Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / March 20, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE 2 gnwiiiiiinnniii<?iniiiiiiininiia?)i? 8 - - I Littleton IN MRS. JACK N Mr. and Mrs Plummer Fitts -of Macon were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Person. Miss Bertha Mae Newsom, who is attending E. C. T. C., at Greenville, spent the week end here witta her mother, Mrs. A. M. Newsom. Mrs. M. W. Ransom, Miss Esther Mears and Mrs. W. W. Johnston of Weldon departed Tuesday for a week's trip to St. Petersburg, Florida. i Mr. Roy King of Henderson spent the week end at his home here. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Boyce and Mr. J. B. Boyce of Warrenton were visitors in Littleton Sunday afternoon. Mr. Garland Hale of Weldon was a visitor here Sunday. Mr. N. W. Warren spent Friday in Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Williams of Raleigh spent a few days this week -mvc r s Northineton. W X 111 w. ? _ Mr. R. P. Allen of Weldon was a business visitor here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Cook spent Sunday with relatives in Dunn. Miss Dorothy Newby, student at E. C. T. C. at Greenville, spent the week end here with her mother, Mrs. Dora Newby. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Jones and children visited relatives in Elizabeth City during the week end. Mrs. N. W. Warren, Mrs. J. A. Crawley, and Mrs. E. L. Crawley spent Saturday in Rocky Mount. Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Patterson, n t vick and Mrs. R. B. 1U1O. v* ? Patterson were visitors in RockyMount Saturday. Mr. Herbert Foster left this week for Statesville where he has accepted a position with the State Highway Commission. Miss Frances Newsom of Roanoke Rapids spent the week end at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Patterson visited relatives in Warrenton Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Price, Misses Annie and Frankie Price and Miss Mary Lyon Coppersmith spent Sunday at Aulander. Mr. and Mrs. Macon Moore were visitors in Warrenton Sunday. Mr. A. P. Farmer of Newport News spent the week end here with his family. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Eatman and Mr. and Mrs. Fab Haskins of moTp Runriav eruests <WV&jr iHV UiiV n v>* v ~ _j ? ? ? of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Gray. Mrs. W. G. Coppersmith, Miss Mary Lyon Coppersmith, and Miss Annie Price went to Rocky Mount Wednesday. Mr. Macon Gardner was a visitor in Scotland Neck Sunday. Miss Mabel Stroupe spent the week end at her home in Ramseur. Horace Palmer arrived Saturday from the University of North Carolina to spend the spring holidays here with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Horace Palmer. Mr. J. W. Hudson of Tarboro was a visitor here Friday. Mr Went f!afisnria of Norfolk i spent Sunday here with his mother, Mrs. M. P. Cassada. Mr. and Mrs. Rom Parker of Enfield visited relatives here Sunday. Misses Rebecca Leach, Elberta Poster and Emily Pippen spent the week end with friends in Raleigh. Mr. Percy Dawson of Norfolk was a visitor here Sunday. Mrs. W. H. May, Mrs. A. J. May, Mrs. C. A. Jones and Mr. Jotin Jones spent Friday in Norfolk. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Austin and Mr. H. C. Smith of Norfolk spent the week end here with Mrs. H. C. Smith. Mrs. A. P. Farmer and Mrs. H. Reid Miller spent a few days last week in Raleigh, where they attended a convention of the Missionary Societies of the Baptist church. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Allen of Thelma and Mrs. W. A. China of Roanoke Rapids visited friends in Littleton Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Shaw of Rocky Mount were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Perry. Mrs. M. W. Ransom, Mrs. Jack Johnston and Miss Esther Mears were visitors in Rock# Mount Friday. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Mohorn and daughters of Weldon were guests of Mrs. J. B. Bcyce Sunday afternoon. Mr. Herbert Foster spent Monday in Raleigh. Mrs. S. G. Daniel, Mrs. D. M. Fulcher, and Misses Estelle Isles _ AM X m IJ AnlrTT BpGllh OtttUIUH)' JUix xvutiwjr JMUUilb. