Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Jan. 21, 1938, edition 1 / Page 6
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
PAGE 6 ^ ? D /% /-vi D'lVlinUTS uiuyi Author of "How to Wi and Influence Peo MARY PI A Borrowed Birth Ce On Her Career To E Woman In Who is the most famous woman in all the world? Frankly, I don't know- But my guess would be that the title goes to a little Canadian Irish girl who weighs only one hundred and three pounds and who was christened Gladys Marie Smith. Miss Smith went on the stage when she was very young. Fortunately, she came under the friendly and expert tutelage of David Belasco; and that master showman changed the uninspiring name of Gladys Smith into something more elegant and euphonious. Belasco called her Mary Pickford. She has been on the screen longer than any other motion picture star in the world- She was world-famous before Douglas Fairbanks stood, for the first time, in front of a camera. She was the highest-salaried player on the screen long before Charlie Chaplin ever saw Hollywood; she was lining 'em up at the box office before Tom Mix ever rode his first horse on a motion picture lot. Mary Pickford was earning her| living when she was so young that. she had trouble with the child-labor j laws. Organizations such as the Gary Society in New York tried to' keep her from acting on the stage.: They said she ought to be learning arithmetic at school instead of struting about in the theatre. So Mary fooled them. She had a cousin' who was a year older than she was; j she used her cousin's birth certifi- cate, and circumvented the minions ? - t <r?rV?ir +V?ic oi ine iaw- xuut io vyhj, w day, Who's Who and other directories give her age as being' one year older than it actually is. | Few careers offer such striking contrasts as Mary Pickford's. | At one time in her life, she did her own laundry, pasted her wet handkerchiefs on the window pane to dry and spent only ten cents a day for food. A dozen years later, she was making about $1,000 an hour of $15.00 a second. How does the most famous, woman in the world live? What does she do for pleasure? Well, eating isn't one of her pleasures. I dropped into see her one day about 6 o'clock in the evening and she told me the only thing she had eaten all day was the one slice of toast and a cup of tea. I asked her if she ws hungry and she said, "No, not at all." Mary Plckford says that ambition is a curse. It drives you and possesses you and keeps you from doing the things you want to do. She likes to walk and ride horseback but she seldom has time to do either. TwaTrILTET FOR THE MISER* OF Jgf> \ <3^ Talc* 2 BAYER ASPIRIN labials and drink a full glass of watar. Re neat treatment in 2 hours. If throat Is sore from the cold, crush and stir 3 BAYER ASPIRIN tablets in I/3 glass of water. Gcrgle ! twice. This eases throat rawness and soreness almost instantly. All it usually costs to relieve the misery of a cold today ? is 3^ to ? relief for the period of your cold 15^ to 25^. Hence no family need neglect even minor head colds. > Here is what to do: Take two BAYER tablets when you feel a cold coming on ? with a full glass of water. Then repeat, if necessary, according to directions in each, package. Relief comes rapidly. The Bayer method of relieving colds is the way many doctors approve. You take Bayer Aspirin for relief ? then if you are not hnnnul ,.,,11 +1, ? Axipivvcva pi uui^ujy jwu vail m? family doctor. 2 FULL DOZEN 25c ~**-S Virtually 1 cent a tablet Warren ton. North Carotins 0 aphies r^% n Friends CKFORD - fi. .1 T I I ;rtiticate started ner ?e The Most Famous The World She works from twelve to sixteen hours a day. She has two sets of secretaries; for she says she could never expect any secretary to work as hard or as long as she does. She gets more mail than anyone else in the world- It would take her ; ten hours a day just to read her mail. The post office delivers it to her in great bags. She receives many begging letters. Her requests for money are ten times as great as her income. Mary Pickford is real?the sort of person that you woud live. Modest and sincere, she is totalled unspoiled by any false ideas of her own She Dried Her Wet Handkerchief on the Window Pane "and Spent Ten Cents a Day for Food importance. She told me she doesn't even care whether there is so much as a gravestone to mark her last resting place. i As everyone knows, she has often played children's parts on the screen; and the reason that she did it was because she longed to cap-1 ture, in the world of illusion, some - f-'-" #3oliflrVite, nf /OiilHhnnH