i a payments sa&aa&asa&J a i 1TMAS 5T10NS sections...
Transcript of i a payments sa&aa&asa&J a i 1TMAS 5T10NS sections...
PAGE EIGHT
fmmincomeT$270 per year
That's Farmer's Average NetProfit For HisTwelveMonthsWork
CASH INCOME $854 IN 1928
By BION H. BUTLER,Ir The News and Observer
The North Carolina tax commissionnot long ago made a study of
the farm and tax situation in a
number of counties of the state,among the number including Moore
county. In Moore two phases ofthe problem was studied, one the
peach situation and the other the
general farm condition. As thepeach problem was somewhat abnormalas concerns farming thatis not so much of a question fromthe farm viewnoint. But the studyof general farming in the countyas well as in other counties of thestate is somewhat illuminating.To begin with a bulletin from
the State Agricultural departmentsays the average income of thefarms of North Carolina is $1,351.The average cash income of thefai-ms of North Carolina for theyear 1928 was $854. Out of thiscomes taxes, fertilizer, wages forhired help, the wages allowed thewhole family working on the farm,and every other expense. In thebulletin under consideration it appearsthat of the farms in the surveythe net cash income on theaverage farm in the survey totaled$270 to the farm after all the expenseswere paid.That shows right plainly the
condition of farming in NorthCarolina, and for that matter, isa rather good representation offarming all over the United States.Much is heard of the plight of thewage earner, but if a survey shouldbe made of any other occupationthan farming and the net cash incomeof a representative numberof persons in various counties ofany state should disclose a netcash income 01 $270 to the familythe uplifhters would bt out on thestreets denouncing everything forthe situation.
It is argued that the farmer hashis home to live in and that he has jhis garden to help out in his liv- jing, but any other man can have jhis garden and his house as well i
... mm
V
OurIt is issued to e1
counties. Wto this
CEi.
When you come
upon year in this
| every angle of t
We will work t(
| made easy whei
We will see th
| affords.
C
Roge
Warrentoo, N
IN THE*
j* * *
SPORTS WRITER PICKS V:RUNNERS, PLUNG
BY PHILIP MARTIN, rpHIS is the time of year when th<
j expert goes off by himself to thequietness of a padded cell to glorifyAmerica's horde of collegiate fdotball players.While he smokes long black
cigars and drinks cup after cup 01strong coffee, the expert consultshundreds of newspaper clippingsand scribbles many notes which aretorn up. He reads and re-reads theletters and recommendations of hishenchmen stationed in various sectionsof the country.This goes on for several days,
during which there is a loss of appetite,sleep and weight. At lastthe expert emerges, a smile playsover his haggard features and heannounces that the 1929 All-Americaelevens are completed.
TTNFORTUNATELY, only 11 men^ comprise a football team, evenIf it is an All-America group. Becauseit seems unfair to name llplayers as supreme, we have selectedtwo other teams. It's not entirelyout of the question to believethat the second or third team Coulddefeat the first eleven, were theymatched in actual combat.These men ot the 1929 Hdnor Roll
have been chosen with the aid of aconfidential report from footballcoaches and writers in various sectionsof the country. Twenty-fiveschools in 16 states produced theathletes selected.We have sought versatile football
players for the All-America teams,believing that in versatility lies ateam's strength. A combination ofshifty runners, strong line plungers,kickers, passers and pass-receiversis the desired arrangement Andito these teams they are combinedto the Nth decree. O' Joe Donchess at left end on theundefeated Pitt eleven reignedsupreme among eastern wingmen.Tappaan wag the greatest end the
as the farmer can. The fact isthat the farmer's average net cash
income is $270 after all his costs:f operating his farm are counted.According to the figures in tfyesurvey Moore county farms earnedan average of $29 cn the farm as
in investment. Many counties ofthe state earned nothing as an
investment on the farm. Five ofthe eleven areas surveyed showedno return on the farm for investnent.In Moore county 51 farms
Ve RepecInvita
very farmer in Warreie want yon to bring ygood market, and sell
;nt:we will strive, as we
i county, to give you a s
he compass.
) see that your handliii you drive within our
:at you get every pei
OULD WE DO MORI
Accept our invitation
rs & Hi
orth Carolina
WORLD OFk- . *
ERSATILE ALL-AMERICA'ELERS, KICKERS, PASSERS AN
fI
! d. »'' IIHWSMW flWM.IL
' f FIRST TEAMI Dbnchess, Pitt ....... EndINaguj-ski, Minnesota. .Tackle, J
i I Brown, Vanderbilt.. i.Guard J| Ben Ticknor, Harvard. C^iyter If Andersbn, N'rthweet'rn.CuardlI Sleight, Purdue TackleuII Tappaan, Southern Calif..End!I Carideo, Notre Dame (0.). «
I!* Quarterbacki Marsters, DartmouttuHalfbackI Lom, California....HalfbackK McEver, Tennessee..Fullback
J SECOND. TEAM| Fesler, Ohio State,, EndI Gordon, Illinois.TackleI Montgomery, Pitt.... .'GuardF Heinecke, Stanford. .. Centerl\ n ar.i.tttnnuiif woiro x/nmo» .uunrif
Westra; Iowa........TackleBaker, Northwestern... .EndBooth, Yale.1,. .QuarterbackSaunders, Southern Califs
HalfbackBanker, Tulane>»« .HalfbackWelch, Punfue(0.) .Fullback
THUjD TEAM. V. Smith, Georgia EndWakeman, Cornell..,*TackleFarris, North Carolina...GuardSiano, Fordham . <.. .CenterMagaf, Penn GuardDouds, W. A J. TackleTanner, Minnesota EndHarmeson, Purdue.......
i*: *»'QuarterbackUansa, Pitt! HalfbackCagle, Army (<X). .HalfbackSloan, Nebraska.... Fallback!
