Newspapers / The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, … / July 25, 1930, edition 1 / Page 1
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&?jgX(ti .' L^L w^ - yl I - StK*Hks at Sont6i' ' ^ '- " y? ffiL-'-^; Tv^ <83 Santiago* Qu*? JatT, Qz-fn- a1 prepared address which he made a - journey over two continents to de ?: liver W 16&$ t^ U C. Bn^; president qt tie N. C. State College,' declared the problems of the IfilSS&r5! axe jest beginning:. Dr. Brooks, a member of a group of ftorth Airierican educators, was invitedby the Government tf Ch2e to participate in a celebration of the 100th anniversary of the opening of the great Chilean nitrate of soda mines. "!> ? i I I- ? w ?- *?' - i % V '? *r ^v* ? ?' -'?i? I Today was the anniversary of the opening of the mines and an imprts* aive celebration had been provided for. Dr. Brocks' part on the ptx* gram was -a speech before govern mental and educational leaders v of this Sooth American republic and the visitors from the United States. Other events of the celebration program were a brilliant reception by the Chifew president and congress and the unveiling of aXablet eommem oratrn? the date. The North Carolina educator selec ted. for hie subject "Educating the Agricultural Class," or "How One Nation ? the United States ? Has Sought to Adjust Agriculture to the Changing Conditions.'' \ Dr. Brooks recounted the advance of agricultural education in the Uni ted States from the beginning of tire Land Glint colleges in 1862, to the present when the government & spending $157,600,000 annually for. farm research and instruction. He said that in this time notable pro gress had been made by the farmers but that more vexing proptems than ever before were now rising to ehal - lenge agriculture. " Agriculture,v Dr. Brooks said: in bis prepared address, "is facing to day more radical changes in methods and processes than it faced a cen tury ago." The educator from another contin ent asserted that the farmer In the solution of his problems needs the cooperation of the scientists and eco nomists of the world and that tikis - could he best achieved in a concert of nations. A nationalism that would. eause' suffering among the people of a for eign nation that home people may have more profit, is contrary to all : that we. took for in a concert of na tions. The agricultural class needs international harmony and good w3t The University of Chile was chosen as the place for Dr. Brooks' address. This seat of learning is one-of the moat picturesque spots in Santiago and a center of learning for the na tion. ' : J- ? . . OLD LANDMARK CHANGED TO BEAUTIFUL THEATRE V ? JL ' I the beautiful State ttred of North Carolina. J i^w^esdsqd plcsHU re ip -the ^ host of B -' ilii! ! * M^aj-? 'J-r g *JUQ5? Mv/iNa HUoToSO- ^'J j I fc-tg r.y :jgS'^^c--:"? y\: I .- .">' ways blowinjr the other way. with us for two hundred years or baetttifaL Unlike' mosf weeds if has have a medicinal value. Really vi ler all the only thin* tberaatte* -yftii fcieolar people strive for in |f|pM lawns. And that, after ah, is bierelyB a matter of fadhM If somefasMon- I able leader she& stw* of a dandelion lawn, everybody wonfti f$. tfyha^tdi^^'^lManl f As a matter of fiaet, the daikjelion is cultivated by many people in dif ferent parts of the wortA'' In America as far aa .most of go in ecorioffilf ^lse 'of'the dandeilon 'is to collect the leaves in the oariy spring and boil them for "greens." In France an especially large-leafed variety of dandelion ie cultivated for food The name-daneBon''in pass ing , is French. It is a- corruption of "dent de lion," meaning lion's tenth* fron a fancied resemblance of the leaf to a tto&. The French abo use the dandelion leases aa asalad, the s^tfybitter taste being reHsfeed-by many palates.' The- Germans, of tire other hand, boil the leaves and serve them; as > vegetable and in some localities har vesTlhem for cattle fodder. When treated as chicory, tire-roots will produce a winter salad very much like the *"barbe da capo da.'