Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Dec. 28, 1934, edition 1 / Page 4
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!' i . PAGE 4 The Warren Record Published Every Friday by The Press Publishing Co. One Year For HOWARD JONES, JR. BIGNAIJL S. JONES Editors HOWARD F. JONES, SR. Contributing Editor That Justice May Ever Have A Champion; That Evil Shall Not Flourish Unchallenged. Entered at the Postoffice at War renton, North Carolina, under Ac of Congress of 1879. He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth tiic Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God??Micah 6:8. However things may seem, no evil thing is success, and no good thing is failure.?Samuel Longfellow. MAY YOU HAVE A HAPPY NfcW YLAK. This is number 52, the las Warren Record to be printe( during the year 1934 whicl on next Monday at midnigh becomes one of the years o the ages. During the, yea we have recorded the simpb annals of our people and re joiced with them this fal over improved economii conditions. During the week that have, passed we havi received many evidences o good-will, words of encour agement and the co-opera tion of a large part of oui citizens. For this we an truly grateful. And now we are on th< threshhold of a new year Mistakes of the past are < part of that past. A ne^ year offers a new beginning the renewal of hope, of de termination to make it bet ter than the preceding one That, to most of us wh< i someway or another eacr year fail to quite reach oiu ideal, is the nicest thini about the New Year. Three hundred and sixty ' five new days lie before th< citizens of Warren County May each one be so livec that 1935 will be marked a: a year of progress towarc the goal of a finer anc richer life for the individua and for the county as whole. We wish for each of yoi a Happy New Year. THIS WEEK (Continued from Page 11 planters in favor of continued re ctriction of cotton production. It i much more pleasing than the re suits of the corn-hog plebiscite. I is taken as assurance that what thi people want is to be regulated Lok for more regulatory legisla tion at the coming session. Among other things, there will b presented to Congress, proposal I I tm < Iiiiiif I I Warren | Warren I PROGRAM V x Monda Mai I "Bells of i | I Wet | Joe Morrison 1 "?ne H ^ % Thursd I I W. C. Fielc 1 "Mrs. Wigg It i bage I Sat Bot "Deamon 1 GSE5SS=5SSm5S5SSS I Warrenton, North Carollni 1 ^flS intMMli^War<* SEATTLE . . ^Miss Buth Shirley Rrown. (above), is the national winner of the $50 ^cash prize, awarded by the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs for the best poster drawing, typifying the modern business woman. for the modification and continuance in modified form of NRA. It is no secret that a remark of Chief Justice Hughes from the bench the t other day has disturbed many offi1 cials here. The case in court was 1 one of violation of an executive order under the NRA, and the Chief t Justice asked where that law was f to be found in any Act of Cont, gress. The executive orders which have, it is contended, the force of 5 law, are being compiled. They will - make a book of about ten tlgus] and pages. Congress is pretty sure to be asked to give its sanction to r> many of the more important ones, s so as to avert further embarrassing i\ questions from the Supreme Bench. !_ By order of the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Deposit In surance Corporation, the highest - rate of interest that banks, includf ing savings banks, may pay hereafter is 2 1-2 per cent. This is ex5 pected to force depositors to put their money into Government bonds 3 or else to invest it in busiheS? en' terprises. i LITTLETON NEWS (Continued from page 1) j afternoon to spend the holidays at . her home in Greenville. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Shaw of Rocky Mount were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Perry on Christmas ) day. 1 Miss Frances Tate, who is attending N. C. College for Women in Greensboro, is spending the holi? days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Tate. Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Vick and Miss Prances Burton left Sunday to i spend Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. . D. S. Carr at their home in Wil1 mington. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Johnston of 3 Weldon were guests of Mrs. M. W. I Ransom during the holidays. I Miss Emelyne Evans is visiting i relatives in Scotland Neck during the holidays. Mr. W. A. Johnston spent the week end in Richmond, Va. 1 Miss Frances Vick is spending the Christmas holidays in New York City. Mrs. J. C. Salmon and little daughter, Rebie Phyllis, have returned from New York City where - they have been visiting Mrs. J. P. s i Snyder for some time. - j William Hugh Sessoms spent t; Christmas in Washington, N. C., e j with his mother, Mrs. J. C. Se"sI. j soms. Neill MacRae, a member of the C. C. C. camp at Hot Springs. N. e i C.. sr>ent Christmas with his moth s er, Mrs. Neill MacRae. : * ft iteaiiiiiiK Theatre 1 1 ton, N. C. | fEEK DEC. 31ST | y-Tuesday ft e West | -in? I the Nineties" | ~ ft Inesday ft Helen Twelvetrees $ -in? ? (our Late" ? lay-Friday ft is - Zazu Pitts | -in? X s of the Cab- | LK Patch" | :urday | > Steel 1 -in? x v For Trouble" | il * T] JUHMOTOW LESSON ^ Cb arLssE-Dunn Tests of a Christian. Lesson for December 30th. 1 John 5:1-12. Bolden Text: 1 John 5:1. Every Christian can determine the reality of his faith by asking three fundamental questions. The first is, "Am I a loyal follower of the Christian ideal?" Now it is not easy to precisely define this ideal. There are many churches, many points of view. Christianity has meant one type of doctrine at one time in history, and something quite different at another time. But all Christians can agree that we come closest to the heart of*uhr religion in the New Testament And one of the most precious parts of j this indispensable source book is j the first letter of St. John from which our lesson text is taken. Here we see, in clear relief, the abiding elements of the Christian message. Take the Golden Text. ''Every one who believes that Jesus is the Christ is a child of God." Harnack, the great modern scholar, has stated this ideal differently, but with equal impressiveness. The Christian religion, he maintains, "means one thing and one thing only: Eternal life in the midst of time, by the strength and under the eyes of God." The second question is, "Do I understand the world in which I live?" What are the underlying forces moulding and remoulding our civilization? It is quite as difficult to know these as it is to appreciate the root meaning of Christianity. No Christian can express the Christian purpose not knowing the temper of his area. We come now to the third and final query. "D o I know how to put the Christian faith to work in my world?" This is flbt easy either. It is hard to make Christianity practical in such a stormy day as ours. St. Augustine, at the time when the mighty empire at Rome was crumbling, wrote his famous "The City of God." We likewise can look beyond the burning towers j of our contemporary scene to the! everlasting splendor of God's1 Kingdom! pSSHHSSSiT HI s ^ | Ba I Wit] | Friendly 1 1 I ^ 1 1 71 Hl| Invaluable ... an t ... is a certain hr n makes commercia bank a rare and t ience. Business : 7] and county have ] their loyalty for r il B !l | CITIZEN WARREN Under the provisions of the I jr and through cor Membership Fund, your money deposited jj up to $5,000. i HIE WARREN RECORI Farmers Vote For Continued Control | The tremendous majorities given the Bankhead act and the KerrSmith act in the recent referendums are clear cut indications of ' what the crop adjustment programs | have done for North Carolina : farmers, says Dean I. O. Schauta, of State College. Such an endorsement, he points | out, could come only from farmers who believe the programs have p played an important role in rural r rehabilitation and who expect simi- a lar benefits-in the future. t By increasing prices ar.d dis- t tributing benefit payments to growers who signed contracts, the Dean cqvc nd instment Droerams have ' h u" J ul J 4 w - | ? increased the 1934 income of North j Carolina farmers approximately 5 $120,000,000 above their income In t 1933. -I He ascribed the success of the, 1 cotton and tobacco adjustment a programs to the fact that the co- t | operation of every grower was se- j 1 cured. Complete cooperation is necessary, he says, to make such a i v program really effective. a ''In the past," he says, " a num- v ber of attempts Rave been made to ^ regulate production so as to con- s trol prices, but they always failed c because non-cooperating growers 1 offset the work done by those who did cooperate. North Carolina farmers are not interested in such F half-way measures: they want 'something that gets results." 1 Unofficial returns show that 117,- 1 368 growers voted for continuance r of the Bankhead act in 1935 and n that the tojacco farmers polled a t heavy majority for the Kerr-Smith p act. * ; In the Bankhead poll, Schaub ex- 11 plained, one vote was counted for t each farmer who cast a ballot, but t in the Kerr-Smith referendum the f votes were counted according to the a number of acres controlled by e5ch 11 voter. b A demonstration in analyzing diseases of swine given by Dr. William Moore, state veterinarian, before * Onslow county farmers revealed s that cholera is not the only disease s of hogs occurring in the county. ^ Under the supervision of the r farm agent, the Catawba County a Home properties have increased in valuation nearly $4,000 and the c operating budget has dropped over t $4,000 since 1930. ?=lr=Jr=Jr=r=lr=Jr=Jr=Jr?i I ^ 1 1 I I iiT 1 ^ 1 ink | ti A 1 n II Service jj a i I i 0 long our resources t iman quality that ti 1 relations with our jj err a t.i f vi n & exner o - ~ ? 