Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR HENOERSON DAILY DISPATCH A*|Wl IS. I*l4. Pnftililil Srt»y iIMMN MlW>< CS« INO. at IS V*mc Mtwt XOBNRY A, DKNNtP. IV** and Editor M. L. KlN<*H. -Soc-Trrx. aad Baa Mar. TKLSPMOMSt Editorial Office t*a Soiltiy Editor *lO Saiiacu uffli-r Itt Til* Hi'DilfriK'n l*«*il> »* a IDMabfr «*f the A»tvi*tisl N>* *• paper Knlerpriar .Vaan'iallim, (South ern New >|>«|irr I'uMmhi-ra AMtVlatlon and the North enrolls* I'ren Aaavla ttoa. The A>ms latnl !>. ><. la exetualv ely entitled to u>r (or reputdicaticn all ■ eras dispatches . tedllod to It I's not otherwise . redded in this |*aper. anil ■ lin the local news puhllshett herein All ri(hts of puhlh'ation of special dlapatohrs herein .r<- also reserxed. si bm iiiptiii> rsit iN PaiaMe lltlril) tn Advance. One Year HOO Hit Months 2.50 Three Months ... I .No Par t'opx OS NOTtt K TO w| NMt niItKRM. Uel at the printer label «>n your paper. The dale thereon shi>w s w hen the subscription expires. Forward jour money in ample time for re newal. Notice date on label carefully •nd If not i.'rint please notify us at on.e Vulvst nl>ers desiring the address on their ivapor t haniiol. please state in thnar cpminumiealion both the OLD •nd NKW address Natlnaal Umtlalnc Nepreseatatltea I'BIIVT. UMII9 A KOH.V 250 Park Avenue, New Tork City: 3i >:a«t VVa. ker Drive Chicago. Walton Huililiuk. Atlanta. Security Building, St l.ouis Entered at the post office in Hender son. N. C.. as sc. end class mall matter Ah—wf»ma»ha.n*«Bd»—aipdv InfcWhdß • RIGHTEOUSNESS BRINGS RE JOICING Whn the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people moiirn Proverbs 29:2. RIGHT REASONING - Let us rea son together, saith the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.—lsa. 1 18 IjJAMES •aSWELL] 1 By Central Press New York. April 2 Marginal!! of a Madhattanke: Another jury summons... Well. I wriggled out of the one last sum- mer, so this time I suppose I murt take the rap ... Maybe there'll be hoi copy in the proceedings, too. .. And who am I to sniff at 34 daily?... Inci dentally, I never beard of an unemployed guy being haaded a summons: he needs the money, and luck doesn't run so mun ificent ly in this rteel-mitted town... That little 12->ear-oM in the row dieit and moot abandoned of the Square cabarets made me un comfortable the ether night; watching with wide, uneasy eyes, the gyrations of a ecorehy rumba she seems asham ed of her parents, who had brought her in... Undoubtedly the most un-nerving moment in any night club floor shows the colored boy with the wooden limb upon the arena of Connie's Inn, in Harlem .He is realty one of the great ♦ap-dancers. and wriile his misfortune lends a macabre note to the loudest and liveliest of the late-spot exhibi tions. onlookers almost forget the sig nificance of that pounding peg. so thrilling is his technique.. .1 noted the intense io*err>: of Bill Robinson, at a ringside table, in Bates' tapping... A newspaperman just returned from Russia tells me that the bane of Sta lin's existence is those high peasant boots he mu:t wear, for the looks of the thins, to formal gatherings.. .The czar of the Soviets has longed all his life for a pair of ahiny patent leather dogs the —kind the officers used to wear... t'LOS£ll SHOPS A social register playboy advanc ed a theoiy one evening recently that took this reporter somewhat aback He contends that prohibition Ms, in ef fect, being enforced in Manhattan! Here's how he supports his aston ishing thesis: "All the de luxe speakeasies are very ctreful these nights about admitting people A stranger hasn’t a chance. The old line about being ‘a friend of Joe Zilch' doesn t soften the doorman's stare any more. You must be known "WtbaA's the result? A private club, nothing else. When a speakeasy de pends upon a regular trade of repeats and habitues its no more than a closed gathering. You can't call K a wide open town when you have to know the ropes to carry on. “A joint which admits onyl mem bers' and rigidly excludes strange faces la scarcely an out-and-out commercial affair. It's an exclusive ckub.” Well .