Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Aug. 30, 1929, edition 1 / Page 4
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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 IJnchallenged. Entered at the post office at Warrenton, North Carolina, under Acl of Congress of 1879. The kingdon of heaven is like unto treasure hid in a field; the which when a man hath found, he hideth, and for the joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field.?Matthew 13:44. Bad will be the. day for every man when he becomes absolutely contented with the life that he is living, with the thought that he is thinking with the deeds that he is do ing, when there is not forever beating at the doors of his soul some great desire to do something larger, which he knows that he was meant and made to do because he is still, in spite of all, the child of God.? Phillips Brooks. FROM THE DAILY PRESS As we understand it, Russia'] aim is to keep on trying until shi borrows enough capital to complete ly destroy capitalism.?Troy Times This is a united country but i there is ever a rebellion, it will bi on the part of the pedestrians. Anc we motorists could soon subdui them.?Albany News. At the present rate of progress America should have a complete network of concrete highways b; the time everybody takes to the air?Peru (Ind.) Tribune. If Marion Talley deserted the opera for the farm on the promise of the Renublican oartv for farm relief, we'll likely hear her voice again?Brunswick (Ga.) Pilot. A luxurious bathroom is a modernized French house is described as resembling the sea-nursery oi Apollo. Apollo, of course, was the god of Song?Punch. Children nowadays are said to grow taller than their parents. They probably get a good start in early years trying to reach their mother's skirts.?Virginian-Pilot. The Boston Globe says, "France has swapped horses again in midstream." We are gradually picking up an impression that M. Briand lives in midstream?Detroit News If there is as much overproduction of oil as there is an over-supply of filling stations, the situation in the petroleum industry must be, indeed serious.?Nashville Southern Lumberman. We learned from the press that the Rockefeller Foundation recently gave Yale seven and a half million dollars. This should entitle John D. to one seat on the ten-yard line.? Judge. The Llraf Zeppelin completes its tour of the world by landing at Lakehurst. Air travel is growing in popular favor everywhere, and many towns are issuing bonds to equip a municipal airport. Members of the American Legion seemed to have an old-time reunion at Raleigh this week. Friendships of other days were renewed ? j j n __i ana new contacts iormea. The legion is growing everywhere. Business outlook for the Fall seems bright for crops are better than expected several weeks ago. If cotton and tobacco sell well, many debts will be paid and many automobiles bought. THE STATE'S JOB Doors of public schools in North Carolina will swing wide next week to welcome the host of children who are seeking the light of education. In almost every instance they will return home with a list of the books which the teacher said they must have. The parents, many of them, haven't the money at the time with which to buy books, an essential part of the child's education. What happens? First, a pretty general Warren ton, ftc 1 f v 1 a feeling that education costs too much. This feeling arous; ed in the minds of the tax' payer. Second, a query as to why the books of an older broth| er or sistqr are not good | enough. Truthfully, it will be answered by the young hopefuls, "Pa, they changed the books since then." Third, we will find that numbers of children will be unable to get the books now, even if the teacher said they must have them. Books cost money and cotton nor tobacco have been sold. No merchant can sell them on time, for the margin of profit allowed by law is too small. Now, would it not be good sense for the State, which says what books the children are to study, to provide the hnnks nnrl rhnvcrp +V10 ~ ~ ~ 7 O v amount back to the counties for inclusion into the regular school budget? They pay teachers that way; they pay for trucks and gasoline that way; the janitor draws his voucher that way, but books?the real essential of school, the chart and compass by which the course of education is set, are to be provided by the parents and to be provided, mind you, at a time of the year when money is powerfully tight with many of them. The policy of the Great State of North Carolina1 seems wrong in this particular. WELL DESERVED HONOR The Raleigh Times. Colonel George K. Freeman, of! Goldsboro, honored by election as j Commander of the North Carolina, Legion, had