| Patronize Oar Advertisers, For | t They Are Oortstutly Inviting | X Yoa To Trade With Them. t t.............. r V, - ?*44SELL ?-'B^jr'aiii SANK "f * H ? IN ? | FARMVILLE + ,? 1 ~ v ;7~, ? ? VQLUM^ TWENTY-NINE FARMVILLE, PITT COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1939 NUMBER FIFTY-TWO ; i | ? * '1 ~? Roosevelt Plans No Further Men For World Peace Associates Say Presi dent Feels War Ten sion in Europe Has Les sened. Washington, May 3. ? President Roosevelt contemplates no new direct I or diplomatic action in the European I crisis, at least for the time being, close associates revealed today. They said that late official reports from abroad have convinced him that J tension between Great Britain and France and the Rome-Berlin axis has lessened and that the time is not ripe for a second gesture for world peace. J The Chief Executive's position wasl made known when he was pressed on I the matter of following up his recent I peace appeal to Italy and Germany J with a speech of another diplomatic I maneuver. He was said to feel that I the threat of immediate war has fad-1 ed, although he intends to keep in I constant touch with developments. Tempering of official anxiety over the international situation highlight ed other national defense and foreign J affairs developments, including: 1. Disclosures that War and Navy I department officials are studying I plans to establish air and naval bases I in Mexico and the Galapagos islands! of Ecuador to fortify Pacific ap proaches to the-Panama Canal. r 2. Increasing indications that new I neutrality legislation is improbable at this session of Congress. 3. The House naval committee re- j ported favorably a bill authorizing $6,660,000 to modernize and recon dition five 35,000 ton battleships?the Tennessee, the California, the Colora-1 do, the Maryland and the West Vir-f ginia. 4. The Navy Department, in an or der effective July 1, extended the basic enlistment period for sailors from four to six years to insure per manency of the enlisted strength and save training costs. The department reported enlistments on the increase. 5. President Roosevelt signed the $162,319,059 second deficiency bill I carrying $70,000,000 for acquiring materials and equipment for the army $36,000,000 for the same purpose for the Navy. 6. Rumania, which is seen as a probable theatre of future German aggression, made a formal proposal to the State Department for settle ment of her $64,000,000 World War debt. Details were not revealed and officials said they would not know whether it is acceptable until it has been studied carefully. Some officials saw the overture as preliminary to offers from other de faulters, including France and Great Britain, whose economies would face severe strain in event of war. 7. The House foreign affairs com mittee announced it will start execu tive hearings tomorrow on neutrality ? legislation, with prospects that Sec retary of State Cordell Hull and high War and Navy department officials will testify secretly. 8. The National Advisory Commit tee for Aeronautics prepared to ask Mr, Roosevelt to recommend estab lishment of five' new aviation re search centers. Col, Charles VA. Lind bergh, recently recalled to active duty, reportedly inspired the move. 0. Eap. Martin J. Kennedy, P., N. Y., introduced a concurrent resolu tion advising the world that "it is the sence of the present Congress" thai the United States will not de clan war unless the safety of the na tion is directly involved or there is a violation of thp Monroe Doctrine. 10. The War Department disclosed that an official French mission is in the country "with a view to possible purchase of munitions." The mis sion called on Assistant Secretary of War Letds Johnson' to announce its piuaiui.1. It includes Major General of the furore created last winter when rrcshfcut Roosevelt was erftfdsed ftr to announce a French air mission was here buying war planes. Tbs mission's visit wss revealed when aa experiment plane crashed m Cali fornia, injuring a member of the mis sion. ' ' v This was believed to have induced the War Department to chronicle the present mission. SPEAKERS PICKED FOB ^ V* ANNUAL FARMERS' MEETING ?-*; - *?* r*,' - m / ?'??