Newspaper Page Text
skkmons MI'SIC Churches PRESBYTERIAN RfV W *•’ Camming. pastor ; Hrvan, Sunday school su ' .j lV h >u! at 915 h, m , with ~ ' v , for men mid women. . ihui.l' service at 11 a m ' , *t>o a duet b> Mrs. W. M. , t Mi< E. C. Watkins. Dl . , union i vice of four chur , i», n. A Ellis will preach .'jVrnitm. Mt- N W- Holloway will Coaie i J worship with us. WEST END HAPTIST. K r v t R Nelson, pastor. dav school at Id a. m., S. W. Css ev superintendent. tiviihip at 8 I*, m. Preaching by R<v R A Whitten. ir,e public i-- cordially invtted to ar.er.d- FIRST BAPTIST, prt-tor Di Hugh A. Ellis. da\ -iihool meets at 9:45 a. m. Men. mg woi'hip at 11 a. m. The ia-t.u vui: preach. Subject. ‘Jesus \\itilur.g the Collection." M." Emma Jones an*l W. J 3. Har . .. : w ill me a duet, “Guide Me O >1 I i* JeMovah.” I'i «venlr.g service wii Ihe held 1 •he Pie-byterian church with the ?i- r ft the First Rsptist church as pie icher s o clock FIRST CHRISTIAN. Hr ft. A. Whitten, minister, m.ds. -chooi at 9 15 a. m., C. D. y f ' i;>etrntendent. W >-hi|> at 11 a. m. ir.. -v m Endeavor at 7 15 p. m. . , woiship at 8 p. m. .V ■he :n .thing hour of worship the ; a .\: w. 4 speak on "The Uplifted C r.:>‘ s,..Uiv evening at 8 o'clock. Rev. . pastor of West End =ip’>* * h.ir< h will preach. Sriui.i: Wednesday evening prayer jc: >r j’. > o’clock in this church. H 01.5 INNOCENTS EPISCOPAL. Rf i W Hughes, rector. .r. ve. ':i Sunday after Trinity. .« * a ni Church school. ; ,1 n. Men's and Women's Bible » M ur.ing prayer and ser • , n. Evening prayer. v J r Mission. North Hender t. - "k Church school Service (.{ H a C rum union will be omitted. FIR-T METHODIST PROTESTANT. t‘i L W i lei linger, pastor. 945 : n. Sunday school for all. C F Tv «.• r -ley. Jr., superintendent. • 1 a ai Worship and preaching, it* WV Turn Back?" is the pas : ’tvmr Shall God’s people turn La it m the promised land? To 1..» . thrv turn" Come and think ’t-e pastor upon this theme. - ? ni We join in the union ser ’ * *’ thr Presbyterian church. Dr. t - is th-* pieacher for the union j«rvice Ift everybody attend who car.. : midweek prayer meeting. "Ja" if’ernoon at four o’clock fallowing Auxiliary circles will meet Circle No 1. Mrs. C. L Pinch, lead i: wi:l meet with Miss Etta Hight. Nos. 2 and 3 Mrs. Gooch eaaer will meet with Mrs. W. R. siughan. Trims,lay evening at 8 o’clock No. 4 . airet with Mrs. E. O. Faulkner. -I*' W B. Hight, leader. A’>i.dance at our services has held -P we. ; Uuung the summer weeks. -*»y thicontinue. If church obliga • rs do not lequire you to attend t -ewhere come and worship with us. FIRST METHODIST. R*\ D E. Earnhardt, pastor. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Classes a.I ages and graded departments : 3re>tig h.Mit. I.i the absence of the pastor, who . «'Vay on his vacation, the afrgapjk ’ v 11 a m. service r Rf-c. C. K. sii|ierinten c‘r' of :he Oxford Orphanage. At this ADMINISTRATRIX’S NOTICE 1 *uv.f qualified before the Clerk of •' | fr.or Court of Vance Cotrrtty aa j lrr ' ’i ;'!.x of the estate of I. W. E '* 3»:<j this is to notify all persons :1 • < a ms against the said estate (•' ■nt !h*m to the undersigned c 'v. f.rd on or before the 22nd Ctv ■ t July, 1933, or this notice may c - t -id'd ,n bar of their recovery. D-- f r,s :nd< bu-d to said estate will * '-se m.ik*‘ immediate settlement. - 5 t’-nd day of July. 1932. MRS. ROSA BOYD, AinnnL-.tlatrix of the esr T *v '<f I. W. Boyd. Vacation Fares Account Labor Day September 2-3-4 HENDERSON TO - rw Y -k SB.OO * ” 1 7.00 r ’ ' ° r ‘ v 7.00 t.oo ‘-’■n 8.00 ' for all trains Friday and '•d i. ;* pti-rnber 2nd and 3rd !r n r» Uf|i3ember 4th from ■■'anford and points north tv , ' n tickets limited September > other points Septemt>er 6th ’ • Round Trip Puftmsa Fare* dpovers allowed and haggaf* checked p ,r In formation See Agent 5,,. n ’ l R peeasanto. DPA. Fellows Bldg.. Raleigh, N. C. S^boasd *** UNA MMW AT THE “Hie Twit of MeeH~ c w j I \ While Moses was g<f>e from the children of Israel forty days upon Mount Sinai in com munion with Jehovah the people persuaded Aaron, Moses' brother, to make them a god they *e«. So he took their jewelry and made them a calf of cold to worship service Alwyn P. Barnee will pi ay the organ, and Mrs. C. E. Green will sing the offertory solo. The congregation will Join In the union services In the evening at the First Presbyterian church, at which p. me r ’ H ' A - Ellis, pastor of the First Baptist church, will preach. CITY ROAD M. E. Rev. M. W. Warren, pastor. