Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / May 16, 1930, edition 1 / Page 1
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B ACCURATE, terse TIMELY VOLUME XXX tgSmoh ImiffW ROAD Moczting Party Arrives At movent on On Tuesday; To I B ge Here Several Months I EflOAD WAV AGITATED B l H. Cook and locating party! Kd the State Highway department B:rived at Warrenton on Tuesday Wednesday morning began -ino- the Warrenton-1 cork survey Louisburg road preparatory to this I route being taken over for main-J tenance by the State Highway com mission. Mr. Cook was accompanied Vl. h o. Cone. M. T. Adkins Jr. W. [ Darden and D. P. Clifford They Kave office and rooms at Hotel The engineering party began work t Kearney's store in Franklin county and will work from there! to Warrenton. They will be on the! job here for several months it is I aid. There will be little change in] the present route from Warrenton I to Kearney's store, it is said, but it Kisexpected that the road from that] joint to Louisburg wil be streaght-1 red in several places and the dis-1 Hance shortened about two miles. I The engineers are working on] this road following several years of I Kiiiution by interested citizens of his section, who clain that the | cute to Raleigh would be material-1 lv shortened thereby and a rich J I [agricultural section be given adequate roads. It was expected that the State would take over this road about the first of last January, but Icommissioner John Sprunt Hill In December wrote Chairman Powell [that lack of funds would make it impossible at that time, and he [thought it would be about June 30 before the road would be taken over. At that time Mr. Hill expect|ed the surveying party to reach here early in the year. It is now believed that it will be the latter Warrenton-Louisburg road is adopt ed as a part of the State system. thicago Printers Adopt 5-Day Week CHICAGO, May 13?As a means ito provide work for fellow printers out of employment, the 6,000 members of a Chicago Typographical Mm have voted to adopt a fiveday week. The action was taken under provisions of the International Typographical Union laws permitting Its locals to adopt abbreviated hours to: a ninety-day period. Similar AilAH A. , _ mwiu ro comoat unemployment b&s been taken in some other cities. At present, members of the ChiHctgo Typographical local work five one-half days, taking a day off ^Beverv two weeks to give work to their unemployed members. WESTERN PLAYER CAN SWALLOW BASEBALL ?VER, May 13.?Denver basefans flocked to the opening ?'-- ? of the Western League sea ttn here last week to get a glimpse m- of baseball's oddities?memof the St. Joseph (Mo.) team. Buruton Bruckman, catcher of H'be Saints, is the only man in base ball ??*** ? ? ? .. n?i eye glasses behind the I to .and Lefty Deck, an outfielder I St. Joe club is believed to bel only ball player who can put 1 base ball In his mouth. I 9 SENTENCED AT RALEIGH I Clinton W. Capps, white man of 1 ^^teat Manson who was arrested in 1 ^ ^ebruary when officers made a raid I tos Place and captured a 50-1 ^BMion still and 5 gallons of liquor, 1 ^sentenced by Judge Meekins in I ^eral court at Raleigh this week 1 ;'18 months in the Federal peni-1 Mary at Atlanta> I ^lher Davis, white man whol ^implicated when a 12-horsel '1 and n cases of liquor were! ;^ed in a raid near Ridgeway H webruary' uas sentenced to Fed , Pbson for one year and one Rodwell, white man who J ^ bis car which contained i struck !> ??<" uiivcul ^Bct" n' ^r- near Manson on I morning, was sentenced I ^B.^^ years in the Federal re- 1 5NDav SCHOOL social 1 ^B^h55 Henrietta and Estelle Ham-1 ^B^^rtained their Sunday school 1 |k m the home oi their mother,! n E' H. Neal, Wednesday night.! J^Abom thirty were present! k, business program, many! t* *ere Played, after which the! J Mrved an ice cream course! IV* ^rshmaliows. 1 Si Filing Time Ends Next Friday; Newell Replies To Rumor Time for filing for county offices will expire on next Friday, May 23, at midnight, C. F. Moseley, chairman of the Warren county board of elections, said yesterday. The week has brought forth no new candidates and the only item of political interest during that period was a gathering of the Bailey forces in the court house on last Thursday night, and the affidavits published in the Warren Record this week by Candidate F. B. Newell denying a rumor that he had used whiskey in the campaign. Mr. New?eH's sworn statement was that he had not given one man a single drop of whiskey during the campaign. His affidavit is followed by one from a. D. Alston, young man of