** . - Members of the North Carolina Cotton Growers Cooperative Aseodak tion and tht-Farmers Cooperative Ex FMMWLLE COUNTRY Oil PURS INTER-CLNB TOURNAMENT - y Entire Membership To Play During Week of May 7; Event To Be Concluded With A Din ner Honoring Winners The Farmville Country Club has been divided into two teams, the Reds and the Blues, with B. O. Taylor head ing the former and W. S. Royster ? the latter in an inter-club tourna ment, beginning Sunday, May 7, and ending Friday, May 12. The following announcements are | made by the team managers for in- , formation of" players: Players on Red team wiH call op- i posing players on Blue team and set 1 time for their individual matches: Due to the crowded conditions, which are expected to prevail on Sun day, May 7, the ladies are requested to play their matches during the week days of May 7. All players will be required to pay one dollar before playing and mem bers of the winning team will have this fee refunded on the occasion of the Victors' Dinner, which will be given by the losers at the Municipal Park on Friday evening, May 12. In arranging the matches some players may have been overlooked by the committee, which requests that it be advised in order that every one desiring to do so may participate. Players matching their strokes and ability to slice, hook and lose balls have bean selected as follows: THE REDS THE BLUES B. 0. Taylor, Captain W. S. Royster, Captain R. D. Rouse vs. L. T. Pierce J. B. Lewis vs. Lath Morris Mebane Lee vs. : Lefoy Parker Rex Hodges vs. James R. Lang R. J. Wainright vs. F. M. Davis, Jr. C. B. Mashburn vs. 1 Lynn Davis Dr. Paul E. Jones vs. I ? R. A. Joyner J. I. Morgan vs. Irvin Morgan L. E. Walston vs. F. C. Sproul Will Moore vs. > Stanly Garris Alton Bobbitt vs. Billy Morton E. R. Sykes vs. Andy Martin W. A. Pollard, Jr. vs. Bob Fiser Dick Harris vs. Jack Horton M. V. Jones vs. L. T. Reese C. A. Lilly vs. H. H. Bradham Gradin Liles vs. Lowell Liles Ted Albritton vs. Dr. E. B. Beasley, Rev. D. A. Clark vs. ' Geo. W. Davis John W. Holmes vs. G. A. Rouse Neal Howard vs. Dr. J. M. Mewborn John D. Dixon vs. Lynn Eason Henry Johnson vs. Robt. Lee Smith A. C. Monk, Jr. vs. Robert Monk Jack Taylor vs. W. R. Burke C. A. Lilly, Jr. vs. John Hill Paylor Alex Allen vs. James Monk Bruce Beasley vs. Ferebee Beasley B. L. Lang vs. T. C. Turnage LADIES THE REDS THE BI^UES Mrs. Neal Howard vs. Mrs. H. H. Bradham Mrs. B. 0. Taylor vs. Mrs. C. A, Lilly Mrs. Kathleen Moore vs. Mrs. W. S. Royster Mrs. P. E. Jones : vs. Mrs. G. A. Jones Mrs. R. S. Scott vs. Mrs. James R. Lang Miss Malette Green vs. Mrs. F. C. Sproul Mrs. W. A. Pollard, Jr. vs. Mrs. R. D. Rouse Mrs. Alex Allen vs. Mrs. Sallie K. Horton Mrs. Irvin Morgan vs. Miss Mary Friar Rouse Mrs. Marvin Jones vs. Mrs. J. W. Holmes Miss Vernice Lang Jones vs. Miss Gene Horton Mrs. M. V. Horton vs. Mrs. R. A. Joyner Mrs. A. C. Monk, Jr. vs. I Mrs. J. M. Hobgood Mrs. John D. Dixon vs. Mrs. C. B. Mashburn, Jr. Mrs. Ted Albritton vs. ' Miss Hazel Monk Mrs. D. R. Morgan ? vs. _ Mrs. Bert McCullum Mrs. Will Moore vs. Mrs. George W. Davis Mrs. J. L. Shackleford vs. Miss Evelyn Horton Egypt Gets Rome Pledge; ? Danzig Worries Italians Rome, May 2. ? An Italian pledge to respect the frontiers and integrity of Egypt'has been sent to King Fa ro uk at Cairo by King Victor Em manuel in the name of the Italian government, it was reported reliably tonight. The assurance^ of friendship was sent to the Ifl^year-old Egyptian monarch shortly before Col. Gen. Walther von Brauchitsch, command er-in-chief of the German army, ar rived by airplane at Tripoli to Inspect Italian Libyan defenses adjoining Egypt and French Taws*. . King Victor Emmanuel's personal message to Farouk was said to have been transmittal through the Italian ambassador at Cairo. >;aHn.j| Diplomats believed that the mes sage was sent in attempt to coun teract anti-Italian propaganda in the Mediterranean and perhaps as a move to strengthen Italy's; demand against France for a share In" control of the Sues Canal V .< | Under the term Italian pact of friendship put into effect last mid-November and sub scribed to by the; Egyptian govern ment, Italy agreed to reduce her military forces in Libya, but recently has been accused of increasing'them. Under the terms of the Anglo Egyptian treaty of i936, Britain wfl remain in military control of Egypt for 20 yean, maintaining peace-time strength there of 10,000 troops and 400 pilots. The treaty provided for a, military alliance and, In event oi war, obligates Egypt to assist Britain ^ Reports, entirely unconfirmed, cir culated among Rome's diplomats to night that Premier Benito Ifaasoli* had Advised Faehrer Adolf Hitler fe proceed cautiously in handling bk quarrel with Poland because Italy ii reluctant to be dragged into a w? ever Danzig^ ' These rumors did not say whethe: Mussolini would": or would not go t< | jatj views with flrrc&t miflffiviiifls aw i m m _ . . CRITICS CANT AGREE New YorH- ?