PAGE TWO Plans For City League To Be PROSPECTS BRIGHT I FOR EIGHTH CLUB! fwiwahis Club May Enter To Round Out Organization In Community With a meeting set for Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in the Chamber of Commerce office, and two more teams already entered in the proposed City- League it terns that some real action wiil be taiten when the groups, re presenting the seven clubs so far en tered meet. The two latest additions \ are the Henderson Lions Club und the Southern Ice Cream Company. I G. Fied Finch is manager of the ' J£e cream nine, and says that he will | be able to enter a very strong team I if he can get some of tne boys that J live in his neighborhood in the coun- j try. Just what the rest of the manag- l er« of the cluhs will say to this bring-! ing of players from out of the city, into the league is not known, but all , these things will be thrashed out in , the meeting on Tuesday night. A good deal of interest is being shown so far in the proposed loop, gnd there are prospects for the. Kiwanis Club also entering a ! team Some of the clubs entered in the j loop so far are a good deal stronger j than some of the others. A well bal anced league is sought so that the , interest will not wane by a runaway i Ip the league standing. If the loop; becomes so unbalanced, two divisions j may be formed with independent | teatps in one of th eloops and club ' teams in one of the crops and club j essarv if the independent organiza tions get too strong, for they will be able to practice and play more often i than those who may have to work and can only get out to play the games scheduled for the city league ' If the Kiwanis club comes into the' proposed loop, will make the eighth | club that has signified it sintention j of enterting the league. If there are j any others in the city that would like j to Join, they are asked to send repre sentatives to the meeting on Tuesday 1 night. Remits!! AMKRtCW I.HAGUE Chicago 9; Boston 2. Clwe’.atKJ 0; New York 5. i Philadelphia 2: Detroit 7. St, Leui? 1; Washington 0. NATIONAL LEAGUE J*tf?burgh 2: Brooklyn 0. New York 9; Cincinnati 1. Philadelphia 8; Chicago 6. Boston S; St. Louis 3. I pießMont league Wmdtcn-Saletn at Wilmington at High Point. Asheville at Durham. RalHgh at Charlotte. HjSir 1 ’ i • Dr. K. H. Patterson £? Slgil Sptf\4 hit Hendchsok.N G BIG MSTPR Girls Can Dreaiii, Too , %-h NBy. * T*GGE. Oe: vOOvjS COCiTiMe | HEftG YKID MQsO ; AGA'.sJ VjrTMyOOR l SUODV Amo I rONi \T'O OETO GO G>VE>SViUG DOSAJNJ I Sfy»' AS)VT(-UK)G> that v4oui_d Be GO»MGTO \DPA TOGEThEQ.' I—. 1 —. VJ6RG JUST RWER, IN) A HodsESOAT TmS MORE POM tHAM THAT! JE^.’ GCi:JG DO/J- > DON'T Ti£ll ME I *5 VT-filO & SONArweR.. QMY / TirVEY \ oi.j.j nm.'■ . - -'. .' ic. '■ ~_ , i’ _ ~ iC'j / — _ - ; __ _ &om. «t> • I f' y £,!%ziJ££'. , t gg r l \r?t£ T Y - ' 1 " IJ t^,; l)1 ,; iJi .j | tHsii;i jui.iiiiiji.tifei^- 1 -' tn^rm NtNK.ETTA ( ,Xouu§ L,Kir TO KNOW TKE **£J\s&£' E ( k ( (ftfe \"’f' | ' Have. MADE j OF LtTTRR- J TOM , bfcAR - ( KNOCK ( .. . )' , N j.' 11 UP- |l vvmat li THERE IN IT TwV j Jfr\ \ Ay ffllll I j Middleburg Grange I Beats. Henderson’s All-Stars 5 to 4 I The Middleburg Grange baseball . team, making its debut Friday after . noon, took a close game from the Henderson all-stars by the score of j 5 to 4. But for costly’ errors on both I sides, the final count would have been much less than it was. as the pitchers on both sides were very stingy with hits. At the last half of the eighth in ning Henderson was leading bv 4-2 but the Grange's pushed across two tallies to tie the count and another in the ninth to take the lead Butties: For Middleburg. Ellington, '■ and J. Jackson; for Henderson, Hight, ( Boyd and Hamm. BLUFDEIS ill : PLAT WAKE FOREST I I : ~ | Game Wedneadiiy May De-j cide Big Five Title; Beat Cardlina Again i Durham, May 16.