Rocky Mount Herald (Rocky Mount, N.C.) 1938-08-12 [p PAGE...

1
FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1938 CLUB NEWS Misß Jean WalkeT is vacationing' this week at Nags Head. ?? ? ? MiM Ruth Hart is visiting relatives in Amerieus Ga. W'/*- ? ? ? ? Mimi Ruth Daniel is spending the week at Atlantic Beach. Miss Liziie Williams and Miss Lney Crenshaw spent Wednesday in Rocky Mount visiting friends. ? ? ? ? Mrs. Willard Conger and Mrs. Hen- ry Thorpe are making an extended motor teur through northern states. ?? ? ? Mrs. T. E: Jenkins and her daugh- ter, Miss Martha Price Jenkins, have returned from a trip to Virginia Beach. Mr. and Mrs. W* M. Daughtridge and family will leave Saturday for Wrightsville for a two week's stay at the beach. ?? ? ? Mr. Thomas Cannady and family of Greensboro spent last week visit- ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cannady, Sr. on Eastern Av., ??? ? I MIH Sarah McLean of Plymouth and Miss Judith Bulluck of Red Springs are guests of Miss Susie Rankin Fountain at her home on Tarboro Street. ?? * ? Miss Edna Arrington, Miss Eliza-, both Renneker, Miss Laura Helen Paschal of Wake Forest, and Miss ( Edna Scruggs of Charlotte are va- j cationing at Virginia Beach this week. Fashion Notes Printed silks have a never-failing appeal. a Handbags are large and of soft dressmaker type. Even gloves are in the mood for ft| lacy effect these days. I For spectator and sports wear, all-, white costume# are smart. Evening (pwns for under-30s must have "cotton appeal." i Pumpkin seeds and gilded snail shells axe used for beach jewelry.. Scalloped edges, trim everything from hats to boleros and skirt hem- lines. Many of the summer's spectator sports frocks tell their fashion news in floral print. French designers are using rib- bons in dozens of novel -ways for hat trimming. Among favorite ensembles, we find much navy with touches of white or a dash of red. Short ankle-length slacks and very short shirt are in a pure white, silky, thin shantung linen. The yoke jpockets and dark scarf are details, also, high-soled clogs. PUBUCOPINION OLD-FASHIONED DINNER BELL To the Editor: Tonight in my neighborhood there fell upon my ears one of the Bweetest notes ear ever heard; its jingle emanated from one of the best and most fl?°P* ular homos in our little town. Its sweet notes carried me back through the years to a big farm home in the country surrounded by plenty and a hospitality fast vanishing. It was the old-fashioned dinner bell. Who knows where there is anoth- er oneT It has "gone with the wind" like old-fashioned cuff links, hose supporters, high standing feollars and two-piece long suit underwear, cumbersome paraphernalia, which used to torture the male of the spe- cies. But there is hope in a cold world yet if the old-fashioned dinner bell remains. Long may its melodious notes, filled with charity and hospi- tality, proclaim to a cold modern world that the sweet things of life never die! JOHN B. PALMER Wcenton. The 1937-38 world carry-over of United States cotton, including lin- tere, has been placed at the high rec- ord of 13,803,000 bales. The carry- over last year was 6,108,000 bales. Ground limestone is beginning to move into western North Carolina counties as farmers plan to earn their g oil building goals through the use of this material. Male drivers were involved in 92 per cent of the grade crossing ac- cidents to motor vehicles in 1937. Nearly one-half of the grade cross- ing accidents that took place in 1937 in June than in any other month. OF INTEREST WOMEN PERSONALS Scimitar and Song Edited By Lura Thomas McNair Among the compensations for this sort of work are the kind messages sent our way. WheH letters come from hither and yonl saying, "I missed your column this week. Why wasn't it inf- ? "or, "I want to tell yon that 1 enjoyed this week's column," naturally it warms my heart, and tired lips go singing through the day. Mrs. Monigold, of Texas, has writ- ten euch a beautiful and generous letter that I wish to Bhare it with yon. She says, in part, "I am afraid you will think I am exaggerating if I tell you how much I enjoy The Gold Leaf Farmer. I think it a won- derful paper, and I have grown to feel that I know all the people in . Wake County. I even got interested in thj candidates. Last but not least is your most treasured column, and I do like the illustrations by Mar- gnerite Fleury so much. I have saved every issue, and I think C. Haaton. Goudiss' column, "What to Eat and ; Why," an invaluable feature; the little facts scattered throughout the paper do their part to make it a | number one farm paper." i Mrs. Monigold writes that she lives I on a farm in Texas, which is situat- ! Ed in a wooded section far from that I part of Texas given over to cattle j raising and ranches, I VACATION AT TWINING HOLLOW I I When school is done it's nice to be i a guest Up in the hills where Cousin Janice lives! The summer-time is much too short; &he gives Me such good times up in that v country place. Wp roam about through fields and woods to trace A rabbit, or to find a flicker's nest. I We listen to the sweet towhee who sings I From every berry-bush till darkness I falls; . We gather daisies; sit on old stone | walls And weave ourselves a petal dress ( and crown Of