» < T7J
k
Pacific coast produced- The playof Wesley Feeler, an All-America 1selection in 1928, showed Improvementthis year but even then fell a 1
were surveyed. The net income to
the farmers averaged $337. Allowingfive per cent interest on the
investment in the farm the profitscn these farms averaged $29 to thefarmer. These farms did not includethe peach orchards whichwere considered separately. TheMoore county farms surveyed showjedan average tax charge of $83.The taxes took 19.8u per cent, or
just about one fifth of the farmer'snet income. On rented farms
It
itionn and adjoiningour tobaccoit with
RE ihave for year
quare deal from
ig problems are
doors.
rrny the market
:?u
unter
A
THE WARREN RE(
SPORTS s»' # *
EVEN, COMBINING SHIFTYD PASS RECEIVERStrifle short of the pace set by Donchess'and Tappaan. Baker, "Catfish"Smith and Tanner, were brilliantin the campaigns of theirteams and only a'pace behind theothers.The wild and untamed Bronko
Nagurski and big Red Sleight arenamed at tackles. It was worth a
lot to witness these two giants in[action. Lou Gordon, the best tackleBob Zuppke ever coached, andWestra.'Wakeman'and Douds'wereremarkable linemen.For the guard positions, selectionfinally settled o^ Bull Brown
and "Hunk" Anderson, fighting captainsof Vanderbilt and Northwestern.The work of these twoleaders predominated. CoachSutherland of Pittsburgh calledRay Montgomery^, "the perfectguard" while a piece of heavy coastartillery was meek and. docile as
Cannon. Ray Ferris and WalterMagai were outstanding at guardpost3.
* * '
T)EN TICKNOR stopped everythingYale had to olfer and ifthere had been two Ben Ticknors,Harvard wouldn't have been forcedto accept a tie with the Army. TheCrimson center was a whale of adefensive player and a true passeroh the offense." Heinecke and Sianorated only a fraction below theTicknor standard.Much could be written about the
Honor backfields, but what is theuse of it. The names stand out andhave been broadcast from coast to !coast and from gulf to dominion.Everybody knows that Carideo wasthe main spring of a gallant, hardchargingNotre Dame team, andthat Marsters was never totallystopped until floored1 by Old ManJinx, in the person 'of Injuries!Booth wa3 an inspirational leader,as was Cagle, Welch, Baker, McEverand others. And speaking ofversatility.just glance over thosebackfleld rosters..
in this district the taxes took 27.2per cent of the rent received.In the Moore county area 51
farms were surveyed. These averaged129 acres. The average in-
20 TZARS' SXFERUBfCl ILet us drill you a well.
WHITE PUMP & WELLCO., INC.Phone 242-1
Norlina, N. C.
|B
Co]
Unusual num
£
In manner of mamanoo tVioro ia rr
about the Ford. Piunseen values whbearing on econoilife. Fundamentalthe Ford policy a
building a motor (
In designing th<on the kind of ca
Many months we
designing of new
ufacturing methodto sell it at a pricpeople. The prodsuch a low pricethan the car itsel
Not in exterior 1out the Ford you iity of materials a
manship. Prominvalues is the ext(roller bearings.
There are morethe Ford.an unu
type and kind thefor the work thejadequate in size a
Being comparalfine watch, they ption and wear, c<
BOYI^ ?1"»IU""""'""I»II»"""II"I |M,m
*
:ord «
vestment to the farm were $6,156,1distributed, land $3,615, improve- Jments, $1,931, livestock $316,' machinery$159 and feed $135. Grossreceipts average $2,398. The three
important crops were tobacco, cottonand dewberries. These farms
did not include the peach orchards.The three important crops returnedan average of $1,457, and theexpenses of the farms average
$1,256. Wages and fertilizers were
the chief expenses. Almost a
fourth of the expenses went forfertilizers. The cash income averaged$555. The average tax paymentswere $83.This throws considerable light
on the farm situation in_Moore
county and the state, and as thefarms surveyed were average farmsthe story is probably fairly representativeof agriculture in thestate, and as North Carolina is one
of the leaders in farming in thecountry it is probably an informativestatement for the wholenation.
