Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / May 3, 1929, edition 1 / Page 5
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s mus r k? 1n'TspOrtSina? 0f per AndTeiii How; De tlet?n,.:i x.-cds rood I PROVE RESULTS I MfcrtunW'y commercial fera uecessiry it; producing products." Jolm P. Leach, aE(j sportini.itt of Littleton, / a conitiiitit'co.ta'ii to the/ 0pXhe Warren Record. Mr. jars that while it is to be / ^Kpd'that fanners must go to ^Mxpense of buying this plant / ^Be; it is impossible to grow I Kcrops mrhout it. lie gives his / ^Ba this subject as fellows: I ^Mtortmtely commercial fer- / a necessity in producing I products. A recent issue of and Observer says that I KK^trs of Wake lenity spend IE*) per cent of 'heir income / ^Kjps toward the purchase of I K-5 This leaves the farmer per cent for all other / ^Hh'less nearly 1i rry farmer | state is today putting from I g per cent of his crop into I flBehl fertilizer. Hu\v to escape / ^Rrea: problem has never been I ^E Every farmer knous beyond / ^Bjotv of doubt the. these fer do pay and pay handsome J Bjds when tiie crops are / porernmenr has experiment / - I ^Hail over the country snu?viuB. ^Kres of dollars, pounds and I _ ST of all kinds of farm pro-1 ^Khat commercial fertilizers do I ^ H especially nitrate of soda.|wl ^Han who reads Dr. Myers lpi pon the use of nitrate of|pt ^Hnd is not convinced that the I pda pavs must be radically!^ ^H Ite critics stand around town I *1( ^Ks the farmer out for liaul-1pc H.r home. The knockers are I'? My those who live upon Ipi left after the farmer's spent Ia* ^Hcer.t for fertilizers. Were the Jsa t not to use fertilizers the I ^Hnes who criticize him for fin Ho would be the first ones to f th at his crop as the bumble f ar Hnded its knee to suck the | ai m the blossoms in August. | jol H though Wake county did ni 40 per cent for guano, the wi arises what per cent of a' th 1 f}l I una mey nave yiuuuvtu ? tbe use of it? And, further- hi tot condition would the1 hi ; in after ten years oi no (th > | ye a ie* rows without the be comparisons are odious, but w nparison in the crops not [ m d and fertilized would be I tc lious and likewise most em- i d< ,g at harevst time, and most; si ng to the human eye dur-1 growing season. lands seem to require more j 01 ian in olden jays or else! a Refo a ear I void 1*0 vhei deHU M To help you iTtl special demc rsH | See the other 5?Bj^ llig Six, if onl ^ J r rirc-i *745 to *895, /. c am! I.ovejoy shock aba ( on idcr the dclivc P* : I 'I B..^ LlW . O 1J ""W^ pOTOR ! H Warrenton, N. i Wanento^ Nb Illinois Girl ... By Beim IT'S text books and tablets and pencils and rulers five days a waek for Mabel Gooch, 18-year-old h:.gh school girl of Johnston City, 111. Then on Sundays and two nights a week it's the Bible and preaching the old-fashioned religion in two churches to pay for "her schooling. The attractive high school sophomore admits that it is mostly a dollars and cents proposition. Her eyes twinkle the smile that her mouth tries to conceal when she hears about the girl evangelists who go into big cities accpmJ panied by their mothers, business managers and press agents, with camera flashlights booming and ablare of carefully prepared publicity about a great "mission." How She Started "I felt that it was my duty to make my high school expenses if I wanted more education, and I'm doing it," she says simply. "Not that my heart is not in my preaching." she is quick to add. "It seems to .me that I should help to convert, others as I was converted three years ago. "The Johnston City Methodist minister understood how. I felt and when some of the .mien from Cedar Grove came to -liim to rec-' ommend a pastor, he recommended me. , "Another girl and I went to their church and held services. mi - - J A - in? "? uiey seemeu 10 nae us ana we kept on. Then the other girl got married and I took charge and have been preaching there ever ie goods are not as lasting. The riter can remember when tenants oduced 12 to 15 bales of cotton ;r horse with one to two sacks of rtilizer, and didn't know what trate of soda was. Today the nant who produces 10 bales per 3rse with four to six hundred mnds is lucky, and again we come i the question of what would be oduce with no fertilizer? After 1, the dope seems to be a necesry evil and is here to stay. "Cover crops and legumes help lprove worn out lands, but even ;en phosphate, lime and potash e essential to all crops. The lalysis of fruit and foliage of all ants show these plant foods plus trogen, and it is needless to say. e can produce something from noting. Our soils contain most of ese elements when the land is st cleared, but as the crops are uvested and hauled away, with em go the plant food. Year by ar it becomes depleted and must replaced by some means. So when e have been forced to use comercial fertilizers and will continue do so in like proportion to the :pletion of the soil and the dered production." Four new 4-K clubs have been ganized in Orange county with n enrollment of 52 boys and girls. re yo It's wis pare w THE 'IMTJ.J BIG to CEM e people make a fundai 1 they go to buy a car. anstration and they com] with the car they are ah avoid this mistake we 1: nstration of the* New P s, by all means. But see t y for the sake of comparis >. 