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Wiggins and Miss Dolly Daniel visited Mrs. John Graham in Warrenton Sunday afternoon. Miss Lucy King, who attends Greensboro College, spent the week end at her home near Littleton with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. King. Mr. and Mrs. Hawkins Thompson of Macon were visitors here Friday. Mr. Harold Hardy, salesman for * Wairmtaa, North I ews Events ELSON, Editor Former Wife Heard [ COLUMBUS . ". . A. H. I Hawraney (above), offered to loan the city $50,000 when it was announced that a $900,000 deficit nust be met this year. The city declined . but Hawraney's former wife, at Detroit, heard of it and now asks for more alimony Addington-Beaman Lumber Company of Norfolk returned last week to Norfolk after spending several weeks here on business. Miss Virginia inree wins, siuueut nurse at Roanoke Rapids hospital, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Threewitts, during the week end. Messrs. William Nelson and Fred Holt of Norfolk spent Sunday in Littleton. Mr. Swain Norman of Halifax was a visitor here Monday. Mrs. N. E. Mitchell spent the week end in Weldon. Miss Lucy Fortescue spent Saturday in Norfolk. Mrs. H. P. Robinson, Mrs. J. N. Moseley and Mrs. W. G. Alston were visitors in Raleigh Thursday. Presiding Elder In Little Sunday nr j Marvin Culbreth, the new! presiding elder of the Rocky Mount District of the M. E. Church, South, will preach at the Littleton Church on Sunday morning at 11 o'clock, the Rev. W. T. Phipps announced this week. He will hold the second Quarterly Conference at Calvary at 3 o'clock and will preach at the close of the Conference. The officials of the Littleton, which comprise the charge are expected to be present, and reports are expected from Sunday School Superintendents, Presidents of Missionary Societies, Lay Leaders, Golden Cross Directors and Church Treasurers. The delegates to the District Conference at; Farmville, May 18th and 19th, will be elected. A large attendance is expected and the general public is cordially invited to attend both services. PITT-BUFFALOE Miss Isabell Buffaloe of Roanoke Rapids and Nathan Gilbert Pitt of Littleton were quietly married on Sunday, March 8th, in Henderson. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. V. M. Buffaloe of Roa noke Rapids. Mr. Pitt is the son of Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Pitt. He holds a position with the Harrison Motor Company in Roanoke Rapids. The young couple are making their home with the groom's parents at their home near Littleton. TO CONDUCT SERVICES Rev. S. L. Morgan of Creedmoor, N. C., former pastor of the Littleton Baptist church (1904-1907), will conduct services here in the Baptist church on Sunday, April 5th, at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. He will also hold services at Enterprise Baptist church at 3 o'clock on the same date. A cordial invitation is (extended to the public to attend i these services. I BRIDGE CLUB MEETS Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Capps entertained the members of their bridge club on Tuesday night. Contract was played at two tables. Mrs. Rufus Bradley received the ladies' high score prize, and the gentlemen's prize went to Mr. Johnnie Johnston. After the game a delicious ice course was served to the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Bradley, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Crawley, Miss Louise White, and Mr. Johnnie Johnston. Id Memoriara Whereas, it has pleased God In His all wise Providence to remove from our midst our beloved member, Mrs. Ara Jordan Tate, we bow in humble submission to his will and while deeply deploring the loss of our friend from this life, we are assured that she has entered Into the duration of eternal bliss. We, the members of the Woman's Auxiliary of the Presbyterian church of Littleton, N. C.