qualified in every respect for the post. He had seen active service in France in command of fighting State troops. He had been active in the work of the Legion since the war and had served it in important capacities. There was no doubt of his consuming interest in the good of Legion members and the organization itself. His abilitv had been proved and the election to head the Legion in the State was a recognition of his fitness for the post, which he highly deserved. In view of what was happening in the electorate as a whole a year ago, even more significant than Colonel Freeman's election was the discovery?after the event?that he belongs to the Roman Catholic Church. To the honor of the Legion mem bers, if there was any suggestion of his religious affiliation it was not heard in the campaign for election, in which he was opposed. The members of the Legion apparently do j not fear the Pope and have no ap >rth Carolina "Cheers From Expert! i ' prehension of becoming auxiliary I troops to serve in America along i with the Vatican Guards. Doubtless these members, if they thought i on the subject at all, remembered that the United States at war did not look at the religious teeth of the men who went out to serve the country on the battlefields. That piece of nastiness and. intolerance was reserved for politics on the lowest level, when it was used to our shame as an argument against and a contributing cause in the defeat of a public man of fine record. In the very nature of things the membership of the American Legion represents the best that we have in the population in that bracket of age to which vigor still survives and from which initiative, ______^ NEWjl P r I MODEL 60 CR 1 Ath:itc ATWATER KENT S< Grid Radio means the el flow of pure tone quaKl ever heard. It means power to reach far-awa tions?new sensitivityneedle-point selectivity, It's new?it's better! S hear it?today?hereout fail! I ^ CONVENE I Foy Davis WARRENT A THE WARREN REC V.*A A . *. ? * ) ; ;. > S t- U'J \0I courage and example may be ex- J pected. Immaterial as was the circum-1 stance so far as his election was concerned, it is a heartening fact that the new Commander is a Roman Catholic. Airmen Thrill Crowd With Bags of Tricks Cleveland,, Aug. 28?The most imposing array of aircraft ever assembled participated here today in a mighty spectacle of the air, a1 kaleidoscopic succession of aerial events of a combined magnitude and daring never before equalled. | More than 100,000 air-minded ' persons attending the national air j traces cheered themselves hoarse at i R Kim I RIDIO 1 ELECTRO. 631681 DYNAMIC, I of course! > new J j sta?new eeifc? -withCome today! INT TERMS I Radio Co. I ON, N. C. I :ORD Wvrwtm. the arrival of the Navy dirigible Los Angeles, and the maneuvers of three baby blimps, and auto-gyro, i gliders and hundreds of airplanes. The Los Angeles was moored at a special mast here tonight, and is to follow its big sister ship, the Graf Zeppelin, to Lakehurst, N. J., tomorrow. The leading events of the day began with the refueling of the endurance plane Shuttle, piloted by Captain Ira Eaker, in a round-trip coast-to-coast flight. Eaker is testing the feasibility of refueling -1-?? aii. moil CArvipp with piaiiCd Ul blic C4.1X WV* . ?W, the cooperation of the Post Office Department. He is remembered as the pilot of the famous endurance flight of the airplane Question Mark. Col. Charles A. Lindbergh and | IMPERIAL Saturday, August 31 X | Bob Custer | | "Law of the Mounted" I ft "Eagle of the Night," Serial g ? Chapter No. 3 X "King Harold," Comedy g ft Monday-Tuesday, Sept. 2-3 g Adolph Menjou | 5 "Marquis Preferred" J | With X Chester Conklin ft "Love In A Police Station," ft g Comedy. g g Wednesday, Sept. 4 j | $ Tom Mix < I ft ?m- 11 ft "TJovrl RmlpH" L XJLUi. VA ? 11 M. G. M. News X "Mystery Rider," Serial $ j| Chapter No. 9 % X Thursday-Friday, Sept. 5-6 X K "Shopworn Angel" $ With 2 | Nancy Carroll and | | Gary Cooper j 8 "Should Tall Men Marry?" a 4 Comedy. X X On and after September 2 X v> the show will begin at 7:45 g $ instead of 8:00 p. m. $ s I The I I | Thar The crafti i is ar C : PRESS North CmoBm FRIDAY, AUGUST 30 l8J Se Mggest^1"r^J'l ?hen rorn^ ^ ^ ^ 1 tetoen in some oi P" mote n* * S d?ing stnnts. Hew upSde don lat aviations m Lieutenants F. many other tricks tnat rfl and Lieutenant Frank I MEYER eon I I SERVICE {aft I 01jr Wiirrtu faori I re Is More I te I i Type, Paper I nnrl T n 1^ anu xniv | smanship of the printer i imnorfant factor I us for your Printing I ! 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The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Aug. 30, 1929, edition 1
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