Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / June 3, 1921, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO THJ WARREN RECORD FRIDAY, MAY 3, i92l nvrm Mttaxb HOWARD F. JONES Owner & Contributing Editor BIGNALL JONES Managing Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES On Year " $1-50 Advertising Rates Furnished Upon Request Entered at tfte Post oSce at War renton, N. C, as second-class matter ndar Act of Congress, March 3, 1879. It may be interesting to the friends of Mr. W. Brodie Jones, former edi tor of the Warren Record and recent ly a student of Journalism at Colum oia college, New York, to know that he is expected in Warrenton Sunday. Mr. Jones will be accompanied by four fellow-students. They left New York in a Ford car Thursday (yes terday) morning and expect to reach Washington that night, spending the day in Washington, reaching Rich mond Saturday night and on to War renton Sunday. Mr. Jones and his associates ex pect to make a tour of twenty-nine states and possibly part of British Columbia during the Summer and early Fall. For this purpose they will use a Ford, and we may be par doned in quoting part of a letter bearing on his trip: "We got out our car this week and it is a "humdinger." A firm gave us a set of Disteel wheels as an adver tisement. We even attract attention on Broadway when we ride up with the neatly painted sign "Coast to Coast on Disteel wheels." We have also a letter from Mayor Hylan, and numbers of letters from the School." Mr. Jones and his friends expect to be in Warrenton several days and will then leave through Western North Carolina and on to Chicago and the great West, returning by way of Niagra Falls and on to New York. JEFFERSON DAVIS The South honors itself today in paying honor to Jefferson Davis. The United Daughters of the Confederacy will meet this day to pay tribute to Mr. Davis and to give hearty welcome to this town of a remnant of that im mortal band who followed with un faltering steps the beacon of liberty held aloft by the President of the Confederacy the Honorable J eff er son Davis, statesman and patriot. It has been fittingly said of him: "He was a statesman with clean hands and a pure heart, who served his people faithfully from budding manhood to hoary age, without thought of self, with unbending in tegrity and to the best of his great ability." At the unveiling of a statute of Senator Hill of Georgia Hon. Henry Grady, the golden-tongued orator of the South, introduced Mr. Davis who was present to deliver the unveiling ceremonies. Mr. Grady's introduc . tory remarks were so beautiful, so appropriate and so filled with the golden threads of truth that we re produce them in part: Henry W. Grady's Tribute to Davis "Had the great man whose mem ory is perpetuated by this marble chosen of all men one witness to his constancy and his courage, he would have chosen the honorable statesman whose presence honors this platform today,' Jefferson Davis first and las. President of the Confederate States. It is good, sir (turning to Mr. Davis), for you to be here. Other leaders have had triumphs. Conquerers have won crowns, and honors have been piled on the victors of earth's great battles, but never yet, sir, came man to more loving people. Never conquerer wore prouder dia dem than the deathless love that crowns your gray hairs today. Never king inhabited more splendid palace than the millions of brave hearts in which your dear name and fame are forever enshrined. Speaking to you, sir, as a son of a Confederate soldier who sealed his devotion with his life holding kinship through the price less heritage of his blood to you and yours standing midway between the thinning ranks of his old comrades, whose faltering footsteps are turned toward the grave, and the new gener ation thronging to take the work that falls unfinished from their hands here in the auspicious Present, across which the historic Past salutes a glorious Future, let me pledge you that the love we bearvyou shall be transmitted to our children, and our children's children, and that genera tions yet unborn shall in this fair land hold your memory sacred, ana point with pride to your loftlyand stainless life. My countrymen (turning to the audience,) let us teach the lesson in this old man's life, that defeat hath its glories no less than victory. l.et us declare that this outcast from the privileges of his great government is the uncrowned king of our people, and that no Southern man high or Ten for 10 cents. Handy size. Dealers carry both. 10 for 10c; 20 for 20c. It's toasted. U humble, ask a greater glory than to bear with him, heart to heart, the blame and the burdens of the cause for which he stands unpardoned. In dignity and honor he met the re sponsibilities of our common cause. With dauntless courage he faced the charges. In obscurity and poverty he has for twenty years borne the re proach of our enemies and the obio quy of defeat. This monument to this blessed Easter week that, wit nessing the resurrection of vhese memories that for twenty years have been buried in our hearts, has given us the best Easter we have ever seen since Christ was risen from the dead, this monument finds its richest re ward in the fact that we can light with