- New York critics couldn't agree on the best play pf the season, and so no award was made. "The Little Foxes," starring Tallutah 3ankhead, received six votes; five votes went to "Abe Lincoln in Illinois, and two each went to "Rock et to the Mbon" and "My Heart's In the Highlands," both group theatre productions, *+ * - Honor Rolt 1938-39 Farnville School First Grade ? Johnnny Barrett, Robert Rollins, Billy Russell, Patri . cia Corbett, Thurber Dudley, Dorothy Lucas, Geraldme Prescott, Connie Rollins, Second. Grade ? Charles Joyner, Mary Frances Allen, Elsie May, Ruth Moore, Fannie Quinn, Janet Stanslll, Helen Thomas. Third Grade ? Cedric Davis, Neal Howard, Charles Parker, Dora Mae Barrett, Lola Gray Kemp, Carolee McConnell, Claudie Aim Moore, Yivan Scott, Joyce Tyson, Betty Rose Wil kerson, Emily Barrett* Mary Ann Rouse, Fourth Grade ? Billy Batton, ?. Bruce garden, Sterling Gatesr. Har t old Rouse, Bobbie Russell, Maynard ' Thorn?, Sybil Barrett, Dora Speight ? Trevathan, Babs Wfllifordi ?L* Fifth Grade ? L. D. Braxton, Har ? ry Bavls, Milton Williamson, Flora - Dean Johnson, Janie Kemp, Johnsie i Mae Moore, Mary Leah Thorne, Cor > delia Vinsoifc^ i Sixth Grade ? Bob Paylor, Bobbie 3 Smith,- Shirley Winders. x;:;v ^ r Seventh Grade: Nancy Gates, Lois r I sill f I mas* -? r yjffUtrti rivo/iA ' VRihiflKAth MAATA I WjPW VJaoUv ajuimwvw* iuvuicj ?' ?" Tjw" 1 TialrJ W 'v High School Graduates Hoar Inspiring Talks Rev. Mr. Rountree and Prof. Deal Address the Senior Class Number ing Thirty-two; Class, Day Exercises Held on i Monday. , < Rev. J. R. Rountree, Episcopal j minister, of Kinston, and rector of Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Farm- i ville, brought a message of deep , thought and great inspiration to the < graduates of the high school, in the j baccalaureate sermon on Sunday j evening. 1 Taking his text from Joel, "And j your sons and your daughters shall j prophesy, your old men shall dream j dreams, your young men shall see j visions," the minister impressed upon the seniors that as they enter into i the larger realm of life they should ^ take the "wisdom of yesterday" and give it to a new knowledge, under- t standing and strength, weaving the t thought they had mastered, the in- i formation acquired and ability that had been developed, into the warp and i fabric of their lives. "The impres sions you . have obtained during this period in your life," he declared, "shall, like the perfume of a Chinese rose jar, cling forever." "This is a day of change," the } speaker warned his hearers, "a day | when the people clamor for the new. ^ Youth laughs at age and declares its j usefulness is spent." "But," he con- ? tinued, "there is very little that is really new. Modern inventions are builded upon the wisdom of yester- j day.. Marconia took an idea of yes- { terday and gave us the radio. Proph- ^ ets of long ago warned against thejc very, pagan recklessness that is so ^ prevalent today." t Pleading for the wisdom of yester day, the -speaker urged that old mis- t takes be avoided as Youth moves for ward, investing minds and personali- p ties in the possibilities, which lies B ahead, and upon them build a more j ^ noble future. "Nothing is too trivial to claim your attention," he declared, ]. "a flaming bush drove a man back j ^ to lead his people out of Egypt into j a land of promise; a Child was born j and the thought of the world was j revolutionized. You have builded a | ^ character during these past few years, you are possessed of certain talents and capabilities. What will t you do with them? Will you think j only of investing them for material ^ gain, or will you make some contri- ^ button to the solution of problems ^ that will render a service to man- ^ kind?" _ _ __ .? ? 