•! If it makes him happier to fftihik n 0... FI CM-CPS PUT-DOWN 8— Schum&nn-Helnk never lets a* American flag out of her possession, beMerit* that to do ao would bring certain miafortun*. Winaky, the bur lesque impresario of the town, got all the newspaper beys into his office the other day to suggest applying the tech nique of the atrip shows to grand opera ... “Get a runway and make the prims doona walk down K, and the hox office would fee mobbed/.. .Hia glory mad* the aheet* at a walk... Taxi drivers of the Village are una nimous in admitting that El Chtcos is a "clean joint "-meaning that K is oat of Mm few places they know which won’t aland for any chine*ng in the matter of atomy fares brought to the <tnor. which will not atknit a man un accompanied by a woman and which M generally, as this reported is glad to reoogniae. a notably healthy dine-and dance emporium, as such business go. TTie Broadway personalities who are seen at every opening, large or small, and who*# names are always announc ed from the floor by master* of cere monies an>: Jack Owterman. who manages to get into the spotlight and sing a song, the same song, incidental ly. on each occasion; Abe Lyman, who usually is funny enough to juaL lfy his center-of-lhinge craving; Lou Ho Its. and half a dosen other regulars whoor names you wouldn't know and whose name* I forget 10 minutes after rech session... It’s a curious thing that there are n»ver more than three or four very, very successful ni»M clubs in Man hattnn at the same time... There arc nmny complaints now about slack trade but In my memory the favored after-the-theatre cut-up places have slw-ays been counted . The name* of them change and the public drifts back and forth, spelling success or failure, often for reasons no one can detect. TODAY TODAYS ANNIVERSARIES. 742 Charlemagne, celebrated King of the Franks and Emperor of the Romans, born. Died Jan. 28. 814. 1808 Hans Christian Andersen, Dan ish writer of fairy and folk tales, born. Died Aug. 4. 1875. 1840 Emile Zola, French novelist, champion of the cause of Drey fus. born. Died Sept. 29. 1902. 1841 —Daniel Draper, noted New York City meteorologist, born there. Died in 1932. 1886—Charles A. Weyerhaeuser among among America's wealthiest lumbermen, born in Coal Val le*. 111. Died Feb. 15. 1930. TODAY IN HISTORY. 1818 The American Farmer, pioneer agricultural paper, established in Baltimore. 1866--President Johnson proclaimed the Civil War at an end. 1930—Third Census officially com menced. TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, presi dent of Columbia University, eminent citizen, bom at Elizabeth. N. J„ 70 years ago. William B. Wilson, onetime Secre tary of Labor, born in Scotland. 70 years ago. Walter P. Chrysler, noted automo bile manufacturer, born in Wamago. Kans.. 57 years ago. Maj. Gen. William R. Smith, U. S. A., who, today, reaches the statutory age of retirement, born in Nashville. Tenn.. 64 years agoo. Sergei Rachmaninoff. celebrated pianiat-composer. born in Russia, 59 years ago. License Needed To Fish Outside One’s Own County w Dally Dlspali-h Bureau, la the Mir Waller Hotel. B\ J. f. BAMKKHVILL. Raleigh. April 2.—Any one who fishes outside the limits of his own county must have a State fishing li cense. fishermen of the State were reminded today by J. S. Hargett, as sistant director of the Department of Conservation and Development. The requirement, Mr. Hargett em phasized. extends to commercial as well as Inland waters, the only ex ceptions being the ocean, sounds and the wide mouths of the Cape Fear. Neuse, Pamlico. Tar, and New rivers, Wilmington. New Bern. Washington, and Jacksonville marking the inland limits of territory where no licenses are required. The State anglers art. Mr. Hargett explained, exempted only the ocean and sounds as waters in which no li censes are required by resident;-, o* any other ce’o.tie.s execj t those in which the waters are located. The law. however, -rave authority tr the Boaid of Co-'. ivj:V i and Development, lo specify nviii'inal waters in >vVtn li cense 'cquirementH do not apply. I’n der ruth. --ity. the boa i excepted the mouths of rivers which have been specified. Although weather handicaps prob ably resulted in one of the lightest Easter Monday fishing days in years, according lo the conservation officials warm spring days are expected t:> bring out fishermen in largo num bers in the eastern and cential parts of the State. Opening of the trout season in the mountain counties April 15 inaugura tes formally the sport in that section. The trout season will continue until September 1. Small mouth bass fish ing in that section will not open un til June 10, continuing until Septem ber 1 and closing at the same time as trout fishing. Seasons for large mouth bass and other species except mountain trout, close during spawning period on