PAGE 2 ? i pMnnm??ii?ii))ini)iiiiimiimm? Littleton IN MISS LUCY &?iiiiiMM?in?H????nn>nn?n???i Mrs. L. M. Johnston of Durhan spent Saturday in Littleton. Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Johnston anc children and Mr. and Mrs. J. L Price spent the week end at Ocear View. Mr. J. H. Pope of Bed Oak was a visitor in town Sunday. Miss Emily Stallings, who ha.' been attending Salem College, arrived last week to speria the summer vacation at her home here. Mrs. J. B. Boyce and Mrs. Alice Partin spent the week end in Warrenton. Messrs. George ' Threewitts and Claude Johnston spent Sunday in Norfolk. Dr. H. C. Coleman and his son. Linwood, of South Hill, and Mr. Hugh Norwood Perkinson of Wise were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Jones. Mrs. W. E. Wagner visited in Warrenton Monday. Mr. Roger Moore arrived this week from Duke University to spend the summer with his sister, Mrs. H. P. Robinson. " ? -? ? -? Vnn Miss Aaaie xNewsom, wuu w? teaching at Kenly, arrived Saturday to spend the summer at her home here- i, ii -rii'Uliai Miss Olive Stokes of Battleboro spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stokes. Mrs. James Parker and Mrs. P. E. Joyner of Roanoke Rapids were visitors in town Thursday. Mrs. Lizzie Slade, who has been spending several months in Littleton, left Monday for Warrenton. Mr. and Mrs. Van Warren of Rocky Mount were visiting relatives in town Thursday. Mrs. J. P. Pippen, Mrs. J. P. Leach, Misses Mary Powell and Emily Pippen, and Mr. George Snuggs went to Raleigh Friday. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Lambeth and Mrs. T. R. Walker spent the week end in Norfolk. Little Miss Dorothy Powell of Warrenton is visiting Miss Jacqueline Moore this week. Mrs. M. Nelson and Mr. W. A. Nelson motored to Chapel Hill Friday. Miss Lizzie Moore is visiting relatives in Edenton this week. Mr. R. W. Carter, Mr. John Zollicoffer, and Dr. W. A. Carter of - -J-u i- i weiaon were visitors in wwu ivmuuday. ^ Mr. Mack Johnston of Durham spent a few days this week here. Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Everett of Palmyra were visitors in town Sunday afternoon. Miss Prances Tate arrived Sunday from Greensboro College to spent this week with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Tate. She will leave Monday for summer school. Miss Lizzie Whitaker; who has been teaching at Selma, has arrived to spend the summer at her home here. Mr. J. S. Riggan and little son, Jack, of Raleigh spent Sunday with Mrs. Lula Riggan. Miss Isabelle Nelson arrived this week from the University of N. C. to spend the summer vacation with her mother, Mrs. M. Nelson. Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Daniel, who have been making their home at High Point for a number of years, have returned to Littleton and are living at their former residence on Mosby Avenue. Mrs. "Herbert Smith and son of Rocky Mount visited relatives in town Friday. Miss Hattie Spruill, Miss Mary Spruill and Miss Lucy Perry spent Friday in Rocky Mount. Misses Frances Newsome, Marj Dell Harris, and Louise King, whc have been attending E. C. T. C. a' Greenville, arrived Monday t< spend the summer at their home: here. Mr. R. L. Traylor of Norlina wa: a visitor in town Friday. Mrs. T. J. Topping and Miss Vedona Topping visited relatives al Roanoke Rapids Sunday. Mr. A. P. Farmer returned tc Newport News after spending several days here with his family. He was accompanied by his daughter Annie, who is spending this weeS with him. Mrs. Courtney Egerton of Raleigh Was the week" end guest of her parents, Rev. and Mrs. Rufus Bradley. Mr. Earl Connell of Warrentor was a visitor in Littleton Sunday. Mr. Harry Cassada of Roanoke Rapids spent the week end at his home here. Miss Dorothy Bonney arrivec Bunday from Flora MacDonald College to spend the summer vacatior with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H F. Bonney. Rev. and Mrs. Rufus Bradley Mrs. Courtney Egerton and Mr. Rufus Bradley Jr. attended a familj reunion at Mrs. Bradley's home near Boykins, Va., Sunday. Mr. Willis Stalllngs of the University of North Carolina has arrived to spend the summer at hi; home here. Mrs. B. F. Weaver, Misses Kat< and Jean Dunn of Scotland Neck Miss Elizabeth Smith and Mr * Warren ton, North Ca lews Events PERRY, Editor f !iiiiiiiiiiii;iiii;;i: !ii?;???m???:???? 