Newspapers / The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, … / Sept. 26, 1930, edition 1 / Page 1
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: fWAR A ^l^P?k^^^^WWKrwti"?i:^', ?- I nrvwm |IM1 T^|H|ip,KffVri n I ? - . $^ari\^\/BBBrj 'M* it y a <m i I . -. . .-r J&^yj)i?#%A^-. /<* Of I SriST I km dtfiaite pta? lTJ.1T I ganisatioa of one, I am j I j^Ssui^d I ^^'t^moet important ****? for decision next Mondny^ti^g| I f^2r?Lairmsn of the State I I way CommiwMon. sad neWD?^1*^1 idsnt of the. Wachovia Bank ?*? Taust Company, as bead of: the mo J ment, and the terms of the 1930 a I ^'llr^Page, who was^ec^d^^at^th*I I &lZ attempt was made to eket bis successor immediately. Ajomber of | I chiding J. ?* Fhgo? Abeedeen, W. 1 I a Clark, of Terbaro, and Felix Har-11 ^Govf a*** Gardner, who hasfl ham personally conducting the mow I work of actual designation his rep- ? I reaentative will be George R. &**> I I director of Stito-wl ft"* r** I I tared far ? "? ?? pubbe dirator ? I of theoJdTrW*?t?OTrmiMt^w-| der appointment of Gov. A. W. me- ? jitr* ,. . I The other impbrtant^qw^n^J ? I be accepted during the 1980 aeeaoa. I I The tentative contract adopted Maori I day contemplate* fufi I ? there is maeh dWmun I CdioliM, where practinDy ?U of 0? U3M^63r of tlXD6 flPftr** I ^Borinnfaf *?&? wtast year anyone I a Ben upon the tobacco sfn ? I mealier^ *| B jofiTnrKf ttot there will bf I I belt, and a third forth? Oid Belt. ? Howe^J^e I I G<<^^ I ^y<riueT niMiijj <**. y 0*^Mil I '/'Ifll |fj)||()inj( | o#ty wy w ^ Mr* Jniprt scttoBp nnnco . ?i H 3r' !/ l'"_, n 1 _ I, ry r% Tt ' iwiMwjjr w ig?* ^ . ,-^jj j-.y plfdHBr llid support to w?w ??/ n? ^ tflb^fef ^lih- . VEfiBT .xOr 1 riPiePP?''Jfcjl*' ~_. # 11~ i j*"~'"x _3JI A^ihlt^M- ||^^ -iB^fc, .jjL, TH 'SuHtiliy' JQiUi ?if JEFMU&&W 1 irllUUIIIiUU L?vlllrvini^|iv >--i.-.v' I ^ **** jbictM tib? iwud^HBte" f^iitsiiw pro* I ^y* jjj[ for food. NfeiflUMn tMtificd that hifl I "I believe you ?e the | ^-T?!e*1." Bodd :umi?l m*mm m&r &&& &?** &* Bwtot|? favectigatajt tiM^agg oflt ? v ?. A ? Hie Jury was oat lees thoaftvel minutes in reteninf Ita vesjfiet' of I I )fidyette1MteedtiLt Mr*. Rudd be I missioners, the maximum pauper al-1 liowmnee. I TOMg' I ???I Na Solution Found To Ws-ll corery At take Lore;! J Varying Theories Held. | I taut caty, Sept 23.?The strange ?mystery of Snug Harbor on Lake Lue is Kkeiy to nevw^ejolved. in | d?r ^body to hLrtT ST52fWI ?noontfce bed etlie harbor was drag gedwith Smfcy I afternoon four divers tried to luattel [the- body, These mein explored the ? body ^tsrold be^ttrfwr wttfcr, according to the divers. The j I body could also be covered with mod ^of time. ^^ | ditt^ ?-J-- '3?Ft'rj I '?"A" ? [ ' vt I WCti JSftMOpKl 4*WJLhIxplr PWhaf rififht ' upstflJ^ti Wfci j ? II mtitettui o?r <wi "griSm Bfiu," Old Glory is the oldest flat fly* I 11%. I lag well aa tta fcSi^Swemi^ 1 !?*' Betsey ? llfcssas^ed tteliataiw^d ^tripes I Seems as if we're not quite sol ?f-i^snaeB, ncres another ooiiet to ?i ?*ew;mt --; -? vv ??*.?' ; v ?_-; J%v fl l| The Stan and Stripes Is the only I | flag of a great nation which ha* at] | ways led its armies to victory. Think that over. ? j The United States haa been engag | ed, since the Declaration of Jndepen ? ,L' irfffW*' *5 '? ??'Va*'- -^??;.'.W.". w^av: . rf#?t\+.. IS+au, K ? ? dence, m six great wars, not couirigagfl our skirmishes with the Indians adl | Filipinos and Boxers and Me&terren ? ean pirates, and our ventures into ? keeping order in other parts of' the ? Western Hemisphere. We've avenged ? Ine important war every twenty-five I years. Blye of these great wan were j with foreign countries. Li every war! ? ?fir^ 0W ?ory..-iu? ?"