gay field-flowers, lined with thistle-down, And then we play it's Maypole Day in spring. Then when it's time for me to leave for home, I take a box packed full of jam with me To Spread on bread cold nights when I have tea; It's made from fruit that I helped pick each day. In winter when I see some on a tray I wish for summer-time with fields to roftm. ?IMOGENE WEEKS ON THE FOUR SOUNDS Down on the sounds at Manteo Softly alluring breezes blow? Few stop to heed the radio; Manteo sets her own tempo. Gently the murmurs from the sound Recall the glories that abound On this island far renowned Bofore our continent was found. ?LURA THOMAS MeNAIR CONTRAST Moonlight on a shingled roof Is a sim'plo thing, But far tjo ricl to hem tha rol.e Of an earthly kii#. ?GILEAN DOUGLAS BEAUTY The sea at twilight glistened gray, At sunset turned to gold; The waves in ever-changing colors say The beauty their hearts hold. Pale greon beside the deepest blue, A silver mist byond th bar, Are secrets told in accents true Of beauty to the farthest star. ?MAUDE WADDELL THE ROCKY MOUNT HERALD. ROCKY MOUNT, NORTH CAROLINA MAID OF FOUR She takes he* tipy broom each morn, t Our sweet little maid of four, And diligently sweeps the stoop Outside our cottage door. With chubby hands she grasps her broom % And sweeps the doorstep clean, Then skips away with carefree air To romp in the meadow green; And my mother heart sends np a j .prayer That shell sweep away all sin From the door of her life and let Only God's pure love Bhine in. ?GENEVIEVE L. MONIGOLD CONDITIONAL Frances has a watch; (She wont let us call her "Fran") It's minus stem and crystal And only has one hand. It's face is pretty motley Like her's when play is done, And idly I asked the question "Does your wrist-watch really runt" The mischief danced in her eyes Of purplish pansy blue?- "Oh yes! It weally wuns But only when 1 do." ?GENEVIEVE L. MONIGOLD (Communication for this department should be addressed to Mrs. Lura Tinmas McNair, Jonesboro, North Carolina.) ; ???????? Massacres Pig And Steals Hams I ? One of the most brutal thefts that haa occurred in this section in years | is reported by William Edwards who lives about two miles from town. On Friday morning when Mt. Ed- ' wards went to his pig pasture about. j 200 yards from his home to feed the j I pigs, he found what was left of one of his fine young red Durocs after a tliiejf had sliced off both hams, I leaving the remainder of the body as a gruesome souvenir of his deed. Mr. Edwards says the pig weighed between 40 and 60 pounds and was one of 25 or 30 in the pasture, some larger and some smaller. Mr. Edwards says he heard no disturbance during the night and would probably have never known of the theft had not the half-carcass been left. He believes Mb hams were enjoyed as piece-de-resistance at some The only known occurance even resembling this in Nash County took place around twenty years ago when Trosß Wilkins, colored, was sentenc- ed to the road for cutting out a barn frolic in the neighborhood, chunk of pork from a live hog that belonged to Arthur Tony, also color- ed. N. C. ORAL HYGIENE PROGRAM GETB BOOST Work of the Oral Hygiene Divi- sion of the North Carolina State Board of Health will be on display at the annual meeting of the South- ern California State Dental Asso- ciation, at Coronado, September 12- 16, it was announced by Dr. Ernest A. Branch. The request for educational mater- ial, to make up a display, came as the result of a suggstion by Dr. Guy Milberry, Dean of the College of Denistry of the University of California, who had seen some of the work of Miss Carolyn Mercer, educational consultant, who prepares material used by the school den- tists of this State in their follow-up programs. From North Carolina she will send at least fifty pieces of material to be placed on display, Dr. Branch said, adding: "I consider this a compli- ment to our efforts, and we will take great pleasure in availing our- selves of this opportunity to place North Carolina's oral hygiene (pro- gram before the dentists of South- ern California." STANHOPE It Rains The clouds of grey engulf our day And overwhelm oui town; It isn't raining rain to us It's raining roses down. Mrs. Leo Bell accompanied sev- eral of her Bocky Mount kin and friends to Virginia Beach last Sun- day for a week's round of bathing and other seashore sports. Mr. and Mrs. Settle Bunn made a hasty trip to points in Pennsylvan- ia laet week. Little J. C. Baines had the hard luck to fall and break his arm last week. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Baines. Mrs. Wilbur Bunn gave her daugh- ter Iris a birthday party on the seventh anniversary. All the little I tot« enjoyed the afternoon and Iris FARMERS AND GINNERS GET READY FOR FALL HARVEST i 950 active gins in the State; this ? year, if the reduction trend of the ? past ten years continues, the num- , ber will .be smaller. Ferguson pointed out that ginners dread the first few bales of cotton ? to go through their outfits, because ? growers usually haul in green pick- l ings. This results in excessive wear i on the gins, as well as rough pre- , paration of the cotton. I Several ginners have indicated they may not open their outfits this year t until green cotton has had a chance \u25a0 to dry out. i Approximately ten driers have I been added in North Carolina this -1 summer, bringing the total of these I j devices to 20. The driers have not c, been added to encourage growers to ,'haul in wet cotton, but to accomo- I » 3 date those farmers whose cotton - 1 could not be handled in any other t way. All over North Carolina, farmers are getting ready to harvest their cotton crop, described as below nor- mal this year by J. C. Frguson, extension cotton gin specialist at State College. In Western a-nd certain Piedmont countieß, the crop is 80 to 85 per cent of normal, in the more central regions about 70 per cent, and in the coastal counties the crop is fair, although boo] weevils have wreaked considerable damage. Ginning of the 1938 crop will start about September 15. At least a half- dozen completely J new gin outfits have been placed in the State this summer, Ferguson said. Also, sev- eral of the older gins have added Because of the better clasa work | which the modern gins turn out, many of the older, more obsolete j outfits are being forced out of busi- I ness. Last year, there were about FAIR OFFICIALS ORDER RIBBONS AND ENCLOSE LOT ?Nash County News nesday of this week when an expe- rienced man was here assisting local. officials in making plans for enclo-1 sure of the new Fair site on High- j way 90 just outside of town. Work 1 on the suggested enclosure and oth- j er necessary structures will bgin im. 1 mediately, says President Brantley. The 1938 premium catalog is about 1 ready to be released to the printer i and will be ready for distribution i in a short time. We are informed . that the list will be considerably \u25a0 larger this year with more stress on ? agricultural products. s Direct reports reaching the local ( Fair management indicate that th» ? carnival booked to play the midway I here this year is one of the best and is winning approval with every In a drive to improve the quality of the Nash County Community Fair to be held the last week in September in every way possible, President Hobart Brantley has just placed an order for hand-! some ribbon prize markers that will be the equal of those found in any Fair regardless of size. The ribbons | selected for 4-H Club and Commun- ity exhibits are 3x12 inches while those for the regular exhibits are 2xB. These markers will be of genu- in fringed silk, with the Legion em- blem and the name of the Fair in- scribed in gold. They will make beautiful souvenirs of the 193ft Fair for the winners and are a mark- ed improvement over the cards used last year. Further progress was made Wed- performance received many pretty, (presents. Joe Finch left Saturday for a business trip to Delhi, Canada. Miss Emma Roberson is spending a few days in Richmond, Va. with friends. Julius Brantley has injured his foot around the farm. Perhaps he was jumping over new lakes and streams made by our daily show- ers. Anyway we hope he can soon lay aside his crutches. \u25a0Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Westray's daughter Josephine of Baltimore, Md. is with her parents for a few weeks. Cleora at Park View Hospital, Rocky Mount is improving fast. All the good members of Sandy Grove church took big dinners and had a big rally together last Sun- day in an all day meeting, Mae and Hayden Bell spent last week with their aunt in Rocky Mount. Miss Carrie Dillard had as her guests last Sunday Mrs. Pitts of Spring Hope and Mrs. Delia Mod- lin Brake of Bocky Mount. Miss Evelyn Pridgen of Akron, Ohio is visiting Mary Helen Dickin- son. It is still raining. Good health to us who're happy Not a fig for him who frets It isn't raining rain to us But turniips and violets. subjects of interest to Negro club members. Both boys and girls may enroll in all courses offered. Subjects include poultry, Bwine, dairy cattle, shopwork, gardening, farm crops, arts, recreation, parliamentary pro- cedure, and table manners. The installation of new officers at a candle-lighting ceremony, Fri- day, September 2, will bring the course to a close. NEGRO SOCIAL WORK BTAFF ENLARGED BY FOUR NEW MEMBERS Appointment of four additional Negro social welfare workers to bring the statewide total np to 26, serving 14 counties in North Caro- lina was announced this week by William R. Johnson, consultant for Negro work with the State Board of Charities and Public Welfare. James Holmes and William Wil- cox at Charlotte, Oppie L. Emmer- son, Robeson county; and Grace Pe- terson, Warren county were the new staff additions since July 1* Anson; Bdrtie, Craven, Durham, Porsythe, Franklin, Guilford, Meck- lenburg, New Hanover, Northampton, FIRST CHURCH OF _ _ CHRIST SCIENTIST Snuday morning service 11 A. M. Wednesday evening service 7:45 P. M. The reading room In the en arch ediflce is open daily ezecept San- day and legal holidays, from three to five P. M. HILL-PROCTOR PRINT SHOP Commercial Printing Of All Kinds 114 Washington St. Phone 39 Rocky Mt. R. L. SAVAGE Disease? EYE, EAR, NOSE AND TROAT GLASSES FITTED Office over Five Points Drug Store Rocky Mount, N. C. ++++++++*+++\u2666+++++++++\u2666* J We have recently installed Ui» T 1 Hild System Rug, Carpet and 4. \u2666 Upholstery Cleaning Equij»- + J ment. Call Us for Expert J + Service in All Cleaning anri | + Dylns + + GUARANTEED % 1 CLEANERS + + L. F. "DUCKY" CLARK + | % MAIN OFFICE J, + 522 N. Church St. + 1 * BRANCH OFFICE J % 115 N. Main St. + + + +++++++++++++4.