*** * PAGE 2 ? . l>uniiiiiiiiiiiiii)iiii?,'niiiiiniinii;:iii; p I Littleton N MRS. JACK N i-.lj . Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Aiken and Thomas Worthen Aiken of Wash ington, D. C., visited relatives here a few days this week. Mrs. John MacRae of Maxton has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Thome at their home in Airlie. Dr. W. E. Campbell spent the week end in Raleigh. Rev. and Mrs. H. Reid Miller and Miss Elizabeth Miller returned Thursday from a visit of several weeks with relatives in Canada. Mrs. Mabel Morris is spending a few days at "Sycamore Alley" with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Bloomer. Miss Mary Butts of South Hill is visiting Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Bobbitt. Mrs. L. S. Slade returned to Warrenton Monday after spending several days here with Mrs M. P. Cassada. Mrs. H. A. Hunt and Wilson Hunt spent the week end in Norfolk. Miss Mariam Jones of Newport News is visiting her cousin, Miss Lucretia Jones. Mr. Mark Page of Cleveland, Ohio, was a visitor in town Friday. I Miss Annie Price and Miss Mary Lyon. Coppersmith visited friends in ] Henderson Sunday. 1 Miss Annie Tucker Moore and Miss Pearl Fishel left Thursday for j Franklinton, where they will teach c in the high school this term. j Mr. Jack Graham Riggan of Warrenton was a visitor in town Sun- i day. i Miss Mattie Jenkins is visiting c Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Aiken at their 5 home in Washington, D. C. f Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Darden, Miss Charlotte Darden, Mrs. B. L. Rives and Mrs. J. J. Nelson spent Tuesday in Richmond. p Miss Betty Carpenter of Roanoke Rapids spent several days this week t, with her sister, Mrs. Jack Salmon. ? After spending a few days here with his mother, Mrs. J. R. Ivey, Sam Turner left Friday to enter p Wake Forest College. j, Mrs. J. M. Mohorn and daughters a of Weldon spent last week here with her mother, Mrs. J. B. Boyce. Miss Virginia Tate left Thursday ' for Raleigh to resume her studies at N. C. State College. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Strandberg of Greensboro were week end guests j of Mrs. B. P. Cooper. ^ Robert Thome spent the week end n at Virginia Beach. fc Mrs. C. H. Lambeth and little daughter who have been spending j. the summer months here, returned to Norfolk Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Laurie McCranie of Washington, D. C., are spending this b week with Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Walker. f Miss Helen Browning, Percy Harris, Dennis Rose, Edwin Harvey and Ben Browning attended a dance in . Henderson Monday night. 0 Mrs. J. B. Boyce spent several ^ days this week in Weldon with her J v.4. -war t a&ugiiter, iviii). o. iyjl. IY1U1JLWJ.XZ. Mrs. W. R. Hunt of Raleigh Is visiting her sister, Mrs. H. A. Hunt. . Mr. Cleveland Carter of Weldon * was a visitor in town Tuesday. . Mrs. H. C. Smith and daughters, who have been visiting Mr. C. G. Moore, left Monday for their home in Norfolk. j Miss Verona Topping spent Monday in Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. John Jones spent the week end in Jackson as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown. J Miss Ethel Parker of Roanoke Rapids is spending this week end with Miss Prances Newsom. Mrs. Kenneth Kennedy and her j children, Miss Virginia Kennedy ^ and Joe Kennedy, of Durham are ? spending some time here with Mrs. " J. R. Wollett. t Mrs. M. Nelson, Misses lsabelle t Nelson and Helen Browning motored , to Rocky Mount Saturday. j William Hugh Sessoms left Sun- ] day to resiune his studies at Wake ( Forest College. Miss Bertha Mae Newsom return ed Saturday from Leesburg, where ' she has been spending the summer with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Cooper of Norfolk were week end guests of Mrs. B. P. Cooper. