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PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH ibUtlhtil Ammmmk U, I*l4. ■_ r ~‘*‘‘ T “~ T IHir ■T*** 1,11,1 BUrDUUON DISPATCH CO- XX O. •« » T«u« Itmt UNRT A DBNNIg. Pras. ud Iditor K. L FINCH. 8«c-Tr«aa and Bus. Mfr, TKLBPHO.IKI • •* Editorial Office IM ■oclaty Wltcr - lit tUIBM Office 11l Tba Henderson Dally Dispatch la a a«mb«r of the Associated Press, News paper Enterprise Association, South ern Newspaper Publishers Association nod the North Carolina Press Associa tion. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to use for republlcatlon all news dispatches credited to It or not Otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. fiiicaiprioit raicßi. . Payable Strictly la Advance. One Tear |I.N Mi Months S.lt Bm Months I.M rW Copy ♦ W NOTICE TO UIHSCRIIKRI Look at the printed label on your Maper. The date (hereon shows when (Me subscription expires. Forward Four money in ample time for re newal. Notice date on label' carefully and If not correct, please notify us at ewe a- Subscribers desiring the .address sal ibelr paper chanced, please state In tfcdlr communication both the ODD and NEW address. , As nasal Advertising Repress a tstlvas ' riOTT. LANDIS A MO UN lid Park Avsnue, New ferk City; IX ■hat Waeker Drive. Chlcaso; Walton Building, Atlanta; deeurlty Building. M. Louis. Entered at the post office In Hander '» N. C., as second class mail matter t Sisn.«l.l»Siu > A Ndikhk^ August 25 ; GIVING GiETS: —There Is thait scat tereth. an dyct incredmth; and there li that wiMiholdeth more.than is meet. it tendetii to poverty.—Proverbs 11.24. f * A s • TODAY . TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES . 1796 —James Lick. San Francisco business man and philanthropist, who gave -wtty his entire -fortune, almost 92,000,000. if or charitable > purposes, donor of the observatory bearing his name born in Fredericksburg, Pa. Died in San Francisco. Oct. 1, 1576. 1799—Andrew J. Donelaon, private secretary to President Jackson, diplo mat. candidate for the Vice Presidency born near Nashville. Tenn. Died ai Memphis. June 26, 1871. 1819—Allan Pinkerton, founder of the detective agency. Scotch - immi grant tp Illinois. where he first piled his -trade of cooper, bom. Died in Chicago, July 1. 1884. 1825 —Jane Lathrop Stanford, wife of California's noted governor and senator, philanthropist, bom at Albany N. Y. Died at Honolulu. Feb. 28, 1906. 1039 —(Francis) Bret Harte, famous American poet and novelist of west ern lile, born at Albany, N. Y. Died in England, May 5, 1902. iB60 —EdgarW . Nye t‘ Bill Nye"), noted humorous writer and lecturer o t his day. born at Shirley, Maine. Died near Asheville, N. C., Feb. 22,' 1896. 1851—Henry J. Ford noted news paper editor, Princeton pproies&or of politics, bom ,at Baltimore. Died at at Summit, Pa., Aug. 29, 1926. TODAY IN HISTORY 1718—New Orleans founded. 1835—Historic "moon hoax’’ in the Ne wYork Sun—announcement of the discovery of a great human population In the moon —wnrch created intense excitement. 1914—Lauvain bbombarded and dam aged 1919—First daily aerial passenger service —-between London and Paris, begun. „ TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Dr. Raymond Walters, new presi dent o<f the University of Cincinnati, bom at Bethlehem. Pa., 47 years ago Col Willia mC. Proctor, president of the celebrated Cincinnati soap manu facturing company, born at Glendale. Ohio. 70 years ago. Grafton Green, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, born at Lebanon. Tenn.. 60 years ago. Waldo Frank New York essayist, novelist, playwright and biographer, bom at Ix>ng Branch. N. J., 43 years ago Patiick E Crowliy former presi dent of the New York Central Rail way. born at Cattaraugus N. Y.. 68 ywus ago. TODAY'S HOROSCOPE The change «>f the sign brings a more flexible nature, easily adaptable to envuonment. and with a very so ciable disposition. The degree brings