Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / June 17, 1938, edition 1 / Page 6
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11 PAGES j T"*^ T3 / N THIS WEEK In Washington k * Washington, June 16.?The announcement by President Roosevelt that he will send a commission to London this Summer to study anu report on the workings of the British Trade Unions Act has met with general approval here except for certain Labor leaders, who see in this plan a possible threat to the Union supremacy now accorded by the National Labor Relations Act. Mr. Lewis, chairman of the C. I- O., for one, does not want any changes in American laws which would put such restraints upon the activities of organized Labor as are imposed n?Q0t "Rrimin Ill U1LHK The general feeling here, however. Is that it Is about time Congress and the American people had access to correct information about how labor relations are controlled in the other great democracy of the world. England has had a long experience with labor organizations and their regulation by government. Besides old laws providing for the registration of Unions and public accounting of their receipts and expenditures, there are statutes prohibiting the use of Union funds for political purposes. The Act of 1927, which followed the general strike oi iooh twiared "svmDathetic" strikes Illegal, prohibits picketing in sup- j port of illegal strikes and forbids the I use of union funds to support such I strikes. An important provision oi I the British law forbids Union affil-1 iaiion by government employees. There is a growing feeling in both | houses of Congress that our own j Wagner Labor Relations Act gives! organized labor an unfair advan- I tage in that it does not give em- I ployers rights comparable with those j of workers. The movement to I amend the Wagner Act in that and 11 other respects has been gaining I < headway. I1 Distribution of $3,000,000,000 In the meantime, the exact situa-13 tion in this country of the related 11 mat.ers of unemployment and reUeils is coming under increasing scrutiny. 11 In response to a request from the J8 President, Congress nas > ed nearly 3 billion dollars for 11 "pump-priming" and relief, in the I < hope that the expenditure of this |' money will stimulate business to the | extent that private industry Willi2 find it possible to re-employ most 011 those now being supported, directly |v or Indirectly, out of public funds. 11 There are grave differences ofjl opinion as to the effectiveness of 11 this new spending in the matter of j r business recovery, but quite general I 3 agreement that it will be useful po-1 c litically, in helping the Administra- j tion to retain its control of Congress J C in the Fall elections- 11 The funds appropriated?which j i must be borrowed and added to the I i National Debt are apportioned I i among the W. P. A., the P. W. A., I v National Youth Administration, J c Farm Security Administration, Por-1 c to Rico Reconstruction, National I e Emergency Council, National Re-lr sources Committee, Prison Indus-1 e tries Reorganization, Federal Public It Buildings and Rural Electrification! loans. IJ The largest allotment goes to the I Works Progress Administration, I which now has on its payroll 2,632,- I 000 workers, who get an average I wage of $53 a month. This does 11 not take care of all of the unem-h ployed, however. The closest esti - J ? ' mate which can be made is thalli there were above 6 1-2 million 11 households, comprising more than! 20 million individuals, receiving eith- 11 er work relief or direct relief in 11 April of this year. A little more I c ??? r\f thn mniiAv eivinf ( t UlMi UliC-bllllU U1 vov juvuvj for relief of all kinds is provided by i states and communities; the rest i comes out of the Federal Treasury. The total of all relief expenditures ; since 1933 to the beginning of 1938 s is estimated at about 14 billion dol- t lars. t Cash Farm Income Less I There is real worry in Washing- ] ton over the agricultural situation, which is another phase of the Gov ernment's relief program. The Farm i Act, passed early this year, is not < providing the relief for farmers \ which it was Intended to provide, because Nature intervened to pro- | duce bigger crops of almost every i kind than have ever been known be- ] fore. I As a result, the prices of farm pro- j ducts as a whole have declined , about 23 per cent in the past year, while the prices of manufactured , commodities which the farmer buys , have declined only 7 per cent. This ] upsets the whole theory of the Farm Act, which is based upon maintaining a parity between what the farmer gets and what he has to spend. The immediate solution, as the , Department of Agriculture sees it; is to appropriate another 212 million dollars to be distributed to farmers to compensate for the lower prices their excess production will bring them. The long-run remedy proposed is to cut down further the acreage and marketing quotas Warren ton. North Can Mexico Joins J ?? - ? H 0 ^ 0 LHs 1 & *> . jioc M,:vS.. . SHANGHAI! ; mum. i T O K Y O-jf : '?!? ? LSS 1 > ' MEXICO 16 2 2 6"'IL II u| -VS fT-'i ' :?