, ? . , ? _____ I riiiiliiiri.ii '" JlMA ft ??????..?(- i l j j r .. . _ P.to?i? Oor Advertisers, For TT^ ... .._ ? 11 " MA _ :_ " - ^ " ? I TeB The Merchant Yon !jaw His They- Are Constantly Inviting Bf TV I I jCfal | I Advertisement in the Paper; He Yob To Trade With Them. OA 111 yf ? ? ^ ^ JL J* ?&> K^JL I Will Appreciate this Kindness. ?.? ' *? ....?i ? , , , ? ????- - . -v.,I-?M 1' I. -if f v . ,;.Y. V i 3^: .. m*~> * > ji .? ?& - ? VOL. TWENTY-TWO FAMVIU* PITT COUNTY. NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1981 NUMBER TWENTY ? - ^^.-v ? .. ?' Dark Clauds Scatter As Stock Prices Go Up i I.. Wage Reductions Fail to Throw Damper On Stock Market Trend New York, Sept 28.?Convalescent Wall Street burled security prices up ward today, as the doctors hinted that the more important surgical op erations upon the economic structure may have been about completed. Share prices registered one of the widest advances of the year, but the sweeping upturn of the normally more dignified bond market was even more spectacular. He cheerfulness spread to commodities, and cotton, silver and grains were higher. Shares gained $1 to $15, the widest advance since the war debt morato rium rally of June. In bonds, there were numerous upturns of $80 to $100 per bond of $1,000 par value, partic ularly in the foreign issues and the domestic rails. The average advance was the widest in more than a year. Trading was the most active for a full session since last October. The 10 per cent wage reduction an nounced by United States Steel Cor poration and followed by similar an nouncements by several other large concerns, was widely interpreted in all Street as one of the final capitu lations to the forces of deflation. It was acknowledged that it will prob ably have a retarding influence on trade for a time, but Wall Street felt that it removed one of the major ele ments of uncertainty. The London crisis had a decidedly disturbing influence for several days, ? ? ? * j even before it broke, but witn traa-i ing confidently resumed in the Lon don stock exchange today, Wall Street hoped that the British situation had become definitely a thing of the! past as a dominant influence here. Financial quarters have been j gravely concerned over the plight of! the railroads, and have regarded it I as one of the last vital problems to I be dealt with. Speculative quarters I were willing to credit rumors today] that aid, either in the form of in-1 creased freight rates or reduced j wages, or possibly both, was definite- j ly being arranged. Railway shares] led the advnace in stocks, and carrier I bonds registered many of the more ] impressive upwings in the market. j With the resumption of trading in] London, the-stock exchange lifted the ban against short selling, in effect! yesterday and Monday. A statement by Richard Whitney, president, ex-j plained that the ban had been ira-fl posed as an .artificial restriction! purely as a temporary expedient, and-] was not a reverse of the exchange's long established policy of maintain-d ing a free market _ 3 lifting of the ban ~ against the] bears was a signal for a hurried bear retreat rather than a resumption of bear onslaughts, for the action was] interpreted as indicating that the ex change officials felt that no more] acutely unsettling situations were hanging over the market The ex change continued its requirement that members furnish daily information as to the identity of short sellers, which tended to hold bears in re straint ?*? j ? There was considWiWW UlUUBUB of opinion in speculative quarters as to how much weight should be given the upturn in stocks for the share I market had been under pressure long enough to make a technical rally I overdue, and the abrupt rebound was not appreciably different from the many that have marked the course of the bear market. I The wide gains m bonds, however, were regarded as quite another mat " ter. It was said in highest banking circles that banks and underwriting houses had decided that the drop in bonds had been carried to extremes, I and that they were^going into the I market with plenty of eaah. In bonds, the British 51-2 per cent I issue came hack to par, hut slipped hade a point from the top, dosing up four pointa set The German and Argentine lames were strong, and tha ftalain governments, weak yea I terday, recovered briskly. I In railroad stocks, Norfolk and | . av&tioBw JEKBf** m&S ^ M#ckbrGsJc6r?lie's hsSL : aOiif Four Days1 Celebration I ? Yorktown To Be Nat [ ional Shrine in Cde I bration of Colonial Ar my's Victory in Revo lutionary Struggle Washington, Sept. 24.?With the heart of all America lifted Up in re dedication to those principles upon which our nation is founded, Friday, October 16, will mark the beginning of the four days' celebration of the 150th anniversary of the Surrender of