uanisffl-COUNTY RZCC3r ' tl t;J'.tM I f V., . ,lr rT''', ' ' "''V,- i V vivVV", - i f0 JA. .-'S;1' r r 'I Established Jim , ' ! i :r?tf Ih-h I L Vr.t n I f v: . ' j ""n '" , '"-'j r I' "T'Ti ' jj. !l li V f PuWKi" J 'TWICE A WL2KTWsday atid Fridays. ua -.w. Kll.t..1 Inn 4ft. 1001. . r rr FiLNCHBK9AU news Consolidated nor. s, ;.wJ TWICE A WL2KTu8day imd Friday. fell 'i.'Jt4' i J UU1M THE feSTABLiSrtEb NEWSPAPER' OF MADISON j COUNTY ' 1 4 F I y 4 you xxix sl ; 1 Sfs . i ' f i fin 'i I. tt-1 -i's. b- xunrirora in overv cmrairv inine"'4:!V- n . " .11 1 . ." w v . " mi... -- . 17-' WHY THE WORLD TODAY n;A S NO GREAT LEADER ' ,1' r If One Should Appear, Would '' The PeopKe' Quit . Jatzmg : and Stock GainJblinfltitoPay H Heed to His Wise Counsel? By JOSEPHUSr'biNlieLS f In the Newt an; Ob?erer - , WANTED: A'VWo?'?fV', ; big roanJ-whoA nndertundt I' world problibf!r ' ' pose practical , roniodie, ,'Uno who hai'tho qualitie that capture the. enthuriatin. of ' h!: fellow, tho e1oiunc or lm. part faith in a drifting genera tion, and the courage to riik all in the adventure for under standing and peace. t innffine desire and deep need of the peoples of the earth to- Hav could be compressed into a sin- o-lo want adveYtisemeni, vo " . ... , iL. Kmra , t ,l. .v,riinu nf what is wouia De in . sorely wanting and what mankind is hoping to secure. For generations people have been saying: "The man tv,o occasion always meet, or "When there is need of a great man, he is always near ai -the Ship of State and steer it into e Snip 01 oww - . safe harbor." Faith in a man 1 is ;,ioness and has horn in tne w been strengthened by reading Car gyle's "Heroes and Hero Worship. Many spent their lives without full effort and steadfast purpose, waiting for some great leader who will show them what to think and where to go Theyshave a sublime faith that at the appointed time some miracle! worker will appear on the scene and v . avinili nower attract all men to the course tU leads to hap-1 piness. and j.ro8perity,r w , fairies, and to follow the great bad- when he emerges, but it ojaden inf to personal effort to sit W waiting Ws PlvinDMJ 19 THERE NO WORLD EADE1" . Not long agoi upon returning rfront Enrdpe, Nicholas Mdrray- Butler Stated at or first time on n f .a . the world iiad no great leader. That sensational state St as; not d bu rjJ general acquiescence in the stated St Dr: Butler was doubts, re ferring to a leader in the uuhhc do. Snot inh. arena of business or acienU though , even there, nobody A risen to equal the aged Rocke feller in business, or the growing old Edison in sconce, or Gary indus try, though Ford is esteemed even ,nore of a success in individual achievement. A little while ago, not SLingbftheorWWarflgure Lenin bestrode -the. millions in Rus Sd W haiftd-:by .bis. followers as tne apostle -of order tf civ. n.P His death left no nuh Unt successor in Russia because Trotzky M been banished in fear ttj. mantle. M.,.MiTii still rides hooted and Mussolini kark.of IUlians,'.i- . -ot , Tengthened by an agreemwith Se Popi and the rigid censorship and me fvv r .v,i.t he maln - tfutocrahc sway - tains.himself. Butnoma tmderstandingly .J lieves Sovietism in Russia or I, Bhlrted Fascism - oned ed a man ... r.ri.f.. -ri. Peter the ureat vr " . wlth "te! . will oermanent - S accept autocracy under the form , doe8 put the soft ped- 5 communistic. creeds or that a, on family r0ws, church !Lsm in Italy will become perma-J , 8quabble8 scandals not Cnt They war with liberty U ... giving principles, and J fhlnk to speak, to own the such matters df minor im- J f W. labor, and Wl VPortance as ' wil 1 -j adjust onW unano . yiaion is broader - - s',, but who is hamper" SnaUsm., .The inability to .w - nuu" . T . 111.. t.i in and unemploymen. - MftcDon rrSanqJestio;; leaves MacDon- HJovert inability to make his Farm Srd ' ie ieve agricultural disteess. invifpil internaui inviteo. , the.di- SrUr,." "- ,,tl world leaderthip' nas nu pected world iea; f, ' ? no remedysugCESTED - With more tb.a-WQQ.Q0O willing .. . 1. " . 