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PAGE FOUR HENBERSON DAILY DISPATCH Amt (A IH4 Pitfctil Btwt AM«r»w Bi««K . i«a*r By tanMuo.l diipat€l c«„ met at 1* Y*aaf Itml XX NUT A DBN Nil. Pres mpA Bitter X L FINCH. S#c-Tr(»i awl BuTlifr. TEUMONU Editorial Offiee (00 Society Xdttcr 11l Business Office 010 Tha Henderson Dally DtspatcU la * B«mb«r of the Associated Preaa, Newa- Saper Enterprise Association. South ern Newspaper Publishers Association And the North Carolina Press Associa tion. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to use for republioatlon all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper, and Also the local newe published herein. All right# of publication of sisecia) dispatches herein are also raaerved. si BscßiprioK reicE»~ Payable Strictly la Ad vane*. One Tear |(.M Six Months S.l» Three Months 1.(0 Per Copy S( NOTICE TO SUMSCItIBKHS. Look at the printed label on yonr neper. The date thereon allows when the subscription expiree. Forward poor money in ample time for re newal. Notice date on label carefully nad tr not correct, please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the addresa en their paper changed, please elate tn thnlr communication both the OLD and NEW address. Batlsnal Adveettnfng Representative* PROMT. LANDIS A KOHN El Park Avenue, New Tcrk City; |( tat Wieker Drive. Chicago: Walton Building. Atlanta: Security Building M Louie. Entered at the poet office in Hender- Poa. N. C . as second class mall matter c>teis T foff hieu ron chsist July SO BE CHARITABLE —Brethren, if a <nnn be overtaken fn a fault, ye which ere spiritual, restore such a one in the eplnt of meekness; considering thy self. leee thou also be tempted.— Gel. «. 1. July SI GUARD THE TONGUE:—Keep tby tongue from evil, and thy lips from speaking guile. Depart from evil, and A) good; seek peace, and pursue Paeon 34 13. 14. IT OUGHT TO BE PUBLIC. Ws do not know Just how the im pression gained ground that the State Corporation would hold behind closed doors its hearings on utility rates, but Judge George Pell’s promise as chairman of the commission that the hearings will be open to both the press and the public is reassuring. To have had these informal discus sion*, as they have been called, in secret would have given the impres sion that there was something to be hidden. Certainly there ought not to be any secret about the rates charged for public services. The utilities are Already getting too much unfavorable publicity for their own good, and they ere undoubtedly aware of that fact. If there is nothing to Aide, there is no good reason for denying the pub lic the right to sit in. Probably there will be less interest In the conversations planned if the doors stand wide open with a welcome to all comers, but If the public were •hut out there would be no end of curiosity and speculation as to what going on inside. Moreover, it would not be good for the Corporation Commission itself. The theory held by •ome that that body functions for the corporations would gather increased force under conditions of that sort. AFTER REFLECTION. Expressions that have followed the fatal riota In Washington Thursday the bonus seeders and the po lice am at least interesting. The at iltudp of public. officials la thus re vealed by these Utterances. President Hoover said he ordered the Federal troops to the scene to put down rioting and to restore and maintain order, only after efforts had been made to have the veterans get out of government property. Walter W. Waters, erstwhile commander of the veterans, declared that no mat tsr what may happen from now on, the former soldiers will carry on, grd ding that "we have gone too far now to quit." General Douglas McArthur, chief of staff of the army, in personal; command, declared that "the govetm- Uent would have been threatened” had not President Hoover ordered the soldiers to the scene. Senator Copeland, after a call at 1 the White House just before noon,' and before the trouble broke, told a correspondent that he was appre-i henalve. saying the situation present-1 •d possibilities of mischief, or worse; than that. In a statement after the; tragndy occurred. President Hoover, laid the blame upon the communists,! where It probably belongs. Meantime, the nation held Its breath until there was news that ai lull had come. Even now, two day* after the regrettable affair, there is gravy apprehension that the last ha* not been heard of this trouble, and that unforeseen events may alter tbe situation even yet. General McArthur doubtless spoke with more truth than fiction when he hnnarded the opinion that the govern ment Itself may have been endanger ed. If there were danger then, that danger Is not entirely passed up to iki« hour. It 1* to be hoped that the weift Is over; it