11 Clinton Smith of Raleigh were | [guests ol Mi*, and Mrs. J. ?. WoileuJ I Last Sunday. J .1 Mrs. P. Jtl. Rose and Miss Jessjt I 11Rose of Henderson were Sunday! I guests of Mrs. Alice Bdowning. II Mr. Clarence Browning is visiting I I relatives hi Henderson this week. I if Mrs. Jack Salmon attended the] I funeral of her uncle in Roanoke j I Rapids Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs.'Thomas Grant of I jRidgeway and Mr. and Mrs. Sam-I I uel Grant of Winston-Salem were I I the guests of Miss Mattie Jenkins J [on Thursday. j Little Miss Sarah Piner KenyonJ [of Macon spent Saturday with Mrs. j | G. T. Vick. *Mis. William Tate and Mrs. Ma-1 jmie Green left Friday for Phila-| [delphia after spending a few daysj [nere with Mrs. M. P. Cassada. j Mrs. G. T. Vickj Misses Dolly and j j Lillian Daniel, Mrs. E. A. Daniel J [and Miss Mary Long Daniel visited| [Mrs. John Graham in Warrentonj [Friday on her 90th birthday. [ Mr. John Wheeler Moore return- L [ed Tuesday night from a visit witlij [friends in Tennessee. [, uonnoh WentinsfcalL who I iYliOO .. ? ??, has been attending Duke Univer- ( sity, spent Saturday here with Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Wollett. She left Sun- . day for Mont Clair, N. J., where she . will visit relatives. | Mrs. J. P. Pippen, Misses Mary j Powell and Emily Pippen and Mr. George Snugtgs spent Tuesday in ( Greenville. Misses Hattie and Mary Spruill ^ visited relatives in Jackson Wednesday. I Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Rives spent J Saturday in Rocky Mount. STUDY CLUB MEETS The members of the Wyanoke ( Study Club held their final meeting ? of the year on Thursday afternoon j in the home of Mrs. M. Nelson. ( "Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt" was the , subject of the program for the af- , ternoon. Mrs. J. P. Pippen had , charge of the program. She was as- } sisted by Mrs. M. W. Ransom and j Mrs M. Nelson, each presenting an , inforocfinor nnnpr Thfi hostess t lUlVAVUVUi^ ? ? | served a delicious salad course after ] the program. The club will resume j its meetings in the fall. , ENTERTAIN AT BRIDGE ( On Tuesday night in the home of Miss Kara Reid Cole, Misses Rebecca Leach, Frances Newsom, Kara ' Reid Cole, Bertha Mae Newsom, j Virginia Threewitts, Edna Hunt, Elberta Foster, and Mrs. O. B. , Moore entertained at a bridge party ^ and miscellaneous shower complimentary to Mr. and Mrs. Lee Carridean of Lawtey, Florida, who are on a visit to Mrs. Carridean's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. T. Ricks. Nine tables were arranged for J bridge in the reception hall and living rooms. Mixed flowers were tastefully used throughout the ( rooms. Miss Nettie Cassada held 1 high score among the ladies and Mr. Harry Clark among the men. Each was presented with an attractive gift. Following the games, the guests were invited into the dining room. A lovely white bride's cake graced the center of the table and each euest was asked to cut the cake. A delicious salad course was served. Mr. and Mrs. Carridean were the recipients of many lovely and use1 ful gifts from their friends. S0HMYKH001 i LESSON If CbarUiE-Duno i Jesus on the Cross. Lesson for June 10. Matthew 27. . Golden Text: Hebrews 12:2. Some feel it is morbid to empha, size the Cross, that it is more , wholesome to stress the life of Jesus , than His death, His happiness than His sorrow, His teachings rather . than His sacrifice. But there is nothing undesirable in facing the t Cross soberly ^ without mawkish . tears. At once we are impressed by its protest, its searching rebuke cf i our godless society. In the light of the crucifixion we note the black. ness of the human heart. ; The Cross, too, is a supreme revelation of suffering. We think of I Jesus hanging helplessly in un. speakable pain, the horrors of i which we can only faintly imagine, . enduring a shame so desolating that it is no wonder He felt God had forsaken Him. Now there is comfort in our Master's pain. In the midst of their own agony men have discovered in Christ a consoling Fellow-Sufferer. The plain truth is that the Cross is "the typical and representative 3 agony of the world," as one novelist says of it. In the Louvre there is a ; striking painting of Jesus on the , Cross, at the foot of which the ar. tist has placed a desolate figure, rollna J' .