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Darden spent the week end at Virginia Beach. Miss Emily Pippen left Monday for Red Springs to enter Flora MacDonald College. Miss Charlotte Dawson of Weldcn spent a few days here this week with relatives. Mr. Clinton Smith of Raleigh spent ounaay at nis nome nere. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bussey, Miss Mary Whitmell Bussey and Stanley Bossey, Jr.? of West Palm Beach, Florida, have been visiting Misses Annie and Tempe Thome during the past week. Mrs. J. W. Warren spent Friday in Norfolk. Miss Sally Moore Pippen, James Jenkins and Chas Allen Jones attended a dance in Rocky Mount Friday night. Miss Elizabeth Pegram is visiting relatives in Weldon. Mr W T? TTiin+ n* TJololrrV. cn.in* W* ?! . *v. AAUUV vr* *w??v*8** Tuesday here with Mr. and Mre. H. A. Hunt. v. Misses Marguerite- and Bernlce -A SMBHMHnMBBMHIIBJMMnMnv Warren ton, North Can ews Events ELSON, Editor Stewart returned to their home in Raleigh Wednesday after spending several weeks here with Miss Hazel Topping. Mrs. Prank Jones visited her parents in Henderson Saturday. Mrs. T. R. Walker returned Friday from a visit with friends in Louisville, Ky., and Cincinnati, Ohio. Mrs. W. B. Browning and Mrs N. R. Newsom spent Tuesday in Jackson. Mrs. J. C. Snell and daughters, Misses Roberta and Josephine, of Raleigh were week snd guests ol TVyfico .Tnsip Alston. 1U4UW WVW*V ? Harry Cassada spent the week end with friends in Franklin, Va. Hill Holoman, Jr., of Ocean View was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Lambeth. Miss Elberta Foster left Tuesday for Raleigh, where she will resume her studies at Meredith College. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Pippen motor- j ed to Red Springs Monday. Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Walker spent rhursday and Friday at Fredericksburg, Va. Mr. Jack Cassada of Roanoke Rapids spent the week end at his iome here. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Condrey of Scotland Neck announce the birth >f a son, James Edward, Jr., on Saturday, September 8. The above announcement, received n the city this week, will be of nterest to the people here, as Mrs. Jondrey was formerly Miss Theresa Jarks and taught in the school here or two terms. MRS. BLOOMER HOSTESS On Thursday Mr. and Mrs. Hugh iloomer delightfully entertained a arge number of friends at a barecue dinner in their grove at Sycamore Alley". Guests from Litleton were: Mr. and Mrs. N. R. fewsom, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. T. licks, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Leach, Its. Mabel Morris, Mrs. B. P. Cooper nd Mr. J. T. Jenkins. brother Littleton Minister Dies Littleton, Sept. 13.?Rev. Rufus Iradley was called to Birmingham, Lla., Monday on account of the alaost sudden death of his only irother, A. Walter Bradley, who uffered a stroke of paralysis at lis home there Sunday. Death claimd him Monday afternoon at 1 'clock. He will be well remembered here y some of the old Bagley School tudents, having attended Prof. Jagleys School here a number of ears ago. He was raised at Jackson, Northtampton county and was the son if the late J. H. Bradley and Mrs. /Tary Elizebeth (Mollie) Bradley, le was a member of the Methodist hurch. Mr. Bradley had made his home n Birmingham for the past ten or welve years where he was well mown in the Grocery and Dairy Business. He is survived by his widow, and >ne brother Rev. Rufus Bridley of jittleton. There were no children. Funeral arrangements had not >een completed when Mr. Bradley eft here Monday night. Littleton School Begins Year's Work Littleton, Sept. 13.?The Littleton High School opened Monday, Sepember 10, with an enrollment lightly larger than the first day >f last year. The teachers who have ;aught here before and returned ;his term ^re Paul W. Cooper, A. IV. Parker, George B. Snuggs, Mrs. Sdith B. Clark, Miss Lucy