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PAGE FOUR -tENKASBN OXILY DISPATCH Ammnmt 11. 1M» Pllllllißi »T*tT Aft*r»««a . Saatej By ■hiiHlaoM uiiPATOi oo- »«• mr >• W«m t fKNKT A DENNIS, Pre*. and Editor *. I* FINOh. and Hua. M«r. TMLKPHOKK* Editorial Offic* oclSty Miter •}• <aal>— % offlca Tha Henderson l'aiiy InspatcL tea • ember of (be Areoclatnl 1 mper Enterprise Association, swatb ra Newspaper Publi»ti«'* AaaociaUoa od the Nor/h Carolina I’ress Aisocla- Associated Press Is exclualeely , itltled to use for re publication all «■ dispatches crcdit'-d to it or aot therwise credited in this paper, and .so the local news published herein. H rights of publication of special spatebes herein are .ilso reserved, n Been I>* iio> t’KU Kv Parable Strict ly la Adtaaee is Year M.M i Months I.^ iree Months 1 sr Copy ItOTIC'B TO M list Hill CHS. Look at the prlntr'i label on yoht iper. The date thereon shows whec e subscription ctpires. Forward ur money in ample time for re wal. Notice date on lsbrl careful!) id If not corre. t please nonf> us at ' ■ But»ecrlh.-rs d«slrinic the address j • their pap.-r charged please state In j sir roniiiiuoic.i'it n tK.lb the OLD i d NEW address. '■flee a I A4r«tthl*s Mesreeeststlvea . >«OtT. LAMM* A KUHN j# park Avenue. New l’lti. C-.tT; >f t •ast Wacker Drive. Chicago; Walton I atldiOK. AUjsu, Security Buildiag j Laowle. ntered at t)«r post office in Mender- j • N. C.. us Seva n.) v.„ss noril matter i C turn 'O'* ou ■ retc»«r.>r lseS»«we—MSiSilSitsistl bSWSk !ORE THAN COXQUERERS - Ail ::es w :k • -c-~- hi \c them - • >.t G-a If Go he for us »!•< ii-nv - Mr- shall sepa 'a? ft ty. V> Chr-.- shill , '.bula:..Ts ->*:•>« r per«*-cu:n*r / .r. . ■ * .k . or p-*! r.. or 1 - ?u N .. -re- rhrr.ps we I tv..:. . _ : r - *h: '>us h . l.;rr. • . 4 m J& | *1 james^aswelll l New Y. rk Nov. 30 Madha tan Day A huier-bluc sky at 9 o'clock ant thru -w: klefceif- fj •sunkgf.fc cold. Fair fine weather, upping spirit., and living wegiht to pet theory of man th: even the stock mark t fluctuate* according to :• mperature. rain ant ■uin . . A leter from Adolph Zukor the movie hud and the impressio' Horn it ihai Adolph pecked it out hiir '•lf on a portable, al’hough I know ii war, dictat' d . . Some letters hav< that informal an. for no teason I car make out. . . The most appalling chores are. foi I :nc tho-e which ate Absolutely neces. ary ... Id rather shop for hour, buying trifling duo-dads in the dinu tore than to go through the t itue ■■f measurment of a suit' of clothes Yet today th** necessity caught up ’ • ilh me when it began to be difficul > know when I was poking an arn hdcr the linng or through the sl. eve Waiting for my white-pencil ar'is . come out and began marking m> tp. I fell into conversation with th* ' .a*a(l of the firm . . He brought ou‘ 1 i'.is scrap-book nun h prized. ir which the name-1 of celeb: itio wh< "ive visi'ed his shop are inscribed . . '‘barley Wertenbaker's monicker war "here, and I learn>-d tho intimate far! •aat Charley has just landed anothei 1 air of yarns with the Saturday Even .r.g ost and is cop brating with <-lubo r-te additions **» h.s wardrobe. . . INTIMATE TRIVIA Also there was tl:e revelation that Central Pershing wears a size sever and three eighth cap. in a not 0 on the 'object ... I had never thought of the general's head as that large . . . Dr Scuss. the loony artist of impos ible fauna, had contributed o»e of nf insects to the memory • • • I didn r fell the proprietor hat Seuss probably gets more for a urawing that size than the clothier cities for a rig of dinner clothes Thumbing through the dated signa tures of artistsand writers, many of whom I knkow. I had a fascinating and. perhaps, a trifle morbid impulse’ to check on the intervals between suits ... If I were that kind of col umnist I might lay bare some inter esting economic trends among