Warrenton, who states that Mr. Newell had no whiskey, offered no whiskey, drank no whiskey on a certain trip to Norlina, which is believed to have been the start of the rumor. At that time Mr. Newell accepted a ride with Mr. Alston to Norlina where Mr. Newell interviewed several friends and where Mr. Alston transacted matters of business. While there has been no new candidates, as the time for the primary approaches, candidates are redoubling their efforts to secure as many votes as possible and it is expected that every candidate in fho nrnmfv will Ho fmmrl of. WTor_ renton next week, when Superior court will be in session, interviewing friends in the interest of their candidacy. Former School Boy Appears On Screen Sydney Blackmer, former student of the old John Graham high school, will play the leading roll in "Strictly Modern," an all talkie at the imperial Theatre here on Monday and Tuesday night. Older citiens of Warrenton will remember Mr. Blackmer as a school boy here about 1910 or 1911. He probably made his stage debut in the senior play, quite an event in the life of the town in the days of the old school. That year he played the leading part in "Snow White," v/ith Louise Moss as the leading lady. A few years after leaving the t . i.u? vjriaiiaixx suxxuux xxe appeaxeu uxx uic New York stage where he made quite a reputation. He entered the movies in a number of pictures before the introduction of the talkies, but is the first one be shown at Warrenton. Power Attorney Is Hurt In Car Wreck L. G. Benford, of the legal department of the Carolina Power & Light Co., and Mrs. Beniord left ; on Tuesday for their home at Ra- 1 leigh after spending two days at Hotel Warren recuperating from cuts and bruises received in an automobile wreck near South Hill on Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Benford were riding with a Mr. McCain in his Nash sedan when they were run into by a car that is believed to have belonged to a rum runner. Following the crash the driver jumped from I his car and fled into the woods. He has not been captured. Mr. and Mrs. Benford were brought to Warrenton where they were given surgical attention by Dr. W. D. Rodgers, Jr., Carolina Power and Light Co. physician. Negro Is Found Not Guilty False Pretense Charlie Carter, negro of near Littleton, was found not guilty of a charge of false pretense in the only case in Recorder's court on Monday. Evidence was that Carter had entered into a contract with i M. R. Boone, white citizen, to perform certain work for money advanced. The defense entered the plea that there was no definite time set for the work to be done and that he had not gotten to it. POPULATION OF HENDERSON 6,345, CENSUS REVEALS HENDERSON, May 5.?The 1930 population of the city of Henderson was announced here today as 6,345. The figure compares with a population of 5 222 in 1920, and is a gain of 1,123 or 21.5 per cent. The figure was furnished by Hobart Brantley, of Rooky Mount, census supervisor for the third district. bp lie WARRENTON, COUNTY C LEGION DEFERS^ STATUE ACTION Members Divided On Form ( Of Memorial; Dough Boy Or Library Building i OPPOSITION DEVELOPED ] Action to erect a "uougn Boy" monument on the court square at Warrenton as a memorial to the soldiers of the World War was deferred for 30 days at a meeting of Limer Pest. American Legion, at the Armory on last Thursday night. Members of the Legion Auxiliary were present as the guests of the Legion. Plans were made at a meeting in March to erect the monument here, and a committee with this purpose in view sought donations from the board of county commissioners and the board of town commssioners. It was thought that the monument would cost around $1000. The town agreed to contribute $200 for this purpose, the county $425. It developed that the cost of this memorial would be between $2250 and $2500, according to figures presented at the meeting on last Thursday night. Considerable opposition has developed to this form of a memorial. M?ny of the members of the legion contending that it would be better | to spend this money for a library building, as the Warren Memorial ( Library had already been dedicated as a memorial to the soldiers of this j war. Other members expressed the c view that only a "Doughboy" would ( be a proper memorial. Leading the fight for the library c building was Stephen E. Burroughs t of Warrenton and the Rev. S. A. i Wright, pastor of the Warren Meth- r odist circuit Striving for the dough- c boy were Boyd White of Norlina r and R. O. Snipes of Warrenton. 