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m., P. M. Porter, superintendent. Preaching by the pastor at 11 a m. and 7:45 p. m. Hi-League at 6:45 p. m„ with Miss Elizabeth Savage as leader. WIH Address Class B. H. Perry will address the Men's Bible Class of the Episcopal Church tomorrow morning at 10 o’clock, it was announced today. MULHOLLAND GROUP TO MEET MQNDAY The Mulholland Missionary Society will meet Monday evening at 8 o’clock with Mrs. Tom Greene on Nicholas street, with Mrs. Green and Miss Effie Grey Newman as joint hostesses. CORINNE PARKER SOCIETY TO MEET The Corinne Parker Missionary So ciety of the First Baptist church will meet Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock In the church with Mrs. A1 Wester, Mrs. R. B. Green, Miss Carrie Draper and Mrs. W. H. Wester. Jr., as joint hostesses. REV. C. K. PROCTOR AT M. E. SERVICES Rev. C. K. Proctor, spertntendent of the Oxford Orphanage, is an nonced to preach at the First Metho dist church tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock. He comes here in the ab sence of the pastor. Rev. D. E. Earn hardt, who Is away on his vacation. The public is invited to the services. WHITTEN TO SPEAK TO METHODIST MEN Rev. R. A. Whitten, pastor of the Christian church, is announced as the speaker tomorrow morning to the Men’s Bible class at the First Metho dist Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. The subject will be, “The Tent of Meet ing.” All men and boys not members of some Sunday school class are In vited to attend this class. Special music by the men’s quartette is prom ised. A cordial welcome is promised to those who attend. REV. M. C BOWLING TO ADDRESS CLASS Rev. M. 6. Bowling, Presbyterian pastor o# Burkeville, Va., who is irv the city with his and chUdreru is announced as the teacher of Ithe John Knox Bible class of the F*irst Presbyterian church tomorrow morn ing during the, Sunday school hour. Mrs. the daughter of Mrs. John B. Watkins, of Turner avenue, whose guests they are during their stay In the city. Modern Midas With Mercury -* "'ls Wf 3 j u B 7 Ts L I ft ' -1: . j/J:- W '/iff*. J y XV wT as® D«adkK?Win«w!h*!n!" GmlUjf’* m»« <N. C,I DAILY DISPATCH- SATURDAY, AUGUST 20,1*82 ’ CHURCHES CITES DANGERS TO U.S. GOVERNMENT Conditions That Have Af fected Business Felt Also By Government PRECEDENT SHATTERED Depression Has Followed Extension pf State and Local Government Acti vities; Institutions Are „ Menaced By ALBERT COATES. Chapel Hill, Aug. 20. Recent months have shown us what can hap pen when the people lose their con fidence In their banking institutions. There are among us men who have pledged their fortunes to save the faith and credit of these institutions. We have thrown the public strength to them through the National Credit an dthe Reconstruction Finance Cor porations, through volunteer com-mit tees organized to restore hidden monies to circulation. We must not forget that the same conditions which have brought busi ness units to the brink of insolvency have brought governmental units to the brink of default with the loss of faith and credit taking its dally toll in mounting interest rates casting their lengthening shadows across the years to come. We must not forget that within the last 15 years unprecedented exten sions of »tate and local governmental activities, followed by unprecedented economic depression have placed un precedented strain on the foundations and superstructure of our govern mental