^There is no flag in Europe of which and Switxeriand, neither of which has i been engaged in war since the pres ident flag and form of government Um old nations of Europe are old I merely because they were settled be-: fore America was discovered. As gov-1 lutiwv while the United States has, I I been standing solidly upon its origi I mat form of government as set forth | I gn the Constitution of 1787. And every I I one of these. European nations haasfl I lost some part of its territory in that I 'period, while we have more than ! Count our national age from the ? beginning of the Republic, the year 1787. Great Britain's revolution began f in 1795, culminated in a victory for | the revolutionists in 1882 . with the I ? passage of the Reform Bill which! took power from the aristocracy and j gave it to the commons. Today the] government of .feWiaiu} f is in the I ? hands of the Working masses, and tji|l colonial empire of Gnat Britain has I be come the British Commonwealth! ( of Nations. ; 1 Older than the United States? I And the British flag, wttch consist ed of the cross of St Andrew and UniteTfttofre ^ bo^ ^chen*** Is 2801 cross fat: St "fUtrick to' tbtftnion Jfedd Our *nd ti? Wast to as, Geneva to Switxeriand, many other parts and possessions. I XT -^1 ? *... ">* '* ~ -J | 1 Cferoany, wli3n qui* (iRtioo was lVWYPW woo ^ n .J Isulii iuwiiIbiiI yellow, reading downward, and is 140 .yean younger than Oi* Glory. Imperial Austria and great Spain, the two moat powerful ztationa. in the iworld when the United States was forme*, are insignificant weaklings jnqw. Austria isa tiny, starving re public; Spain has lost all of her col onies in the New World and in Asia. Her government in that- period han jgune trwoL an aotocratfc- monarchy through anarchy and ineffectual at tempts H a- rup^lic to tte limited monarchy of toQp; her flag is no longer the royal banner of CaeWe arid mis a Mr nation,, established by#* poleon in 1805 Russia's changes we |bot dbogt vPolaad^ Belgium* Nor? smy, Sweden, aH^bave changed their geVenunerits and their flags, most 4 them 4^#nes, hrthe plirfod med^^cre^t ^ ^ , ? ? % ? ? ? 4 ' >a_" vl. Attorney-General Delivers Address Before D. A. R. Meeting In Wilson. ' to view a the 9***# tendency to disregard law and order, and of forceejieaded by those whose ignoble task is the overthrowing of the stand ards and ideals set up by the Con rtittition ?t a*tUM sto, rf. hUtorfc background, development and adapt!" bihty tc present conditions, his aw* lysis <a the situation, and 111, to this generation, to meet the situa tion^ in his speech delivered to the R., in Wflsoh, .on I new program, "Patriotic, Ikiuoation,'' which organisation is undertak ing for to f*fi and winter contempla tion, hut win probably .$<? so regard wMch it came, byjEfefrnd of the year. as being pleased to find interert in tha Constitution on the increase. He remarked that apparently many peo ple are acquainted only with the lStB amendment v I Through the procession of -steps taken in the formation and ratifica tion of the Constitution, the speaker carried his hearers, pausing to pay tribute to Washington, Madison, Hamilton, and other eminent states men, who drew up the document and labored ia the campaign waged for to ratification, and declared that a di vine wisdom guided those men, who gave us that document j Stating that the Constitution pro vided the framework of a government apportioned powers of relationship between the Htates, and asserted it self as the supreme law of the land, he proved its efficiency, and said that only 9 amendments had been (Continued an page 2) '. i ' ? - -: ? r"T^". " r** ? ? I J. . a !:"' 'T -Vo. ?'?'"? J' \ - . .. .'.^,'r-t I 'ww^SJuLS! Sued ByTwo t*wye?. i Washington, Sept. 28.?W. K-Hen watt station ?tte "Pogg?j^??. <|3^dgSg 8?jSOTJ^ veport, La-, atadto I ?i? i? *r In of toe'Merchaiita' ??H ?" Swtothm, wM<* h ?? ??*?* ?