1 Members of the Auxiliary, asked t for an expression" of their views, s told how the Auxiliary had already started a small fund for a library building and expressed themselves forcefully for the building as a ? memorial Mrs. C. R. Roawell and ^ Mrs. A. C. Blalock spoke in defense of this project and in opposition to k the monument. Miss Amma D. Graham, took the view that it was , a memorial to the veterans and that . they should have the last word in ' the matter and should receive what they wanted. "To those of ns who went over ^ the seas and wallowed in the mud ^ and dirt of Prance, who saw war's horrors, to the common doughboy, ? a library building will not be ade- t quate expression," Boyd White said. d "We want to see a statue, a repre- d sentation of the Doughboy as he was; we want to see him whenever v we come to Warrenton. I would $ like to point him out to my son and say 'Son, that is a picture of a your father, an American Doughboy.' I am sorry to say that I do not even know where the library c is. I don't believe the average dough- v boy of Warren county knows. I r think a library is a good thing, but d I shall fight to the last ditch for "s the monument; but if I am licked, d I am going to roll up my sleeves F and work for the library." he con eluded. R. O. Snipes and Russell Palmer also made short speeches support- t ing Mr. White's views. j "The ideal behind the American p Legion is service,' 'the Rev. Mr. j Wright said. " I cannot feel that it f would be carrying out this ideal to t erect a statue; rather I think it C best to erect that form of memorial a that not only will commemorate the c past but will be a living memorial that will serve today and will prove 1 a benediction to generations yet unborn. I think that a library build- e ing is the better form of memorial. ? Henry Montgomery, expressed j himself as favoring the libray building, as did Walter Gardner, Bignall j Jones. Jasper Shearin, C. A. Tucker and Harold Skillman. "Speaking not as your commander," said Loyd Kinsey. "but as a c member of Limer Post, I feel that p while I would give $25 for the s doughboy. I would donate $125 for a library buiiaing. ien years xmvo past and we have neither. Let us t have action. I feel certain that we r can have either form of memorial that the post may choose, but let a us go to work and erect one or the other." v Following discussion of Memorial t services here on May 30, the form of the exercises was left to the dis- t cretion of the Memorial committee, of which the Rev. S. A. Wright is s chairman ,and the meeting adjourned. c t rmt >F WARREN, N. C., FRIDA Federal Officers Continue Drive In Warren County Continuing their efforts to encircle violators of the Eightenth amendment into the coils of law, Vance county deputies, led by a Federal officer, had a full day last Friday when they captured a still it Manson, 500 gallons of mash at Sole's Bridee. a still at Tiarero. and irrested Ed Stone and M'-s. Mae Purdy at Raines Filling Station 'cllowing a search which revealed a gallon and half of liquor. As a follow-up to raids made last Monday and Tuesday when five nen, two stills and 116 gallons of nash were captured, Deputy Sheriffs W. G. Watkins, L. C. Walston and EL E. Brewer of Henderson, led by Federal Officer F. E. Street, workng out of Raleigh, made a raid at 1 Sanson last Friday morning and : captured a steel drum outfit with 100 gallons of mash. No men were ;aken. Saundering forth to the Largo 1 dcinity, the officers came upon an : )ld still site. While there a shot vas fired in the distance, supposedly 1 i signall, and the men moved down ] ;he branch where they seized a new iix-horse boiler still with 12 boxes , >f mash. The operators were not jresent. A raid at Cole's Creek, in Smith 3reek township, gave the officers ' >00 gallons of mash, but neither J still nor men were captured. , Searching the Raines Filling Sta,ion, between Norlina and Ridgevay and formerly operated by Mrs. Raines in whose home Lillie Mae Stewart shot Bryant Bragg, the rfficers seized one and a half galons of whiskey and arrested Ed stone and Mrs. Mae Purdy, operaors. They were given a hearing >efore J. C. Hardy, Federal comnissioner, and sent to the Warren ;ounty jail when they failed to aise their bonds?