V VOLUME XXVI. A WEEKLY NEWS PAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WARREOTWATWAin . WARRENTON, WARREN COUNTN. CT FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 307192i t.... . - CUT THEIR WAY OUT COUNTY JAIL MAGIN AND JIM HUDSON BROKE JAIL SUNDAY While Jailer Is Attening Church prisoners Cut Their Way Out ef Prison. Magin Re-captured Wednesday. Yne c heck flasher Eddie Magin, niias Francis Gordon, and Jim Hudson who were both sentenced to work the public roads by Judge Calvert at the September term of Superior court broke jail last Sunday and escaped. They were recognized by several parties as they wended their way to parts unknown. Evidently they were aided by out side confederates as Magin was pro vided with a saw with which he sawed his way to liberty; Hudson escaped with him. Sheriff Davis and Deputies Green and Ellington were quickly on the trail, and as they surmised found "the birds" had called at the home of Mr. George Allen (who know Magin and testified against him in court). Magin unburdened his mind and loosened his tongue to Mr. Allen with the tale of his escape, in a bragadoceo way, and intimated that he expected to be in Norfolk "by Wednesday night. His story of the escape was as fol lows: He was furnished with a saw; in tact he had the saw strapped under his clothing while being in the pres ence of the Judge and receiving a mild sentence, because of the fact that he claimed to be a veteran of the Wor. War. Sunday night when Jailer John S. Green was at church he cut his way through the ceiling and entered under the roof of the residence part of the jail, sawing through the ceiling- and entering- an upper room of the resi dence part of the jail, walked down stairs, busted open the front door and thus escaped Hudson following. Magin's offense was forging' checks many on. the Red Cross, ssd 039 on Mr. Geor-ge Allen of the Embro neigh borhood. He was caught in Petersburg and brought to Warrenton by Chief .Green and lodged in jail; evidence then be gan to accumulate of his wide-spread actively as a check flasher and forg erer. His especially hobby seemed to be that of gaining the confidence of Fed Cross officials with his pitiful tale of wounds and misfortune resulting from his service in the Canadian and later the American armies. He limped, had wounds upon his person and wore Uncle Sam's uni form. There was some doubt about his story being straight, and many believed he was a fake. The story of the discharge papers showing his ser vice in the army was the very thin one of "I left them with my sister, fearing I would lose them." All questions asked him in court were answered in a whisper, as he claimed he was losing his voice from confine ment, intimating that his lungs were involved. He asked to be sent to the public roads, rather than the- peni teavtary, and Judge Calvert under the circumstances gave him a road sen tence of 15 month. Jim Hudson offense was an affray in which he inflicted a wound that blinded the carty in one eye. He re ceived a sentence of 12 months on thi road. Sheriff Davis immediately sen cfncer W. C. Ellington to Portsmouth with instructions to remain there and v . atch all trains until Magin appeared. He was rewarded Wednesday by a telegram from Deputy Ellington stat ing that he had captured Magin, and would return with him at once. He arrived here Wednesday night and lodged his prisoner in jail. Magin was carried yesterday to the Pur -t in. county roads. It is expect that Hudson will be picked up at any time. Community Meeting , Remember the community meeting Friday evening at 8 o'clock. Camp songs and games will furnish a jolly time. Every one is invited. Engineers , Arrive. Engineer John E. Buck and his as sistant Mr. A. H. Joyce are here get ticn work. Messrs. John H. Kerr, Jr., Joe Macon and Ray Wesson aie as t;ng the roads in shape for constructing. PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY Progressive Farmer. " The cheapness of lumber in the old days and 'the shortage of cash led many good farmers into habits of carelessness in .the handling of an important part of their property, the farm buildings. So long as lumber was seemingly cheap and so long as the good, durable, heart-pine timber of a few years back was available, there seemed to farmers to be little reason for painting. The lumber was so durable that the damage by decay seemed inappreciable. And so on many farms the