Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Feb. 27, 1931, edition 1 / Page 2
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M’- >>--■" ■'4FA' . ’'V^> .f ■ .X ■' ■ -' ■' -- , • ---^y ^:r-r- ~f^-- >' .' .• - ■ ^ ', - , m PAGE TWO \ /HE NEWSjOURNAL; BAErORO. K. C. PHTOAY, JBB. S7, * The News-Journal ■),it.. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY AT RAEFORD N. Q. SUBSCRIPTION RATES $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE PAUL DICKSON Editoi Entered as Second Class Mail Matter at the post office of Raeford, N. C., under Act or March 3 1879. RADIO ANI> GOOD SPEECH! speech and pleasantness of p’oice. Soon most announcers Much is being said, and^ arrived at this ideal and then iustlv so, about the influence! it became necessary for the •of r^dio 0,. the speech of the | “ 01 AinOriCSIlS. lllv, r^-F onnon+o SlrtTVifi aoilfV»PT*n of radio announcers. masses advent who are conscious that their Avords are reaching untold thousands, and who therefore exercise the greatest care in modulation of the . voice, choice of words and correct pronunciation, has brought before the people of Ameri ca correctness and good ex pression of speaking to an ex tent never before equalled. Educators and writers have tried to accomplish this for years, but it remained for the radio to present the problem of good speech in a national way. It is probable that the skilled workers in words who write the advertisements of America and the resonant voiced radio announcers who introduce programs to the ra dio public have had more to do with the rising interest in our language as a practical and beautiful thing than all the novelists, playwrights and poets of the world. Few peo ple could restrain a murmur of wonder at the skillfully wrought sentences which cast an aura of jbeauty around an electric washer or make a can of apricots seem a food the gods must envy. Words take on a new interest when they *cre polished, refined, skillfully related and presen ted to the v/orld in a voice of velvety smoothness. 'Listen ers realize, some of thenr for the"time that the lan guage is more than a practi cal tool, it is capable of strange beauty and power. In one particular, how ever, the announcers seem to err. For a while many A-/ere satisfied v/ith correctness of field of accents. Some southern announcers exaggerated the southern softness of speech until it became little more than a blur; others adopted the northern accent and de veloped a strange and liv-, bred tongue. Then the Eng- glish accent descended upon the microphone and “door” became “dawr” and the sim ple “a” broadened into im mense proportions. There are so many synthetic accents up on the air now that it is a pleasure to run across an an^ nouncer whose voice sounds American. Some of the ac cent fiends have even culti vated the ' broken Engli-sh which Maurice Chevalier has brought into prominence on the American screen. The radio has done great things in bringing to the A- merican public a realization of the posibilites of correct speaking, but it will do no good by the playing up of foreign accents. America has looked too long to European things as superior because they are^ European. Recogni tion of true values is one thing; conscious subservience the capitDl this week. One of the most vigorous diecussicnis of the present session todk place this week in the Senate. proposed action is not as'^aijnbitiouB and to pose ns a- .cure for, the unrightly and uiis^e features of concentrat ed highway advertising but is presented as a fair regula tion of it. The action in ques tion is a component part of the Budget Revenue bill which proposes, in part, a tax of three cents per square foot on billboard advertising. A probable result of its passage would be the lessening of lo cal highway advertising and a monoply for wealthy nation al advertisers. The naming of Struthers Burt, Southern Pines novelist as one of the men backing this part of the Budget Reve nue bill, is significant of one phase of the backing which the action receives. The work of the Sloathem Pines citi zens in the beautification of their town and the highways near it, is outstanding in the State. It was considered so important that a committee from the !Ewanis Club was appointed for this work alone. Their efforts have borne fruit in the form of rich winter grass and flourishing long is another. The natural A- merican tongue is not less lovely than the English or French accent. It should be retained for to modify it in favor of others is to admit an inferiority; whmhi does Mffit exfets. "• ( BSdgecooibe tamers fluKfS * 'Co operative porelMlNi of Ml poandb of lespedeza seed from tho Stanley County Farmers Staitual EmAMose. The order saved' $1919.50 for the. 70 farmers/taking part fik the order. NOTICE OF SALE OP LANO. Under and by virtue of the pow ers of