( do hereby DunUam ] solved: That in the passing of Ara Jordan Tate the Church has lost a valuable member, this Auxiliary a devoted worker and each of us a personal friend. And be it further resolved: That these resolutions be spread upon the minutes of the Auxiliary as a permanent record of our esteem and that copies be sent io The Warren Record for publication ai=r> tn her children and to her mother, Mrs. Thomas Jordan, as an expression of sincere sympathy of the members of * the Auxiliary. "Servant of Christ, well done; Praise be thy new employ, And while eternal ages roll Rest in thy Master's joy." (Mrs. T. J.) MAMIE MILES, (Mrs. J. L.) TEPIE C. SKINNER, Committee. Gives Details Of Farm Program Soil conservation grants of 15 or 20 million dollars probably will be paid North Carolina farmers this year under the new farm program. The exact amount, said Dean I. O. Schaub, of State College, will depend largely upon the number of farmers entering the program and the amount of land on which grants are to be paid. Although no contracts will be signed, as under the old AAA, farmers will be paid for devoting part of their land to soil-building or soil-conserving crops, he explained. The three major objectives of the soil conversation and domestic allotment act are: Conversation of the soil through wise use of the land. This will also check the overproduction of soildepleting crops. Re-establishment and maintenance of farm income at a "fair level." Protection of consumers by assuring adequate supplies of food, feed, and other farm commodities now and in the future. With the objectives, said the dean, the new program will have a broader significance than the old AAA, although it may not limit cash crops as effectively as was done before. Farmers who qualify for payments this year will be required to have an acreage of soil-conserving crops, or land devoted to some other conversation practice, equal to at least 20 per cent of the acres in soil- depleting crops. And he must not have an acreage of depleting crops this year greater than his base acreage for these crops. The bases and normal average yields for cotton, tobacco, and peanuts will be the same as established for under the old AAA. Bases for other depleting crops ""ii ho ronriroH nut on a fair and equitable basis by the Seciretary of Agriculture, Dean Schaub said. Cotton, tobacco, wheat, corn, peanuts, truck, and the like are classified as soil-depleting crops. Soil-conserving crops include forest trees, legumes, hays, and pasture grasses. Part of the soil conservation grant to each farm will be a moderate soil-maintenance payment, probably 75 cents an acre, on land planted to soil-Building or conserving crops. Fields already in these crops, and on which the crops are maintained in 1936, will qualify for these payments as well as fields where these crops are planted this year for the I A nnout | We take pleasure Mr. S. f will be in charge of 01 Monday, March 16th. Mr. Little comes to Wa ommended, and with experience on automol performing as it shoulc in and let Mr. Little cY glad to see you and you and remedy your car ti I GILI ( AUTC WARRENTON, N tu;nrntnniiiii:iiiiiii;iiii:;:i;ii;nii:i:: fHE WARREN RECOR (first time in several years. The other part of the grant will 1 be a diversion payment on land t shifted from depleting crops to soil- i ' building or conserving crops. A diversion payment of six cents c a pound on the average production a of land thus taken out of cotton t has been recommended. The recommended tobacco pay- ( ment is at least five cents a pound, but in no event less than the rate per pound on cotton. For peanuts, the recommended rate is 1 1-4 cents a pound, but t in no case less than 25 per cent of t the rate for cotton. i Diversion payments on other soil-depleting crops will bei fixed ? later, Dean Schaub stated. ( The maximum amount of cotton t land on which diversion payments c will be made for shifting to soilbuilding or conserving crops is 40 ? per cent of the base acreage. ^ The maximum diversion on which tobacco payments will be made is { 30 per cent of the base, and the ( maximum for peanuts is 20 per ( cent of the base, the dean pointed out. i XTrv noTrmonf will hfl j UIVCIOIUII |/ajntw?v ?? ? made on food and feed crops if the farmer, in diverting land in these crops to soil improvement, reduces his food and feed production below the amount needed on his farm. Running Farm Is Family Affair Running the (family business should be a cooperative enterprise, said Miss Pauline Gordon, extension specialist in home management at State College. A man is not protecting and providing for his family in the best way when he keeps all business transactions and worries to him- ! self, she stated. He needs the help of the family , circle and the members