^"Ignores Kidnapers r? ^^gjgfcSHlwMWBBfa'i'-i^BWMwi / Biwivivixf;,.-. * : ' i LOS ANGELES , . v Despite threats of kidnapers against her Met* Loretta Turnbull (above), beautiful speedboat racing champion is again entering regattas and driving winning races. veiled in darkness, looking up at the inscription, "He himself has endured great sufferings." Note, too, the complete submission of Jesus. This is well voiced by Katherine Mansfield, a victim cf tuberculosis, who wrote in her Journal: "One must submit. Take it. Be overwhelmed. Accept it fully." But we rightly think of the Cross as an expression of victory. Miss Mansfield says elsewhere, Jo not want to die without leaving a record of my belief that suffering can be overcome." Exactly! Suffering can be defeated. In one sense, the Cross marks the greatest failure in history, for the Mas;er hangs there defeated and broken. But in a higher sense the Cross s history's greatest success. For the Lxjrd of glory reigns there as King! Four Club Members Go To Washington Joe Pou of Elmwood, Iredell county; Beatrice Sherrill, route 3, Statesville, Iredell county; Mary Elizabeth Wildman, Parmele, Marsin county, and Fred Bass of Lu:ama> Wilson county, have been selected by the agricultural extension service of State College to represent the 4-H club members of North Carolina at the National Dlub Camp to be held at Washington, D. C., June 14 to 20, L. R. Harrill, state club leader, and Miss Ruth Current, girls' club specialist, announced last week. Joe Pou has specialized in dairy calf work but also has conducted projects with cotton and poultry. His records show a profit of $256.50 in money plus a nice herd of pure bred Jerseys in the making. His :alves have won blue ribbons at various county and state fairs and tie introduced an improved strain Df cotton into his community. He is recognized as a leader in 4-H club svork. Beatrice Sherrill has completed projects in room improvement, foods, clothing, health, sewing and canning. She has won a number of prizes for her work and has been a community leader in both cluo and religious affairs in her community. Her leadership abilities have won for her state-wide recognition. Mary Wildman has been a member of the 4-H clubs in her county for seven years, completing projects in clothing for health, food conservation, room improvement, general homemaking and foods. She was voted the most outstanding club girl at a five-county club encampment and has won recognition at the annual state short course. In addition, she is a community leader in club work. Fred Bass has specialized in the pig club project, making a net profit of $163.05 from his work. He has taken an active part in leadership affairs in his local club; represented his county in judging contests and attended two state short courses. Miss Wildman and Mr. Bass will have their expenses paid to Washington by the Agricultural and Development department of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. Dry weather this spring In Piedmont Carolina has been beneficial to the extent that it has permitted the harvesting of a high quality crop of hay. CITIZENS INSURANG G. W. Poindexter, Pres. Warrentoi FIRE LIFE 1 I Insurancet Consult Us Insurance' -? ~i HE WARREN RECOB Today and Tomorrow By Frank Parker Stockbridga L * CAPITALISM .... defined People speak of capitalism as if it were some sort of an organized plan imposed upon people unable to help themselves. Capitalism is merely a name naturally out of mankind's ability to produce a surplus wealth beyond immediate needs. Capital is nothing but wealth not required lor productive use ai the moment. Every man who has a dollar in a savings bank and does not need it is as much a capitalist as a millionaire is. Capital is destroyed only wheni it