sunshine the shortening end of a path that has long been dark and dreary. Georgians, countrymen, sol diers and sons of soldiers, and brave women, the light and soul and crown of our civilization, rise, and give your heart's voice, as we tell Jefferson Davis that he is at home among his people." And Protect Your Health I have opened an Electric Shoe Shop in the store formerly occupied by P. Friedenburg, and prepared to do all kinds of high class shoe repair work. Shoes repaired while you wait. All Work Guaranteed Neese's Electric Shoe Shop Warrenton, North Carolina j Never Has Been, Never Will Be Greensboro Daily News: "It must not happen again," saio President Harding, as he laid a wreath on the coffin of the first Amer ican soldier killed on German soil. But by way of preventing its hap pening again he "would wish a na tion so powerful that none will dare to provoke its wrath." As long as the President of the United State is so ignorant of the mere superficialties of history as to know that there never has been and never will be, a nation so powerful that none will dare to "provoke its wrath, the prospect for world peace is bleak and dreary. Three millions of Americans dared to provoke the wrath of the mighty British empire; and their daring is the reason why there exists an American presidency for Mr. Harding to hold. Starving Russia dares provoke the wrath, not of a single nation, but of, the civilized world. Human courage has no freez ing-point. Men who are convinced of the righteousness of their cause will often walk into the jaws of destruc tion. Does Mr. Harding intend to make America more powerful, from the military standpoint than all the rest of the world combined ? We doubt it. Yet it will have to be more powerful than that before Russia will not dare to provoke its wrath. "So powerful that none will dare tfo provoke ijs 'wrath" poppycock! The legions qf mighty cherubim led by the Archangel Michela are not that strong; for we are reckless men provoking Heaven's wrath every day. The only way for America to "help promote world peace is by being so just and reasonable that none win find cause to provoke her wrath. The way for a man to protect his person and property is not to go around arm ed to the teeth, but to live within the law, and lend his support to its en forcement against any other man who breaks it. The way for a nation to protect itself in this century is exactly the same. Mr. Harding's utterance is more befitting the chief of some nomad tribe, or the holder of some robber baron's castle, than for the elected head of a great civilized government. Rant and cant are appropriate enough to barbarians; but they strike a dis cordant note among civilized men. ProfessionalCards. DR. H. N. WALTERS Surgeon Dentist Office Phone-59; Residence Phone 66 JOHN B. PALMER Attorney at Law Office on Court House Square DR. W. W. TAYLOR Surgeon Dentist Office Phone 52; Residence Phone 34 FRANK H. GIBBS Attorney-at-Law Office over Bank of Warren Warrenton, N. C. DR. ROB S. BOOTH Surgeon Dentist Office 69. Phones Residence 138-J The Jinest Tire for Small Cars H oo jf $ :- X W JM ; otooi T. O. RODWELL , Attorney and Counselor At Law Special Attention Given to the Settle ment of Estates by Executors, Admin istrators and all other office practice. NOTICE OF SUMMONS WARRANT OF ATOAChVe?T North Carolma-Warren County AY. G. Coppersmith s Vs. W. W. Warren The Defendant in the above-ertiti ed action will take notice that or, I 2nd day of May, 1921, a summons the said action was issued agSinS Defendant by John D. Newell , of the Superior Court of county, North Carolina, returnln" before the Clerk on- the UthH May, 1921, which was returned h the Sheriff of Warren county on $ 7th day of May, 1921, endowed- ter due diligence this defendant tl found in Warren county"- ai Whereas, the Plaintiff claim.' Defendant the sum of Two Hundred one Cents, with interst thereon frorn" the 1st day of January, 1920, at thi rate of six per centum per annum due for goods and merchandise 0li and delivered by the Plaintiff to'thn Defendant, for which the Plaintiff jn stitutes this action; Now, Therefore let the Defendant take notice that he is required to be and appear befon the Clerk of the Superior Court of Warren county, North Carolina, at the Court House in the town of War renton, on or before the 11th day V July, 1921, and Answer or Demur to the Complaint which will h? deposit ed in the Office of the Clerk of the Court on or before the 20th day of June, 1921. The Defendant will also take notice that a Warrant of At tachment was issued by said Clerk of the Superior Court on the 23rd dav of May, 1921, against the property of the Defendant, which Warrant is returnable on the . 