May 1 for one month and ten days or un til June 10. being broken only In a few counties where certain days dur ing the general closed season have been exceptd. WKenheiliag do wn nupie syrup put into a large kettle and do not cover when 4 form a aoh bad si cold water it will fir into rtw. HENDEKSON, (N. C.J DAILY DISPATCH- SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1982 " Government Economy Aid To Business, Babson Says Local Governments Leading the Way and State And Federal Organizations M u »t Follow, Economist De clares; Says Budgets Must Be Balanced BY ROGER W. BABSON, Copyright 1982, Publishers Fin ancial Bureau. Babson Park. Fla., April 2. The current trend toward economy in Gov ernment shows that we are at last coming to our senses. This movement merits the support of everybody who wants to see a recovery In business. England is working out of her de preeslon by flashing expenses and balancing her budget. The United States must follow her example. Gov ernment costs, federal, state, and lo cal. in 1931 were thirten billion dol lars—more than one-fifth of the en tire national income. Business, under going the most severe dpression in seventy-five years, is crying out for relief from this staggering burden. People can no longer afford to give one day's income out of every five to run the government. There is, of course, immediate need for more re venue to balance the budget; but let us not forget, while imposing these new taxes, to insist upon the most sweeping economies. The trouble with government fin ances in that they follow the crazy principle of spending the money first and tryin gto raise it afterwards. In stead they should follow the business principle of estimating the Income first and then appropriating only as the income will permit. There is a definite limit to the income which the government may exact without killing the goose that lays the golden egg, namely, business. Current financial re ports show that this limit has already been reached, and business, instead of laying golden eggs for public officials to gather, is laying just ordinary goose eggs." It is time the public in sisted on the same sound financial principles in government that apply to individuals and corporations. Local Government!* Leading the Way. My organization recently compiled a list of all the states, cities, towns, and counties which have made salary cuts during the past three months. As shown in the following table, state and local governments have already made a good start in salary reductions, even though the movement must go further than it has thus far. _ Public Salary Cub*. Jan. Feb. Mar. Three Months' Total States 11 2 4 Cities and Towns 37 33 21 91 Counties 14 6 3 23 Total 52 40 26 118 The reason the states and local gov ernments are leading the way toward cutting operating costs and curbing appropriations is that they were the first to feel the effects of Impaired credit. Difficulty in accomplishing fi nancing in New York, Chicago. Phil adelphia. and other centers has awakened the public in time to avoid a disastrous collapse of state and city credit. In the meantime efforts to make si milar ecenomies in the federal gov ernment have been blocked by po litical groups. A cwrefully jplanned program of salary reduction through out all brances of the government from Congress down would not only mean worthwhile cutting of public costs, but more important still, would set an example would have a good psychological effect on th whole coun try. Business can be speeded up only as every group makes the necessary sacrifice. With 6,000.000 totally unm ployed, several million more on part time, and nearly all private workers having taken substantial pay reduc tions, there is no reason to exempt the vast army of public employees from the sacrifices which all other groups are making. Must Balance* The Budget. While new taxes are necessary and will be imposed to create some sort of balance for the national budget in the emergency, the real cure for our financial troubles lies in controlling the outgo. The multidude of Bureaus. Commissions, and other appendages which have fastened themselves onto the federal payroll In such profusion during the past twenty years should be thoroughly overhauled and those not absolutely essential should be Jei minated. Unquestionably the trend of our political system since the war has been toward ever-increasing and cost ing and costly bureaucracy. This trend largely accounts for the