t ■ —I !—-—! " (Sl?p fflarrrn Rrrori) Published Every Thursday By Racord Printing Company P 0. Bo* 70 Warrenton. N. C. 27589 BIGNALL JONES, Editor Member North Carolina Pres.. Association ENTERED >45 SECOND CLASS MATTER AT THE POST OFFICE IN WARRENTON. NORTH CAROLINA. UNDER THE LAWS OF CONGRESS Second Class Postage Paid At Warrenton, N. C. r. ONE YEAR; $5.00; SIX MONTHS, $3.00 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: OUT-OF-STATE: ONE YEAR. $7.00' SIX MONTHS, $4.00 Prohibition Example Our Sunday School teacher many years ago, who was something of a fundamentalist, used to tell us that there is nothing new under the sun. While that may not be literally true, in the sense that the automobile is not a new object, but the substance may be the same in abuse of a mode of travel. This thought is brought to mind by a TV feature Sunday night in which it was revealed that piracy of boats in Florida, often with murder of their crews, is growing. The reason for the piracy, it was stated, was the growing traffic in drugs smuggled into this country by water. Thus we see an age old act of piracy adapted to new conditions, bearing out the contention of the Sunday School teacher. The story was told of a million dollar yacht and its two crew members, en route down the Florida coast, disappearing. It is believed that the yacht was hijacked and the crewmen killed. The boat was then used to bring millions of dollars worth of drugs into this country from Mexico or coastal islands and then the board was scuttled and the evidence was thus destroy ed; another load waiting, another boat stolen used and scuttled. The story is reminiscent of smuggling, hijacking and murder that went on along the coast during the days of Prohibition when the high price of illicit whiskey provided the funds to support the criminal underworld and to supply much of the money used in bribery and corruption of many in high places. With the repeal of Prohibition, smuggling lost its profits and disappeared in this form, to be replaced in time by the smuggling of prohibited drugs, whose profits are probably ten times those of smuggled alcohol. The profits are so large that it appears almost impossible to stop. The thought keeps occurring to us that the United States might well profit from its experience with Prohibition of whiskey^and replace uncontrolled drugs with strictly supervised sales of drugs, taking the profit out of criminal sales and much of its appeal to adventurous youth. It is a repugnant thought, but someday our people will learn that in this cruel world we must choose the lesser of two evils. Mostly Personal The Saga Of Old Jonah By BIUNALL JUNES We had been sold on offset printing for sometime before the Franklin Times at Louisburg bought an eight«?kge pr*ss' a camera and other offset material. The purchase of this newspaper press made it possible to realize our dream of "going offset," something that practically all newspapers have done in the past fifteen years. We bought enough equipment to enable us to prepare Page negatives of our newspaper and entered into an agreement for the Louisburg paper to print our paper. Each Thursday afternoon as early as possible we would leave Warrenton with necessary page negatives from which the plant made plates and Pnnt,™the paPer at 30 much per 1000 papers, depending on number of pages. This had an advantage in that the papers came off the press frI"t'd» assembled and folded, and all hand-folding was ended. However, there was and has remained the drawback of hauling papers to and from a central printing plant, which also means that the paper must be sent to press from three to four hours earlier in order to compensate for time spent on the road. At first Duke and I would take the finished negatives to Louisburg in a Chevrolet touring car belonging to flni h a bring aU the finished papers back in the car trunk. In the course of time the number of papers *n wWe "INte^ld 9 friends. He was excited about his work, and like the rest of us, when something is special, he wanted to show us his favorite room. He told how the lights on the clocks signaled the Senators, he told of the action of Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, who kept the enormous crystal chandelier in his office, when Jacqueline Kennedy wanted it returned to the White House. He became genuinely emotional as he told of the spinetingling excitement he experiences each time he steps into his responsible position on the Senate floor. Personable, caring, efficient, and dutiful, yet like any person who wants to show his new friends the excitement of the world he has found himself in, Senator Jesse Helms has won and reinforced the admiration of some fortythree senior citizens of Warren County, North Carolina. G. ELTON COOKE Ruritan Club To Sponsor Barbecue The Afton-Elberon Ruritan Club will