Newspapers / The State’s Voice (Dunn, … / July 1, 1934, edition 1 / Page 7
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SPffil Ttrtj Eifitortab From TheFayettoviHe 'tHwywisr of June 27. rissia educating itself back TO (SdD Russia's hthdst Sodety, the. SoMety of the' Godless, is- beiftbatftiiig %tfe fact. that despite the Official abolition of the Deity by the Soviet .Government, millions of icttskiahs cbhtiftfie;,t6 'Wor ship God. To counteract • fhe vVtior&kijo of God the Society of the Godless is calling for ^nore atheistic education in '-ttns Kia. They are baiteriiig fheir 1 Mftds against a stone wallo because'the more educated the Russian people become the more arid m'bfe they \Vill fui*n‘ ‘back to belief fn a 'S<^fSfhe ;'Beiii'ig. Edntafed1 rtfpn 'may (fiffbr <&s to flu* nature of Gdd, they tiiaycMffer in their belief as to the extent of God’s inter est in humanity, but their very educa tion brings -them-to'knb\v that behind everything that eXists.be'Mrid the uni-* verse, behind the -stin, behind the moon, behind the tvitfdstrnd the tides, behind the erirths mid the facials, die-* hind the salts and the aci&s, behind the atoms-amd the molecules, behind the neutrons and the neutrons, behind space and behind time, there is a jama. Astronomers catch 'a gfiftfp.se' of tb2 rytbm of the stars, chemists pfecceive the ryfhm of the efemtns, and they Know there is somewhere a - Phin of which they hare tmrovered only -the ©titer fringes. Plain men see the hand of God in the rising and setting of the sun, in the alternate -phenomena of. summer and winter, and -they hear ftis voice in the song of a bird or the rustic Of the wind throfigh the pines. Only fools, half-baked with a little dangerous learning, cry in their ignor ance: There is no-God! (Russia, officially Godless, in making education compulsory and efficient, in sures the return of the recognition of God. y- • . j " *_: * / . ■„ .•» Some Goldsboro Folk When I was at Goldsboro in the spring of 1933 getting up a list of sub scriptions to The State’s Voice, it was court week and a rainy one at that. Consequently, I-did not get to see the busy clerk of court. But it happened differently the other day. When one meets an Aycock, he in stinctively feels that he must be meet ing somebody. The Wayne Aycocks have now a name that gives them something to live up to. C. R. Aycock is waynes ciera oi court, i^wuciiuj, the people of Wayne think he is tlie straight Ayeock goods. After serving out a partial term to which lie was appointed in 1929, he was reelected and in the recent primary was renom inated by a big majority. We had failed to meet the sheriff of •Wayne and missed him again the other day. But we did meet three fine fel lows of his official family. Mr. II. B. Gardner has been office deputy for ten years, beginning his service under former Sheriff Grant. R. W. Precise has served as field and office deputy almost as long. J. A. Whitley has been field deputy for ten years. Evidently, those fine fellows1 axe godd Officials to stick thus so long under two sheriffs. A Large ^Mortality Peircentage. ' Of the score of subscribers in Golds boro secured on that rainy day in the spring of 1933, three fine men have died—Col. Freeman, Dr. Hollings worth, and David Prince. A heavy mortality that. Over at the Prince place of business I found his son William and two sons in-l(tw in charge and carrying on. One of those sons-in-law of David Prince is a son of Mr.1 L. H. Na9h, the who for thirty years whs responsible for making the Sampson Democrat one of the best printed county papers in the State. I found another of the Nash boys as assistant auditor. Evi dently, Mr. L. M. Nash thought the three Nash brothers enough printers ■ for one family, ais he did not bring Op any of his sons to the trade. X. *W. Nash, the owner of the plant which "So long printed the Sampson Democrat, Is the 'M«jtYaHcr^tiife^in,iuiei,| hilwthws Hiring. i . , J’; --r'i €.a thereis NO-DEATH those WITH FAITH. It.were trite here to recount the Vle H&hMrl personality, -the im'selfish Character, the kindly inteteStednCss, hrid the ifaaterahl and Rifely devotion nf Jfrs. ^Thaides 0. Rose, whose tin t'imeiy! •passing yesterday morning be r eared* Fayetteville. 