is consumed by individuals. It is not lost when it is invested in permanent things, like buildings and railroads. The individuals who invested may lose, but the building remains. The outcroy against capitalism is not really aimed at the system, which is the only system under which real wealth ever accumulates, but against individuals who divert too high a proportion of thentemporary share of the world's ?apital to non-social uses. SOCIALISM .... State owned Stripped of all of its sophomoric entanglements, the essence of Socialism is not the abolition of capital, but the ownership of all capital by the State. The tendency in that direction has been growing stronger for more than a hundred years. Private capital used to build and operate highways and bridges, charging toll for every traveller c,r vehicle that used them. Long ago those enterprises became investments of public capital. Agriculture, fishing, mining and manufacturing are still in the hands of private capital. The complete Socialist program would make all of those functions of the State. REGULATION ... U. S. aim What we seem to be heading for in America is a compromise between uncontrolled private Capitalism and complete Socialism. The compromise is the continuance of private Capitalism under State regulation. We have had that in the case of railroads for fifty years. It seems to be close at hand in the matter of telegraph, telephone and radio communications. At the same time, there is an increasing tendency to apply State capital to long term enterprises which do not promise a direct return in dividends, but which are presumably justified by their social i value. This includes such things as . . . I parks, many classes or nignways, public buildings, and semilar enterprises. Private Capital is not interested in these non-productive ven-| tures. TAXATION ... it is distributed Since capital is merely the surplus product of labor above what labor received, the question whether that surplus belongs to the employer or to the labor which produced it is a vexed question that, in its turn, is the subject of continuous compromises, out of each of which labor igets a proportionately larger share. Since public capital is exactly like private capital?that is, the surplus of wealth above what is consumed in the course of its production?it follows that the larger the share of capital accruing to labor, the larger the share of taxation must be borne by labor. There is no such thing as taxing capital out of existence. Individual capitalists may be taxed into poverty, but that is merely the conversion or private eapiwu mw public capital. The only way capital is destroyed is by wasting it. Private individuals waste it by spending it on unproductive luxuries, great estates, yachts, in other ways that serve no legitimate need but are merely ostentation. Government wastes it by giving it away in return for little or no productive labor, and by letting political grafters steal it as it passes through their hands. HISTORY 1645 ruling The first effort to regulate the use of private capital in this country is set down in the Proceedings of the General Court of Plymouth Colony for the year 1645. John Stockbridge of Scituate, who was E 8 BONDING CO M. E. Grant, Sect'y l, N. C. * tit* Tf _il M n l l i ff y - XJKS1W& >f all,Kinds upon Your Problems jij^ IFarre my earliest American ancestor, was brought before the court and charged with being a monopolist, in that he owned all the water-pc wers in the colony and had put only one of them to use, with his grist mill. He was ordered to either build mills on IJie unused waterpowers or sell them to someone who would. He built a sawmill on one site, and sold the other to his son-in-law. It has always seemed to me that a sound principle was established there. Private capital might justly be required to go to work for some social purpose, such as building a sawmill. In a perfect social system it would not be permissible for its owner to withhold more of its bene- I fits than sufficient to maintain himself and his family in reasonable comfort. Such a rule would be absurd, however, even wicked, in a political system riddled