1/ o A- ? li men of the town jl rewarded us with l! nany, many years. !j u 1 s I I I 1 a S BANK il TON, N. C. IH Amended Banking Act of 1933, 11 in the FDIC, Temporary In this bank is now insured ir 0 0 =11=11=11=1 =i I=II=I I=I rg| i ) Warrern 4|1Gamblin \ % |f} 'HOUND s HI Ik NEW YORK ? Decidedly regal in a full length, " enuine mink coat, she walked down 'ifth Avenue holding the leash of straining little Boston Bull, important as a race horse in his little t ed sweater. Many a head turned 5 she passed, for on each side of g hat royal red sweater were signs 3 hat read, "For sale." ? t Among the attention getters used ^ iy a street vendor in New York is j r ust another that doesn't make ense. He holds a paper ablaze under g he necktie and with appropriate lokum announces that it's fireproof. The watchers gather 'round. But, I ,sk, who wants to buy a necktie hat's fireproof, anyway? 1 * f Sentry-go and New York sandwich man with his billboard front . nd back, we never connected until " /e saw one emaciated human bill- ] oard standing in the middle of the idewalk, his head odding, eyes losed. He was, in spite of the raffic's din, fast asleep. * * 1 Riders of the Subway Rage ex- ( lect to get off the train before let- * ing people on, ordinarily. But pity ? he New Yorker who hesitates. Like 1 ootball, yau see an opening, and j s un for it. But look out for little nen such as I saw coming out of : he subway the other day. Three i leople were in the line of fire, waitng to get in. And out shot the ittle man, shoulders squared for he impact. He carommed from one o the next and the next in his reormer's zeal to teach them where ,nd how not to stand. ... I thanked lim Inwardly for doing something 've wanted to do myself, not once ut a hundred times. * New York gazed recently at the Inion Pacific's new record-breakTTTg treamline train . . . Air-commuting ervice from Long Island to Manlattan was instituted this summer l . . An autogiro landed on a nar-' ow Hudson River pier ... A new , nd faster plane service, New York; o Miami in eight hours, has Just ommenced . . . New York is desined to see a new train of the New laven line soon, with a skin as ' I Will Me If You A 01: i 52 visits to your you where to loo and the things of and nation. Sub i, I ( 5 f ton, North Carolina FRID mooth as a dirigible and not a > Ingle protrusion?not even exhaust ] ipes . . . New York- is looking for ? peed. I * An uptown theater in the midst f Harlem blazons forth on its t anopy, "Jesus is Here." . . . Look 1 little closer, please, and you'll : iscover that the modern revival leeting is sufficiently profitable to ent an entire theater for the pur- . >ose. * * Mechanical gadgets always atract onlookers in New York. I lever cease~"to marvel at automatic levators. Push the button for the 1st floor. The door closes. Up :oes the car. The door opens and here you are. Another little wonler is a radio the maker calls the nagic brain. It virtually thinks for rou. I'd like to have it think up ome better programs. Nearly every cotton grower of jincoln county has picked and ginled his cotton and stored it i a government warehouse. Patronize the Advertiser. LUKE RILEY SAYS THE RA BEFOl Since moving near the river 3EST-Y57T. We watched the vicious outside the house. About 15 minutes ? cool their burning stomachs, but md mice only. Will not hurt cats, doi from the dead rat. BEST-YET comi :ize 50c. Sold and guaranteed by dea : NOT Farmers Mutual Fire Ins hold their annual meetinj 5th., 1935 at 10:30 o'cl house at Warrenton. All be presant and hear th< transact other importanl G. R. FF Sec.-Ti g ? ^an More 1 re A Subscr HUarrrtt $e home each year?visi k for bargains, where : interest going on in tl scribe N only S1.50 The Year AY, DECEMBER 28, 1934 Crop rotation plans begun by Sertford county fanners in 1929 ire still being followed and are ^roving profitable, they report. v ^ New x ork is famous for special- I ;ies. Add tne company that doqsH lothing but clean gloves! * ' LEGAL NOTICE PIANO ? WANT SOMEONE TO take a fine piano and finish payments on unpaid balance owing. * Cash or terms. Quick action necessary. For particulars address Postoffice Box No. 73, Warrenton, N. C. d21-3tpd ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE j Having qualified as Administrator 1 upon the estate of E. L. Pike, de- 1 ceased, late of Warren county, N. I C? this is to notify all persons hav- 1 ing claims against said estate to q present them to the undersigned at Littleton, N. C., on or before December 21, 1935, or this notice may be plead in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This December 21, 1934. R. H. PIKE, d21-6ts Administrator. TS DIE IE REACHING THE RIVER. several years ago we've always used water Rats nibbling at BEST-YET, later they darted off for the river died before reaching it. kills rats js or chickens, and there is no smell ss in two sizes, 2 oz. size 25c 5 oz. lers. ? ICE:- I ranee Association will 1 on Saturday, Januan^y ock a. m. in the court members are urged to 2 annual report and ' ; business. Hgjg? tAZIER reas. ^ummj:ni?i]Tmiuiiii;ujniuiinmiiiniuiininii uii,innniu>nlmini?jQP& 'E=sss==gFljg I ^ o You iberTo J curb ts that will tell to buy or sell le county, state j ow! In
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 28, 1934, edition 1
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