notables however. I was braced to learn, ever on a cursory lnsp-cUon. that th e laris! were on the whole doing better . There were many November entries. SUITS JVND SUITS All of which carries me back to a! store which I rea l ly ought to have told yesterday, when I was talking about Cecil DeMllle. the director, if I had l to tell it . . . Somebody whispered: 1 “Did you hear there were nine suits because of ‘King of Kings - ?". . . To which a gay ‘young man burbled: “That's six more than I had. including l the one I had on’ t Dwellers in New York grow as ac customed to the whir of aircraft pro-' pellers. what with the incessantly noaey baby blimp which haunts the skies arfd the usual flock of commer clal and pleasure planes, that scarcely a head is craned at the sound . . . Yet last night my supper was inter rupted by a compound racket of pro pellers which made me think the en tire air force was on the wing . . . Rushing to the window, I saw one of those sights which makes me glad a combination of luck and yuung adven ture landed me a resident of Mkdhut ’ tan . . . Against they earning, yell owr> tarred hives of th* mid.town section floated the mystic bulk of the Akkron. the great gray sausage blinking rhythmic red lights that stops the breath and •lassie* the eyes with an authentic settee of wonder When the pnW flags over the day by-day marvels of Madhattan. it takes the Akron humming down the hgiher lanes of night to reawaken all the dlzxv sense of impossible ettles whien made us all glad we had chosen NfAv York long ago Arid m an ,-w'nlnf paper, open on my dO'k as I write, is u reproduction of a piojecteti airship designed, in 1805. by one E ii Robertson The craft consists of a gigantic balloon to which is appended what looks like a Span- i :<h galleon, foresail, anchor and all dust foi vfety. htcre are even a eoupV of wings of tho feathery variety nt 'ached to the gaseous sphere. It would have probably been impos- | « ble then to imagine anything as | simple ’is ilie Akron ir. lire and ex'er. I —.or trapping- being impressive at all . j . Rut if our gigantic cigar had floated I t overhead ir. lvi.V I wonder what 'ho j I j 1 mortality rate from heart failure would i h »v. bo-;rt , ' I OTHERS’ VIEWS MRS IVAKIS EXPLAINS | To 'he Kditor ! In justice to the boys of Room 2. of ! the Henderson High School, in regard ! ; v v the comments ir. the "Barks from j the Bulldogs" upon their low attend ! .nee percentage for the past quarter, ' will you kindly publish tho fact that ■ h;s low rate was not caused by any tok of loyalty upon the part of the j soy#, hut of the following inavoidable 1 ihser.c- 1 - twenty-three days’ absence ,f ~:-e of 'he most loyal members of j ■ne group, as the result of an ofAra- on for appendicitis; four days' ah : . • ce >f another, confined to his , •> .in attack of influenza: or.c day's : bsi-r.ce of each of >ix boys who at j r.ded the Sta'e Fair, as reptes.nta ! ;ves of the B.iv Scouts of Henderson. Thank you. I Very respectfully. Bertha I„ Paris, teacher. ■Editor's Note This statement is ladly given space, but the Daily Dis ■atch accepts no responsibility what ver for any article or statement ap earing in the “Barks from the Bull. : ogs" section of this paper The copv ; received from th, high school staff nd is published for hit* school, and ; not read in this office before pub ication'. * TODAY TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES lfifiT Jnhathan Swift, famous Eng sh satirist, author of "Gullivei’s 'ravels." horn Died Oct. 19. 1745. 1729 Samuel Seabury. first Protes. ant Episcopal bishop of the United tates. bom in Groton. Conn. Died t New ondon. Conn.. Feb. 25. 1795. 1817 Theodor Momsen,' famous Ger man historian, born. Died Nov 1. 903 i 1819 Cyrus W. Field, the New York *itv merchant whom Congress voted gold medal and the thanks of the lation for his work in the promotion f the first Atlantic cable, born at Ttockk'btridge. Mass. Died July 12. 