! > 9) PAGE FOUR The Warren Record Published Every Friday By The Press Publishing Co. One Year For. .$2.00 W. BRODIE JONES Editor HOWARD F. JONES BIGNALL S. JONES Associate Editors That Justice May Ever Have A Champion; That Evil Shall Not Flourish Unchallenged. Entered at the post office at War renton, North Carolina, under Acti of Congress of 1879. y/ltidiCeSfcSdkX / AgOClATKf^ And all things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.?Matt. 21:22. Share your bread with little children, see that no one goes about you with naked feet, look kindly upon mothers nursing their children on the doorsteps of humble cottages, walk through the world without malevolence, do not knowingly crush the humblest flower, respect the nests of birds, bow to the purple from afar and to the poor at close range. in Inhnr. en to rest with prayer, go to sleep in the unknown, having for your pillow the intimate; love, believe, hope, live, be like him who has a watering pot in his hand, only let your watering pot be filled with good deeds and good words; never be disoouraged, be magi and be father, and if you have lands cultivate them, if you have sons rear them, and ' if you have enemies bless them ?all with that sweet and unobstrusive authority that comes to the soul in expectation of the eternal dawn.?Victor Hugo. FROM THE DAILY PRESS One reason so few people can buy what they need is that so many are busy buying what they want.? ip* Virginian-Pilot. Living within the income means : living without the worry?Boston ;j j Herald. As well as without a large | number of other things.?Arkan- :i; sas Gazette. Women have all the advantages ::: these days. It takes an income of ffaf civ fifftiroc to arot a man in thp rn UiA ilgMl VW WW Q V V H ?? ? ? togravure section. One figure will s get a girl there.?Tampa Times. the Eas Our Ambassador at London an- pro] nounces that he will not serve He liquor at the Embassy. The Brit- ?i ish Ambassador at Washington has (<1 announced the same rule. Hands across the tea!?Dallas News. aro1 ryir A Bowling Green girl is irate be- any cause a Louisville newspaper pub- era* lished she was to be married, and his she says she doesn't even know the jj groom. However, lots of others find that out, too late?Elizabeth- . town (Ky.) News. One wag remarks that some A girls use dumb-bells to get color on the their faces and some use color on &rei their faces to get dumb-bells.? nor Savannah News. eye: "J "Dawes Won't Don Court Knee one Pants." Another of those breeches of etiquette.?New York Evening , Post. st0 app frig Alaskan women plan a memorial to the pack mules who lost their lives in the gold rush. Maybe we and men will be appreciated yet.? p American Lumberman. jn ] a r< President Hoover's dry T board would have no trouble fror floating this year. wer the A systematic, well con- und ceived and ably financed plan should be worked out "3 U] here for the promotion of .t] the Warrenton tobacco " market. Plans are under "] /. , .. mei way ior a general meeting of t to discuss the situation in a i w few days, and let us now E plan to pull together for the best interests of the town. At Lim least six million pounds of ratl tobacco should be sold here ^ during the coming sermon. "< rusl Dr. E. C. Branson ir. a re- trai cent address said that the see best interests of the rural t church would be served by alre q OT01 consolidation, and predicted that this movement would ^ gain in popular favor. We J J believe he is right. There would be endless argument "I about merging where differ- wen ent faiths are concerned, but a S1 this is not contemplated by the TV p VQWOAM TJ r\ V\/\li I JL-TX JUI uiioun. lie UC11CVC3 h0 I that the. minister could best en serve by being with the peo- sori pie more, and that a strong rural church is preferable to J several small, weak ones, si Consolidation within denom- whc inational lines would have ^ this tendency. love iki , Warren ton, North Carolina "? f II ^ 1Mi N 1 H fl I V HE RE-"THEREI 1 column of comment on persons and things seen I here and there over the , roads of Carolina. \ By BRODIE JONES j 1 trolling into a furniture store ( other afternoon in one of the j tern Carolina towns, I found the prietor calmly loading a 22-rifle. looked up with a grin. What are you going to do?" < Well, there has been a big rat^l una nere ior several uays wuilg me and while I haven't got , customers I'm going to take a . ;k at him as soon as he sticks 3 head around that wardrobe." : he missed the rat, he may sell wardrobe for a battle scarred 1 ique. 1 : good stout fence stood between ] young Huck Finns and the ] ;n apples, but the apples lost j ie of their appeal to youthful ] 3. ['11 tell you what we'll do," said Mother's Pride and Joy. What," answered another Tomb- j ie buddy, at that age when , les is apples and friends is ( nds. Let's get Bob through the fence ( [ make him bring us the apples." | aithful Bob, who had romped 1 Pall to retrieve Bob White's, was ;ady partner to youthful coaxing. he owner of the orchard peered 1 n a back porch. Two small boys ' e in the grass eating apples and j dog was crawling through the ' :e with another. The trio were iisturut'u. tfew York's calling you." Put 'em on," I answered. [s this Jones, Brodie Jones?" ( Yes, sir." ! 