Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Oct. 4, 1935, edition 1 / Page 6
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IV PAGE 6 Today and Tomorrow By Frank Parker Stockbridge / IMMORTALITY . . . step away I am glad that a national movement has been started for a me morial to Will Rogers. Vice President Garner is the Chairman, with ex-President Hoover, Henry Ford onH a lone list of other prom men. men on the committee. Jess Jones, Chairman of the Reconstruc ftion Finance Corporation, will receive subscriptions. I cannot think of any man in my time, not in public office, who en deared himself to so many million of people. I saw Will Rogers' las I picture the other night, "Steam boat 'Round the Bend.' I could no believe that he is not still living One of the miracles of our times i the power of the motion picture tpreserve the illusion of life. It i. the next thing to immortality. I am sending my dollar today t< Jesse Jones for the Will Roger memorial. I hope everybody wh has ever enjoyed one of his picture will do the same. MOTORS . . .and deprdssion i We had a depression in 1907 That was the year in which Henr; . Ford put out the first low-price, automobile, bringing motorin: within the reach of everybody. Th. ( automobile industry broke the bac! of the hard times. , We had another depression ii j 1921. That was the year in whip' < instalment sales of cars becam. . general. Once more the automo i bile industry lifted the nation ou : of the hole. This year, 1935, we are comin; 1 out of the worst depression ii 1 nearly a hundred years. The au < tomobile business is the bigges since 1929. More than 3|l-2 mil lion cars will have been made an( sold before tire end of the year " 1? i-Vio mntAr /?a r or wie umu umc mc u*ww* r is the main instrument in restoring ( prosperity. Other things havv helped, of course, but I give auto- , mobiles first place. RELIEF a liability A short time ago one of m> wealthy friends, who owns a larg. j country estate, asked me to recommend a good house painter. H; was going to repaint all of hi; 1 buildings, a job which would run to 3 several thousand dollars. I told him Ed Pixley was the p best painter I knew in our part of the county. ? "Has he been on relief?" asked 5 my friend. "If he has, I don'l want him. I am all through hiring , men who have been on relief. Thej ^ have all become too lazy to be in- j tersted in doing real work." I met Ed Pixley in front of the t-, bank that afternoon. He told mt e that all the family were working |( at whatever they could find to do and were managing to scrape along. "We haven't gone on relief yet, and we are not going to," said Ed. I told him about my friend Ed cranked up his old car and s] started right. He got it. a I have heard other employers say the same thing about workers who 5 have been on relief. ? INDEPENDENCE .... spirit r' I stopped on Forty-second Street, ^ New York, the other day, to have E my shoes shined. Out of the Ions w row of bootblacks one boy attracted my attention. v I got the boy talking. He had R come from California, he told me. n with his invalid father, who had been offered a job in New York but * couldn't hold it. So the boy?he 0 was fourteen or so?had got him- c self a shoe-shine kit and was supporting his father and himself. ? "Is your father on relief?"I ask- v ed. "Not for a minute," he replied. d "I wouldn't let him, even if he wanted to. We're getting along. 1 . . . Hey! Here's your change, E Mister." I had slipped him a quarter in- 1 stead of the regulation nickel. 'I " don't want any money I haven't 1 earned," he said. |c There is more of that American Ir spirit of independance left than 11 most folks think. ? I GRIT still pays I heard the other day, from a friend in Moultrie, Georgia, of an example of pure grit in the face of adversity. An elderly minister, too old and feeble to fill a pulpit anylonger, was facing starvation. The mortgage on his little country home was about to be foreclosed. But neither he nor his aging wife was willing to apply for relief. The wife took charge of the situation. She persuaded the local banker to lend her $150. Forty dollars went for a mule, the rest for seed, equipment and fertilizer for a five-acre tobacco patch. Last month she finished selling her tobacco. It brought $1600. The mort- 1 gage and the back taxes are paid 1 and something over to live on. She found the road to independence in old age. 1 Too many of us quit too soon. 1 ] Tax exemption certificates have I been delivered to 4,200 cotton growers of Lincoln county. Warren toll, North Carolina Higher Income From Better j Type Cotton The AAA loan and adjustment payment policy for the 1935 cotton crop Is designed to provide greater i eturns lor the proaucers ui suy-1 erior quality cotton. This is why the adjustment payments to each grower are to be based on the average price of 7-8 inch middling staple rather titan on the pi ice of his own lint, said J. P. Criswell of State College. In consequence, the grower who can get more for his cotton