Yorktown, in which the President of the United States will lead. The arrangements have been under the auspices of the United States York town Sesquicentennial Commission, of which Senator Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia, is chairman. In a setting representing a pictur esque Colonial Fair and Harvest Fes tival, to which will be added histori cal exhibit^ loaned by the army and the navy, together with priceless an tiques, there will be enacted pageants depicting the colonial life and the principal events in Yorktown's his tory. The French and American fleets will stand by in the York River with the frigate Constitution (Old Ironsides) occupying the place of honor, when at the opening of the celebration, soldiers and sailors dressed in colonial uniforms, will raise the U. S. fag of 1781, and then the French and the British flags, and i f i . will Doom saiuws. i Through the cooperation of the army and the navy, there will be magnificent displays of fireworks, and continuous band concerts. There will be colonial dances and games on the green, and marionettes and Punch and Judy shows against the backgrounds of other days. Virginia will do the honors on Fri day, with Governor John Garland Pollard presiding. In the mossing the Virginia State Commission will dedicate a memorial to General Lord Cornwallis and the; valor of the British soldiers at Yorktown. The Colonial National Monument will al so be dedicated by the National Park Service of the Department of the Interior in commemoration of James town, Colonial Williamsburg and Battle of Yorktown. At the exercis es in the afternoon, Governor Pollard will deliver an address of welcome. The program will also be a chorus by 1,000 children, and a colonial pageant. Saturday has been set apart as Revolutionary Day, and the exercises will be participated in by the various patriotic societies, among them the Daughters of the American Revolu tion, the Sons of the American Rev olution and many others. A feature of the program will be the presenta tion of the descendants of LaFayette, Rochambeau, Comte de Grasse, Count Tulaski, Baron Von Steuben and oth er great leaders of the Revolution. A historical and military pageant, with maneuvers by the United States navy will also be featured, and will be followed by a military and naval ball to be given by the United States Commission at the New Chamberlain Hotel at Old Point Comfort, Va. ^ Religious services will be held both in the morning and the evening on Sunday, with sacred concerts the massed band* During the afternoon there will be pilgrimages to the va rious historical shrines. The program on Monday morning, the tenth anniversary of the Battle of YorktOwn, will be opened by the unveflihg of the two tablets to be placed' at Yorkto\yn by the National Society of the. Daughters of the American Revolution, One of these is kv'memory of the French and the other of the American heroes, who made the supreme sacrifice. Mrs. Lowell Fletcher Hobart, President General, wiE make the adcbgess. .. He official exercises, at which Sepator .Clauds A. Swanson, chair man of the United States Yorktown .n?nii|| iiiitwiuiiil Gmmdadm will. 13 States, with their staffs, followed tion, and those in charge of public A and private schools, 20,000,410 school 1 children are expected to assemble at 3 1:45 the President's address over the radio and to partid- . pate in the celebration. The Presi- j dent will speak to them at 1:50, and < at one minute before 2 o'clock, eas tern ^standard time, he will ask these studnitA to stand,- sahtte the Ameri can fiafi: and sizur America* . | Michigan Peach Queen Visits HooveT~l j <^^35^He^!!o!e!^u5lg?S^e3^3va^^3l^^!3uTr? jcnted two choice baskets of the fruit to the President > Farmer's Club [i Organized Bert Jno. T. Thome Presi- ) dent; Organization To Stress Diversification of Crops A number 4f enthusiastic farmers, outstanding and representative of the < agricultural vocation in this commun- I ity, met Thursday evening in the mu-!? nicipal building here and perfected 1 the organization of a Farmer's Club, i which had been under discussion for some weeks. 1 John T. Thome was elected presi- < dent, and J. W. Holmes vice presi- < dent The dub is to be congratulated t at having these men serve as officers 1 of the group, as they are not only i planters of note but are financiers, 1 substantial ritizens and leaders in the various circles of community life and 1 in state affairs as well; Mr. Thome < being president of the State Cotton 1 Cooperative Association, and Mr. 1 Holmes one of the outstanding legis- i lators sent from Pitt county last; year. < The president addressed the dub, 1 making a plea for further dlverifi- * cation of crops, and E. F. Arnold, 1 county farm agent, spoke on the val- 1 ue of farmers' organizations and of ' the success of various dubs which had come under his observation in J Tennessee and Western Carolina, giv- 1 ing as an example of profound inter- < est the Mill River Club in Henderson < county, which holds an ' attendance ' record of many years. Brief talks relative to the success of the club 1 were given by members. 