3ow're you Jones, guess you re- , nber me, this is Paul Erickson!" ;he Pacific and Atlantic Photos.' as at Columbia with you." rickson, now working for a big rs agency, wanted pictures that ad taken of the Atlantic Coast e wreck near Enfield, and it was ler a surprise that his line of k and mine should have crossed :r about nine years. 3et copies if possible, Jones, and 1 them to a porter on a fast' n, tell him to bring them to office at Park place and we will' that he is well paid." he pictures, incidentally, were' ady on the way to another news ucy, and I was sorry. rhat a lot of folks thought was' lannon last Fall seems to be a cracker now. See where that fellow Saunders it awalking down Main street in abeth City the other day with ait of pajamas on," the man in next chair commented. What do you think of that?" queried in addressing an elderly tleman who was receiving ton-' al treatment. | Don't think much about It but hat he had on more clothes than )t of women wear these days." omehow I feel that Louis Graves, > started the argument with W. should strut the pajamas and Lt now at Chapel Hill. Such a ;ly audience there now, with all ^ * 0 THE low Styles Do Change /-CT\ ? 1$ / I CuA?M vv ^} ( THAT LOOKS *N / ;|J J il pm 8 f W\ \X \ V\ the Summer school looking for < [earning and new styles. Johnathan Daniels, whose "LookBoth Ways" column in the Old Reliable is creating comment, had the situation about right when he t suggested that W. O.'s figure would cause more comment when draped ? in a night shirt. Why not settle it, gentlemen of j the press, by meeting at high noon on Capitol Square, with Louis looking "Grave" in his pajamas and W. O. "Saundering" in his nightie and have a style march to the Sir l Walter?one on one side of Pay- ( ;tteville Street, the other across, c Let the populace acclaim the hero. 1 It would make a 'swell" benefit J program, kid, the flapper who had i money and stage-ambition commented. I 1 "I'll take you on for a game, , Tom." The remark started the putting contest at Roy Davis' amuse- . ment and radio headquarters on Main street. The time was a few 1 hours after supper and the crowd ( included quite a few golf fans, with ladies represented. 1 "Go ahead." "Naw, you lead off." * Tom Burton, dressed nattily as if ready for a tournament stepped 1 to the boards and with all the pre- * cision and time of J. Willie White when you ask him the "time of * lay", proceeded to leisurely sink four 1 balls out of a possible nine. And that was good, too. 2 Then Red Headed Jerry Allen t stepped forward, briefly looked the ^ situation over and nonchalantly sunk five and won. It was the first ( time he had ever had a golf club } in his hands. There is irony a plenty in this Did workaday world. ( The permanent 4-H club camp j< now being constructed at the ? Mountain Branch Station near jr 3wannanoa will be ready for use t ;his month. ta mmam Your Ford ? ootid m USED WHAT do we niean by "solid valu^s"7 Simply this: ^ When you buy a ' used car from us you pay just what that car is worth.' There has been no inflation in the resale price to take care of an unreasonable trade-in allowance. The price of the new Ford is very low, and the value high; there is no leeway for excessive trade-in allowances. That is why you can buy a used car from us knowing the Bonn i Warrentc WARREN RECORD r y Y/ \ 'y\ ^ : :ev#a"re? ?ncy X X n> . / \ Rosccer P Jjb f/jisset-HOMv Sun Bathing May Be Dangerous, Dr. Says NEW YORK. July 17?Beware of ;he "sun tan craze." It's being overdone?dangerously ;o. It's all right to become a sun-tan jronze adonis, or venus, as the case nay be, but if you must become >ne, do so gradually. This is the warning of Dr. Charles Frederick Pabst, chief dermatologist >f the Greenpoint hospital, who de:lares that any person who at one ell swoop acquires a severe case of ;unburn has an excellent chance of icquiring a "wooden overcoat." The quick-tan fad at America's jathing beaches and summer resorts ias had, in many instances, a disistrious after effect. Dr. Pabst has become sufficiently nterested in the matter to issue five ules for the guidance of the fadlists, and others, towit: 1. Acquire a coat of tan gradually )y brief exposures to sunlight. 