1 n 4-liA vain for work, no man ; who com mands the ear of even his country, not to speak-of -the' world, . has a remedy. With almost every nation spending twice as much for war pur poses; as .in 414 noDoay present more than a good gesture wwaru an end of large ' armies and costly navies. With the Filipinos aesinng a voice in their government and, In dia and Egypt' and otner countries ripfaieri lf-ieterrainatIo'n; :wlat rul er has a'pollcy'ldokfng toward better things? k Who has'"practicaf(vsionfc would People follow? ti, a 1 a t 1m H pra - whose voices rose v. ---"i 1: i r-. ..v .. ft above the din and made tnemseives hfeard 'td the' remotest ends' of the e4rth were Clemenceau, Wilson and Lloyd George., The -first two are dead, Clemenceau defeated after he had saved France, and Wilson after his covenant of peace had been re jected by the Senate, and Lloyd George, who did more to win the war nnv other European, lingers in Parliament as the. leader of a dis- . minority of a once dom if J nnrtv. He is still the most inpnt nartv. He is brilliant of all Britonyrut his iorm er achievements give him little prestige. His later career illustrates the saying, "How soon we are for ont" .even while in the flesh. Was it ' not because the world fell from un I selfishness and idealism that caused tne people to turn ft leadership of """ . , i aTWi xv- 1 to turn hack from its j..no .tmiism. normalcy ana UUlIlltoo, wj... ' ... fr himself" and "an eveijr. end of visionary dreams' as tne mul titude called Wilson's covenant? COULD A LEADER BE HEARD? I? there should arise today a Washington, a Jefferson, a Lincoln, a Wilson, would the American peo ple arise out of their money-grabbing and fliwering and lack of ideal- j tn either or aH of ism aiiu mows 7 n. t the iariron of ; iaas and fthe ,byi:n5.a2f nal hurry and coniusion anu tion in little things or new, things, could a truly great man make him-, self heard above the hubbub, and, if ! heard, would his, leadership De ac cepted? Dr. Eliot, not long Deiore w AiA thought not. i He wrote to saw a friend that the trouble was not only a lack of leaders, but equaiiy . io.v of followers ready to hold up the hands of a great leader fight ing for a rigfttequa cause. WHEN HE WILL APPEAR Tf Carlvle was right, a leader will aimear., but not, until the people have fully recovered rom the back-wash of war and are ready to come ou ua thfl loworounds of making a god of pleasure and lucre. . It is as much tha fault of a faithless and gadding populace, as of the strong men, that this decade for the first time in an EDITORS ARE HUMAN When a doubtful situa- tion arises in a town it is 'tiultKthe fashion t'te-f mnrk that "the paper , T h , era.ge dtizftn'- , h quJte , certain., he .. li ..u mowartstrter could run a newspaper better than the editor does; and if he were pub lisher of that sheet he d show 'em, you bet ': As a ( matter of fact, u . he nas , norse ocnoc ' . . , liaf the edi-' fen hog : nnrsp Heiiac 11c themselves wun w?"" , - , - ' -JP?fiiM T ivnB-jf newof'" . f, ought not ta, expect the J - . Mom j t n w 1 ! "r.r w.Tt .nv rrnn- osition which: he ihimself ? hasn't the courage to sup- port or assail over his own Z signature. ..... ... , . 1 . - tia d tor is' wuungi t uc vu.w. '.a' t.rt rtiish am' oiiectin the public into tO" pull" cnciuuu v-" , .fir fftr individuals or mi jjf wornem in eveijr vvuimj vw i world, except France, looking in n0TitJe8.-Sdlected:' - . ; ;-V.:: MARSHALL N.C., "TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, And Sf&s Out of hundred years, has no great man When he comes he will' not preach the easy way, but point to stJfe heitrhts and invite folks to try their muscles as they follow him to . ... . . , ..-it heights of practical idealism. ' How long before that day come? ' Automobile Ac- x cidents Increase . Duiinlp; Xar Washinirtoh. t. C Deaths, as the result of automobile ac cidents in the United 1 States J..-;.1-..' 