IIM ?mi 11 riillMI 11M< IIII > ?' Pfctranize Oar AdNwMm% Far ;; Yaa To Trade With Theau -< . . < . ? ? ' ? MliMII ?M ??????????< ????? ' VOLUME TWENTY-NINE FARMVTLLE, WTf COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 19S8 ^NUMBER SEVENTEEN State Receives II In Its Fhie-Cured Quotas iiww?iwinniiiTiiii in !? Ml Sept. t ? The Farm Administration announced today that adjotelginte had boon made in the flee wd tobacco marketing quota* of Virginia, North Carolina and Geoj0fc adding an aggregate of 9, OUJM pounds of tobacco on whfch no pel^r tax will have to be paid Gaoigia, where the crop already has beta marketed, received an ad jaat raant of 3,449^00 pounds, Vir ginia, 3,406,000 pounds, and North Carolina, 2456,000 pounds. The adjustments were ordered by Secretary Wallace bectnw minimum limiting allotments for small farms absorbed too great a portion of the State quota and caused inequities to iobm fcurger firms. Quotas in other flue-cured states ?South Carolina, Florida and Ala bama?ware not changed. The adjustments in Virginia, North rsroHaa, and Georgia raised the na tional flue-cured tobacco marketing allotment, invoked under the new farm act, from 739,068,000 pounds to 74M79.006 pounds. All tobacco sold in excess of quo tas is subject to a penalty tax of 50 pee coat \ Quota- adjustments in the three states we is for farms on which to baeco previously had been grown, as the- national allotment of 21,150, 006 psaada for new farms in all t states was not disturbed. TVs increases raised Virginia's quota for all farms from 66,458,000 y tends to 68,864,000 pounds; North CarohnaV from 486,678,000 to 487, 884,000' sad Georgia's from 71,058, 000 to 74,502,000. In addition, Virginia has an esti mated quota allotment of 2,257,000 pounds for forms on winch flue cured tobacco is being grown for the fhrst time and North Carolina has approximately 9,256^)00. The Geor gia allotment for new farms approx imated 5^000. Finmrs Baek Control Plan tT- /*?". # ,w' Vnto Overwhelmingly in fMr of Retaining Any doubts that Pitt county (?rm er* aro ki imnr of a tobacco control ft, jgfcjt ywr wen dispelled SataoNhff afteimwin at the comdusion af a. ee* meeting which got under ^The farmers, who more than, filled the court room, voted almost to a| man fo? control. Only^our persons ? eaae to have voted against the pmnoi at Ac meeting, one of eight eaDed by the Farm Bu reau rilnnlt ii for tobacco produc ing icndnh stated? "What wn ere confident that a large our farmers still favocj undnrttih control and will vote for u ^ tha next referendum if called." ft Aq set forth that "we deplore overstate their production," and the t?irf>nrT ?f aoma farmers to conelud , -thX? favor and will work for rack to the law ?* will correct anti and Inequalities that has revealed." ^fla^ly-major ob^ction to the vouraa^ in this isctioii is the con tantion thst it does not reflect the - M^Mned that seme form of SLTto^S-ry and, following Saturday* making, |?,Br '^hM< the that any prevailing te > a^aattt&n.eep ba worfced out aansr fretary*. Betogh, Sept 5. ? Crop^egg PuiiiTi FbiIwiI^ no?sae^ij(dhg^ thth tha' organjgetion'o w 3d to meet at IWtoen , . - ik. tiC WdBnMdhV night to acelled a jury here Sun llday meriting at o'clock. The I Chief Lucas said he and^ Martin Two Armies Operatu|s Nortii of The Yangtse Rearing Brunt of Drive. . Shanghai, Wednesday, Sept. 7. ? 15wo< strong Japanese armies "operat ing north of the Yangtse liver today assumed the brunt of the Japanese drive oil Hankow and captured three Chinese positions which pot them in possession of aDurosch&s to the north an communications of the Chinese provisionai capital. It jppearwd! tint the Japanese, at tack unur drifting towards tactics Pssd in the great southward drive from the PeipiajjpTientiiri area last fall when the. Japanese operated over a long [front and disorganised the Cfflnass by jtriking alternate blows in widely separated areas. ) ? /V . r-i - ? - - . ? > ?? . I A Japanese commumque sata mat the Northern armies, "Advancing along the shortest route towards Hankow," captured Kwangtsi at 1 p. ntr yesterday and were enveloping Wusuah, at the northern end of the great barricade which the Chinese built acroes the river above Japan*** base in Kinniang- Japanese eolumns had pnetratsi into both these posi tions earlier, and their capture had been dtaimed, but today it appeared that the Japanese were moving in sufficient strength not only to hold their gains but to keep on advancing. North of Wusueh one of two Jap anese fbrcee which have been pushing toward the Peiping-Hankow railway captured Kushih 90 miles eaat of the Shiyang railway station ? their ob jective^ Vanguards bad moved lb miles farther west indicating that Sinyang might be taken within a fortnight, Chi esse Lew 1 . The Japanese communique said the Chinese lost 600. killed and 800 prla-v oners around KwangtsL Their losses in the Huangmei&wangtsi sector since Sept 8 were estimated at 25; 000. Sinyang, 100 miles north of Han kow on the Peiping-Hankow railway, was bombed by 17 Japanese planes for two hours. Large areas of the city was*'.demolished. On the south bank of the Yang taw Chinese reported the