Barren Eecorfo , e A r" • '' ' S jBSi RlP f I N RAH S True Economy 1 tu ' . .in i ijiii t S Li 11 "iiimeiited editoriaih 'in 1 • ut Kionuitn .n its ia>t Friday edition Impressed with it reasoning we decided to opy much of it and had actually run -idered o new lead i ti'se premises leads to false con clusions when we discovered that section of the ;Mper placed in our car could not tx- found Someone had advanced ihe idea that the destruction caused by the recent tornados *n North and South Carolina would ac tuallv stimulate the economy This premise was based on the idea that broken windows, for in stance, would have to be replaced and this would riot only ' ,ii t'111 p 11■ > nit-rit t arpeti t**i ^ 'jut t< manufacturer^ "t t lhe State pointed <>ut that the 11 uikiip'. does not work that wav Instead tht* person whose windows were broken would 'iave tu >peiul all tht moiiev he "ould raise to repair his house and thus would not have an> ::ione\ to bu> shoes, and other necessities and thus Una1 business would be destroved l'ti.it was the gist of the paper s rebuttal, and there was much more We comment to the limited extent we have under the idea that half a loaf ma> beat no loaf Abstracts Are Printed Warren (. uunt\ histor\ buffs will be interested to IVarn of the recent publication b\ a Rock\ Mount historian of a 253-page volume Abstracts of the Early Deeds of Franklin County. North Carolina, 1779-1797." Franklin Count} was formed in 1779 when Bute County was abolished and divided into Franklin and Warren counties The early deeds of the count) were recopied in 1802 and 1803. but are not in chronological or der The volume contains abstracts of the first seven deed buoks Aii introduction by genealogist Hugh Buckner Johnston and an early map of the county prepar ed b> cartographer Garland V Stout are included in the volume The names in the book are in capital letters and are indexed The cloth-bound volume is avail able for $22.50 from Joseph "'at son at 406 Piedmont Avenue, Rocky Mount, N. C. 27801 All books must be postpaid North Carolina residents should add a three percent state sales tax and a 11 percent county sales tax Worth Quoting The Charlotte Observer publishes in each of its Sunday papers a column headed Ob servations. a collection of notable quotes." The quotes collected each week are com piled by Fid Williams, Observer Associate Editor From the issue of Sunday, April 22, we select two quotes, On Praying In Public," and The Limits of Government." They follow On Praying In Public Editor K G. Puckett in the Biblical Recorder, journal of the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina, on a scene at a fast-food restaurant One man seated near me was typical of many in the place at that time of the morning. He was neat, clean and well-shaven but dressed casually He was definitely not the banker, lawyer, doctor, minister type I do not know his name or what he does for his living He arranged his food on the table, neatly organized for consumption Then he bowed his head and closed his eyes I assumed he was praying No one told hin to pray; no one told him he couldn't. He seemed oblivious to the presence of others around him; he didn't know I was there or was observing. . As I drove to my appointment through a small monsoon that hit Raleigh that morning, I reflected on what I had witnessed . With so much talk about prayer in public these days, my impression is that here is a man who has found the answer He doesn't talk about it; he just does it' The IJmiU Of Government < nlumnlsl Robert J. Sarmwison in Newsweek: Few would contest government s responsibilities to alleviate hardship and poverty, though people argue over how much and where An economic system that cavalierly dis cards anyone it can't use isn't much as a social system The welfare ethic grafted onto capitalism during the Depression has eased poverty and insecurity Without Social Security payments, roughly 50% of the over 65 population would be counted as poor" compared with only about 15% after Social Security But what started as an effort to aid capitalism's worst casualties and reduce its most crushing insecurities has turned into a broader belief that any unwanted economic change deserves to be protected against or compensated We are now learning that this quest for absolute security is both futile and self-defeating. Domestic price controls couldn't keep oil prices low in the mid-1970s, because low prices stimulated demand and increased imports of high-priced oil The effort to deny change, by causing individuals and firms to delay adapting on their own, often makes the ultimate change more traumatic Do we really help auto-workers by protecting them against imports if protection leads to higher