I Ui biic mix j uvu^iiw wj. that had been denied her. 1 I asked Miss Pickford if there weren't thousands of girls in America just as pretty and charming and capable as the stars of Hollywood. She said, "Yes, of course. Success, however, depends so much upon opportunity, and opportunity is just another name for what we call "the breaks.' So perhaps the stars in Hollywood are the persons with ability who got 'the breaks'." | Wouldn't it be great if a tenth of what the advertisers claim of beauty preparations were true? ! ~ | N01 TO TAX Effective Feb] cent penalty will In March there wi penalty; in April penalty, and in M penalty. TJip law was t, cent was added 1 taxes of those late was changed by t to vary from 1 pei Pay your taxes the penalty. I W.J. in THE m Announces Plans For Annual Show 1 i The North Carolina Crop Improvement Association will hold its fourth annual seed exposition and meeting in Lexington, February 3 and 9, A. D. Stuart of State College has announced. Farmers' displays at the show will include certified and uncertified seed of high Quality, Stewart declared. Featured on the first day of the 1 meeting will be a crops judging con- 11 test in which 4-H Club boys and : students of vocational agriculture i will compete. 11 Officials of the N. C. C. I. A. nave , secured several prominent agricultural authorities of state and national importance to speak before the crowd on the second day of the exposition. Goldsboro was the scene of the association's last meeting, where a large number of Eastern North Carolina farmers viewed the exhibits and took part in the meetings. The annual meeting is held in a different city each year, Stuart said. j The association now has a mem-, bership of approximately 360 farmers ; scattered throughout the state. I These growers, through their cooperation with the association, are producing superior seed with highproducing, disease-resistant charac (iCliOMWIi Stuart pointed out a definite need for the production of more certified seed in Nortii Carolina. Only two per cent of the seed planted in this state are certified, he said. "The field is wide open for those who are interested in producing purebred seed," he declared. | I Elberon Items Mr. and Mrs. Daniel E. Hudgins and family of Waxrenton spent Sunday with Mr. arid Mrs. W. H. Aycock. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Shepherd and Miss Mildred O'Neal were visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Williams in Warren Plains Sunday, i Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Wood and sons of Ringwood spent Saturday j night and Sunday with Mrs. Wood's j parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Jones- | Mrs. W. L. Fleming and son of j near Henderson were dinner guests oi JMrs- jjeua r. rivAAA.A Uli kjui.-, day. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Hicks oi Henderson were guests of Mr. and j Mrs. J. P. Choplin SundayMr. and Mrs. M. K. Aycock and 1 son, Mrs- F. W. Aycock and Miss Hattie Aycock were visitors in the ' home of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ben- j | son in Inez on Sunday, j Mrs. W. W. O'Neal was a dinner! guest of Mrs. W. B. Mustian on Sunday. j The Sulphur Springs W. M. U.1 met in the home of Mrs. Delia F. I Aycock on January 12th. A very interesting program was given. The next meeting will be held in the home of Mrs- M. C. Duke on Feb- j ruary 16th. IIUC.I [PAYERS I *uary 1 a one per be added to taxes. 11 be a two per cent a three per cent [ay a four per cent hat 1-2 of one per flj each month to the ! in paying, but this he last Legislature * cent to 4 per cent. early and avoid Pinnell RIFF IRREN RECORD mm liSSOH If CkttUtLDnM Ministering to Physical Needs. Lesson for January 23rd. Mark 1:29-45. Golden Text: Mark 1:34. The Committee on the Costs of j Med ical Care, of which Dr. Ray j Lyman Wilbur was Chairman, esti-, mated that In the prosperous year pf 1929 the American public spent about $3,700,000,000 for medical care pf every kind, an average of $30 per capita, or $108 per family. This is an enormous sum, and ought to assure adequate results- The Com-' mittee found, however, that surprisingly large numbers of sick people go without proper treatment. It discovered that 25 to 30 per cent of' all cases of serious illness never j iome under the supervision of a physician, and that about half of the families with incomes of less than $2,000 receive no medical care Df any kind, although these are preEffitMMI?MkMMM? I | Ji\uauaicio impT U< A I ALL M TllA ITh The 7: PRACTICALLY EVERY BEEN REC0NDITI0NE1 I SMALL DOWI> EACH USED CAR