Newspapers / The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, … / Aug. 6, 1937, 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
nn 111111 > 11111 n 11 ^ ^ rhm niri^rnininnniii ' 44 ** *' 1 * ** * 1 > * * U 1 ^ ' ' * * * 1 * * ' 1 ri;' ??? ? ' jjft ' ? , 1 ? ?V ' ? ? VOLUME TWENTY-SEVEN FABMVILLM >ITT COUNTY, NOW* CAROLINA, FRIDAY, AUGUST ?? IM7 NUMBER FOUR -? . i " ' 1 ;J| "? "" |. !.' >? i. i.I f i . . . Japanese Planes In Bomb | Attack on Chinese Army ' "V Wrecking Of Several ? Chinese Troop Trains Claimed In Japanese Quarters; Japan Would Create Another Man chuquo ( Tientsin, August 5.?Japanese air panes blazed a path of death along the Pei ping- Sui yuan railway today while the Nipponese high command in Tientsin and Peiping strove des perately to form an independent pro Japanese government for North ~ China. ? Three-engined Japanese bombers c roared over the Chinese central gov- c ernment's 89th division, which was 1 entrenched astride the Sha river and ' the railway 15 miles northwest of Peiping, and dropped scores of c bombs. The planes then followed the rail- ' way northwest and again bombed ^ the Nankou Pass and stations be- ? tween the Pass and Kalgan. The Japanese asserted that several ' Chinese troop trains were wrecked. rf Miliitary headquarters here said that five separate troop trains, car rying the Chinese 184th division, 1 were bombed in Chahar province to_ ^ the south of Kalgan "wiith heavy losses to the enemy." Another bombing squadron routed * bands of the Chinese 29th division, which originally was stationed in and around Peiping, and remnants ^ of the Tungchow peace preservation corps which rebelled against the Japanese and slaughtered hundreds n of Japanese soldiers and civilians fn the former pro-Japanese east Hopei autonomous republic headed by Gen. Yin Ju-Keng. Japanese land forces aiso ien ^ Peiping and advanced up the rail way to confront the 89th division ^ which is composed of veteran Chinese troops commanded by Gen. Tang En-Po. At Nanking, Generalissimo Chi ang Kai-Shek presided today at a conference of the highest military and political leaders in China to prepare coordinated plans for a general war with Japan. Leaders attending included Mar shal Yen Hsi-Shan, pacification com- 1 missioner for Shansi and Suiyuan provinces, Gen. Pai Chunghsi, die- I tator of Kwangsi province, and Gen. V Liu Hsiang, war lord of Szechuan province. Chiang controls central China. Yen's territory is in the extreme north, adjacent to the areas already occupied, by the Japanese, and Paf*s province is in the extreme south. * Gen. Yung Yun of Yunnan c province also arrived by airplane n and pledged himself to support the ^ general war program. His territory a is adjacent to French Indo-China ^ and French influence is strong ^ there. * He said that Gen. Han Fu-Chu, powerful semi-independent military u governor of Shantung province is co- 0 operating with the" government and ^ has facilitated the passage of Nank ing divisions through his territory 0 towards the Tientsin front. _ Reports leaking out of the confer- 1 ence indicated that General Pai, long known for his hatred of the ^ Japanese, was in favor of an imme diate resumption of the offensive. ^ Liu Hsiang supported his position. v Marshal Yen, whose province would be among the first to be invaded by the Japanese if the war spreads, 1 counseled moderation. Meantime^ throughout the con quered areas the Japanese moved rapidly to impress the permanence s of their occupation on more than 10,000,000 persons in Hopei province 1 Pressure was brought to bear on the emergency committees formed c earlier in the week by Chinese cham- * bers of commerce and civic leaders to restore order in the devastated 1 areas around Peiping and in Tient sin. ' Japanese agents told the Chinese ' they ahould set up an independent ' North China government at once and appoint Japanese advisers to 1 "assist" all Chinese officials. - ' Several Chinese leaders feigned illness and retired into hospitals to 1 escape being drafted for the propos ed pro-Japanese regime. Checks Received For Aged, Blind The first checks under the Social Security Act were received yesterday for Pitt county. Forty-seven of them came under the Old Age Assistance and 14 under Assistance to the Blind.. * ?: Many more applications have gone in for approval and returns on these are expected within the next two weeks. The aim of the Welfare De partment in the county is to establish the claim of all applicants who have received direct relief from the coun ty before investigating and establish ing the claim of other eligible people who have not previously received pafcUe aid. - * KV- >r5- V?. ' ' ? ?".* ?