? ' ' - ?as.'", -.1 ?. MU1MIM> t I They Are CwHpl|*itiiig ? J Too Te Trade With Them. ! j i ri > i im i ?fi m ?mm ihii 11 miU m. ,i'? fvfi- ? I 1("^ j - ? 1H if ?jk H U ItH ? ? ? ?*-- II hi .mm I pflr Ilf9!^! A ~ JLJL^h^ JL j I h.jW* > :' r i-~? 1 m Tfce Fannville Tobacco Market for the first seven days of tins season hdSaold 4,572,392 pounds as compar ed with 2.472JM* pounds for the fMI seven ddyr of the season of lltt. This as poor will note shows * ffcther good infttesbd hi pounds, which increase we hope to carry on thMagh this season. And we win be ?Ml to do this if every one inter etfNti in the Futevflfe market will oaly do their part in boosting and CiffUng for the market. There has been much common to bacco wold on the "floor* since oar lent report to you, consisting largely of trashed oat primings and common tips width has had a tendency to lower oar averages some. The break os Wednesday appeared to be slight ly better-and the buyers more spirit ed In their bids, all of which reflect ed in a higher average of approxi ntttHy a dollar a hundred higher tltfa Tuesday. The fading on Thura day morning seemed good and we pledict a more satisfactory sale to day. Good tobacco is selling better. Some selling as high as $32.00 per liqmli wl this morning. At this ttne from what we have been able to get from reports of the i other large markets, Fannville is stiff Ml ding in price averages. We hme ekery reason to believe that Whan the better grades of tobacco btghnto show up on the floors, our aftitagte will pick up considerably. fhrskers are advised to keep their t side cQ' dry, grade closely, and bring it to Farmville, where you will get tit highest price possible for each pBa Follow the sale card at all thins, as we sell only one day* to the hsiae in order to avoid block sales. Important Triple-A Announcements Made ?. Y. Floyd, AAA Executive offi csfof State CoHege, made two im portant announcements this week which vitally affect tfce Agricultural Cnjwttstion Program 1k the State. Ike first coaMkl the rate of H(P cciiiaei'vatien payment on cot ton. A tentative rate of 2 cents per pith# for the allotted acreage times normal yield was announced j last >iovember. But, when more than 90 percent of the cotton growers in th#Nhtionpfr*>jtk within their acre age lflotmhitt, id was found that in suEfideat funds to make the full- 2- i cent-pfer-pound payment were on TW Agricultural Conservation Act aWw* a deduction, or- inereaae, of not mow tluui 10 percent in the-psy meats wtren such a situation exists. U Hidfrilisim had been below the estimated figures, there would have btm A njlteSSi far pigment. Unitfort, Ffsyd said, the rate of psyuAt on cCfctosr wSl bis 1.8 cents jar' pifcmd for tiHe allotted acreage normal yield, a 10 percent pMbLtiue m the rate of payment As other ansoancctnent by the tfffptf' ens the absndon naftt of the previously announced piet to matehsizy vetch asd Aos tjfct printer pes stod available to f 4s in 41 Eastern North Ca*o flbuntiee ar a grant-of-aid, shu ts tin Hsu and phoephat pro i in the State. OMP^psonda of seed magbl by the i ? - v" Jga ': i lOdJ i?$4 ~ ' ^0 gQpp|y " b$ 'jslrpTi to ^ Mir Warjhreats Rushing* More Troops Into Manchoukuo To Guard Against Rus sian Move Tokyo, Aug. 80.?Japan's fears that Soviet Russia, freed from Euro pean pressure by her non-aggTesion pact with Germany, may seize the initiative in the Far East are caus ing a great flow of Japanese troops through Korea pnd North China into Manchoukuo. On a journey just completed thru Manchoukuo as far as the Outer Mongolan battle zone border, this correspondent found troop and sup ply trains choking the railways. They were being rushed toward vul nerable points along the more than 1,000 miles of frontier across which j Japanese troops face those of the ? Red Army. ( Japanese military men are con vinced that one of the major con siderations of the German-Soviet , non-aggression pact was an under taking by Germany?so recently : linked to Japan by the anti-Comintern \ treaty?not to interfere with any , Russian moves against Japan. I (Japan and Russia, who fought a i major war in 1904-05 with Japan j victorious, have been., at swords' , points since Japan's conquest of . Manchoukuo, begun in 1931, drove Russia from her old sphere of influ- ] ence in North Manchuria. , (During the last eight years there j have been hundreds of clashes along , the Manehoukuo-SBberia frontier, , culminating in the fighting along the } border of Manchookuo, Japan's pro- \ tectorate and Outer Mongolia, under Soviet Russia's wing. This has been j continuing intermittently since May j 11, Japanese and Russians battling , each other ostensibly on behalf of t their protectorates.) j Hitherto most Japanese have felt } that in a new Russo-Japanese war , they believed bound to come they n could choose the time and place for \ its opening. The Moscow-Berlin ] pact, however, has changed this con fidence into anxiety expressed to me j by Japanese 19 all walks of "life j throughout Japan, Korea and Man- \ choukuo. ] No estimates are available for the . Kwantung Army (Japan's powerful 3 garrison in Manchoukuo). Its strength has been estimated at 500, 000, approximately equal that of all Russian forces in Far Eastern Si beria. But all indications are that ( reinforcements are very large. e Japanees expression concerning j prospects of a war with Russia vary. , Army officers naturally express con- ( fidence in Japan's- ability to win, al- 3 though some admit that the necessity , of keeping large, forces in China j might prove an important difficulty J (Japan has about 1,000,000 men en- 1 gaged in her two-year-old effort to conquer China.) . , Lieut. Gen. Hensuke Isogai, chief 1 of staff of the Kwantung Army, told 3 me he did not believe a full dress 1 war was imminent He and other < K -aatung Army officers pointed-to b .the infinity of supplying major Russian armies at the end of the < lung Trans-Siberian Railway, in < spite of recent completion of its j i i 1 ' iouble-traclring, in euppoHT of this | ?dew.' (It is known, however, that Ae Red Army has done an it could, jy establishing arsenals and supply Jgpots in the Far East, to make its forces there self sufficient.) Among great numbers of Japan sae, however, there is genuine dread )f. the Russian conflict they believe s emminent. V> ?, ? i'? |-j . > n .. At-iL - "5- is fei rafiaiy &w?'^(xp6Ct6Q? ?.v*&?. C ? w V&nc6 Baise, Stit9 ? Hiftlr^Ay X t j % " "** B *?4 ' Id that private owfiflw of land along , . ? "; ~^j ' ' l *?" "" ?%|*2^L "* the weather bureau follow! C Pear 88 feet (three feet over Monday i Sept, 4 Members^fFaci^Ar Moort j today that preparations aire|heatfy complete for the opening of the Farmville graded school on Monday, ready for distribution by today. A principals-meeting was held in? Greenville Thursday night,, at which time the school heads worked admin istrative details and routine mattelM relative to the opening >f all Pitt County Schools. . I School busses will be released from the Pitt County garage in Win terville, according to. County Super intendent D. H. Conley, but unless a driver who opiated a bus last year can produce a driving certifi cate, which will be checked by the Pitt grand jury and State Highway Patrol, he will not be permitted to thrive. Mr. Conley states that school bus routes have been laid out accordion bo the 1989 law and can be altered M?ly through provisions set forth bjrl the State School Commission, and ivarn that any violation of the bus routing, as laid out by the Commis sion, will be charged to local school authorities. ~^ ?liteL ? ? * . .a - _il_ l- _ I The attention 01 motners, wno lave children expecting to enter school Monday, is again called to the ruling which prohibits a child being altered unless he is six years bid on >r before October 1, andjfurther ?ules that they mxte\ be enrolled for he--first month of the school term, i The new heating system installed I in