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The Canton Enterprise Volume 22 Number 29
Item
Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).
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FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1926. THE CANTON ENTERPRISE, CANTON, N. C. JPAGE THREE MORE LAWS INSTEAD OF LAW ENFORCEMENT Then so many laws proposed nowadays imposing special restrictions or obligations upon Individuals, that a citizen who attempts to obey the law has a constant feeling o straint and uneasiness lor tear he viil overstep a legal harrier. A compulsory automobile liability ""Insurance law Lines into effect in Massachusetts <xn January 1, 1927, Every automobile owner will have lo do one of three things: First, take out a motor vehicle liability policy, or, second, furnish a motor vehicle nubility bond, or. third, deposit $5,- 000 ill cash or securities with the state. The general laws of every state define individual resopnsihility and provide for the payment of damages for injurious acts. The new Massachusetts law does not alter the status of the genera] personal liability law but imposes new requirements and restrictions on the action of the individual, instead of enforcing existing laws to protect the public. It makes living more intricate and expensive, "What is really needed," says G. F. Miehclhacker, Vice-President of Great American Indemnity Company, of New York, ''is some efficient means of preventing the occurrence of automohile accidents. Whether compulsory automobile insurance will have this effect remains to be seen. It is not unlikely that the large body of motor vehicle owners who are compelled to insure for the first time, will feel that they must take chances heretofore avoided. Where the careful and careless, efficient and inefficient drivers are all placed on an equal footing, there may he a tendency for the careful and efficient driver to relase to some | extent the precautions which he has ' always observed. If these reactions take place, the frequency of automobile accidents will increase." handling the dishes and silver which are kept in the cupboard. Croup the equipment in the kitchen into working centers for preparing raw food, cooking, serving and dish washing. Store food supplies as near the food preparation center as possible in cupboards or recepti proof against dust and household pests. Provide good wall or drop ligbts. or lamps in brackets, over the sink and stove and any other work centers, so that when your tasks continue after dark, yon can see what you are doing. If yon have a window above your sink you will find it a great blessing. Arrange for kitchen ventilation to carry Off cooking odors and maintain a comfortable temperature. Choose finishes for Boor, walls and woodwork that are easy to keep clean, durable and pleasing to the I've. Set sink, work table and other large equipment at such height that I he worker doe-s not have to stoop over them. Running water—both hot and cold, if possible is the greatest boon a housekeeper can possibly have in a kitchen. Your State extension people will tell you ways to install a water system inexpensively if you have none. Provision for the sanitary disposal of waste and garbage is also extermely important. Think (irst, last and always of suiting the kitchen to the work done in it. This practical test can he applied to every feature from the floor plan to the hanging of the smallest saucepan. POLICE CHIEFS ENDORSE ALL STEEL MOTOR CARS MAKE KOUR KITCHEN CONVENIENT Although the details of arrangement of every kitchen are more or less problems in themselves, the general scheme remains the same because the chief work in all is the preparing and serving of food, and •washing of dishes and utensils. "Make your kitchen so convenient that you can reduce your hours to a minimum," suggests the Bureau of Home Economics of the United States Department of Agriculture. How is your ktichen situated in relation to the dining room, the front and back doors, the cellar the telephone and the pantry? Make, if you can, in the connecting wall between the kitchen and dining room a two-way cupboard for storing china and passing food and dishes. If you can also place your sink adjoining this cupboard on the kitchen side, you will save many steps in "One California chief pointed out that not only did the all-steel body protect passengers in unavoidable wrecks, huh that the reduction in the size of the pillars supporting the top gives the driver a better view of the load and permits greater opportunity to avoid accident than the bulky ten used in closed cars. "This is a sincere tribute to Dodge tirothers, the (irst automobile manufacturers to recognize the strength and safety of the all-steel body," said Mr. Branson, of the Branson .Motor Company, local dealer, in