I ?lf* Warren Serorii ?*7 Published Every Friaay By The Record Printing Company BIGNACL JONES, Editor ? DUKE JONES, Business Manager Member North Carolina Press Association ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AT THE POST OFFICE IN WARRENTON, NORTH CAROLINA, UNDER THE LAWS OF CONGRESS "Second Class Postage Paid At Warrenton, N. C." SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year, $3.00; Six Months, $1.50 "Trash" Mail Monday we found in our postoffice box a letter addressed to "Rural Route, or Star Route Boxholder, Postoffice Boxholder, Local," bearing a postmark Oklahoma City Okla., and stamped U. S. Postage, 2'a.c, bulk rate. We were en route to the trash can in the postoffice to dispose of this nuis ance, when the thought occurred to us that it might be an example of why the Postoffice Department runs a deficit. As for a public service rendered, we haven't the slightest curiosity about what the letter contains and have not opened it. In addition to the cost of handling this kind of mail by the post office, it is a nuisance to many re ceivers. However, it is not of its nuisance value that we wish to comment, but of its cost to the postoffice department. For quite obviously it requires just as much handling to dispatch this "trash" Two Cheers For Old North State Greensboro Daily News On paper North Carolina's per capita in come has crept up from 44th to 42nd place among the 50 states, but there is considerable question whether this represents an income explosion for the Old North State or simply a disastrous sag for states like North Dakota and Louisiana. Among the contestants near the bottom of the ladder, and that includes mostly south eastern states, North Dakota and West Vir ginia, to mention two, sagged badly. The important point about North Carolina is this: We did not sag. We bettered our per capita income from ($1,574 to $1,640) while North Dakota, which undoubtedly suffered a major crop calamity, fell from 40th position and an income of $1,741 in 1960 to 47th and $1,484 in 1961. North Carolina's modest increase, during a year vhen there was much backsliding, is encouraging. The gain is not spectacular but the trend is forward. It means that more jobs are being created in the state?more than are being wiped out by the farm revolution. It means a dynamic spirit still stirs in a state which has always had more children than it knew what to do with and so has had to ex port many of them. We venture to make one prediction: Bar ring some unforeseen cr?p calamity or a sud den decline of tobacco manufacturing. North Carolina will continue the upward march in the sixties. By a sacrificial effort we have liftoH r,nr tanrhnr nnlnrin. rrf the forties into the thirties in national ratings. This brings us national attention in the right cvcles. It also challenges salary levels in competitive fields. So while the latest per capita income re Port does not merit three cheers, it probably merits two. The Old North State is on the plus side, even if by a narrow margin; and that is something. V Safety Sense The Advertiser (Fountain, Colo.) A deluge of ghoulish guessing and blood thirsty reporting has obscured the very real progress that has been made in automotive highway safety. From a high of 11.3 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles in 1943, the rate was slashed to U in 1980. In 1961, it was reduced even t, with a record low of 5.1 posted in the first 11 months. This outstanding progress was during the decade and a half since World War II when the number of cars, trucks and buses on America's streets and soared from a little over 31 millinn than 74 million. With the automotive safety record constant ng, it's time to stop screaming death the family car is home in the garage, t's no minimising the importance of safety and nobody wants to?but sen reports of widespread carnage, Instead drivers safer and more competent, them more tense, more nervous and better drivers is not horror but scares but suggestions; not terror Safe driving is a skill which, and remembered, provides great America's automotive safety record proved still more, without horror and by the conscientious application of at safe drving fesa!