Fortescue, Miss Louise Dalton, Miss Annie 3arris, Miss Estelle Isles, Miss Floy Brewer, Miss Lillah Nelson and Mrs. E. L. Crawley. The new ones here are Miss Claire Benthall, Miss Mabel Stroupe, Miss Emelyne Evans, and Miss Louise White. A number of improvements have been made on the school plant since school closed in the spring. The building has been painted inside and a new boiler and heating system has been installed. An addition is. now being made to the building providing new classrooms and new toilet facilities. Beef, especially steaks, should be chosen by tests of elastic red meat and firm, white fat. Built Up Strength y By Taking Cardui Here's her own account of how Mrs. T. W. Hardixx, of Qreer, S. G? was benefited by taking Cardui: "I suffered a great deal from weakness in my back and pains in my side and felt so miserable," she writes. "I read of Cardui and decided to try it. I felt better after I took my first hot lie, so kept on taking it as I felt such a need of strength, and it helped me so much." I Thousands of women testify Cardui benefited them. If It does not benefit YOU, consult a physician. )&na How About A i her 16 hour mv?? a aJ&tiu. k _ SUMDAY5CHOOL LESSON CbarUiLDuna Isaiah Contrasts False and True Worship. Lesson for September 16th. Isaiah 1. rtnldpn Text: Psalm 24:3.4. This stirring sermon of the prophet Isaiah is a thrilling call to reality. The Lord argues the' prophet, will not tolerate worship, however elaborate and ceremonial, whose fruits do not manifest the earmarks of righteousness. The heart of the lesson is to be found in the 16th and 17th verses, "Wash yourself clean, banish your evil doings from my sight, cease to do wrong, learn to do right, make justice all your aim, and put a check on violence." What does this mean in terms of today? Were Isaiah now alive I imagine that his message would sound something like this: "The fundamental cause of our existing social anarchy is a selfish insistence upon individual rights. Unless a workable strategy of social planning is developed, suicidal chaos will inevitably result. "The millions who can find no work tragically demonstrate the obsolete character of our economic system. They are not Belgian refugees or victims of a flood or earthquake, but the. dupes of a stupid, unjust social order over which they have no control. To effectively release them from their plight the State and Federal Governments must provide adequate relief funds, launch large-scale construction programs, and establ- J ish unemployment insurance. "The Church should take a leading part in the gigantic struggle for ^ Rev. /. N. Demy says: " I have found nothing in the past 20 years that can take the ] place of Dr. Miles Anti-Pain PSh. They are a sure relief far my headache Suffersrs from H e a d a c he, i Neuralgia, Toothache, Backache, Sciatica, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, Muscular Pains, Periodic Paias, write that they have used Dr. Miles Anti-I>ain Pills with beherresults than they had i even bojjed fax. " Count uess American house- < wives would no mare think j of fcccriug house without Dr. < KEQcs Anti-Pain HQs Asm with- \ oat floor or sngar. Keep a packI oge toyanr medicine cabinet and sacoe yemrseff needless suffering. At Drug Stores?25e t^td fLOQ jkimhin piiis THE WARREN RECC Labor Day for Ma ^I ? .