1 . : . . < PROF. KANE OUT ON BOND . - ? 1 Hampton, Va., Sept 19.?Elisha 1 Kent Kane, charged with drowning i his wife in Chesapeake Bay, was re leased from Hampton jail this after- 1 .noon after a $15,000 cash bond had ' been delivered to the court by his ' attorneys. | The young University of Tennessee ' professor was wearing a gray suit and no hat as he left the jail where he has been confined since last Sun- 1 day when arrested shortly after his j iwjfte's burial. P&i*' ? ? V sT* ?' i ... * Farmville High Opened Honday Enrollment Shows In crease Each Day; 185 in High School; 459 in Elementary School The Farmville Higll School opened m Monday with an 'enrollment of 344; 469 pupils being enrolled in the deraentary school and 186 in the ugh school. This number is increas ng each day. All necessary arz|ingemente for die opening had been ; completed by Superintendent R. E. Bpyd and his amps of workers, inehriibg the Jnegia-., nation of high school students, and rapils were able to adjust themselves ? the proposed schedules and work vas begun with little confusion. Formal assemblies have not been ield so far this week, the first chap d exercises being scheduled for 9:45 Friday morning. No changes have aeen mad in thr. program of these pe riods, Mondays, Tuesdays and Thurs iays being assigned to the elemen tary grades and Fridays to the high school. Constructive programs will >e continued and the large attend ance of parents, which is customary, is expected. The faculty is composed of 22 nembers as in previous years, and he system of engaging as many lo :al teachers as practicable, which was established last year, was followed igain this session. A total enrollment of 763 made a record for attendance last yea? as did he 21 graduates, being the largest dass in the history of the school. Athletics, which are supervised by R. 3. Cason, have a prominent place in he school and plans are being made to make this season the best in years. Slight changes in the schedule as mnounced by Superintendent Boyd include: The last bell for the morn ing session will sound at 8:40; lunch tiotir, 12:10 to 12:60, and the hour yf dismissal* will be 3:30. Well, it's about time for the pros perity boys to begin telling us better times are around the corner. Farmers who want to receive at tention from politicians should fol low the example of labor and orga nise. i " ?? i t . What's become of the fellow who used to tell about how much hexnade on the marketV daily advanes? ? The difference between a politician and a statesman is that a statesman stands for something besides his job. ~ ~ .?? i ?- - - - - - j rumville tobacco market j Farmville, n. c. ^ ? '; El. ,.-y "/ ? | | j j Doctrine Which He Has Taught in India to Se : cure,' Nationalist De li mands from Britain (Mahaama Gandhi, who is attend- J Ing the sessions of the federal struc tures committee in London which is! formulating a more liberal constitu tion for India, May wrote for the Associated Press an explanation ofl the doctrine of non-violence whichl he has followed in India as a means! for securing nationalist demands.) J By MOHANDAS KARACHAND GANDHI London, Sept 20.?Consciously or! unconsciously, we are acting non vio-1 lently toward one another in' every-1 day life. All well-constructed socie ties are based upop the law of non-j violence . . I have found that life persists in! the midst of destruction. Therefore,! there must be a higher law than thgt i of destruction . Only under that law! would well-ordered society be Intel-1 ligible and life-worth living. If that is the law of life, we must work it out in daily existence.., Wher- J ever there are wars, wherever .ybnr are confronted with an opponent,! conquor him with love. I have found I that thti jaw of love Has answered in | my own life as the law of destruc- j tion has never done. Has Penetrated. In India, we have had an ocular demonstration of the operation of this law on the wildest scale possible. I don't claim that non-violence nec essarily has penetrated the 360,000, 000 people in India, but I do claim it has penetrated deeper than any other doctrine in an increditably short time. It takes "fairly strenuous course of training to attain a mental state of non-violence. ' It is a disciplined life, like the jife of. a soldier. The reached only when the mind, body, and speech am in proper coordination. Every prob lem would lend itself to solution, if we determined to make the law of truth and non-violence - the law of life. To me, truth and non-violence are faces of the same coin. Whether