Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / July 14, 1933, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE 2 EVEN' Miss Elizabeth Boyce returned Sunday to her home In Warrenton after visiting Misses Beth Partin and Susie Spruill Mohorn for the past two weeks. She was accompanied by Miss Susie Spruill Mohorn who is spending this week; in Warrenton. Mrs. W. E. Wagner and Misses Edith and Verna Jones visited friends in Warrenton Saturday. Mesdames N. E. Mitchell, H. P. Robinson, Horace Palmer and Misses Annie Tucker Moore and Sally Boyce motored to Raleigh Monday. Mr Ijiratno Singleton Of Candor, N. C., was the guest of Miss Mabel Warren during last week end. Dr. and Mrs. A. L. Daughtridge of Rocky Mount were visitors in town last Sunday. Mrs. G. P. Smith arrived Wednesday from Durham and will be in Littleton for several days. Misses Sally Moore Pippen and Nora Browning left Wednesday for Greensboro where they are visiting Miss Louise Daniel. Miss Cora Mae Joyner of Cypress Chapel, Va., is visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Threewitts. Mrs. T. R. Walker and Miss Hattie Daniel spent Tuesday in Rocky Mount. Mrs. Kate Ennls returned Wednesday from Miami, Fla., where she has been visiting for the past few weeks. Mr. Jasper Rlggan and little son Jack, of Raleigh spent several days last week with Mrs. Lula Rlggan. Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Glasgow of Oxford were visitors in town Wednesday. Miss Edna Walker Is Improving: at her home here after a tonsil operation at Roanoke Rapids Hospital Monday. Mr. Willis Smitn of Roanoke Rapids was a visitor in town on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Walker, Mr. ] T. R. Walker Sr., and Mr. D. G. j Jones visited mends in Weldon on < Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Howard King of 1 Roanoke Rapids were visitors In Littleton Sunday. Mrs. S. G. Daniel of High Point spent a few days this week in Lit- 1 tleton. 1 Miss Martha Tilghman Smith arrived Friday from New York City and la visiting friends In town. Mrs. K. B. Topping and children spent the week end In Jackson. Miss Louise Harvey of Enfield spent Sunday with Miss Annie j Price. Miss Ruby Palmer spent a few ' days last week In Rocky Mount. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stevens, 1 Miss Annabelle Stevens, and Mr. Irvln Stevens of Danville, Va., and Miss Mat tie Pullian of Leesburg, N, C., were the Sunday guests of ; Mrs. A. M. Newsom. Mr. A. P. Parmer left Sunday lor Newport News after spending last week at his home here. Miss Thelma Boyd of Roanoke Rapids was the guest last week of Miss Verona Topping. Mr. ar.d Mrs. J. W. Bobbitt and Mr. Cecil Bobbitt motored to Durham Sunday. Mr. O. B. Moore of Whitakers was a visitor In town this week. Rev. ana Mrs. Rufus A. Bradley left Monday for Wrightsville Beach where they will spend two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Mohorn and Mr. O. P. Mohorn of Weldon were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Mohorn Monday night. Miss Mary Lyon Coppersmith returned Saturday from Baltimore where she spent last week visiting friends. Mrs. John Powell and Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Riggan of Warrenton were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Moore. Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Joyner and little daughter, Shirley, of Roanoke Rapids spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Bonney. Mrs. Jack Johnson and children returned Friday from High Point and Albermarle where they have been visiting for the past few weeks. Mr. A1 Quarles of Norfolk arrived Saturday to spend his yacatlon at his home here. Misses Emma Harris, Alice and Gladys Jones and Mr. J. L. Johnston motored to Raleigh Monday. James Albert Three Witts Is visiting his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. i J. W. Baker, at Hilton Village, Va.l Mrs. R. T. Perklnson and baby spent la* week in Raleigh. Mrs. Norman Brane and children of Henderson are spending this week with Mrs. John Jones. Mr. O. W. Fitzgerald of New York Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bobbitt. Mrs. V. P. Perry returned Friday to Raleigh after spending some time at her home here. Miss Helen Browning and Mr. Clifton Alston spent Sunday In Norfolk. