Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Nov. 1, 1929, edition 1 / Page 5
Part of The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
l^AVj^ovemberm iiv / Arth?fBrl,bB0* 'p. Feels Better. Airboat. ^street felt better, sat up and Wrlm* mt "wh*t ?had to these who gambled, m Ifoi t0 the na" its general prosperity." mi? nf rhieaeo. head - w . Jlsiall Field & Co.. comes intol #1[h thousands of mer-1 JB over the country, knows! fjsir.es.- they are doing and I ads genera! conditions asl H^-gnv man in the United! Ureplies to a question thus: I firm b( hever in the doc-1 you preach, don't buy! and dcn't sell America I ^B-Thepreset:' liquidation in the! j^B-a:!i?t is not due to nor does! getv.-a' business condi-1 H the country. in| run prices of securities J ^B<^ detenr'.'d by their yield / "" inv.Qcifrnpnt. I 011 a" believe i\!cic business con-1 ^Kjjwnd and that production! ^E~t0'Mnption of goods in most ^^Tyvebeen iy well balanced.! this, there appears to be no! spec nation in commo-j MRsurt as that which occurred! ^H^;een hundred and twenty. I liquidation in the stock I ^K.^?as inevitable and unless it ;oo far ana becomes too dras-! a to think, will be I ^H^gl to the business situation! harmful." | imlduigs were burned down, - ? HioH no mines.! IB amines aim ... |>e steels have vanished. Kpe; profits have been reduced K-ass of ticker tape, that's all. Biy as one solemn banker said Mr; nil now do more useful than watching the ticker orl lookers' blackboard. 1^ Carnegie Foundation says football is "tainted by fc." Free teaching and cashl fces are given to young men L can kick hard, run fast and J fee savagely. J [: Tould be more pleasing if colss sought great teachers as eageris they seek great quarterbacks. I a; no harm is done. The games I great crowds arouse young ' "i iWp life and I IPS UHClCOli i" w..vB? f college education to young men i rolling mills and rear ends of mgons who might otherwise bs uneducated. nht Homer, with profesntlight. in a fine engineering t praises the all year round mtion development of the Ohio know completed. p: development of the Ohio rs a beginning of many simI injects that need attention, par many will President Hoover I tough? pan ever had greater opporfc o: better equipment for b Gulf of Mexico should be fitted with the great lakes via ifesippi, the lakes with the cc Ocan. by canals suited to e going ships. tesions as to "all-American American." and other d technicalities should not deletion. tas might yet be discussing J *?e of a sea level or lock LJt Panama, or the compara- j IWvantage of Panama and "welt, brushing all that aside, | ahead and built the canal. is what counts. Hoover's plan for a ; system of inland waterways ^ in prosjiect. the hope of Rfiat welcomed an able enp to the White House, r- expenditures planned will F to $525,000,000, and every f spent will pay for itself ten per. f Resident observes that the r increase in expenditures rSotat only to the cost of oneI At - une battleship. 1 VPresident might have added j modern war the whole of | ^' ' Oship would be worth less Rj^-half of ten cents, since are now merely targets Btiaarir.es and airplanes, worth ff5?' except to battleship build ** ib flying advances rap ^ Europe. A few days ago showed a gigantic hydroR*"-'-h 12 engines, flying, carryR* Passengers and crew. Britain is building a plane R^me size a triplane instead also with 12 engines, to ^W^Tord the first to talk! engine plane, "to carry I with a machine shop I H?r The Germans and the I tuild ihe planes. K^c like other nations, can al-1 monty lor killing. -ffidred thousand dollars I B* Changed lor twelve pow-1 ^ ^encan Vought-Corsair air-1 '^Br^be used by the Nationalist! [928 Warren ton, Not Government to gas and bomb the Kuominchun, Chinese "People's Party." Extension Conference Planned For January The annual gathering of agricultural extension workers from all parts of the State will be held at the North Carolina State College during the week of January 6 to 11. "We usually call this meeting for early December but have decided to hold it in January for this time so that the county farm agents may meet with the members of the Southern Livestock association meeting here at the college during the same week," says I. O. Schaub, director of the extension service. "The cattle growers will meet on January 7, 8 and 9, and some of the leading livestock breeders and scientists of the South will attend. We are rapidly developing a livestock industry and it will be beneficial for our agents to attend the sessions of this convention and to learn of late developments and facts about the industry." Mr. Schaub said the agents would gather in Raleigh early on Monday morning, January 6, and would hold three sessions each day except for the periods when the livestock men were in meeting. The director expects to have present several representatives from the United States Department of Agriculture and will use some of the research workers and directing heads at State College on the program. One of the important matters coming before the conference will be work on the long-time program for agriculture. Methods of adopting this program in the counties and communities will be discussed. The extension service is now having printed 10,000 copies of a publication outlining the program and will have it available for distribution early in November. The next great task is to have the program adopted as nearly as possible in all parts of the State. Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact man.?Bacon. CARD OF THANKS This is to thank the white and colored friends for the kindness shown me through the sickness and death of my mother and for the beautiful floral tributes. CLARCEY KEARNEY, Daughter. ' I Bar? I Still P I At I WHi I Of A Merchandise that member of the fa we had a better i have prices been a Do not fail to mak nrvln QflO flTIP C ILI1I5 CX11 kJVV/ v/i* v -w any detailed price come to our store Nor I Inrler I st< Opposite Motor ! th Carolina TH Welfare Conference ! Will Be Held At ; Henderson Nov. 6 j The Central District Welfare Con- ( ference will be held at Henderson ( Wednesday; November 6, it was an- 1 nounced today by George H. Law- i rence, superintendent of public welfare in Orange County, who is 1 chairman of the district. The juve- ' nile court will be the theme of the meeting, at which a number of prominent speakers will appear on the program. I The conference is one of a series I of six held throughout the State a each Fall for the purpose of study- t ing some social welfare question of c immediate interest. These meetings r are attended by professional social workers and laymen interested in problems of public welfare, and are , sponsored by the North Carolina associations of Superintendents of Public Welfare and the State a Board of Public Welfare. The conference on November will draw representatives from the eigh- _ teen counties, which are included in A the district. They are: Caswell, Per- h son, Granville, Vance, Warren; c Northampton, Halifax, Franklin, Nash, Orange, Wake, Johnston, P Chatham, Lee, Harnett, Moore, f: Hoke, and Durham. tl Dr. Roy M. Brown, of the School ^ of Public Welfare, University of a North Carolina, will make the open- E ing talk, having as his subject, "Ju- t: venile Court Law in North Caro- i( lina". He will be followed by W. B. t: Sanders, also of the University, a whose topic will be "The Juvenile si Court in Operation." Superinten- t' dent S. E. Leonard of the Eastern ^ Carolina Training School will speak n on "Institutional Committments and 0 Parole." Rev. C. K. Proctor, Sup- n erintendent of the Oxford Orphanage, will discuss "Means of Handling the Dependent Child." The e morning sessions will be held at the;c parish house of the Episcopal ia church. v A luncheon will be held at the n Henderson Country Club, at which Dr. Harry W. Crane, of the Univer- 5 sity of North Carolina, and also director of the division of mental hygiene for the State Board of Public Welfare, will be the chief speak- ! er. His subject will be "Mental I Factors of Particular Importance: for Juvenile Court Consideration." Following the luncheon Miss Mar-, garet Lane, Girls' Probation Of-1 ficer of Wake county, will discuss probation work with especial emphasis on work with girls. Mrs. R. B. Bullock, member of the Nash ;ains I 'revail I Our l| ALE I Sale | will please every | mily?never have I issortment, never a is low. p I ;e a special trip to HI >f our circulars for IJ is, but better still, fl I folk II c^llin? III W >re I E WARREN REC01 bounty Board of Public Welfare, ind also a member of the State Juvenile Court committee, will ipeak on methods of informing the )ublic about Juvenile Court Work. Mrs. W. B. Waddell, superintenlent of public welfare in Vance lounty, and the Council of Social Agencies in Henderson, will act as losts for the conference. Person Farm Agent Wins Fertility Award For the second time in two years I. K. Sanders, county agent of 'erson county, has won first place mong the county agents of the welve Southern States for the ex ellence of his sou improvement irogram. Mr. Sanders was awarded this lonor again this year by a commitee of agronomists which met at itlanta, Georgia, on October 18 nd 19. Ten county agents were onsidered but the general excel;nce of the results secured by Mr. landers, his methods of operation nd his analysis of the situation in ds county caused the judges to deide unanimously in his favor. Each year the southern soil imrovement committee offers six ree trips to the annual meeting of tie Association of Agricultural Vorkers. Last year Mr. Sanders nd County Agent W. G. Yeager of towan county won two of these rips. North Carolina is in a divis)n with Virginia where only one rip is allowed, but both Mr. Yeager nd Mr. Sanders had programs of uch outstanding excellence that wo trips were given to the State. Ir. Sanders, as the first prize Winer, was awarded a gold medal and ther honors at the association leeting at Houston, Texas. This year the agricultural workrs will gather at the State Agriultural College at Mississippi bout February 1. Mr. Sanders ,'ill have his expenses 'paid to the leeting. Commenting on the award, Prof. Unusu The Ford is -i.i - and sturdy car ing quality tha every part. Of importance to < extensive use o The story of to 1905, when t pany developec loy which raise< of steel threef beginning of th specific steels f idea which has expression in tl Today, more kinds of