than the average price of 7-8 inch middling?at a time when the average is 10 cents or moie?will receive a total of more than 12 cents a pound. For example, he pointed out, suppose a grower sells his lint for 11.5 cents on a day when tile average for 7-8 inch middling is 10.48 cents. This grower is entitled to an adjustment payment of 1.52 cents, which will give him a total return jf 13.02 cents a pound. But to take advantage of the arrangements which have been made to benefit the producers of superior cotton, the giower must demand a higher price for good lint tiian is ceing offered for cotton of average staple length and quality, Criswel added. Too otten, he went on, growers are willing to let their cotton sell tor average prices wnnoui uue mjiideration of the higher value of top juality cotton. The N. C. Agricultural Experiment Station is now working on a oiogram for improving the methods by which cotton is priced, Jriswell continued. More attention on t?ie quality of the individual oale is being stressed. This is anothep reason why jrowers should seek to produce a oighei grade of cotton, he pointed out. Afton Items Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Collier of loanoke Rapids spent Sunday with dr. and Mrs. Jim Limer. Mrs. Vaughan Godfrey and chilIren of Snow Hill, Md., visited her larents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Marain, last week. Mrs. Ernest Hardy of Hookerton lsnea ner parents, rvir. auu ivns. . W. Burroughs, last week. Miss Florence Burroughs of Norolk is visiting her parents, Mr. nd Mrs. W. C. Burroughs. Miss Marie Pinnell of Castalia pent the week end with hei arents. ! Mrs. Viola Collier of Roanoke tapids is spending the week with Irs. Jim Limer. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Egerton and hildren of Norlina were visitors f Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Pinnell Sunay afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Fuller and imily and Miss Annie Belle Robrts visited Mr. and Mrs. Edd Ful:r at Farmville Sunday. Elberon Items Mrs. J. L. Blythe and daughter pent one day last week with her lother, Mrs. Delia F. Ay cock. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Aycock and it. ana Mrs. w w. uneai spem, ne day last week in Henderson. Miss Elizabeth Vaughan of Warsnton, Mrs. Delia P. Aycock and Ir. M. K. Aycock visited Mr. Walter 1. Aycock at Kinston one night last 'eek. Mr. and Mrs. M. K. Aycock were isitors in the home of her mother, Irs. W. A. Benson, of Inez one ight last week. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Fleming of 1 tenderson were visitors in the home fher mother, Mrs. Delia F. Ayock, Sunday. Misses Bettie Fleming, Jessie teavis and Rosebud Aycock were isitors in the home of Miss Milred O'Neal Sunday. Miss Violet Abbot was a visitor of Jiss Annie Short Sunday afterloon. Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Short of Jiddleburg, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. itones and family of kittrell, Jr. and Mrs. H. F. Jones and hildren and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Justian and children and Mr. and Jrs. Edward PeoDles were visitors n the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe 'eoples Sunday. Miss Annie Margaret Duke spent Sunday and Sunday night in the lome of Miss Mildred Crawley of Jollister. Mrs. Daniel Lee Hudgins and shildren, Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Bowen ind Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bowen )f Warrenton were visitors in the lome of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Ay:ock Sunday afternoon. Misses Sarah and Mildred Car oll spent Saturday night and Sunlay with their sister, Mrs. Melvin Jhoplin. Mrs. Mary Abbot is spending some time with her daughter. Mrs. Waverly Harden, of Norlina. Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Limer and children of Alert were guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Limer Sunday. A marked Increase in the production of horses and mules on the farms of McDowell county has been noted by the farm agent. A number of farmers are keeping one or two brood mares from which colts are being raised. TH1 ! Chevrolet Triu I ^_MM ^ ^ " "* ^ ' j i * :.. ?\ ' :.. $y- %- , - 'v ^?-S?i88?fa-'?ll III c^: :&: & , In the first formally observed and f of the Pikes Peak auto highway, net power, endurance and efficiency ovei lOflrt foot tin'fli a n'ep nf 40^0 fppf fro show the lK-ton true!:, driven by V 3000-pound load (it made the run afi (left to right): Harry Kartz, technic Gazette and Telegraph; and John L. truck, which Harry Hartz drove to truck with f .'11 lead, soMMyranoi lesson |y CbarUiE-Duna The Suffering; Servant. Lesson for October 6th. Isaiah 53 Golden Text: Isaiah 53:5. Isaiah 53 marks the climax of Kie famous Servant chapters. In chapter 42 we find the first reference to the Servant. Further allusions are to be discovered in chapters 49, 50, j and 52. But the 53rd chapter, in J which the Servant appears as a suffering redeemer, is the