--Fresh from their: ninth inning victory over Caro- | * !ina. the Blue Devils of Duke, again i ; figuring prominently in the Bjg Five j i race, await their game at Duke park Wed/iesrtav afternoon with the league ) | leading Deacons of Wake Forest i which may pfove to be the deciding . j contest of the 1932 campaign. Held to four hits by Joe Griffith. Tar Heel hurler. for eight lnn|ngs, the Blue s Devils avalanche of safe blows that won them the ball game in the t ninth, brought to a finish a fierce 1 contest that will be remembered here ! for a long time. Dutch Floht. working against the. j Tar Heels in what will probably be I his last game this season, showed ' everything a great pitcher needed and I went right on through to the end de i spite that early in the game he was awan-ded pool support by his team ntafes. j Either Roy Alpert or Tim Mc- I Keithan, righthanders, will face Wake ! Forest in the game Wednesday. Coach Jack Coombs said. It was McKeithan's i entry into the game in the seventh j [ inning Saturday that started the | > Devils on their hitting ways. He got | safe blows in both his times at bat. ; Wake Forest will bring a formiid- I able outfit to Durham featuring their ' brilliant hurler. Lefty Barnes. Short- I stop Karp and First Baseman Joy | ner. All have been playing great ball . this season. j MASSANUTEN WINS PRfef* TRACK MEET ! Chapel Hill. May 15 (AP> —A little : tea mos big atars from Maananutten Military’ Academy of Virginia swept ; the field at the University's sixth an j nual Southern prep school track cham pionships here today. Coach Leslie Feuts brought only seven boys, but he had as many stars. Arthur Jannell won firsts in both dashes and the broad jump. Allen Werbelow did the same in the high Jump and the high hurdles, and Milan Zoris hung up the two new meet rec ord?: of the day in the shot and the discus. The Steubenville. 0., boy’s 152 feet 3 1-2 inch mark in the discus wag the performance of the day, for i( [ bettered the meet record by more than i 21 feet and the Southern conference ) varsity .record by 14 feet, and it cams | within three feet of the national prep ! ‘•fhool record. I HENDERSON. (N. 0..) DAILY DISPATCH, M 0 N’D A Y MAY 16, laiA : SHARKEY STARTS VTO^WTS^EA^LY With his heavyweight champion ship fight against Max Schmeling in Long Island City, N. Y. t still lYioro'thnn five weeks hwav. Jack The Piedmont Parade « \ Doubl.eheaders were the order of the day Saturday for all clubs in the j Piedmont Loop with the Asheville Tourist anjd Wilmington Sailors being the only teams to win both games played. Bulls, Pointers Split. Durham took the opening game of , Saturday's doubeheader at Durham by collecting 19 safeties, nine of them j doubles, to score 12 runs while the ! Pointers were touching Lambert, Bjll , pitcher, for seven pits and 2 runs. I , The Pointers came back strong in : | the nightcap by hitting timely behind | the good pitching of “Goat" Walker j to win handily, 6-1. Caps Break Even with Twins. The Twins, using four pitchers, nosed out the Raleigh Caps in Win ston-Salem Saturday in an eleven in ! ning battle, 7-6, | In the night tilt. Stevenson's homer I Inside the park with Wolfe and Smith on base, enabled George Petty to get i his first win of the season. Petty al-1 lowed the league laeding Twins only ! three hits in the nightcap, to win j 3-1- Tourist T*»i« Two. The Asheville Tourist took both ends of a double header in Asheville Saturday, taking the first 7-6 and the second 10-7. Kola Sharpe Tourist ace, marked pis fourth win of the season in tjie afternoon tilt. The night tilt was a rather freakish affair. The Greensboro Pats tallied ail seven of their runs 1 nthe first two innings and hte Tourist counted their ' 10 markers in the second frame on : five hits, five free passes and three errors. Tars Get Double Win. I Eight homers featured the double ! header Saturday between the Char- j \ lotte Hornets and the Wilmington j Tars in the seaport town Satuiday. ■ I The Tars took the first game 9-2, the j Sharkey begins training in | Orangeburg, N. Y. Here he is on | the links and at the weights on his 1 first day in rr.mp. Hornets onl ytwo markers were hom- | ers by Culbreth and Pond. Circuit | blows by Rauding. Burns and Noonan, each coming with a man on, sent ! Merle Settlemire to the showers. In the nightca, Anderson got a cir- i cuit clout for Charlotte while Noonan I and Lindley each contributed four baggers to give the Sailors thetr sec- ' ond win of the day, 3-2. Jim Ryan allowed the Hornets only two hits in the short affair. PIEDMONT LEAGUE Club W. L. Bet. j Winston Salem '...12 5 .706 Wilmington 10 8 .571 Raleigh 9 8 .529 J Greensboro 8 8 . 