( SsSsSaSa sfarsrisrsts I, The witness ^ tUng before the commtoifl* , 4? *? tiatill^triyi injt Sjn^hi January, ? Widci^ l?d iHOd <?IF f2? * $2,600 fee. Proceedings opened today with the I fcparing of an application of W. H. Chandler, Deadwood, S. D., who I wants to build s smaUstation and to opetito to tha <to)t.tta? ?? cycles, vkkh is toe w?w ten,* *ar ed by Henderson with Station WWL, Loyola University, New Orleans. Henderson countered-urtiA an 'cation for unlimited use of the wave length, which would exclude . both Cullender end WWL, and for en in crease in power from 10,000 to SOr 000 watts. He revealed that he ia contemplat ing a battle against bus tran^orta* tion sf frtghtrw* that he had other arusadea in-m ? ?behalf of the American people. fl have asked fbr the increase! Inower/' he said, no reach the people and further expose the dishonest me thods of chain stores. Any commun ity without bratos.enough to keep its ?profits at home i# doomed." tempting to destroy the reception 9 KWKH, and that false accusatiwj had b*?t made against him by radio commissi on inspectors. Although he started his chain store fight only a bout a year ago, Henjrsw, 1 igjoss-examinatipn by ..(Swften jDolle, attorney f<w tpydla Univerrity, said hipantipafliy was not of recent ori? gin. "Why," he exclaimed, ?wh*irl was married 26 years ago, I <**#* wife looking in a mail order eata lofe^d her Ilk want," he continued, ^to show the people means to have i&nsjSsSIS rine to former AmiiaMedory^.mei ^Gerard's Itot of MB -bo ?*rol M. E. Ketdwm to to'toffl <* ? ff m ^KSL ElPUaiON inniy E00-9 ywtBp who r^.-- ALlLaM\'/'Wlllir WlllCi*' 1 p8T8uwf |V ,-?jy . v jjfmljiiji r Ulfl lUfl ott DlywiBCT : (si? a I - . . ? - vj 1 on ft tftnu ' ? nig I mmmmI ^ . r i l? lift] 1 CurQulUt yOitOll. \if01V fcT'^r vOOpW?- i $?sgr$sJw? *& j September 18 UwiilA M < !R33KS.W?ns: atpiK-sKSS1 Mtveries ?p to the same date altho j dation to receivs tf?.gfull effect of < tha 90 par Otnt advanoe announced ( only two weeks before. : The North VjOatoliaa Association i was still maintaining its delivery of more than 11 times is maeh cotton 1 aa it received ap to tha same data 1 SgcBsMSS! eral Manager U. B. Blaloek, Wwdnes- \ day. T* Agfodatian had paid drafts for fiwt adyance on considerably j jaeB? :;#an :jll,000 bales Tuesday night or a total of mora than a half- 1 million dollars. Only 1,000 bales had i been received on the same date last 1 F?M- ' When asked what percentage of i tha crop the North Carolina organl- i ration would handle thin year, Mr. j Blalock remarked that, at the pes- 1 ant rata of increase, it looks as if 110 1 pes cant of thia year's crop wight not i be an oureaaonahie estimate. Ha ex- : plained that it is net so much a# a ] Jake after all wbw the large amount of old ootton of the 1999 crop which tha Association ia receiving is taken into account* ^. Edward Purdie, prominent business man and farmer of Duni^ and also Director of the Cotton Growers' As- 1 Bodation, said in a letter to the As- ? sodation September 18 that more < than 60 per cent of the cotton com- ] lag to :0unn, :*Weh is tha largest gisistipss; ?iiw i B - - * ?W' . ... ? -"** J Py-^Sji frefyi >. ; ?W.v. ? i 'Igg ? ftiliv]M 'I It aalli w aw ? nwi ns v. . | Skyscrapers Being Erected ; In New York Will Pierce i Tfye Heavens. #/ ? ? ll.iin i ?' - , 1 New York, Sept 24?New York's rapidly changing, skyline will give room to the tallest stone building in the world on December 81, 1980, when, the George A. Fuller Company . builders, compete the new City Bank-Farmers Trust Building in the . heart oTtba financial district ; Fow months later, this claim to ? fame will pass to the Empire State . Building now pushing its way to a goal of 1248 feet on the midtown site j of tho famous old Waldorf-Astoria ; aad . to the added distinction of . being the tallest edifice in any class- i Ification throughout the world. The ' Chrysler Building, which is not of r stone construction but is built wiffi brick facing largely, will then retire after, baring held the world's tallest bufiftir title (1046 feet) for the pe- J Thni for the first time since 1889 j when-th* EMM Ttower of steal was ; pushed to a height of 1024 feet in Paris, stone is to regain supremacy t ?wing budding materials for tpD , structures. Since 4,700 B. C. when