1A4A ...HI i.nnn). Viol I UUUIl Ai7tVf Will J.cvi vi appaliinsr total of 36,00b, or approximately 10 per day, ac v i , , cording to estimates jjist ; made by the American Motorists Aaanriat.ion. ' i . The estimates are based on t ill . v ICOME OH OOWM -i YOU tOMT -JK UlM , V f )5aSTJi . : 1U 11 1 -V?L You R.B. MAKiN.V ' MiA-Jl iSaf' .... ,,1111 In I I li -III NT.wSIUtfA- ' !' . lJ 1 1 1 VI i v : 'jfPj i a preliminary survey for the So every evening after his first six" months of; this year, bath he wotlld sit by his" up which. shows that there has ' ,w innw and aniff the been aft increase of 9 per cent ! ...(Akiln nfollflAd nvW' in auiumumic xMUwv, the corresponding penoa 01 " . 1 . Jr "A4, 4-V,a noma roto nf in vAI, 111 DWt&A AMW ') creasefor! the 'entire year of 1930, it will jmean'that a total of 36,035 ' persons will meet liheir death as the result of au tomobile accidents, represent- ing an increase of 2,975 over! the" 1929 traffic toll which was. 33,060," , declares J. Borton Weeks, President of the A. M. A. . ,;The greatest numoer 01 T . " a . cidents,' accoramu; 10 rcyui . made to the Uepartmenw 01 Commerce, is." between' 5 and 6 o'clock, during the motor vethe - hide s traffic movement r home ward. The next most dan gerous period of the day is be-j tween 7 and 8 p. m while Sun day is the most dangerous ly of the week, due, of course, to the increased use of automo - biles on that - day, the . State - menlr. concludes! - t '- Scottish Rite News. t Reach DH) YOU EVER STOP TO THINK? EDSON R. WAITE Shawnee, Oklahoma ; Yoshio Nkobe, Editor of the Japan Times arid Mail (To kyo), Says: "In this old world of ours vou' have to irive value for what 'you receive or you will be placed in the embarrassing position of the broiled eel shop-keeper of old Tokyo; "Movt fn a hrnilpH oel ahOTJ i 1 - of Tokyo lon? ago there mov- r , - th if t , ho ioved tee : .11 j.v.j j.i:n. 'kinnni smells of tnis aencacy oerag cooked. ' ! - I'lT 1 rance of the brj?iied eels ! ' - - - . . . . .1 I ich rose to nis nostnis. 'Now after about a year of I this sort of thing, the eel shop keeper, who was an avaricious fellow, presented a' bill 6ne fine morning to his neighbor to the following purport : Tor sniffing 33,769 eels being broiled at so many one hundredth of a Mon, total due so many pieces . of gold-' "The sniffer of cooked eels, without turning a hair, imme- ! 'diately unlocked his strong hox. - counted out . the gold . . them.fa . hMnWnsc ! edt F6r the smell of yourels I pay you with" the sound of i' . . f 1 my money. . ' r$o Wat waa that,t nii Mama, look at the quaint. jOihionedL: 1- "Yes. dear. .. .. . ."But, - Mama, what are ta.se .annj ! seams running up me . , cn?" 1 "TTush: dear, dt quiet out rt JTk. Pitader, . jl9SQ' By Albert T. RetJ The Grape Industry The Federal Farm Board is aiding the grape industry in securing transportation f acili tieef to fering that iuitlto mar ket. The new Prohibition Commissioner recently issued a statement saying that the home- wihe-makei would not interfered with, providing that I he did not try to sell any ,of his makings. :. ' When 'prbhibition was made the law, of the land the' Cali f nrnia flnH Rantfirti nwrlers of I grape vineyards protested grape vineyaras proiesieu loualy and vikoroualy and de: , UoiCU uiai, wicjr nuuiu uv. . d But they weren't. ' iBtelieire It Or Kot-- It's True ' j im imi. NEWS-RECORD LOST : AD. FINDS DOG BEFORE" 'PRINTED So far as we know, the News-. Record breaks the record in quick results from a want or lost advertisement. In ten min utes from the time the owner plsced his ad. about a dog that had been lost four or five weeks, h had the dog, had paid the $5. reward and was on his way re joicing. -It came about in this ways A gentleman from Weav man fmm WMT. ' ' .... ...... kT - , 11 7 v into 'the News- Recoild office Monday and placed a "Last Ad.'' onenng ao.uu ...re-; MM jihi. j-ft id.. wuavv . a, v . - fT Am' sWiri-nt SFallll Ttkm . ' , , , v.v v.4 ward for a dog which had Wn lost somV'four or! flv weeks. . .. A !4.1. f tW. a, . : J 1.1. '.J v.. . ,A - giveui anu wa u. w w ruh ' four Issues. '.The ?ad. was' Immediately taken, back to the prmteT.tColetnaaCaldweu; to . be set. - As soon as the descnp- ! tioir was read, Caldwell" aaid,' T believe I saw thatf dog this morning on this street" - The .. owner- was Pected - to" where the dog was believed to- be and . . . . .. j.,. in a few minutes came eaca won - the dog- and -paid Caldwell the sjuv. ,n,,iii momd. , - vn. uof - mean win ir,. - i roaniTJi iron uvei-iom. .'