*++ +*+++++. NEGRO SHORT COURSE SET FOR GREENSBORO C. R. Hudson, head of Negro ex- tension work in North Carolina, has announced that a 4-H Short Coursa for colored farm youths will be held in Greensboro, August 29-September 3. The event, to be held at A. and T. College, will be patterned close- ly after the short course which was held at State College recently. A well balanced program of short talks, classroom work, and recroa tion will be offered the delegates. Featured speaker for the week will be Dr. C. B. Smith, assistant director of the Federal Extension Service, who will talk Friday, Sep- tember 2. He will be introduced by Dean I. O. Schaub, director of the State College Extension Service. Miss Ruth Current, head of North Carolina home demonstration work, will bring greetings from the Ex- tension Service Tuesday, August 30, and L. R. Harrill, State 4-H Club leader, will epeak to the colored youths Thursday, September 1. The days program will start at 6 A. M. with the rising bell and will continue until bedtime, 10 P. M. Dur- ing the morniug, the delegates will attend assemblies and classes; after- noons have been turned over to rec- reation; and the evening programs will be devoted to one-act plays, vesper services, singing, contests, and I other forms of recreation. Classroom work will be limited to Pasquotank, Robeson, Wake and Warren counties BOW have full time Negro workers. A worker is also stationed at the Morrison Training School in Richmond coun- ty. For the first time thig year, John- son said, at the invitation of the department of public instruction, so- cial work c las gee were held «t Eliz- abeth City State Normal, A ui* T. College, winston-Salem and Fayette- ville Teachers Colleges, and the North Carolina College in Durham with a total class attendance of 790 and assemblies for one address of 1,500. Most piessing need in Negro work at present, Johnson pointed out, is some way of adequately caring for feeble-minded Negro children and delinquent Negro girls. Plans are now under way for the fourteenth annual institute for Ne- gro workers to be held afc St. Au- gustino College in Raleigh the first 'week in February of next year. The institute is attended by Negro farm and home agents, county nursee, W- PA and NYA and other workers. North Carolina first went into Ne- gro social -work in 1925 aided by a grant from the Laura Spellman Rockefeller Foundation, leading all states in this practice and still leading in the South, Raleigh, Charlotte, Winston-Salem, j Elizabeth City and Durham were the ' only cities having Negro workers | when the old ERA liquidated thTee ! years ago in 1935. Today the staff ! of 26 serve North Carolina as case 1 workers, child welfare agents, pro- ' bation and truant officers accord- ing to the | needs of the county where they are stationed. l lf you want to gain friends you | must be one. Uncle Jim Says I, A fellow from State College told me the other day that for every 100 tons of fertilizer farmers bought in 1932, they bought 189 ton# in 1937. During this samo (period, the fertilizer industry payrolls in- creased 11 per cent and employment 64 per ee»t. Is God merely a wish, a dream, .. hope, an illusion f If so, then most of the world's greatest minds have been fooled and most of the world's greatest characters have be«n built Uipun a falsehood. One observ- ing what religion has done for man- kind could almost say, "Though it be false I will cling to it." To be- lieve in God if there is no God if to be credulous; but to miss Him if he really is, is to be stupid. There are three ways of obtaining knowldge of Truth: by examining the records of the past, by learn- ing of the experience of others, and by experiencing for ourselves. Ia the final analysis we only know onr own experience. And so while ths records of the past tell of God and other people speak of Him, we shall really know Him only as we oursel- ves experience. His presense. Let us seek Hie presence.?Talmadge CL Johnson in "The Upper Room." "WE KNOW FINER TOBACCOS^ JLJOT SMOKE CAMELS' CALVIN WIGGINS (left) knows cigarette tobaccos. He k*ows because he grows tobacco. He says: "There's - quite a difference between fine grade tobacco and other grades?big difference insmoking too. From my experience, it's the Camel people who buy the best ' tobaccos. Most tobacco planters down here smoke Camels, as I do. We know Camel buys finer tobaccos." 4 _ carefully scanned to make sure that every Camel * | Lunch At Moores I Cool drug store these hot days..... We have just had ; \u2666 the biggest sandwich day we ever had. Total Sandwich ; | | sales 1132 for one day . j[ t Total Salad Sales for ONE DAY?6? POUNDS ;! I MOORE'S C. 0. D. DRUG i STORE 1: % 356 S. Main St. Rocky Mount, N. C.' j ???Mra I AT f E N T ioNn j|| USED CAR BUYERS ! + t i I I COMPLETE LINE OF! | CHEVROLETS, FORDS,! i AND PLYMOUTHS AT f | ATTRACTIVE PRICES | I Come In and Seel | I Them Before | I BULLUCK j I Auto Sales Co. i | ROCKY MOUNT - - - NORTH CAROLINA + i i ,4,4,4. 4, 4*4. 4. 4.4.4.4. 4..j.4. 4.4. 4. 4.4.4. 4.4.4.4.4.4.4. 4, 4, 4. 4. 4, 4.4.4. 4. 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, PAGE THREE