1 /1-ltl ? ? Holding up tne gencie uaiuuau ?? an example of a character that touch- J ed with the benediction of blessing everything with which He came inj contact, Mr. Rountree exhorted this | group of young men to emulation of His life of loving service, and to the dedication of their talents to the up- J lifting of humanity, Rev, D, A, Clarke, of the Metho dist Church, offered prayer and the Scripture lesson, taken from the sec- < ond chapter of Acts, was read by Rev. C. B. Mashburn, Christian min ister, J. H. Moore, superintendent of the ? school, introduced the speaker, and t the service was brought to a close i with the benediction, pronounced by 1 Rev. B, B. Fordham, of the Baptist 1 Church. Anthems were rendered and hymns 1 led by a choir of voices from the t various churches under the direction ( of Mrs. Daisy H. Smith and Mrs. i Haywood Smith. ^ Jesse Mack Carraway, the small, i winsome daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ( Mack Carraway, mascot of the class, preceded the thirty-two seniors in i the processional. ' ^ 1 Marshals* were: Pauline Farmer, 1 Retha Mae Simpson and Elizabeth t Moore, Juniors; Alton Thomas, Doro- i thy Lewis and Yvonne Smith, Sopho- i mores; Alice Harper Parker, John i Parker and Cornelia Knott, Fresh men. . j The stage committee was composed ? of Miss Mary Alice Beam an, Mrs. L. T. Pierce, Mrs. C. A. Tyson and Mrs. 1 Made Carraway. j The graduation exercises were held i on Monday evening with superinten- 1 dent J. H. Moore presiding. The in- ! vocation was given by Rev. H. M. WilstBU^pf the Presbyterian Church. Rachel Louise'Barrett, daughter of ' Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Barrett, as salu- 1 tntorian, made the opening speech, and Robrt Eittman Pierce, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Pierce, was ^raledic torian. Mayor George W. Davis introduced the speaker of the occasion, Profes sorsor Ralph C. Deal, French instruc tor at East Carolina Teachers Col lege, who gave the young graduates much sage advice bound up in wit ticisms. accomplish. "And so," the speaker Presbyterians To HoldMeetiegs Rev. R. C. Clontz to Preach Week of 15th At Presbyterian Meet ing. Beginning: Monday evening, May 15, a series of services will be held at the Parraville Presbyterian Church. Prom Tuesday through Friday of that week there will be brief morning services from 9 till 9:30 o'clock, and Bach evening except Saturday, be ginning at 8 o'clock. The Rev. R. C. Clontz, of White- 1 rille, is expected to preach through- ^ >ut this' series of meetings. Mr. ( Slontz served for a number of years ? is superintendent of Home Missions n Wilmington Presbytery, and is now jastor of the Presbyterian churches < it Whiteville and Chadbourn. He is a ( preacher of unusual attraction and j >ower and has had good success in \ ill of his evangelistic meetings. j Special music will be rendered and , :he singing at the evening services vill be led by C. F. Baucom. \ A cordial invitation is extended 'to < ;he other churches of the town and } 0 the people throughout the commu- ( lity to attend these services. j 1 Local Business Man < To Attend National T C. P. Association Meet < i New Orleans, La., May 4. ? J. I. i dorgan, Farmville, will be among 1 eaders in the cotton oil industry at ending the annual convention of the ' National Cottonseed Products Asso- 1 aation to be held here May 8-10. < Mr. Morgan, North Carolina-Vir rinia representative on the Board of ? Directors of the Association, has been 1 1 leader in the industry for many ? rears and served,as president of the I irganization in 1935-36. He is presi lent of the Farmville Oil and Fer- i ilizer Company, ? ^ Nearly 800 representatives of cot- t pn oil mills and other industries are * xpected to attend the three-day 1 neeting here, according to S. M. Har lon, Memphis, Tennessee, vSecretary Ereasurer of the Association. t T. J. Kidd, Birmingham, Alabama, t s President of the Association; T. H. Jregory, Memphis, Executive Vice- e President; A. L. Ward, Dallas, Texas, t Educational Director; and Christie t lenet, Columbia, South Carolina, c ieneral Counsel. ' _ T < It's about time for the people of c he United States, including those in I *itt County, to forget their habit of am basting the government. All that s rou have to do is to compare what t ?ou have with what other people i iave. ' J ) ' 1 Congress Fines Prelonged Stay f Adjournment Move To Bring Demands For Longer Session to Stop War Step. % Washington, May 2. ? A demand that Congress stay in session' to ?aard the nation from being "eased" jr "driven" into war was made in the Senate today in reply to a move for Tune- adjournment.. It came from Senator Johnson (R. dalif.), a veteran exponent of Ameri :an