have a ' right to know something about his ' business. This is especially signifi- , cant in the case of a farm family. ; Not only can the family help the husband and father with his problems, they can also plan their own affairs more satisfactorily when they are aquainted with the family's business. The training young people get in this way will be of great value to them when they go out into the world, Miss Gordon added. Discussions of the cost of shelter, food, clothing education, travel, taxes, automobiles, and entertainment can be made a valuable part of the childen's education. Every family should study its income and so arrange its mode of living not to exceed that income. By working together, the farm family can often develope projects which will increase its income. The family council, in which all ? 1 iU/vl* Urtpf memoers poui mcu ucok Chas. E. Foster Civil Engineer, Surveyor Littleton, N. C. j j Help Kidneys ^ II poorly functioning Kidneys And | 9 Bladder make you suffer from Getting Up Nights. Nervousness, Rheumstio Pains, Stiffness, Burning. Smarting. Itching, or Acidity try the guaranteed Doctor's PrescriptionCystex(biss-tex) ?Must fix you up or money CySZCX back. Only 75/ at druggists. tcement I in announcing that ; ',4 l 5>. Little ir repair shop, effective ,rrem,on very highly rec17 years of mechanical jiles. If your car is not I, we invite you to come leek it over?He will be i can be sure he will find oubles. LAM > CO. ORTH CAROLINA >niin>i???mwmuwumiH?nnin??Kij D w' will lead to sounder decisions on] various problems and at the same toe help bind the family together n love and respect. If the family has no knowledge ? training in business transactions, he asked, what would happen if he husband should die? Care Of Chicks Shows In Hens The future success of the poulry flock depends a great deal upon he care and management of growng chicks in the spring. Give them proper care, said Roy 3. Dearstyne, head of the poultry iepartment at State College, and hey will grow into strong, vigor>us, profitable birds. Some of the fundamentals to ob;erve while the chicks are young vere pointed out as follows: Do not overcrowd. See that there ire not more than two chicks for ;ach square foot of floor space in he brooder house. Provide two half-gallon drlnkng founts for each 100 chicks. One !ive-foot mash hopper will be :nough for each 100 chicks during he first three weeks. From the age of three weeks intil they reach broiler size, each 100 chicks should have two mash loppers four inches high, six nches wide, and five feet long. Inadeauate feeding and drink ng facilities is one of the worst 'aults in poultry raising. Have adequately controlled ventilation. More chicks are killed or weakened by overheat than by shilling. Keep the feed hoppers filled with i well balanced mash. Aim to have the chicks consumng about equal parts of mash and scratch feed at the sixth week. Maintain rigid sanitation. Cull all slow developing chicks, rhese seldom "come through" and irove profitable. I When the weather permits, get Chati rUK IHb CUIN TO L T1 Is A Busin Occasionally tablish a business? have to increase his The truth of 1 vertise and increase limited amount of si who by the use of i times to the other fe ble nickle. The national!: are the best and lov big busy store that a ways the best and clNo one ever h great advertising ex] and follow-up literat ceries, clothing, dry ments, paints, wall pj But you do h goods of a mail-order that he believes he c hint why their prices it is because of the g out catalogues and < home throughout the The home n counteracting the 11 logues in taking busi By the use of soon educate the hoi everything he can to i not be done as quick advertising. Advertising is buyers would know o would be reduced to to increase their pric prices would mean i chants who have not of persistent advertis Meet your ad' the home folks every THE W the chicks out on the ground. A great deal of benefit Is gained from sunshine, green feed, and fresh air. Disease Checked By Ceresan Dust Two methods 01 controlling the damping-off disease In cotton are recommended by the State College agricultural extension service. One is to treat the seed with Cere san dust and the other is to keep the seed in storage for two years before planting