* The roots are also employed IWgfciuil of chicory for mixing in toffee, thereby becoming both a ft&r end a substitute. Its moat important uselamedMn aL The roots art dug up in the fen and dried and sold for medicinal pur poses in dreg stores under tie name of Taraxacum, whieh is the generic name of the common dandelion. At one time tile root waa employed aa a remedy for many internal ailments, but now is officially used aa a mild laxative. ;:'v In India, where the plant la native, it has never been used by the native for n>e<ficfnal purposes. Tbo Swiss re quire ft to be gathered in Spring. If is collected chiefly in Europe * and thousands of pounds arte exported to a& parts of the world. Teas and wines are made from the flowers. Even though it has eeohoime val ues, wist most of usxWattt to know is how to get rid of it from our lawns and gardens. Complete erad ication is impossible because it has gained world wide distribution, it la thus found in waste places, giving seeds fe furnish a good supply for all lawns and paries. Hie windblown seeds are pniuoed .if' Summer; hence the seeds trie found any and niijLBU inVawa every wnere, . . jfood' v' which p^. i ?i?-. ^** . ? 'y-xt"^^ w*A!^v i? - ?T. ~?ii - y/* ? ^?ti I ? -??jjnS^rK?!vf _t'- ~iv?,S -**?'- ^ *? ? ' t ? 'IT ;5vV^*^|^' v".-? ?' ?' *?' ?'" ^^iS^hT.' *." . -*r i7;-"."r ' a ? " '-<* ^ - ? - * ?'. *? ? :'? ?? 7~,.; .* _,pr?? -.r- '.. ? ,?" l uv V WW? UIvWh AAA XAVnl - *#>*uv ? ? J ? .v'Sfe?* , r A Vw? JV-^-~t y.~J .?? ^ _n ~^V^j <?' 3^U_?^*:f.*? 1 f ?4J I |f yfcjl. . ^?WWWtnffl - snd QsttBS ^ygayjjg^'*~ M' ' ' |Mt J ? - V ,* 5 '1 > ' ^ ' .i ? m, in , $V z ?^??(?^?j^ifci^p'.'j ?'?* ?.? *S-f% . f mm'imm'Buistim p*. SottPteW^, i. Colombia* S. Ci, July 21.?Senator Qafe L/BIeaad, viateran of forty yean storay political activity in South Carolina, ind his two opponents for :&f- Denibcratifr -domination hi the August 2T jfrimmry, today '5epr*fea their campaign for support into the hiai^rating Piedmont area of-the I 3S?rI ^ The county-to-county campaign,, a unique Soath Carolina institution in volving joint debates among the can didates in *??ry eounty seat* was suspended for a ^ncfc, lmt Senator P. Byrpes, of Spartanshurg, and So licitor fceo* w. Harris of Anderson mads individual appeals at various points. He joint campaign will be resumed ne*t week. ' ? "... ? ? ^ ? " ' ?? Bleaas, ierriug his first term a* Junior United States senator, has asked re-election upon the basis of his record; Harris, a young Worffi jWar veteran anA fbrier secretary; to the late Senator Ben (PftehforifJ Tillman, has aaped that record Tipon every stamp, while Byrnes, ig noring his rivals, has based:his for aqpport upon' Ms reoordof four teen years as a- member of Congress from the Second South Carolina dis trict 'V' The campaign of the triumvirate of toga-seekers' has failed to %elbp the intense partisanship and public feeling so characteristic of some of ^lease's earlier days when he made a wide reputation as a fire-eater of t^hustings. An e&o of the old Belaf? days was heard, however, when the can didates spoke at Union, the ;*fcene of asserted tiu^i^tl^^titution toe J a wjrite vKtiM,: tb21 aiy' *to te witii the dohsWtion.* ? ?. SI >. ..