-a social reconstruction. Her stake in the fight is momentous, for the basic social and ethical problems of our industrial civilization, are deeply human and personal. She must keep herself well-informed, and must ever be on the alert to hazard much for righteousness. This is no time for complacency. The Society of Christ must be profoundly discontented with things as they are." FARMERS IN DEBT (Continued from Page 1) way in a friendly meeting together, it was said. Any debtor or creditor seeking a readjustment in the debt relationship one to the other may ask this committee to investigate ^nd make recommendation to each or both parties for the purpose of effecting a satisfactory solution of any existing difficulties. Application blanks will be furnished to either the debtor or creditor seeking adjustment. These blanks will be furnished by any member of the committee and may be used to request the aid of the comittea. This committee has nothing to do with the actual refinancing of farm loans under the Federal Farm Relief Legislative program. Debtors or creditors wishing to use the services of this committee should get in touch with Chairman A. S. Bugg, or any other member of the committee. The State Committee consists of the following members: Lionel Weill, chairman, Goldsboro; R. A. Doughton, Sparta, Dr. D. W. Forster, Executive Secretary, Raleigh, J. L. Skinner. Littleton. Millard F. Jones. Rocky Mount, H. A. Millis, High Point, Julian Price, Greensboro, M. O. Blount, Bethel, J. Allen Taylor, Wilmington. It was pointed out by Mr. Watkings that Warren county is indebtJ Spe Invits The Warrenton Ser one and all to come to s farmer friends, we war The Warrenton Service if middle of all three tob most convenient?When ceive courteous treatmen square deal. We carry the best i can buy, we guarantee it if you crave a cheaper 1 oil and a lot of other th Sell you cotton and and come to the Warn just around the corner, Center Warehouse, for i trucks and automobiles. )RD ^ ?? by A. B. Chapin I t^Sstc^ ed on farm lands to the excess of one million dollars and the State of North Carolina is indebted in excess of one hundred and five million dollars. Long-Used Laxative ,To be bought and used as needed for many, many years, speaks well Tor the reliability of Thedford's Black-Draught, purely vegetable family laxative. Mr. C. E. Ratliff writes from Hinton, W. Va.: "My wife and I have used Thedford's Black-Draught thirty-five years for constipation,?tired feeling and headache. I use it when I feel my system needs cleansing. After all these years, I haven't found anything better than Black-Draught." Sold in 25-cent packages. Thedford's BLACK-DRAUGHT "CHILDREN LIKE THE SVBTO" WEAK AND SKINNY MEN, WOMEN mm nun nnru Hnu uniLuncn Saved by new Vitamins of Cod Liver Oil in tasteless tablets. Pounds of firm healthy flesh instead of bare scraggy bones I New vigor, vim and energy instead of tired listlessness! Steady, quiet nerves! That is what thousands of people are getting through scientists' latest discovery?the Vitamins of Cod Liver Oil concentrated in little sugar coated tablets without any of its horrid, fishy ta3te or smell. McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Tablets, they're called! "Cod Liver Oil in Tablets", and they simply work wonders. A little boy of 3, seriously sick, got well and gained 10'/$ lbs. in just one month. A girl of thirteen after the same disease, gained 3 lbs. the first week and 2 lbs. each week after. A young mother who I could not eat or sleep after baby came got all her health back and gained 10 lbs. in less than a month. You simply must try McCoy's at once. Hemember if you don't gain at least 3 lbs. of firm healthy flesh in a month get your money back. Demand and get McCoy's?the original and genuine Cod Liver Oil Tablets NJtA ?approved by Good Housekeeping Institute. Refuse all substitutes? JE, insist on the original McCoy's? SHrlL there are none better, cial I ition rice Station invites you iee us?To our tobacco | it to remind you that Station is right in the j acco warehouses, and | e you will always re- j it, real service, and a n our line that money , stand behind it. Still, ine?say Tires, Tubes, ings, we got um. tobacco in Warrenton snton Service Station, and across from the vhat you need for I ronton. North feroBmi FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER i4 ^ I r????