Newspapers / The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, … / Oct. 24, 1930, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
? ?>:>'? ? * .-*BW - ? * .1 -? ? T ^ it M - 1 - ??f ? gb ^ ^ flS^a | w 1 OT AV-aiCT n?f ? _?? ,'?. .?M.__ __r %Ti\Mmr%t/,l MyK v wtF^ ? Ij ffiSE Sjl -^' I- '^E HH - ^^BI^Bl ^HaRk . U kS Vt-flVl'M 5 rw 3 ?> |f a | ? *? ;-'~' ^fc.. -, ^B^^ BBpt . - 5SW . Si ^B M * * *. ig>_1f i> i ~ id> -ri m-I? ^ __ ' * f I fiftik ?#'1^|kJi^WP^^B^B:' -F gr'"B 'B Im l flJII I -'S W :W^BMkwPB I IHiS ADY&rqSpiQi l f i ACKB ? I S S 1 ' 'S4"^Bad ?l''^B.S ' EaX' .mff I..B^^^; : B J-B ?"B m 'jB B S h9B l-'1'-' '?? '? ' "'li:' w1"Wft ' 1?B^B; - l?v I mw *??*??* ? r A- . .B-m^^' ???* mV H ?:?: B wj 1 oflktfflv JB*?k Jm? Jk%^ kfer | - *?? wioAr?ian g j t ir 'iuX,y.; '^y:;::'";:: ;?;-> ? ? . ' t'.' ... ?-???" '?? ' ? ' - _ ? . . ?'. ?' -"- :' ? . ' ?jjf?'-C?\ K_ ?"_ ' ' ' TIC: a . V'./. 1 I t%T~? 'J 11 '* - ' " II 1 ???? 1 " FAMfflLLB. PITT CODNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY. OCTOBER Nth, ,?30 TOtIW?r*'<*^ * : ; * ~ ???*? ^ifa* ?r?^ TteMshaat Many Cities. ; On belt Thursday and Friday, Oct friha Mart to finish. It hi not only a! roMdfog comedy bat has also a great ' rs"i3 out a doubt the j|i iMtirt show ever oftead by an amateur cast. It is put] on coder the direction of the tJhiver-' sa| Producing Company, and every^' whew the show is acclaimed an un - aouai success. The scb&ehTtilll to the company street of Camp Shore Off, with an army barracks as a back ground. Special sesnery and costumes for the production are being shipped here by the company. It is a unique and sensational production. The story of-Corporal fiage?"-oe? tere around Red Eagen, an iriah doughboy played by lath Morris, ami his screamingly funny Jewish buddy, lay Goldstein, played by JuBan Rum ley. Eagen and Goldstein have been in the army only thirty daya, just long enough to think that they know it all and know nothing. They pretend to be very brave and in fact are very I soared when anyone is around. Bed Eagwi is looking for a big promotion because be told Ids girt SaHy OOiail, pitted ?y EHaaheth Fields, that he - ?^MK'Un ^ ,, ? waft going to be a captain. Howrva j instead of getting a captains job, be gets in bad with the topi Sergeant, played by Thoa. Taylor, and is pat ob K P. doty. His baddy, Hay, is thrown on JL R with him far laugh ing at him. After Bed and Isxy are put on K. P. RedVgiri, Sally, comes to see him in bis new uniform and Red has to hide to keep her from knowing be is on K. P. Around this potato pile, a lot of the comedy re Tftlves. Red manages to bide from Ms jgfarl for a while and then news comes ?of a spy being in camp and Sally is mistaken for -The guard, a vary "hard boiled actor, played by Jim .Joyner, finds Sally and sends her to -the guard bouse to be shot at five bells. Then Red and Iny start out to save her and while walking guard, Bad, thru an accident, captures the spy, pares Ms girl and is promoted to CerpnraL He then gets to drill the famous awkward squad. About this, time the Armistice is signed and Red gftts to go back to Four Corners and marry Sally. There are lots of fanny situations in the show. ?Bd and bay date up the mmtt and tWr way gets Bed in bad with hit girt Sally. The nursea axe Green. Two old am, the Irishman and Jew, fathers of Bad and Isxy, ptaffdkhy a G. Spell and Sam Needle i,i ."L wyLa' wi_ u,- - HflBy 190 ISM B JOfO Wm W SttrNA and spend all their tiaae.making love to than. The eld maid war worker la trying to find a husband apd finally nabs the Y. M .C. A. worked, placed by iMaa Annie Perkins and J. T.. l. wwikwn qm wot min. run die a mate of amy adenea sensaJ ? ?