Institutions. These institutions are the founda tions of our social and economic structure, the guarantee of security to the business transactions and the hu man relationships of our present life, the promise of stability as by evolu tion rather than by revolution we move into the days ahead. We cannot let them topple and tumble like buildings in an earthquake. enter of Gravity Skirting. The center of gravity in American life—in our social order, in our econo mic organization, in our governmen tal structure —is shifting today with a meaning no less significant and far more real than In 17T6. Here is a cause to which ourselves now no less than our fathers then are called upon to pledge our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor to the end that Popular Government shall not perish in our keeping. '• With Sweeping through Ftyissia, into southern Europe an# Fas cism seeping through Italy Into Northern Europe, Jwith a coalition government in England desperately striving to steer English institutions between this Scylla and Charybdis and barely able to withstand the ris ing tide of socialism, with re percussions of these movements break ing upon American shofea’i are called upon to rededicate to ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON - ' -Srrift—« Cfca*to,, 32 and 31. ML j God told Moses of this sin of the people and Moses came down quickly from the Mount. When he saw the people's idolatry and shameful con duct he was so angry that he dashed to pieces "* the tables of stone on which- God had written the laws the people had already broken Hlßj'if j -v|’ wijSilKx JBt mm Chajs«l / Hilt tAug, 20 Pictui-ed above are the presidents of the va rious groups of private citizens in North Carolina who are cooperating with the presidents of the various groups of governmental officers in working out the program of the In stitute of Government which is to hold Its first formal sessions at the Uni versity of North Carolina September 9 and 10. when the Institute’s state wide governmental program is to be launched. They are (1) Kemp D. Battle, Rocky Mount, president of the North Carolina Bar Association; (2) S. J. Ervin, Jr., Morganton. president of the Association of Local Bar Associa tion Officers'; (3) Robert M. Page, Raleigh, president of the North Caro the preservation and development of American governmental institutions to look to the rock whence we were hewn and build upon it. For over a thousand years our race has fought with spear and sword and rifle # and ballot for the building of these institutions. The year 1215 and the Magna Carta, 1689 and the Bill of Rights, 1776 and the American Revolution, 1832 and the Reform Bill, 1919 and the enfranchise ment of women are milestones in the path which has led from serfdom to freedom, from subject to citizen, from absolute mnarchy to constitutional law. Every one of advancing steps has brought more, people to par ticipation in the .government and has correspondingly Increased their power of coatrol. . Ay cook. Vance, Morehead, Murphy, William R. Davis are our own local symbols of the long, unbroken strug gle through which our race has slow ly ‘‘climbed and fought its way from savage Isolation to organic social life.” \ Like a bell from ilistant hilltops we can hear their names. They ring out to us today the spirit of a people which sees in disaster only a chal lenge the brighter to bum and which when darkness hedges it. about builds fn litself a dwelling-place of light. We are the men of that tradition, you and I. Men in public office are more than common jobbers, or salaried em ployees. They represent more than the people who elceted them. They are part and parcel of a great tradition. They are the heirs of generation upon generation of men and women who have strangled through suffering and blood to hand down their government al institutions to their children a lit tle stronger than they found them. They are trusted with the liberties of the people. Today against a background 