500 j Asheville 8 8 .500 » High Point 7 8 .467 Durham 7 10 .412 Chailotte 5 11 .313 AMERICAN LKAGtfE Club W, L Pet. Washington 19 6 .760 I New York 16 6 .714 | Cleveland 18 11 .621 ! Detroit 14 10 .583 ! Philadelphia 11 13 .458 St. I>ouis 12 17 .414 ; Chicago 7 18 .280 Boston 4 20 .167 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: W. L Pet. Chicago 18 9 . 667 Boston *36 9 .640 Cincinnati 16 15 .516 St. IxniLs 14 15 .483 Philadelphia 13 14 .481 1 Brooklyn 10 15 .400 j New- York 9 12 .429 Pittsburgh 8 15 .348 In 1683 the New Haven Colony fConnecticut) was begun by an Eng lish companv under John Davenport. , I allowed only church members t , vote, and for ji£nrs had no laws but those of the Bible. Talked Tuesday Night GRANGE IN COUNTY PLANS FOR LEAGUE l Schedule of Baseball Announced For i ..it Half Season BEGINS SAT’Y, MAY 2ft Winners of Each Half To. Play For Season Title, and Second Team* Also To Play For Other Two Ratings A schedule of baseball, game? to be played by the countywide leatrue of local chapters of the National Grange was announced today. The season is to open on Saturday, May 28, and schedules already arranged run thro ugh July 2, which will be considered ihe first half. At that time, if it is desired to continue, the same schedule will be started over again for the sec- I ond half of the season. | Winners in the two halves will play j each other for the season title, the | loser taking second place. The two de- I seated teams in the play-off will then play u series of games wltfi each other to decide the third and fourth place | standings. I Granges are operating at Towns , ville, Middleburg. Aycock, Zeb Vance and Dabney, all except Zeb Vance have an er.tr>' In the league program as outlined the schedule for the first half season being as follows: May 28. Aycock at Dabney. Townsville at I^Hddleburg. .June 1. Dabney at Aycock. Middleburg Townsville. Jiine 11. Aycock at Middleburg. Townsville at Dabney. .June 18. i Middleburg at Aycock. Dabney at Townsville. .tune 25. Aycock at Townsville. Middleburg at Dabney. .July 2. Dabney at Middleburg. Townsville at Aycock. | Two Games Listed For Week-End By O’Neil Sluggers The O'Neil Sluggers, under the management of A. Boyd, announced today this strong organization will take on the itiiddlebiug All-Stars here in league Park Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock, and then on Saturday they will meet the Greystone Quarymen here on Saturday afternoon. Boyd’s aggregation consists of ex high school stars and boasts of a strong team. They expect to represent I O'Neils Hardware Company in the | city league that is to be formed here. A small admission fee will be j charged to see their games on Friday : and Saturday to help defray the ex i pense of balls, it was said. WINNER OF DERBY TAKES PRBAKNESS Baltimore, Md., May 16 (AP)—Bur goo King. a royally bred son of the Blue Grass, moved into the select cir i cle of great thoroughbreds as he cap ped his Kentucky Derby victory with a driving triumph in the forty-second running of the Preakness at Pamlico .Saturday. | Coming from behind to nab the de cision in the closing strides, the E. B. Bradley oolt equalled the perform ances of the mighty Six Barton and she great Gallant Fox, heretomore Che only horses that ever won both the derby, and the Preakness. DUKE RAU ItS FOR VICTORY IN NINTH BUnchfeti Hit* Bring Aik Duke Runs for 3 to 2 Win Over Heels Durham, May 16 ou . r druggi.t for STAN BACK hy name aad get What you a*k tor. INTERPRETATION oP ABSENT VOTE Law (Cont.nued from Ps«*> (p.e i Place for the purpose of volin» person on the day of the >n election. In order for first group to use the absents J*? lott. they must actually be county so that if they return a. r the day the absentee