*s> g^ each scenes which axe trfce to army Life, especsaBy to amice men. Not bimdred iocs Krfliii h as well aa the gas* up people of the cast In the special pageant, "My Dream rf the 3% Jtande*. will be read by W. G. Sheppsrd dicsaed in anifoat - .. w ?_ in sailor vtttforms, ? m -|> ^1, y I ^ . .__^. - m t H j, jm ?H?D!v <v|H|V mfmf&' SKI ~ (Vvfyooc 9m' fl ? ? JfflB^.w kin^lr TVIffvilUg MB BA?W ftj 1 *im Ik ? . _ ? _rfl k fi - i . , <[" 1 KjmK^ . i-**l i - " * ? i ??1 ?fl^KS. ?* flWHL. I a AifttmiMv AnjMkxmT/i ACdfSS) OFTRYING TO KHI rat BABY - Marias Wi?ni Claims Cruelty And Mistreatment By Her Hi ill? I;' Held In ML Marion, Oct .22.?A story of cruelty and mistreatment at the hands of . her husband una told hy Mm. Lewis Don- j can, who was testifying in a magis trate's court here this afternoon at her own hearing on a charge of at tempting to kffi or destroy her three weds' old baby boy which she had abandoned in a wood near here Sun day about noon. She is around 20 -4 years old. Dejected and apparently resigned ' to her fate, she related that she had ; ben drives from her husband's home I to Spartanburg, S. C., after failing to 3 lriH her unborn child with drugs which he made her take, claiming that the embryo was not Ida. This claim of her j husband's she stoutly denied. Finally, she said, he offarstlto:M-h? return to him and her five year old child ? if she would somehour: get rid of the ?fa>t ijj { r ? **?? -W* ^A r.Af ahhen OXie ???WO IUW >MV ...ra, ? dotted the infant Jbut had hidden it in tiie woods until she eouM have a . chance to see her husband and find 1 what his attitude was toward'her and j her babe. As the tiny boy was dis covered soon after she left it, she had not made up her mind whether to claim it up to the time she was. appre hended by B. L. Robins, McDowell county eonstabble. She was brand over to the January ' tern superior court raider $1,000 bond^ ? She declined to ask anyone to go on her bail. Sha dirrftftH to implicate her bus- 1 band in the alleged attempt to. kill : tile babe saying that he knew nothing of.lt* being in the wood until after it J was found. ' ^Witnesses testified that the baby, 1 lyhig in the undasbmuh where ft 1 could not be seen from the ldghway * fifty feet away /Would have froaen to death by 'Tor 8 o'clock that night , anyway; that ft had kicked off one . stocking and modi of its wrappings , and was already suffering from the < cold when found by a hiker who hap- ; pened to hear its forlorn cries. The bebe is, to aQ appearances ,all i right now, having been placed in the j hands of Mrs. M. JL Stafford by Mr. Iltobbins soon after it had been dis covered, Officers are trying to piaee ! it in some home. ~ LIVELY DISCUSSIONS MASK I m* WNTt KBDICAL IIBET I wi-'7 Wk the program el the Pitt Comity Medi cal Society meeting held here on! Than*ay evening of la* etoek, with Dr. O. S. MorrQl as boat* had Dr. Sr ?a^oflZtbj^2 sseeial guests at this time Drs. E. T. James nee, m 1*20, in a pofitieal address here latf alfi*. said tfiat irhile he S^te^ab elected at the November election, "the existing farifflaw will be re pea Jed without hearing or other cere monies." ? ?*" -^41 ? ? ; He added: "The-schedules which will and daubtless should be retain*; ed are those relating to agriculture. They ere probably no more helpful than harmful." ?v , This was Mr. Cox's first speaHng appearance in the Ohio Democratic campaign. '?