wages and a less competitive industry0 Politicians do not want to admit the limits of government power, because the whole post-Depression political enterprise is to soothe in security But what insecurities can, or should, government soothe9. By evading issues that almost everyone senses are there, politics feeds our anxieties 25 Years: A State Twenty-five years a state as of .January 3, 1984, Alaska boasts the largest national parks, refuges and forests in the country, totaling 150 million acres, National Geographic says. The Alaskan territory was purchased from Russia for $7.2 million in 1867 Fenre Isn't A Platform As I see the Helms and Hunt TV ads, both are standing on a fence trying to convince us it's a plat form Billy Arthur in Chapel Hill Newspaper A sculptor's r-'iditiiiii of Keesr n: lli^hl is arfi-ii bv the < riituries-old oaks drap»-d with Spanish moss at the Krookyrt'rn (Amicus lot atcd midua) be tvu-cn Myrtle Beach and (.corti- inwii "s ( lhe burdens will he featured in Mosek Personal next week Mat! I'hoto Mostly Personal Visiting South Carolina IH BH.NAU. JONKS l'he family, (irate Howard. Ann anil I. loft Warren ton shortly after ■ a m Friday bound for Myrtle Beach. South Carolina, on our first trip of the spring It had been more than 50 years since my last trip to the famous South Carolina beach, and the first trip for both Grace and Ann Howard had often visit ed tins beach Grace, who always furnishes transporta tion for these family trips, said that she had figured that the shortest way from Warren'on to Myrtle Beach was by Louisburg. So we turned off just south of Louis bur^ for Bunn, Selma and Smithfield in Johns ton County, by way of the Bentonulle Battle ground. From there we continued southeast to Clinton in Sampson County, the largest county in North Carolina, stretching j<) miles on*- way and .!5 another, for a total of %:i square miles This we learned Monday from a reference book in the of fice. Sampson Countv my reference said is only a few miles smaller than Rhode Island Clinton is the home of Lauch Fatrdoth. Democratic candidate for Governor of North Carolina, who had said recently in a Raleigh meeting that while Sampson County produces a lot of toba< co, that tobacco oiu\ represents a third of its farm income From Clinton we went to Elizabethtown, to Whiteville where we ate lunch From White ville we went to Tabor City to I,oris. South Carolina, only a short distance from Myrtle arrived in the middle of the afternoon and soon found quarters for the night As soon as we had found our rooms, we went to Captain Juel's Hurricane Restaurant at Ijttle River overlook ing an inlet for a fish supper and salad. After dinner we rode to Calabash, a settlement on the edge of North Carolina where scores of restaurants and mer cantile specialty houses re located (>n the front of many restaurants were -its.s ;»J\ till the -nr 1.x11|i > on i an I'.it fin ><' (i»e restau rant adwtised shrimp fur jo All Mm can cat. :i" ngei appeals In Uli : a that I an: a seniOt ' it:/en We >ti ippt'ii : 11 lint* i a t h e r ta i" g i' conglomeration of in dividual stores, where stuffed annuals, pic turt's, and many other gifts were on display -I thought the stuffed ani mals uere rather at tractive arid became separated from the family while I wandered through several stores. Finally Howard came up to me and said that one of the stores was selling G A Henty books, and he thought I might want to bu\ one for Charles White I read several Henty books as a boy, but they were not my favorite, but I had learned several months ago when a friend sent me a Henty book. that t'harles still likes to read them My favorite adventure books as a child and teenager were Alger books, Frank and Dick Merrill, the ( astle rnen Series, The Hover Roys, Tom Swift, and several others 1 went to the store where I not only found a Henty book, hut a copy of The Hover Boy s, On Hoard Ship" and a book written by Booth Tarkington There were many other old volumes, hut the three were all the books that I wanted at the moment I have not had time yet to set* if they still have any appeal to me Much of the day the sky had been overcast, and it was sprinkling when we returned to our rooms For many years we have visited the beach at least once a year Although it has been many years since we have (x*en in swim ming, but we have en joyed walking on the beaches at night But we did not Friday night be cause of the rain However we were pret ty tired after riding most of the day, and went to bed early The next morning we were up early and ate breakfast in the motel restaurant The others ate pancakes, but I set tli'i 1 t'j>i i ggs. bacon a:;d t ilt I ill; glad I ilnl. '■at 1 tlMiiilit 'tiii' grits ui'i r ttii' best tti.it