may be and it may aet.to. omy um •*» tail. HEALTHY YOUNG PEOPLE. To have been adjudged the health iest boy and girl ia their distfieta is an honor to be coveted and ana to he proud of on ths part of young Miss Currin and Mr. Finch, even though they were not selected as the heal thiest in the State. One must be in exceptionally fine physical condition lo be rated a* the second or third healthiest hoy or girl among 30,000 or more Four-H club members in North Carolina, and that Is the distinction these young people from Vance county have won, despite the fact that they did not make top places. Vance county, too, is proud of them and the records they have made. They took first honors in their dis trict eliminations, and allowance must be made for variations due to the de grees of strictness by different ex aminers. Because of climate, location and the general habits of the people, Vance is above the average in health char acteristics of its citizens. And that Is a recommendation for the com munity. &j£ *1 james*aswelll» By Central Press New York. July 30-1 hear: That shrewd showmen are about to initiate a string of houses which will show nothing except animated cartoons, ptiucipalyl Mickey Mouse. ts That. according to ancient Dutch cu.vtom the ma- Wm yor is entiled to ■ two lamps for his his doorway, s, vEB at the city’s ex pense. Jim nt y Walker has his That an actor a wife, suing for diorce. gavve her nus band's address as "the curb in frort of ohe Palace Theatre.” That one the site of the present Flushing, L. 1., golf club British sol diers used to amuse themselves roll ing cannon-balls about a coure of nine holes. That the most beautiful fire in New' York was a trivial blase ia tbe Sherry Netherlands spire a few years ago; the beat attended fire was Coney Is land's recentt con/tvgrsjUon which se-?ms to have stimulated business for t v e resort. y That unpaid emiployee of a recently closed movie house are. spending their las* pennies to buy radio time—so that the public can hear of their griev ances . Thai one of the toniest soda foun tains in the city still char-ages 50c for an ice cream soda —with one scoop of cream. That Twenty-first street follows the original Lover’s Lane of the town. That you dontt hear much about Hoboken. N. J., any more, now that ihe theatrical revivals over there faded. That the River House ia generally considered the moat expensive collec .t on of de luxe apartments in town, end that Park avenue harbors far! Tower really top-notch socialities then rpper Five avenue and the East Eigh *Les. That the end of the Bing Crosby- P.uss Columbo verbal squabble, which furnished such grand material to thf i idio columnists and publicity scribes :n that both of the principals are off the air. For good? That, according to ohn Golden, the ! heat re men, radio and television will I lay the same trick on the movies that the movies played Ok the legit drama stealing away stars’, ( authors and audiences. , That Staten Island has the highest hill on the Atlantic coast. That going around Manhattan Is land by water you must pas* beneath £ Ixiteen bridges. Tbat one of the purty-punty sights of the town is the Empire State tow er glimpsed through the rigging of a sailing yacht. That the happiest unemployed here about* are the houseboat squatters near 3puyten-DeyvM-on-Hudson, who make a wice tableau drifting tranquil ly offshore In the late afternoons. That soft drinks have hk the new low of all time at some of Ooney Is land’s stands—2c per glass. That Oount “Sea-Devil” van Luck ner is haring "impersbwdton trouble." One of the UUctt mimics actually call ed the count himself and called him the phoney! He’s ad confused as a result; Is he the McCoy, or is he some body else of ths same name? lift— WHliatn T. Adams, noted Juvenile writer Author of ths “Oliver HENDERSON, IN. C„J D9QLY nfefrATCH- SATURDAY, JU L Y 30, ' iWt Eviction by Steam Shovel jB ~tL& hi TT'imFflßx Wi Cr l a . nes are shown aa they arrived at one of the bonus army billets in Washington following the authorities’ decision to razs i*ni^ UC n Ure V n .i? n t ffort 10 , put * n end th * veterans’ siege of tha capital. Despite the efforts of Walter Waters, commander of the B.E.F, serious rioting followed police efforts to evict the bonuaeera. TODAY, TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1818- Ehtily Jane Bronte, one of the famous English sister novelists born. Died Dec. 19. 1848. 1831 —Helena Biavatsky, founder and leader of (he Theosophist move ment born in Russia. Died in Lon don, May 8, 1891. 