sale contained in those two cerfafnf deeds of trust execiuted by W. A, ;McBr'yde and' wife, Otelia McBr^e to the undersigned Trus tee, for the Dundarrach Trading Co., Inc. TBs first said deed of trust Be ing datsd March 19th, 1927, and re corded in Book 58 at page 2S, and the second deed of trust being da ted MarcB 15th, 1930, and recorded In Book 58 at page 141, both in tire office of the Register of Deeds for Hoke County, N. C., default having been made In the payment of the' indebtedness^ secured by each said deed o ftmat, and the holder of ;same having demanded foreciosura by said trustee, as provided in each said deed of trust I will on Thurs day, March (twenty-sixth), 1931, at the hour of noon at the courthouse door in Raeftani, N. C., sell to the highest bidder for cash, the follow ing described tracts of laud; Situate and being in Antioch Township, Hoke County, North Carolina,, on Northeast side of Johns Branch, adjtdning lands of W. A. Brown and! others, beginning at a pine in the; NrE. side of Johns Branch, just belhwr the L Ford on said branch, and. runs N. 47 E. 17 chains to a pine in the line of a 100 acre survey iin the wMt edge of a pond; thence with the line of said 100 acre survey N 24 chains to a stake in said' ipond by two leaf pines but the proposition sweetgums; then Ni. to w. i6 chs of eliminatiiag' the unsightly # and 75 links to a.stofce by a dog- ® ' ^wood; thence S. 30 E.. 22 cbs. and THE SIGNS OF THE TIMES ; i The old criticism of over- 'numemus and unsightly hig^r- v/ay signs coosideri^ for yeanr 2>3r every society whirh loves- the ;potentfal beauty of North Carolina, reappears: in a bill discussed at length in WANTED and soon weatherbeaten signs has proved more stubborn. The other phase of the ac tion is shown’ in the fact that the State Cbramisaioner of Revenue, A, I. Maxwell fa vors the plan and two offi cials of outdoor adivertising companies were present at the hearing to oppose it. Mi, Maxwell decQired' that the present billboard tax. -was hardly remunerative enough to pay the collection and that the new law would be agreat improvement.. ' Adverrising company officials oppose cssc- tain restrictive: features of the new plan and declared that the present tax. couldl be raadte to yield thirty* thousand: dldr- lars instead of six: thousand, by energetic collection. Public iiAerest wall: oerffen- on the fact that the. passage of the bill would: regulate the number of signs om the highr ways to sosae.extentband wosaid i be a further step in the re- ; licving the tax situations It is a small step to fte sure; and one that to many/ may seem, insignificant but the steady, even if gradual. niDvemfifltof tax burden from the sfeoul- ders of the impoverishexilami holder, is'a sign 61 dawn in;!' a hitherto extremely grey sky —R. C. . LADY' BOOKKEEPER Apply ixi own handwiriting. Gwe agQ and experience; Highsmith Hospital INFLUENZA SPREADING Che& Colds-, at .pnce; with 666 TisdKe as a preventive.' Use 666 Sdve for EUiibies 31 UtiTtr to a stake by a dogwood; thence S. 30 E. 22 chains and 31 Unka to a pine, Bhawn^’s- conie.'*; now (W.m. A. McBryde's 10.6 acre tract; thence along thw line of said 10.6 acre tract S. 30 Ei 20.3T chains to a stake by two’ H&re® ^ Bryde's line! thence S 55 N. 10 chains to a uine, a corner; thence S, 35 W. 9 chains by attike' by two pines in the eastern efee; of W’ld branch; thence up the various cour- ses of the N-E edget of' Jobes 1 Branch; thence up the various courses of the N-E etfgffi of aaM Branch; thence up tire various I courses of the N-E edge of Jobes ■Branch N. 30 W. 22 chains; N. 70 W- IS chains; S. 28 “W", 42. cBhms-,-; N. 87 W. 15 chains to the begin- 'Eiitg;, containing 162 acres; more or less- ; Second tract, heginnine- at a iplie' • in the N-E side of Job'k- Branch, a little below Lawson Fonf, and runs ' N.. .gr E. 12 chains to a’ pine: in the lime of 100 acre survey; thence ;witftiaaid. line N 20 WI. 6 .chainffi to a- stake; thence N. 70 E. 44; chKhis. and 23 Tnu.ks to a stadrac By ai dbgr ■wxaal; tberree S. 20 E.. 22 clMiis anff 3T Smto to a piiMU thenc*; S.. 70 'W. 10 chains to a stake; thence S_ 85: E. 34 chains taj a pine.';; thence SL 35 chains tc» the edg® ct saiid Biamch; thence the • various courses to the beginning, comtain- ng 5 acres, more or.- less; TMs sale will be made suhjefit, to a first deed of tru'iU D»ade sairt W.. A, McBryde and wire, to, Chick- aanauga Trast Co., Trustee, dated lay 4tb, 1922, and miordcd iii Betofe 30' at page 478 HoKcp Count/ Regia- try. Which said deed of trast cov ers tract number one' llereah; con taining 162 acres. But does not in clude the second; pact N^. % as ahore described. Time of Sale; Thursday;, March 26th, 1931, at 12 V'Clock ML. Place of Sale:: Courthoatse door, Raeford, N. C. Terms qf Sal« Cash. This 24th day of Febcuary, 1931. 