6. Pontine, Michigant plus delivery charg \orhers regular eauipment at eUght extra c Payment Plan available at minimum rat red price as well as the Iiat price whe akland-Pontiac delivered prices in< charges for delivery and financing SALES COI C. ] rth Carolina THE Pays Way in t Pastor at 7 Mabel Gooch, 18-year-old high school pupil-pastor, and one of the churches where she preaches four times a week, are shown above. since. That's nearly two years now." Mabel was 16 years old when she went into the strange church Shay Tells Secret Of Growing Hogs For More Profit RALEIGH, April 30.?In a brief five years since C. B. Faris has been county agent in Craven county, hog sales have grown in volume and value to where the total for the nprinii has now reached the round sum of $185,881.03 in total value to the farmers shipping. "In 1924, only four cars were shipped," says W. W. Shay, swine extension specialist at State college. "The 280 animals in this shipment brought the farmers $5,492.83. In 1925, three cars were shipped but then the shipments began to increase raoidlv. In 1926. 33 cars went out and in 1927, 44 cars were shipped. Last year 44 cars were again shipped and the price was rather disappointing, but the growers of the county have not permitted themselves to become discouraged and so far this Spring 20 cars have moved. In all, since 1924, there were 148 cars shipped containing 10,465 hogs weighing 1,903,083 pounds. The value of these animals to the farmer after deducting freight, comipission charges, etc., has been $185,881.03." Mr. Shay says that when the first car was shipped back in 1922, it | '?mmm m buy m * iz* ?* to J:j yd ltlft gg m l r ^ mmmi LC a oduct of kl ;ral motors mwll 3im nental mistake They receive a >are the new car out to trade in. lave arranged a ontiac Big Six. he New Pontiac on. M. Bumper ?9 ipring cover9 OBt. General Motort Time tOm n comparing automo* zlude only reasonable * - VIPANY Henderson, N. C. ? - ; WARREN RECORE School I wo Churches and had Just completed the eighth grade at Stiritz, the mining village near here where she lives. She had about given up her g'aatest ambitton-^-to attend high school. There wad little work in the mines tor her father an,d high school in a town several pilles away costs money. There are abdut 10.0 members at her first chifrch, miners' and farmers' families principally, and thev Hire their e-lrl nastnr VMVi. O" " f * Plain i*reachin{; ' "No 'high Jalutin' stuff from her," they' say. "Just good, straight teaching what the Bible says." Word of her ability in the pulpit went from one person to another until she became a prophet with honor in her own village. The Methodist church there now has her as its pastor, too, with meetings Tuesday and Saturday nights. .The church work sends her to school, she says, and the school educates her for better church work' - - - ~~r She would almost prefer to talk about school affairs than her preaching. She likes English, Latin and biology and "has to take" geometry. "There's lots of common sense in the theory of evolution," she says. -"There are so many ways in which evolution is illustrated to us in things that we know and see about us that there are some points about the theory that we cannot deny. 1 don't think, though, that we came from monkeys." caused so much excitement that $2.25 in telephone bills was incurred in selling the animals. This car probably created more excitement than did the whole trainload of 13 T A alk about BARGAINS! M /joaucAN SCSETT I^u^mhd . r I L n mmtfti junui ftajMcfa rw* . .HE finest tires the workl has ever known! The lowest prices eix r for peak quality tires. A guarantee against all road hazards for 12 months. More than that.... the guaran* tee is in the form ot a real Sur ety Bond, issued by the Amer iean Surety Company. That means it's got to be fulfilled. Ask us to show yon a copy. And we will make good on it right here in our store ... withI out delay, without red-tape. I With such quality, such prices, such a bonded-guarantee, our Dunlop Tires are the biggest bargains ever offered! Dunlop'a tunc Winterized Tire note in atock... This doea away with Chains Warrenton Service Station Warrenton, N. C. , I, | Wai Tenlon, North cars which went out at one time two or three years later. 