2. Do not sleep on the beach in ;he direct rays of the sun. 3. If your skin will not tan, you ire a Yellophobe and should avoid ;he direct rays of the sun. 4. When fishing or sailing do not 'orget that water reflects the ultraviolet rays of the sun. 5. In July and August protect vourself as much as possible from ;he direct rays of the sun, if you vant to avoid illness from sunburn. "This sun-tan fad is being overlone," said Dr. Pabst, "and already lospitals are receiving many cases )f severe sunburn. It would be veil for all persons desiring a coat }f tan to realize that there are lertain persons, medically classified is 'yellophobes,' who do not tan. They are exceptionally sensitive to he sun's rays and burn instead of nning." lealer offers lines in jj / CARS . r pride you pay is for the service that car will give, and nothing else. Our usedcar department is based on a spirit of fair-dealing. We would hardly care to risk our reputation by acting otherwise. Coihe in today and see spine of our bargains in upused transportation. There are several makes now on display. Model T Fords are thoroughly reconditioned, and carry a 01 COMPANY Warren ton, North Cai Too Much Bunk <? In Tire Selling, I Company of ' Dealer Believes "There has been too much bunk i * in tire selling," says Walter B. *** Fleming, local Dunlop tire dealer, In the first place most people are MRS. RE apt to be a little bit mad when ^ they buy a tire. departed this "They dcn't get any fun out of it, as they would out of buying a Faithful toilei new car or even new clothes. Precious soul, "To them it represents a disa- Beauti^n life ?reeable but necessary purchase, God g^?th tl and the only thing they want to RgSt from ai] io is to make sure they are buying Rest from all most wisely. But they wonder how Rest from all to buy wisely, because most tire Sighing and claims are as much alike as the Rest through statements of two prize fighters Endtess years before a fight. Each agrees to knock ^ home witl out the other fellow in the first NEICE romi1- Secretly all "This situation is probably the pers0nal wag reason why the Dunlop Surety beiow ] Bond Guarantee, which is now of- are way ab0V) fered with every Dunlop tire, is proving so popular with our cus- It-S fy^y tomers. This guarantee is just a peaceful ^ t, simple common-sense, straight for- ftahtine ward statement, covering the buyer against the twelve major tire p., t] troubles, even if he admits the ^atro " troubles are his own fault. It has "~? no ifs or ands and it applies even F9R SALE" on Dunlop Pneumatic Truck tires. ^ S??d 00 "We find that this 'plus value*? H if you could so call it, which we are jyjg^'t able to offer, does more to satisfy customers than all the high power ONE LARGI salesmanship in the world. They Macon for can read through this simple guar- sPend antee, see that its faithful per- Macon? N I You Re mi That advertising lowers to the consumer. It increases the profits t( cost is lowered. The actual cost of adve: the final cost of the com A. P. Langmas, assistan istration at the Washing Wash., recently made a figures are surprising. Twenty-nine firms answ of advertising on the pri Five reported that the p duced and the quality r( Eight indicated that thei the same. Five showed that the pric improved. Eleven reported the pric quality was greatly imp] In other words, without II ing more for poorer stuf 01jf Mai "** FRIDAY^jijiv 1 uaranteed, not only by y the American Surety 1 wish 0F tHasOB New York, and buy tion to each 2?* ^ hJ ice that every claim their kindness led."?Advt. sympathy during death of my hJc ?? lemoriam 0rert"becca champion memory of our dear ... KD 0F Thaw. ;becca Champion, who ,v\e desire to expre^ . I life one month ago. ^ on to ?ur friends many acts of kincC '* r, thy work all done, the death 0f n,^^| into glory gone, **** bless each '?? , with its crown now the m aee rest; I heart-aches, and CXECWOfrT^M I possible , Ha S qualified ? ^ jSla S mL?""*!! Odd, heautllu, , fV,- hW this * to notify ?n J? m IS AND NEPHEWS. ^ ***** & present them to the of us, think that our ^ JW es and profits are a COvery. AH peS 111 lormal, while price3 said estate will pL ul(!ei<M ; normal. mediate settlement win, ""W This 19th da, o, 2 5| how people can be as w. d. iy| jrtle-doves one minute Jy " like tigers the next. ADMINISTRatriy^^ he Advertiser. trbc^non thl^fl as ____________ mx uP?n the estate of ===== Perry, late of Macoffl -KITCHEN RANGE County, N. C? this is t, J ndition. Also Baby P61"80"8 having claims aaj i excellent condition. estate 10 present them ? n Poindexter, City. properly verified, on or hj 19, 1930, or this notice wfflJB . in bar of recovery. * S DWELLING NEAR This July 19, 1929. rent. Nice place to Mrs. ARTHUR nichom Summer. Box 162, Admikr^B C. jyl9-4tc-wge jyl9-6t. Should I em perl the cost of most commodities I ) the seller because the selling I .-i.* _ ii I reusing is a very smaii item ju i modity. M t professor of business admin-1 ton State College at Pullman, I study of conditions and his ered inquiries as to the effect ces of their products. H rice of their products was re- H miained the same. H r prices and quality remained W ;e was reduced and the qualitJ es remained the same but the roved. advertising we would be pa)' H '

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