isolation and a critic of admin- , stration foreign policy. He asserted ;hat it was to Congress that the peo ple looked for protection against var. "It is the Congress, with all its 'aults and shortcomings, and the Senate will all its sins of omission | rnd commission, that will keep us >ut of war, ahd no other person or ( ndividual, no matter who he may be, . vill do it," the Califomian said in a ? ;ense and solemn tone. . "We must be on our guard every , ninute of the day and every minute >f the night in order that we do not mrticipate in a war in which we are j lot concerned?in order that we not j >e eased or driven into it. , "For the people of the United ( ?tates," he concluded, as galleryites , >urst into lifely applause, "Let's keep { >ut of war.", ( Senator Connally (D. Tex.) empha lized Johnson's appeal with a state- ] nentj >as soon as the ovation sub- , tided, that he foresaw no immediate , irospect of war in Europe, but: "There may be a war, and the ( Jnited States has no business in that ] var. Nobody but the Congress of * he United States can determine j vhether we will be in that war or i lot." J Should Remain. I Johnson argued that so long as j here was a chance of war, Congress 1 ihould remain in session. j If, he said, the United States ihould go to war to destroy "these i wo dictators," referring to Hitler \ tnd Mussolini, the result will be a ] lictator for America itself." i "We all want to go away," he said, , 'we all want to go home, but we j an't go home. We've got to stay < lere on guard." ] Johnson's demand was evoked by i proposal from Senator Bankhead < hat, regardless of.the status of leg- ] station, Congress end its session on < rune 15. ? < First May Snow Brings Lowest May Temperature Mercury Falls To Only 1 Two Above Freezing; ? But Crop Damage Be- j lieved Slight. J - J Raleigh, May 8. ? Freak spring itorms yesterday brought the lowest' i emperature and latest snow flurry 1 loted in this section since the Raleigh > Weather Bureau started keeping 1 ?cords in 1887. On the top of pleasant weather ( tfonday,: rain began to fall shortly ifter midnight, as the mercury de dined from 60 degrees early in the j noming to a phenomenal 34.5 de- ( frees at 2:30 p. m. Only compar- f ible tow in weather history was 37.5 , legrees on May 10, 1906, Accompanying the freakish cold { vas nearly an inch precipitation in ( he forms of rain, hail and snow, the after falling in the Capital City j iround 2 p. m. The temperature drop vas accompanied by biting winds, but he warm ground caused the snow to , nelt rapidly. - No trace of snow had ever been , recorded here later in the year than , April 14 (1907?. , Heavy rain turned into pelting ( lailstorms at 7:30 yesterday morn ing. Early ones, to work found the . streets iced over, and dotted with torn ' leaves and twig^ On St. Mary's ? Street, near Needham Broughton High School, traffic was freed to de tour around a limb, severed from j a tree and leaning against a telephone cable. | Included in the weatherman's tricks, here were thunder and lightning, one bolt damaging to the roof and chim- . ney of a house at 12 Home Street. The scow was unforecast, but Weatherman H. E. Kichline extended _ a prediction of fair and warmer to day. ? ' v- v: -:1 ?; The surprising weather ^spread over a large part of North Carolina and part of Virginia, but the remain der Of the nation was enjoying clear and milder weather. H PITT COCNTYjRETORTSp ?eported today as strong winds, hail, tnd rain visited Pitt County. Pellets of hail which fell in the lyden community were rather large, , rat were said to have been soft Re- \ >orts from Ayden said the hail resem- ] )led snow at some places. \ Hail fell also in the Lang's Cross ?oads community, but damage was ight Only slight damage from hail vas reported in the Grimesland sec ion of the county. rRANVILLE RECEIVES TWO HOURS OP SNOW Oxford, May 2.?Snow fell for two ? lours over in Granville County t6 iay, the county's first recorded in itance of snow in May. The fall nelted ah it ^ truck the ground.. ? It was imtwssible to ascertain" dam - ige to the tobacco crop and to gar lens immediately. i FREEZING TEMPERATURE i RECORDED IN DURHAM ? Durham, May 2. ? A low ther- ! nometer reading of 32 degrees was i recorded here today in the wake of i storm of sleet, hail and snow. More ; ;han an inch of precipitation was recorded. It was Durham's first re- : rcrded May snpw fall. Gfreenville