mankind will consciously follow the law of love, I do not know, but that need not perturb us. That law will work just as the law of gravitation will work, whether we accept it or not.. Just as a scientist will work wonders out of vsridus applications of the laws of nature, a man who applies the laws of love with scien tific precision will work greater won ders. For non-violence is infinitely more wonderful and subtle than force of nature like, for instance, electricity. The man who gave us the law of love was a far greater scientist than any of our modern scientists. The more I work out the law of love, the more I feel delighted with life and the scheme of this universe. It gives me a piece and a meaning of the mysteries of nature that I have no power to describe. DR. JORDAN IS DEAD Stanford, University, Cali., Sept. Id. Dir. David Starr Jordan, 80-year old chancellor-emeritus of Stanford University, died here today of a com plication of aiiments from which hie has suffered for several months. " Dr. Jordan, noted pence advocate, became unconscious as a result of his fifth stroke of paralysis yesterday. He died at Serra house, his Stanford campus home, about 9:45 o'clock this morning. With Dr. Jordan at his death were Mrs. Jessie Knight Jordan, Jxis_ wife, Knight Jordan, a son, Mrs. Eric Jor dan, a daughter-in-law and two phy sicians and ttfo nurses. PAY YOUR SUBSCRIPTION ' , 7 ??? ?? ?1 ? The Farmville Enterprise urges all subscribers to make every .possible promptly upon expiration. The dates upon the mailing wrapper will show when your subscription expires.. This is dictated by several con siderations, chief of which is the evi dent fact that only through the con tinued loyal support u* our readers can we continue to publish the type of newspaper that we have given this know full details about, you cant af ford to niftil ah issue. ~ ? that the parent of a few dollars will M Hack Worry For Tb'e Farner Youttgsville Man Shows How to Make His 1931 Farm Pay Youngsville, Sept. 22.?On his 220 acres of and, most of it pur chased when prices were at their peak, William Thomas Moss supplies an example of progressive farming that ia in several ways unique. Al though owning a tractor and mak ing much use of it, Mr. Moss does most of his field work with horses, hondsome percherons which he raises for himself and also for sale. He goea in strongly for hogs but sells most of his surplus in the form of pigs seven to eight weeks old. He grows cotton but puts his main reliance on grain and legumes. Of every thing he raises he endeavors to pro duce enough to have some for sale. He kills five or si^c fattened hogs every yea* for his own use. "We don't need that much meat," says he. "But we like ham; so I kill enough hogs to give me all the hams we needd." ' He has ho tenants, employs day labor, and 6ith four hired men he keeps ten horses and a tractor go ing. He does most of his plowing and all of his cultivating with rid J I... ing implements urawu uy teowa ux two to three big percherons. "If I had money needing invest ment, I'd put it in cheap land right now," says he. And he would make of the land a sort of crop, by working it with the view solely of building it up and selling it when land prices rise, as he is sure they will do. He finds that there is a good mar ket for all the percherons he has I for sale. One city ice company want edjbo buy eight from him last spring. a year, titough he has sold as many as ten, most of them poung colts, in a year. Other farmers buy most of those he sells. ii" ; v Texas Plan Gets Sudden Support * South Carolina Assem bly Starts Acreage Re duction Bill Toward Its Passage - Colombia, Sept. 23.?A movement for the South Carolina general as sembly, for days on the verge of a sine die adjournment of the special session, to enact a cotton acreage curtailment program similar to that of Texas, gathered force today. mt? ti?,Avrwinfn/]lTr fkiQ mOTTl J. IK? UUUOC uuCA|ivwwu*jr . ing revived the measure and gave it passage on second reading by an overwhelming oral vote. Senate sup porters of the measure hoped to pass a similar bill there tonight, amend it to some bill already passed by the house and return the "bob-tailed" bill for house action tomorrow and then adjournment. Other senators favor ed sine die adjournment tonight Under amendments adopted by the house, the acreage curtailment bill would reduce the cotton crop in 1932 and 1933 by 70 per cent of acreage planted in 1931. It would be effective only if the total prohibition law fails to become operative. This was made law this morning when Governor Blackwood signed the bill prohibiting cotton planting in 1932. Honse supporters of the cur tailment bill asserted the Long plan was "dead" and that the legislature wil have Jone nothing for the cotton farmer unless it enacts the reduction program. The original bill is a copy of that passed by the Texas legislature, its Introducer, Representative Tigert, of Greenville, Dantzler of Orangeburg, and Bush of Aiken, said. ?f It provides that "upon the sworn complaint of any citizen of this state that any part of this act is being 'violated' or upon the request of any magistrate of any county in this state, or of the commissioner of ag riculture," circuit and county solici tors shall institute injunction pro ceedings. Violations would subject this grower to a fine of $25 for each acre planted against the law. - 1 ?" ????? ???? 