available money was needed so badly for other things that the house, the barns, and other buildings went unpainted. But the quality of lumber available in most parts nowadays is no longei of tne heart-pine variety. WhiK there still is some of this to be had, the average farm user of lumber get3 a far diffeent grade. The sap-growth lumber ordinarily available now is so porous and so readily absorptive of water that it offers the best of liv ing conditions for the agents of decay. And such lumber, if allowed to re main unprotected, deteriorates so rap idly that the sound plank of today is soon a spongy crumbling mass. With the ever growing scarcity of lumber and with the present day prices for - new lumber of inferior gade, it is imperative that every man take steps to save what he has. Paint is the one ecourse. Instead of being a luxury, paint is in reality a neces sity. It is in the nature of an in fnd its proper application pays a vestment. Money expended for paint handsome dividend in the prolonged life of the building or the farm im plement. Like other things, paint can be misued. Painting when Jlumber is moist may be worse than useless, in asmuch as the paint will tend to 3eal the moisture inside the wood, allow ing it to escape much more more slowly and thus prolonging the per iod of activity of the decay organ isms. Painting heart-pine or resin ous lumber materials to disappear lessons the yalue of the- paint. One would hardly think of payiting with out using a priming coat. Painting the iron parts of implements without first thoroughly cleaning them and freeing them from rust Is poor pro tection. Paint, properly applied, is one of the best investments a farm owner can make. Buildings or implements unprotected will not last. It isn't 2 question of what is good enough for you or good enough for the tenant. It's a question of money in your pock et to paint and thus prolong the per iod of service of all buildings on the place. . , IN MEMORIUM Sergeant Herbert M. Miles Co. H. 120 Inf., 30th Division Killed in A,ction Sept. 29th, 1918 God gave my son in trust to me: Christ died for him,- and he should be A man for Christ. He was His son, And God's and man's, not mine alone. He was not mine to give, He gave himself that he Might help to save All that a christian should revere: All that enlightened men hold dear. IJIS MOTHER. Several days ago Welfare Officei Raymond Rodwell wrote to Supt. E C. Brooks, State Superintendent of Public Instruction asking for a ruling on the matter of compulsory attend ance and received the following reply under date September 28: "My dear Sir: "I wish to say in reply to your let ter that the rule referred to by you is as follows: "Wherever the transportation 13 provided for children beyond a two and one-half mile limit the compul sory law should be made to apply. In other words, you cannot compel chil dren to walk more than two and one half miles to school. But if the coun ty has provided transportation so thac children will not be compelled to walk more than two and one-half miles, then the compulsory law does apply. "Very sincerely yours, "E. C. BROOKS, "'State Supt. Public Instruction." Nothing Much. "Pa, what are ancestors?" "Well,. my son, I'm one of ycurs. Your grandpa is another." "Oh! Then, why is it people brag about ' them ? "Boston Transcript. TO REDUCE FARM FIRE LOSSES. STATE ASKS ALL TO OB SERVE FIRE-PREVENTION Insurance Commission Gives , Causes of Fire And Tells How They May be Largely Pre vented With a Little Care. Farm tires cost about $20,000,000 a year $18,166,710 in 1918. Of the fires that year 33 per cent were from causes classed as preventable, 37 per cent from partly preventable causes, and 30 per cent unknown but believed to iiave been largely preventable. With inadequate fire-fighting euip ment on farms, fires are hard to con trol. Prevention is the best way to deal with them. Defective chimneys and flues took toll to the extent of $1,982,031; sparks on roofs, $1,181,171; careless use 01 matches J?y smokers and others, $1, 071,987; petroleum and its products, $732,067 ; and stoves, furnaces, boilers and their pipes, $674,968. The largest item listed as partly preventable is lightning, $3,933,950. Fire Prevention Week (Oct. 2-9) should be made, a special time for looking over the premises to see that the buildings are in the best practica ble shape to prevent and resist fire; that inflamnable rubbish is cleared