increase of 475 per cent in Federal government costs Bince 1913. No other Kejurnin*; Student t |l Mmm Parts, London and Berlin may ho the goal of many an American's ambition, but, somehow, the re turning wanderer Is always glad to get back home. Virginia Dawes, daughter of former Ambassador Charles G. Dawes, is no exception. She is shown on her arrival at New York altar a six months’ study trip to Paris, nation in the world has shown such an increase. England is nearest with 296 per cent; Holland third, with 279 per cent; Germany fourth, with 273 per cent; Switzerland fifth, with 282 per cent. In the United Stats even In our most prosperous times the public expenditures were growing much more rapidly than our national in come. Now with the average family income reduced about 35 per cent since 1929, we are paying 20 per cent more than in 1929 to run our Govern ment! As I have said, the vigorous cut ting of expenditures in England has brought back a balanced budget: enabled the repayment, ahead of their due date, of credits advanced to her; brought a sharp rise in sterling ex change; and a better spirit of confi dence and courage to British business. Aggressive action on our part along the same lines of Government econo my will do more than anything else to reestablish business confidence in the United States. To do this, all groups must un selfishly make sacrifices for the com mon good. Each congressman seems to think that his main duty is to get something out of the Federal Trea sury for his own section. Every com munity should let its congressmen know that local and sectional interests are subordinate to the big task of balancing the national budget. I be lieve that this change in attitude is coming, because people now see that as individuals and communities they suffer only as the whole country suf fers. and prosper only as the whole country prospers. General business as measured by the Babsonehart is now 35 per cent below the normal X-Y Line, compared with 34 per cent a month ago, even with the adjustments for usual sea season improvements. A. J. MAXWELL OPENS , HIS HEADQUARTERS Daily Diiiwtrl Bnreua. la the Mir Walter Hotel. BY J. t. RANKERVILL. Raleigh. Apr!; z. —Campaign head quarters for Allen J. Maxwell, who Is one of the three candidates seeking the Democratic nomination for gov ernor, have been opdpd on the fourth floor of the Capital tttub building here on the corner of Martin and Salis bury streets. The rooms occupied by the headquarters are 401, 402 and 414. Robert Ruark. Raleigh attorney who was recently named State cam paign manager by Mr. Maxwell. Is In active charge of the headquarters, with a corps of assistants. CROSS WORD PUZZLE ACROSA I Divided 7 renaming to a state II Barren 14 Act of coming to a place 15 Noting motion towards 17 To cover 18 Language of Siamese 19 Pronoun ?0 Liquor 22 Wife of a czar 14 Watering place 15 Paragraph 17 Hanks •, 28 Portal 29 Sophistical 11 Specter, phantom 13 Powerful rock-bor ing tools 14 Pollen-bearing organs 85 Jumbled type 16 Note of scale 57 Uin or noo.se 12 Written mandate 17 Owner of plantation 18 Dwells at 19 Resounded ill Daub SI Learning SI Conclusion S 4 Follower of Pliny 46 Mass. Inst, of Tech (abbr.) S7 Indefinite article >8 Control *9 Country of Asia • t Bone (l-atin> 12 Landed estate at tached to manor 14 Platform, dais 1G Tags ngam 17 Petition lo the Lorn irTpi z H r7 B rl ~~ IBP To T 3 LJff —— 73 ■■ ■■ 5i ™ _—— RI IP RMRR RRR —■ —- -—Bpi — Z--ZW-----WZ — 97 -— Mp~ r ■ “ ■H IXMirl Uff A 81000 OUT $ . . i vxx/ of this Mn<Ml „|L ' - ———— s' ! /v& p UNIVERSITY PRESS ISSUES BOOK THAT WON PRIZE Chapel Hill, April 2—The University Press has just brought out a volume by Profs. F. B. Simkins and R. H. Woody on ‘‘South Carolina During Re construction . ” Thp book won the John H. Dunning prize for the bent essay in American history writing In 1931. Simkins formerly taught here and is now at Virginia State Teachers College: Woody is a professor at Duke University. The new release is a “study of so cial, economic and political forces of one of the most interesting phases of Southern history, the reconstruction period in Sk>utt|i Carolina.’