'Mrs. ' Rose s^as ^SSeftttalfy ageritle wotnSn of a type all1 too rare In an ago add bra ‘WhiCh apparentty1 temporarily Ttfis 'lost fts: hhid -add1 ft.s free concep tion of fundamental" truths arid values 'F6r’twenty days dtrring most of ‘which time she Was in Complete 'poss ession of her mirutmfcriy *flite -miefctal faculties, 3Trs.' Ko¥e' ISy On a hospital bed knowing that she was fatally in jured, and that it was only a -question of a few days before she would be call ed away from this world to a world which she had never seen, but a world m wmcn she naa faith. That, journey Mrs. Rose faced with out' fear and 'without' hysteria, regard ing it not as an expedition Tffto aland of unceHalnty'Tfom \Vfio'se bouVn no traveler returns, but rather as a trip home where a 'ploa'sa'ht reception awaited afida'hOppy f efinidn. itli a faith that Whs geoivhie'aril nn ‘ -tm&XWlr'*.■ itofle pAiWi dtttfflg' ‘her tast'i»ilresst’ftst^ue::a ttetfff&n on*ftflfh as Fayetteville has ever known. fihe had gone through life taking it for granted that people (basically were goodf that' kindness was normal, and that God's -grat'iouSness permeated everything, ahd she faced death 'frith the same faith. To such as Mrs. Rose tne natural phenomenon of death is but one sim ple step hearer the j$*teat ♦glory of God's love which they reflect and dif fuse in the mundane walks of life. GRAHAM A. BARDEN Nominee for Congress from the Third District. the best I ever saw, wore himself out and is gone, though he-was theybung est of the trio, the other Prince son in-law is a Son of'Rev. H. D. Hood, who usM to cbfcie down preaching in Sampson. Here--are three fine young fellows in charge of- the- Prince busi ness. __ Success to them. Across that broad street, probably the broadest mainF street in the state, due to the town’s being built up and down the railroad and the road’s being later compelled to move its tracks, I found my old friend Dennis W. Cobb, stHl. running his mercantile business, but now Assisted by af fine yddnjr&ra. Dennis’s mother was one of the Samp son county’Pikers. He ia a^fc*t cou shi Of Mrs. R- O.1 Bridget of -Bladen boro and of Mrs. 3. A. Turlington o Salemburg. His father used *> be well kiffi#n-a#ar,KJtel t6an. ' Up in the Edgerton Building I vis ited Goldsboro’s lone Republican law yer Mr. Julian T. Gaskill. He is ac Lily a candidate for the State senate m the twarn The names and achievements of Lionel, •IiesHe,- *ss Gfertrdde Weill, and others of: the • tribe of 'Goldsboro Welils 'fire more Or lbss ;famillfir f to readers of the StAte1 press. But when thehame WfcflF 1s-sebn *or’ hehrd 'byine ’before me arises, in vision, a- page-' of L*A/iB<toitz’ “Transcript arid -iviessen ger”- of ’fifty to -fifty^Ve years ago. The -Messenger, -as it iVAs Palled for Short,. Was a real paper. ‘J. LA. Bonitz tvas brie of the best newspaper men- of his fttne or any trifle In -North ’ CAto Hna. I grew up reaf^Bg it, every line bf it, iflblfldiflg advertisements. In every IsSfle appeared ah rifiver riseiflerit of H. WeilL &' Bros.. I can see the advertisements in outline with that signature almost as plainly as if upbn a paper before me. in Golds boro, the other day,' I 'fotind the; iden tical" firm name upon 'the huge'Weill emporium. i lunvtfu to uMinet out i was really more interested in learning more about my old -newspaper- friends of fifty-odd years-ago than about the present extent of-the business. Three Brothers From Germany. The - fathers of the ! present ‘ Weills Who are so prominent ln-’bfistness-’and civic affairs in Goldsboro1 today come : from Germany over sixty- years • ago and settled promptly "at Goldsboro. -They : tfrrned to merchandizing ‘ as promptly: as' ilttclcs to'wateV. Precious little capital tliey had, but they made immediate- progress, as I have always • judged by thfelr Mvhrtfeem^hts.'-They were Herman, Sol, and Henry. .Eater Emil Rosenthal became a member of the firm. Each of the three M'eili brothers reared families, also ■ Mr. f Rosenthal. Lionel is a son of f Sol; ' Leslie, Kerman, arid Miss Gertriide of Heftry. SisteVs of* Lionel are Mrs. A. Oettinger, of Goldsboro, and Mfs. -Leon Strauss of Cleveland, Ohio. The chil dren of Herman seem to have scat tered to other parts of the country. Y OF GOLDSBORO Herman Weill, son of Henry, is a ■GdldSbOro banker. Present Members Of fWdf'irtn. The present ^members Of feheotfd-fifm •are Joe Rosenthal -and * -’ind ’Slonel’‘Weill, ■* >Tbe-sfee nf'*he~‘nf»ft«htiie 'tto8t«ess ■may be estSmatecl- ftfWn fife fact bhat the-stdres1 embrace tjtf.oOO-iscgiare fbet of . RoOfs. ^ A ' fertilizer factory -has been established during, the past year. The business office Is a hive of busy ■ Btehogri^iers and Bookkeepers, %oth irig; more is needed to* suggest the mag nitude of the Weill business. : Bht I ean but recall that the : f otrttdhtiOna ’ Vvefe laid;*away’ baek fn the old “Mes senger” days When the’ Wefll tfdv'er tfsement was afeguiarfeature of the •paper. • ! 