away; and that habits of safety are instilled in the handling of matches, lamps, stoves, and kerosene and gas oline. Gasoline has come to play such an important part in farm life that spec ial care should be taken to see that it is not stored in inflammable buidings, and is never opened in the presence of uncovered flame. Fire Prevention weeks ends on the semi-centennial of the great Chicago Fire. While occuring in a great city, the traditional cause of this fire was one which is liable to occur in the country the upsetting of a lantern in a stable. If lanterns must be used in barns, they should be kept in good condition, set or hung in a safe place, and never filled or lighted in the barn. Numerous disastrous fires are caus ed by thrashing machines, both by scattered sparks and embers and by dust explosions in the separators. All smokestaks should have spark arrest ers, and the ground around the boiler should be kept clear and wet down if necessary. Grain dust explosions are largely preventable. The United States Department of Agriculture has made exhaustive studies of the sub ject and is prepared to recommend ad equate safeguards. Serious losses are caused by sparks from locomotives, which ignite dry wooden shingle roofs and start many fires in straw, stubble, and gras3 dur ing dry season. If a railroad nrcs through the farm, it will pay to plow 1 few furrows along the right of way as a fire break. Kerosine lamps should be examin ed to see that the burners are in good condition, and should never be left where they may be upset. Kerosene and gasoline receptacles should be kept apart - and should be so different as to avoid possibility of a mistake. Ordinary friction matches should be kept in safe receptacles, away from children, and never carried loose. Smoking in barns and garages never should be permitted. Fire marshals of Western States report greater fire losses in gain and straw the past season from carelessly thrown match es, engine sparks and automoble and tractor backfire, than ever before. Buildings may be made safer by seeing that the chimneys are without cracks and free of soot, which may take fire and scatter sparks on dry roofs. Flues which may become hot should be covered wthasbestos and any hear-by walls and ceilings pro tected. There should be a sheet of metal under every stove. Out of all the losses by lightning, not one was on a buiding protected jby lightning rods. It is now definite-; ly known that lightning rods afford protection. If installed intelligently they reduce the risk from lightning amost to the vanishing point. Public schools may well devote an hour or afternoon to a special fixe prevention program. Some prominent, citizen could be called in for a talk. Essays and, perhaps, a playlet by the children would help impress the mat ter on their minds. Some schools al ready have a weekly 15 minute les- son on lira prevention. The plan is. MR. FORD'S RAIL ROAD MAN AGMENT MANUFACTURER MAKES GOOD RAILROAD MAN Correspondent States That Suc cess of Henry Ford's Manage ment Not Due to Freight of Ford Motor Company. (John B. Carr in Philadelphia Record.) That center from which their inter locking directorates are controlled, railroad officials and a few specula tively inclined individuals who still hold transportation stock, must be mightily relieved at the speed and finality' with which the claim of Henry Ford's superior railroad man agement has been refuted. And 1 can imagine, too, how much eased is the burden of those editorial defend ers of the top-heavy, floundering rail systems by the happy and spontan eous projection of the idea that the success of Ford's newly x acquired Streak of Rust is altogether due to the patronage of the Ford Automo bile Company. Something over or less than a year ago the railroads of the country were receiving more freight than could be handled by their use of fa cirfties, and their inability to care for traffic was unque'stionably a heavy contributor to the business reaction of last fall through extensive cancel lation of orders because of non-receipt of delay shipments. Yet, de spite the fact that roads were doing capacity business, they claimed that cost exceeded income by about five per cent. Is not this answer enough to ex cuse, advanced with such obvious re lief and gratification, that Ford has made his road pay by using it to haul his own freight to the exclusion of competing lines? There has been