Japanese offensive was stalled. The Chinese claimed, they "had recaptured Mah weilinsr *nH thit. thk Jtmwtftft van guard had been driven back from Tehan, which had been leveled by Japanese artillery fire, Japanese planea worn bombing Chinese posi tion- in the forest South of Wahweif ing "continuously," The Japanese said that their forces driving eastward along the Lung Hal railway, from Kaifeng, on the [ south shore of the Yellow River, were making.progress and soon would ef fect a junction with-Japanese columns fording the Yellow river from Shasi province. Once this junction is ef fected the attack on Tungkwan, key to Siatt-Fu, capital of SbenaJ pro vince,, will be resumed, ? , W: In South China, Japanese naval plan so continued their daffy raids on mflway* Bridge* at Pakongchow Yochow, md-Y^anton were destroyed. One Japanese-pHwewt* shofddwn at atUrdoraw points, ? : ,'jt *j| ? dw I Ijiir&y^'ffi*'"'ik: *t5;> "?'- ?'- -?"' * s :?. cv-. '*vrL'." K ' , I *** ? ? ^ ;. 9 W ? MMr ft Ms Bfc.w T & ':^HBBBWHWWBWWhWH-' 4 I II I ? I .ill IM.IM.Il/ ???? ? ?' LET NOT OUR LOVE OF PEACE PREVENT W1HWBi 'tSEi4N(r . WHAT IS HAPPENING. ' ? President Roosevelt's speech in Canada, two weeks ago, is gmeriUy interpreted in Europe as a warning toth^ totalitarian States that this country, while not ready to fight with the Ibitiah and the French, has no intention of aiding the dictators, and that, if drawn into a struggle, the people ef the United States will be on the side of the democratic powers. ? ? ' ? ? ' Taken in conjunction with the earlier radio address of Secretary Hull, which outlined the principles for which this country stands, the address was received as an aid to pre venting drastic action by Germany at this time. The situation in- Eu rope, in the eyes of many observers, is extremely tense and anything that tends to relieve the pressure is a step toward peace, Let'* Forget It, v There are many people in this country who are not interested In any viewB about foreign affairs. They . prefer to forget the whole, interna tional situation and believe that what happens in the rest of the world is no concern of Ours. They forget, it seems, that lack of foreign markets is the cause of our agricultural prob* lams and that upon our foreign trade depends the standard of living of the people of the United States, ? . Certainly, the writer-does not want ? the United States to become em- ? broiled in a continental war'in Eu-1 rope or to send American-soldiers to' foreign lands again. If possible, we I would like to see peace maintained, ( However, and the the point is im*j portant, peace cannot be maintained' by being so afraid of war that, as a! nation, we must shut our eye* to, everything that happens and abah- J don all the riglits that belong to us under international law, a ?iu. - Vu. : i A VUM ? ?W? | The mere fact that the United States is spending more than a bil lion dollars on its army and navy indicates that, despite our peaceful j intention, we must take cognizance of world affairs. The richest ftation in the world, in natural resources, there are those in positions of power today who would not hesitate to at tack this country if they thought they could get away with it, To be unprepared is to become another China and, sooner on-later, to have to fight against overwhelming odds. The measure of our national de fense is not our intentions but the attitudes and alliances that exist j among other powers. No one can bUnfc the fact that Italy, Germany! and Japan are uairsg war as an in strument of national policy, that: they are aggressively seeking to: enlarge their spheres of influence; and that, up to date, they have not hesitated to violate most of the ac- J cepted conventions of war and peace ful civilisation. ??? What We May Face. In the-face of such a condition the stiui^and^apvy that in; necessary must be -measured by the forcei' that may attack- us. Consequently, as /UiWceahy ^rfified,' oonside^ tion-must be given to a possible com- j bifiatfttv at these vital American in-i teresta in. both oceans at the same' tima^Among our vital internets, Wil take It for- granted, ia the mainto ps* of the Monroe Doctrfitt that keeps-forign nations from estaWish in? their hegemon^#^ this bemtojr _ on. to ?*? of the three "have not" powers. They haTe a difficult" eeonomk situation ^^uM^all^iated. SMVitallrtr . German and French Other as Fears of War Continue. pli;# ? Stiring-Wendel (On the Maginot Line in Prance),?Sept 6. ? The reinforced armies of France and Germany, their exact strengths close ly guarded secrets, stood watch over the border sopes tonight, waiting the outcome of the Czechoslovakia crisis. ; The German policy of "protection" of the Sudeten German minority fA Czechoslovakia, and France's pledge to fight for the Czech and Slovak republic if 'it is invaded, led the two nations to take military measures unparalleled in recent years, The French e7en went so far as to mine a number of rafyoad and high" way bridges along their frontier zone, This precaution caused loud laugh ter from the Germans talking to Frenchmen from behind.the high wire barricade which mark the frontier at Roabruck hbar