I ha\ c I'UT eatell \t tei i niinu, ,11 >inid Myrtle Beact where I c; t•.111> impressed by its sl/• ■. we managed In reach a beach where we stietched our legs for Mime time l'hen vse headed fur Brookgreen Gardens billed as \ meriea s most beautiful sculpture gar den, with its beautiful giant live oak trees, its flowering plants, and magnificent lawns Monday morning before 1 could write any account of our two-day trip, I had to read a number of papers that had accumulated over the weekend 1 noticed with much pleasure as I read Pete Hulth's column in The Smith field Herald, that he had devoted half of his column to the Brookgreen Gardens, which he visits every year I shall quote freely from his column in next week's column On this trip, Howard carried his camera, took mi pictures on the first day, hut several in the Hardens, and later at Georgetown Several of the pictures taken m Brookgreen Gardens will be used in this ar ticle. and others in next week's column Cancer Crusade Is Said Off To Good Beginning The Warren County I ancer ( rusade is off to • i good start, according to Mary I) Williams, chairman The first report from volunteer workers on April 27 in dicates that $1,200 was collected, a little more than 25 percent of the 1H84 goal Mrs Williams will receive reports on May 4 and May 11 at the ( orn muruty Center on Franklin Street in Warrenton from noon to 4 p m We are hoping to have all kits turned in by May 11." the chairman said this week We are really trying to help find a cure for this killer, cancer Letter To The Editor Lawmaker Is Thanked I u Uit hdltol I want tu publicly IJiank Kep h rank Ballance Jr Vtarren Halifax and Martin counties • for fus sup port and leadersfup role in correcting an unfair situation in automobile insurance I'he insurance industry had been cfiarging people excessive!* for one speeding ticket even though they tiad an other wise safe driving record no points in a tfiree year period With Representative Ballani.es support and leadership role we were able to get a law passed stopping this unfair practice N .t you fiave iiu traffic offelLses for a period of ".cars and rei eive a speeding ticket of 111 mile ur or less, vout rates will not go up l'his . es not however, apply if the speeding isin a si ' me l'his new law will save North ( arolini. inilliotLs of dollars on then auto insurance bill l'lie insurance companies argued that it would cause auto in suralice rates tt go up generally But as a result of the hearings my office held in Nuu'inbei. l'Jtt3. auto liability insurance rates will not increase one ;..cn ny Physical damage rates, which include collision and coinprehensive. w ill actually drop It is because of support like Representative Ballance s ttLat North i arohna has according to a I I'I article January l'.W the 4th lowest auto rates in Vmeru a Again. 1 wish publicly thank Representative Ballaiu c !oi lie pit.,- t.. fight f.x the people of North ( arohna JOHN INC,'AM i 'ommissiontT of Insurance News Of Yesteryear Looking Back Into The Warren Record MAY 5. 1944 Ktfurls art- bt'ii... mailt' to have 250 German prisoners brought to Warren County tu work on farms and at sawmills, Hob Bright, county agent, >aid yesterday Kdward Price Grant, son of Mrs Mary Kleanor Price Grant, of Warrenton has been commissioned as a warrant officer This was a direct appointment in the field and in the war zone Mr and Mrs. Vivian Shearin entertained the faculty of Macon High School at a dinner Sunday with Mr and Mrs John Rodgers of Warrenton, Mr and Mrs R J Parrish, Mesdames I^auren lA>ete, Helen S Moore, Misses Carrie Brame, Emily Milam. Irene Litham. Marjorie Rice of Macon at tending May 1. 1959 The Rev Kdward l>aurence Baxter, 44, of I-ake City, Penn. has accepted a call as rector of Em manuel Episcopal Church in Warrenton, effective No\ ember 1 ( V Whitford was nominated for president of the Warrenton Ijons Club for the coming year at a regular meeting of the club held on Friday night at Hotel Warren Mr and Mrs. Butler Jones of near Warrenton have recently moved to their new home, formerly owned by Mr and Mrs Paul Bobbitt on Snipes Street May 2, 1974 Charles Alston Hayes, 27, a native of Norlina, has been named by Warren County commissioners as county manager and industrial director and will lake office in July Richard Holtzmann, Jr., son of Mr and Mrs Richard Holtzmann of Norlina, has been named state winner of the Conservation of Natural Re sources 4-H Project Bruce Bell, Macon postmaster, was this week named Postmaster of the Year by his fellow post masters in Warren County I' Mil IMI ITU \l tMVKKTISKMKNTi ELECT JOYCE D. ODOM Warren County Board Of Education Democratic Primary May 8, 1984 Your Vote For Quality Education Will Be Appreciated