1838 Henry A. Dupont soldier, in dustrialist U. S. Senator, born near Wilmington, Del. Died there, Dec 31, 1926. TODAY IN HISTORY 1619—First legislative a.ss*%m£bly In America met at Jamestown Va. 1907 -Foundation stone of the Car negie Palace of Peace laid at the Hague. t * TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS ’Henry Ford, world-famous Detroit automobile rrtanufacturer, born at Greenfield, Mass. 69 years ago. Maj. Gen. Smedley D. Butler, U. S. M. C. retired, bor n at Westchest er. Pa.. 51 years ago. E. Halde Man-Julius, Girard, Kans. publisher, editor and author, bom 43 years ago. Robert R. McCormick, publisher of •*he Chicago Tribune, born in Chicago, 52 years ago. Oscar C. Merrill, noted Washing ton D, C. civil engineer, born at Manchester, Maine, 58 years ago. TODAY S HOROSCOPE The person bom today should at tain power and eminence, if no very bad planetary aspects Interpose bhelr Influence. The nature carries a large amount of courage, endurance and •talent, which will raise him In Ills chosen sphere of action. Jt requires very bad aspects to controvert its good influences; but the direction of the talents is very variable. DISTRIBufiONOF RELIEF PLANNED (Continued from Page On*.) much money the stale will need to j borrow, he said today. *The law pro vides that the Governor must admin ister all this money and that the en tire responsibility for its administra tion rests upon him, ho than lie can not assign tihii, task to any depart ment o:\depatUnenta. It writ not be administered through Vhc oil Governor’s Council on Unem ployment and Relief, however, and this crganizsitaon dies today. This relief money could not be administered by thus council, since it also had to do with unemployment, while the Federal money available under the relief bill must be used for direct relief—food clothing, fuel and shelter. It is re garded as likely that the governor will appoint one individual as Us assist;, an*, who w4l have charge so the relief 1 werk in the State, although the gov ernor will personally have to approve every plan and disbursement. Until the survey of conditions in the State incident to determining the amount of money needed is completed, it will be impossible to toll how much the State will need to borrow from the $300,000,000 Federal relief fund, Governor Ga*rdner said. Alt present the State Department of Public Wei- Rare, the Ste Department of Public Instruction, the Board of Healh and other State agencies are making this survey for the governor, so that a preliminary estimate of the State’, 'needs may be had. So far the Department of Public Welfare has received reports from Its wHhane orfiftcers on condition* In some 40 counties, but the nature of these reports has no* been revealed and probably will not be until reports have been received from all the coun ties, according to Mr*. W. T. Bost. bead of the department. Unoffcla! reports indica* e that conditions art fond In many sections of »ie Mate and that more relief work will be needed this fall and winter than was needed last year. Southern Senators Tell Farley South Will Hold Firm Despite Dry Plank (Continued from Pan OX.) put on the Issue without endsnafttfAf tha South. . With Governor Ely of MaffSthu- setts, Governor Roosevelt discussed ways and means of bringing the In dustrial Bay State into line in No vember. Apparently the results were satisfactory to Governor Ely. They probably will be partially disclosed when the nominee makes his radio address tomorrow night, and the Mas sachusetts governor issues his state ment the following day. The full scope of the Democratic strategy on prohibition, however, will] not be known until President Hoover delivers his acceptance speech here on August 11. If he goes moderately wet, It may nccelerate the Democratic movement toward a still more complete repudia tion of prohibition. He is being ad vised by some virtually to ignore the issue, saying it is up to Congress. Others expect to see him outline a rather detailed substitute for the eighteenth amendment. While the Democrats make most of the political news, Mr. Hoover and his managers prefer silence until after the acceptance. A buzz of political discus sion followed the President's appoint ment of Atlee Pomerene of Ohio, to the Reconstruction Finance Corpora tion, but the White House took no part in It. This appointment, putting manage ment of a powerful administrative agency into the hands of orthodox Democrats, is the farthest step toward coalition government this country has seen in recent times. How much the Pomerene appoint ment will help the Republicans in Ohio is a matter of dispute. The for- ! mer senator several times has been j talked of as a favorite son of Ohio | Democracy for president, but recently I he has not been active politically. I Ohio will have a large place in the ] political sun before the campaign is CROSS WORD PUZZLE i ~2~ ~3" ilp ~ “eT "7" _ io 11 4 HI 5 gp ~” 17 \e> ~ 20 “ 2S "2® 30 525 Ti £55 32" 33 [j£s 34 £55 36 055 *3 -44 IP 4 S 4* 47 __ Ip so ~sT “ _ |p "S 3 54 "* 53 fed ' " ill I mjjM-3 I »I ACROSS I—To box 6—A file B—Slender 10—To color 12—Frosting* 14— Purplish brown colpr 15— Ever (contr.) 