'Perhaps ‘ I shall be able to vpjfesent a pletore or picfufes "of One-or 'Shore of the fliytlls fnihe-rfekt lsSue. * I-tihve later serin the WeiriStfein fam ily of Lnmbeiten' come .-ahnost '-penni less to I»uinlbertGn*,and witbinthirty years reach-a" place of prominence in Lumberton lit e/-and the sons become stalwart 'business and professional men. I ran -up 'with ©ne-of them, a young lawyer ,-afc Swithfield sometime ago. . I sometimes -wonder what the Fritted Statel^afe losing in hutting down^ immigration. Even the once de spised * Italian immigrants *havegiven Us a-J&aGurirdia-‘-and '-a ■* Peeora. <*Fho BardeM, ifrhorfseffried' right beidw ’ us -in- South- GarOHna, iSe the'Weills,'he-, •gftn their American varver as ‘Hffer ehsiits. The tfiogul of the family, ou •retiring from' business the other day, after much helpful Service in ‘govern mental affairs, TBeciafrid agaiiist allOw ing ! anybody'-to pfie up profits in ease ■of; another 'War. • •Iiioiiel, fa?s!fe, arid ISfrss Gertrude *^11, to kaerifiOn no bther, are p!ay ihg rio "mean part in the’•‘business‘find Civic Affairs of ^iotth Carolina. • The planet Venus approaches with-. in 25,000,000 miles of the earth and is . the nearest of all the planets to the • eflttth. •im—fimmmm d:h inAfiii ■ ■ "■ ■An il l" >' 1 A. O. DICKJENS Wilson, N. C. Mr. Dickens was defeated for the Congressional nomination by Con gressman Kerr by only 300 votes. of being elected. But won’t that one ' BefMMlean Attorney have a fine show one day if the Republicans ever come hack into ’power in the nation ! Pie will be sure to come his way. But Gaskill came from Carteret county where Republicans are plentifhl, and is not of that political faith because of hopes of political pie. • The Democratic candidate is that well known* and highly esteemted'law yer S. F. Teague, a brother of my friend D. B. Teague of Sanfotd, and if he is only as fine a man as; D. B., wbyne *ill he W@ll represented In the senate Tfeit’ Wihtfei-. I just missed an interview with him, as he drove off from his^ce. just as I was driving. and f9b$ihston- are yiftM up in a senatorial district* though reach practically possesses its own fceiator. But, you see, Johnston sometinteaggoes Republican, and those wily ''tSfemo-. eratic legislators up at Raleigh #iard“ carefully against such a, eondttlfency. Notice Wilkes county tied on Ao a as'Scotland county I jtelieye,. There is an example of gerrymandering to make a safe Democratic congressional dis trict. —— David Bland is evidently rejoiced that he did- not ‘have the temerity , to ; enter the judicial race in the Fourth district. He saved -his time /and money too. ?/He and Mr. Dickinson make a strong team in their new-part nership. Dr. J. N. Johnson is a brother of Senator Rivers Johnson of Warsaw. He may not be able to talk like 'Rivers, but he is as-good in bis own profes sion as Rivers is in bis. The father 'of the fine group of Johnson boys was for many years Atlantic Coast Dine hgent in Warsaw and was. known by thousands of people and'esteemed' by practically the,: same number. So inany of the Goldsboro readers of The Voice Were out of town that it will take another trip to see them, when I hope to find another batch of new ones. Five or six new ones were added the other day, though the most of the time was spent in looking for and ■ talking with old subscribers. 3 am ! giving considerable 1 space this time to the Weill family, of GoldSbdro. . Davidson county growers are show ing riiOre: interest in obtaining wheat Seed known lo be Of good origin in'or der to maintain a high duality of grain. Fuh>rister Wheat and Lee Oats do well -in thht vicinity. Lr«wn Top dreis theDLWn With bone-meal Or ''other COlhrO'etdai -’fertilizer. ‘The rams win soafe'it in arid get the grass ready' to withfeteud the coining -dry hot weather. f*AlNT«tBi»iv8l>WP,A*E WhCn paffrfcirig, he Sure that new coats Are new‘applied over Mistttred past. : The SvWfaCe Should be scraped cledn Before' the new Sttrifaee •protec tion is Stat on.-*: /FtWem«ri: *V6u - ain't onfe of them Wofehs Wet^drollWlHkD tools «nW»e*ots as soon as ' knock-off whistle 'blows, *iv**if" • • '•'** S*«H1: “fcbt dNw»*i|ave Sydney Bnllethri • < . Djez.' ‘ 1 . .. -- .. : - - : . .
The State’s Voice (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 1, 1934, edition 1
7
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