20th day of June 1921, before the Clerk' of the Superior Court of Warren County, when an-1 where the Defendant is required to appear and Answer or Demur to the Complaint, or the relief demanded will be granted. This 23rd day of May, 1921. JOHN D. NEWELL, ch. jhtaylor. Clerk Superior Court. NOTICE Trustee's Sale of 80 1-2 Acres of Land in Roanoke Township, War ren County, at Warrenton. By virtue of a Deed of Trust from N. B. Harrison to me of Record in the Clerk's office of Warren county in Deed Book No. 106, Page 433 and being thereby required by the holder of the notes secured, I shall at 11 o'clock, Monday, June 20th, 1921 at the front door of the Court House of said county, Sell by public auction that certain Tract of Land in Roa noke Township in said county con taining 80 1-4 acres (being one-half undivided interest), bounded as fol lows : On the North by Virginia and North Carolina State line and the lands of Richard Tucker; on the East by lands of Mrs. J. R. Green arid Richard Wilkins' estate; on the South by Richard Wilkins' estate and Oliver Harrison; on the West by Adam Harrison estate, Sarah Broad nax, Gavon Jackson and John Byrd. Terms Cash. This May 27, 1921. L. W. KIDD, Trustee. FORD CARS TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LAND Under and by virtue of the power and authority conferred upon me by N. B. Harrison and Ethel Harrison, his wife, on the 2nd day of April, 1918, which is registei'ed in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Warren County, State of North Carolina, in Book 105, page 115, I will sell at pub lic aution to the highest bidder all the interest of said N. B. Harrison and Ethel Harrison (being one-half undivided interest) in the following described Tract of land, lying in Rou noke Township in said Warren Coun ty, bounded as follows: "On the North by the Virginia and North Car olina state line and the land of Rich ard Tucker; on trie East by the lands of Mrs. J. R. Green and the Richard Wilkins Estate; on the South by the lands of Oliver C. Harrison; on the West by the lands of the Adam Har rison Estate, the lands of Sarah Broadnax, Govan Jackson and J. II. Byrd, Containing, in the entire tract, Eighty and one-fourth (80 1-4) Acres, more or less. PLACE OF SALE: At the Court House Door in Warrenton, N. C. TIME OF SALE: 12 o'clock M.. Monday June 20th, 1921. TERMS OF SALE: CASH. This -May 27, 1921. L. W. KIDD, Trustee. Goodrich 30x3i anti-skid safety tread fabric tire now available at the 20 Price Reduclion which went into effect May 2nd (LInti-Skid Safely 'Tread at the 20 Price Reduction Here is a 30x3 2 tire, with snappy black tread and creamy white sides clean, trim, splendidly finished generously large and full in size, with the Goodrich anti-skid safety tread. This tire will give you much longer mileage, the greatest of durability, the utmost riding comfort and the fullest satis fadioh. Like all other Goodrich tires the 30x3 2 "is made only in one quality. It is so thoroughly and unusually good that its makers frankly declare it the best tire ever made for small cars. THE B.F.GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY oAkron, Ohio Dealers everywhere are selling Goodrich Silver- town Cords, Goodrich Fabric Tires and Goodrich ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having this day qualified as Ad ministrator upon the estate of Ed ward M. Gundy, deceased, late of Warren County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to me proper ly verified on or before the 18th May, 1922, or this notice will be plead in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will make payment to me. This 18th May, 1921. CORNELIUS A. GUNDY, Admr. 6ts. Elams, N. C. v Red or Gray Tubes all one quality at the 20 reduction in prices which Goodrich made effec tive May 2nd, 1921. PRODUCING 4,000 A DAY Ford is building cai-s at full speed. And, according to an official state ment from the factory at Detroit, the demand for Ford cars and trucks still exceeds the output, despite the fact that a new high level of produc tion has been reached. By the first of May the figures rep resenting the daily production were in the neighborhood of 4,000 a, day, so the May schedule was set at 101,125 cars and trucks, not including the out put of the Ford Canadian plant oi any of the foreign assembling plants. The output mounted daily: May 12th J brought forth 4092, the greatest number that have been produced in one day so far this year. Since the month has 25 working days, present indications point to a new high record. A comparison of Ford production figures for 1920 and 1921 discloses the fact that for April 1921, the output was greater by 24,514 than for the corresponding month of a year ago. The output for May 1921 will prob ably overshadow May 1920 f?y be tween fifteen and twenty thousand cars and trucks . . Approximately 43,000 men are at work in the Detroit plant of the Ford Motor Company. The factory is operating on full time, six days a 1 week and three shifts a day. I "We were never m a better condi- Record. See if your neighbor is in- tion than we are right now." said . terested in subscribing to his count.' Henry Ford- recently. ' paper. t, Von rn n 'f A A t- , . feel so good but what will make you J feel better. if c .1 'JwV.JQ I Geta ac2r For Sale by HUNTER DRUG CO Speak a good word for the Warier I havo taken the Agency for the Capital City Laundry, of Raleigh, and will be sd toxhave you leave your laundry at C. F. Moseley's store. I wM deliver laundry at your residence. Your patronage will be appreciated. ClTalvern M. Palmer Agent Capital City Laundry
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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June 3, 1921, edition 1
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