no charge that the D. T. & I. gives the Ford Automobile Company a prefer red rate and where no discrimina tion is practiced the identity of ship-: per is nd factor in determing cost of hafylling business.' . - ; The facts are that Ford is operatr ing his road in a highly efficient man ner, at a cost of 53 cents per dollar of revenue, and with rates 20 per cent less than those in vogue. As I said in an earlier letter. I think it is time we had a little honest discus sion of the national transportation mess. MRS. T. J. HOLT ENTERTAINS Mrs. Thomas J. Holt entertained Saturday morning complimentary to Mrs. George Allen of New York at two tables of bridge. Those playing were: Mrs. George Allen, Mrs. R. B. Boyd, Jr., Mrs. John H. Kerr, Mrs. Alfred Williams, Mrs. Biixton Williams, Mrs. John G. Ellis, Mrs. Edmund White and Miss M'ariam Boyd. Delicious refreshments of cream and cake were served. Mesdame Norwood Boyd and Gor don Poindexter received the guests at the door. MRS. W. A. BURWELL HOSTEbb Mrs. William A. Burwell entertain ed Tuesday afternoon from four to six o'clock complimentary to Mrs. William Boyce, Warrenton's charm ing bride, at progressive bridge. Those playing were: Mrs. William Boyce, Mrs. Jim Boyce, Mrs. Milton McGuire, Mrs. Mary Elinor Grant, Misses Hilah Tarwater, Ella B. Jones, Nell Davis, Virginia Gibbs, Annie Burwell, Laura Boyd, Janice Fleming, Lulie Price, Miss Gordy, Misses Lucy Williams and Oliva Burwell. A delicious salad, hot rolls and ice tea were served. admirable. Meetings of farm organizations are particularly proper occasions for fire prevention programs. These oganiza t'.oiis frequently have a fire insurance feature, and every fire loss means larger premiums for the mutual in-: surance associations. The lesson of fire prevention should be taken to every rural home and community. Precautionary measures will do much to cut down a loss' that takes millions of dollars out of the possession of , rural Americans every year and leaves nothing in its place. Prevention is better than regret. A GIRL'S LAMENT I wisht I could be born'd agin, An' be born'd a little boy; Wouldn't have to wear no petticoats. 'Twould be such sho nuff joy. It's hard to know which way you are, When you's born'd a little girl, No matter how or what you do, You's wrong in dis here worl'. I's tried my Grandma's primmy ways, I's tried my sister's whirl; There's not much use to try enny mo I's jus' tired o' bein' a girl. I dreads to be a great big girl, You all knows de rer.son why, Its "skirts too short and necks too low," . x An' too many hug's on de sly." t ' Sometimes I wishes I didn't live, I don't know where for to go, Its such a. fas' age for little girls, An' we has has to reap what we sow. Some days I tries to be clean an' sweet, en dey .calls me a copy cat, 'Cause I loves my daddy's- clean cut ' ways, , An' the set of my mother's hat. If you's good you's named a po' oP maid, An' dats ail dats comm.' to you. If you's bad "you just aint fit to live," I hears dat all de day thru. j Sometimes I thinks if T is a girl, An' I think a heaps o' ways; For the world don't know 'bout every thing,: , An' you can't b'lieve all it 'says. Now I know I can't be born'd ag'in, Brit you hears me what I say, I'll live dis life de best I can, An' try an ho'p save our day. So if I has to be a girl., . Wid a Mis 3 befo' my name, I'll be a girl, the best hat exists, For bein' a girl aint no shame. : Ey Miss. Luey Foster, Louisburg, N. C. THEY ALSO SERVE He wanted to paint a , picture' , And lie noped to nave sung a song, To help many souls to heaven, Or even save one from wrong; But his ear was never quite perfect, . And his colors were never true, So his songs got no attention, And his pictures didn't do. f. He aimed to bring truth and justice, And he strove to put error down But a canker he found at the heart root. . Of every reform he had won; He lived long enough to discover The beauty alive in the mire, And to weep when beneath Truth'3 advancement Showed the cloven hoof of the liar. i Came night at last, for the toiler, "A failure!" he wearily said, As ha closed his eyes; and next morning, The wor'd dully. noted "He's dead!" Came his Master with angels, and stooping Above him "His Image!" they cried, "T-s finished' He said, while He touched him, And His servant awoke, satisfied. Lilla 'Vass Shepherd, in the Living Church. OPENS STORE Messrs. Kaplon and Son are open ing a general