Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Jan. 31, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE 2 I Littleton N< MRS. JACK NI ??? ??? >M??MM*??M? ?< Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Thorne motored to Raleigh Friday. Mr. Roger Crawley of Wilson was a visitor in Littleton Sat urday. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stokes visited relatives in Battleboro Sunday. Mrs. G. G. Ragland and Miss Isabel Nelson spent Saturday inNorfolk. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Matthews oi Wilson werp guests of' Mrs. J. W. Montague on Thursday. Mrs. John MacRae of Maxton has been spending the past week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Thorne, at their home in Airlie. Mrs. Sallie B. Summerell of Wilson spent Sunday with her sister, Mrs. E. B. Perry. Mr. Harry Cawthorne of Chase City, Va., was a visitor in town on Saturday. Mr. William Hugh SJessoms, a student at Wake Forest College, spent several days this week at his home here. Miss Elizabeth Smith of Raleigh spent the week end with her mother, Mrs. J. R. Wollett. Mrs. J. H. Bruce of St. Petersburg, Fla., was the guest of Mrs. T. R. Walker a few days last week. Miss Frances Newsom cf the Roancke Rapids faculty spent the week end here with her mother, Mrs. A. M. Newsom. Mr. N. M. Gardifer and Mr. Jack Salmon were visitors in Scotland Neck Sunday. Miss Louise Harvey of Enfield was the week end guest of Miss Annie Price. I Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Joyner of Roanoke Rapids visited relatives here Sunday. Mr. D. M. Fulcher of Washington. N. C., and Misses Llewellyn Pinner and Joyce Fulcher, students at N. C. C. W., were week end guests of Mrs. D. M. Fulcher. Mr. R. P. Henry of Chicago, 111., was a recent guest at the Cooper Hotel. Mrs. Ed Williams of_ Raleigh was the guest of -her sister, Mrs. C. S. Northington, several days this week. Messrs. Jack Nelson and Harold Hardy were week end visitors in i Norfolk, Va. Miss Louise White spent the week ] end at Murfreesboro. , Mr. J. W. Cree of Henderson was a visitor here Saturday. Mrs. J. B. Boyce spent several , days this week in Weldon as the HBt daughter, Mrs. J. M. Mohom. Mr. E. G. Joyner of Wilson spent 8unday"here with his father, Rev. Francis Joyner.'" Mr. and Mrs. William Herbe-t of Enfield were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Moore on Sunday. Mrs. Walter Hedgepeth spent last week in Henderson with her daughter, Mrs. Avent Strickland. Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Walker spent a few days this week in Richmond. Mrs. W. L. Pierce and Mr. R. W Craig of Wheaton, Illinois, were guests at the Cooper Hotel this wees. Mrs. H. C. Smith spent the week end in Norfolk. Mrs. J. W. Montague is spending a few days in Norfolk. Misses Mary Whitmell Bussey and B. Graham, students at Duke University, spent several days this week with Miss Bussey's aunts, Misses \nnie and Tempe Thome. Miss Sue Gray spent the week end in Portsmouth. Mr. Harry Darden Jr., who is attending Duke University, spent several days this week here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Darden. Mr. W. B. Myrick, who now has a position in Henderson, spent a few days last week with his family. Miss Emelyne Evans spent the week end with relatives in Enfield. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Stokes returned Friday to their home at Hendersonville after spending several weeks here with Mrs. Stokes' parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Pippen. They were accompanied home by Mrs. Stokes' sister, Miss Emily Pender Pippen, who will spend some time with them. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Stansbury and Miss Christine Boone spent Friday in Raleigh. Miss Claire Benthall spent the, week end at her home in Woodland.. Mrs. O. B. Moore of Raleigh | spent the week end with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Horace Palmer, j Mrs. S. M. Stansbury Buried On Sunday Littleton, Jan. 30?Mrs. Lillie Glasgow Stansbury, wife of S. M. How Calotabs 1 To Throw C hare found In Calotabs a | boost valuable aid In the treatment I of oolds. They take one or two tablets the first night and repeat the third or fifth night if needed. How do Calotabs help Nature throw oS a cold? First, Calotabs Is one of the most thorough and dependable of all Intestinal eliminants, thus cleansing the intestinal tract of the germ-laden mucus and toxines. Warrenton, North Carolina ' -4 ews Events I L'LSON, Editor j Miss Paris Smiles . Ev,v.;.'. -.v. _k HP *BP^aMrraail p: HnO ' jBBMjB BBBBSiwtfc: - ? - .-* ''*' I vl vX*M v?