Transcript of Rocky Mount Herald (Rocky Mount, N.C.) 1938-08-12 [p PAGE...

Page 1: Rocky Mount Herald (Rocky Mount, N.C.) 1938-08-12 [p PAGE ...newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/2014236872/1938-08-12/ed-1/seq-3.pdf · to tell yon that 1 enjoyed this week's column,"

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1938

CLUB NEWS

Misß Jean WalkeT is vacationing'

this week at Nags Head.?? ? ?

MiM Ruth Hart is visiting relatives

in Amerieus Ga.W'/*- ? ?

? ?

Mimi Ruth Daniel is spending the

week at Atlantic Beach.

Miss Liziie Williams and MissLney Crenshaw spent Wednesday inRocky Mount visiting friends.

? ? ? ?

Mrs. Willard Conger and Mrs. Hen-ry Thorpe are making an extendedmotor teur through northern states.

?? ? ?

Mrs. T. E: Jenkins and her daugh-ter, Miss Martha Price Jenkins, have

returned from a trip to VirginiaBeach.

Mr. and Mrs. W* M. Daughtridgeand family will leave Saturday for

Wrightsville for a two week's stay

at the beach.?? ?

?

Mr. Thomas Cannady and family

of Greensboro spent last week visit-

ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Cannady, Sr. on Eastern Av.,??? ? I

MIH Sarah McLean of Plymouthand Miss Judith Bulluck of Red

Springs are guests of Miss Susie

Rankin Fountain at her home onTarboro Street.

?? * ?

Miss Edna Arrington, Miss Eliza-,both Renneker, Miss Laura Helen

Paschal of Wake Forest, and Miss (Edna Scruggs of Charlotte are va- jcationing at Virginia Beach this

week.

Fashion Notes

Printed silks have a never-failing

appeal.a

Handbags are large and of soft

dressmaker type.

Even gloves are in the mood for ft|lacy effect these days. I

For spectator and sports wear, all-,white costume# are smart.

Evening (pwns for under-30s

must have "cotton appeal." iPumpkin seeds and gilded snail

shells axe used for beach jewelry..

Scalloped edges, trim everything

from hats to boleros and skirt hem-

lines.Many of the summer's spectator

sports frocks tell their fashion news

in floral print.French designers are using rib-

bons in dozens of novel -ways for

hat trimming.

Among favorite ensembles, we find

much navy with touches of white

or a dash of red.

Short ankle-length slacks and very

short shirt are in a pure white,

silky, thin shantung linen. The yoke

jpockets and dark scarf are details,

also, high-soled clogs.

PUBUCOPINIONOLD-FASHIONED DINNER BELL

To the Editor: Tonight in my

neighborhood there fell upon my

ears one of the Bweetest notes ear

ever heard; its jingle emanatedfrom one of the best and most fl?°P*

ular homos in our little town. Its

sweet notes carried me back through

the years to a big farm home in thecountry surrounded by plenty and

a hospitality fast vanishing. It wasthe old-fashioned dinner bell.

Who knows where there is anoth-

er oneT It has "gone with the wind"

like old-fashioned cuff links, hosesupporters, high standing feollarsand two-piece long suit underwear,

cumbersome paraphernalia, which

used to torture the male of the spe-cies.

But there is hope in a cold world

yet if the old-fashioned dinner bell

remains. Long may its melodiousnotes, filled with charity and hospi-

tality, proclaim to a cold modernworld that the sweet things of life

never die!JOHN B. PALMER

Wcenton.

The 1937-38 world carry-over of

United States cotton, including lin-tere, has been placed at the high rec-ord of 13,803,000 bales. The carry-over last year was 6,108,000 bales.

Ground limestone is beginning to

move into western North Carolinacounties as farmers plan to earntheir g oil building goals through theuse of this material.

Male drivers were involved in 92per cent of the grade crossing ac-cidents to motor vehicles in 1937.

Nearly one-half of the grade cross-ing accidents that took place in 1937

in June than in any other month.

OF INTERESTWOMEN

PERSONALS

Scimitar and Song

Edited By

Lura Thomas McNair

Among the compensations for this

sort of work are the kind messages

sent our way. WheH letters comefrom hither and yonl saying,

"I missed your column this week.Why wasn't it inf- ? "or, "I wantto tell yon that 1 enjoyed this week'scolumn," naturally it warms myheart, and tired lips go singing

through the day.

Mrs. Monigold, of Texas, has writ-ten euch a beautiful and generousletter that I wish to Bhare it withyon.

She says, in part, "I am afraidyou will think I am exaggerating

if I tell you how much I enjoy TheGold Leaf Farmer. I think it a won-

derful paper, and I have grown tofeel that I know all the people in .Wake County. I even got interested

in thj candidates. Last but not leastis your most treasured column, and

I do like the illustrations by Mar-gnerite Fleury so much. I have savedevery issue, and I think C. Haaton.Goudiss' column, "What to Eat and ;Why," an invaluable feature; the

little facts scattered throughout thepaper do their part to make it a |number one farm paper."

i Mrs. Monigold writes that she lives

I on a farm in Texas, which is situat-! Ed in a wooded section far from that

I part of Texas given over to cattle

j raising and ranches,

I VACATION AT TWINING HOLLOW

I

I When school is done it's nice to be

i a guestUp in the hills where Cousin Janice

lives!The summer-time is much too short;

&he gives

Me such good times up in thatv country place.

Wp roam about through fields and

woods to traceA rabbit, or to find a flicker's nest.

IWe listen to the sweet towhee who

sings

I From every berry-bush till darkness

I falls;. We gather daisies; sit on old stone| wallsAnd weave ourselves a petal dress

( and crownOf gay field-flowers, lined with

thistle-down,And then we play it's Maypole Day

in spring.

