Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Jan. 19, 1934, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE 4 The Warren Record Published Every Friday by The Press Publishing Co. One Year ior flJt HOWARD JONES, JR. BIQNALL a JONES Editors HOWARD P. JONES SR. Comxlbutlng Editor That Justice May Ever Have A Champion That Evil Shall Not Flourish Unchallenged. Entered at the Postoffice at War. ten ton. North Carolina, under Act it Congress of 1878. He that by usury and unjust gain incr? aseth his substance, he shall pit her it for him that will pity the poor. A faithful man shall abound in blessing:; but he that maketh haste to be rich shall not be Innocent.? Proverbs 28:8. Whatever strengthens and purifies the affections, enlarges the imaffiration, and adds spirit to seme, is useful. Shelley. WE CONGRATULATE JUDGE BARNHILL We offsr our congratulations to Ji dge Barnhill upon his order forbidding spectators remaining within the bar, the space set apart for prisoners, witnesses, attorneys and others connected with the business of the court. The practice of citizens crowding into the bar has grown into an evil. Often times it has been difficult for witnesses and prisoners to be bro jght through the crowds within the railings, whispering and rustling has made it difficult for the jurors to hear the testimony of witnesses. Needless delay has been caused and the tasks of court officials made more trying. Bad as these objections have been, it seems to us, they have been minor compared to the loss of dignity and general disrespect of courts brought about by such conduct. The great majority of our citizens regard our churches as sacred institutions. They would not think of crowding around a pulpit, sitting on the chancel rail, gating, whispering, shuffling their feet. And yet something of this spirit of sacredness should surround our courts. A court room should be a temple of justice. It is a solemn moment when a prisoner is brought before, the judgment bar to answer his accusers. Liberty, good name, sometimes life itself is at stake. Such moments plead for dignity and for decency. So we congratulate Judge Barnhill upon his discernment, his concept of court as something set above the mob, and hope that other judges who follow at Warren courts will keep in effect the practice which he started Monday. / i Clipped EXTRA LEGAL Judge Henry A Grady, presldinf over Wake Superior court, has suffered a lapse Into that impulsiveness which at times threatens to befoi his Jurisprudence. (One could il there were time enough specify i few items such at; grand wizardin* the Ku Klux and displaying a pistol while on the bench.) XTomltb TVjvHc ponntod tn ha r\r\e MV? */UIW| tV|/UW\4 VW MV V**^ of the stfite capital's most persistent bootleggers, having been convicted, Judge Orady imposes a sentence of two years in prison oi a $200 fine, and then offers to suspend it on condition that Davis leave the State of North Caroline and remain outside forever. Judge Orady knows even bettei than we ordinary citizens do thai there is not in the constitution o! the state or in the statutes made and provided anything conferring on him the right or power of banishment. True, there is considerable Warrentaa, North Carott precedent if Judge Grady cares to follow that of police courts dealing | with prostitutes, vagrants and petty j lowlifers who have been flushed in ' . one community and chased into another in clear disregard of the responsibility. of those doing the flushing. Too, governors have now and then granted paroles or pardons conditioned on temporary absences from the scene of the crime. But it isn't and never was in accordance with Hoyle, Blackstone or the Code of North Carolina and should ; be abandoned by Judges who de- { ' mand that their judgments be ac- s . cepted as proof of their judicial r fitness. j Davis, we fancy, will pay the fine. " If he doesn't we trust he will go t to jail and serve his time. But in c any event if he elects to leave North v Carolina, he'll be back unless providentially restrained and Wake Su- j. perior court will be required to redo c a bit of business that Judge Grady j should have dispatched first chance, j ?Charlotte News. ? I MOSTLY I I PERSONAL 11 By BIGNALL JONES : | t niu,i I Reading an old copy of Jerome's p Idle Moments a few nights ago 1 p was struct by several of his humor- j, ous Illustrations. Most persons feel s that the universe revolves around a them, according to Mr. Jerome; ^ and that the earth and the waters _ under the earth were created for his or her especial benefit. This ^ emlnds Mr. Jerome of the bantam r rooster who believed that the sun rose in order to hear him crow. c Everybody is vain, according *o ^ the same author. Men are more,t] vain than women, if possible, he w says, and adds that even animals s are vain. He relates the story of a ' oig dog standing before a mirror ? or long periods admiring himself. B 'Never have I seen more snug sat- jj isfaction, except at a vestry meet- ^ ing," he comments. J Its been a long time since I came p as near shouting as I did In Super'or court on Monday morning when 3heriff Pinnell stated that the Judge had ordered the bar cleared 0 of spectators and reserved for the s use of lawyers, court officials, ' aewspapermen and others concerned with the court's business. jj For ten years I have been wantng to see this action take place. B I have written editorials on the c oractice of allowing citizens to clut- r ler the bar. I have talked with law- * ?" nrHL InHffao ohniif. fhp % y Ci d AX1U WXl/XX juugw umwmv v?w practice, to no avail. And then out ' if a clear sky, so to speak, my wishes are carried out, by a judge who probably did not know I existed. I had a similar experience five or six years ago while I was editing The Roanoke News, a newspaper of then limited circulation published at Weldon. I wrote an editorial advocating the return of part of the gasoline tax to the bounties to be used on county road work. This editorial was written the latter part of December. I had not heard the idea discussed, or seen any articles in the newspapers advocating the step. I am quite sure that no legislator saw the article and I heard no comment thereon. But a few weeks later the General , Assembly enacted the idea into law. '* I can take no credit for either idea, ; but it is gratifying to see meas- ^ ures which I have advocated re ceiving the approval of the higher- j upa? John Tarwater proved a good Samaratan last Friday night when t had to come out in the rain in order to get a car out of the ditch. ; While we were Tiding out to the : scene, he told me that he had been : 1 reading in this column my comments on hunting, and judging - therefrom my abilities as a Nimrod, he believed that he should go out with me. Being a rather modest young man and knowing my proneness to quote personalities in this column, he : asked me not to divulge the big- : ' gest kill he ever made (I declare I almost said the biggest bird he r ever killed). I can't tell what it was, j . but he will have to do better than : j that before he can go with me. < i That is he would have to, if I f didn't like the young fellow and L would not be glad to have his com; pany. I Renew your subscription. | ????? HI I ^g7' ' $?? , ! EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES 1 FITTED . Every Monday morning from 9:00 to 11:00. Office with Dr. Rufus Jones, the dentist, over Citizens Bank, Warrenton. Main office near ; .? P. O. at Roanoke Rapids. j ' DR. E. D. HARBOUR | i OPTOMETRIST j c TH niMDAY5CNOOi USSON Cbari?> L bujKi Jesus begins His ministry. Lesson for Jan. 21st, Matt. 4:12-25. Golden Text: Matt. 4:17 The lesson presents the Master as jreacher, recruiter, and healer. As i preacher He proclaimed the same nessage heralded by Jolm, "Relent!" The word literally means Change your mind." We are to culivate a new point of view, to herish a different outlook, a fresh 'lsion. As a recruiter He summoned to lis side four men of vailed capaity and outlook. The first and most mportant was Simon Peter, the eader of the Twelve. We remember ill his faults. He was boastful. He vas prayerless at Gethsemane. His lot zeal got the better of him when le cut off the ear of the high iriest's servant. And he openly disivowed his Master with oaths. And . - * *? ret what a tov/er of strengm ne lecame, a veritable rock of Gibralar! The second recruit was Andrew, 'eter's brother. He is the commonilace, unheralded hero of the gos?1 record, the quiet, unobtrusive lelper who seldom appears in the wift drama of Jesus' career. So far s we know, he had no special gifts. Lpparently he performed no miracle leither did he found a church. And et this one-talented man used his nfexior endowment with rare sweetLess and nobility. The other two new disciples were ousins of Jesus, James and John, he "Sons of Thunder." With Peter hey enjoyed a special intimacy hth the Master. They were men of Lmilar spirit, who journeyed toether when the Twelve were sent ut two by two to preach the :ingdom of God. James, because his fe ended with an early martyrdom IJ ?fVi a rUcHnr?t.ir?n of his IU HUb icawu vAii/ vuu?u.v...? rother. But he was a devoted soul, ohn, of course, Is given a special lace of preeminence as "the disiple whom Jesus loved." As healer, we find the Master verwhelmed by a host of pathetic ufferera, the victims of both phys;al and mental ailments. G. T. White of Yadkin County uilt and filled a 65-ton trench ilo thin fall at a cost of only 37 ents per ton of silage stored, he epoits. 