$1000 each. The leavy bond, it was said, was due < o the reputation of the service itation and its connections. iYRD DOG IS KING CANINE IN HOME TOWN HAMILTON, Mass., itfay 13.? Fox," half dog and half wolf memier of the Byrd antartic south pole xpedition, is nothing less than ing of the Massachusetts canines. Here, among domestic animals hat have never travelled beyond he town limts of their home, "Fox" ettled down to a long period of est to dream away the long summer nights of trackless ice fields, rigid weather, and of "mushing" a frozen southland. Norman Vaughan, in whose care Fox" remains, and who brought he dog here, was in charge of the ogs and sleds on the Byrd expeiton. Town dogs, spoiling for trouble, 'ill have to search no further than he home of "Fox." 1 J 1ISS LEACH TO BE HERE MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS Miss Lucy Leach, welfare worker if Warren county, said that she rauld be in the court house at Warenton each Monday and Thin-slay in the interest of her work, intead of each Monday and Tueslay as announoed in last week's laper, CONTRIBUTIONS ASKED : The Woman's club will appreciate , ontributions of flowers or food for ' heir sale to be held on Tuesday, J day 20, a member of the committee 11 charge of the sale said yesterday. ( Proceeds will be usea ior tne mine und which goes to the undernour- ' shed school children in the county. ^ litizens desiring to contribute are isked to call Mrs. George Scoggin ?r Mrs. W. N. Boyd. FAKE PRISONERS TO RALEIGH I Five prisoners captured by Fedral prohibition officers in the < ounty in recent raids and bound ] 0 Federal court by Commissioner r. C. Hardy were carried to Ral- I igh on Wednesday by Marshall ] Fdwards and E. L. Green. i GOES TO NEW YORK Miss Margaret Davis, daughter f former Sheriff R. E. Davis, de- i larts today for New York where : he will attend a business school. Mr. Loyd Kinsey is spending his week at Philadelphia on business. Mr. C. W. Fleming of Wise was 1 visitor here on Thursday. 1 Mr. Jimmie Miller of Henderson pas a business visitor at WarrenI on fH i c urpplr Wii ?? VVMI Mr. John Henderson was a visior at Littleton on Tuesday night. Mrs. A. A. Williams is spending everal days at Philadelphia. Mr. A. A. Williams spent a few lays at his home here last week. Uran lY, MAY 16, 1930 TAXPAYERS TO 11 MEET SATIRIC' R. T. Grandy Will Discuss 5 Tax Question At Court i House At 2:30 o'Clock i IS A VITAL QUESTION J R. T. Grandy of Wilmington will ^ discuss the tax question at a meet- ^ ing of the Warren county taxpay- E ers at the court house at Warrenton tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock ? W. A. Connell Jr., secretary of the I b Warren county union, announced r yesterday. c Not only members of the union s are asked to attend the mass meet- b ing, Mr. Connell said, but every a taxpayer in Warren is urged to r come out. "We feel that he will ii present a vital message, and that h if we are to secure any relief from y the burdensome tax on real estate n that we must have united action. 1 Other counties are falling in line, 11 and Warren must not lag." n W. E. Turner of Sandy Creek Township is president of the War- s ren county taxpayers union which b has members in every township in the county. Mr. Turner recently v pointed out that Warren was falling behind other eastern counties in the number of members and expressed the desire that as many members as possible would attend * the meeting tomorrow afternoon. More Cotton Is Being Used In Dress ] Materials This Year s NEW YORK, May 13.?Sixty-five t per cent more dress manufacturers ^ ire making cotton dresses this year than at the corresponding period r in 1929, according to reports just 11 received by the Cotton Textile Institute. n This indication of greater fash- b ion popularity of cotton is contain?d in advices received by the Institute from the Associated Dress c Industries of America, comprising i! upward of 1,000 dress manufactur- ? ers, a large majority of whom are f situated in New York City. 'The increased extent to which these manufacturers are now work;ng with styled cottons,' 'states C. K. Everette, of the New Uses Sec- p tion of the Institute, "reflects to in important degree the growing consumer interest in cottons which p has been noted thorughout the country this season. It is interest ing to find that these gains in man- A ufactured ready-to-wear apparel of sotton are distributed very generally throughout all important price anges. They may be considered ad- tl litional evidence of the fact that 0; cottons this vear are beine inter- h preted in many new phases of the f( mode. a "In connection with this gain in y( ausiness by so many important y, iress manufacturers it is also signi- 0: ficant to find a strong and steady Ci consumer demand for cotton goods g: [or this merchandise reflects in n market reports of resident buyers s luring the past month." PERSONAL MENTION Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Gardner and Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Gardner and jon. Thomas Scott, left Monday for in extended trip South. While S iway they will visit points of in- V ;erest in Florida, and will be guests ci if Mr. H. M. Gardner of Stiltson, Cl Georgia and Mrs. W. J. Parker of c Darlington, S. C. c Mrs. Roy Davis is visiting in sl Windsor. J! Mrs. L. C. Kinsey and Miss Loyce McCord spent Saturday in Rich- _ mond. T Mr. Sol Fishel of Vaughan left an Tuesday for treatment in the Marino hnsnital at. Norfolk. Va. 4<wi|?.vv.. wv Miss Martha Reynolds Price spent | Sunday in Jackson as the guest of 3 her sister, Mrs. Gene Gay. She was ^ accompanied home by Miss Lula r< McCraw Gay who will remain for n some time. E Friends of Mr. Gene Gay of Jack- g: son will be pleased to know that he tl is slowly improving after a serious u illness of pleurisy and pneumonia. Mrs. Gordon Farmer and son, Gordon Jr., have returned from a visit to Mr. Farmer's mother in w Clayton. 1( Friends of Mr. H. Henderson are ^ glad to hear that he returned home f( yesterday from Watts hospital, Durham, where he underwent an " operation several weeks ago. Mr. Rennie Jones of Nashville was " in town on Thursday morning. o: Mr. T. V. Allen was a visitor in Raleigh on Thursday. Miss Katherine Arrington and Miss Keller of Raleigh spent the H week end here. n rb ? 1 fix*** 1 o Shoot At Fleeing Robbers Assailants of Robert Palmer, 18'ear-old son of Paul Palmer of 'aimer Springs, are still at large, 'aimer is wearing a bandage .round his head as a result of being truck over the head with a cocoa ola bottle by two young strange nen at his filling station near the Virginia line on last Friday aftertoon. Following the blow over the head irith a bottle, young Palmer was ied up with a necktie and the men obbed the station of about $25 in ash and started off in the service hoHrm nnprot^r'c par "RrpalHna* VHc VMV*V*t WJ^VAMWi U VMAa 1UU onds, Palmer grabbed a shot gun ,nd fired a shot into a rear tire, eloaded and shot the second time n the back of his cur. After runiing on the flat tire for about 200 ards, the robbers abandoned the aachine and fled into the woods, llood on the cushions of the car 2d to the belief thut one of the len was wounded. Bloodhounds were rushed to the cene from Louisburg and followed y a large posse tool: up the trail. Lfter an all-night ctiase the trail ras lost near the Steel bridge early n Saturday morning, Robert Palmer is a nephew of B. I. Palmer of Warrenton. Robeson Sheriff Has Unusual Platform In Lumberton, N. C., "Bing" Frank Vishart thus announced his canidacy for sheriff of Robeson couny: "I hereby announce myself for heriff of Robeson county, subject o the Democratic primary in June. ly platform will be: "T shall nnt en nut to makft anv ests in bad weather, when it's rainrig or cold and disagreeable. "I will not make a raid on any lan's whiskey still, o r search a bootsgger's premises without first notiying them 48 hours in advance. "I am in favor of disposing of all aptured whiskey as follows: Meettig the requirements of the sheriff ,nd his deputies, the remainder to ie turned over to the aged and inirm at the county dome. "The only reason I am running or sheriff is the salary. "If I am defeated in the June rimary, I promise to run on an inependent ticket. "Your vote and help will be apreciated, and I promise to carry ut the platform to the 'letter.'" Miss Drusa Wilker Wins Hijjh Honors News has been received here oat Miss Drusa Wilker. daughter f Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wilker, as been awarded the silver cup ir the best allround work done t Converse Collef.e during the ear 1929-30, It wis learnea nere esterday. Miss Wilder is a member f the junior ciass, carrying the full aurse required for bachelor's detee, in addition to her course in lusic, in which she is majoring, he won the same honors last year. Sailey Supporters Meet On Thursday Supporters of J. W. Bailey for enator met in the court house at /arrenton on last Thursday upon all of E. H. Ruiisell of Macon, aunty manager. Plans were disussed for pushing Mr. Bailey's ampaign in Warren, and enthuiastic reports wen made by several resent from different sections of le county. drs. Kinsey Wins Golf T ournament Defeating Mrs. W. D. Rodgers by holes, Mrs. Loycl Kinsey won the idles' golf tournament on the Warmton course on last Friday afteroon. Both Mrs. Kinsey and Mrs. odgers received silver tokens, the ift of the late W. K. Williams for le championship and the runnerp. TO PLAY GOLF HEBE Players from Roanoke Rapids ill meet Warrenlon golfers on the >cal