Newspapers / The Moore County News … / Sept. 7, 1933, edition 1 / Page 4
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'THE MOORE COUNTY NEWS Established 1875 A weekly newspaper devoted to ! tiie upbuilding' of' Moore county, published every Thursday after noon. JOHN BEASLEY........ Publisher TED L. FRYE .... Managing Editor Subscription Rates: One Year ..........—.. $2.00 Six Months ... 1.00 The News invites the expres sions at any and all of its readers on any subject of general interest. Entered at the posto£ffc$ at Carthage, N. C., as mail * Aiatter of the second class under act of congress of March 8. 1872. ’ ' The Moore County News has consistently led its field in circu lation and influence. I Represented in the national advertising field by American Press Association 225 W. 39th St., New York Chicago Office—122 S. Mich. Detroit Office, 2111 Woodward At. : Kansas City, 306 Coca Cola Bldg, i St. Louis, 505 Star Building ! “I’LL BE THE LAST” Read this from the Winston-Salem! U:. Journal if there’s any doubt in your mind as to “what your duty ig with regards to the NRA campaign: •“ 'Mr. President, ^f your program succeeds, you’ll be the greatest Presi dent we’ve ever had; if it fails, you’ll be the worst!’ “And to this President Roosevelt replied: “ “Wrong! If it fails, I won’t be the worst President; I’ll be the last!” "The President is so sure that his recovery program will succeed that he probably has no very definite idea of the condition things would be in if it should fail. “He has no time to meditate upon any philosophy of failure. He has faith in his plan and in the people. The country has passed other crises safely and has always emerged greater in statue and more powerful in strength. "Yet, the President’s epigrammatic prediction that he’ll be the last Presi dent, if his recovery program fails cannot be lai\ghed off. Russia, Italy and Germany, to mention only three important countries, have undergone profound and radical transformations, during the past two decades. “The underlying causes of these changes were economic in nature. Con ditions in Russia, Italy and Germany are highly experimental, but the ex-1 ^ peTiments are costly. j “Genuipe and effective reform can i. be achieved in the United States now I with a minimum of cost and waste if j the people will cooperate intelligently j ,■ and unselfishly. “There can be no recovery for a few at the expense of the many. “Recovery must be nation-wide and extended from the top to the bottom of society. Only one reasonable course lies ahead of the American people and that is to support Roosevelt’s recov-J ery program.” • WHY MOLEY RESIGNED There has been so much speculation about the reasons for the resignation! of Raymond Moley as Assistant Sec-1 retary of State that the public is : finding it difficult, no doubt, to make) p* nP its mind as to what was really V, back of hi® action. “Enemies of the Roosevelt admin istration, qf course, have done every thing possible to convince the people ’: that there has been a serious split in *be ranks of the President’s advisers,” says the Winston-Salem Journal. “But the people will do well to remember that the wish is often father of the thought. There is nothing the oppo nent of the ‘New Deal’ would like better right now than bitter dissention in the official family at Washington.” ff As for Mr. Moley’s resignation, H however, we are confident that the special correspondent of the New York Times who was on the ground at Hyde Park when the resignation took place, is telling the whole truth v about the matter when he writes the following: "• “For some time there has been con siderable discussion among Mr. Roosevelt's friends of the desirability of a national organ which would be sympathetic to the main purpose of ; Ids administration. “Mr. Roosevelt’s dose friends began lo feel acutely the need of a national popular -magazine representative of bis general point of view during his r pre-convention campaign for the pres idency. Tfhey felt that the political / associations and philosophy of most of the publications in this category Were hostile to Mr. Roosevelt’s brand of liberalism. “Except in Bernaxr Macfadden’s publication, Liberty, in Which Mr. Roosevelt conducted a column for sev eral monts, Mr. Roosevelt’s supporters experienced difficulty during this per iod in obtaining what they considered adequate and sympathetic presenta tion of his accomplishments and pro gram. 7> “The one national publication with distinctly Democratic affiliations Was Alfred E. Smith's The New Outlook, end Mr.