- MafcTiVj.V V/ , * ? \l V-V\ Mexico will be a maior Dart ternational Exposition on Trea; and here Senorita Hortense Mel International Signpost on the is the Mexican Consul General as official visit to the site of next In colorful native costume, shi its best. permitted to farmers for the stapl lommodities. These are cottor vheat, corn, tobacco and rice. The cash farm income for thi ?ear, including about one billion dol ars in Federal benefits and sub iidies, is expected to be not mon han 7 1-2 billion dollars, as agains : 1-2 billions last year. The cottoi ituation is particularly serious, fo he world markets already have i urplus of 25 million bales carriei iver from previous years, to whic! his year's American crop will ad< mother 13 million bales. There are 200 million bushels o cheat in storage from last year, an< he outlook is for another 250 mil ion surplus bushels this year. Whei he new com crop starts to marke lext Fall it will find a carryove urplus of 300 million bushels ahea< >f it. Against these surplus crops th 3overnment is authorized to mak oans to farmers who will keep then n storage, and so maintain price, n the face of world competition lixty cents a bushel on surplu cheat, 50 cents on corn and nin< :ents a pound, or $45 a bale, oi :ot:on may be so lent by the Gov irnment. So even if their crops d; lot find a cash market, the farm rs who grow them are in no im nediate danger of starvation. ' Farm Youths Meet At State College "Community Building" was thi heme of the second annual Olde: ifou.h Conference at State College rune 7-11, attended by 113 boys am lirls from 30 North Carolina coun ies. In urging the young people to pre >are themselves for their life's work j. R. Harrill, 4-H club leader ii :harge of the conference, also askei ,hem to do what they can to buili lp their home communities and t' nake this world a better place. Col. John W. Harrelson, dean o idministration at the college, coun leled the young people to take stocl if their physical and mental abili ,ies before choosing their vocatior men do everything possible to pre oare themselves for that work. "Go to college if you can,'' h >aid, "but if you can't, don't be dis couraged. You can do much t overcome this handicap if you wi] ise your own initiative." Gov. Clyde R. Hoey appealed t ;he young people to drive mor carefully on the highways, the: auded the school bus drivers fo ;heir record last year of more tha )0,0000,0000 passenger miles with >ut a fatality. Dr. Frank P. Graham, presiden sf the University of North Carolin discussed the possibilities of provid ing better schools for rural childrei Dr K. C. Garrison, professor c psychology at State College, advis ed that to succeed, one must d more than is required of him, an said that success is not measured i terms of money or social position. Dean I. O. Schaub, director of th extension service, stated that fani ilies who farm to make a good li\ ing will get ahead faster than thos who farm money crops to get rich Renew your subscription. THIi !. F. World's Fair VANCOUVER,8 C * r, C N^roMCITj^j wi mMiH * * * Pr: .-'. -" : v ? ;.*'> . A,-'. * -r ' . .. * ;V ,.. :;.... v-.. *,+ \ A ? ?*<**- M* I ,VV ;<V v ^ '0---4?j' ' f,J;;;v''-<r' ; : '; 1;^ % '" ^ ' .'Ca *x icipant in the 1939 Golden Gate Insure Island in San Francisco Eay, ero, Mexican beauty, christens the land. Senorita Melero was sent by a representative of Mexico on an year's World's Fair of the V. t. e typifies Mexico's "fair sex at JOHMYSQiOSi w!??2!L i The Suffering Servant, r Lesson for June 19 th: Mark 15: i 22-39. j Golden Text: Mark 10:45. i The death of Jesus carries our 1 thoughts to three profound mysteries enveloping human life, pain, * sin. and eoodness. 