&??': *''? , I The logical canseqnences of a Democratic Congress, Mr. Cox said, would bfe that ^'wewill destroy the depression now hanging over busi ness. We will re-establish the cor dial relations with the nations of the earth. We will say te our manu facturers that it Jb not necessary lor them to build plant in foreign coun tries." "Any farther readjustment* of the tariff," he said, "should only come after a complete investigation by a Tariff Commission made up of eco nomic specialists?not a commission constituted in part by representa tives pf special interests." "Not only fc*ye Republican leaders throughout the years claimed a mon opoly on our prosperity, but & fee many instances they We treated the American people as chtt&en. It wee undo: the threat of prolonged tariff discussions and nsaitbg in instability in business that they Were to thfeir control of the government, "In this campaign we hear noth ing said abost patent riga member of. the Cabinet, Mf. Pp*is, utj. _H lut fnr M*. Alt Will WV f '-H'-wy ?T. . T-r-v- | Davis to convince any one that bpsM neas can be any wow than it la now, In any circumstances. Nevertheless, why not meet, very definitely, tfie inquiry which can be very logically pot as to what will happen if * Democratic Congress is elected this year. If the Democrats should carry only the House and immediately sp an formal organisation enact a measure wih>Wd>Sng thit ptoSr* 1 quo whidrthe Smoot-Hawley mon- | strosity - ftispfocas Senate, as now ably pass the hill?and-1 venture the prediction that Presfcknt Hoover would sign it This would htintjjn: operation perfor^wttbout *?*' = slightest probability of temporary, a "The voters of the country, there fore, have the opportunity of render ing immediate service, because the would be heartening to our manufac < turcrs; it would be pregnant with a meaning at ?gice understood by our foreign customers?In short, it would presage the only measure of relief sow in sight," ' r. "i I... ../'5 | ? r ?, ,._ ???''?^ ? - ??- '. * - "V"^-' V 5v^V*^: ? -J, iiBii.ywvin t^fV11 if^j j Danville, Va., Oct 82.?Notice was served In the dtj^jpolice court today ftat Ja3 Sentences In fatW will foi ?? . ? ?" _-v? -.'??*--?--**? . Murray, stmei* ^uniMaum tnreai*' ening Miss Bailie Hadgkamfcoiaid ?l,A ___? A,-J XA w_%l1, iA MtminJn ovMall sne wanted tOrjPifE w pro viae small hrothewwitk dotMNt: fiPp ' Commonwealth's Attorney John W. Carter prosecuted the cans and eon zrtgzxsigsS. ESlSSlEffSSS itiA&sssS far d^oa^iro^ I I | threats and the iwi^g of several FranS^aSo^ganipep of the ?aioft, <?d not jwrtw here teday m the nniid la, s^ettteg m**f \* morrowcifoce pronjjsestopay eertein bills for food haw Wm^m* tmlon-has hod difficulty ft was tan* radrin ** %^?FntrrUr?itSaheS John Hopkins Hall, state commis sioner of .labor and McCaU Frasier, commissioner of motor vehicles mere ^TL100^ Z??? strike management committee, vhich {Hedged co-operation in preserving the I A y\ivf ? -??-? YSW^Y Wt/^ i ^ ASn 1 ^ ^ ^^t?^ ^ f ?*??i ftongi the J^resident withheld ghetto* a ^ic ?t^t oY| proble fwraStaf^nllel to it which [ entails effort both in city and>tgrt-1 mmjmgtfm wmrnw prevent exaggeration in diacuaalona ofthesahfect \p^ WF ? , -? 'Jf* , I ? J_i._ ?_ v?.j_ -xl :- x rom a?t? now in ukj .imius ui |he federal government, largely com- j the number of unemployed workers ww Placed afc ?