- Smith was Mr. Roosevelt's , bitterest opponent. . "With the country now launched on S’1 Odfet v rr-.r STrpe'rij%gpte„v.i,which ;Wrtd u»c hvf tense debate, Mr. Roosevelt’s friends Have sought every outlet possible for, sympathetic interpretation. With that purpose in mind, Mr. Roosevelt gave permission to Mr. Moley and other members of his official family to write for publication and to his sec retary, Colonel Louis McHenry Howe, to make weekly broadcasts on a com mercial program. This departure from precedent provoked considerable criti cism. “The general prospectus issued by Mr. Astor bore all the earmarks of an .expression of Mr. Roosevelt’s own inspiration. The final arrangements for Mr. Moley’s enlistment as editor of the publication were completed this morning at the Roosevelt home in Hyde Park. Both Mr. Moley and Mr. Astor were present.” MUST HAVE BETTER PRICES FOR COTTON AND TOBACCO We are glad to see Dr. Clarence Poe aroused over the threatened low prices for tobacco and cotton. “Unless something is done to boost cotton and tobacco prices right away,” Dr. Poe says, “cotton and tobacco far mers are out of luck for 12 months to come. They will have no more pay days’ until the autumn of 1934. “General Johnson seems especially anxious to hold down prices until the NRA can get under way. But mean while the cotton and tobacco farmers’ whole 195(1 production is being sold. The danger is that they will sell on the basis of relatively low price levels and then have to buy everything in 1934 on the basis of very much high er price levels.” ui. Poe said the administration ap pears to be trying to restore the 1924 25 price levels, but says the process is too gradual. “It is all right for fac tory workers, whose wages can be raised any Saturday for the next week or for factory owners,” Dr. Poe says, “who can advance prices almost on a day’s notice. But with American farmers as a whole and Southern far mers in particular, the situation is radically different. About three fourths of the cotton is sold in four months’ time-r-and tobacco is sold even faster.” The farmer has been led to believe that the plowing up of one-fourth of his cotton acreage this summer would: have raised the price higher than it | is today. Something is wrong with the price. He ought to be getting more than nine and one-half cents for his cotton. The Durham Herald is bemoaning the low price of tobacco brought to the North Carolina markets. The farmer has no recourse. It does him no good to turn in his tag. He must I put the weed right on the floor and take what comes his lot. “What is the answer?” the Durham paper asks. “Curtailed production will not serve until it has reached a drastic level possible only through whole hearted co-operation between growers A processing tax will prove only a temporary expedient since it will prob ably be reflected promptly in the bid ding on the auction markets. “After all, it seems the only per manent solution lies in a new market ing system. So long as the product is marketed through a system which is entirely controlled by the buyers and in which the seller has virtually no voice, a fair price for the producer will be difficult. There must be better prices for far mers’ products, else the whole scheme of the NRA is going to fall through. Man Charged With the Burning of Family Lafollette, Penn., Sept. 2.