Then when it's time for me to leavefor home,

I take a box packed full of jam withme

To Spread on bread cold nights whenI have tea;

It's made from fruit that I helpedpick each day.

In winter when I see some on a trayI wish for summer-time with fields

to roftm.?IMOGENE WEEKS

ON THE FOUR SOUNDS

Down on the sounds at ManteoSoftly alluring breezes blow?Few stop to heed the radio;Manteo sets her own tempo.

Gently the murmurs from thesound

Recall the glories that aboundOn this island far renownedBofore our continent was found.

?LURA THOMAS MeNAIR

CONTRAST

Moonlight on a shingled roofIs a sim'plo thing,

But far tjo ricl to hem tha rol.eOf an earthly kii#.

?GILEAN DOUGLAS

BEAUTY

The sea at twilightglistened gray,At sunset turned to gold;The waves in ever-changing colors sayThe beauty their hearts hold.Pale greon beside the deepest blue,A silver mist byond th bar,Are secrets told in accents trueOf beauty to the farthest star.

?MAUDE WADDELL

THE ROCKY MOUNT HERALD. ROCKY MOUNT, NORTH CAROLINA

MAID OF FOUR

She takes he* tipy broom each morn, tOur sweet little maid of four,And diligently sweeps the stoopOutside our cottage door.With chubby hands she grasps her

broom %

And sweeps the doorstep clean,Then skips away with carefree airTo romp in the meadow green;And my mother heart sends np a j

.prayerThat shell sweep away all sinFrom the door of her life and letOnly God's pure love Bhine in.

?GENEVIEVE L. MONIGOLD

CONDITIONAL

Frances has a watch;(She wont let us call her "Fran")

It's minus stem and crystalAnd only has one hand.It's face is pretty motleyLike her's when play is done,And idly I asked the question

"Does your wrist-watch really runt"

The mischief danced in her eyesOf purplish pansy blue?-"Oh yes! It weally wuns

But only when 1 do."?GENEVIEVE L. MONIGOLD

(Communication for this department

should be addressed to Mrs. LuraTinmas McNair, Jonesboro, NorthCarolina.)

; ????????

Massacres Pig AndSteals Hams I

? One of the most brutal thefts thathaa occurred in this section in years |is reported by William Edwardswho lives about two miles from town.

On Friday morning when Mt. Ed-' wards went to his pig pasture about.j200 yards from his home to feed the j

I pigs, he found what was left of oneof his fine young red Durocs aftera tliiejf had sliced off both hams,

I leaving the remainder of the bodyas a gruesome souvenir of his deed.Mr. Edwards says the pig weighed

between 40 and 60 pounds and wasone of 25 or 30 in the pasture, somelarger and some smaller.

Mr. Edwards says he heard no

disturbance during the night and

would probably have never knownof the theft had not the half-carcassbeen left. He believes Mb hams wereenjoyed as piece-de-resistance at some

The only known occurance evenresembling this in Nash County tookplace around twenty years ago whenTrosß Wilkins, colored, was sentenc-ed to the road for cutting out abarn frolic in the neighborhood,

chunk of pork from a live hog thatbelonged to Arthur Tony, also color-ed.

N. C. ORAL HYGIENEPROGRAM GETB BOOST

Work of the Oral Hygiene Divi-

sion of the North Carolina StateBoard of Health will be on display

at the annual meeting of the South-ern California State Dental Asso-ciation, at Coronado, September 12-16, it was announced by Dr. ErnestA. Branch.

The request for educational mater-ial, to make up a display, came as

the result of a suggstion by Dr.Guy Milberry, Dean of the College

of Denistry of the University ofCalifornia, who had seen some ofthe work of Miss Carolyn Mercer,educational consultant, who preparesmaterial used by the school den-tists of this State in their follow-upprograms.

From North Carolina she will sendat least fifty pieces of material to beplaced on display, Dr. Branch said,adding: "I consider this a compli-

ment to our efforts, and we willtake great pleasure in availing our-selves of this opportunity to place

North Carolina's oral hygiene (pro-

gram before the dentists of South-ern California."

STANHOPEIt Rains

The clouds of grey engulf our dayAnd overwhelm oui town;It isn't raining rain to us

It's raining roses down.

Mrs. Leo Bell accompanied sev-eral of her Bocky Mount kin andfriends to Virginia Beach last Sun-day for a week's round of bathing

and other seashore sports.Mr. and Mrs. Settle Bunn made a

hasty trip to points in Pennsylvan-

ia laet week.Little J. C. Baines had the hard

luck to fall and break his arm lastweek. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.Clifton Baines.

Mrs. Wilbur Bunn gave her daugh-

ter Iris a birthday party on theseventh anniversary. All the little

I tot« enjoyed the afternoon and Iris

FARMERS AND GINNERS GETREADY FOR FALL HARVEST

i 950 active gins in the State; this? year, if the reduction trend of the? past ten years continues, the num-, ber will .be smaller.

Ferguson pointed out that ginnersdread the first few bales of cotton

? to go through their outfits, because? growers usually haul in green pick-l ings. This results in excessive wear

i on the gins, as well as rough pre-, paration of the cotton.