$00,0Q0 *nd H was ^ The census inquiry was considered demonstrating that thsre was on tide average in each family one and three *^ kj ?? - MMtefuMka - i i?i>1a m1<I n ?i inl n?n J ggggg^gg pletely devoid cf bread:^nneri than has usually benpf so regarded. i"cThejis"'ww the usual reports to tfcezs-Bect that the n^t step in tKe fn iiii.1 ?iLiHini.'il ii III iMli~M f'*** IVkituuj - ll! .m'. . ,f J P?lH a large scale, but there ware no offi Was not Den^a^ aeximte propoaais This expectation was confidently ^ ted t | Among the plans already diacussed hp this eaWhol committee, Secretary Hurievittdicated today consideration - had been given ops under which em- ! ployraent would be divided among a Jarjgc??umber Of individuals working * shortw^lme. ?:^ ? : The plan already has been used hy the War Department in flood control "By ewgloyiog 2,000 mfen for three ; days a week instead of 1,000 for sfe days a week, a meal-ticket would be j provided at least for ail of them." ? ' y '? ? i ? '?ii ' H One Of Two ??* Om*? Both Of Them Beemed S* T??r. ? . ... Memphis, Tenn., (Oct 23ililjjylg of the Mississippi Rivor today dis posed the bodies of two yoraf uwa^ unconscious and burning1 alive in a brash fire. One of thita <fied iate te d*y of a crushed slrtdl. MmML ? l d^d ^u^, old^ Ihe discovery that on? of the youths -^ M|-?? ? | . . | g "-"v" v ^\'?.-? "':' -??' I* -tmimitmir Ambulance at tendants who brought ' themhere found only the letters and I the diary. Both tetters were signed i "Irene, "and were dated at Day Book, I N. C. Oa? was written October 16, the ?othef^ct^i^ V::; ? S-i- i \ At the top 4f. age was written, "in i school" MI -miss you aft. I sure wish ? I could be with .yon," it said. A scrap of poetry apparently writ* I ' ten by the other, was found with the letter^ ently were beaten six or eight hours [attack. wtt iSd^ I About A wfiv|^| Nei hbors " ^ I WLl TM-?I utiif If i * i t f , A *ft / /\ i i _, I ureonviiie -ucvodgt outu wes itij|ci28s** ^anniversary of eGorge Washington, | Governor Is Undicided About ; ?MwHa4l0llir; ture For Future. Raleigh, Oct. ^.?Although defl- i nite W9 available, < itfcsterday at the Bud- '? get bureau that the 1930 State Fair was operated at a total deficit of ] approximately $6,000, as against aid-' 1 vance estimates of between $20,000 i and 126,000 .This estimate was based < on die present business depression. < The operating deficit in 1929 was < $7,000 ,but 1&ze was a total deficit 1 of. $41,000, due to permanent im* ( provements afti carry-overs from I the 1928 fair. "This year there wen i no carryovers and no permanent im- < provements, and all charges of every i nature, Including the employment of cpvered in the estimated $6,000 de- ^ ficit Although gate receipts wqrt j slightly less than last-year, expenses were iept at a minimum, Governor Q. Max Gardner stated, < ularly in the last days of the* week ] and by expressions, fhat have come . to him. ? -? ? .?? y .a, ? ? ? . ? ?. "I visited the bw aevarai aaps and was impressed by the orderly j manner in which it was conducted { and by the highly creditable ex- < hibits," stated the Governor. j However, he added that he has not ( decided what recommendations he ; will make to the General Assembly c for the future and will not do so un til after conferences with the dlrec- . tors of the Pair and- with his Ad- t visory Budget Commission. , Although the Pair,this year was regarded-as making an unexpectedly Pine showing in view of the hand!