dry good store in the Jackson building on corner opposite court house. Tobacco Brings 80 Cents Enoch Solomon of Inez sold a small pile of tobacco on. Boyd's Warehouse floor this week for 80 cents a pound. It Pays to Advertise. A Western evangelist makes a practise of painting religious lines on rocks and fences along public high ways. On2 ran; "What will you do when you die?" Came an advertising man and painted under it: "Use Delta Oil. Good for burns." The American Legion Weekly. Saving Money. Mrs. Doughless "I saved the money to buy this coat, darling." Doughjers "How did you manage 4 Ly JJ.i,lVUtJ t Mrs. D. "I bought it with the 1 . mnnev vou erave me for a new hat . -j T j and had the hat charged to your ac-, count." The American Legion Week j PASSING OF f.-It. J. M. BURROUGHS DIES AFTER BRIEF ILLNESS WEDNESDAY Mr. Burrough Prominent In the Life of This Community. Was a Member of Board of County Commissioners. Mr. James M. Burroughs passed away Wednesday morning after a few hours illness in the sixth-ninth year of his age. To a large circle of friends and ad mirers this announcement brings sor row. If there is one citizen of this community who stands out as a love able character it is Mr. Burroughs. Coming to Warrenton with his family from his farm in Nutbush township about ten years ago, he has been identified with the town and its ac tivities ever since. His honest, integrity and christian manhood soon became known to his new acquaintances,, and he was pro posed and elected a county commis sioner, in which capacity he was serv ing at the time of his death having been re-elected several times. Mr. Burroughs was a gentleman who impressed every one as bein without guile or hypocrasy: he was true to his convictions and to his friends an honest man; the noblest work of God. His death was a shock to ail of his friends and hia passing from among us is deeply depIorecL He was in his usual health when taken ill Tuesday with acute indiges tion, which, in conjunction with a weak heart, brought his life to a close in the early hours of Wednesday morning. He remarked to his family: "I believe I will get up," and upon the suggestion that he had best re main in bed, said he believed that he was too weak to get up, and lying back in bed passed to the Great Beyond. The funeral services were held at the grave in Fairview cemetery yes terday afternoon in the presence of a large number of his. friends and the b-mt7'W'iiicounty.' Many" ' and beautiful floal offerings attested the esteem in which he was held. Doc tor T. J. Gibbs of the Methodist church and Rev E. W. Baxter of the Episcopal church officiated. Mr. Burroughs was twice married. His first wife being Miss Sarah Wright. To them were born two sons, Messrs. William H. and Stephen Burroughs, and three daugh ters, Mrs. Horace Reed, and Misses Mary Russell and Sue Burroughs. He was married the second time to his wife's sister Miss Virginia Wrign.., who with four children survive him. A good citizen, a good father and husband, a good, neighbor has gono from among us. We EhalV miss him, and the consolation of his friendship and kindness is a sweet memory to many. IN HONOR OF TEACHERS Miss Julia Dameron, member of the Board of Trustees of the Warrenton High school, and Miss Belle Dr,meron, her sister who is a member of the faculty, entertained the new ter.chers at supper Tuesday evening. Afte supper the remaining members of thts Board of Trustees and their wives, nnd the other members of the facul ty who were not new teachers, gath ered at the hospitable home of the Misses Dameron and the evening was delightfully spent in getting acquaint ed. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Damer on and Mr. and Mrs. John A. Damer on were present and aided their sis ters in receiving. It is to be regretted that several of the trustees were unavoidably pre vented, from being present. Those who were present think this commun ity is fortunate in the personel of it 3 teachers, and jdedge their hearty co operation. , TOBACCO MARKET The tobacco market here is shov ing decided improvement over the opening prices nnd farmers f.re ex pressing satisfaction at the prices, as compared with last Fall. Good to baccos are selling very well. The warehousemen are telling you through the columns of the Record the stcry of sales made giving planter, price and pound3. This is procf of the pud ding, and speaks louder than any other method.