1 First of all, the Cross is a con. tinual reminder of the hard fact of i pain. The first disciples felt the t bitterness of this pain very much, r That is why they associated the I tragic words of Isaiah 53 with the crucifixion. "He is despised and ree jected of men; a man of sorrows, g and acquainted with grief." i This unutterable torture is not s isolated, but tyipcal. Christ does not l. hang at Calvary alone- The world s hangs with him, f"r the crucifixion e is repeated again and again in many i places and in many lives. And it is - the glory of the Christian faith that a it has never run away from pain, - but has always met it head-on with - a willingness to accept it as normal and inevitable. In the second place, the Cross lis a perpetual testimony to the terrific power of evil. Those brutal - soldiers hammering the Saviour to an agonized humiliation represent 8 the devil in his most hideous guise. r And it is one of the supreme merits of Christianity that it compels us 3 to face sin in all of its ugliness with " the same frankness we employ for trouble. The true Christian does - not pull down, the shade when pass ? ing an unlovely scene of exploita1 tion and injustice. 3 Finally the Cross, by a strange i paradox, witnesses to the uncon3 querable integrity of the good. There; we see goodness in all of its purity, f And that goodness is undefeated, de sDite the worst that men could do i to it. We do not wonder thai. - Good Friday, on our Church Caleni, dars, is printed in black. For that - Friday was indeed the blackest da? of all time. Yet the church has not e made a mistake in calling Good Fri 1 day good. For the day of the Cross o is a good day, a day that tells us II that Christ reigns in spite of the blood and agony of his dreadful o execution. e n To date, 3,340 Buncombe County r farmers have filled out work sheets a for farms containing 236,139 acres. - Most of these farms have already earned a part of their 1938 pay,t ments by following recommended a practices. i. Arthur Grose of the West End if Community in Rutherford County says barley is a line suosui,ui.e iui o corn, gives good s.cre yields, may be d grown in winter and does not allow n his land to erode so badly as corn. ,e Recent downpours of rain in Edgecombe County have demonstrated the value to terracing. le Newly plowed ground on terraced farms have not been badly eroded while on unlerraced farms the results have been devasting. : WARREN RECORD j H o 0 S E I I AND | | HOME I | By MARY E. DAGUE | Pre-War Styles Here we are doing up shirt waists just as we did in pre-War days! It takes such a short time to launder them yourself that you need not send them out or put them in the family laundry. When you do a georgette blouse keep the suds and rinse waters the same temperature, always lukewarm. Dissolve the soap flakes and whip them into heavy suts in the wash water. If you have nara water use more soap iu?icau of a water softener. If, however, you prefer to use the softener, measure it as carefully as you would baking powder for a cake and follow the manufacturer's directions implicity. Squeeze the suds through the fabric and squeeze rather than twist when you wring from one water to another. Rinse through at least four waters, using the same squeezing principles in rinsing that, you did in sudsing. Spueeze out the last rinse water and spread .he blouse on a bath towel. Roll up tightly and by the time your iron is hot the blouse will be just right to iron. When you dig the weeds from your lawn carry a small bag of lawn j seed with you and drop a pinch of | seed in every hole left by the weed, j This will keep your sward even and ] .the grass will crowd out new weeds which might come from a fragment of root left in the ground. Garden Furniture We have found that .he furniture we use in the garden needs special attention to prevent decay as well as the usual care given porch furniture to keep it attractive. All the parts that come in contact with the ground should be dipped in creosote. This preserves the wood and will prolong the life of garden furniture for many years. Colorful Brides Even weddings are colorful this year with brides deserting the traditional white and choosing pale blues for the wedding gown. The rose?a lovely pinkish ivory?is another popular color this season. Farm Questions And Answers Question: When is the best time] to apply poisoned bait to control, luuaccu uuu worms r Answer: The bait should be applied early in the morning when the bud is open. A small pinch of the bait should be dropped in the center of the bud. Careless applications are of no value. Applications should begin about two weeks after the plants are set, but many grow- j ers delay until serious damage is , noted. Treatments should be continued every week or ten days until | the plants are topped wi:h the bait j being placed directly in the tip of the plant. Question: Is it necessary to feed, : moist mash to my poultry flock' throughout the year? Answer: There is little to be; gained through this feeding practice, but. the mash has an important, place