PAGE TWO 1IBt8HttWIIHIil?)lt??niHw?n ; f HERE THERE ! ];| A column of comment on H persons and things seen H here and there over the 8 roads of Carolina. By BRODIE JONES THE LAST TIME He was a slight quarter of a mile ahead of me, signalling for a lift. His looks didn't seem to make him a particularly welcome companion at first and the car breezed on. At second glance I put on brakes, and he came stumbling up, with a limp, : and climbed-in. ' We drove on for a short distance and he turned to me: "Young fellow, you know this is the last time you will be riding on this road in a long time"? The pause in his speech may have , been more fancied than true? "I see they are getting ready to put up the detour signs." AN ANSWER A poem from Dean Inge last week on the "half an inch, half an inch, 1 half an inch shorter" style of dress. , brings a fair defender into print this week in answer. She says: Half an inch, half an inch, Half an inch underShut your blamed eyes, And then go to thunder? Who cares if you smile, Short skirts is the styleCheck the sensation? I Ours not to reason why, Ours but to go and buy What fashion decrees. 1 Critics to the right of us? Critics to the left of us, Critics behind us? Say what they please. FAST TRAVELING He was a hitch-hiker of exper- 1 ience, and he was proud of his record. When he wasn't treking over the country, he said that his business was interior decorating. He expressed his views and gave his | opinions to an attentive ear the ^ other day as we were knocking ^ along the highway: . "I've been all of the United ( States. A fellow don't have much ^ trouble getting rides if he dresses nice and keeps shaved. I generally ' go into a hotel when I get to town, look over the register and see who , is headed my way. Then I sorter j hangs around and gets acquainted j before the next day. It generally , works. I went from Philadelphia ' to Miami this Spring in six days. J Caught one ride for 1200 miles with ' rvlrl YV-irt-r-1 Ua ho ' B11UU5"V Q With J; Jack Mulhall ; , ! "The Best Man," Comedy. j uiu man liuiii lviaiiic. nc oaiu in, was glad to have me along for he was lonesome, but that he would never have picked me up on the road. There's a lot of folks like that, and I don't blame them." The hitch-hiker expressed the view that in a few more years we would have California weather in the East and that hot Summers and cold Winters would prevail there. He said he had noticed how the climate had changed in the past ten years. THE GOOSHUM GULF Roy Davis, Editor The Council boys from here went over to Garber's Ridge last night to call on the Kon-Anners. Gooshum Gulf gets kinder quiet in the afternoon. Crops laid-by, you know, and young 'uns and all are down at Turtle pond beyond the Ridge. Our fair-sized cop, Billy Eneezer, told the city daddies at their powwow just 'fore sundown the other night that something had to be done about these road windburners. Billy says that the rights of the town citizens must be protected ; IMPERIAL [ Saturday, August 17 ! Buzz Barton a I "The Vagabond Cub" i b "Eagle of the Night," new ]? ( serial i| I "The Bull Fighter," Comedy ]? | Monday-Tuesday, Aug. 19-20 Jf ! "Annapolis" JJ [ With ; John Mack Brown, j[ | Jeanette Loff, ;j | Hugh Allan ;j "Do Detectives Think," ! Comedy \ I Wednesday, August 21 Jr ; Bob Custer f ?In? j | "Texas Tommy" j| M. G. M. News ! "Mystery Rider," Serial !i ; Chapter No. 7 I Thursday-Friday, Aug. 22-23 Alice White ;j "XTa n fyh+Tr RflHv" ' S Warren ton, North Carotin and that he don't want no more of his chickens killed. Lilly Kon-Anners and the Council boys went to Omega, beyond High Hill, to a shaking the other night. They said the fiddling was fine. Wish that ye editor could have been along. "If you leave your business your business will leave you," this traveling man commented the other day as both of us, far from our business bases, were seeking shekels. "You know what I mean. A fel - ' _i_x. *i. low has got to StlCK to It, Ilgni, XI/ through and he'll come out after while unless he fails to learn anything. The first letter in success is an S, you know, and that starts the word "Sticking", too. Some connection there." OUTSIDE DOPE Any one picks up a lot of information about his own town folks when he chats with others who 'travel' the town. A lot of news and many sidelights some times come from outside sources. No one can know any place if they do not get an outside view. They are too close to see it all. Turkey Girl Named ' 'in /-ii 1^ _ Head or ^-n ^iuds RALEIGH, Aug. 14?Mary Emma Powell of Turkey in Sampson County was elected president of the North Carolina 4-H club organization at its final business session closing the annual short course held at State College this month. Associated with Miss Powell in the administration of club