friendships and fortune, attained mainly through the pleasant, convivial spirit oatuiai to u. And if oppor 'unity is s. ized at the height of the ride. *he ei.u ui wilt Certainly be bt''U DU- Diamonds owned m tne timed blatrs wue valued <*l 33.uu0.0UU.U00 by mn Insurance company's purvey. Wife Preservers • j Tv Dusting ii not complete until the upholstered furniture is goat OVE with a vacuum dsaner. FARM MURDER MYSTERY UNSOLVED - '<\ f*v s\ ' . ' - ■.t-iy.. MB Repudiating an earlier ‘‘confes sion” to police in which she told authorities she killed Eleanor Alderson common law wife of Guy Gunsaulie, in self-defense, Mrs. Nell ie Kumler, 36, above, of Liberty, Ind., has thrown blame sos the slaying on Gunsaulie, also above, for whom she served as housekeeper on the Gunsaulie farm near Liberty. A severe eriU This Is Year For Family Races For Public Office fathojrj^.Sons^Wives and Husbands of President or For mer Officeholders Are In Fight in This Campaign; Presidential Relatives Are Being Rung Up BY RODNEY DI'TCHER NEA Service Writer Washington, Aug. 25.—This is a big year for “family stuff in politics. There is enough material for a new party which might be called the "Next <of Kin" party. Plenty of leaders are available and the rank and file Icould consist of sons, daughters, brothers, sisters and mothers of other people. Everybody's relative is either get ting nominated to something or being taken up to the platform and shown off in order to help out somebody's campaign. «... The “T. R." Parade. The eßepublicans are parading the surviving members of the famous Teddy Roosevelt family to convinve voters that Franklin D. Roosevelt is neither the son of T. R. or T. R. him self. They doubtless will succeed, but it reminds me of my fond hopes last spring that the G. O. P. would nom inate Calvin Coolidge and young Theodore Roosevelt and the Demo- j crats Franklin D. Roosevelt and Sen- ! ator Marcus Coolidge of Massaqhu-1 setts. Let's all plug for those tickets j in 1936 and then dare the politicians to keep us from getting all mixed up! The Tetldy Roosevelt relatives in this campaign seem to he better known | -Alice, young Ted and Mrs. T. R —j but judging from the pictures in the paper; there are- more active mem bers of Franklin’s tribe- including the missus, two lovely daughters and a grandchild. The Democrats would seem to have a fair chance of out- Roosevelting the Republicans in the long run. Hoover “Shock Troops." The Hoover children and grand children are being held in reserve and are expected to be used as shock troops at critical moments during the shooting. Photographers are saving extra plates for them. Meanwhile, whether- hard times is a factor or not, there is an obvious ly increased desire ■ in - many (quarters to Aep political honors in the family. Statesmen have sons and ’sons seem to be going in for The Senate is a popular objective of the next of kin. Bennett Champ Clark, son of the late Speaker Champ Clark, has been nominated for the Senate by the Dem ocrats of Missouri. Nobody gave it to him, either. He had to lick the powerful Pendergast machine of Kan sas City, Clark turns out to be a wet and a progressive. “Son” Charlie Crisp. Congressman Charles R. Crisp of Georgia, son of another famous speak er, is also .out for the. Senate. Crisp has been in the House for many years and it had been his lifelong ambition to be speaker, as was his father. But he gave up that ambition when he decided to seek the senatorial nomina tion. The first woman ever elected to the Senate for a full termundoubtedly will be the widow of the late Senator T. H. Caraway of Arkansas. When he died the Arkansas Democrats gave her the job for the rest of his unex pired term, but she dismayed them when she displayed the 1932 “family spirit” by running for the nomination against six male candidates—and won. -HENDERSON, (N.C.,) DAILY DISPATCH THURSDAY AUGUST 25 lMf ing by police of Gunsaulie failed to shake his