*X*I vJ' '^i^lHaBoocHiil ? [ v:::::::::::::->."x&vvX&aiBff''" x*:;:*:*.. IhH'Ir^ . > :-^^S lBooaoWCTv\Tiia , a JCBR-. -. -. . . v ' ' ' ' ? ^,-VJVv' PARIS . . . Mile. Madeline Balestre (above), flashes the smile which won for her the title, of "Miss Paris of 1936" in a national beauty * * - 4 P A J 1 fontest, JUSI xeaiurea iit;re. Stansbury, passed away at the home! of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew S. Glasgow, in the Aurelian Springs community, on Saturday night following an illness of two years. Funeral services were held at Tabor Church Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock with Rev. C. R. Jenkins, pastor of the Littleton Presbyterian ehurch, officiating. Interment folowed in the church buryng ground. Mrs. Stansbury is survived by her parents, her husband and three children, Mabel, Sans Jr., and Sarah. She also leaves two sisters and five brothers: Mrs. Martin Lambert and Miss Eula Glasgow of Aurelian Springs, W. A. Glasgow of Rocky Mount, Roy, Glenn, Albert and Clyde Glasgow, all of Aurelian Springs. Mrs. S. J. Stallings Buried In Littleton Littleton, Jan 30.?Mrs. Emma Laura Stallings, wife of S. J. Stallings, was called to her heavenly -eward January 23, 1936. She was born in Henderson, N. C., and liv?d there until she came to Littleton as a bride. She was the daughter if Louis Kittle and the great granddaughter of William Wyche. She joined the church at fourteen i years of age, and faithfully served her church which she loved so devotedly. She was one of the youngest of six children, all of whom are now dead. She is survived by her husaod ne son, Cleve Stallings: one daughter, Mrs. Joseph B. Latham; two grandchildren, Willis and Emilie L. Stallings, all of Littleton. The funeral services were con ducted Saturday morning at tl-e home by Rev. Francis Joyner, whom she 'had known a great many years and who was a school mate of her husband. Her body was laid to rest in Sunset Hill cemetery. The following lines, written by a relative of her's, Wilbur F. Tilitttj of Vanderbilt University, were found among her "souvenirs": | "When some fair mcrn you hear I'm gone, You'll know, friends, where to find me; In that fair land, where all things there Of earth's sweet things remind me, The Fatherland, beyond, above, | The snent-nowing river; Where they who work and learn and love, Meet, live, and love forever!" r Today Tomorrow By Prank Parker Stockhiidge Vi / POLITICS . . . newspapers It is just forty years since I began as a young reporter to "cover" national politics. In 1896 I spent half the Summer on Major McKinley's front porch at Canton, Ohio, and the other half traveling around wth William J. Bryan on his special trains. That was the first time a I Presidential candidate has ever at tempted to talk to all the voters. Political campaigning has taken on an entirely new aspect since radio broadcasting was first used in the campaign of 1920. This year it looks to me as if it would be a battle of radio voices between (Mr. Help Nature )ff a Bad Cold Second, Calotabs are diuretic to the kidneys, promoting the elimination of cold poisons from the system. Thus Calotabs serve the double purpose of a purgative and diuretic, both of which are needed in the treatment of colds. Calotabs are quite economical; only twenty-five cents for the family package, ten cents for the trie" package. (Adv.) TH1 Roosevelt and whomever the Republicans may nominate. It will be an interesting show. Each candidate will do his best to stir up the emotions of his hearers. But in 1936, as in 1896, I think the result will j be determined by the sober exam- j inaticn of the facts as they are presented in the newspapers. FARMING . . . still problem I can't remember a time when there wasn't a farm problem pressing to the front in national politics. George Washington faced a serious 1 farm problem when he was President. The "Whiskey Rebellion" of 1791 was a protest of the farmers in what was then the West against a Federal tax on whiskey. The only way they could profitably market their grain was by converting it into whiskey. That was before there were railroads or good highways. ! After observing a succession of farmers' political movements for farm relief all my lifetime, they all seem to me to have a common root Farming at best is a hazardous oc- | cupation. To succeed in it takes a! combination of natural talent, high | intelligence, intense maust.y ana. great capacity for self denial. Also,! usually, more capital Mian most beginning farmers can command. In other words, farmers are just about like the rest of us. CABBAGES . . .lose character Agricultural experimenters at Cornell University have developed an odorless cabbage. I am still undecided as to whether that is an advantage or not. The senses of smell and of taste are so closely tied together that I would have to eat a dish of the smelless cabbage before I could be sure that it would taste as good as the old-fashioned kind. I think most of the objection to the odor of cabbage comes from housewives who don't like the way it smells up the house. Most people ccok cabbage too