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Ward and Warrenton, North Carolina FS OF II Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stokes visited s< relatives in Battleboro Sunday. t( Misses Elberta Poster and Ddna tl Hunt are visiting in Englesiio this d week. A Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Alston and Mrs. Nora Grant returned last tl Tuesday from a two weeks trip to ft not Rnrines. Arkansas. gt Mrs. Herbert Smith of Rocky b Mount was a visitor in town Mon- tl day. t' Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Moore of P Roanoke, Va.( were the guests last & week of Mr. and Mrs. John Moore. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Salmon, spent si Sunday in Roanoke Rapids. If Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Daniel of ri Greensboro were visitors in town c Saturday. d Mrs. Jennings Lucas of Colum- b bia, S. C., arrived Friday to spend e some time with Rev. and Mrs. C. i> Rees Jenkins. She was accompanied c< by her husband, who returned to Columbia after spending the week p end with Rev. and Mrs. Jenkins. g Dr. F. D. Sain of Temple Uni- ir versity and Hospital, Philadelphia, li was the guest of Miss Krtie Boyd h Warren last week. n Miss Olive Stokes of Battleboro b spent Monday with Mr. and Mi's. J. p M. Stokes. oi Miss Thelma Brown of Woodland ^ was the week end guest of Miss w Annie Tucker Moore. ai Miss Laura Rainey of Roanoke T Rapids arrived Monday to spend al her vacation with her parents, Mr. P1 and Mrs. F. M. Rainey. 10 Miss Emily Pender Pippen spent ^ several days this week in Marshall, ^ Va., as the guest of Dr. and Mrs. H. L. Townsend. ?* Mesdames N. W. Warren and E. " 1 Thnrerfou 1n ^ Li. urawicy kjpciii xuuiuuuj *? Rocky Mount. ** ???????? ' UNION SERVICES gi Union Services conducted by the w Rev. C. Rees Jenkins will be held w In the Presbyterian Church Sun- cc day night, July 16th, at 8 o'clock. hl A cordial welcome is extended to the public. tc e) AUXILIARY MEETS P< The American Legion Auxiliary held its July meeting in the home ? of Mrs. J. M. Mohorn on Wednesday afternoon. The meeting was well attended. Plans were discussed for a special entertainment to take place in August. The Auxiliary Is Investigating several cases of needy families of the ex-soldiers and reports on these were heard. After a aj orief program the meeting adjourn- h( sd- di la Calvary-Thelma Items ? lb Miss Myitis Elliott of Richmond, ai Va., is visiting friends in our com- tt u.. in ixiuiuty. aCharles Taylor of Castle Point, df N. Y? Is visiting: his grandmother, b( Mrs. Lula House in Thelma. n( Among the visitors with Mrs. H. D. Myrick Sunday were Misses m Hazel Martin and Helen Vincent, ^ Mrs. Mary L. Vincent, Vernon Vincent and Mr. Wilbur Myrick. D Mr. P. C. Myrick returned home fi' Sunday after a grand fishing trip ce over the week end at Christian tt Harbor near Edenton. M Mr. M. A. Sillery of Durham hi spent the week end with his fam- w< uy. Messrs. Woodrow and Eldridge al Singleton of Manson were the guest of Miss Elizabeth King last Wed- al TT nesday. Mrs. Woodlief of Richmond, Va, was a recent visitor in the home ni of Mr. and Mrs. Prank King. in Mr. Elwood Copeland and Miss 10 Mary Bell Copeland of South Car- 01 olina were recent visitors with Mrs. Edgar Isles. hl Miss Dorothy Myrick was a re- ai cent visitor in Elizabeth City. al b( PASCHALL LAYS (Continued from Pare 1) is their employee and not their si master. That he is reluctant to e: furnish information to those who d pay taxes for the support of the t< schools which he superintends, and ii {is not frank and dependable in the a statements which he makes to f; those who pay the taxes and are t entitled to full and complete t knowledge as to how they are ad- t ministered." t The petition, signed by Mr. Pas- i chall, runs for five full typewritten t pages setting forth the alleged j shortcomings of the school man. In it he is charged with failing to j place tax money collected to the 1 credit of the Norlina sinking fund; ] that Mr. Allen received on August i 8, 1923, the sum of $500 from ] Charlie Johnson, treasurer of the ] Ridgeway Improvement League, to- 11 wards the erection of a Rosenwald I school at Ridgeway, that the school < was not built and that Mr. Allen' < has failed to return money to said j Johnson; that Mr. Allen diverted, j money collected in the Macon f TI MTEREJ LUCY 1 :hool district; that he has failed ) account for money collected in le Wise school district; that he iverted the sum of $500 of the Jton-Elberon school fund. The petitioner further alleged fat Mr. Allen had been guilty of ivoritism and wanton extrava ance in the erection of school uildings during his administration; lat he gave the job of erecting le Vaughan school building to a olitical supporter of his at a price 11 