6t banks breaking, industries rocking, agriculture in the slough of despond, the shrill cry of tne auctioneer ring ing round our homes, waste in pub lic places is intolerable, inefficiency In public office Is a fraud. Ignorance in public officer is a sin visited on the miseries of the people. In the name of popular government this generation is called upon to turn its present flaming governmental in terest into constructive channels and through a far-reaching program of training our governmental personnel, simplifying our governmental struc ture, and vivifying our education, bring new knowledge, bew strength and new courage to officials in the cities, the counties and the state of North Carolina, as in these trying times they strive to JusAfy the j'.'.iy, l ! _ 11—— 111 ~ ' ' * r™ - Moses prayed for the people’s forgiveness, going out of the camp where he erected his tent as a place of prayer. As he went forth to pray for them the people stood at their own tent doorc and watched and worshipped. TEXT—Ex. S3:11- To Direct Program of Institute of Government lina Bankers Association; (4) H. C. Bourne, of Tarboro. State commander American Legion; (5) Bryce Beard, of .Salisbury, state commander-elect of the American Legion; (6) John A. Park, Raleigh, President, SRatfc Press Association; (7) J. B. Wright, of Raleigh, President State Medical Society; (8) Arnold Schiffman, of Greensboro. Immediate Past Presi dent State Merchants Association; (9) Mrs. John L Henderson, of Hickory, president of State Parent Teacher As sociation; (10) Mrs. J. M. Hobgood, of Farmville, President of State Fed eration of Woman’s Clubs; (11) Miss Elsie G. Riddick, of Raleigh, Presi dent State League .of Woman’s Vot ers; (12) Mrs. E. R. Mosher, of Chapel Hill, President State Association of University Women; (18) Miss Nettie faith of the people who clothed them with the public trust of public of fice. To this and all groups of public of ficers and private citizens in North Carolina are joining together today in the Institute of Government for the purpose of inaugurating thoroughgo ing and systematic studies to reveal the structure and workings of gov ernment in the cities, the counties, and the State of North Carolina—set them forth in guidebooks, demonstrate them in laboratories, teach them in schools, keep them up to date in. jour nals and through a constructive pro gram of public education carry them to students and teachers of govern ment in every classroom and to every group of private citizens in North Carolina. PELLAGRA GROWING RAPIDLY IN STATE ■* (Continued from Page One.) year in North Carolina, when 658 new cases were reported in August. Pellagra Is generally recognized as a disease of poverty and hard times, most prevalent among those unable to afford a varied diet, or who do not not know the causes of pellagra. The years pellagra has been most prei valent in North Carolina were 1917 and 1918, during the war when all food was scarce and expensive and again in 1929 and 1930( the first years of the current depression. The deaths from pellagra in these years were as follows: Year Deaths 1917 606 1918 696 1929 953 1930 1,015 The launching of the “live at home” program by Governor O. Max Gard ner in 1929 and 1990, in which the raising of more food and feed crops on, the farms of the State, especially of more vegetables, is credited by the board of health with halting the up ward climb of pellagra and with re ducing the number of deaths from T,- 015 in 1930 to only 696 in 1931. It is agreed that the $16,000,000 worth of food and feedstuffs produced in the State in 1930 above the amount pro duced In 1929 bad a great deal to do With halting the s prevalency of pel lagra. *■ The tree la the most powerful, hut also the moat exacting, creature in the vegetable kingdom. Warm ctmwrti have dMc the east ern ahorse ai the oeaam habWakh right up to the Arctic Circle. TOMORROW j God showed his presence with Moses at the Tent of Meeting by a cloud which rested ovei the