.-..- -.r ; I v 4 Pages Thi ? Issue .TARHEEL' TOBACCO GROWERS ORG AN- 'J Following ' two- fereat mass meet ings, one at State College and the other in the Raleigh city auditorium, tobacco growers in North Carolina ; have decided to go ahead wtth'the organiZaCiionf of a (ioopteratiive Mar- ketmg Association dj wnicn ai iei, , 100 miflo"n pounds of ijhe weed will be removed' from the?'action mar ket this season. "' ' ? ,4 Approximately 3,000 perscns at tonrfoH thp first ' mass mefitins1 held at State College on September 11. Atout 2,000 were present at the au; ditorium meeting on September , 17. ; The latter group, however, consisted ; largely of selected men who were urged by the growers of their home counties to attend. Heading up this. mpptiTid' wprp thp mpmhprsi of thA Tobacco Relief Commission consist ing of 49 members from as many counties. . When the meeting had heard from Governor Gardner, J. C. Stone and k others, a resolution was passed au thorizing, "that when this meeting adjourns, the Tobacco Relief Com mission will immediately retire and undertake to project into reality s3e farm organization conforming to the Government Farm Board and , that the Governor of North Caroli na be authorized to appoint at least seven disinterested citizens of the State to assist in perfecting said or ganization." This resolution was carried unanimously. . ; The Commission decided to act on Governor Gardner's suggestion to draft Frank Page, former Highway Commissioner and now vice-president of a large bank in Raleigh, to head the oreanization work. It is thehpp.e of the commission, to take wt minion pounus 01 weeu ii vw m new bright belt and 40 million front the old belt off the auction market this year. xne rallying cry 01 me mass uretv ing was Governor Gardner's ringing. declaration in favor of the right of :; the little man to live." A committee of five was authorized by the Relief Commission to be appointed by the Governor to prepare a contract and : make recommendations to the Corny mission at once. Declares Cham Banks icwoi Will 'Damage Farmers . ; Mnre financial ' difficulties for farmers and a death blow to small towns are predicted by George Hen-' sel, banker of Quarryville, Pennsyl , 1 vania, in an interviiew in the Coun , Itional bahki to absorb country banks. ' and operate them as branches. . ' Already, in one case, Hensel de clares, a Western branch bank with $400.0100 deposits, sent $300,000 to the Eastern parent bank, leaving the community the use of only $1UU,UUU of its own money. This would be come a general condition unaer Widespread branch bank plan, he be lieves. ,'... I "Operating under a manager con-' cerned only with' making profits," says Hensel, "many of the" loans we country bankers make through per- , ., 1 l-J V. -V.-...- f sonai &UUW1CUIS6 vi viic VU.1I.V.V w- the borrowers, would be turned down. Country communities cannot develoD under such financing. You ranV nut into a rule book the truV - y . . man elements that a country Maker . , .... :t a borrower. we ask UVU V ' what , . . n kmd 01 wiie ne nas. u uou" . . wifa .. ,. - VU& Hensel declares that a bank is not purely .'for i the benefit of the bank er, but a place for a community to put its money 'where' it, will be safe and available when people need it He. points out that in 1900 ' there onlv 60 . branch :"banks, while now there are 8,000. Strong' pres sure is" being ' brought upo - Con- ' V. ).!.. 1 M' AMII 'tllft' WftV tO arvsai nojo, iv placing ball the' smaH binks of A- r-r .-, rn. ...... merka on a fehaln basis. Barley will be added to the plant Ings of anWieaseTadfeaga to wi tor cover cro'iis for-'both grazing r haV- iaBu:ico.ibe C6unty this f

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