* The thoughtful eye sees farthest. Duwn 1 Larger 2 That man I Luminous bridge between two poles 4 Uproar 5 Nitrogenous sub stance resembling albumin 8 Delays 7 Burlesques 8 A passing 9 Air, melody or tune 10 Nervous twitching It Avenue (abbr.) 12 Persona! .satire 13 Rigid 15 Fixes In mind through study 21 Simple; sheer 23 Noting repeti tion (prefix) 24 Alone 26 Charting 28 Establish in a residence (var.) Answer to Previous Puzzle Inf h*l y hWH 6 ! t h|Bt rv * J r T sslfr t sMIm h frTpjpK esp aTc]s|mN OITjE V, E. ss F> Ay S g,j e W ElßtelibA A Wplshr R A pi U| A S O KtMs ERE li_omipLOL!S§| ET-O I LEjuBAN ty|e|NiTjs|&BE|RlNo|g^rß lu 6pjt ui statu 32 Lad:es of position 37 Unfurl 38 Schemer 39 Highland (So. Afr.) 40 Gosling (Prov. Eng.) 41 Weasel-like animal; 42 Lauded 41 To life up again 44 Region of lowland; south of Dead seo 45 Intervals of time 48 Irritating African fly 51 Printer’s unit 54 German East African copper coin 65 Common diminutive for Nathan 58 Bteep in water to separate fibers 60 Married woman (abbr.) •3 Mol 45 Sloth The One Consistent Exception To speak to the purpose, one must speak witu a purpose. NOTICE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF VANCE Default having been made in the deed of truut executed by R. A. Harris payment of that debt secured by that and wife, Bessie Harris, dated the 15th day of January, 1931, recorded in I book 155 at page 425 in the office of the register of deeds for Vance county, N. C., and ait the request of the hold er thereof, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sal; and sell to the high est bidder for cash at the Courthouse door in Henderson, N. C., on Monday, April 11th 1932 at 12 o’clock midday, the following described property: All the righrt title and interest of the said R. A. Harris and wife, Bessie Harris of every kind, nature and de scription in and to that lease dated the 22nd day of April, 1930, duly filed for registration in Vance County. North Carolina, executed by Dorsey Hart and wie, Ekrise Hart, which said lease runs for a period of fllve years with option of renewing the same for five years, on some six or seven acres of land in Vance county, North Caro lina known as pant of the Dorsey Hart farm, adjoining T. H. Hight and | others, and upon which land R. A | Harris has erected and does now ope rate a planing mill or saw mill. To gether also with all the machinery appliances and equipment now locat ed on said premises and used in the operation and conduct of said busi ness; said machinery eo relating in part of an A-d Yates Planer, a Berlin Saw and a Hardy-Tines Corliss Type Steam Engine. It being the intention of this instrument to convey all of the machinery regardless of whether the same is described herein or not, locat ed on said premises. Together also with all right, t.tle and interest which the parties of the fin* part may have in and to buildings, houses and other property which may have been locate upon the said premises or which may hereafter be located upon said pre mises during the life of the aforesaid lease. This the llbh day of March. 1932. J. H. ZOLLIOOFFER. Trustee. Low Bound Trip Fares to Almost Every Town in A tuerica Over The East Coast Stage Lines The Short Line System These tickets are good on all regular schedule buses. Call the agent for information, ’Phone 18 Union Bu* Station, Henderson, N. C. * When planning a trip always nde the bus. Bide De Luxe Motor Buses— The most safe and courteous way to travel. ADMINISTRATION NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of the estate of J. W. Young, deceased, late of Vance County. N. C., this ii> to noitfy all persons having claims against the estate or the said deceas ed to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 14th., day of March. 1933, or tihts notice wiH be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the estate will please make immediate settlement. E. O. YOUNG, Administrator. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY TRAINS LEAVE HENDERSON AS FOLLOWS No. NORTHBOUND 108—8:48 A. M. for Richmond. Washington, New York, connect ing at NoriJna with No. 18 ar riving Fortamouth-Norfolk 12:05 P. M. with pari or-dining car ser vice 4—2:52 P. M. for Richmond Washington, New York. 10*—0:48 I*. M. for Richmond Washington and New York. 8—3:28 A. M. for Portamonth- NorfoUt Washington. New York. No. SOUTHBOUND 191—(5:43 A. M. for Savannah, Jacksonville, Miami. Tampa, St. Petersburg. 3—3:12 P. M. for Raleigh. San ford, Hamlet, Columbia. Savan nah, Miami Tampa, St. Peters burg. 107—7:55 P. M. for Raleigh. Ham let, Savannah. Jacksonville, Miami. Tampa. SI. Petersburg. Atlanta. Birmingham. 8—1:25 A. M. for Atlanta, Birm ingham, Memphis. For information rail on H. E. Pleasants, DPA., Raleigh. N. C , or M C ’ Capps, TA , Hendetwoa, N. C.