commenting on this article. "The all-steel body is destined within a few years, 1 belive, to replace the wood framed automobile body just as certainly as the all-steel railway coach and the all-steel steamship have replaced those made of wood." AUGUST ENDS PLANTING FOR FALL PLANTING Approval of all steel automobile body construction was expressed by all but 84 out of approximately 500 police chiefs interviewed on the subject of Highway Accidents and their Prevention, according to statement i,n a recent issue of the Literary Digest. These police chiefs from all parts of the country were interviewed in the making of a survey which was submitted to the Second National Conference on Street and Highway Safety, held recently in Washington tinder the supervision of Secretary of Commerce Hoover. As quoted in the Digest, Harold D. Buttenheim, editor of the American City Magazine, in submitting the results of the survey to the conference, said: "The last question dealt specifiie- ally with lowering the fatalities by constructing closed car bodies of steel on the same safety principle as the all steel railway coach. All but eighty-six answer this allimativc- ly. A number of the chiefs were decidedly emphatic in their answers, relating experiences of theirs which indicated conclusively that in the wrecks involving all steel bodies they had found the strength of the steel had saved the lives of passengers. <^S^<^<S^<$k»<Sx$*S»$k^<Ss^<3><£<S>^<SkS^ ig the parson is not the only expense attached to getting married. The young man who is going to promise to endow a young lady with all his earthly goods should have something with which to endow her. else the promise is empty. An account in this hank, the total of which ambles across four spaces in the dollar column of a bank book will come in bandy- in the young benedict: and as the country editor said: "Now is • C time to subscribe." r-TSM The Champion Bank and Trust Company Canton, North Carolina I ? The latest planting dates lor many vegetables for the fall garden close by the middle of August. Frost is too near to plant later than this and the vegetables will not mature so as to be of value to the grower. The plants of cabbage, tomatoes and celery must be set during the first half of August to insure their maturity before killing frost occurs: The first week in August is not too late to plant late Irish potatoes in eastern North Carolina. The succession plantings of snap beans should be continued all over the State and the first sowings of such crops as lettuce, spinach, turnips, mustard, Chinese cabbage and kale should be made. Where tomato wilt is present in the garden soil, the planting of such wilt resistant varieties as the Norton or Marglobe is recommended. It is unnecessary to stake tomatoes unless the season is unusually wet. Unstaked vines will produce a larger crop though they will be a little later. Tomatoes, Irish potatoes, celery and cucumbers should be sprayed frequently or dusted with Bordeaux mixture to check the serious diseases which affect these crops. The late summer and fall is the most Continued On Page Six THE ADVANCED SIX *-| C 9 C 4-DOOR SEDAN ^LDjLD f. o. b. factory "Enclosed Car" motor, 7-bearing crankshaft, full force-feed lubrication, air cleaner, gasoline filter, oil purifier—plus 4-wheel brakes and 5 disc wheels—included at no extra cost. Wonderfully smooth and quiet, this Advanced Six 4-Door Sedan with its big "Enclosed Car" motor offers also 25% greater power and 23% faster pick>up. Come in and DRIVE it yourself. BELL MOTOR CO., Inc. Canton and Waynesville cF8 *S for Economical Transportation ** Coach er $ Coupe •• R>arBoor$ Sedan •• Landau $ fc-lbnThiek* ajQC (ShutuChify U&r& 1-TbnThxk. $ SSO Chassis Only sJ%J\M Small Down Payment Convenient Terms All prices I. o. b. Flint, Mich. —Chevrolet in enjoying the spectacular popularity ever ^ear-shift car. Over 3o0,000 people already purchased the Improved Chevrolet this year because no other car offers such modern design, a performance so smooth, so powerful or so many quality features at Chevrolet's low prices. Come in! See this truly modern car—drive ttl Get acquainted with its superior features— learn the numerous advantages of Chevrolet ownership. Then you will understand why there has been such a sensational world-wide increase in the number of Chevrolet buyers. J So Smooth—So Powerful RUSSELL MOTOR COMPANY Phone 262 Canton, North Carolina. QUALITY AT LOW COST
Object
Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).
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The Canton Enterprise (19??–1971) was published in Canton, North Carolina by the Canton Publishing Company. Its preceding title was The Canton Observer (circa 1900-), and succeeding title was The Enterprise (1971-1996).
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