long, anyway. My wife pulls the leaves apart and throws them into boiling water for 20 minutes. Try that way sometime. WATT .... his engine Everybody that uses electric light s] pays for it by the watt?so much f] per 1,000 watts?kilowatts?per hour. But the name "Watt" comes from a man who never dreamed of electric light. He was James Watt, inventor of the modern steam ' engine, who was born just 200 years c< ago. ? s< In a real sease, however, James r Watt, the Scotch boy who put ^ steam to work, was the great grand- j daddy of electric power; for you e i could cover the world with electric c wires and get nothing out of them if you didn't have an engine to turn the dynanfbs. James Watt's steam engine turned the world upside down, it started the industrial revolution and the machine age. It is at the root f of all our modern social and eco- v nomic problems. It is no wonder r that we have not yet learned the r I answers to all of these problems, for I it is less than 200 years since the s J seed of them was sown. That is a 1 very short time. I , RAILROADS . . distribution c | The railroads have scored another | point in the battle with motor- j \ trucks for freight transportation. The Interstate Commerce Commis-'s j sion has at last authorized the roads v to operate their own freight pick-up 1 i and delivery, systems. This removes t ! one of their handicaps. One reason, i whv mntrv trancnnrfatinn r\f f rrV,t 1 * "i . has grown so rapidly is that the J c j truck can back up to your door and j 1 take on a load, and deliver it at the I other end of the line, while the | = GOO] Many peo fail becau It should save a ps once you how fast Rpsnlvp m come and tion to coi present tb The i deposn federa i L??? A ; WARREN RECORI SAGAS of By R. ( Manager, Aviation Di Standard Oil Comp JUST at bedtime, the telephon executive officer of the V; peratively. It was a call from about 150 miles from El Paso. N ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jones, wa and other com- 1 plications, and only immediate attention at A an El Paso hospital could save her life. Would 3 the Varney Air Transport provide a plane to move the child to 4rT| El Paso? There was no landing field at Alpine but, said Mr. ? Jones, there were L " facilities at Van^k Horn, 40 miles J)) from there. If the pMfjps. transport com- iTj pany would send tx yiaiie, IUI . aiiu Mrs. Jones would take the baby by car to Van Horn In the dawn of a gusty, drizzling day, Pilot C. H. Chidlaw took off from El Paso for Van Horn. It was dangerous flying weather. Vicious cross-winds swept the rain-ridden skies, and visibility was practically nil. But Pilot Chidlaw battled resolutely on against the elements. At Van Horn he circled low searching' jfor the flying field. There was none. Only a tiny local baseball diamond upon which it would have been useless to attempt either a landing or take-off. Beside the diamond stood a lone car and by the car a man, gazing steadily up at the circling plane. Pilot Chidlaw knew that in the car the suffering infant lay in her mother's arms and that the figure watching Him so anxiously was tfio careridden father. No matter what the risks, Pilot Chidlaw felt he must tret the child into the r'.ar.e ar.d dipper and consignee of railroad reight have had to provide their wn truck service to and from the lilroad stations. The new system should make for ister and cheaper distribution of ommodities, and so help in solving ne of our chief economic and ocial problems. One of the chief easons why everybody cannot ave plenty of everything when arms and factories can produce nough for everybody, is the high ost and lost motion in the process f distribut on t) the consumer. Manson Items Mrs. Sue L. Allen of St. Louis, de? is here to spend some time I'ith her sister, Mrs. L. N. K'mball. drs. Allen is 85 years cf age and nade the trip from St. Louis alone. Mrs. R. W. Falkener of Henderon spent last week here with Mrs. j. F. Hamme. Dr. Theo Dill has returned to his lome here after spending a week ir more in Norfolk, Va. TWT-e .Tonlr Orpcrnrv nf R.iricpwnv w llv" J ?0w " -~>J isited relatives here Friday. M'ss Jennie Dowling of Hendcr;on is spending some time here vith Mrs. W. E. Brack. Mrs. Dorman Blalcck of Warjencri was a visitor here Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Smitti Wyckoff of %Torlina visited relatives here Friiay. Mrs. J. W. King, Mrs. Harvey tfyrick, Mrs. Frank King, Mrs. M. A. Sillery and Miss Emma King, al D INTENT pie have plenty good inter i~^i, _? 