- . ? ? ! . Tobacco Mnl To Beta Wilson> Gov. Hoey Will Crown Rulers ? Mjss Hazel Monk to be Farmville's Queen c e Wilson, August 5.?On Friday, J August 20th, fifty two girls from a "very section of North Carolina will f ompete here for the honor of ruling d ?ver the First Annual North Care- p ina Tobacco Exposition and Festival, t o be held here August 19 and 20. h From among some of the most eautiful girls in North Carolina a a Jueen will be crowned to rule over he Festival for the coming year, t lie winner will have the honor of " hoosing her own King to rule with c ier. The King and Queen will be 7 rowned at brilliant .Coronation Cere- 0 nonies at the Wilson County Fair a Jrounds that night, at which time f< Governor Clyde R. Hoey will crown 1< he rulers of the Festival. After r-ards a colorful Coronation Ball will ii e held at the Watson warehouse tl ere, at which time Rita Rio and her y 11-girl Orchestra will play for the Sail. A Grand March, led by the a Ling and Queen and her Court of c< 'rincesses, and their escorts, will be ii eld. 0 ? ? ? ? rt *>??_ _1_ 1 1 Miss KobDie sue BiaCK nas uecu ci amed "Miss Wilson," and will be in n ttendance to the Queen, but she will d ot be allowed to compete for the n onor of being crowned Queen, as vi rill other girls. Among the young ladies of East n Carolina to compete for the Queen- s< hip will be Miss Hazel Monk of 'armville. tf vi BAN STRIKE NEWSREEL oi St. Louis, Mo.?Newsreels of the lj Ihicago steel strike riot on Memorial vi )ay, in which ten persons died, were "> anned by theatre officials of Saint a .ouis as "unfit for women and chil- ai ren to see," after a preview for po- ci ce, theatre men and reporters. n lealth Officer I Submits Report: C( . i A letter from Dr. Ennett, County 11 lealth Officer, received by town R lerk, H. A. Joyner, contains infor lation regarding; the recent venereal f isease clinic held here, and reads I s follows: Ir. R. A. Joyner, Town Clerk, 'armville, N. C. ly Dear Mr. Joyner: As per your request, I take pleas re in submitting a brief summary n the Farmville Venereal Disease 'linic. This clinic was, as you know, . pened on March the 24th and weekly n reatments have been given since that a ime. sj The patients are, of course, tested & efore being treated. The total number of different in- jj lividuals tested up to July the 28th ^ eas 943. The total patients found to be g( tositiiWTy syphilis out of this 943 tj >ersonPwas 197, or a2|% positive. ^ The average number of patients t] reated at each clinic is 53. 1 a The average number tested for Cj yphlis at each clinic is 50. ^ The cost of the drug per treatment j s about 10c. n On this basis, the total cost of the ri [rug to date for the Farmville clinic ^ las been $95.30. ? Each patient who is able to do so s supposed to pay 25c per treatment. p The total amount collected from e ;he patients to date is $24.35 or a n ittle more than an average of 2c per <j reatment. ^ This leaves a deficit of $70.95 g vhich has been met by the Pitt Coun- e ;y Health Department. < It is anticipated that in the near (? future, the State Health Department g sill furnish the local Health Depart- ^ ment a certain amount of anti-syphl- / Litic drug, free. c The regularity of attendance of f the clinic patients has been very t good. > ?? '?* ^- ? tvjj. As Jtieaitn ui^cer 01 nw ; I wish to thank the . Farmville City ^ officials for their interest and co operation in an effort to control *he syphilis scourge, a scourge which.is menacing the health and prosperity in every section of this country. In closing, may I say that it has j been a pleasure to the Pitt County Health Officer to work with yyu, your City officials and your citizens in general in carrying on health work in your comrafcmity. With kindest regards, I am Yours very truly, _ . N. THOMAS ENNEmV Health Officer. 4 Hutson Feels Outlook Is Fair For Loaf Crop ' ______ Marketing* Holiday Probable If Production Goes Up; Wheat Grow ers Declared Lucky Raleigh, Aug. 4.?The outlook for ora and cotton farmers in the Unit d States at present is "not so good". . B. Hutson, assistant federal AAA dministrator, told North Carolina armers and warm women here to ay, while the tobacco situation ap arently is not running into difficul- ? ies and wheat growers appear to be . lcky. ' Hutson spoke at the annual Farm nd Home week session. "The corn crop may be disastrous 11 0 the corn farmers," Hutson said ^ as the crop may be so big that they 8 an't sell it at all at a good price, he cotton crop may go up to 14,- r 00,000 bales with consumption prob- 11 bly around 13,000,000. You can't ? Dresee the effects yet but it doesn't >ok good. "The United States appears lucky c 1 regard to its wheat crop. We have 8 tie only big crop in the world this ear, it seems. "TV.