affairs for the coming year will be Boyce Brooks of Calypso, Duplin County, vice-president; Vernon James, of Weeksville, Pasquotank County, secretary and treasurer, and Lossie Hardison of Plymouth, Washington County, historian. These four young people have seen leaders in 4-H club work in ;heir home communities and coun;ies for the past several years. Each ane was also prominent in some vay at the recent short course. Miss Powell has been especially success;ulin her work in Sampson County. Recently when the county commissioners of the county decided to liscontinue the work of the home' agent, Miss Powell was among those prominently engaged in the effort ;o retain the work. She not only appeared before the commissioners aut also aided in the movement to lave hens donated by farm women and sold to defray the county's share of the home agent's salary, j' She is an excellent presiding officer j j and a good speaker. Boyce Brooks, with Ruth Coleman pf Alamance County, was on of the State health champions at the re-j aent short course. He is a perfect j specimen of physical manhood, | naking a' score of 99.1 percent1 >ut of a possible 100. He is the son }f Rev. and Mrs. C. V. Brooks of Calypso, is 17 years of age, 67 inches tall and weighs 134 pounds. He ( c artive in the garden club of his' home community. Vernon James scored 96.6 percent [ in the health contest. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. James and president of the Weeksville Club. Miss Hardison was one of the, most popular girls at the short course, attracting all those about; her by that sweet disposition. As a r Studebaker's big , you now I stude; Straigh sd _ t-aoor FOR at the and a Straight Eight Luxurious motoring become Studebaker?world's largest 1 ?now offers at $1235 a luxuri by a thrifty straight-eight mo Six four-door Sedan as low as than the Dictator which sol All * * rui prices cii. PALMER SALI Warrenton, N. C. * ' TH Senator Wheeler In Attack On Tariff U7 Aorrrvrrvmw Anc 1???Renub VY XlUllXXi v< x , aamq* *vi ?- ?4 lican members of the Senate finance committee continued to sustain basic rates fixed by the House tariff bill today despite renewal of the Democratic attack on the measure. "The glaring immorality of the Hawley bill is that it has abandoned * 'protection' as the basic theory of 1 tariff making and has substituted a pernicious and destructive system of price insurance," Senator Wheeler, Democrat, Montana, said in a statement issued by the Dem- < ocratic National committee. IN MEMORIAM MRS. SARAH TWITTY The patient and cheerful spirit of Sarah Fitts Henry Palmer, wife of Robert Cheek Twitty, passed to the Life Eternal on May 2nd, 1929 from the home of her daughter, Mrs. Howard Palmer, in Six Pound, Warren County. Mrs. Twitty was born August 16th, 1840, at Palmer Springs, Virginia. She was the daughter of Horace Palmer and his second wife, Varoline Fitts. She had one full brother, William, and four BAKE It t Eight Sedan ONLY factory 2 door sedan at fIl85 s economical motoring! For Guilder of eight-cylinder cars ous four-door sedan powered tor. And imagine! A Dictator $1095 ?an even better car d in big volume at $1345. the factory i . IS COMPANY Henderson, N. C A half brothers, Horace, Benjamin, Paul and Jacob, and one sister, Rebecca. Early in life she joined the Methodist church, which was the Church of her forefathers, and was a consistent member throughout her long life. She was very young when she married Robert Cheek Twitty, only son of James and Caroline Cheek, his tfife. They were married from the home of her aunt, Mrs. Harriet Pitts Thrower. This union was blessed with nine children, eight of whom lived to maturity. The oldest son, William, went to Buffalo, New York, to live when twenty-one years old. He became a successful doctor, having graduated in Pharmacy and medicine from the University of-Buffalo. He married Miss Amelia Claris of that city and has one son, Robert Claris Twitty. The second son, James followed his brother to Buffalo, and like him, studied Pharmacy in the same University. Having been reared on a farm, he found the life of a druggist too confining and abandoned it for one in the open, establishing a successful riding academy in Buffalo. He married Miss McLean and died in 1916, leaving no child. The third son, Robert, became a Veterinary Surgeon, taking his course from Columbia Univer-u - * tt-X?: ? Sity 01 veiei'iuury ivicuiuiuc, vyoohington, D. C., also from New York College of Veterinary Surgeons, and practiced successfully in Buffalo, N. Y., till his death. He was never married. The fourth son, Alston, is a real estate broker in Bronxville, N. Y. He married Miss Mildren Newton of Long Island and has a daughter, Virginia. The oldest daughter, Caroline Sterling, married Horace Palmer 3rd. Harriet