1 C One of the hopeful signs about c the hog growing and feeding Indus- \ try in Craven, county is that far- r mers are sticking to it through a } year of lew prices. Then, too, they are growing more com for feeding |; < the animals. Mr. Shay suggests that j | the ratio of com to hogs should be 150 bushels for each brood sow kept, i To be profitable, hogs must be kept j moving; they must be made to pro- i: duce every pound of weight pos- :: sible and they must be so bred that ; j the pigs may be pushed for sale in :! March, April and May in the j! Spring and in August and Septem ber in the Pall. This, says Mr. Shay, is the secret of success in hog grow- j: < ing in North Carolina. M Patronize the advertiser. ??^ainfulN? I INDIGESTION ij | J11 "I SUFFERED a good J 5 ? iji while before I found 11 :3 V ==^B something that < 1 I; I? would help me," Ji! : J yg-U writes Mr. E. W. ft t Berry, of Neosho, J' : Mo. "My trouble jij jjj I w a s indigestion, i : V/B|H pains in my chest V : MvW and a tight, bloated || Xmv \ that would ci : \\\\\ \ make me feel j[ ? \\ \\ smothered. JiJ 2 "Speaking of this i i : 3 to a friend of mine, he told me j [ ; that Black-Draught was good J iJ i for this trouble. I bought a i i :: package. It certainly did help J 1 ; me, so I continued to use it j j j! "I am in the transfer busi- o :: ness, and sometimes when I J? ;? would be hungry and ready to X --a t ?i j n j :? :1 I t eUL, J. WUUlU UttVO U. UcLll ttllU j [ would have to eat later. Then J [ | j | I would eat too much or too j, | i hurriedly. This would cause I> j | [ indigestion. After 1! started | , using Black-Draught, I found ] | | i it did me a world of good." i i | [ THEDFORD'I} J ] | BladeDraught; Fox* CONSTIPATION, , INDIGESTION, BILIOUSNESS j ! j ? | "WOMEN who need a tonic ] | [ $ |aa] should take Cardul. In rgoX | < |lt use over 50 years. ex-iso |h >0000000000000000000 Is I? ' ii* / -i'J E-r- ; The Po The W The mart households, all properly finan* his banker wh vest profits; frc>m his bank housewife whc counts take ad force in civiliz< Gitii - * * CMOHM PAGE FIVE I Since the first of January, far- In Binnswick county, fanners and [ tiers of Lenoir county have sold bankers have been holding con7,471 pounds of poulti y for $22,- ferences looking to the purchase of 37.25. This is double the tonnage pure bred dairy cattle for family jf any previous year. cows. :S3a8ra:nassfflitt?iiiiimii?iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirc^ Rejort of the Condition of the Bank of Warren I At Warren ton, No:*th Caroina to The Corporation Commis sion?At the close of business on the 27th day of March, 1929. RESOURCES Loans and Discounts $354,930.54 Overdrafts None United States Bonds 15,250.00 All other Stocks and Bonds _. 22,000.00 Banking House 25,053.28 : Furniture and Fixtures 13,145.48 Cash in Vault and Amounts Due from ;|j Approved Depository Banks 57,603.98 Checks for Cleaning and Transit Items 637.06 Cash Items (Items Held Over 21 Hours) 87.42 Other Real Estate 12,627.52 Total $501,335.28 i : i LIABILITIES Capital Stock Paid In $ 50,000.00 Surplus Fund 25,000.00 ; Undivided Profits (Net Amount) 6,958.86 Reserved for Interest 2,000.00 Demand Deposits Due Banks 88.16 Other Deposits Subject to Check 137,695.28 Deposits Due State of North Carolina and Any Official Thereof: Secured, $40,368.44 - 40,368.44 j Other DeDosits Secured bv a Pledge of : i Assets or Depository Bond 63,143.14 Cashier's Checks Outstanding 714.95 Certified Checks Outstanding 20.00 Dividend Checks Outstanding 103.00 Time Certificates of Deposit (Due on or After 30 Days) 6,281.00 Savings Deposits (Due on or After 30 Days) - 168,962.45 Rediscounts None Bills Payable None ? Total $501,335.28 State of North Carolina?County of Warren, ss G. B. Gregory, Cashier, W. H. Dameron, director, and L. C. Kinsey, Director of Bank of Warren, each personally appeared before me this day, and being duly sworn, each for himself, says that the foregoing report is true to the best of his knowledge and belief. Sworn to and subscribed G. B. GREGORY, before me this the 2nd day Cashier, of April, 1929. _ __ TTTT TTTQ T3 AW/TOT DAMERON, y vljxww Notary Pablic. Director. g My commission expires L. C. KINSEY. October 15, 1930. Director. ; j | wer That Makes heels Go 'Round . s of trade, flourishing farms, happy I reach the peal; of efficiency when ^ed. The business man who goes to en he wants to obtain funds or inthe farmer who Secures a loan to purchase new equipment; the > maintains checking and savings ac[vantage of the greatest intangible iton?B ANKIN G. sens Bank
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 3, 1929, edition 1
5
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