in the feeding at some time 1 during the year. It is especially im-! I portant in keeping up production of | laying hens during the period be- j ginning about June 1 and continu- | ing through October. It is also used I to hasten production of late hatched | pullets and with breeding hens to I I hacton nrnriiirf.inn in .7 a nil A rv Three pounds of the regular laying mash moistened with hot water or milk, I preferably milk, will be sufficient for each 100 hens. The best time J to feed this mash is at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Question: When should I select my Irish potato seed for planting next year? Answer: Seed potatoes should be vsaam pss ON THE WATER WA60N FOR ALt WHO CARE TO RIDE. Warrant ifadiOdditiee X6_s?wjieal i Cnorr HnpR?T sS, ^ |SSAeS^7 /"f"SONAt EXP! f JJ^ /'^ IENCES UNDER k^v ^ The $cRipir, wen \ vyg| KEfr^ A cooKig fa THE KITCHEN tHEV THINK & I IN CHAGACTtf 1 nS#' S\ TO ARKANSAS e - ====d VEAR HELP RSTV THEIR HOMEV It selected at harvest time as the prac- j tice of picking good looking pota-1 toes from the stored crop does not insure good yields or freedom from : disease. Go through the field just j before digging or at harvest time | and dig a large number of hills- ! Keep the potatoes from each hill separate and select from these the seed potatoes needed. The seed. tubers should be picked from the I hills containing the largest number I of uniform potatoes typical of the variety. Hot Months Require Extra Poultry Care Poultiy authorities agree that adequate range, shade, and green | feed are three essentials for well- ' managed flocks during the hot summer months, says C. F. Parrish, ex- j tension poultryman at State College. WHAT ^Kg Hi % | DO YOU Ijjo you s i it does its ' important to buy real a standard standard p and easiest occupying Record adv able mercb effort! Start th (Fit? | on. North Carolina . ii ?.mmy I . by Squier m impbomptu i iw?be xsclub ew;rtainment in ena.ack. start) them oki the )a0 to fame yfl?jyffijp^ A WHS,WHERE Sdtjr "II ?[ )\ f UIM4 ABNEC S&U4SW IEME WAS BORfi 7 ^(^?0 STIFF,THEY U m CUCKEO ON ThfElO. 117 I I BIS-TIME AUDITION... <jNA_/ THEN TURNED DOWN rn , A, ,r(/ ) THE PROFFERED 5U5TAINtKLAUUV INS JOB TO HUNT UP A __ SPONSOR 1 When growers are ready to market their birds, those who have been careful to observe these essen tials will find they have been well paid for their efforts. Where home-mixed rations for pullets are used, Parrish recommends the following growing mash: WHERE ! BUY THR retch every dollar so that ev work well ? If you do, you km these questions of what, whei ly are! You know that a real piece of merchandise selling irice. But did you know tha , way oi hnding real bargains your easy chair and checl 'ertisement? This way leads lants and merchandise withoi le Ad-Reading Habit Right Nt Hamnt Si FRIDAY, JUNE 17, l^ 1 i . 35 pounds No. 2 yellow cotn ^ 1 (120 pounds standard wheat mii! I |! dlings, 20 pounds No. 2 heavy 1 I finely pulverized, 12 pounds suni. I II ard whea. bran. 4 pounds fish me*s I ! I (55 per cent protein i.2 p.ur.Cs rnea- I , 1 meal '55 per cent protein 2 pouni I I dried skim milk. 2 pounds arouru 1 'limestone or oyster she!'.. 2 yxiuni; I I bone meal, and one pound iodiaej I table salt. 1 1 Farmers having an adequate sc>. I I ply of milk may omit the dm; | j milk recommend'1 - tion. Because it is a vrutabi?o! n' milk should be given to txJ, some form. y '5 However, when fed a, a H should be placed in clean, easil 5 cessible con.ainers. Surplus * *" should not be allowed to rem the containers since it attracts n'"3 Plenty of water sh u;!d be" able at all times. i; tjossib'ea'"" should be kept in a shady p<a'c' ' . Along with the mash' h j should have all the grain thov m ! ea : each morning. I Notice the date on your 1>arer j renew your subscription ' limamiifj To Get Rid of Acid And Poisonous Waste ^Yoar kldBcys hd; to k?p -JlC JH* W!?! btdotU haaAaehe, |tud? cfKw 5 j Mo than OH something las 'ftvJ WUfW. iBjhuf* Ph. A JOifo of rralefol people reconanj Than *. Ait your ntfihborl I?m?M a Ursang contains, in properly jroportions, Buch proven in- JHL as organic iron. Quickly fflin appetite and aids nature by g~Sr the substance which makes BES blood. When this happens, d strength usually return. I j|l ike new. Get Pursang from j|B I HOW :3 ^ I Mm 1 ' 1 I IFTILY? I rery cent of i 3W how ali e and how bargain is below the it the best 5 is simply :ing every to dependjt physical I >w ! ! ! krnrii
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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June 17, 1938, edition 1
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