14— Scarce 17— A girl's name !•—Metrical foot 21— Protection 22 Final 25—Break suddenly 18— Title of reepooS M—Preposition 19— Exclamation 21— Wrath 22 Pale brown color 15— Long ago U —Weaael-Uko MkMlt 12 —Enusta ♦S—BwSST *B—Street urchin 49—Turf \ ■ 61— T bought V 1 52 ManulactUfod bg ; 64—Vanished 65—Portabie shelter DOWN ‘ stroot i—Type Mat f-AltOrt A—Ytm •—FUar* wtkm ‘•Where The Silence ’Unf That *E»fy, You Were Arf Afraid to over. Governor Roosevelt, making his first speaking trip since the conven tion, will address Ohio Democrats at Columbus on August 20. Probably President Hoover will go Into the State later. This is one spot which was sure to become a battlefield whether the east did or not. ROCKY MOUNT MAN IS DEAD IN ALLEY Rocky Mount, July 30.—(IAP) Walter Van Tassel! 25, was found dead in an alley here today, apparent ly strangled to death. Dr. Roy Norton, city health officer, and Jake Thomas, Edgecombe county coroner, investigated and expressed belief the man was intoxicated and has strangled himself with a necktie which was found tied closely about his neck. Officials said they suspected no foul play. 11— Ireland 12— Religious denomination 18— Turns aside so—Officer of the mint 22 Type measure 23 Falsehood 24 Part of circl# 28 —Tune 27—Prefix meaning before 23 — Man's name 24 Jumbled typo 24 —Harden 27—420 sheets 19— A fiat tableland 40— Bare 41— Inanimate 45—Secret society ÜbfcrJ 24—Wither 42 — Indolent 47—Want •o—Mineral roctl '• •** V 1 . : * ' ? Anew , : t to Previous Pass to FORECLOSURE SALE By virtue of tne power contained in a deed of trust executed by Lena Mims Hill and husband, Claud Hill, record ed in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County, in book 146. at page 163, default having been made in the payment of the debt therein secured, on request of the holder of the same, I shall sell for cash by pub lic auction at the courthouse door in Henderson, North Carolina, to the highest bidder on Wednesday, the 3Lst dlay of Augurit, 1932, at twelve o’clock M. the following desmbed real pro perty: “Begin at a done on Robinson Street, Ed Turner corner, begin 47 feet from The edge of Kittreil Street, an run thence along his line N. 88 W. 190 feet to Turner corner on an old from the edge of Kittreil Street, and thence 8. 9 W. about 82 1-2 feet to a pin, Kelly corner; thence along Kelly Hne 8. 88 E. about 170 feet to Kelly Comer on Robinson Street; thence along said Street North 4 East 93 feet to place of beginning. See deed to Lena Mims from S. G. Kelly and wife, recorded in the Register of Deeds office of Vance County, in Book 134, page 167, for a more accu rate description. J. M. PEACE, Trustee. Thte 29th day of July, 1932. ROUND TRIP BARGAIN FARES August 13 HZNDERBON TO Athens $6.00 Atlanta 7.00 Birmingham 8.00 Columbia 6.00 Savannah . 6.00 Jacksonville.;. i 7.00 PUJJafcAN BARGAIN FARES Limited Returning Prior To Mid night Following Tuesday For lafsrmation See Agent H. E. PLEASANTS, DPA. Raleigh, N. C. Phone >7OO 505 Odd Fellows Bldg. Seaboaid Ai* lu*l HAIIMW , ‘ - •+mrn,mwmm East Coast Stages The Short Line System —- - w Special Rates for Tobacco Curers Going to Canada For Your Convenience Going North Bide the Bus —Convenient Quick, Clean, Comfortable and Cheap ALL TICKETS GOOD UNTIL USED rrgM the 1 2ito|| ' To BUFFALO DELHI SIMOCO PETR 01 ' One Round 3ne Hound One Round One Way Trip Way Tr%> Wtey Trip Wav Tr f HENDBftBON, N. C. 15.66 *.50 18.90 28.35 18.56 27.85 17 50 26 NORUNA, N. C. 15.10 26.65 18.26 27.55 18.00 27.00 IT 50 « SOirm HZLLs VA. 14.75 21.40 17.60 25.75 17.15 25.75 17 50 ** V BUSES LEAVE DAILY lUHMikQ TIME: 26 Houn Durham or Raleigh to Buffalo lt»2 Epgt Caedi Stages has pi* these nates la effect especially tox benefit of the tobacco curers who are going to Cased* Xi** tkt XASt COAST STAQSS th* Chapeit . Hat phot tan IWm u. | Attention! Tobacco i Curers j Special Round Trip Fares Fra ! Raleigh, Durham, or Hendra —To— Buffalo . $M Detroit 31 « Toronto 34 in Tillaonburg 31.06 St. Thomas 3100 Delhi 3100 Tickets C*.i Sale July 30 T.> A* SI Limited to Return m ImU- as to V For Information See Agent or H. E. PLEABTXTS. KM , 506 Odd Fellows Bldg., Kalrlgb. V ( Seaboard AIK LINK KVLLWM bargaTn fares’ August 6th HENDERSON TO No Days Tickets Limited Atlanta 5 Chattanooga 6 13.75 Birmingham 6 13 "5 New Orleans 10 26.75 Savannah 10 10-W Jacksonville 10 IS* Tampa 10 2250 Miami 10 25 .(» Havana 19 49 "5 And Return REDUCED PULLMAN FARFA Rates To Many Other Florid* And Gulf Coast Point** Attractive Optional Route** in FloHl* Far Information S**e Ticket Ap ll H. E. PLEASANTS. PI'A Raleigh. N. C. Phone S* 565 Odd Fellows Building Seaboard AI VUkl RUM A¥