—Floyd. Johnson, filling station operator, Sat3 urday was charged with murder in connection with the burning to death of his wife and three small children in their home Wednesday night. He was arrested Friday pight and taken to Knoxville where Police Chief Bryor Baird, of Lafollette, said he! would be questioned and held for safe keeping. District Attorney General Jesse L. Rogers said charges were placed' against Johnson on the strength of evidence gathered during an investi gation. “We can’t tell all we know now,” he said. Johnson was the only one to escape from his burning home. He said he jumped through a window. “Smoke and fumes filled the room,” he related. “I didn’t have time to do anything ,not even grab a child.” The charred bodies of Mrs. John son and her three children were found in the ruins near a hall door. They were buried in a single casket Fri day. ' ARMS AND LEGS FOUND The arms and legs of a woman, hacked from the body, were found in a field near Detroit yesterday. Now they are looking Jjot the body. Through finger prints they have iden tified the woman but have not found the body. Uncle Sam Buys Nine Hundred Hogs Augusta, Ga., Sept. 2.—Approxi mately 900 hogs have been sold to the government in Augusta this week by Georgia and South Carolina farmers in the farm administration’s plan to reduce swine production. About 86 per cent were below the 81-pound class and were put into tankage for grease and other bi products. Those above that weight Will be cured and distributed ua, food ^mong the poor. .. ■’ #vf/ .» Pens at the packing plant servin'' the government as purchasing agent are filled, but the nogs are - being slaughtered fct'th* rate of 150 a day,' Short Items of Late News PACOLET PROCESSED Pacolet Mills, at Pacolet, S. C., a large concern, is closed down this week. The management says that they have caught up with their orders and cannot afford to pay the process tax and star* stuff without orders. They hope is ~to open up soon. \ PRESIDENTIAL SHARK A twelve-foot shark was caught from the yacht on which President Roosevelt was sailing Sunday. MACHADO’S THREE MONTHS Former President Machado who was driven out of Cuba and has been sheltering In the Bahamas, arrived in Montreal, Canada, Sunday, with leave from the Canadian government to re main three months. WEBB IS DRY A rousing dry meeting was held in Charlotte Sunday, at which Judge Webb and Jake Newell spoke. Judge Webb, who while in congress, got the Webb-Kenyon act through prohibiting shipment of liquor into dry territory, called upon the people of the state to vote against the repeal on November 7th. .. - * A SPOT IN CAROLINA,* jfV S. H. Williams was murdered in Charlotte Saturday in what appeared to be a case of putting on the spot. He had been accused of running a' lottery. He was sitting in a -car om. Myers street, between Ninth and Tenth, with his driver, Ches Craw ford, colored. Two men came up from behind, both of the colored, one with a stick and one with a shot gun. One called to Williams not to move and as he rose, the negro with the shot gun fired upon him and he fell dead out of the car. One of the negroes, Roscoe Campbell, is under arrest. Of ficers believed that Williams was lured to the spot by angry gamblers of rival lottery games. TIME BY THE FORELOCK Jimmie Brown of Miami, Fla., takes the bright side. Jimmie was arrested for stealing a battery from a filling station where he worked but in which he did not have his heart enlisted. “I am glad they got me,” he said. “If I had got away with this I would probably have tried something bigger and got into real trouble.” FEDERATION FIGHT William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor* is fac ing opposition for reelection on the j ground that he did not get enough concessions out of the government fori labor in the many codes. His friends claim that he got a great deal. In all codes except the automobile industry, there may be unions represented by their own elected officers. The auto mobile code is not so favorable. In it, while