CURATELY DESCRI IT IS OFFE As each car is broi selling block the Auct you a detailed accura report regarding its co You can buy any cat with the same assuran and satisfaction that y a private sale, and on EASY MONTHL THIS IS AN OPPORTU I Coaches V|T^ BoydDial 331-1 i Warranto cisely the folk who need iiuch at- < tentlon the most. < This deplorable situation is not 1 due to a lack of doctors or nurses for both professions are overcrowd- " ed. The trouble is that medical service is now organized on a hopeless, ly wasteful and chaotic basis. Vast sums are being spent in a hit or miss fashion on the stupid assump- 1 tion that "rugged medical Individ- 1 ualism" is preferable to group prac- ' tice on the cooperative plan. Dr. 1 Wilbur's Committee, in its majority report, recommended "that medical 1 service, both preventive ana tnera | peutic, should be furnished largely! by organized groups of physicians" centering their activities 'preferably, around a hospital " llhe famous Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., is geared to this technic. A. complementary proposal is group hospitalization which operates on an insurance basisi. Our lesson gives a vivid portrait of Jesus as the Master Physician. "He healed many that were sick,"i says the Golden Text. Were he' alive now in the flesh he would be eager to improve the health of mankind by every means available. The 1 Our Ne\ I ARE SELLING SO FAf CAR DEPARTMENT SO WE HAVE DECIDE] >ED A UC" rain ob AKES sday, two a AT 2:30 AN] e 2:30 Sale 30 Sale At E MAKE OF CAR WILL BE 0] ) AND REPAINTED . . . I PAYMENTS WILL BE AC- COM BED BEFORE RED Select light up to the Car r ioneer will give _ te and truthful Tl*y ndition. Befort at this Auction ce of confidence ou would buy at lH Y TERMS NITY YOU MAY NEVER 1 CARS J YOUR OW A> ON EASY Boyce Your FORD D n. North CMho F emancipation of the public from the lurse of disease would be to him a najor Christian aim. iVireworms Damage Irish Potato Crop Wireworms are dealing North Carolina's early Irish potato crop a leavier blow with each passing year, ieclares J. O. Rowell, extension entomologist at state collegeIn the past little emphasis has been laid on control measui es, but it now appears that immedia te steps must be taken to combat this insect menace. Rowell explained that a large number of market potatoes failed to ?rade No. 1 last year because of wireworm attacks. The true wireworm, which is the larval or worm stage of the click beetle, is the spuus ucauuc&t ni^cuu uicuij'. Since wireworms commonly infest l ;od land, potatoes often suffer se- | merely when planted on recently j sroken ground. Such leguminous irops as clover, alfalfa, field peas, ind soybeans are not suscepitible to ittack. Therefore, potatoes may be v Fords J >T THAT OUR USER IS UVEK-SlUthJiU. 0 TO SELL ALL OUK CAf T nc 1 SHINE ALL N Jan. ALES 0 7:30 P. M. At Our Gars Joyd's Ware FFERED AT THIS AUCTIOK ALL MUST BE SOL D. easy mo: 111 IN YOUR CAR Am AT i our ?fow. Drive your 1 t Out Department ai 1 The Auction Sale s praise it and a any Car you bu Balance on !*P EASY MON' IAVE AGAIN TO BUY R] i AT W PRICE J L Tfc-KMo Moto dealer Wan RIDAY, JANUARY 21,1935 I planted with a reasonable degree of I safety on new land following 4 I three or four year rotation of wije. I worm immune crops. I Rowell pointed out that I crops such as corn, cotton, fc!i I sweet potatoes are susceptible to I attack by this insect pest. Whej I these crops follow Irish potatoes on I the same land, it appears that tie I only means of reducing wirewor? 1 infestation, in such fields is clean I cultivation from October through I the first of January. " I In the Eastern counties where soil erosion is not a serious problem the ground should be turned as soon as the crop is harvested or at least by the latter part of October. In the Piedmont area there is m. I tie that can be recommended as a I cultural control. It is the usual practice in this section to follow a rotation which includes small gram or corn following potatoes. J. L. McNeill of Mitchell county solved the problem of succulent feej for his dairy cows by growing two tons of stock beets on 1-lOth of an acre of land. Coupes WW IS >N IODELS SS5"1 I ge I .'house I f . . MANY HAVE I NTHLY TERMS j TAKEN IN TRADE | rCTION SALE Car to our Used Car j If iy time before the J I tarts and we will ap- j JBI Uow you full value on IBI iy at the Auction Sale, j IBI THLY PAYMENTS j III ECONDITIONED USED If J Sedans Ijj r Co. *enton, N. 0- IN
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 21, 1938, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75