the I Great ^fwnid of Gisalt was com- t pMedl' (410; feet high) during the J reign of Sing Khufu on Nile, natur- j al building stone dominated as the > bhitar material for all monumentalI j construction, a matter of 6,589 years. i Occupying die entire block bound- J ed by Exchange Place, and William, j Beaver and Hanover streets, the Cfty i Bank-Farmers Trust Building is be- j ing projected 56 woridhg stories or t 750 fSet into the afr, 821 feet higher j, than the Washington Monument A merican stone eosting $1,200,'000 will t be utilised entirety for foe ttrwUurel , facing, according to I. F. Manning, f vice-pwridont of the George A. Fig- ? er Mpany*$?m rtreetura) stone j, J1 The designers uf the building,? Cross A to Yorit w ^ ir. Manning states. For aoae 9 the urge ornamental carvings, rough ewn Mocks have been specially quer ied weighing asmnch as 4M00 In the age-old nee lor height, op 0 the close of the nineteentif eehtsry, rchitect and stonecutter "fled fben am* the steal and the skyscraper, rtth rtona somewhat out of the race' 1 the United States at least, for the kyscraper has never truly invaded . ^With tL^a^tL o; the BUM Ik' llm. IJlltiJ , % '5'J pirc Hsin^ 524 f&ct which first v -?,jt,'<?.iy^i- '.'?it' On several of the raaikets fittgw S7*a? rood." ? - f; ,-! {;, j,.i ? Total safes on, the n&e markets vera about 1,500,000 pounds, _" &}.?? t Prices averaged higher than had jeen expected on the Henderson to- - nuxket Monday asv the-stfling ceason began in the middle belt [here was a general air of satisfac tion amoejf the farmers, ??. r : Official sales were ZVLfiQO pounds it an average of $1180 per handrail The average on the othdr markets ranged from $11 to $12 per hundred, with some grades selling as high as M$i- * We may be mistaken, but on the^ Face of it appears that the move ment started by Governor Gardner for a cooperative. association of to-; l>aeeo farmers, has begun to have ef fect upon the big tobacco lords, who wold bate- mighty bad to see the North Carolina tobaoco .go Jntof*. E?ool, forcing them to pay fair prices. " . "WHITE-COLLAR MEN" One result of every period Of in-' Ration is that it renders-so many poung men discintinhed abta tin inr. ;vi table slump come* and .tbey are 10 longer able to get large mosey for small work. . Among the unemployed now are cens of thousands of these "wWte says get another, so they thought; meantime, they tried to emulate the' rich and spent their incomes faster ban they received them. Those men placed a false value ipon themselves and their services, tad many of them have not yet been' ire worth the fat salaries they used ? draw, and most of them will never io happy again, remembering always he days of egsy money. The really intelligent office work ers are the ones who have marie hemselves so useful to their employ-. ;ps that they are the last to be paid >ff when times are dull. They have lense enough to realise that the way. ? get ahead is to spend less then hey earn, to plug away steadily sT he day's work, and be content With' They are the ones who haws itored up happiness to tide '. them iver the dull times. The new, candle-power Lindbergh beacon, at Chicago, XB* nrhich makes a revolution every SO leconds, sends forth a 600-mile shaft if light. 1 ? 1 * ? In an effort to stop further inct iation of the Tfyring Tower of taly, hardening material wfli ba'iir acted into the sand and clay at its "?" v.- - - < ^ tase. ? *; . ?* . ' '*?/ ' ? ' >? * r m When 60 Lancaster (Pa.) girls ap >eared in high school without stock-" ngs, they were sent home with the admonition to not return until coro tifcfe garbed. . -'?? ' ' kv%V- "L* - J ,r-v' ? To win a 2&eent wager, Wayne Topper, of Wabash, I**, ate * pcun* 1 cheese, a box of crackers, and 48 '7'-"-' ? *T< T . < {. ?' XV ~ ? f \*, ? riuZ '/? ??? ? 'M 1 ? 1 1 1 " ' '
The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1930, edition 1
1
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