1 i ? Mr. Littleton?What's the idea? These shirts are three sizes too big for me. You know my size. Mrs. Littleton?Weil, the big sizes don't cost any more^ than the little Farmville Tab. Market Has Satisfactory Week First Block Sale v\f Sea son Monday Averaged $11.32; Block Cleared' Tuesday The fourth week of the Farmville Tobacco Market began on )Monday with the heaviest sale of the season, and the first block. Total poundage of 688,714 was sold before 5 o'clock, and a sensational jump in prices brought the average to $11.32, the peak of the season so far. The block was cleared on Tuesday without dif ficulty, the sale being much lighter on that day, as has almost been made the general rule for Tuesdays. there, has been a noticeable incline in prices on the better grades this week, but the lower grades seem to have ilttle market value, though Farmville continues buying it at prices above some of the neighboring markets. The gain in prices has held up and the local market's average has been above $10 each day this week. Prevailing prices of the weed are to be regretted, but the warehouse proprietors, instead of being blamed or censored, deserve the gTatitude of the farmers, and ar.? receiving it this year, especially those of this market, all of whom are laboring aui striv ing hard to get the highest dollar possible for the fanner, who is their best friend after all. The warehousemen here: J. Y. Mc.ik, L. R. Bell, J. M. Hobgooci, R. H. Knott and G. H. Webb, are expe rienced heads in every phase of the buying and selling tobacco game, and are exceptionally qualified for the high position of \ rust and confidence which they hold in the hearts of the thousands of planters throughout Eastern Carolina. A funny story on the warehouse men of another town, which shows the grim humor of the farmer under any situation, though it may be mythical, is as follows: "A certain farmer sold his tobacco on one of the eastern markets and when ha to get his nitnssy ire found that not only did he not draw anything; but there was actually 50 cents charges against him. 4I can't pay you now,' he said, 1>ut if I go to heaven when, I die I'll send it to you; If I go to hell, I'll just hand it to you.'" A good set of -buyers is the beet possibe -asset for a tobacco market, and F&rmville is fortunate in the per sonnel of her two sets, which repre sent all of the foreign and domestic manufacturers and dealers of the world today. They are behind the Farmville market and are doing all they can for it. The merchants and citizens of the town are directly interested- in the selling of tobacco, their own and the other fellow's, and their best efforts are being put forth to make this market outstanding and keep it in a foremost position in the Eastern belt Total poundage for the week was I,671,276, which brought growers $178,708.96, an average of $10.70. ? 1 ? ? ? i'i i> ^ Legionnaires To Present Play "Oh Doctor" Three-Act Musical Com edy to Be Presented in Perkins Hall Friday Night, Oct 2 Coming ss it does with excellent recommendations and highest praise, the musical comedy, "Oh, Doctor!" which is to be presented on Friday evening, October 2, at 8 o'clock in Perkins hall and sponsored by the local American Legion Post, promises to be one of the best entertainments ever given here. The story re vol ves^ around a tonic called "Nervo." Based on this for mula theme, the plot is convincing ly developed by means of thriMtog scenes, full of excitement and ?4r prises and by witty apd sparkling dialogue. Colorful charier bits add much to the charm, entertainment and rich human appeal of the play. The well chosen group of principals include 15 of Farmvilte's most talent ed young men and women, augment ed by eight snappy and stunningly costumed choruses with 16 musical ^umbers, all tending towards the making up of one of the most spark ling and enjoyable musical comedies of the day. There are 80 people in the entire cast. Every one should see "Oh, Doctor!" It is the kind of a show which makes "playgoing" a pleasure and a privil ege, for it is not only funny in a re freshing way, but it has a dash of ro mance thai completes the ingredients necessary for a perfect plot The, clever and efficient director is | Jade Spioer, of Columbus, Ohio. '? *'!