most im jr | THE FEDER/ INSURANCE C( PROT YOUR FUNDS I There can be no quesl of funds entrusted to tl Through the Federal poration, created by Coi Federal Agency, all of c tected against loss of th tent of $5,000 in each a The additional securil possible by this insurant centive for you to oper furnishes a sound basis safety of your funds un<3 4 NTI7ritl< U UMILLI1I WARREN1 J BUILT UPON CONFIJ A I WARREN RECORD -ks In Thrilling Tests Ai % ' ' X; x.: . . ''' imed tests of motor trucks over the perilous ir Colorado Springs, Chevrolet l^-ton and the course of the annual Labor Day hill cl m the start to the summit, 14,109 feet aboi /. P. Bentrup, on its way to a record of 37 terward, without load, in 25 minutes, 12 sec :al advisor; Robert M. Ross, Detroit Time Jenkins, Chicago Daily News, The lower the summit in 25 minutes, 3 seconds, and pressive of all. j d W-lio is this Servant? We do not' j precisely know. Some think the j . unknown writer of these glorious' passages had in mind a contemp- j r orary figure like Jeremiah. Others a argue that an ideal figure of the 8 future is meant. Still others con- 0 sider the Servant as the nation, in r whole or in part. a But whatever explanation we * accept we can be perfectly sure that liiis inspired author uncon- _ sciously drew a wonderfully fine!"" picture of Jesus. Christians have 5 for long rightly considered Isaiah 53 as the most notable anticipation of Jesus in the Old Testament. When we read its verses, phrase by phrase, we think at once of Christ. Take the clause, "He was iL DEPOSIT I 3RPORATION 1 ECTS N THIS BANK ;ion about the security lis institution. II Deposit Insurance Corngress as a permanent >ur depositors are proem deposits to the ex- n .ccount. ;y for deposits made L le should be a real inl an account here. It for confidence in the ler all conditions. & S RANK J 'ON, N. C. DENCE?GROWING SERVICE | }k i I Warrenton, 'op Pikes Peak IHIili ;'?j hairpin turns and steep switchbacks half-ton trucks demonstrated their ' vik nnn(-an?- n <-J!?<-ntioa ftf 10 milfid iillki VUUtHIki a utdkouw ui umv#| re sea level. The upper illustrations minutes, 52seconds, with its full onds), and the officials at the finish s; Dan Kennedy, Colorado Springs photos show the Chevrolet half-ton the finish of the run of the l'^-toa lespised and rejected of men." In landers oratorio, the "Messiah," he most appealing passages are tot the massave choruses, but the rias, and of these, "He was depised" Is one of the finest. He ertainly was despised by Judas, eter, Caiaphas, Pilate, the soldiers, ,nd the rabble. "He was a man of orrows, and acquainted with j rief." But this grief, thank God, is not frj' Mini.,. To S A Cardboard, sold to school ch office of The W; Jones Brothers I board are invitei to the office of T This change the Press Publis' JUST REC] Dc Several of 01 Food for them ir that we have doi form for those v WE ARE and invite you to quality goods at lone Groceries Fe North CwoUn* FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 ^ 1 -T^^T^ony. it isl Last week, 2242 I la merely pe ^ ^ath borne I to Pitt County were delivered I vicarious. supreme glory of 082.22 in rental checks tor ww,' I ?UE grief ^ ^ that he car-Jmg the AAA tobacco pion^ 1 the crucffle martyrdom, the woes of I men. He himself needed^no 1 ^f^^pXroT oX Muter gavel V -J I G, !?e nrivilege of bearing in his etes examined and guta, i him the pn weight of mens! fitted 5 i own person delivering theml I wickedness, and deliver ? { Every Monday morning to*,.. I lorn it by the redeeming grace 0 1 ^ 0!{lce with Dr. ^ I the Cross. I jonee, the dentist, over ctsjj, 1 ???? ^^tC^ol^edin^edemonstralonsI DR? E. D. HARBOUR 1 S 12W6?pii hkve been started in I OPTOMETRIST I COMING!) "North Carolina's Greatest Event11 State Fair RALEIGH NORTH CAROLINA 6 Gala Days and Nights OCTOBER 14 to 19 All New "Congress Horse Professional Entertain- Dare Devils" Racin* Au<? ment On Race Track Wed.-Thurs.- j Races Program 2 tM. Tuesday Friday j Saturday Mammoth Agricultural and Industrial Exposition $11,600 In Agricultural Premiums ON THE MIDWAY "WORLD OF MIRTH SHOWS' GRANDSTAND ATTRACTIONS DAY AND NIGH I J 'chool Children nd Teachers which for a number of years has been ildren and teachers of the county at the arren Record, will hereafter be sold at Store, and those desiring to buy cardd to come to our store instead of going 'he Warren Kecord. is made by mutual agreement between hing Company and Jones Brothers. ??_ I r?x7irrv en* a i ? ouin*JrWT OF II CjI v h.lj om/iLL omnriLn i v/i >g Biscuits I ir customers have asked us to get Dog i this form. We are happy to announce tie so. We also have this food in loose /ho prefer. I CONSTANTLY INCREASING I OUR STOCK 1 . "Amo fn nni' o+Afo TirhoTP VOll Will filicl ' V/V/IAXV^ l/V VU1 Ol/V/lV^ yyiivx v 1/ ~ ? ih reasonable prices. TELEPHONE 31-W I is Rrothers | Warrenton, N. C. eds Fertilizers Wood and Coal AS
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Oct. 4, 1935, edition 1
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