the graded school building; the I recent renovating of the Home Ec inomics 'Cottage; a new Tinit, the Agricultural and Manual Arts build ng and gym recently completed , at i cost of around $70,000, together vith a 12th grade and a nine months ;erm' offer opportunities' his year the most successful in its listory of 36 years. - The only addition and changes Swhh Jhe list oF faculty members irinted- hi our Tobacco Edition on he 18th of August are: Miss Mar? Warding, Wilson, will teach English tnd French, and Miss Alice Beaman, English and Latin, NEW SPEED RECORD ???? Paris ? Major Manric - Rossi Jairas to have established a new; world's air speed record of 311.621 tilometerS (193.622 miles) an hour j average over a close circuit of 10,-' )00 kilometers (6,218.7 miles) in a ji-motfered Amojt 37ft type v plane. Hie former record wan held by four Italians who averaged 286.970 kilo neters an hour in a flight made on lugust X. ,7-,.I/:' :; ^JllBKwMllMaHlB were declared identical today in an ! 'unusually cordial exdiahge of greet !Sd thf I Marquess at Lothian. I government I have {he honor to rep-j resent to do everything in its power J to maintain peace -And to bring | may require by pacific means and so help to bring the nations back to stable prosperity and table peace'', Loi^thi^ldito^idei^l^; ; are confident thafc^n this search for peace- they - an ~ only pursuing , same ends whieh you, Mr. President, and the Amerioan people also have .t V,a<.^+ n at heart. Mutual Cordiality In reply, the President asserted ! that it was "the afasere desire . ot : the American government and peo ple that the relationship of mutual ' cordiality , and mutual respec^ now| 1 happily existing between our coun tries shall continue to prevail as one ' of the corrierstones upon which the structure of peace shall be" founded. "The principal task of interest- 1 ional statesmanship," Mr. Roosevelt 1 !WTW*> euect peacexur whiT live eolations of contnftre* leen the nations and thtfe tof I :he folly of War, which un fteems to overshadow the ?fry. ftnterican government and * live consistently* over niany ?] ft voted themselves to \ the 1 ?r pernoment Ipeaoe and an 3 ftp fear of aggression. In. ^ ftt, I am happy to record, ft always found that the 1 ftvernment and people went*] the same endi'V . 1 ftnv- jn which King Vittorio I P Italy asserted that hip j ?as been doing and is doing ' I is possible to bring-about 1 lith justice.*' < ftwge' was in response to 1 ftvett's appeal last -"Week , I take the lead in a move ftsure a pacific, solution of ftt crisis. Use King's brief . ftred* that ha was "grate-; ? le American President for. t 1st." The monarch added Id immediately transmitted ! ftntial communication "to ftaent." ?''f :| lhange between Lord Lo- I I President iRoosevelt was I Innectidh with the Ambas- 1 ftsentation of letters of ( ?Tthe course of a day io 1 I President also received a 1 ? satisfactory progress from 9 Indutriee Board, and Stall- .1 ?vudiBpatchc. on (fee pro-: I l/ents abroad. let with the stiff formal Ihhdi -asaaQy attend-Iruch?; 9 9 ^^^^ftord Lothian Appeared at I I suit an^. eV^n uitiig^-J I rolled umbrella he carried when he- 9 arrived In. Washington'i.yedtsiday^ ' He was in conference with Mr. . Roosevelt almost an hour and a half. The ^ | of the United States Steel Corpora 1 tisatibn at industry so that it might i I ? ' '' ' li ' a * ? ?DBnn * ? fl^}p^pvp(''.>?^p^^pp ^rrr. .a ??