out of reason, paid vouchers Ithout the signatures of the local chool committee, and refused to :t interested citizens examine the ecords; that he gave a similar ontract for the erection of an adition to the Afton-Elberon school uilding; that he caused to be rected at Drewry a school buildig far beyond the needs of the immunity. The school superintendent, the etitioner continued, has been uilty of "favoritism and nepotism 1 that in the expenditure of pubc monies under his control, he as favored his relatives and kinsien. That large purchases of uilding material and other suplies have been made from the firm 1 Allen, Son & Co., which firm jur petitioner alleges and believes as owned by the father, brother tid sister of said J. Edward Allen, hat said purchases were not made fter competitive bidding or after roper efforts to make same at the west possible coat to the taxpay s, but on the contrary, inured .rgely to the profits of the relaves of said J. Edward Allen com>sing said firm." The petitioner concluded by ask ? 4" V-> r* 4- r* n /-* V-VTT /?f f A >5 wutiiu biiat a. ui biic ;tition be "served upon the said Edward Allen, and that he be ven opportunity to file answer In riting, and that after such anser shall have been filed a full and : >mplete investigation be made as irelnbefore prayed for." The petition was ordered referred i the attorneys for the board for lamination and advice as to disisition. i )avis Clan Holds Reunion At Home i Of Hugh Davis ] ______ i By JOHN S. DAVIS More than two hundred friends 1 id kinsmen enjoyed the frugal 1 ispitality of Hugh C. Davis Sun- 1 ly, July 9th at a reunion of the 1 te James A. (born 100 years ago) 1 id Mary Cheek Davis family whose ' zing descendants number over 150, I l occasion that cannot pass from ' le memory of those present, who 1 ined with the host who provided 1 :licious barbecue in supplying a > >untiful and most enjoyable din;r. The hand of fate thirty years ago j oved far to the" West brother ( rank and his wife, a daugnter 01 ie late M. T. and Annie Pitchford uke and though fortune has been :kle and the returns slow and uiiirtain, especially during the last iree or four years, Frank and iary with three of their children ive been with us agairt for three eeks. This reunion was in response to 1 invitatioh from Hugh to greet ie happy return ot our brother id members of his family from tah and Idaho. This occasion was a fitting culmiition of a two week's love feast, i which were gathered those whom irtune had seperated twenty, thirty more years ago. The toll of destiny in thirty years as been heavy. Many lOVed ones re gone, but nature has been kind ad generous, multiplying the numir of those who are missing many mes, with fresh young men and omen full of hope and ambition, i There seems to be something acred and inspiring about a gathring of this kind that is hard to escribe. One does not know where 3 begin or cease, but we know that ; is more than a reunion, it is celebration of the power of riendship, it is a manifestation of he triumph of love over hate and ime, it is indisputable evidence hat the righteousness in human learts finds pleasure and happiness n contact with others of its kind, hat lingers long after barbecue and ippetites have been forgotten. The social side of it is always enoyed by everyone, it makes and renews friendships and obliterates petty differences, delightful reminiscences are exchanged that furnish pleasant memories for a long ong time. It makes better neighbors ind citizens. Such a reunion was this, and I :an't understand why such occasions are not provided oftener. Everyone has gone his way thanking Hugh and realizing more perectly that God is good to us. IE WARREN RECOR ST TO I 3ERRY; - - - THIS WEEK I In Washington ! I J WASHINGTON, July 10.?Two new words are coming into use as a result of the new laws now in effect They are NIRA and FRA. So far they have been printed only in capital letters, but sooner or later they seem bound to become regularly recognized words that will not need capitalization. NIRA is composed of the initials of National Industrial Recovery Act and FRA stands for Farm Relief Act. The practice of coining words out of initials is new to Washington, although it has been the custom in Europe for many years. Every Englishman knows what is meant by "Dora". It is the Defense of the Realm Act, passed early in war and still in effect. It is "Dora," for example, which makes it illegal for saloons in England to be open during certain hours of the day. We are going to hear a lot about "Nira" and "Fra". When they are in full operation they will bring about such radical changes in methods of doing business, in industry and agriculture, that many are speaking of the New Deal as a Revolution. In a very real sense, that is what it is; a revolution of the bloodless American way. As Otto Kahn pointed out before the Senate Investigating Committee, about every thirty years the United States changes its attitude toward business and makes a complete about-face. TWo Roosevelts and Theories The last previous change was in the administration of Theodore Roosevelt, when the anti-Trust law was enacted. The theory then was that what the nation needed most was unrestricted competition, war to the death between business organizations, unrestricted freedom of everybody to get into the fight for wealth and either win or be licked. The theory of the Frankiin Roosevelt Administration is that unrestricted competition, formerly encouraged in the supposed interest of the ultimate consumer who would benefit by low prices, is a ruinous policy when competition destroys the buying power of the consumer by closing factories an?d throwing men out of work. Under free competition in industry there is always an irresponsible minority in every line to take advantage of ;very excuse to reduce wages and .engthen working hours, and by price-cutting to bring the whole ndustry to ruin. Wage Earner The Consumer That the wage-earner is the crincipal consumer is a lesson the jconomic world has learned only in ;he past twenty years or so. There:ore, the approach of the New Deal x> the economic situation is not :rom the point of view that the :onsumer must be protected against ligh prices, but that the consumer nust be enabled to buy goods at nrioa ic hifrh Pnoil^h In ?u ? - _ nsure profits to the producer, the consumer being, primarily, the wage-earner who must have a job it good wages if he is to be able to juy anything more than bare necessities. That economic theory is not new ivith the present Administration. It is the theory held and strongly advocated by President Hoover and many leaders of political and economic thought for ST good many years. What stood in the way of constructive action was mainly politics; partly the opposition of Congress to anything which Mr. Hoover was believed to desire, and partly the reluctance of most old-line politicians to advocate or support any important change in the statutory structure, especially in the 'sacred'' anti trust laws. It took n genuine "New Deal," a complete sweeping out of the old 1 J mo _ crowu ana an uvci wuciming 111U I jority of public sentiment and Congressional votes behind the new President, to make it possible to try to do anything about it. Now NIRA and FRA The result so far is NIRA and FRA. The purpose behind these two radical laws is to raise prices of manufactured and agricultural commodities and to insure that there shall be no undermining price cutting, no ruthless overproduction to force prices down, nothing done to shake the stability of industry or agriculture. Under NIRA minimum wages and maximum working hours are provided by agreement within the industry, with the Government ready and able to step in and force pro ducers who won't cooperate to liv up to the provisions of the codi D Waria JTTLE1 EDITOR agreed upon. Production control price maintenance and other conditions calculated to insure steady work at good pay to all workers are included, and the anti-trust laws are repealed. The first industry to submit a satisfactory code is the cotton textile industry, which has agreed on $12 a week in the South and $13 in the North as the minimum wage, 40 hours as the maximum work week, and not more than two shifts a day for factory workers, while there is to be no selling below production cost and other means to prevent unfair competition are provided. Every other industry in I America is oreanizine under NIRA. though not fast enough to suit General Hugh Johnson, the Administrator of NIRA, who would like to see ten million workers reemployed before cold weather comes. ALLEN ANSWERS (Continued from Page 1) a Louisburg attorney. The record of my service is an open book. I have never laid clafm to infallibility, nor do I claim to have any wings. Those who are held up as without fault or error have a hard time living up their reputation. "Mr. Paschall tells the Board of Education that I am 'unfitted by temperament for the position which I occupy'. From the vd?? day on which I was called from Oxford, where I was working in 1919, to my very greatest