Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Warren Record from Warrenton, North Carolina • Page 6

Publication:
The Warren Recordi
Location:
Warrenton, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY, MAY 12, i922 PAGE SIX THE WARREN RECORD MRS. MAUD PHILIPS AR-RINGTON PASSES AWAY If AMBOHE MEDITATIONS THE COURTS GIVE WHY 2 OUT OF 3 MOTOR ACCIDENTS OCCUR UNDER IS AM HOUR. in Warrenton to learn the trade. He served three years as, an apprentice, and became very proficient in his trade. Later his master rented a shop in 'Warrenton, and put him in' charge of it.

Here he won a great reputation as a blacksmith, especially in shoeing horses. Many leading citizens of the County sent their blooded horses to him to be shod. He was a great favorite with his master and mistress and all of their children: In proof of this, he enjoyed special favors at their hands, and not long before her death Mrs. Lizzie Henderson, his young mistress, gave him the old family Bible of the Greens. He enjoyed having his friends read the Bible to him; but always insisted that they should read out of his old Mistress's Bible.

A few hours before- his death, he had a friend to read to him out of this old Bible. He was a member of the Episcopal Church. He left a widow and several children who are esteemed by both races. T. J.

TAYLOR, D.D. In her first number "Aux Italiens" by Lytton, Miss Scull showed her ability to the sad and serious as she pre. sented the bereaved lover's momorie-of a lost heart which are stirred by the music of Verdi's Opera. This vas made still more effective by Miss H0 den's playing softly during the rea, selections from that Opera. Miss Bolton sang two plaintive melodies, "At Parting" Dy Rogor an(1 "Why Do I Love You" by Later in the program she san? ther song in the same strain "From The Land of the Sky Blue Water" by Cadman and a brighter selection from Neidlinger "Sweet Miss Mary." Sh0 also favored the audience with one encore, the well known favorite, "My Rosary." Although Miss Scull in her first selection showed that she was quite capable of portraying the tragic side life, she proved in her presentation of Mayo's novel, "Polly of the Circus" that her real forte lies in the brighter and more normal situations of life.

Her portrayal of the little waif Polly was sympathetic and showed a clear insight into Polly's character while her delineation of Mandy, the cook of deacon Strong, and of Jim and Toby from the circus, were equally good. A large number of relatives from out of town as well as town peop'e and college girls were present enjoy the recital: WEH VoU HEAHS A tyAN TALK I M' BOUT GOOX "Book onB JAll-Bl. Hits a sho sign ts IIL AIN' FAIL-B1 none. wix HIM yit: Copyright. 1921 by McClure Newspaper Syndicate decorated with ferns and other potted plants, graceful floral baskets of carnations, of roses and purple wistaria.

The occasion was the graduating recital of Miss Alma Scull, reader, pupil of Miss A. Louise Rentz, in which she was assisted by Miss Janie Bolton, contralto, Miss Lucille Holden, accom-panist, and Misses Sarah Johnson, Elizabeth Manning, Lucy Burt, Irene Taylor, and Ellis Cdedle, marshals Made By Oup 16 Ft. B. S. F.

S. Flues and Flue i I I IvTv "1 rf i -j MISS ALMA SCULL GIVES RECITAL AT LOUISBURG COLLEGE Miss Alma Scull, favorably known in the lower section of Warren, gave her graduating recital at Louisburg College recently. Her friends will read with interest the following account from The Franklin Times: The Editor. On Tuesday evening, April 25, the College auditorium was beautifully Are S. F.

S. obacco D. F.S. R.f Check Style Order given By Mr. WW I III in! If If ti il; teiilil pi bIiTIl I glials i it ii pi i 1 SlipTCp hfajjl The friends of.

this highly esteemed lady will regret her passing from mortal vision. Mrs. Arrington" was Miss Laura Maud Philips of Edgecomb County, a daughter of Dr. James J. and Harriet Amanda Philips of "Mount Mor-iah" farm the ancestral of the Philipes.

She passed away at her home in Rocky Mount, Saturday night, May seventh, at eleven O'clock in the sixty-ninth year of her age. In early life she married Mr. John Arrington of Nash County and was the happy mother of Misses Mary Kate Mrs. Florence A. Philips, Mrs.

Henry Gregory, Mrs. Hugh Battle, and Messers Archibald H. and James J. Arrington. She was sister to Mrs.