~~? which 1 HOME HINTS cold water ... ' *?I . By NANCY HART Put wax PaP*r over *aterni, that has been cut. it L)a I ?????' fresh and moist lor a w . I Use denatured alconoi to remove * * ? "w"8 I tobacco Stains from copper or brass Lemons will not deca t ash trays. kept in cold water thatV thfiy ^ I * * * changed every day. re^?y I Zinc is easily cleaned with a bit of lemon left standing: on any stain Patronize the AdvertkT~" for an hour or so. Wash with hot water. The zinc will look like new. ^5 I To remove paint spots from hardHelp K:dnw, I wood floors, rub them briskly with A Lf..JJorIy functioning I kerosene and follow with a cloth Up Night? I moistened in lukewarm water. f te* I * * * ^tor'sPrescripUoVc'^;;^^ Cyatex Etfe'l-SJ A good furnifure polish is made | of equal parts of kerosene, tureen- ??. I tine and vinegar. " ??a I * * * pi You can prevent eggs from crack- * * ^ OStef ing by pricking with a pin before rj^i Enirin^ e I you boil them. g ' Surveyer I * * * Littleton, N C fl Sandwiches will keep many hours ^ if placed in a covered earthen jar I I BENT | I I rrunrnn (K rtnutna i Spoil The Looks of Your Car 1 Have Them Repaired At K GILLAM AUTO? I Warrenton, N. C. I K We have a man who is experienced m this I K, line of work and feel confident that we can give K, a job that you will be highly pleased with at j K a very small charge. Kb: \ Km ^Km I MAKE OUR GARAGE YOUR I. I AUTOMOBILE HEADQUARTERS A; I I j In The March Toward K KE(JU VEKI | Every cent released by closed Banks returns to Normal Trade Channels, benefitting YOU, whether ^ you are a depositor or not. The Real Estate listed below is offered for sale ^Bto to speed payment to Depositors. THE FOLLOWING REAL ESTATE OWNED BY THE FARMERS & MERCHANTS BANK. Hs LITTLETON, N. C. Br ' V IS OFFEREDFOR SALE: Butr ] PARCEL NO. 1.?Farmers and Merchants Bank Building '1f Be b five very desirable offices on 2nd floor on south side 01 n Main Street in the town of Littleton. Jthi PARCEL NO. 2.?88.8 acres improved farm lands w"bse0'ut. B* t room residence, pack barn, curing barns and all necessary Hever buildings thereon. Located about one mile east of ne Bgy on highway between American Agricultural Chemical oorpu c fertilizer plant and Bowen's Crossing. Excellent tobacco Biat i PARCEL NO. 3?7'/2 acres about one-nalt mile north o " p lister, N. C., fronting on State Highway leading from go Essex, adjoining the present home place of J. R- Wolle ' d Bat < PARCEL NO, 4.?13 acres farm land, practically all c ea Bllh; ? A rnnld T03CI. One mile west from Hoiiister, N. u., oil uie mtuu PARCEL NO. 5.?Two-story frame house on Bflc<in Town of Littleton known as R. W. Thornton resides ^ Bt ] PARCEL NO. 6.?Six room' house and two lots, <^^"orchard B?Ugl noke Ave. and High St. in Town of Littleton, N. C. N"* on lot Hack'-'" Mr PARCEL NO. 7.?One lot of 8 acres on High ana H hf Streets in Town of Littleton, N. C. ^ 30 h PARCEL NO. 8.-3 Five room houses and lots all fron 1 fas Hackett Street, Littleton, N. C. . ^,,r. h PARCEL NO. 9.?One vacant lot, back of Farmers an ^ Hfc, h chants Bank Building, Littleton, N. C. Very common y V1 < "Shop Lot." ^tup, PARCEL NO. 10.?Twelve acres of land in Ju^ms M[f mile H18 ? Warren County, known as "Newsom Tract," about o re; directly south from the home of E. L. Whitaker. Littieton B sa PARCEL NO. 11.?43 acre farm one mile norph of ^ reti on Highway No. 48. Good dwelling and out buildings, we J Any Known as the "Bobbitt Farm." Ideal for tobacco. jan(j Bn in PARCEL NO. 12.?One-half interest in 243 aC*es 1&rtn. U fpe' in Littleton Township, being a part of the Gretna ore* in eker, PARCEL NO. 13.?One vacant lot near Market B mi Town of Littleton, being lot formerly owned by Otis ^ B he The sooner this land is sold, the so0"^ your frozen therein will go to worK aga?" ".fI?jrTY "" PROSPERITY, and that of YOUR COMMU Address your bids or call in person to G. HAROLD MYRICK, Liquidating Age"fFARMERS & MERCHANTS BANK BLDG. , LITTLETON, N. C.

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