Fitts married Jeff Davis Palmer; each daughter has children. Mrs. Twitty was educated at the Warrenton Female College, when Mr. Daniel Turner was president. She remained at this chool later when he was succeeded by Rev. Mr. Campbell and Mr. Edwin Parham. She was a beautiful young woman. In addition to her loveliness of feature, she was a gifted conesult of price reduction? can Iraya E WARREN RECORE versationist, with a rare sweetness of voice. These personal charms re- * mained till the end of her life. The married life of Mr. and Mrs. Twitty was a lovely romance for more than a half a century. The last fifteen years of her life she was totally blind, which affliction her devoted daughters gave untiringly of their time and affection to alleviate. When the sorrows of life had ceased she was carried to the family cemetary of her husband, near Ridgeway and there laid by him to await a joyful Resurrection. mrs T.T7ZTE MONTGOMERY, | Raleigh. Report of R. J. Jones, Secretary and Treasurer, Town of Warrenton, N. C., For Month Ending August 5, 1929. FOR CORPORATION PURPOSES Receipts July 2?To balance on hand . .$6,269.84 July 27?To cash from Warrenton Water Co. on note 250.00 August 3?To cash M. M. Drake Genl. fund taxes.. 51.39 August 3?To cash M. M. I ' o no I Draue poll taxes o.w July 6?To M. M. Drake, J. K. Williams, fine $10.00, cost $3 13.00 I July 6?To M. M. Drake, J. K. Williams, fine $5, cost discounted? 5.00 I July 11?To M. M. Drake, burial permit Eliza Somerville - 3.00 I July 19?To M. M. Drake, burial permit infant Jno. Painter 3.00 I August 5?To M. M. Drake, burial permit Louise Peoples. 3.00 I August 5?To F. H. Gibbs for gravel? 37.79 I August 5?To Warrenton E. Light Co 30 I August 5?Overdrawn on this account. 297.79 I $6,937.1111 Disbursements July 5?M. M. Drake, I pay roll.. .$ 37.35 I July 5?Pd. order L. H. Porter, street acct. 1,000.00 I July 5?Pd. order Warrenton Water Co 59.00 I July 5?Pd. order Car. P. & L. Co. 172.70 I July 5?Pd. order Capital Grocery Co 15.20 I July 5?Pd. order M. M. Drake, salary 150.00 I July 5?Pd. order Boyd TV/Tn+nr fin QPPf". 3.74 I vjuxaui iuwui ww., MVWVI July 11?Pd. order W. H. Boyd, St. work. 200.00 I July 11?Pd. order L. H. Porter, St. work 3,000.00 I July 11?Pd. order C. F. Moseley, St. work... 50.00 I July 11?Pd. order C. E. Lovell, salary 21.50 I July 17?Pd. order L. H. Porter 91.90 I July 17?Pd. order M. M. Drake, pay roll 39.20 I July 17?Pd. order C. E. Lovell, salary.. 21.50 I July 22?Pd. order Warrenton R. R. Co., L. H. Porter acct 271.39 I July 22?Pd. order M. M. Drake, pay roll 37.60 I July 22?Pd. order Mrs. Grant, writing contract? 1.00 I July 22?Pd. order Warrenton R. R. 40.59 I July 20?Pd. order C. E. Lovell, salary. 21.50 I July 27?Pd. order C. E. Lovell, salary 21.50 I July 27?Pd. order M. M. Drake, pay roll.. 28.10 I July 30?Pd. order W. H. Boyd, acct. in full 88.94 I July 31?Pd. order L. H. Porter, payment 1,000.00 I July 31?Pd. order J. S. Plummer, horse board 23.14 I August 1?Pd. order M. M. Drake, salary 150.00 I August 1?Pd. order R. J. Jones, salary- 30.00 I August 1?Pd. order F. H. Gibbs, salary 33.33 I August 1?Pd. order Warrenton Water Co. 59.00 I August 1?Pd. order C. P. & L. Co. 172.70 August 3?Pd. order M. M. Drake, pay roll.. 74.75 I August 3?Pd. order C. E. Lovell, night police 21.50 I $6,937.11 August 5?By overdrawn on this account $297.79 FOR CONSOLIDATED BOND ACCOUNT PURPOSES Receipts July 1?To balance on hand.. $1,380.71 August 3?To cash, M. M. Drake, Bond Acct. 51.39 Disbursements July 11?By Pd. coupons due April 1, 1929 $ 15.00 August 5?By balance $1,417.10 August 5?To Balance $1,417.10 Also on hand: One certificate Citizens Bank $3,731.20 One certificate Bank of Warren 3,250.00 One note, J. C. Moore. 63.00 B Warren Hotel bonds, $500 each. 4,000.00 1586 shares Warrenton R. R. Co. stock..* 39,600.00 Warrenton Water Co. balance on note.. 50.00 148 shares Warren Hotel Co. stock. Drefered 74.000.00 396 shares Warrenton R. R. Co. stock. 9,900.00! 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On our cord-testing mz cord) stretched side-by-side with r stretches and recovers (to absorb STAYS STRETCHED! See how before it breaks (to stand severe : SUPERTWIST carcass I Boyd-Gilli W a WAntAn \ FRIDAY,^AUGUST ^ I largest cer of ^ n any- Greatest guar- Bargains which r :ld for *K Tire odyear I History! e it is. ? e new Lifetime Gi:irantei super- 'Against Defect* 1,"^ 30x3 C?1 ; ?5-?? iir best 30x3!/2 Cord n mile- $5.25 that 8 30x3!/2 Cord O'size, ,roud!y 29x4.40 Cord me in S6.20 ur size lunting 30x4.50 Cord omein $7.20 All Size Tires At Special Prices ved ii wj Your Old 71. % JK% AcccpU1' ? i Part Payi;-::.i eaa fc RDS * ' ' S'e SUPERTWIST (Good,car. r~ _ , standar^ cord. See how SITERT^V ^mrlr?ad shocka) while the other?? road f , VJST stre