I Several ginners have indicated theymay not open their outfits this year

t until green cotton has had a chance\u25a0 to dry out.i Approximately ten driers haveI been added in North Carolina this-1 summer, bringing the total of these

I jdevices to 20. The driers have notc, been added to encourage growers to,'haul in wet cotton, but to accomo-I »

3 date those farmers whose cotton- 1 could not be handled in any other

t way.

All over North Carolina, farmersare getting ready to harvest theircotton crop, described as below nor-mal this year by J. C. Frguson,

extension cotton gin specialist atState College.

In Western a-nd certain Piedmontcountieß, the crop is 80 to 85 percent of normal, in the more centralregions about 70 per cent, and in thecoastal counties the crop is fair,although boo] weevils have wreakedconsiderable damage.

Ginning of the 1938 crop will startabout September 15. At least a half-dozen completely J new gin outfitshave been placed in the State thissummer, Ferguson said. Also, sev-eral of the older gins have added

Because of the better clasa work| which the modern gins turn out,many of the older, more obsolete

joutfits are being forced out of busi-

I ness. Last year, there were about

FAIR OFFICIALS ORDERRIBBONS AND ENCLOSE LOT

?Nash County News nesday of this week when an expe-rienced man was here assisting local.officials in making plans for enclo-1sure of the new Fair site on High- jway 90 just outside of town. Work 1on the suggested enclosure and oth- jer necessary structures will bgin im. 1mediately, says President Brantley.

The 1938 premium catalog is about

1 ready to be released to the printer

i and will be ready for distributioni in a short time. We are informed

. that the list will be considerably

\u25a0 larger this year with more stress on? agricultural products.s Direct reports reaching the local( Fair management indicate that th»? carnival booked to play the midway

I here this year is one of the best

and is winning approval with every

In a drive to improve

the quality of the Nash County

Community Fair to be held the lastweek in September in every way

possible, President Hobart Brantley

has just placed an order for hand-!some ribbon prize markers that willbe the equal of those found in anyFair regardless of size. The ribbons |selected for 4-H Club and Commun-ity exhibits are 3x12 inches while

those for the regular exhibits are

2xB. These markers will be of genu-in fringed silk, with the Legion em-blem and the name of the Fair in-scribed in gold. They will makebeautiful souvenirs of the 193ftFair for the winners and are a mark-ed improvement over the cards usedlast year.

Further progress was made Wed- performance

received many pretty, (presents.Joe Finch left Saturday for a

business trip to Delhi, Canada.Miss Emma Roberson is spending

a few days in Richmond, Va. withfriends.

Julius Brantley has injured hisfoot around the farm. Perhaps hewas jumping over new lakes and

streams made by our daily show-ers. Anyway we hope he can soonlay aside his crutches.

\u25a0Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Westray'sdaughter Josephine of Baltimore, Md.

is with her parents for a few weeks.Cleora at Park View Hospital,

Rocky Mount is improving fast.All the good members of Sandy

Grove church took big dinners andhad a big rally together last Sun-day in an all day meeting,

Mae and Hayden Bell spent last

week with their aunt in Rocky

Mount.Miss Carrie Dillard had as her

guests last Sunday Mrs. Pitts ofSpring Hope and Mrs. Delia Mod-lin Brake of Bocky Mount.

Miss Evelyn Pridgen of Akron,Ohio is visiting Mary Helen Dickin-son.

It is still raining.

Good health to us who're happy

Not a fig for him who fretsIt isn't raining rain to usBut turniips and violets.

subjects of interest to Negro clubmembers. Both boys and girls mayenroll in all courses offered. Subjects

include poultry, Bwine, dairy cattle,

shopwork, gardening, farm crops,arts, recreation, parliamentary pro-

cedure, and table manners.The installation of new officers

at a candle-lighting ceremony, Fri-day, September 2, will bring the

course to a close.

NEGRO SOCIAL WORKBTAFF ENLARGED BY

FOUR NEW MEMBERS

Appointment of four additionalNegro social welfare workers tobring the statewide total np to 26,

serving 14 counties in North Caro-

lina was announced this week by

William R. Johnson, consultant for

Negro work with the State Board of

Charities and Public Welfare.James Holmes and William Wil-

cox at Charlotte, Oppie L. Emmer-son, Robeson county; and Grace Pe-

terson, Warren county were thenew staff additions since July 1*

Anson; Bdrtie, Craven, Durham,Porsythe, Franklin, Guilford, Meck-lenburg, New Hanover, Northampton,

FIRST CHURCH OF_ _CHRIST SCIENTIST

Snuday morning service 11 A. M.Wednesday evening service 7:45

P. M.The reading room In the en arch

ediflce is open daily ezecept San-day and legal holidays, from threeto five P. M.

HILL-PROCTORPRINT SHOP

Commercial PrintingOf All Kinds

114 Washington St.Phone 39 Rocky Mt.

R. L. SAVAGEDisease?

EYE, EAR, NOSEAND TROAT

GLASSES FITTEDOffice over

Five Points Drug StoreRocky Mount, N. C.

++++++++*+++\u2666+++++++++\u2666*

J We have recently installed Ui» T1 Hild System Rug, Carpet and 4.

