I ACCURATE, TERSE I TIMELY XXXVI MMHT toiKTUFFICE SITE I UU1 peed For Standard Oil I Property Has Been For yarded To Washington pETAIL s not known I The government has purchased j lib; standard Oil Company prop sty opposite Hotel Warren for the BLpose of erecting a post office at ffarrenton. it was learned yesterday bm t. 0. Rodwell. who drew the deed and forwarded it to WashingI Hie property was offered the! government several weeks ago by I the oil company at a price of $12, dW, and since that time government officials have been here to test the soil to determine if it came up to requirements. No definite details in regard to J the time construction of the new) b..iwinr will commence are avail-1 able here; however, P. G. Seaman, iriu has been operating a service station there mider lease for several months, vacated the property on Tuesday night, and the presumption is that work will begin at an early date. Littleton Methodist To Have Revival Beginning Easter Sunday night, April 12. and running through the following Sunday night, a revival meeting will be held at the Littleton 51. E. Church, S, with a sermon by a different guest preacher each night at 8 o'clock, the Rev. W. T. Phipps, pastor, announced this reel The schedule to be carried out is given by the Rev. Mr. Phipps as fallows: Monday. Rev. J. O. Long of Weldm; Tuesday, Rev. W. C. Wilson of Sorlina; Wednesday, Rev. O. I. Hinscn of Warrenton; Thursday, Stv. J. J. Boone of Roanoke lipids; Friday, Rev. E. B. Fisher of Roanoke Rapids. A special Easter service will be held at 11 o'clock Easter Sunday moming. A cordial invitation is extended by the minister to all the services. State Exams To Be Given Next Week The North Carolina State seventh grade examinations will be given on Thursday. April 9, in all the schools ol the county, Supt. J. Edward Alloa stated this week. This date is sot by the state, he said. On the day preceding these exultations teachers of the county till meet here to receive instructcns. M. E. Conference To Rp Hal rl A*. A/I I-V a. IV1U ril ITlflLUll Hie Second Quarterly Confer?* for the Warrenton Charge ? be held at Macon next Satur% April 4, at 11 a. m., the Rev. 0-1. Hinson announced this week. Dr. J. M. Culbreth will preach in "ie Warrenton Methodist Church Sunday night at 8 o'clock, the Rev. to- Hinson said. | named on committee Chapel Hill, March 31?The Inte-Praternity Council and InterI Dormitory Council at; the Univer|to arrange for the pntpw-ommont. feculty, students and guests at ifitv n?0nd annual Student-Fac. ay to be held here Wednes^ April 8. ^'teemen on the InterfeT?5' Council are: Albert ElCounC]i. Bern- President of the Heart T, H'cks, Rocky Mount; KB w yant' Pineville; Earl Con^ ^ B?nd' *r. ?man maimer of HookerN c-? a native of Warren coun t''*as a visitor in Warrenton yesan'i while here visited the J..16 of The Warren Record. Mr. ?* was accompanied to our .** hy a. b. Alderman, candidate k ,Slate Superintendent of PubHtst ion who was at the seat of Warren in the inter his candidacy. i services at aroola BetkilW services will be held at Church, Areola, on thej tt'cWv Sunday afternoon at 3 j Bleste annoimce?ent was made WAR! She "Showed 'Em" COLUMBIA, Mo. . . . She is an exquisite blonde. She is an Arts and Science student at the University of Missouri. Her name is Miss-Louise Carroll . . . and they've crowned her the Tiger's most beautiful co-ed. 'Happy' Plummer Freed When Jury n itT . /^i *1. oays rNot utility William Henry (Happy) Plummer, Warrenton negro, was found not guilty when he was tried in Recorder's court Monday on a charge of possessing whiskey for the purpose of sale. The indictment was drawn against him upon order of the solicitor when Willie Williams, negro, wiio accuses Plummer of robbing him of around $20, testified in court that he became intoxicated off of booze he bought from Plummer. The original warrant against Plummer charged him with larceny but when the case came up in Recorder's court two weeks ago tire evidence disclosed that the case was beyond the jurisdiction of Recorder's court and it was remanded to magistrate's court where the indictment was changed to highway robbery and placed on the Superior court docket. Williams testified that he got drunk at the home of Plummer, that he had slightly more than $19 with him at the time, that he got t-?'1 ? ? -J /n+V* a** rx AfrrA in riummer miu tuiubuci ui/giu i?.?