*. ?nU/wn nnflnnb rlirht' nnw is ?iUV wwtiavvw vwnwa. - -0 . irly good as both the production and , jnsumption is up some. However, i ' the production goes up even 50,- ^ 00,000 pounds more than now fore ast the price may drop badly. We lay have to have a marketing holi- ? ay to ascertain if farmers want a larketing agreement and fix indi- a idual quotas." 1 _ The agricultural program .for the ation for the next two years, Huf jn said, should include: Conservation of land, acreage limi- 0 ition through some means; and pro ision for marketing agreements or ^ ther devices to handle surpluses. c Land conservation, he said, mere- P r was "{pod farming". The culti- a ated acreage, he continued, should y supply the demands, but not create ^ big surplus to beat down prices" P nd when exceptionally good weather reates surpluses "marketing agree lents or other devices should be used ^ ? keep surpluses in line and hold up tj rices." * ." Senator Borah, dean of the Sen te in point of service, voted against o le veto, saying that some farmers n ould be called to pay five or six per ti rnt, unless the bill was passed and a lat industrial loans, made by the g econstruction Finance Corporation, c : ii 'olitical Guns I; Roar At Cotton : Road Dedication: b Raleigh, August 4.?Yesterday's ^ lotorcade and celebration down ^ bout Goldsboro, Clinton and way ^ cations was billed as a 'Cotton Road' jlebration, but the thunder of ora >ry sounded to many like the boom lg of big guns along the political 1! ront. J There were listed on the program * 2ven "addresses" and at least six of lem were made by North Carolinians ? nown to have now or to have had in n he past political ambitions. The a sventh might be termed non-politi- p al in its implications only so far as 1 forth Carolina is concerned. It was f elivered by Bennett H. Maybank, 11 iayor of Charleston, and Hizzoner's a emarks were doubtless relayed to c be faithful in South Carolina's big- c ;est city. ' p The half dozen Tar Heels who ap- ^ eared on the program with suspect d political intentions were Congress- r nan Graham A. Barden, State p 'reasurer Charles M. Johnson, Secre ary of State Thad Eure, former v itate Senator Rivers D. Johnson, c rstwhile American Legion National 8 Commander . Henry L. Stevens, Jr., e Commissioner of Agriculture Kerr * Jcott, Judge Henry A. Grady. In ad- * lition there was, of course, Governor Jlyde A. Hoey, but his appearance ould be attributed more to his of- c icial position than to any aspira- * ions to future greatness. c Mr. Barden, naturally, neglected ' 10 chance to look out for his fences, he ceremonies being staged in his ( tome district. Rumors that young 1 [Charles Abernethy is likely to op- ( lose him next year have been too '? oud to be ignored. Mr. Barden 1 here, was not unwilling to appear lefore so many of his constitutents. ' -I! * ?"'/ r I If everybody paid their debts there , would be no debts; what an idea! It requires a statistirian to deter mine whether new magazines are springing up faster than old ones are dying* ? ? ? .suv... . ABOUT ADJOURNMENT NO FARM LAW CONVENTION BOOKS PRESIDENT OVERRIDDEN COURT FIGHT HALTED PRESIDENT IS BEATEN SENATORS LOOK AHEAp PRESIDENT SATS LITTLE ROBINSON, THE LEADER -??? I:' By HUGO SIMS (Washington Correspondent) The adjournment of congress, much lesired by many legislators, may be learer at hand than most people thinR lut, if it iB, a number of important ssues will be left unsettled.. With he new Court measure no longer ilocking the consideration of other egislation, the Wage-and-Hour Bill, he Wagner Housing law, a bill plug -ing loopholes in the income tax sys em, and some parts of the executive eorganization program are being ushed toward a votei Whether they an be enacted before the demand or adjournment overwhelms all oth r factors is doubtful in view of the ontroversy which will inevitably be roused. The general idea is that further arm legislation will not develop at his session, particularly in view of learings announced by the House Agriculture Committee. Chairman ones of the House Committee and 'hairman Smith of the Senate Com mittee, apparently have their own deas as to proper measures and re not inclined to push the ever orrnal granary plan, proposed by the 'arm Bureau Federation. In view of the indicated production f wheat and cotton this year, some ?aders fear that additional farm igislation is necessary to prevent a ritical condition from developing, articularly if the 1938 yields bring nother surplus. Whether yields this ear will lead to lower prices remains oubtful but the threat to farm pros erity is real regardless of the ad jurnment fever which is heating up Congress. In view of the Supreme !ourt decision upsetting the AAA, here is some confusion as to what Congress can do to meet the situation. Representatives Baker, Snell and ther Republicans continue to de ounce the sale of