8fe==gF==^-is CITIZENS INSURANI G. W. Poindexter, Pre#. Warrentc FIRE LIFE Insurance i Consult Us r | insurance Another NM&MKBM ? i Down here at the War our new 1934 Standar | Oil, which is thorougl cold and position. It fl cording to the temper weather to a possible < insuring perfect lubrici | peratures, plus easy c weather. It is a supei derful discovery in the duction and can only tions and don't forget, : tion guarantee. It cor in need of service and vice station line remem BH fE WARREN RECORD Believes Aviator Prisoner of Savages SAINT JOHN, N. B., Jan. 13.? One of the last men known to have seen Paul Redfern as the American flier flew over the Carribean Sea i nearly seven years ago says there ! is hope for believing Redfern still lives. j Captain I. A. Hamre, master of the Danish freighter Christian Krohg, which directed the pilot to land shortly before he disappeared I on his inter-continental hop, ex- ' j pressed belief that Redfern is now held captive by a tribe of wild Venezuelans. Late one afternoon in August,! 1927, the Danish freighter, bound i for Rio de Janeiro, was plowing j Carribean waters miles off the Venezuelan coast. The crew idled about the deck in intense heat. j Suddenly there was an increasing hum from the north. A tiny speck rapidly took the form of an airplane which began circling over the ship. Scraps of paper fluttered from the plane. Retrieved from a small boat they bore this terse message: "Point ship to nearest land?wave flag or handkerchief for each 100 ? * ?1__ M miles distant?Keaiern ?muu&s. The crew painted the necessary Information on the deck In white letters. "After dipping his wings in thanks for the Information," said Captain Hamre, "he made off toward land, which was 170 miles distant, and T have no doubt that he made it in safety. He seemed to have plenty of gas, his engine was running smoothly and there was; no indication of storms in that vicinity." Redfern had left Brunswick, Ga., I for Rio de Janerio. Wreckage believed to have been parts of an airplane picked up by fishing boats. ! was interpreted as meaning he had | lost his life but several rumors that ' he was still alive In interior Brazil . have followed. None has ever been i substantiated. ; Relatives of the young flier have never abandoned hope that he is i alive. I Co-op Essay Subject Is Given Approval RALEIGH, Jan. 18?Announcement of Education and Coopera! tion In the New Deal for Agriculture as the subject of the seventh | ' annual essay contest of the North j Carolina Cotton Growers Cooperative Association has brought forth | inquiries and favorable comments1 from teachers' students and State leaders, M. G. Mann, secretary]E S BONDING CO. f M. E. Grant, Sect'y >n, N. C. LIABILITY BONDS of all Kinds upon Your Problems i _ ^ ^ I Wonder wKsum :m@m ] renton Service Station is d Esso UNIFLO Motor ily adjustable to heat, luctuates in viscosity acature from 10 in cold 10 in warm weather and r; ation during varied temranking in the. coldest r product, the most wonrealm of lubrication probe secured at Esso Staunder absolute satisfacnes in sealed cans. When a square deal in the serber the Old Reliable. i\\t SaggEHl ^1' BmEBGSB wmmmmmm?mmmmmm I Warrenton, treasurer of the cooperative, said' t this week. c Among the letters was one from Dr. A. T. Allen, State superinten- c dent of public instruction, terming t the essay contest "one of the most t worthwhile things that is going on." e "The topics which you have had s are practical topics upon which f there is abundant information avail- a able, and the effort of the children s to go out and study this informa- t tion and come back and stand on their feet arid talk about it is the Is very kind of exercise that we want c to go on in the public school," Dr. t Allen wrote Mr. Mann. They are a dealing with things that affect their fc own lives and may affect their fu- t ture." Dr. Alien termed this year's sub- i ject as "appropriate as anything f you can find. He said the subject, t Education and Cooperation in the v new Deal for Agriculture, will be c a concrete way of bringing the 8 present world and its problems di- s rectly to the attention of the pub- 1 lie school children, and that is : what we want." ! Dr. Allen also said he had I watched the efforts of Mr. Mann In 1 the essay contest from its beginning i and that he would be glad to have his department cooperate to the fullest extent. Care Needed In Handling Chicks t i The exercise of strict care in the' handling of young chicks is highly important in eradicating bacilliary i white diarrhea, states H. C. Gauger,, I of