Allocated Funds For Power Lines i Washington, May 2. ? The. Rural Electrification Administration allo cated $3,422,500. today for construc tion of power lines. The projects included: City of Greenville, N. C., $88,000 for 110 miles of fine to 896 customers in Pitt County. MORE WEDDINGS '? '? *? . ~a*> ?'0*' Washington. ? The overtime work of Dan Cupid is given as a major cause of the present shortage of houses, according to the Home Loan Bank Board. The number of Ameri can families is increasii^at^tt? rate : ! SIDDEN LITVINOV RESIGNATION COMPUCATES EUROPEAN CRISIS . Veteran Russian Coip* missar of Foreign Af fairs Replaced By Mo lotov, Moscow, May 3. ? Maxim M. Lit vinov tonight was replaced as Soviet Russia's foreign commissar, a post he had held for 10 years, by Premier Viacheslav M. Molotov in what for eign observers regarded as a victory for Soviet "Isolationists." The announcement of the shift by the supreme Soviet's Presideum, the hierarchy of the U. S. S. R., was a complete surprise to diplomats. It said Litvinov resigned at his own re quest, but did not give his reasons. Molotov will retain the premiership for the present at least. There was speculation that, be cause of Moltov's reported isolationist views and his knwn contempt of the League of Nations in which Litvinov played an active role, the last possi bilities of enlisting Russia in the Anglo-French "Peace Front" against Nazi-Fascist aggression may have been shattered. It had been predicted for several days that Russia would break off negotiations with Britain and France if the latter nations refused to ex tend their military alliance to include the Red Army. Fear Collapse. (In London, it was feared that Litvinov's resignation, of which-Brit ish diplomats said they had received no prior intimation, meant collapse sf the Anglo-French-Soviet negotia tions of the anti-aggression align ment, already in a state of virtual deadlock). Foreign speculation ran along tne line that Litvinov, because he favored a "Western policy," might have been subjected to great pressure by the isolationists in view of the reluctance if Britain to enter into a tight al- ? liance. The isolationist, reported to include ehlefs of the Red army, may liave felt that it was useless to seek Franco-British aid in halting aggres sion in Europe and that Russia Bhould therefore withdraw behind her own frontiers and concentrate on measures to repeal any direct attack against Soviet soil, it was said. __ (In Italy, the news of Litvinov's resignation was received with en thusiasm by Fascists who regarded iiim as one of Italy's foremost ene mies. The average Italian, recalling . Josef V. Stalin's recent "purges", was inclined to believe that instead of re- ,? signing, Litvinov had been removed from his post). - Molotov, like Litvinov, is a vet jran Bolshevik revolutionary who iielped prepare the way for the rise" if Lenin and Trosky. Later, how ever, he was described as the man y who drove Trotsky out of Russia and i^to exile. Twice in his youth he was exiled for revolutionary activities. Molotov's real name, which "he * abandoned 25 years ago, is Scriabin. ? \ Wholesale Order ' Nearly 2,000 bushels of Coker 100 lotton seed, purchased co-operatively through the county * agent's office, iiave been distributed to Northamp ton County growers. municipal Primary A Here Fermalily Lack of Opposition Re garded As Proof of Satisfaction With Ad ministration; With Mayor ?teorge W. Davis, run oing for re-election, unopposed, and nomination, the municipal primary only five commissioners slated for ~ 7 ruesday, was merely a formality and a light vote was cast. Joining the "official family" com posed of Mayor Davis, Dr. W. M. Willis, J. W. Joyner and R. 0. Lang, were J. M. Stansill and R. LeRoy Rollins, who put their bid in for the Beats vacated by Irvin Morgan, Jr., and A. J. Flanagan. Lack of opposition to any of the candidates was regarded by citizens here as proof of satisfaction with the present administration, which has been most successful and marked by great" progress and development ? in municipal improvement projects. % Votes were cast a* follows: Mayor George W. Davis, 201; Board pf Commissioners: Dr. W. M. Willik?: 195; J. W. Joyner, 198; R. 0. Lang, 198; R. LeRoy Rollins, 195; J. M. Stansill, 199. C. H. Flanagan served as regis trar and C. A. Tyson and T. W. Lang - as poll holders. FINED; GETS TICKET ? ? Seattle' w"k; ~~ WilKam