tent. Here he “spake unto Moses face to far«, as a man apeaketh unto his friend.” The cloud was the «ipn of God’s presence. Today Jesus says to us. “Lo. I am with you always ” Brogdon, of Greensboro, President Business and Professional Woman’s Clubs; (14) Kemp Lawis, of Durham, President North Carolina Association of Cotton Manufacturers; (15) J. K. Scott, of Haw Rivei; Master State Grange; (16) R. R. Lawrence, of Winston-Salem, President State Fed eration of Labor; (17) Clyde A. Er win, of Rutherfordton, President State Teachers Association; (18) Chas. A. Hines, of Greensboro, District Gov ernor Civitan Clubs; (19) Chas. W. Phillips, of Greensboro, District Gov ernor of Rotary Clubs; (20) Thomas P. Pruitt, of Greensboro, Immediate Past Governor of Klw&nis Clube; (21) Earle Rives, of Greensboro, District Governor American Business Clubs; (22) Hugh G. Mitchell, of Statesville, District Governor of Lions Chibs. RECALLING OF JAP AMBASSADOR HERE CAUSE OF ANXIETY (Continued from Page One.) Washington and was regarded also as perhaps the ablest and moat enlight ened representative whom Nippon ever had In America, grave fears are en tertained that Tokyo will send a fire eater in plaoe of him. Indications, too v are that the next few months will see “aitaatbons” aris ing betaveen Washington and Tokyo of a sort to acquire unusually delicate handling. In short, the Japanese are believed to be resolutely embarked upon a policy of large-scale aggression and ccnqueet on the Asiatic mainland. It is all very well to say that - what is going on a tsuch a distance is none of this oourtttty’e business. Neverthe less, onfttets of interests to develop. When they do K is much pleasanter « Is Your Property Fully Protected Against * V"' ,# t Windstorms? We write all forms of insurance and bonds. Let us help take care of your in surance needs. We have several desir able houses for rent, if you are not satis fied Wfth your present arrangement, let us show you what we have to offer. Henderson Loan & Real Estate Co. Phone 139-J. SCHOOLS SUNDAY 8» tfco A!*ik C. Roll And Alfrao ! Bmvm-Im to talk them over with an amiable LtHe negotiator like Katsuji Dehuchi than with some two-sworded samurai, who is spoiling for a fight to begin with. In the first pace. Uhe Japanese al ready are taking steps to drive all for eigh trade, including America's except their own, out of Manchukuo. as they redhristened Manchuria when they gobbled it from China. They do not admit, indeed, that they did gobble it. The official version is that it de clared its independence, under Hoary Pu-yi. who was deposed as emperor of China when he was a baby and spent all the rest of his life virtually an a Japanese prisoner until Japan put him in his present job. Theoreti cally it is .Henry whe is taxing all business except Japan's into bank ruptcy throughout his territory, but naturally everyone is quite aware that Japan is dictating the taxes. This is certain to he an Intrena -tioruiUy sore subject shortly. The Kingdom of Sweoen as a uni fied State is about 1200 years old. GROCERY STOnES. FISH nFaTI ers and markets save on your wrap ping paper. Use old newspapers— Get a big bundle at the Daily Dis patch office foi 10c. 21-4 T LABOR DAY Vacation Fares A September 2nd-3rd HENDERSON TO Chester $ 5.00 Columbia 5. 00 Athens 6.00 Savannah 6.00 Atlanta 7. 00 Jacksonville 7.00 Birmingham 8 00 Ocala 8.00 Gainesville 8.00 Dunnellon 8.00 Barton 9. 00 Auburn dale 9 .00 Whiter Haven 9.00 Tampa 9.00 Arcadia 10.00 Boca Grande 10.00 Bradenton 10.00 Sebring 10.00 St. Petersburg 10.00 West Palm Bench 10.00 Hollywood 11.hh Ft. Lauderdale 11.00 Miami ". 11.0 U Tickets sold for all trains Sept. 2nd-3rd Tickets to points south of Jackson ville limited midnight Wednesday, _ September 7th; All oher points midnight September 6th Baggage checked and stopovers al lowed on other tickets. For Information See Ticket Agent H. E. PLEASANTS. DPA. Raleigh. N. C. Phone 2700 505 Odd Fellows Building Seaboaid Alfc UMI IMIW) PAGE THREE