souvenir conven ion books by the Democratic Nation 1 Committee and while the investi ation that they seek stands little hance of being voted, they are mak ig some useful party capital. The ale of the souvenir books to purchas rs, at varying prices, included some aving business dealings with the rovernment. Office-seekers, corpor tions and others, no doubt, purchas d the convention booklets without ressure or thought of favor, but the pposite may also be true. As a loney-raising scheme, the sale of the ooks by the Party is not to be en orsed. Such a salesmanship device oes not fit into the clean record of he Roosevelt Administration in dis ursing vast sums of public money. The House has passed a bill liberal sing pensions for veterans of the - panish-American War, the Phillipine nsurrection, and the China Relief Expedition. About 23,000 veterans 5 years or older, will get $60 a lonth pension, the increase adding bout $4,876,000 to Government ex ense, and about 2,500, who require he constant aid of a nurse or at endant, will get $100 a month which ticrease will cost the Government an dditional $873,000. Whether the in rease voted in the House will be ome law or not is uncertain but the irobability is that both houses of Eongress will do as they have always ;one and pass almost any bill giving aoney in the form of pensions. The tensions are granted without regard o need or to any injury suffered while serving the Government. Inci lentally, when Congress displays the ame generosity to World War vet erans, the average citizen will begin o understand something more about he burdens of war. , Both houses of Congress voted to >ver-ride the President's veto of the rill to continue in effect existing re factions in interest on mortgage oans made by Federal land banks. The senate voted 71-19, with staunch iconomy advocates voting for the neasure which the President had de nned to sign because it would add ?30,000,000 to the Federal budget and ap-set the financial program. Every Republican, except Senator Vanden ourg, voted to over-ride, and Senator Smith of South Carolina, Chairman of the Agricultural Committee, was "astounded" and declared himself ready not only to reduce the interest rate "but, if necessary, to eliminate carried smaller rates of interest There. are a great many concfas (Continued on page two) Large Profits ItaaliZMt Frm Salo^fWhiskey Gross Sales Since Stores Opened Total $484, 544.76 Greenville, Aug. 4.?Charles O'H. Home, chairman of the Pitt County Alcoholic Beverage Control board, re vealed today that the liquor stores in the county had sold $484,554.76 worth of whiskey since the first units were opened on July 27, 1936." During the first year, during which time the stores were open only 11 months, the stores had a gross sale of $230,464.50. During the 12-months period which ended June 30,1937, the stores sold $254,150.26 worth of li quor. The board paid the state of North Carolina a total of $14,536.64 during the 23 months up to the end of the last fiscal year. In addition the state was paid approximately $1,000 in chain store taxes. The fiscal year-end audit shows that eight stores .have made a profit of $95,523.59 during- the time they have been in operation. The Board has turned over to the ( general fund of the county the sum of $40,000, in payments of $20,000 each. It has a paid inventory of , approximately $40,000 in stock and had approximately $13,000 in reserve , for operating expenses on June 30. The Board has spent about $5,000 ! for truck, store and office supplies and equipment and other necessary equipment O f_ V/llOiniUUl nvilic wuajr vcutw ow~ tention to the fact that the stores had shown an appreciable increase in , business during, the past several months. He said he considered this , increase was due to a large part to , the fact that the ABC board was granted the privilege by the last legislature to employ special officers , and give them the power of arrest, , He said that before the board was ] empowered to employ officers and , give them the power of arrest, its ( hands were practically tied as far as . a special law enforcement depart- ] ment was concerned. A good portion of the money spent prior to the granting of this power along these lines was for educational programs. An indication of the amount of in crease in business in the Pitt county stores was shown by the July report It was reveald that sales during last month were approximately $8,000 | ahead of the same month for last year. Highway Funds Diversion Still ! Possible In 1938: i Raleigh, Aug. 4.?Opponents of { highway fund diversion cheered in- ! wardly if not loudly, when the state's big surplus as of July 31 was an- 1 nounced; but they still shuddered at ! the thought that this escape perhaps 1 portended a double