with inefficiency and honeycombed with graft. Private capital and its owners, at the worst, are far more honest and far morei careful of the uses they put their capital to than any government I know of. Poor Soil Improved In Union County The value of soil-building crops in tbe rehabilitation of infertile lands has been demonstrated on three Union county farms recently visited by a group of 60 farmers of the county. In the southwestern part of the county, a farm owned by Eugene Ashcraft has been built up by vetch, kudzu, and lespedeza since he took charge of the place in 1930. One 12-acre field of vetch, examined by the group has reseeded itself since it was sown in 19331. At present, the vetch stands over two feet high and is thick and succulent. The vetch is mown for seed every year, with a yield of about four bushels to the acre. A dense growth of voluntary lespedeza has been thriving under the vetch. Another field has a lush growth of vetch and kudzu started in 1931. In 1933 three cuttings of hay were taken. The first was mainly vetch, while the last two cuttings yielded all' kudzu. A total of five tons of hay was harvested. Ashcrafthope:; to get kudzu all over the 400-acre farm, to be used chiefly as hay. The V. V. Secrest farm was also badly run down a few years ago. But the soil has been built up with * "* 1 nnrl soyoeans( lespeueza, wu vcuu. Oiiu Sec rest is now developing a seed farm. This year he has 10 acres of Reel Hart, No. 2 wheat, which is expected to yield 25 bushels to the acre. CH J, ,?v __ mweU t a DUUR AOVEB71SSMENT Chevrolet proudUy presents the new Sjport Sedan as the most beautiful model ever bnih by amy manufacturer of low-priced cars. On a long chassis embodying Chevrolet's combination of ( \ exclusive features ? enclosed Knee-Action, an 80-mile-an hour, 80-horsepower engine, / nrvnOTPT MOTOR COMP f ? Compart Chtmltf* low dfeWnumJ pritm and e? I SCOGC WARRENTON, N. a ton, North Carolina A. M. Secrest showel a 15-acre field of Red Hart, No. 2, which should yield 20 or more bushels to the acre and 15 of Red Hart, No. 1, which is not quite so prolific as No. 2. Both fields are also supporting thick stands of lespedeza. A nearby field of beardless barley is expected to yield 40 or 50 bushels to the acre. It has been doublecropped for several years: barley in winter and corn with soybeans in summer. Soybean vines maintain the soil fertility. / i HOME HINTS By NANCY HART S f When you are laundering pongee articles, wash them and let them dry thoroughly before you touch them with an iron. If an iron is put on pongee when it is damp, I the material will turn a darker color and become as stiff as though ti Without lm| DEA1 "A Pure Food am plants would be a to all living creat ?SCIENTIF1 Read the above statement i no truer words have ever been v eliminated from the soil,, no ma ' could stay alive. Chilean Natural Nitrate;, for n importance of its Nature-given food is the only nitrogen that c the only nitrate that contains ] ments... Nature's own balance e So you see the importance of fying Chilean when you buy n Champion Brand (granulated) genuine Chilean. Both are natu purities. You are safe with eithe: K^TUA. NATURAL I THE OLD ORIGINAL SO SIDE-DRESSER FOR m ????????I w EVROLET 'Motion h cable-controlled brakes, and all die rest?is mounted a body that combines five-passenger capacity, exceptional Inggage space, and more de luxe touches than we have space to tell about. If appearance and convenience oorae first with youTand you wish to stay In the low-price field? henvbeyood a doubt, is your car. ANY, DETBOIT, MICHIGAN my GM-AXL terms. A Ctmrml Motor* Pake. JIN MOT C HI % FRIDAY, JUNE 8,1^1 ' had been startched irsteaiT"^ staying soft and silky. Small, dainty pieces of lauiKln 1 I such as laces, fine handkerchief 1 land neckpieces will wear much 1 'longer if they are put inside a bag 1 |to launder. They are seldom ven 1 | dirty and nDA, THE IDEAL ^ I YOUR CROPS & 'S I keze / I TVEOPLE MhtmtUnmc Eo<^ m . {7UM-* the way the ,sP^a^L mcrse8intot?!l^y?i^tt' make no mistake handsome as this It I .deckiedlyj^^^ holds enough tor a ,^d nenttoar^sp^^^ locks make it tamper pr OR CO. I endersorn^JI