the N. C. State College poultry; j department. I Persons walking into brooder' houses, rodents and other wild creatures, contaminated food, manuTe from diseased birds, and un- ' sanitary houses all are responsible for spreading the disease germs. Another source of infection is in New 50^ Size! LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S TABLETS FOR WOMEN They relieve and prevent periodic pain and associated disorders. No narcotics. Not just a pain killer but a modern medicine which acts upon the CAUSE oi" your trouble. Per sistent use brings permanent J | relief. Sold by all druggists. K IiEFOSITS IN THIS BAN CITIZ TRU5 DEC! RESOURCE Cash in our vault and due from banks $ Suspense Items State of N. C. Bonds Other Stocks and Bonds Banking house and fixtures Other real estate ? Overdrafts Insurance Dept Loans and Discount 1, F. D. I. C. Fund Total $2, The ABOVE DO THESE EXPER THE A OFFICERS J. B. OWEN, Chairman ol W. A. HUNT, Presic K. L. BURTON, Executiv S. P. COOPER, Vice-I THOS. G. HORNER, Vice ROY O. RODWELL, A. H. CHEEK, Asst. Cashle JOHN L. WESTER, Assi IW. H. FLEMING, Trus PERRY & KITTRELL, Gel North Carolina pR liseased ergs, which always hatch >ut diseased chicks. i "To wipe out the diarrhea, all' liseased chicks should be killed and >urned or burled," says Gauger. "All irooder houses should be cleaned (very day until the chicks are even days old and then once every our days thereafter. All birds and inimals which might spread the terms should be kept away from he chicks." At least one square foot of floor pace should be provided for each hick. A good disinfectant should ie placed In their drinkin g water,' ind a well balanced mash should :e Included in their diet so as to mild up their resistance to disease. To prevent the cldcks from eatng food that has fallen to the loor where germs may be lurking, he feeding pens should te placed ipon wire frames at least one and ne-half feet square and an inch .nd a half from the floor. The wire hould be small mesh. Or size l-l hardware cloth will also serve sat HBHBBBBIISHflWHHi IIMPE Monday-Tuesday "STAGE N With Alice Brady, Maureen O'l Healy and Phillip Holmes. Two With Matinee at 3 jt. m. and " Wednesday, KATHLEEN "WALLS C With Sally Eilers, Norma Fos Marina also comedy. Matinee ! Thursclay-Friday MYRNA LOY, MAX BAIR, PI 1DEMPSEY "Prizefighter s With Walter Huston, Otto Ki 3 p. m., Night 7:15. Saturday, J BUSTER CRABBLE 1 "TARZAN THI Chapter 1. The Hive of Death Riding Torr.a.Jo, also C medy. 11 COMING ATTRACTIONS: Js Jan. 31?Worst Woman in Pai Mr. Skltch; Feb. 3?Hoot Gibs< K INSURED UNDER THE U. S. C STATEMENT ;ens b ... and ? ST CO MP. HENDERSON, N. C. :MBER 30, s LL Capital stocl Capital stocl 823,626.32 c cent prefei -K7ftl9 Surplus and 5'" v.ided Pro 100,743.63 Reserve for ' Insurance D< 40,743.63 Individual D Cashier's Che 37,609.49 Certified Che 50,000.00 Savings Depc 27 Certificates < 13,999:83 _ZZ ,112,849.56 Diviieiend Che 3,009.63 Outstandir. 183,167.97 Total ES NOT INCLUDE T1 IENCED BUSINESS lFFAIRS OF THIS B BOARD ( f the Board J- B- ? lenV _ M. -sr. Cooper e Vice-Pres. 'resident J. C. Cooper !-President Cashier S- P" Coo^r :r and Secty. Geo. B. Harris stant Cashier ? t Officer ' A" Hunt aeral Counsel K. L. Burton IDAY, JANUARY 19,1934 1 islactorily. The frames shouiT^l cleaned daily. I Gauger states that a most 1?. I portant step is to secure eg:? 0.1 chicks from hatcheries whose flocks I have been found free of the dlar.l rhea after being given the blood tests, or at least make sure tha-.B the eggs came from blood-tested birds. I Patronize the Advertiser. I U Dr. Rufus S. Jones HI | A.B., MA, D.D.S. 11 U General Practice of Dentistry HI 1 8 X-RAY SERVICE 111 H u I Citizens Bank Building 31 | Phone 70 II rial! January 22-23 10THER" I Sullivan, Ivanchot Tone; Ded reel Merto-Goldwyn Comedy f:15 p. m. January 24 NORMS' >F GOLD" ter, Ralph Morgan, Rosita H 1 p. m., Night 7:15. , January 25-26 RIMO CARNERA and JACK H IN THE ind the Lady" ruger, also Comedy. Matinee anuary 27 fl n The NEW SERIAL it FEARLESS" and Western tin fatinee 2, ll-21c; Night 16- 6 in. 29-30?Jimmy and Sally: ris; Feb. 1-2?Will Rogers in an. M IOV INSURANCE PLAN :ANK I 4NY I 1933 J ABILITIES k $ 250,000.00 c 6 per rred 50,000.00 Undifits 18.150.63 Cont'g. 147,214.90 jpt 7,355.06 eposits 1,099,157.31' n Jcks .... 1,672.61 Jcks.... 729.17 sits .... 500,418.27 of De 81,488.94 ! 26,962.57 icks I ig 18.50 $2,183,167.97 B RUST ASSETS I MEN DIRECT I ANK I 3F DIRECTORS I WEN, Chairman Thos. O. Horner 8. 8. Parhm B B. H. Perry B Roy O. Rodweli B Saml M. Watklra B E. F. Par ham
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Jan. 19, 1934, edition 1
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