denial. Mrs. Kumlei told police in her first statement that she buried Mrs. Alderson in the grave which the latter had dug for her. She maintains that the original "confession” was the re sult of terror. Below, Sheriff Herbert Ellison, of Union county, is shown pointing to the grave where the bodv was found. Joe Weldon Bailey or Texas son of old Senator Joe Weldon Bailey of Texas, is running for the House. The LaFoliette Boys. The LaFoliette boys of Wisconsin— Bob and Phil, son of “Old Bob” grow in stature each year. Bob doesnt come up for re-eieetion to the Senate this year, but is out helping Phil, who has a hot fight on for re-election as governor of Wisconsin. Senator John H. Bankhead of Ala bama is a son of the late Senator Banklt-ad,' and (so is Congressman William Ba*nkhead, who has been here about 15 years. Senator Morris Shep pard of Texas was first in the House, where he succeeded his father. Other congressmen whose ancestors preceded them in the House include Kvals of Minnesota, ies, Kleberg and Lanham of Texas. Congressman Ruth Bryan Owen, daughter of William Jennings Bryan, was licDked for re- ' nomination. Ex-Governor Bilbo of Mississippi and his wife have both declared for Congress and a grandson of the late Senator Henry Cabot Lodge seeks a in the assachusetts legislature. RAILROAD WORKERS UNITE AGAINST ANY FURTHER WAGE CUT (Oootlnueo from Page One.) were not getting what they were en titled to at the peak. If they are re ceiving the equivalent of a small ad vance now, their spokesmen insist that they have long been entitled to it. They did take a 10 per cent cut be ginning last February. Railroad presidents assured them then that the economy would enable the companies to increase their staffs somewhat. Instead, Interstate Com merce Commission reports show that Class 1 roads had 19.12 per cent fewer men on their payrolls in mid-May this year than at the same time in 1911. Nevertheless, heads of several of the big lines are urging still another slash. They certainly discussed the idea, at a meeting held by them In New York recently, to consider a suggestion that they seek a loan from the Recon struction Finance Corporation for re habilitation of their various systems* unquestionably badly neglected equip ment, trackage and roadbeds—which would be quite an industrial stimu lant, advocates of the plan pointed out. Not all the transportation presidents were favorable to it. however. Why (the dissenters asked) pile up additional obligations for repairs that can wait until times are better? Why not, rather (It was proposed), seek the I. C. C.’s permission to rim wages again? Twenty per cent is said to have been the figure initially men tioned. though it is understood to have been agreed subsequently that, for the present, 15 would do. To be sure, the session ended with out any “definite decision," as Presi dent L. F. Loree of the Delaware and Hudson expressed it, having been leached, but the impression prevails in labor circles that the transporta tion chiefs only postponed action, be cause they did not think it would be tactlful to demand a cut virtually just as President Hoover Was delivering his renomination acceptance speech in Washington. It scarcely was to have been ex pected that the rail workers would like such an account of the employing group’s attitude, but Wall Street did; transportation shares advanced sharp ly on the strength even of a fair prospect of another cut in the em ployes’ pay. Perhaps not unnaturally, the em ployes betray considerable resent ment at this manifestation of good cheer on ’change at their prospective expense. A remark dropped by Mr. Hoover in the course of his acceptance ad dress has noticeably perturbed them yet further. “In the first stage of the depres sion,’’ said the president, "I called the leaders of business .... to meet with me and induced them .by their own initiative to uphold wages until the cost of living was adjusted.” Labor spokesmen