steel ai each particular and perfected 1 needs of each ] steel are used alone because ] ience have pro1 ? h4-/\A1 TTTl 11 mi UX SICC1 Win gl and reliability There is no 1 thought that ar be made to do save expense, always been to material for e Boyc *D Warren C. B. Williams, head of the department of agronomy and one member of the judges committee, said that the program of soil improvement being followed in Person county is easily the best in the South insofar as they were revealed by the papers submitted. Mr. Sanders is doing a great work in the use of limestone, soil improving crops, fertilizers and livestock, he said. State To Again Seek Truth of Wiggins' Case RALEIGH, Oct. 30.?Effort to fix the responsibility for the slaying near Gastonia on September 14 of Mrs. Ella May Wiggins, Bessemer City mill worker, will be begun 011 November 4 under the direction of Judge Pender A. McElroy. Decision to make another effort to bring to the bar of justice the slayer or slayers of Mrs. Wiggins, mother of five children, who was killed by alleged anti-Communists as she was on her way to attend a Communist meeting, along with 22 other mill workers, was reached here Monday night by Governor Gardner, following a conference with Attorney General Dennis G. Brummitt, Judge N. A. Townsend, executive counsellor to Governor Gardner, and Solicitor John G. Carpenter. Judge McElroy will sit as a committing magistrate at the instance of Governor Gardner. The Gastcnia grand jury last week refused FOR SALE?IMPORTED CHOPper Canaries. Young males just coming into song at special prices of $6.50 each, until Nov. 5th, 1929. C. L. Jones, Weldon, N. C. It FOR SALE ?FRESH EGGS. Julia Dameron. It YOU HAVE TO TELL TO SELL. THAT'S A FACT THAT IS BECOMING BETTER KNOWN EVERY DAY. IF YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO SELL OR BUY, USE RECORD WANT ADVTS. The Foi ally Strong an unusually strong because of the endurt has been built into special interest and every motorist is the f fine steel. Ford steel dates back ;he Ford Motor Coml the use of a new al" d the tensile strength old. That was the e Ford idea of using or specific parts?an perhaps its highest le new car. than forty different re used in the Ford? 1 kind being selected to fit the particular part. Seven kinds of in the transmission research and experimrl fVicjf oovon Irinrls V V/U UlUfV L>V V Vil ye greater efficiency than one or two. imit to selection?no ly certain steel must for many parts to The Ford policy has use the best possible ach part, and then, 1-Gillar Warrenton, 1 ton, North Carolina PAGE FIVE to return Indictments against any a reward for information leading cne of the nine men held for her to the arrest and conviction of the death. The State has also offered' slayer of Mrs. Wiggins. ttniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililllllllllllllllliilllillllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Opens Monday Night, Nov. 11 ? \wmma\ Big Armistice Program Monday Night, Nov. 11 A special program of interest to the old and young has been arranged for this night. Don't miss it! First Call, 6:30 P. M. Buglers Assembly Call Buglers Assembling in Main Street for the parade of all ex-service men, white and colored; Confederate veterans; Spanish-American war veterans; Boy Scouts and Campfire Girls in parade to the Fair Grounds. Historian _.Jos. P. Pippen Welcome Mayor Jno. H. Taylor Songs of the A. E. F Led by J. R. Ivey, Com. Walker-Spruill Post 181 Speaker Hon. D. Mac Johnson Lowering of the Colors Capt. Claude Bowers, Co. B 120 Infantry, Warrenton Band Playing "Star Spangled Banner" All service and ex-service men standing at retreat The Firing Squad ..In Command Capt. Bowers Taps - Buglers ft . All Confederate Veterans, Spanish-American War Veterans, World War Veterans?(white and colored), Boy and Girl Scouts will be admitted free to Fair Ground if in the Parade. ' Don't Miss This Big Armistice Night Program. Come and Bring the Children. . . Admission to Littleton Fair Grounds?Day or Night?25c. 'it: i I ill !| ' rd Is An I and Sturdy Car B> 1 | through large production, to give it to the public at low cost. K The Ford open-hearth furnaces have a yearly capacity of 600,000 tons. The quality and uniformity of this steel are held to even closer limits than those used in industry generally. As important as the steel itself is the Ford method of heat-treating by automatic control so that the same piece of steel, though in one unit, " *! /?/? J 1 , _?? 1 J may nave ainerenr degrees 01 naruness at different points. t| A further development of this onepiece principle has been made possible by perfecting the art of electric welding. This permits the use of an unusual number of steel forgings instead of malleable castings or stampings, without increased weight, yet with a considerable gain in strength and simplicity. Such high quality of material has a direct bearing on the performance of the Ford car. Throughout, it has been designed and built to give you many thousands of miles of faithful, uninterrupted service at a very low cost per mile. I n Motor Co. Vorth Carolina * r
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1929, edition 1
5
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75