank, to suit either Mirk and i Hy. Although they were no more in terested in going to glofy with Joe Bim motni than w*x Chief Tew. Still, they de cided lo compromise on "Dynamite." After all, they l do not consider dynamite such a mild thlhg, and although Sim mons waa fined for committing a nuis- j unce, Nick and Hy nre Mgnv-d that he ' did not commit half fh<* nuisance In; 1 ! would have vmmilted hml he eipltnli-d 1 that charge of dynamite any ncarce, th* j j City Hall than the North I\>le. . - O , HIGH GRADK COTTON AT LOW t’RfMtrCTIOM « OST Continued supremacy of American [cotton in world trade is dependent upc i thp production of rottoa of high quali ty at ri-latircly low cost, according "o tAe United buttes diportynent of agricuj | ture its I'JZI yrsr book, pa^ltshefi. I Froductton of high' quality cun be | continued nr r,' tsiri-d tbrutiuii adoption Inf pri.vi ii vor ii , whovt supoeior var fictera of cotton M l>u kept puny Is lis xald. The custom umong ittowcis of j j planting many different varieties in ll»- same locality, the practice of ueteg or ' Vihury seed for pJbiiUbk and i Ike papular idea (jiat cotton vsruti.-s "run out” are also touched upon. Concerning the boll Weevil, it is **H | that a profitable crop of cotton may : be rgised hy adopting certain mYusurr which will retard the pent under orll I - t>ary .cirruoixtoetces. The ps* ol cal rinm arsenate, Io dry dust form, which ! I ha* prhved fseirty Wtrrc.-ssful, Is recom j mended. K. gsrdiriK cost of production, the dr- j partmeal say* that the grower who know* hi* own actunl eo»t | ttoa and bis average or Mandurd fig j fairway to stop imall leaks in hi* c* ure* to compare with his own, is in a pens** and to reinforce those features of hlo practice in which he ha* an ad vantage. . DR. W. L. MORRIS CMroprartoY OfTice Hfmri—S-12, 2-5 - Office 208 (Irani'"Builtlinrf Or. Maude E. Weidman CXiratfßrtor ' 400 415 Gram ifldff. ~ Phont 4?t WBJfNEABAY MOWUMB. BOY.lg4m- llipli Umbn fiuiri Them an of |sillle Worth and ' Rcfums to Aid GREAT VAJ.IIkIiN ° fiTATHH WATER GO4JUHKS i t i u. Fish in the streams of Waynt county ar* being killed by JsM hind, of Mlegal i methods, secordiigg ta Mr. J. M. Ht one, ■ j impeekor *f th* deportmeat of fisher ies ot the State, wha lately mad* an I inspection of thi* territory under tb* direetloo el th* Slate I'oiVniiaaionrr of Fisheries, Aa a" malt of th* Hlrgal dost ruetlon ef-fish the pablie baa coun to think that the'fish of this sactiun arc of little value, Mr. Stone says, and they tk ere tore hesitate to g»v* lafor mat ten necessary to pot s stssp to ths ' lliegol methods. Me. hton* aoyt that j he ho* been untiring in hi* ssforts to. ! round sip th* violators but it handicap- K'd by this relactanee of peopio to giv# 1 itiv-se faets ia a letter to The News, and then continues: * This cOaSitfsn I* lsrgs-lyli duo : to thr fart that your fish ar* being killed by sit kind* of UlSiirai methods daring Iheir spawning season. Your river* and their tributaries asre rbing dynimited and lined with tray* and nets. All kind of illegal killing meth- - od» being arsed ased far ths doniroc i lion of fish, making it isnpoaaibte for i the fishing industry m th* tnksrior of 1 tbe ttatc to develop to any dpprt i eight* commercial value to tha people. The United Ktatet Bares* of Fish i-rles roncedes to North CaroMaa the greutest State in thr onion for develop ing the fish industry. With our sniMs pulcd territory with our thousands of square mile* of rivers and sounds, sec ond to none we stand today in tbe t foremost of all other states. This should make us mar* snxiont to pro tect this Industry. In th* year IMH there were marketed from ths vaster* of North Carolina MH.ItG pounds es ; black bass alone, raises 1*8.187,00 to *ay nothing of nil -other specie* SM.- 00,800 worth of fish, oyster* etr. are marketed from the waters of North Carolina annually, I mention these fact* in order- that th* pcoplt will awaken to Ut* ipet that ■ : we pant to bqjld jjP the fish industry . and to do to we must pYoteot ths sms l !- ; out streams a* well a* the largest rivers an (tsonsdo. and to do this we must ibWff itth*, heart*. uqwmtslfw *1 *kf«W -lap wkidiog ciIMM-e in tbe worts cf 1 stamping out the iUvgat billing of the fish. Kindly let me have., any and all the ePldglirc possibly lo ohtSin,-gn<|-I will .itpestiget* and prustgut* b|f violt (W* withuai-irjic or fsvof, . , I sis, yours truly,'; J. H- STONE,:Jltate Inspector, Department of Fisheries, Wilmington, N. C. ■===£: ’.iyT ,i_l The Lamp and the Home The lighting of tho lamp * at homu han always bepn ths Kig mml of uppndM'hinK Hvcning anti tilt* return of thc r 'family from their toil. Lamps have Iwen ukadr lieau tiful to add ‘to thv welcome which the home innpireb. In the development of the Lighting Art —l fte < transition from oil loj{Btt_lu_A)ectriclty— > lamp ilssFgnpfiie often the re sult of precedent. , Tim Duplex lighting Table i End Floor Litmp examples i of application of electricity ac i wording to motlorn lighting principles. What kind of lamp have you to greet the toilers on their re turn? Have you one that tends grace and charm to yftur home? Have you one that distributes so that it ig a pleasure to read by; anil at tho same time have sufficient light for the rest of the mom? 4 us and let our naleanian ten you moro about this won derful lamp. Ask him to bring one HO you can »*• it, » r «ee them in our show room. CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY - *i n ‘irr* i— *ll ■ r * %

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view