ballot K hn not be used, Mr. Brummiu out. In the second group There " flcate A jpust.be used by those lr u first group and Cerllheate h bv th ** in the second. ' ,ho “ The catch of the person desiring to vote by the absentee method account of physical inability , s flcient for the purpose.' Mr Bin, mitt said. “Or, in lieu thereof (h , ' muat be the certificate of a showing the physicial inability 0 f the ypter to be present. The oath re. lU j„. a by these certificates must be niaue before some official authorized to ad minister oaths If such officer ha- a seal. It must be attached to the c-,. tjfieate, It is not enough that the „f. fleer shall sign the certificate t) , r oath must be actually administered by the officer to the person seekn to use the absentee certificate. If t tl „ is not actually administered t;., ballots accompanying the are Invalied and should not be com ed. The certificate used must also signed by the elector and not by son, r one in his behalf, except that an ~ literate person entitled to vote is p * 4 . mltted to make his mark. "A person desiring to vote by on? or the other of these me(hi*ds tn.,i make application to the chairman ~f Jhe county board of elections befoir tjjg ballots are distributed, or to n„, registrar of the precinct after ih,- bajlots are . distributed, either in j*.,. spn, by mail or through another 1* thg application is made through » r .- other, it must be in writing." Dispatch WANT ADS ttet Results FOR RENT FIVE ROOM BUNCA low. hardwood floors, heat, gar»|t planted one block from high scho*. ' Phone 443. 16-lts * SENIORS IT WILL PAY YOU TO see us before you have your dipi mas framed. Special low prices rn all picture framing Hender* i> Book Co. 13 14-16 la I ' ) WANTED—TOBACCO PLANTS FOR cash. Legg-Parhem Company. lt>-J ; ATTENTION SENIORS I BRING your diplomas, let me frame them. Will make you special price for n<-xi few days. Robert A. Blalock a: B&rnes Funeral kome. 124 r: FOR LEASE TO COUPLE VERY attractive furnished, modern house-keeping apartment. Ca.’ 584-W. 11-13-16-1? MISS G. C. HIJtCkNAI.L. PtTBIJG stenographer now located at Hen derson Book Co. Copying, nnilu graphing. mimeographing. nnht? Mattresses, cots, day beds and feather beds renovated J3<4) and up. H. C. Anthony Maltreat Co. Breckenridge Street. 16-lU TIIEDAILY DISPATCH IS NOW OS sale at The Smoke Shop. Jefferson Case, Henderson Candy Kitchen and Wiggina Drug Store. You may te nure a ropy from any of llieee plare,- at the regular price of sc. 29-ts GARDEN SEED WE HAVE A FULL stock at teduc.-d prices. Plant snap beans, butte* beans pole beans, cu cumber, squash, watermelon canta loupe and various other seed Park er’s Drug Store. The Rexall Store 13-3 t FOR RENT -SEVEN ROOM HOUSE on Harrell street AH modern con veniences. Will rent very cheap Apply to J. S. Evans. 16-2 ti. USED CAR BARGAINS 1930 Chevrolet Sport Coupe $295 0" 1928 Pontiac Ccupe. $l5O 00. 1928 Ford Coach $13500. 1928 Oakland Sedan $l5O 00 1927 Chevrolet Redan S6O 00 1927 Pontiac Sedan $95 00. MOTOR SALES CO Phone 832 5-ts GROCERY STORES. FISH DEAL ping paper . Use old newspaper* ers and markets save on your wrap- IGet a big bundle at the Daily Dis patch office lor 10c. 21- ,f NOTICE OF SALE OF STOf K OF GOODS In United States District Court Eastern District of North Carolina In the matter of Richard Thomas Stewart, Bankrupt Under an order of the U. S. Dis trict Court, I will sell, by public auc tion to ihe highest bidder, for cash at the R. T. Stewart store, in Mid dleburg, N. C.. at 12 o’clock, men on Tuesday, the 31rt day of May. 1932 the stock of goods of said R. T. Stewat : consisting of clothing, shoes, hard ware. and novelties and other m*>- cbandlre. ThG stock of goods was ap praLsed at $666 67 This sale is ?» h ject to confirmation of Referee, wi’-'.- out notice. Successful bidder will required to deposit 10 percent of h - bid to guarantee compliance. At time and place. I will also offer f"- sale the accounts receivable of Bank rupt, upon some terms and condi tions. This 16th day of May 1932- T. S. KITTRELL, Trust** R. T. STEWART, Bankrupt