portion of diver- ' sion for the fiscal year 1938-39. i The surplus meant that there will ] be no need for diverting anything 1 from the. highway funds to the gen- J eral funds at this time, but it is re called that the 1937 legislative en- < actment on the subject applies to a 1 biennium. The assembly struck out 1 the previous provision for mandatory ' diversion and provided that there ? should be no diversion whatever so ? long as a surplus exists. It permits, 1 however, diversion to the extent of $2,109,000 annually and it is the op inion of the state officials that this i provision is cumulative and permits diversion of $4,200,000 for 1938-39 should it become necessary. The now existing law was enacted as the result of a compromise be- 1 tween administration forces and anti- 1 diversionists, a 'compromise which followed one of the rare occasions on which the dominant group was ap parently on the brink of defeat in the house. At the time, most com mentators declared the Department of Revenue had gained all the substance and-left only the shadow to the High way Department which opposed di version, as it appeared almost cer tain that disersion would be "neces sary." 1 The present outlook, however, is that there will be no need for di version even in 1938-39, though the possibility of course exists; and so [it may well turn out that anti-di veraioniBts were much smarter than they were generally crediated with being. ? Boll weevils have struck the Wil son County cotton crop in large num bers. ( On the farm of Howard Wat son 32 squares were picked up from the ground and 16 were found to have live grubs in them. New WPA Set-Up to Cut Administrative Spanding increased h Budget For Pitt . ( * Expenditures of $427, 172 Authorized By Commissioners For Present Fiscal Year Greenville, Aug. 4.?The 1937-38 budget calling for expenditures of $427,172,501 ? an increase of $108, 408.50 over the $318,764 figure for the fiscal year just ended?has been tentatively adopted by the Pitt coun ty Board of Commissioners. A debt service over which the com missioners exercise no control, ac counted for a big percentage of the increase. During the 1937-38 period, a total of $259,292 is the amount of funds to be paid on bonds and in terest. This amount is an increase of $82,292 over the figures of the past year. During the new year, the general fund calls for appropriations amount ing to $96,754.50. During the twelve months just passed, the general fund appropriation amounted to $95,000. In the county home appropriation, a slight decrease was realized, $11, 470 was allocated as compared with $11,708 for 1936-37. A total of $13, 648 was allocated for the Health De partment. l^his was a slight decrease against the amount for the previous year, which was $13,766. Administration costs ol outside poor and relief were shifted to the Social Security Fund this year and the allocation for this item was re duced from $21,280 to $10,508. New responsibilities were assumed by the county to meet Social Security re quirements?an item not in last year's budget. A statement on taxes collected since 1927 shows that .9459 per cent of all taxes levied since that time have been collected. The figures show that in the time since 1927, $5, 680,593.17 in taxes have been levied and that $5,373,789.83 has been col lected. < Unemployment Fund Continues To Swell Goes Over $6,000,000 Mark; Better Business Reflected, Powell Says Raleigh, August 4.?Employers in North Carolina had contributed a net of $6,195,436.44 to the State Unem ployment Compensation Fund through July, representing 9-10 of one per cent on their 1936 pay rolls and 1.8 per cent of the 1937 pay rolls thru the month of June, Chairman Chas. G. Powell, of the Unemployment Compensation Commission, announced yesterday. The contributions of 9-10 of one per cent on 1936 pay rolls reached 53,013,586.95 through July, exclusive af $2,931.15 in refunds and worth less checks, and the amount is being increased by small additions as em ployers are found who come under the act but who had not previously paid contributions. Contributions for the first quarter af 193"? at the rate of 1.8 per cent of the pay rolls reached $1,558,278.71, exclusive of $1,635.56 in refunds and t>ad checks. The April contributions were $550,248.79; the May payments $560,295.62 and the June payments $498,895.99, paid by the end of July. The increasing contributions of May over April, and the prospect of still another increase for June for which payments were due without penalty July 25, indicate improving employment conditions in the State month by month, as well as an in crease in the first and second quarters of this year over 1936, Powell said. First Week Sales Average 25 Cents On Georgia Markets Atlanta, August 6.?The state bu reau