\u2666 Upholstery Cleaning Equij»- +

J ment. Call Us for Expert J+ Service in All Cleaning anri |+ Dylns +

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+ L. F. "DUCKY" CLARK + |% MAIN OFFICE J,+ 522 N. Church St. + 1* BRANCH OFFICE J% 115 N. Main St. ++ +

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NEGRO SHORT COURSESET FOR GREENSBORO

C. R. Hudson, head of Negro ex-tension work in North Carolina, hasannounced that a 4-H Short Coursa

for colored farm youths will be held

in Greensboro, August 29-September

3.The event, to be held at A. and

T. College, will be patterned close-ly after the short course which washeld at State College recently. A

well balanced program of shorttalks, classroom work, and recroation will be offered the delegates.

Featured speaker for the weekwill be Dr. C. B. Smith, assistant

director of the Federal ExtensionService, who will talk Friday, Sep-

tember 2. He will be introduced by

Dean I. O. Schaub, director of the

State College Extension Service.Miss Ruth Current, head of North

Carolina home demonstration work,will bring greetings from the Ex-tension Service Tuesday, August 30,and L. R. Harrill, State 4-H Clubleader, will epeak to the coloredyouths Thursday, September 1.

The days program will start at 6

A. M. with the rising bell and willcontinue until bedtime, 10 P. M. Dur-ing the morniug, the delegates will

attend assemblies and classes; after-noons have been turned over to rec-reation; and the evening programswill be devoted to one-act plays,vesper services, singing, contests, and

I other forms of recreation.Classroom work will be limited to

Pasquotank, Robeson, Wake andWarren counties BOW have fulltime Negro workers. A worker isalso stationed at the MorrisonTraining School in Richmond coun-

ty.

For the first time thig year, John-son said, at the invitation of thedepartment of public instruction, so-

cial work c las gee were held «t Eliz-abeth City State Normal, A ui* T.College, winston-Salem and Fayette-ville Teachers Colleges, and theNorth Carolina College in Durhamwith a total class attendance of 790and assemblies for one address of1,500.

Most piessing need in Negro workat present, Johnson pointed out, issome way of adequately caring forfeeble-minded Negro children anddelinquent Negro girls.

Plans are now under way for thefourteenth annual institute for Ne-gro workers to be held afc St. Au-gustino College in Raleigh the first'week in February of next year. Theinstitute is attended by Negro farmand home agents, county nursee, W-PA and NYA and other workers.

North Carolina first went into Ne-gro social -work in 1925 aided by a

grant from the Laura SpellmanRockefeller Foundation, leading allstates in this practice and stillleading in the South,

Raleigh, Charlotte, Winston-Salem,j Elizabeth City and Durham were the

' only cities having Negro workers| when the old ERA liquidated thTee! years ago in 1935. Today the staff! of 26 serve North Carolina as case

1 workers, child welfare agents, pro-' bation and truant officers accord-ing to the | needs of the county

where they are stationed.

llf you want to gain friends you| must be one.

Uncle Jim Says I,

A fellow from State College toldme the other day that for every100 tons of fertilizer farmersbought in 1932, they bought 189 ton#in 1937. During this samo (period,the fertilizer industry payrolls in-creased 11 per cent and employment64 per ee»t.

Is God merely a wish, a dream, ..

hope, an illusion f If so, then mostof the world's greatest minds havebeen fooled and most of the world'sgreatest characters have be«nbuilt Uipun a falsehood. One observ-ing what religion has done for man-kind could almost say, "Though itbe false I will cling to it." To be-lieve in God if there is no God ifto be credulous; but to miss Him

if he really is, is to be stupid.There are three ways of obtaining

knowldge of Truth: by examiningthe records of the past, by learn-ing of the experience of others, andby experiencing for ourselves. Iathe final analysis we only know onrown experience. And so while thsrecords of the past tell of God andother people speak of Him, we shallreally know Him only as we oursel-ves experience. His presense. Let usseek Hie presence.?Talmadge CLJohnson in "The Upper Room."

"WE KNOW FINER TOBACCOS^

JLJOT SMOKE CAMELS'CALVINWIGGINS (left)knows cigarette tobaccos. He

k*ows because he grows tobacco. He says: "There's

-

quite a difference between fine grade tobacco andother grades?big difference insmoking too. From myexperience, it's the Camel people who buy the best

' tobaccos. Most tobacco planters down here smokeCamels, as I do. We know Camel buys finer tobaccos."

4 _ carefully scanned to makesure that every Camel

*

| Lunch At MooresI Cool drug store these hot days..... We have just had ;\u2666 the biggest sandwich day we ever had. Total Sandwich ; || sales 1132 for one day

. j[t Total Salad Sales for ONE DAY?6? POUNDS ;!

I MOORE'S C. 0. D. DRUGi STORE 1:% 356 S. Main St. Rocky Mount, N. C.' j

???Mra

I ATfENTioNnj||USED CAR BUYERS !

+ ti II COMPLETE LINE OF!| CHEVROLETS, FORDS,!i AND PLYMOUTHS AT f| ATTRACTIVE PRICES |

I Come In andSeel |

I Them Before |

I BULLUCK jI Auto Sales Co. i| ROCKY MOUNT - -

- NORTH CAROLINA +

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PAGE THREE