48-4t JESSE GIBSON,, Trustee. VPosted Feb. 24!*i 1931- A new to be etanted in Avery Coun^ this summer contett- pleates the grwftfg of head lettuce tor the Ihte aunrttSr merket. ' -DANGEROUS Ot/SINESS. Our stomach ana digestive systet are lined with membraiM; which ii delicate, sensitive and eai^y lnjure4 It is dangerou’S' business, then, to use medicines containing harsh dru£^ salts or minerals, wheii. we are con stipated. In addition to the possi bility of injuring the linings of our digestive system, these medicines give only temporary relief and..;may prove habit forming. The safe way to relieve constipation te with Her- bine, the cathartic that is made from herbs, and acts in the way nature intended. You can get Herbine at— RAEFORD DRUG COMPANY, CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT—4-room Residence, wa ter and Ifgftts, close to school. J, A. BAUCOM. 48-tf LOSIT^LADIBS' BLACK POCKET BOJBiK somewhere between post- office' and’ Teiephoite EIvchange. Re ward if returned to IMISS .MA'TTIE W1LS(5N, alt Telepfione office. It Oimdren'e Patent Leather Slippers, elxeh 5.1-2 toll, n^T ehIpmMt Just In 98c B A U C O M ^ S FOUND^ONE SOW PIG. red with black spots, about three months old, has token up at my lot Owner - can get same by jaylng tor this ad. JOHN McKT. BLUE.. 48-£t FOR SALE—Large Paper Shell Pe cans. Fihest (foanty, SOc per pound. J. R. CO'VrSTGTON cc FOR SALE^ONE FRESH YOUNG JERSEY COW.—J. D. MASON. TOM WiarSON’ iWATEBMELON Seed for sale.. Selected, graded, and treated^.. N. BARNET BLUE. 464t. BLOODTESTEF CHIffiKS'—K«Is, $14; Leghorns, IIS’ per 100—See the 50 cliick capacity Livu^An-Grow Brood er, raises the chicks in the home to three weeks of agee—Very idtean and labor sa^vin®—$2.25 eavb—Feeders and Waters for sate; RAEFORD HATCHERY—J. H. BLUE, 46-tf MEN-WOMEar—^Are you tired of working for others? If your income is too Small;: or if you are looking for something to d'o during your Ayftole or spare time ■write me at once. 2c stamp appreciated. J. MYERS, Importer, Box 184R, Tuck erton. N. J. 40-521 New lot Ladies’ Spring slip pers, NEW GOODS and New VALUES $1.95 up BAUCOM*S Good Quality iMjeni’s Wor]1c Shirts, blue, qray, etc., sizes to 17 49c B A U C O M * S See our NEW VALUES Men’s Dress Shirts- 75c, 98c, $1.50 B A U C O M * S in New lot of Romper Cloth let all colors' and patterns, spe- (dal per yard 10c B A U C O M * S Unbeatable VALUES In Men’s VPferfc Glov^ — see what you can now get for 25c, 3^, 49c BAUCOM VS IVferYs Good Heavy Work Coato. reduced to only $1.49 B A U C O M » S COATS SPOOL COTTON 6 Spools for 20c' B A Ui C O M ’ S B A U C O M * S . CASH STORE Raeford, N. C. A good Place to Tradp.^ Since 1908. .r ■'^1 An ANNOUNCEMENT by your Fertilizer Dealer Now 2 in a Series appearittg in this newspaper M y purpose in being here in business is to supply at a fair price what you need A DREAM OF TOMORROW! THE great captains of indus try today are men who had merely a vision and energy a generation ago. They worked hard, they made their dream take shape in concrete and steel and glass = :Most likely it was their BANKER whose counsel and financial aid gave them their start. Money talks : :It is to the weaver of the Dream of Tomorrow that this Bank dedicates its sup port. COAL We Stock Coal All the Year and Spe cialize in the Highest Grade. to make successful crops. This year I am in better position tlian ever be fore to help you. I have contracted for my supply of Chilean Nitrate at the lowest price in years. I can pass this saving on to you. I recommend Chilean Nitrate...the nitrogen the 8outh relies on for real money-making crops. .1. ■v CHILEAN Nitrate is the natural nitrate Nowhere in the state do we believe you can buy “BLUE STAR ’ and ‘‘BLUE DIAMOND” coal as low as our price. For those wanting a cheaper coal we have a few cars for less than the above coals. IT PAYS TO BUY THE BEST We deliver rain or shine, sleet or snow. Hoke Oil & Fertilizer Co. PHONE:240 J. -•■virA M fertilizer. For more than 100 years it has been used to improve American crops. A little under the crop is important but a liberal top or side dressing is your insurance of profitable results. There is just one thing to think of when you buy your nitrate. Say CHILEAN to your dealer. That one word is your protection and his too. Insist on Chilean and you get the one best nitrogen for your crops. Remember the two kinds—Original Chilean (Crystalline) and Champion Brand (Granulated) both natural nitrate. !IITI»At»;:| LOWEST PRICE NAtURAI NEW 100-lb. BAG The bag without a backache. Chilean mtmteofSoda EDUCATIONAL BUREAU 403 Professional Bldg., Raleigh, N. C. In writing for literature or information, please refer to Ad No, 68 ADVERTISE" OR BE FORGOTTEN! if /itfH ^ L
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Feb. 27, 1931, edition 1
2
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