insist that they can recall no earlier utterance from the present White House tenant limit ing the upholding of wages to a period preceding readjustment In the cost of living. It Is clear that they Im agined him Insistent upon a continua tion of the high post-war scale even In the face of a decline in living costs —and exceedingly evident that they are deeply disappointed to find them selves mistaken. It may be that these hopes were uneconomic, but there is no doubt that labor, all along, has considered itself entitled to a larger share of the fruits of industry, counted on getting it through a stationary wage, with & de clining index and is bitterly discon tented over Its discovery that no such Intention exists among the vast ma jority of large employers. LANDS AT NEWARK AFTER MAKING THE BEST SPEED FLIGHT (Continued from Page One.) flight as she passed over Amarillo at 11:10 p. m. EST., last night. At that time she had flown only 1.0001 miles airline in eight hours, everaging about 125 miles an holir. The last 200 miles she must have made at a speed of 261 miles an hour. NON-STOP FLIGHT BEGUN OVER OCEAN TO NORWAY (By the Associated Press.) Some units in aviation’s big parade were zippling along today, while oth ers got set to go. The plane ’Green Mountain Boy," from Barre, Vt., hopped off from Har bor Grace, New Foundland, bearing Clyde Lee and John Bochkon toward Oslo, Norway. The fliers expected to make the 3,150 miles to Oslo in 30 hours, but they carried enough gaso line to stay aloft for seven hours be yond that time. George Hutchinosn and seven others in his "Flying family” preened their ship on Anticosti island, Gulf of St. Lawrence, ior the hope to Labrador. They planned to proceed in easy stages to London. Captain J. A. Mollison, In New York, got ready to fly back to Eng land tomorrow, if weather reports are to his liking. Thor Solberg and Carl Peterson waited at Darby’s Harbhr, If. F„ to vtfjmantle their wrecked pfenel It plunged into the water during a fog Tuesday night. CROSS WORD PUZZLE 123 4 5 6 iiniiiiiiinn IO II IS 13^ _li_*i_lz !_ P3q 35 36 111111111111 l I 5 8! II I I 111 I I ..Ti) ACROSS 1— Distant view B—Esteem 10—To clear up L'—Decay 15— Peace 16— Quarrel 18—Something learned by repetition 20—Mournful 21 —Siesta 22 Hinge 23 Jury list 24 Membraneous poucl 26—Fish eggs 28—A plot 30 —To utter gaspingly 81—Greek letter 33—Encountered 84—Discuss copiously 37 Lubricator 38— Kept secret down 2 Close 8— Anglo-Saxon pustule 4—Ambiguous saying 6—A fish 6 Ensnare 7 Attire 9 Lofty —Extirpate _ £ ‘ l< *_ ’ Wake Leads State With Auto Deaths In Month of July Raleigh, Aug 25.—(AP)— Wake county led the 100 counties of North Carolina in automobile fatalities dur ing July, having eight killed in motor mishaps, L. S. Harris, head of the Motor Vehicle Bureau, reported today. Wake’s totakwas almost one-seventh of the State’s aggregate of 54 killed. Thirty-three counties had one or more fatalities within their borders. Buncombe county came second in fatalities with five and New Han over had three. The populous counties of Guilford and Mecklenburg, which usually are well up in the county list of fatalities, had only one person killed in each last month. Forsyth had none killed, though It usually is also listed for several. The world’s land area amounts to about 56 million square miles. ill-—Ground; quantity o.2—Pitch 13—To vindicate from blame 17—Pertaining to popes 19—A claw 24 A table implement 25 Small 27—Volatile liquid 29—Assessment SO—To fondle 82-*—On ", 33—Market 35 Succor 36 Plural noun suffix t • -i . Answer 1 to Previses Pauls A Total Eclipse That Is Always With Us! NOTICE OF SALE OF AN ANTO MOBILE CAUGHT IN THE ACT OF TRANSPORTING LIQUOR The undersigned sheriff of Vance county, North Carolina will offer for sale by public auction *£ the court house door In Henderson, N. C.; at 12 o’clock on the 3rd day of Septem ber 1932: One Ford Coupe, motor number A 3588826 license number, 