B. H. Bunn of Rocky Mount and Messers J. B. and W.

E. Philips. Mrs. Arringon was rioted for her beauty of character and host of friends. Sweet and gentle; refined and cultured her life has been a benediction to her children and friends.

The funeral services were conduct ed from The Church of the Good Shepherd Monday afternoon and the body tenderly laid to rest in the Arrington Family Cemetery at Hilliardston in the presence of a large number of friends and relative. Beautiful floral offerings heaped high the grave attesting the depth of affection of those who knew her. Modest, refined, sweet-spirited, a de voted Daughter of the Old South has passed to her reward, leaving the fragrance of a life well spent. DR. TAYLOR WRITES IN 1 MEMORY OF CYRUS GREEN Cyrus Qreen died at his residence, near Warrenton last Friday evening, May fifth, after a brief illness.

He was eighty-five years old, and had spent his entire life in and near Warrenton, only being away from this community for a very short time on one occasion, in his long life; and then he went to Philadelphia to consult an occulist. He was rasied on the plantation now owned by Frank Newell, and was born a servant of the late Thomas Green. In early youth, he was made a house servant, and until after the War between the States, he never plowed a furrow, or cut down a tree as big as his leg. When about eighteen years old, his master put him in a blacksmith shop 1C i cue OF THE STOMACH 3G3E wlOU CANT ENJOY LIFE with a sore, sour, bloated stom-ach. Food does not nourish.

Instead ft is a source of misery, causing pains, belching, dizziness and headaches. The person with a bad stomach should be satisfied with nothing less than permanent, lasting relief. The right remedy will act upon the linings of the stomach, enrich the blood, aid in casting out the catarrhal poisons and strengthen every bodily function. The large number of people who have successfully used Dr. Hartman's famous medicine, recommended for all catarrhal conditions, offer the strongest possible endorsement for EH SERVICE FIFTY YEARS a C2ESXC 31 TABLETS OR LIQUID SOLD EVERYWHERE msummi It Pays to Get it at MY Quality-Price-Service A.

W. Gholson Eyesight Specialist Gholson Jewelry Store Henderson, ftJ. C. LUMBER HAPjMMy SCHOOLS IMPETUS Validation of $5,000,000 Bond Issue "Most Momentous" Dr. Brooks Says.

BUILDINGS WILL FOLLOW RALEIGH, May 10. A marked impetus in the building of school houses in those counties which are still without adequate buildings is expected as a result of the validation by the decision of the State Supreme Court, just handed down, of the bond issue of $5,000,000 provided for by the last Legislature to be loaned to counties for the erection of schools. Superintendent of Public 'instruction E. C. Brooks declared that the decision is one of the most momentous insofar as the educational life of the State is concerned, ever made by the courts of North Carolina.

The way is now open for the most rapid expansion of the school facilities of the State that has ever been experienced. School houses of a value of more than $6,000,000 have been built through the aid of the old loan fund and much of the progress of the State in school work has been made possible through that expansion. And yet that fund, at the most, was only a small fraction of the fund that will now be available. The State of North Carolina is spending annually on its rural schools today more than $8,000,000 as compared with less than one million a year two decades ago. The school property of the State is worth today more than.

$25,000,000 as compared with little more than one million in 1900. If the value of school property in the State has been increased 2500 per cent, in twenty years under the handicap that has existed, what will not the expansion be annually hereafter with a loan fund of $5,000,000 available? This is the pleasant question in the minds of the educational leaders of the State. CHURCH REPORTS ON TEMPERANCE Report of the Committee on Temperance and Social Service Weldon District Confreence, Warrenton, N. April 13, 1922: We rejoice in knowledge of the fact that the growth of temperance sentiment has been marvellous and fully to our most sanguine expectation, national prohibition becoming a fact earlier than we thought it possible. Prohibition is now a fixed principle in our constitutional law.

Violation of this law is now something more than a misdemeanor, it is an unpatriotic, anarchistic, and Bolshevistic act a trampling upon the principles which our flag represents. We believe that the time has arrived when it is necessary that the ministers and laymen, in the exercise of their rights of true American citizens, speak out boldly as occasion presents itself in an effort to teach the people the enormity of present conditions, in an effort to create sentiment in favor of constitutional law-enforcement. We should use every possible influence to have good men put into office, for both the strengthening and the execution of the laws. We rejoice in the knowledge of the fact that many of our executive and judicial officers are meeting the situation with due diligence in maintaining law and order in the State with reference to the illicit liquor traffic. To all these we give our hearty commendation.