>?. | crops had been placed in various | groups and that the first group, such as corn, cotton, tobacco and 1 peanuts, were called , depleting crops, while such crops as hay, beans and peas were put into a group called conserving crops. I "You get paid 5 cents a pound up to 35 per cent, of the base for all cotton acreage reduced; 1 1-4 cents a pound up to 20 per cent, of the 1 base for all acres of peanuts reduced, and 5 cents a pound up to 30 Der cent, of the base for all reduction of tobacco," Floyd said. BANK PRESIDENT RETURNS R. T. Watson, president of the Citizens Bank, and Mrs. Watson returned to their home at Warrenton this week after spending six weeks in Florida. \ MOST OF THE NEWS ALL THE TIME NUMBER 14 I PAn TkDAfD A M TA ouil rnuuiuuu iu BE EXPLAINED Mass Meeting of Farmers To Be Held At Court House Saturday Afternoon FERGUSON IS SPEAKER B. Troy Ferguson, of the extension department at State College, Raleigh, will be the speaker at the mass meeting of farmers at the court house at Warrenton on Saturday afternoon. April 4, at 3 o'clock, when the new soil-conservation, soil-building and soil-depleting program will be explained to the growers of this county. Every farmer in Warren is urged to attend the meeting and hear the new program explained in detail, said County Agent Bob Bright yesterday. By BOB BRIGHT uouniy agem The soil conservation program will be in force for the year 1936 and producers may divert as much as 35 per cent of their cotton base and receive 5c per lb. for the diversion. In the case of tobacco, a producer may divert as much as SO per cent of his base and receive 5c per lb. for the diversion. Under the soil conservation program a farm will have two bases. A soil conserving or soil building base and a soil depleting base. To qualify for payment a producer must have 20 per cent or more of his soil depleting base in soil conserving or soil building crops. Soil depleting crops are cotton, tobacco, corn, wheat, and other cash crops or feed harvested. Soil conserving crops are crops plowed in as green manure. Soil building crops are classified as crops plowed in that improve the soil from the standpoint |of pflant | food. Clover plowed in, vetch plowed in, lespedeza plowed in, and other legumes plowed in. For plowing under crops the producer will receive payment in addition to his payment for diverting crops. This payment cannot exceed $1.00 per acre if the payment is greater than $10.00, but in the case of small farmers the payment may be greater than $1.00 per acre. X understand (hat terracing will be an approved practice and land owner or cash renter may receive payment for having his land ter raced. This program should he a wonderful help to farmers and I sincerely hope they will take advantage of It. Local Students Made Members Beta Club Miss Margaret Capps of Areola and Miss Myrtice Strickland of Warren Plains have been made members of the Beta Club, an honorary society recently formed at the John Graham High School, announcement was made in the auditorium of the school yesterday morning during the Good Citizenship program which was held to award medals to Virginia Weldon, Leonard Daniel and Raymond Modlin, who had been voted the three outstanding members of the senior class. The medals, given by the Warrenton chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, stand for Service, Loyalty, Attitude, Leadership and Scholarship. Bruce Howell Dies At Weldon Bruce Howell, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Howell of Weldon, formerly of Warrenton, was buried Wednesday afternoon following funeral services conducted from the Methodist church In Weldon. It was reported here that he died following an attack of Influenza which gradually took his strength. In addition to his mother and father, he Is survived by one brother, Grover, and two sisters, Mrs. J. A. Ross, and Miss Annie Sue Howell. The Howell family moved from wtuicillAm auvub tuicc jcaio ogv. RECOVERING Friends of Miss Lula McCraw Gay will be glad to learn that she is recovering from an operation for appedicitis at the Roanoke Rapids hospital, where she was carried on Saturday while on a visit to her grandmother, Mrs. E. C. Price. She was accompanied to Roanoke Rapids by Mrs. Mary Eleanor Grant and Miss Martha Reynolds Price.