232718. This car formerly the property of Melvin Grissom, ordered confiscated and aoid by Recorders Court of Vance county, August 16th 1932. This the 16th day of August 1932. J. E. HAMLETT, Sheriff of Vance County. By J. L. CASH, D. S. FORECLOSURE SALE Vy virtue of the power contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by Grene Hunt and Bottle Hunt, his wife, on the 10th day of February, 1919 and duty recorded in the Register of Deeds office In County in Book 95 Page 206; default having been mfeude in the payment of the debt therein secured, and on the request of the holder of the same I shall sell by public auction, tq the highest bidder for cash, at the Court House poor in Henderson, N. C., at 12 o'clock ( noon) on Monday the sth day of Sep tember, 1932, the following described property: That House and Lot situated on Bieckenridge St., and bound as fol lows; Begin at McCoin corner on Breckenrklge St. and run thence N. 89 3-4 W. 157 1-2 feet to stake on Baker St.; thence along Baket St. N. L E. 50 feet to stake on a 4 foot alley; thence along alley S. 89 3-4 E. 119 feet to Breckenrklge 3t; thence S. 37 E. 62 3-4 feet to the beginning being the home place of said Green Hunt. • . This August 3rd, 1932. J. C. KITTRELL, Trustee. NOTICE OF SUMMONS AND AC TION TO FORECLOSE TAX SALE CERTIFICATE In The Superior Court STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA: VANCE COUNTY: Vance County VS. W. H. and Sal He Peoples, his wife and all others claiming any interest in the subject matter of this action. Defendant®. Each of the defendants above nam ed, and aR presong claiming any in East Coast Stages The Short Line System Special Rates for Tobacco Curers Going to Canada For Your Convenience Going North Ride the Bus —Convenient. Quick, Clean, Comfortable and Cheap ALL TICKETS GOOD UNTIL USED tb » BATES rants To BUFFALO DELHI SIMOCO • DETROIT Om Round >ns Round One Round One Round Way Trip Way Tr*> Way TTip Way Tr4> HENDERSON, N. C. 15.65 38.50 18.00 28 35 18.55 27.85 17.50 26 26 NORLINA, N. C. 15. M 26.65 18.85 27.55 18.00 27.00 17.50 26 23 South hill, va. 14.75 21.40 17.50 25.75 17.15 25.75 17 50 26 23 BUSES LEAVE PAILY The Beat Coach Stages has put these rates in ettecTespeoially for '*• bensfit of tire tohaoco curers adw ars going to Canada. Ride the EifiT/GOABT BTIGXB the Cheapest and ‘.J Mort OiKMt Bate-Phone 1* Jl tereet, Ken or right in the f•ikiving tract of band to wit; a lot on Che.vni' known as the home place. to W. H. Peoples by deed in book page 424. also another lot on Ci*. nut St. almost directly oppo.sit* a,. tersecUon of John St., deeded to W H. Peoples by deed in book M*. jwa* 125 will take notice that an action en titled as above has been comtn* t,< H in Superior Court of Vance couirv N. C., to foreclose a certificate of • \ sales amounting to $26 71. issued bv D. L. Kearney as sheriff and Tat Collector, for 1929, and the def- ndar; are required to appear in the office »! Clerk of Superior Court, llend N. C., on the 4th day of Sept*-nib-r 1932, or within thirty days th-r* if>r and answer or demur to the complaint-! now on file, or the relief will be crav ed as asked in the complaint; and all other persons claiming any r.Jr title or interest in and to the said or the proceeds of the sale of nr* hereby required to appear at 'he offs'-* of said Clerk within six niow*i> fiom date of tshds notice and the same with due proof thereof, or h* forever hereafter barred from rla'm ing any right, title or interest in Ihe same. This the 4th day of August. 1932. HENRY PERRY. Clerk Superior Court. A. A, BUNN. County Atty. A 10 DAY VACATION TO CUBA August 26th-27th From To Norlina Havana Henderson And Return Oxford S2BOO Louisburg __ , __ Via Jacksonville Wake Forest And Pnri Tampa Tickets so!d for all Trains August 26th and Train 191 From H»*n derson August 27th Stopovvers—Baggage Chocked Far Information See Agent H. E. PLEASANTS. Dl*A 508 Odd Fellows Bldg., Raleigh, N. C Seaboanj