unions may exist, employers have the right to hire or fire without interference by the unions. BAILEY IN FIGHTING MOOD Senator Bailey, who has pressed up on President Roosevelt the idea of more currency inflation, is warning North Carolina that the state will have to pay its part of the three bil lions public works funds and -'thgtwe had better stir along and get all the building that can be^had .under it. SLEEPING SICKNtiSS MENACE Sixty-three deaths have/already oc curred in the neighborhood from sleeping sickness which has been rag ing for some time. The cause of the disease is not known and intensive ef forts are being made in trying to find; the cause and the cure. PIED PIPER IN HOODLUM TOWN The clean-up campaign in Chicago is said to be resulting in a general exodus of gangsters and hoodlums from the city. They are arresting all they can lay hands on on charges of vagrancy.' Seeing that it is Jail or get out, the boys are leaving. ROCKINGHAM MARBLE WORKS Manufacturers of Fine Cemetery Memorials in Marble and Granite O. W. DOSTER, Proprietor ROCKINGHAM, N. C. IB. KENNEDY. Highfalla, Kept W. Duncan Matthews - ATTORNEY AT LAW / Hart Building SOUTHERN PINES. N. C. — -* Moat for Your Money In a Good Laxatnro Thedford's BLACK-DRAUGHT has been highly regarded (or a long, long time, but It la better appro* dated now than ever before. Peo ple are buying everything more care fully today. In buying Black-Draught, they get the most for their money, „ln a good, effective laxative, depend of ord‘n"y ooMa* 25 or more doees of Thedford’s Black-Draught in a 25-eent package far Children, get p.'casanS-iastinff MTSPf at SThedfvrd’* Blaek-lHcaght. Special Nonces. FOR SALE: A PAIR OF MfR^ good work ipules.—R. G. Gordon, Bennett. "T ltpd. ' - WANTED: TO TUNE YOUR PIANO and make it sound like a new one. Specialize in doing the better class of work. Best references furnished. —D. C. Hancock, Sanford; Sept7-tfn. '* ' CAFE FIXTURES FOR SALE— Complete outfit for starting busi ness. Real cheap. Good cotndition. Write Box 213, Carthage. v It. WANTED—Position as typist or stenographer. . Can assist with bookkeeping.' General office train ing. Three years experience. Will • do public stenography. See Miss Luff at Ginsbynt’s, Carthage. Aug. 30, tfn. | FOR RENT—RUoms for rent, with or without bokrd. Apply to Mrs. L. B. Clegg. 11 2tf _■■■ FOR SALE—Purebred Police puppy, eight months old. Fine guard dog, going cheap.—J. S. Maness, Bear Creek, N. C. Sept. 7-lt-pd. FINE JERSEY Milk Cow for sale. For information, address Box 1623, Southern Pines, N. C. tfn. TWO CENTS a word carries your message in this column to nearly ten thousand readers. h CHATTEL MORTGAGES for sale at The Moore (County News office. MAGISTRATE SUMMONS for sale at The Moore County News office. FOR SALE—Cheap and easy terms— 155 acres, three and one-half miles, east of Carthage; good house.— C. E. Byrd, Darlington, S. C. Aug. 31-3t. DO YOU HAVE anything to swap? Let us know through these col SEARCH and SEIZURE warrants for sale at The Moore County News of fice. FOR SALE—Cheap and easy terms— 158 acres, good buildings, two and one-half miles southeast of. ^ Car thage.—C. E. Byrd, Darlington, Aug. 31-3t. U..* < • CROP LIENS for sale at The Moore County News office. * ALL KINDS of Job Printing at low est prices. See us for your require ments. The Moore (County News. TRANSCRIPT OF*JUDGMENT for sale at The Moor# County News of fice. 'l. w v.v i'v ---:--— NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PARDON OR! PAROLE Take notice, that‘the undersigned, who was convicted a$ the May term of the Superior court of Moore coun ty for carnal knowledge of child fif teen years of agei, and sentenced to five years in the State prison, will, on Tuesday, Sept. 26th, make ap plication to the Governor of North Carolina for a pardori *or parole. This Sept. 5th 1933. HARVEY BLAKE. Sept. 14—2t. DR. J. I. NEAL VETERINARIAN Office and Hospital on Wicker St SANFORD, N.C. ROUND TRIP WEEK END FARES CAMERON TO Portsmouth-N or folk ■........ $3.00 Virginia Beach .......... $3.75 Tickets sold for all 'trains Fri days, Saturdays, and morning trains Sundays, March 31st to October 1st, inclusive. Stopovers allowed, baggage checked and tickets honored in Pullman cars upon payment of Pullman Fare. Tickets,1 limited returning prior to midnight following Monday. v ' ; Reduced Pullman Fares. Additional Week-end Fares between all points on the Sea board. For Information See Ticket * Agent t SEABOARD Air Line Railway EVERY DAY—lbW ROUND Trip Fares to CENTURY. OF < - PROGRESS CHICAGO n All Expense Trips—Let 14 Make Your Arrangements. H. E. PLEASANTS, D. P. A. SEABOARD AIR' LINE If.' :M¥AY TSj. > I ALL-WEATHER PATHFINDER We have some bargains in used tires. See us before you buy. Central Filling Station Carthage,N. C. : ' -v’1/-7;; " IT - ft- ‘ •>* ‘ v "'•Jt 'V 7’^';"’r ♦•-vr.rv'.-irf: mwi Want^tihese PJM.CES? Then' you’d better act quick!' Rubber /prices are going rup» Cotton pricee are* going up. Tire pricegjhare.to fol low. \ ; COO D’YE AR ALL-VtEATHER 4.40-21!—$ 7.a0 4.50-21—$ 7.90 4.75-10—$ 8.40 5.00-19—$ 9.00 V 5.25-18—$10.00 * 5.50-19—$11.50 0*00 D YEAR PAJH BINDER 4.401-21—$5.55 ! 4.50-29—$6.00 \ 4.50-21—$6.30 4.75-19—$6.70 5.00- 19—$7.20 5.00- 20—$7.45 Want safetV? Want MILEAGE? Want QUALITY? • Then why not buy thesafesttire?That’s a Goodyear. It gives protection from blowouts in every ply —with every ply bu H t from bead tt bead wl th pa tented Super twist Cord. It stops your car quicker than any other tire—10% to 77% quicker — proved by tests on wet pavements. • Take the word of bus fleet operators— Goodyears now de-1 liver 97% more mile age than they did • five years ago on the ,< gruelling grind of' fast, heavy, inter state bus operations. Goodyear uses the lessons learned on buses to Increase the mileage of your tires. • Then get the tires built by the largest tire-builder in' the world. Because more people buy Goodyear Tires—Goodyear can give you more qual ity for your money.' ;r.r £$ ' ;<r; :KM + £■'/ I -?fc3 YOU CAN LAMBAST THEM WITH CIRCULARS_ ’ (We’ll be glad to print them-—double pages, single pages, four, six or eight-page circulars.) YOU CAN SCATTER HANDBILLS ABOUT TOWN (We print them, too, black and white, or on colored paper.) YOU MIGHT USE SOME WINDOW CARDS (We print them, any kind, color or combination.) ••M if! S " i tg. —But a lot of people don’t like to have their homes all cluttered up with circulars and .mT" handbills, and they put your message in the ’ 3 5! 5 wastebasket, just like they do the other fel- • } ■ ■ lows. . . - ■ Consequently - k':, V >1-”tris* ■ i'.ftr-’fc' •' ; "i WE RECOMMEND NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING... . - BECAUSE .. . Like Col. Wm. Prescott said at the battle of Bunker Hill, _vy you can do like his marksmen did and “Don’t fire until you see the whitesFfciSiu&vJ of their eyes.” Meaning, of course, that your advertisement in our news- y . J ,.f.. J paper columns isn’t thrown away, because people buy the paper,to;jread-a .and they read your advertisement if it is in the paper: •b*’** > ' * v •. * \ BECAUSE ... If your bijslnegisis like most other businesses in this sep-' tion, you don’t have any [jmuhition to waste. Marksmanship, tfierefort^ is important. That’s whqrf the yjpwspaper pomes in. You know . it goes \ w into the very homes you Want to reach ... and you know they read'itT-1 BECAUSE ,.. There is no skiin milk in the market reached by your news- ■ ■ *’ ■*>#& -» papetf.. Newspaper subscribers have money to spend, or they wouldn’t ’ be spending it to buy the paper. The newspaper market is the cream of. the buyers .. . and they buy an average of 20 per cent more home town products than people who don’t read the paper. . ‘ ‘K gjjgf nerJ ■ THE MOORE COUNTY NEWS i •W&y'k M, » - ; - u,uw V* v ; . ; * yl* I C ?
The Moore County News (Carthage, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 7, 1933, edition 1
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