We call the attention of our people to the fact that the final victory is not yet won. There are tremendous fore es actually at work for the nullifica tion of prohibition laws. Eternal vigi lance is still the price of success. We take pleasure in commending the active work of the Anti-Saloon League, this being the organization through which temperance and law enforcement sentiment is crystalized, in which organization all ministers and Christian laymen are active mem bers. Resolved, therefore, that we peti tion the General Assembly at its reg ular session to enact such laws as will be found necessary to make our State enforcement laws conform to the nat ional Volstead Act.

W. T. SHAW, D. R. ANDERSON, W.

F.XIOPPEDGE. MARRIAGE LICENSES. The following marriage licenses were issued this May 3 J. S. Shaw and Sue Frances Shaw.

May 6 Herbert Crowe and Char lotte Mary Williams. May 6 G. O. Truby and Marjorie Hepburn. May 9 Clyde Burnley and Mary Only one and one half per cent of the people in the United States have incomes over $3,000 a year.

Men I II If IH I I 17 Ft. B. Sheets 1 1 1 I i feet talk CflTwRKSHT ISgg AUTOCASTCa SEW Ctt 'FARM WIFE IS DUE more;" peace says By S. T. PEACE (President of the First National Bank, Henderson.) Did you ever think of the impor- ance of the farmer's Can a man farm without a wife? What farm landlord would employ a tenant had no wife? The farmer's vife is the silent partner.

She keeps the house going, she prepares the meals at early hours, she sews the clothes, she bears and rears the children, she often helps to plan the crops and she often works them. And more than this, she never complains tnougn ner day is never aone. The farmer's wife deserves more consideration than she gets. Her husband often times, and perhaps without thought or intention, takes the money that should be spent for the comfort of his wife and home and ends it out West for corn and wheat a.nd oats and hay and for other crops hat he should raise home. He pays high freight rates and for long dis tances and thereby supports other men's wives at the expense of his own.

Is this right and should the banker ncourage this practice by supplying noney for the purchase of Western hay and grains? The banker does well to lend mo ney for the purchase of pigs, cows, sheep, seed, but would it not be well to go a step further and let the farmer's wife realize her importance on the farm? Would it not be well or the banker to lend her money for a new cook stove for some dining room chairs, for a new suit of furniture, for a good sewing machine, for electric lights and for other things that would make her work easier or that would make her home brighter and more attractive? When the farmer's wife realizes her importance on the farm and in the home she will demand a greater consideration and this consideration will come when the husband and the wife both agree that the wife will never get her just dues and the con veniences to which she is justly en titled so long as the husband makes no sustaining crops but simply gambles from year to year on tobacco and cotton. MRS. R0BERS0N WAS SURPRISED AT THE RESULT Esteemed Lynchbury- Resident Declares Tanlac the Most Wonderful Medicine She Has Ever Seen Gives Details of Her Case. "Nobody knows how I suffered be fore. I finally found relief by taking Tanlac," said Mrs.

A. S. Roberson 507 Thirteenth Lynchburg, Va. "I was terribly weak and nervous and for three solid months was tortured almost constantly by a throbbing headache. My stomach was so badly out of order that many days I hardly dared touch a morsel of food.

At night I would roll and toss about for hours and when morning came I would feel worse than when I went to bed. Nothinsr seemed to heir, mp a bit and I felt that I wnnlnn'f. he able to hold outfmuch longer, for I was growing weaker every day "One my husband gjt me a bottle of Tanlac and insisted that I try it, and the way I began to im prove was simply astonishing. I am new. free of every one of the old troubles and never felt bet her in my life.

I wish everybody could know what this wonderful medicine did for me." Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. Automobiles are replaced with new ones on an average of every five years. 3 1 ALLOWS. TO H- nSHCR I lr II 1 it -11 1 ii Pi 11 i IIS II jir rP! iJ I'i't'M fey uliliUJ 18 Ft. B.

D. F. D. R.f 20 Ft. B.

Wanted Fill in Specifications Below 192 To be delivered Size of Barn inside Length of Furnace, inside barn. Size of With or without Remarks: TT tl Warrenton, North Carolina Virginia Ivey..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Warren Record Archive

Pages Available:
8,547
Years Available:
1892-1922