**T'aio? feobbitt and 0. M. Carpenter, of the Raleigh WFAofffce,and Mr. arid Mrs. If. J. Shephard ami Mrs. Mc Mullen of the WeMon office, all of the Unqanaqr members 4$-ftm?, vine's nobtefco eoloily^nrid a mm* bes&rf guests front nearby towns. Prior to the sumptuous barbecue dinner, served at seven o'clock, Mr. Bobbitt, of Raleigh, made" a presen tation address and turned the key of the club house over to Mayor George W.vDavis, Who accepted-tiie new creational center jn' behalf of the town of Farmville. Bnef remarks of mutual admiration and/ appreci ation were made by other WPA and town officials , relative to this and preceding cooperative projects un dertaken'for this community. the sum of *13,006 lias been spent jointly by the Works Progress Ad ministration and citizens of Parm ville since the golf courts wds start ed in the spring of 10?8, the riew club house being eonsfructfed At a cost of $7,500. . Tito new building, ornate and spa :ious, has a center lodge or lounge 12x48, with locker rooms, a kitchen Mid ladies' powder room. It is fin ished lri rustic; stjjtf vWth paneling; has a lafge fireplabe in d^fcsr'end of the kmngey OAd'irff'iWi lighted and ventilated. The ffcOttf ire hardwood. A vhtaridarhlftadogBd raining almost the lenfctb sSttfeg- for the ifclUBng. The course is-now in excellent shape and Ike Pollard, secrtEhry, re port that, the ,clttb is meeting all ixpensea, is free Of-debt, and has . *' surplus in the treasury, though fur iiBhings for the club house is expect ed to cause a shrinkage in this par dcular. ' ZT . ., ?? wamam TO^A., '\?'n, ithl^~^*-'' I lwfliy^CV^ny .'^^. ?- A-j of^ 'g IB years' e*i?^n??Pe y. ? .. durinj? the I iHUtlvU a> ? j J the cmramt ^ S&T r,?r. T^- ?* .jwWlDUtw,. yj^- -y- ^!P?5s3 "^!!?!?^^ ^?,T^ rtusBQ from $93 to SlOO^ month ,v 2?^TT'TT' ^'. nnft:;i'iii'i'r A* ^ 'Wnf 4 ? ?: ?, \ ? ^ cm in ourea among . wmte teacners . it* -; /??'&f Jhf*afik ? t im. B six years' from $116.50 to $118.50* I jitlnI I nt^li ? ^ n ? IJ LI ?"* riiiil Atftt-ttVf cMinnl 'Qiy?nc6' WflOOl ?" ' ' ? . tfivil .Will XliUUw JviliViy *i^Av , WWJA) 1 Poi ^^^UTeF^pj^foA^ " ^EnSs^ryS1odS^^I^^ " irJ'. ' : ' : ? ,-? V.* v London, Aug, 30.?Fuehrer Adolf * Hitler failed tonight in an effort to induce Poland to send an emissary to Berlin immediately to receive his fpll demands and negotiate on sur render l ot Danzig mid t&e Polish J corridor, and Europe's great powers brought their armies to a new high pitch. The British government sept a message to Hitler, answering.his re quest that it try to. convince the Poles of the advisability of sending one of the heads . of the Warsaw . government to Berlin. Even before dispatch of the Brit ish note, Ambassador Sir. Neville Henderson in Berlin had advised the Geirman government that Britain would not make such a direct rec ommendation to Poland: In Warsaw, an official, govern-. ment spokesman said Hitler's latest proposals to Britain were "'even cruder" than his statement to France and were unacceptable. Poland Balks Poland was reported in Paris to haVa informed both' the British and French, governments that none of Hitler's latest demands were accept able. Thus, it seemed apparent that Po land would not agree to a ritu^t'on reminiscent of Chancejlor . Kurt Schuschnigg's visit to Hitler Just be fore the Nazi absorption of Austria or the urgent visit to Berlin of Priwi^nt "Rjilfl Hacha of Czecho slovakia before the little republic was taken over by Germany. Instead of .approving Hitler's rec ommendations to Poland, the British : government merely passed it on to Poland . "for the purpose of infor mation." . ; / ' Tonights British message to Ger many was. understood to have stated again in forthright terms Brititin's determination to fight for Poland if the Poles go to war over Pantig, the Corridor or upper Silesia: . At the same time, Germany was told that Hitler's "observations" for direct Polish-German negotiations in Berlin" had been communicated to Warsaw and that Poland, had been asked to send her own obser- t vations to Britain. Crisis Continues Britain was said to have told Ger many that there can be no question of British pressure against the Poles and that both the procedure and agenda of any negotiations can be dtofded only in consultation between' out fSTcnns" to Hitler's latest commontaitioi speak ing of direct German-Polish nsgbtia ' "L k r SLenville, Aug. SO.?A MUttae* oftiro and a rtralgh?8^?01^^^ ^Idi^^had 'in an effoHl to" avnid AVfMt. Ths ? , ?i>' I*- .'; _: viitr%ifr'imkt%A ' Tlrtii'l WT