- 1 caps of ""hard times" and rain, the ? besitaney as to the future is due to the general opinion that -for the $ State to operate the Pair a eredi lable manner, about $100,000 should ie spent in additional buildings, walk 1 vays, etc., m aiidftioq to the *?V 500 worth of buildings erected by he old Pair Association and the city rf Raleigh, which in addition to ?* jash payment of $75,000 surrendered to reversionary in thb eld U legislature ? not ,e- i yarded as a particularly propHitous 1 time for getting appropriations. The * only State money spent on the Fair * by appropriation has beten $24,000. in 4 L929, but $41,000 was paid out of the emergency fund for the deficit last a year and a siiikilar payment of )$6,- i 300 will have to be made this year. I ?!&&? * ANNUAL BAZAAR TO $E HELD ^ The annuel basilar of the Episcopal!* P^Tlocal post dTHie American Le- M giori ha/"recently remodeled and for- W wftfch it has very gensrouri# loaned 11 ^ a ius fuie i xra v ^ uuzue? ux tuc i j Wsji. * it I 11 "Wh ?will 1 i ? m I] ' " I ' * ? jdio Central Prison ftnd vdblijh imcnt pf ^ prison solely for ^ OTO ^d^tt^riiatedgn Awt couW to recommended. K-stattsj k?i to? toJto p*to-'. ; lpiH)lH!ll'J9thin the wells has ?. iy dinged," Mr. Dunn told the club, ||f wtora he If a awriWr. ? - >?: * "Of the 2,800 pm&frt the State Prison Ithiak there are several hun M who go out avdarthe supervia ion of eounty welfare offices or other competent jKpeone and make useful aitifflM. P* policy of the Parole Board Of it is established will be to supervise closely ell paroled prison *ra and to revoke the pfgplep of who en not able to keep jobs. - "Lack of. law for such a board handicaps us on one aide and lack o* finances handicaps us op thsse sides, ft costs, or should poet wtth the pree*> pit number of mug* about 83 cento a lay or IQftO a year to mrintafn a pris ?ner, although we have recently held Ws down to 78 cent a day under the Spwnort economy program. Prom he purely financial side, the relief to he taxpayers of .the State of 840 prfs^ paroled tuidor sucli ~ a systciQ sould be $90,000 ? year," l Mr. Bmm declared the prwtnt oca* *ap and predicted that his board and he Governor's spedkl Ipmnrfssion, vhich da headed by fir. Boatard W. Mum, of the Univerrity of North Carolina, will reoammend^thatit hp Ion for a new^nn, somewhere in Eastern North Carolina ,to Sensed inclusively for crippled sad physical y defective prisoners. Going at some length into the ptob ems confronting the Prison -oBard, ind paying a high compliment to itapt George Boss Poo and Chester 0. 3ell, his chief assistant, Mr. Beam pave a number of statistics concern ng the prison showing <jbat of the tm >f .age, 797 who have served prepioua erms and 614 who have committed tome form li homicide. ???. v ^i'~ /;! '? ? ?? PriOMton, W. Va., Oct 28.-EWr? maids patrolled the county Jail to ' 1 *" "Wi-. ? "t light, where Mrs. Minnie Stull, 30, ws held for grand fray action after . dickey Stall, ^gh^g^^therl*. ' ? ^ ' ?*"*; :- '? "Mama dlid it," the boy *a$??|gj&d is saying In hoapttal *?She pot me h a tab of hot water and then took : ne oat She did it four or five times ind then Bfflyj*^"^ Billy is Mickey's brother. He is 16. "Do you know what would happen iTSSlSSSSSSIL" S??SS?'"" Urfto'^t ^,0W ^ % WW:** It spa only today ,when the story was .? r 11 l rr.itli.ihiB j? ^arii ^ ?' L- ' - lot/ juw< CIia VAA +-~'* '?"*' fef ii.Vi^1 r..:. "iI??? -^;?' V -*'&] ? ?? ? _ _ ~ ~?' "'t " j , ?' ^ ' y' a - * .Jif - '? .J- J. -^V. . ' ? *4^1
The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 24, 1930, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75