Forbaoh, "We hare no intention of attack ing France," a husky German cus toms guard at RosbrocVsaid. "But we are taking; plenty of; defensive precautions," German troops garrisoned in the new Siegfried Line apparently were engaged in maneuvers around their hew positions, At Stiring-Wendel frontier station several rounds of > machine-gun fire and occasional rifle shots could be heard in the hills above Saarbrucfcen, One of the moat striking things in the Maginot *one is the few troops that are seen moving along the roads. The normal garrison of the lone is generally given at about 100,000 men, bat officers in the sons said they thought 260,000 wottyd be a "conservative" estimate of the gar rison's present strength. In traveling along the strongest part of the fortified line, however, the biggest group of soldiers I saw marching in uniform was less than one hundred, But the barracks are filled to ca pacity and the underground forts were said by officers tif have all the troops they could accommodate. Troop trains brought thousands of reservists up to the line but .dropped them off at tiny hamlets where they disappeared underground. Whole truck trains of supplies moved up. But with the real fortifications nf the Maginot Line several miles from the border the only French soMiert Germans could see were a few. sen tries around the little cement ? pill boxes along the Rhine, at Strasbourg and in the Moselle Valley. The only German soldiers french men could see were the few stationed at the new blockhouse beside each road leading into Germany. All the German and French fron tier populations knew tire armies were there, however. Newspapers were having boom Bales on the French side. While on the German side the prices for smug gled French and British papers have trippled in the last few days. IOAN DAVIS IN NEW HIT ?: Recently v teT^eriea'a Number SSrio the Queen of th/l? with She is part of s/btg-iiame cast features Cesar Romero and Buddy Ehsem^Tbe & Wml Sunday and Monday; Sept ll-Ii^at the Para- , mount TheatreCandjiha directed by Roy. D^RuilgiSlgS^l; | Afthur Treacher, George Barbier, Louise Hdvick, Billy Gilbert Patricia Wilder and Ftatf Hurst we included in the cast of the film, which is one ortte Movie Quiz 1250,000 contest n *J * t. T>?.xiK_Ll |<|t|4']?|||\l ? frcOl!rldh0gl1 WXn .:-? flHttic uDilll nil v r Greenville Win Be Host 46 Eastern DfefrictSes sjon of State Pedera-| Greenville, Sept. !S. ? W. P. Owens Greenville post office clerk, today an- j nounced complete plana for an east-], era district meeting of the North 11 Carolina Federation of Post Officer Clerks in Greenville Saturday i Owens, chairman of the session, |< said that a general business meeting | will be held in the Pitt County court- |< house Saturday afternoon at 5 o'clock, f t 0. L, Whitsell, National State rep-r resentative, will speak on purposes I of the organization. |i "How we may reach our objec-11 tlves," will be the subject of an ad-11 dress during the afternoon session r by W. S. Campbell, State/ president, r An open^ forum discussion, led by J William I. Homer, national legitla-11 tive representative and editor, will!1 follow the State president's address.!.1 Election of district officers will! highlight the afternoon session, which 1 comes immediately after an open discussion on the district organiza tion. After announcements, the meet-!' ing will adjourn until 7:80 p. m. for!1 a barbecue supper in the city-county!' armory. The meeting in the armory hall r will be called to order at 7:80 o'clock! by Chairman Owens, after which in troduction of the tqastmaater, Pro- j fesabr R. C. Deal, will be made. Mayor. M. K. Blount of Greenville,!' will deliver the welcome address.!: Response to the welcome* address will 1 be made by State President W. S. Campbell. A response will also be j made by representative In behalf of the ^Woman's Auxiliary -of the North Carolina Federation of Post Office! Clerks. ^ Highlighting the night session wOl! be an address by Congressman Lind-J say C. Warren, who will be Intro- L duced by Colonel E. G. Flanagan of Greenville*. Another address will be delivered by William L Homer, who! witf be introduced by O. L. Whitsell. ' The program for the day^Will-beI completed by announcements and in-1 troduction of State officers. Mrs, Glass Passes I* Mer Grief Muss ... ; iFtnal Rites Held Satur day For Highly Es teemed Citizen. Mrs. Ellen Love Glass, 7 .1 * J J LI J I Uw jwjgn cnggs, D| ana jwin ocewm onfgsf 9, only children of Mr. and' Mrs. Robert Briggs. i;?~y 1 1J j -?> y ? Because of excellent growing con ditions, the lespfedeza crop to Cieve- ,v land County has made a maximum growth Ola', year, and fanners -at* ' cutting and. curing some high quality bay. Blair Gives Pointers OipCover Crop Sowing^ Small grains and legumes ? > grown as winter cover ctopa may M ^ sown on cotton land after the first picking by using a narrow seed drill m r harrow. Crops that are recommended for Ma purpose are oato, rye Wri.,. igg|?/v State. Cofttg^?^1 : The cotton stalks should be cut as soon as possible after the first fl? : ing so as to give the cover crops a better chance^ make a vigorous peas, may be drille