surprise to take oath of office the first time in this position for which I had recommended another man, until this present day, I have had some doubts about this very matter of my fitness to be county superintendent. I have i never sought the office nor shall I do so in the future. "My reluctance to furnish information is a figment of the imagination. No school superintendent's office in this state has given more information to citizens within the jterm of service of the present in'cumbent, than has that of Warren county. We are still ready to do this service. We recognize the right nf the citizens to it. | "The charges set forth that some colored people at Ridgeway deposited with this office some money to help build a school building and that this money has not been returned to said colored 'citizens. To this extent the charge is true. The money was deposited; it is still in the capital outlay funds of the public school account; the Negroes of Ridgeway still need their school building, and it is my sincere hope that same may be built. Every i school day I shudder to think of i the old trap now being rented; U. S. Highway No. 1 in ten feet of ] one corner, the railroad in 200 feet of another; rooms so small and < poorly lighted that to keep those ] 175 children there is a crime, but 1 the best we can do. More than . once the board has approved a ] building at Ridgeway, but the com- | missioners could not raise taxes for I any more Negro school buildings. 1 Then the Rosenwald Fund suspend- < ed on account of the stock market i slump. Some Negroes asked, last < fall, for the return of the money. I I learned that there was more than one league and asked the attorney i to pass on the claim. Meanwhile, ] 4-V?r?f r? vnfnrn r?f t.hf? 1 X IlCtVC UUpCU l/llau U/ 1VUUA tx WA VAAV | , Eosenwald fund, and possible abil- i ity to build, might enable us to ] terminate the crime of the present | Ridgeway building. Ask a doctor. "In the Macon school district, < the money was collected for debt j service. The State loan bonds were , due in December; if it wasn't paid, j the pay of every teacher in the j county would be held up; the bonds ; were not due until the following ( August. What did I do? I paid the ] State in December, expecting more i money by the following August. It's s no fault of mine that taxes were ] not collected. I protected the Macon teachers, and every other teach? ? o?i-i/vrvi /vf ofrrVif- mnnthQ in tU 1X1 ~<X O V/llWl W1 v-x6*?u ... the county. Did I do wrong? And those New York bondholders were paid?don't forget that. Last year the County Commissioners employed A. M. Pullen and Co. to audit the Norlina accounts. When Mr. J. R. Pascnall, in his complaint in suing for his note of 1908, alleged that taxes had been collected in NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Budget for the Town of Littleton, N. C., has been filed in the office of the Town Clerk or public inspection, and that a public hearing will be held thereon by the Board of Commissioners of said Town on July 27th, 1933, in the Mayor's Office (Town Hall) at 8:00 o'clock P. M., prior to the adoption thereof, when and where all persons interested may be heard with respect thereto. Dated this the llth day of July, I 1933. I ? E. C. BOBBITT, Town Clerk. o itoa, North Carolina ] ON CI1 the district and misapplied, the e Board of Education had the same i auditor to audit the Wise accounts. This auflit is a matter of record. | It speaks for itself. Nothing would f please me any better than to have ( the accounts or every school dis- ? trict audited by a certified public * 1 accountant. The chairman of the 2 Board of Education went with me , to the County Commissioners in t connection with the last budget and s asked for a levy for that purpose in several of them, and the request i was turned down. I "In every case which the building s of a school house or an addition i thereto nas been left to my discre- t tion, which has been in extremely a few cases, the contract for same r has been let for the best interest c of the public. It has been true that c some construction men were my r friends, and it is also true that ? their work was the most satisfac- f tory and economical that could be t had for the required job. 