it, said Dr. Luther Shaw, extension plant pathologist. The disease is caused by a number of organisms, some of which live over the winter in the lint on cotton seed, he said, but it seems they cannot live on the seed much longer than one year. Sometimes the organisms are in the soil. When the land is infected, Ceresan dust treatments give the most effective control, he explained. for enough dust will cling to the lint to protect the seed and young plants through the seedling stage. Weather conditions favorable to to occur early in the season, Dr. damping off disease is more likely Shaw stated, and for this reason cotton planted a little later than usual will stand a better chance of avoiding the disease. Three ounces of two per cent Ceresan dust will dust a bushel of seed. It may be obtained from any of the larger seed houses for about 75 cents a pound. A discarded churn, a feed mixer, a home-made barrel duster, or a nrvm m ornl o 1 frAflflnff mn/?hinp tnav VVUUilVtVU** V* VMUWQ be used as a container. Pill the container half full of seed, put in the right amount of dust, then agitate it briskly for five or tan minutes. J Store the seed in a bag or bin until ready for planting. If the dust has been mixed thoroughly with the seed, it will give a good form of protection, Dr. Shaw said. s on Adver SERVATION OF LO( -OCAL BUSINESS FI Published By hIE WARREN RECOR Tk at Ten 't Wnrth A iVOO A IAU V AOAB % V V I Worth Patronizing? we see a man in business?a who says he does not advertii prices if he did. the matter is that the merchs his volume of sales must incre ;uff he. sells and charge mori egular advertising turns his How's once. It is simply the < f advertised brands of goods, ^est priced products that we advertises and draws trade fo leapest place to trade, and ha ears it said of the big mail-or penditures in sending out mi ure, including large monthly goods, shoes, furniture, hai aper, etc., made them charge i ear just the opposite. Ask ai house why he patronizes then loes a little better in the way 1 4-1-4-U A 1AAn1 ofr art; luwci tiiau me i\jv,cki otv. rreat amount of business they )ther advertising mtatter regi i country. ewspaper affords the only ade-pulling influence of th< ness away from your home c< regular space in the local pa me folks to appreciate the ii serve them to the very best of ly and successfully in any ot the economic factor of busi] f the exceptional values offer almost nothing. Merchants 1 :es in order to remain in bi 'ewer buyers and business fa taken the time to study and ung. vertising competition in our i week. ARREN RE FRIDAY, MARCHa^ i jap4n?eoit D^,HAm AND SCALP ITS A SCALf MOIClJf* I ^Ul. FmiTWOW! A, ; ?1 I Wrrt. tar rati -n, ' I T>? H?lr." Mrtlwm R??*JV?P liiiiil theatre I "The Haliwar Has the Shows" I LITTLETON, N. C. I WEEK OF MARCH 23 I Monday-Tuesday I j I (All Slows 10-35c) I i I Clark Gable, Charles Laugh- I I ton, Franchot Tone I "Mutiny On The Bounty"! I I Two shows daily, 3:15-8:15 I II Wednesday I I (All Shows 10-30c) I Edmund Lowe - Karen I Morley I I "Thunder In The Night" II Prosperity Night I | Thursday - Friday I (All shows 10-25C) I Jane Withers II "Paddy O'Day" I 11 Added Short: "Major Bowes' I 11 Amateurs" I Saturday il (Continuous Shows 1:15 on) I 11 "Man From Guntown" 11 with Tim McCoy Chapter No. 11, Tom Mix in "The Miracle Rider" Adm: 1:15 to 5:30: 10c-15c 5:30 on 10-25c =7 tismg :al business rms d idvertising .ctually trying to esse because he would int who does not ad:ase his prices on the ; than the merchant goods three or four )ld story of the nimwith few exceptions, can buy today. The r miles around is al,s always been so. der houses that their illions of catalogues supplements on gro dware, farm implemore for their goods. riy farmer who buys i and he will tell you of price. If y?u as^ >res, he will tell you do through sending llarly to every farm effective means of , I jse mail-order cata- I immunity. iper a merchant can I let that he is doing I his ability. This can- I her manner than by ness. Without it few ed and the turnover would be compelled H isiness, and higher tilure to those mer learn the real value H lewspaper?Talk to im :cord i
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 20, 1936, edition 1
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