sponsor a barbecue supper and gospel sing on Saturday night, May 28, at the Warren County Track and Field, just off 401 at Afton. The supper will be served from 6 until 9 p. m. Plates will be sold for $2.50 each with child's plates and hot dogs and hamburgers available. The gospel sing will begin at 7:30 p. m. The Watchmen from Goldsboro and the Thompson Family from Henderson will be among those performing. Tickets are on sale from all Ruritan member* and Ruritanettes. In the aftermath of Guatemala's February earthquake, geologists have traced ground torn for some 150 miles, National Geographic says. Single cracks were as much as 33 feet long and 4 Inches wide. Visit Washington By ELTON COOKE The Nation's Capital, Washington, D. C., was the destination of 43 members and guests of the Norlina Senior Social Club on Thursday, May 19. The purpose of the trip was to meet Senators Jesse Helms (R) and Robert Morgan (D) of North Carolina and to tour the Capital, the White House, the Arlington Cemetery, and the Smithsonian Institution. Leaving Norlina at 7:30 a. m. on a chartered Greyhound, the passengers participated in a Traveler's Scavenger Hunt with five winners. Jarrell's Cafeteria near King's Dominion was the first refreshment stop. Arriving in Washington, D. C. at the Russell Building to meet Senator Jesse Helms, the group was escorted through the corridors of the Senator's offices to be told they were invited to the Senate Chamber to hear Senator Helms deliver his speech on "Conservation of Energy through Dispensing with Forced Busing." Mrs. Grace Crews, Senator Helms' personal corresponding secretary, directed the Norlina group on the senate underground shuttle to the Capitol. Senator Barry Goldwater (R) of Arizona was crossing at the same time, even stepping on the escalator behind Mrs. Mildred Hicks. Senator Herman Talmadge (D) of Georgia preceded the group on the stairs to the Senate Chamber. Waiting for the elevator, Senator Edmund Muskie (D) of Maine passed them on the Senators' elevator. Once seated,' in the balcony, the group heard Senator Ted Stevens (R) of Alaska complete his ammendment. Following Senator Helms' dissertation and motion for passage, he personally met with the Warren County residents, explaining the procedure of Senate business, emptying his desk drawer to show the signatures carved of former Senators of years gone by, a triidition^begmri fit the form-' yti#^itfrs oPW^ovtfrn- 1 ment. As Senator Helms described the history of his desk and the different desks in the chamber, Senator Thomas Eagleton (D) of Missouri entered, joking with Senator Helms and the group from Norlina. Senator Helms personally I, directed them to "bia favorite room," the Vice President's office in the Capitol, off from the Senate Chamber, unlocking it Just for the Norlina group. He described the mirror, the busts, and especially the chandelier Vice President Lyndon Baines Johnson put into a bill on the Senate floor to keep it in the vice presidential office. Graciously signing autographs and posing with the Norlina group, on the Capitol steps, concluded his personal attention, but Mrs. Crews, his secretary, took the group by the Senate's shuttle train to the cafeteria, beneath the streets of Washington, D. C. A tour of the Capitol followed, featuring a visit to the Congressman's Prayer Room and George Washington's crypt, the place intended for his burial, to see the catafalque, the velveted bier of Abraham Lincoln and others lain in state in the Rotunda, two places rarely seen by visitors. Walking along the underground hallways, to the Everette Dirksen Building, Senator Robert Morgan (D) on crutches from a torn cartilage greeted the group in his office, until the five lights appeared on his clock, calling him to the Senate floor to vote on the "Strip Mining Issue." His wife came in to greet all there, just having returned from a luncheon with other Congressmen's wives, including Mrs. Rosalynn Carter and Elizabeth Taylor. The Howard Johnson's Motel in Alexandria was a welcome sight for wearied tourists. A short trip to tour Lincoln's Memorial, a ride around the Kennedy Center and by Watergate concluded \ Thursday's activities. Friday, a White House tour, lunch at the Museum of History and Modern Technology at the Smithsonian Institution, with two left to tour that museum, the remaining 41 toured either by trackless train or by. f»ot Arlington:Jp§#ry.jftey raw the two Kennedy brothers' graves and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The trip to Norlina was interspersed with a songfest, a stop at Jarrell's Restaurant, and a Bingo game and a happy return to familiar homelands. Mr. Tobacco Grower you can't stop a HAILSTORM Don't stick your neck out! Guard your growing dollars with Hail Insurance! Phone 257-3128 Citizen's Insurance and Bonding Co. Main Street • Warrenton