$'-, mail as it does a first class letter, al though in fairness it must be pointed out that it does not require quite the rapid handling given to first class mail. This, however, we feel, is not too im portant a factor in its cost to the post jffiee department. The Postoffice Department is now? as is usually the case?running in the red. In order to lessen this deficit the department is asking an increase in postal rates, on iirst and second class matter. The Department is seeking to have the first class letter rate raised from 4c to 5c, claiming, we understand, that the 4c rate does not cover the cost of handling a first class letter. If a first class letter can not be handled for 4c, one wonders how a third class "box holder" letter can be handled for 2V?c. Another thing we haven't been quite able to figure is why there should be a cents difference in the charge for han dling a sealed and unsealed letter. It seems to us that the mechanics are ex actly the same. Then there is the matter of franked mail, covering all the mail of federal agencies, including the bulky and large ly unread Congressional Record. What charge the Postoffice Department makes to these agencies for handling their mail we do not know. But we have a firm conviction that if instead of a franking privilege, each Congressman and Senator?as well as heads of other agencies?were given a postage meter and charged the regular rate for his mail as a charge against the operation of his office, that there would be much less mail dispatched, and much less def icit in the Postoffice Department. The United States has a fine postal system and renders a remarkable serv ice to our people. It is a debatable ques tion as to whether or not it should be operated for profit or as a public serv ice. But, we feel, that if the department is to be run as a business, that it could do away with much franked and "trash" mail with little loss to its patrons. NEWS OF FIVE, TEN AND 25 YEARS AGO Looking Backward Into The Record May 10, 1957 ?Warrenton citizens were this week asked to conserve water by Supt. Harold Skillman due to a threatening water shortage. W. A. Miles, encumbent, was re-elected Mayor of Warrenton Tuesday, defeating Frank Banzet by four votes. P. J. Harton was elected a member of the Board of Commissioners of Norlina in a light election Tuesday. D. A. Rose defeated Mayor T. R. Walker in the race for Mayor of Littleton on Tues day. May 9, 1952 Frank Robinson of Oine, Smith Creek Town ship Constable, was on Monday appointed County Dog Warden by the Board of County Commissioners. The board of Town Commissioners approv ed the building of a large warehouse here by D. G. Currin at a meeting here on Monday night. The Rotary sponsored John Graham High School Band will give a concert in the school auditorium tonight under the direction of Robert Macon Davis. The Board Of County fyimmlMtnnw. m ? Announcing THE FCX SPRING PAINT SALE APRIL 16 - MAY 15 Your Best Paint Buy At Any Price UTILITY PAIL With Paint Purchase Save Today At Your Warren FCX Service WARRENTON, N. C. ?. v, ? ????" ?&? Now...beautiful buying days during Chevy^ GOLDEN SALES JUBILEE! Spring's s-wasling! So why wait any longer to ; . . rmmr satisfy that new-car urge of yours? Especially FlVEW UT1UAL.A ululli LUUlu when your Chevrolet dealer has such beautiful II couldn't look more like a convertible unless buys busting out all over the place. Like in ! it icere one!. . . A steel top molded into the fourteen Jet-smooth Chevrolets. Or eleven crisp contours of a convertible. Chalk it up new-size Chevy II models. Or a whole crew to Body by Fisher finesse. Here's luxury of frisky Corvairs. So come on in and pick and and riding comfort that add up to every ehoosc to your heart's content at your thing you expect in an expensive car Chevrolet dealer's One-Stop Shopping Center, i except the expense. NEW CHEVY n NOVA STATION WAGON Space and spice in a new kind of saver. And it's just one of three new Chevy II wagons. Very parkable. Very packable, too. Has a load floor that's over 9 ft. long with NEW CORVAIR MONZA CLUB COUPE The trim sportster that started the bucket seat brigade. Here's rear engine scamper wedded to the road with tenacious traction and quicksilver reflexes. And this one's as second seat and tailgate down. easy to own as it is to drive. ?? V NSW BEL AIB 4-DOOB SEDAN This NEW 1MPALA 6-PASSENGER STATION popular priced Jet-smoothie rides like a j WAGON Chevrolet wagoning at its most family room Od wheels. Got a mammoth | elegant. With up to a whopping 97.5eu. ft. cave of ? trunk, too, with bumper-level j of cargospace?including a compartment in loading and a handy deep well for bulky j the floor where you can stow golf clubs and items. Plus a choice of six or Y8 skedaddle, j other valuables out of sight. 8ft the new Chevrolet, Chevy II and Corvair at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer'? BRYSON CHEVROLET, INC. No. 110 WARRfcNTON, N. C.