-?JSESSSag iThe Noted DM in KUospiWirofi an OperatiiM I for Appends, Had Hi**i Hie Life to tilt sAlr Many k : ?j^JSuffalo, N^yTjuly 28?Glenn again and again ii the d?y?] rxjaj-^gl day mthe General hoepftal^ere. He had beea operated pendicitjflWp ^ndSafbeen reported oa the way to reoovery.J constant watcn Desxae ner nusoana si hotel tat could not reach the hospital J on one of the main arteries, close to f the heart-#** given as the cause at 1 death bfr hospital authorities, c Did Thew Wright, hi* penpal physician I wasT eaHed by Mr. private nurse, when the sviattalieeame W*H denly unconscious \ News of the death ofc the man ti | whom aviation owed much of ; w achievement in the pait quart*| cen tury came with a shocking' sudden-1 ness. Tributes from fllfers and aero-J nautical leaders in all part* of the! suffering from appendicitis with re-1 curring *nito atfracVff ^or~PO"w time.! cover nearly a million dollars. The complaint chargfed violation' <tf patent Cu^ faded to [ f nufumail La? jignftit; JJIISC""' IfeW** liAmA' |- _ * *?*-4 ?-*~~ *W Mi*v4% ,v 'rf*- ?? - J o . -VJc? ' . . '-.---I I nft'TDflVinO' QtlHllT'nilJijJ r?A/Mvlo I ESSrSCI &?28S ?S&2? vaudeville and <4 au unit, ??? , took the air in.? fan-faro of cheers,! *ffe n of pris*r ahd all fte iert of the fia "fare th# gdetf sp<g$|| undertaking. Their plane \e similar to ?fe Olie In irm the^m m^ recordfprn hmi .Mr fitted with dual parte wherever pojfiMe so that! the wirii^;ay?t*m or the ofl lines, ! wUulft>0Ce' (iif^S **" I 2y indetoHely or mSj ? Ohrflenger, pounded JH., Oarence "Smoky" Smith, 1*4, and Arthto Quiek daimed the world ? c&JjS?S in a maple tree, if anyone is inter-| T?^~3t8?''- ??E * Vp in llinneapolis, Mkwt, Id yearf ? fold D*v? Hogaii had been in a tree ] ? almost as ifcogln gt Panl the other} half of tKe1 twin cities, police ordered f I oil M il A4 j all endurance sitters down irom tneirM SPp&V kp"** W-Ztk I And if they drtrt-fcitf^waixd , come down now," attt;tS?: polk*;?n~ nouncemOttt the fire department wOll called out to wash them down! ^ hditf lnd ^atdtf W [n Chicago health commissioner I sh&tog j pw^es." ? ?&&& :V ;/5"^v"v- I fe& ?1 ?'??' # I Funeral services for Marion Fran cis Smith; 78, wemiipulucted fromj O&r-Bim'Pittmm, Wtm WiUBapjf, - _ ?? - ? . ? __? ? ^n' ? - . . ? ?5?? 1?WX :.?SrS? mQcDS uT j a dH&iffi6i- hcrsj Ivy and C* ? I A tf AftlTP'T j I' "' j I - ; ? . . -r ^to^iaoe ^the utmost simplicity and ooiet, and* ^bsest friend#' .-of -the . couple attended the Mremoay, performed by the Reverend Dr. Ferrum. ?'?'?I / Sir Henry Lunn, editor at the Re viw&t Cbuithe#, waa instrumental in arttngtng for the license, which had to W gotten especially in order, to permit the Cannon# to proceed atl Scheduled to Braril. f? ? Lunn told the United Press hi# in tercession, suppdementd by I letW*l from U. S, Ambassador Charles G. Dawes to the Archbishop at Canter-: bury, had resulted in the issuance of j the Ucense throu^h the faculty^office* 4 5fte Bishop ljpi been in charge of j ihe Brawl division of Foreign Mis sions in the methodist, church fori Iff/a. McCallum and Bisop Cannon were guests of Sir Henry Lunn at the same time in 1929. Bishop Cannon, 65 year old church man whose romance and marriage in London last week were kept secret until recently, occasioned numerous stirs in the United States in past years, his most recent public appear ance of note having been his defiance of a United States Senate commit tee. The committee wanted to know something. about his distribution of eampsdgnfunda in the last president ial election. - OF WORK Luge Proportion ShonkfcBe At ? ^mbuteff to This Cause; SsyB Dean Miller. Chapel Hill, July 21-^A large por tion of criminal offences should be laid at the door of unemployment/' declared Bean Justin Miller of the Duke University School of Law at the institute of public ; welfare which opened here today. The institute, be ing conducted by the State board of public welfare and the university, will continue through