'A politi- a cal supporter' at Vaughan was t doubtless Mr. Dal Riggan. No con- i tract has ever been awarded to Mr. i Riggan. But contracts were aiwarded Y to other men there, being lowest bidders, and they efhployed Mr. f Riggan to do the work for them so r that they might not lose money. a He did a most excellent job of it, c too?no charge for the advertising. c At Afton-Elberon, the builder was, .. if I mistake not, Sheriff Willis J. Pinnell. Since when was he my "political supporter?" The house t there was built at first by old John 1 Branch?political supporter? a "I am interested in the charge that I made 'large purchases from' AHrvi fftrwilw "driof ic fhn loef nnr] E ixiy wii xaiiiixjr. aati/ 10, uiu xaou anu only construction of any size was 1 that on the Negro Rosenwald industrial building at Warrenton, 1 that was not handled by a contractor out-and-out. This material, r bought from White's Building Supplies, by my direction, amounted to " more than all else bought b^ my " office in years. It's not my fault that the Rosenwald Fund went bankrupt, we couldn't pay the dealer for a long time, he brought suit against us and would not drop said suit until the last of the bill was paid after the Rosenwald fund settled, they having borrowed from the General Education Board ; (Rockefeller) to do so. I don't / blame this dealer, either. I state facts. "The allegation that an extravagant building was erected at Drewry is not in accordance with the facts. It has four classrooms, every one of which ITas been occupied since the day the house was completed. ? Tt has 9 crrwi auriifrvriiim fillinor 9 ? ?? long felt need in Nutbush township. It is of brick veneer. An experienced builder gave it as his opinion last week that it was $orth twice what it cost. The low bidder was Jack Smiley. He gave bond in a Baltimore company, and where he ?ot his material is none of my ' Dusiness. We required him to use Warren county labor and he did so. Contract was awarded in open session of the Board of Education, ;very member present and the dis;rict committee approving. "The office accountant is my L aunt. Any charge that she is em- L ployed by me, or that any other L relative is employed by me, is di- L recbly at variance with the facts. L Miss Edna Allen has consistently aeen elected to the position which ' she holds by the whole Board in I session, and not even with any F -ecommendation on my part. With I a record of a dozen years as a public school teacher, seven years ^ n a National bank, a half dozen F is a college professor, more still in sommercial work where she could earn Warren county people?and fet she has consistently received a >alary smaller than senior em- ? ployees in local banks have receiv- ? e+ycy di*He/s ? FRIDAY, JULY 14, \$M T/.UXI d, or grade teachers eqfialij^H "This writer remembers th$? s the administrator ot a h? jublic trust. Warren County/? )ayers pay their taxes: Vi/B bounty's citizens must be cons? :d; Warren County's children? he objects ot our school sys^| The whole county's best in: l a md not the ideas or interest? t lew only govern the pohcii? he otiice oi superintendent? chools. * "I have not done with the J ng of these charges, 0f cjfl ^ull and complete reply uniM ivailable for the proper ,jl Vith nothing to hide, i ft-el he showdown. Only, y^fl im embarassed by this 'ten^M nental unfitness' business^! lone school work here for I luarter of a cetury, my teinl nent seems to have dislnte^M Somebody recently found onl amily tree the phlegmatic eJ he canny Scot, and also kj im proud of my tempera&M lackground. Away out on thatB ly tree probably were some I ng by their tails?but noneiH tanging by their necks. V "I repeat, I have never or infallibility. I ant prouc I ecord of our county school sil ind what it has done in tiie^| lozen years, for the boys anil if Warren county. It is inerl hat in this period of aggril vork, some enemies srouic! teen accumulated. Much as il o be regretted, it is preltrall , record of no accomplishmel . Erastus Parker ol Harnett ail ilanted wheat 011 iespedeza st#S ncreased his yield from 28:dl lushels on two acres :111c he increase to lesiiedeza. rl The Catawba County Home II tas three acres ol sweet cloveiH treasures nine feet in height. J I Da. K. H. Pattehsok I fyr Stfk SfiKuha WmwrD*aao0,VQ. .Kj Charles E. Foster I Civil Engineer And I Surveyor Phone 177 Littleton, N. C. DON'T FORGET THEI SUNDAY SCHOOI EXCURSION TO I Virginia Beach J YORFOLK-PORTSlM^fl Wednesday, July fl Through Coaches ToB VIRGINIA BEACH | v. Norlina 4:10 41 v. Littleton 4:40 v. Roanoke Rauids ....5:05 Returning Leave Vir?i^B Jeach 7:30 P. M. anfl BB 'ortsmouth 9:00 P. M. VIRGINIA BEACH V ORTSMOUTH SEA BOAR* Air Line Railv^iB a /- r\ f Jfl 7"*'*
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 14, 1933, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75