of markets reported opening week's sales in 51 of the state's 59 tobacco warehouses totalled 12,010, 160 pounds at an average price of 25.28 cents a pound. Receipts from sales totalled $3, 085,920.05. " ' The bureau said three of the 59 warehouses reported that they had no sales opening week (Thursday and Friday) and five were still to be heard from. Sales during the 1936 opening week (fourdays) totalled 26,818,196 pounds at an average price of 25.11 cents. Total receipts were 36,357,896.43. "Feed the brutes" is good advice: ask .any of the women who serve [church suppers. w District Offices To Be 1 Eliminated; 15 pe$ cent Personnel Cut Antici pated Sept 1; Relief Work Rolls Reduced to 18,600 Raleigh, August 5.?A reorganiza tion of the State WPA administrative set-up, to result in a 15 per cent per sonnel reduction when it becomes ef fective around September 1. is being worked out, it was learned yesterday from George W. Co an, Jr., State Ad ministrator. The proposed plan would eliminate the five WPA districts in the State and carry on administration of WPA through State headquarters and a "county-area office" basis, with pos sibly two to four zone offices. This economy step in administra tive costs is in line with the reduc tion of project workers -which is gradually being effected. The num ber of project workers has fallen from 29,378 employed last August to 18,600 authorized for August this year. In July, 19,800 were employed, showing a cut of more than six per cent in one month. At the same time Federal funds for carrying1 on WPA work in the State have been reduced from ap proximately $1,200,000 in August last year to $706,000 allotted the State WPA for this month. A carry-over of about $150,000 from last month brings the August total to about $850,000. The reduction in Federal funds and project workers in the past year is about 35 per cent. Consolidation plans for the State set-up are being studied now by Sate authorities and at the regional office in New Orleans, La. Coan said the proposal involves "the establishment of 18 to 20 area offices which will serve as operat ing units for an average of about five counties. It is also contemplated to establish cither two, three or four zone offices 'in various sections of the State which will have small of fice personnel whose duties will be largely supervisory and coordinat j ing." The plan would eliminate the five district offices now situated in Wil liamston, Raleigh, Winston-Salem, Charlotte and Ashevilie. Coan said the 100 county offices would be re tained and that the area offices would be reduced from the present 25 to not more than 20. "The larger operating offices in the new set-up will be the area offices," Coan said. "The administrative per sonnel of these offices will exceed in number the administrative personnel to be set up in the proposed zone offices." Coan explained that the elimina tion of district offices wouid con centrate administration of WPA work in the State office. Last month all finance division offices were moved to Raleigh and the proposed reorganization furthers consolidation efforts. ajic picocno luitti auiiuiiiouauvc personnel is about 310, with 150 in the State office and 160 in the five district offices. Dropping of about 40 to 50 persons is expected when the change is effected. Co an said reductions in administra tive personnel made during the past few months have brought about a 17 per cent savings during July and August. For April and May, costs of operating were about $80,000 month ly, he said, while for July and August, the average administrative expense will be about $66,000 monthly. The new plan of operation being worked out for WPA in this State is at present being tried out in Vir ginia, Mississippi and Georgia, Coan sad, with reported success. ? ? WHO KNOWS 7 1. What is the ratio of pedestrain fatalities to traffic deaths ? 2. What is the largest artery of the human body? 3. Is there a State which does not grant divorces fcr any cause? ? 4. What nation has the largest number of motor vehicles? 5. What two .teams played in the World Series last tyear ? 6. What caused the explosion that wrecked ^the Zeppelin Hindenburg? ; 7. Will me Government loan money for the construction of a generating plant to serve rural areas with elec tricity? 8. Is heart aisease increasing among younjg people? | 9. How old was Guglielmo Mar coni at the time of his death? i 10. Which navy is stronger, the French or the Italian? (See Hie Answers on Page 4) People who work too hard do not live around Farmville. Your neighbor has no right .to keep you from reading The Enterprise; you can subscribe to it in your own name, ? r " . /
The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 6, 1937, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75