the week. The fchtiiDB -for study is unemployment and dependency. Dean Miller was introduced ;.by President Frank Graham of the^ Uni versity. ^ I "We cannot escape the fact," Dr. Miller said, "that unemployment and dependenc^contl|sute both .directly and 'indirectly to the problem of crimei* If a' person is unemployed and dependent upon society for a bare existence, the possibility of his com mitting an ana-social act is infinitely (Natjfe ? . V. I ^The lhw it uneven in its dispen sation andthe poor and the dependent aiw-'apt to receive a poorer'brand of those^who^ne^^le law enforcement are well acquainted with the fact that the law i* not ad ministered so as to give all an equaM cerned. ?> ^ ii? p^pplw ?t ft, '' ' ' ., / . ?'AHv corn crop,, ox ^/imiovy . vounty " * ? ? ^ jjoto wortu ostqiiimi stsntofs 'Tfv n 4 V n , X??* f . jj2_ '- '?;'^r- S *'i jday by the overwhelming vote of 58 I el ot warships the limitation theorj I applied to battleship by the 1922 Na val pact. Great Britain is placed on a. parity with the United States, treaty supporters hold, and Japan is I granted lesser tonnagjfcrCfe I;; Savings in future-naval eonsfcme tion are estimated in the hundreds I of million dollars; but some of its cities eharge thpt the $1*?1?Q|#>0 *hieh will be required to build the American Navy up to parity in the | j^te^y^r' life of the treaty is too Three of America's battleships, five of Britain** and orie of Japan'* will be junked under the treaty: Onfr ofthese from each nation: -will he turned into a training ship, the oth ers scrapped or junked. No new bat tleships are provided for under the treaty, which extends for fire years more the capital ship building holidy of the 1922 treaty. The ratification vote came at 4:80 p. m. of the twelfth day of the spec- . - ial session of! the Senate called :by President Hoover for consideration of the treaty. The session met July 7, .ea the Monday following adjourn ment of the regular session of the - seventy-first congress and debate; started formally on the following day. A little band of die-hard opponents numbering big-navy- advocates and one or two pacifists opposed the treaty and demanded postponment of actfcm imt&Hhs Doeamber sessum of congress. When this was dehied, they unloosed deluges of talk and reservations. - The treaty advocates contented themselves wih less than a dozen formal speeches. They let the oppo nents led by the aggressive Hiram Johnson, republican, talk themselves out. j The opponents In hflf a hundred speeches talked over moat of the day of debate. They repudiated charges of filibustering, but admitted defect only-when President Hoover and Seriate leaders by strenuous canvass ing brought back to Washington more than 60 senators,?enough to insure a quorum, or working majority. LOUIS EDWARD EVERETT AGE 71, DIES FRIDAY , . ; " ~ ' - * ' Louis Edward Everett, age 71, a well known resident of this place at one time, before moving to Wash ington, N. C., and from there to Pet ersburg, Va., his lpte home, succumb ed to a heart attack Friday morning at' 8;25 at the home of his daughter, Ifra Gf. Thomas Hinson. Mr. Everett had been in ill health for three years, suffering from high blood pressure. - and heart diseased.- .? , r B# tvmai wi* M Ott Srfurdafi; *ftwnoMi ftjCO, interment w^ V? ttade in the eattBtoV ben. ^ - VT- ' ii fle leaves in addition to hi* wid- y^', SiJ"of wLhtaXn,7to* <S lE'iiKSi 7lE'^ ?Tn f ,GTw^fr ^ ^ * nJnp. P5IX * two * >1 ?? ? ' 7 T5p^v I - , 1 * . Lw . - ^ I BoD lraiffii in B(2eb* I . " 1 ? "HI "I i II Ill ? I I ??????
The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.)
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July 25, 1930, edition 1
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