course nexi; Wednesday af;rnoon as the third game in the )ur-town tournament now under ay. To date Wurrenton, Hender>n. Louisburg and Roanoke Rapids ave each lost one game and won ue game. MEMORIAL SERVICE Memorial Services will be held at idgeway cemetery, Sunday aftevoon, May 18th, at 4 p. m. MOST OF THE NEWS ALL THE TIME NUMBER 20 SUPERIOR COURT TO OPEN MONDAY Two Murder Cases To Be Tried; Palmer Suit Leading Civil Case W. A. DEYIN TO PRESIDE May term of Warren county Superior court will convene on Monday morning at 10 o'clock with Judge W. A. Devin of Oxford presiding. The docket contains two murder cases and an unusually large number of civil cases. Chief interest centers in the trials of Hubert Bmnch, charged with the murder of Gerald "Rock" Harris, Charlie Frazier, charged with the murder of Geoi?ge Davis, and in the suit of Jeff Palmer against the Carolina Power and Light Company. Hubert Branch, young negro of Warrenton, is charged with killing Gerald Harris, negro blacksmith here, at Ca:rrington's Shoe Shop on Tuesday, February 8. Harris was mortally wounded with a piece of iron pipe and died in the Durham hospital the following Sunday. Branch was arrested an hour later in the basement of the Warrenton negro Baptist church by Officers Lovell and Drake. He has been in jail since that evening. Charlie Frazier, white man of near Warrenton, is charged with shooting George Davis, young negro employed on his place, on the afternoon of November 13, following an argument about feeding some stock. The white man used a shotgun at close range, shooting the negro in the leg between the knee and thigh. He died in the Henderson hospital the following Friday. Frazier's case was continued at the Tn v\nn f???m Af <>Ai XT a ic fVlO u an uai y m;iui v/i t/uiu v. xxv xo vxxw son-in-law of Fate Weaver, former night police office;: of Warrenton. Following a mistrial at the January term of court, the case of Jeff D. Palmer against the Carolina Power and Light Company was continued until the May Term. Palmer, young sort of Mrs. Jeff D. Palmer of Warrenton, was seriously injured on September 30, 1928, when he climbed a power pole at the Warrenton ice plant, came in contact with a high powered wire and was badly burned and knocked to the ground by the force of the current. He claims through his attorneys that the Power Company was negligent in providing proper safeguards. The Power Company claims that they had taken due and ample precautions. Young Palmer is suing for $250,300. Other criminal cases include State vs. Lucy Bullock, selling whiikey; Henry Thornton, disposing of mortgaged property before paying landlord; Asa Alston, abduction; Asa Alston, larceny; Dave Katz, charged with breaking into the Bank cf Macon; Buck Mayfield and W. H. Mallette, larceny; W. H. Mayfield and P-eggy Mayfield, disposing crop without notifying landlord; Brown Rod well, operating an automobile while under the influence of whiskey. Rodwell is also - J ?il-t- 4-sx otnn o-ffnr cnargea wim luiuug vj running into G. E. Holt's car near Manson early in March. State vs Buck Anderson, disorderly conduct; J. L. Smiley, obtaining labor and material under false pretense; Artis Rodwell, assault; Pett Moore, disposing mortgaged property; Otis Terry, assault; Otis Terry, carrying concealed weapon. Brown Rodwell, doclieted to appear in this court, was on Wednesday sentenced to serve three years in the Federal reformatory at Chillocothe. Rodwell was the driver of the liquor beairing car which several months ago ran into a car driven by J. A. Holt Jr. and seriously injured Mrs. Holt and her mother. Mrs. Holt appeared in court on crutches and identified Rodwell. The Palmer-Carolina Power and Light Co. case is the only one of the 39 civil cases that is of unusual interest. Due to the crowded condition of the ci\ll docket the commissioners have asked for a special term of court and it is probable that many of the cases will be continued (Continued on page 8) CHURCH OKUAN1/1AX1UWS TO SELL REFRESHMENTS Church organizations of Warrenton will sell refreshments on the court house square at Warrenton on next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, it was announced yesterday. The Young Ladies Missionary society of the Methodist church will sell barbecue and pies on Monday. The St. Mary's Guild, of the Episcopal church, will sell sandwiches, pies and ice tea on Tuesday and Wednesday at 1 o'clock.
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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May 16, 1930, edition 1
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