riolrinlla.Pnro PnrlrsV/QiV V JIllVA t » V A WA AW
News ItemsMiss Louise King spent Thursday J
night in the home of her uncle inWise. jMrs. J. D. Stewart was a Macon j
visitor on Sunday afternoon. jFriends of Mr. Hugh Rodwell will
regret to hear he continues ill at 1his home. jMr. C. L. Ellis spent Friday in j
Richmond. \Mr. Tom Stewart of Middleburg 1
J Good jPrinting ]
| Lights the Way To j jBetter Business
t * i i i
reopie juage largely ,
j by what they see and jI nothing makes a better Jj first impression than a
good printing job. j jCan you afford to use ! jj anything less than the ; ,
j best? I |Warren Record I I
nsider the Iwhen you bwber of ball and rollersmoothness, reliability, <
nufacture, as in perforluchthat is distinctiverincipally it concerns theich have such a greatmy, reliability and longly it is an expression ofmd the Ford method of;ar.
e Ford, we decided firstir we wanted to make,re then devoted to themachines and new maniswhich would enable use. within reach of all theuction of such a car atis even more unusual
f.
things only, but throughfindthe same high qual,ndexact, careful workentamong its unseenmsive use of ball and
than twenty of these insually large number. In>,y are. carefully selectedr have to do and are asis in number.
Die to the. jewels of a>revent unnecessary fricontributeto smoothness
D -GILLAM
JartmUm. North Carolina FRIE
and Mr. J. D. Stewart of Oakvillespent Sunday in Lawrenceville, Va.The Woman's Missionary meeting
was held at the home of Mrs. MaryPalmer on Thursday afternoon. Aninteresting program was rendered.All members are requested to bei'present at the next meeting whichwill be held on the first Thursdaywith Mrs. Palmer and Mrs. OliverDavis at the home of Mrs. Palmer.Among those from Oakville at- ]
tending the play "Miss Blue Bon- i
I CHRISSUGGE!
SILK MlSquare and Oblong (InLADIES' SILK HOSI1
Newest Fall ShadesLADIES' H
All F
§} KA1NCg Ladies', Children's, M
Sf styles, ma
g MEN'S N8? Largest assortment i
W 45c to
W HATS OR CAPS F(if SBJjf Oxfords or Straps for aim ly. Give something i
§ BOYS'wf Serge or Mixtures. Maktig Christmas with one
§ SHI]m Men's or Boys', CollarNff Plain White or Fancy,s| mas box if. you want.
tig MEN'SH Surprise him with a n<
*£ Remember our prices:H MEN'S H
g Silk and Wool, All SilkS? Men's or Boys'. 21
I WRIST WAn Ideal Gift. ]
HANDKERCHIEFS, S\>BEI
In fact we have most sneeds and everything iway.For Cash, For L<
The Cash
Jnseen Valy a motor car
1 il T-1 1
bearings m tne rora (
economy and long life
and quiet, reduce up-ke<thousands of miles to the
Studying the operatioings you can see their vaowner. Steering is madebecause of the roller beaiing gear and because theis carried on roller bearwheels and front axle ki:formity good performanceaxle is due largely to thon the rear axle pinion an*
These are held to such clejustment is unnecessary.
From the .engine-to-ththe entire drive of the Fo:speeds is wholly on antirollerbearings. In additoperation, this saves ga;car more speed and povsecond speeds, decreasescrease the durability andtransmission gears.
Similar good results aiin the drive shaft, the geneball and roller bearings i
There ase definite reifor the smooth-running, aof the Ford, and for its u
reliability and long life. Tbeen built to endure.tofully and well for many th
I MOTOR
)K\t DECEMBER U, XMnett" in Warrenton onnight were Mr. and Mr.Palmer and children, Mr. q®Davis, Misses Doris Gardnet,i^BFannie and Etta King. '
Mr. and Mrs. Henry EllisWarrenton visitors on Sat^®Mrs. Oliver Davis was arJ®son visitor Tuesday altera^®E. D. Bowditch was recently JBpointed as county agent r
sa&aa&asa&J1TMAS I5T10NS 1ifflers siported) 95c to $5.85®3ry, "holeproof" h90c to $1.95a.t boxes'rices:oats men's or Boys, severalny prices.ECKTIESwe have ever shown$1.45OR MEN OR BOYS |[OES Hiy member of the famiusefulthis Christmas.SUITSB:e your boy happy thisof our new suits.RTS Battached or Neckband,all prices.in a ChristSUITS
I*w suit this Christmas.$15.75, $19.75, $24.75[OSIERY BHIT *
or Mercerized Gloves,>c to $2.50 a pair IrATCHES H[ngersoll Make.HEATERS, PAJAMAS,Hinything a Man or Boy Iis priced the Cash Co.
. Co., Inc.
ties I
contributes to B"
3p costs and add3 life of the car.
n of these bearlueto every Fordeasier and safer"ings in the stearweight of the car ^Vuings in the frontng pins. The uniiof the Ford rear He roller bearingsd the differential.)se iimits that ad
le-road, in fact, ^mtrd nn ail forward J* Vl v..
friction ball and Mion to smoother Msoline, gives thever in first andi noise, andinefficiencyof the ^mr,
re apparent also'.rator.whereverire used.
isons, therefore,lert performanceinusual economy, ^B^'hroughout it has ^mrserve you faith ^B a
ousands of miles. ^Br$.
co. |