4-: ac ui ui autiuu* be every man's self imposei irt of his earnings. An eas get started, and you'll be your dollars grow. ow to save a part of your ri soon, very soon, you will be isider bigger opportunities v lemselves. Citizens I TS INSURED UP TO 55000.00 B L DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPOl ) Wi THE SKIES 1. Ocrtcl 1 \ * vision, Sales Department any of New Jersey v e in the home of Roy ?T Snyder} irney Air Transport, rang im-j Frank Jones of Alpine, Texas, ancy, the 10-months-old daughr' s desperately ill of pneumonia' on to El Paso. Due east of the'town he saw a highway extending for several miles without a turn. He sped towards it. Cautiously, he crept lower and lower until he was directly over "the long, thin strip of concrete. Then, hoping that no stray side wind would carry the plane into the deep ditches on either side of the road, he brought the plane down upon the highway. The father, who had sensed what the pilot was attempting, drove up with the car/1 The baby, with its mother, was transferred to the plane. Along the narrow tape of road Pilot Chidlaw raced the plane, fiarely in time to escape a bend in the highway, the ship took to the air. Pilot dhidlaw swung about and headed back for El Paso and life for a baby. ' of Littleton, visited Mrs. L. N. Kim ball here one day last week. i Mr. J. M. Bender came home las I week from Duke hospital, j Mr. Rhinehart Seaman of Hen derson was a visitor here Monda night. ! Mrs. Clifford Cole of Norlina vis iforl Viov mnfVior Cipro THririflV | 11LU XIV/A. iitwviivx ? . Elberon Items Miss Helen James spent the wee i end with lien grandmother, Mr j Mustain, at Warrenton. Mrs. Del a F.-Aycock returne i bjme Sunday after spending a fe ~ "I I I I III I ?I ?I I III?111 TRADE WITH US Armour's j Breakfast Bacon 1-2 lb. pkg., 18c i Fatback, lb. 15c Salt Herrings doz. 20c i , Jones grothers Warrenton, N. C. 1 - IONS ? isions but d duty to sy matter surprised sgular inin a posi/hich will 0 3ank ;y the ration urenton. North Carolina p] days with Mrs. Joe Peoples in Pari View 'hospital at Reeky Mount. Sin reports Mrs. Peoples is getting alonj very well, considering her operatior Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Short o Middleburg were visitors in tlv home of Mr. and Mrs. T. P. People Sunday. Rev. I. B. Jackson filled his reg ular appointment at Sulphu Springs church on Sunday. H preached a real good sermon. Oi account of cold weather there wa a very small congregation. Fron now on through the winter month Sunday school will be held at 2:0 o'clock and preaching services wil be at 3:00 o'clock on every fourtl Sunday. Messrs. Junius Aycock and Ed ward Peoples visited Mrs. Joe Peo pies at Rocky Mount Sunday. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank all of my frienc and neighbors for their kindnes shown to me during the illness an death of my dear brother, Mr. Jii Champion. MRS. RUTH SEAMAN And Children Notice the date on your label an k _ s. MM IShL - v - \ kt. M?liM f-s^ajSEMPs^^MjljBBk. ^aMraBBr^^WB "My Dear, here really is trade-In our old iron and m. CHEAP, you know, so we Our EIe< and Percol 1 T s d CAROLINA POWER Electricity is Cheap s renew 7our subscription. 130 1 Robertson Fert has just arrived and i from my storage hous This Special Plant B< at the same price as t I JOHN MA 1 |p sa: y 1 ROBERTSO 1 CORPC UDAY, JANUARY 31, 19^ P i1 Oscar Caudle of Fall CreeVYa^. Wt e kin county, sold 56 pounds o! *ai. If 3 nut kernels from one tree at ^ 1 ' j cents a pound and says he y,-^ | f J crack walnuts from all the trees 0n | e his farm next fall. s r Chas. E. Foster I Civil Engineer, Surveyor | a Littleton, N. C. I * Try CARDU! For I functional Monthly Painj I Women from the 'teen age tc the | change of life have found Carriui H | genuinely helpful for the relief of j functional monthly pains due to lack H ls I of just the right strength from the ? I food they eat. Mrs. Crit Haynes, of Essex, Mo., writes: "I used Card'jl H n| r)ien , girl lor cramps and found tt vm i nave recenuy taken ra,7, during the change of life. I vras verv ? ,J vous, had head and back pains and I a generally run-down condition. cJdd I haa helped me greatly." I . Thousands of women testify Cardni i, d nted them. If it doe. not K Yon I consult a physician. ^ I 's Plant Bed 11 ilizer I1 Is now ready for delivery ? se at Noriina, N. C. ed Fertilizer is now sold ;he regular tobacco 3-8-3. YFIELD JR. 11 LESMAN I I N CHEMICAL 1 I )RATION I I a bargain! Why don't you Plrt ~ 1-3 I i can now enjoy more of it!" stric Iron | ator Offer I l really GOOD Electric Iron I nd Percolator are houseold necessities so it is sensi- I le to take advantage of the I emarkable Bargain Offer I re are now making: I New and Improved I ELECTRIC IRON I and PERCOLATOR I ith many of the latest features? I BOTH for only I U A 45c Down j I 50c & Mown | m allowance of 50c will be I iade on your old iron, per- I olator or coffee pot. I elephone 4080 or visit our I alesroom at once to avoid I isappointment. I 8 LIGHT COM* I ?Eijoy MOM Of II! I
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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Jan. 31, 1936, edition 1
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