892 .* 1835 Samuel U. Clemens < Mark "wain"> famous American humorist >om it Florida. Mo. Died at Red 'ine. Co!>n.. April 21, 1910. 1872 John D. McCrae. the Canadian •hy sician whrj wrote “In Flanders’ 'ields the poppies blow" during the lat’le of Yjires. bom in Ontario, Cana. Jied i" France. Jan. 22. 1918. 1875 Frank Ward O’Malley, veteran American newspaperman, born In Pittsburgh. Died in France. Oct 19. 932. i TODAY IN HISTORY 1782 Preliminary articles of peace ignrd at Palis between England and Vmerlca. concluding the American devolution. » 1838 Mexico declared war against v rance. 1900 Oscar Wilde, famous English ><>et and dramatist, died. 1920 "Wizard" Chariest Ponzi of Boston pleaded guilty of mail frauds md sentenced to prison. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Frederic W Wile 0 f Washington. D noted journalist and broadcaster, bom at La Porte, Ind.. 59 years ago. Rev. Dr. Daniel A. Poling, noted ■ditor and temperance advocate, horn it Portland. Oreg.. 48 years ago. Charles Evans Hughes Jr.. New York lawyer, onetime U. S. Solicitor General, son of the Chief Justice, born in New York. 43 years ago. Judge Henry Horner. Governor.clect. of Illinois, born in Chicago. 51 years ago. Dr. Arthur M. Stimson of the Na tional Institute of Health. Washing ton. born in Rome. N. Y.. 56 years ago. V Donald O. Stewart of New York • author and actor, born at Columbus Ohio, 38 years ago. Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill, famed English statesman, born 58 years ago. Prof. Edgar D Adrian of Cambridge ‘ England, joint Noble prizewinner In medicine for 1932. born 43 years ago. TODAY'S HOROSCOPE The nature of the native of today Is" changeable, perhaps relying on chance and contented with the lot In life, so long as too much exertion is mrt re quired to maintain it. There Ua spicy character that may come to the top, and While, perhaps, not producing any great results in the world, will do no intentional harm, i HBJDHWem, (R.C.J DAILY DISPATCH WEDNESDAY, NOVEWBBR 30; 1§32 Price Filing And Mortgage Finance Seen About Limit (OontlPuec fiotn Page Ohe.l many obstacles militating against speedy enactment of permanent |k>- llCUte. While House Democrats remained undecided wi the farm relief should 1 take, whether it should debate on the 1 domestic allot merits plan, the equali zation fee or export debenture. Sena tor Robinson, of Arkansas, the Demo cratic lender, was expected here today flesh from conferences with Roose , veil at Warm Springs, (la., in time ‘ tor a drive for beer for revenue and lid to farmers at this session. FARM RELIEF AND BUDGET DISCUSSED BY ROOSEVELT j Warm Springs, Ga., Nov. 30. iAPi J A rcnewe.i study of farm relief and I budget balancing and visits by Sena- I tor Long, of Isiulsiana. and Bennett J C. Clark, senator-elect from Missouri, j preceded la'ks by Franklin P Rno.se j velt today with the men who will handle his Sami relief program in tlie Hmit e. Gov. Roosevelt Makes Good Impression Upon Capital Newspapermen (Continueo Irom Page One.> next best thing. Their idea is to create a vivid impression, regardless of the effect if may have on the subject of of it. The correspondents did their best for President Hoover for awhile. De ciding finally that their task was hopeless, they went into reverse, and .lid their worst by him. Two or three of them have plugged away to the last on the pro-Hoover slant, but the adverse majority has been overwhelm ing during the greater part of his ad ministration. he piesident-elect a< the papers al ready have related, was a guest of the correspondents at a dinner at the Na tional Press club, while m town over night recently, upon the retiring pres idents invitation to confer with him concerning Europe's war indebted ness to the United States. In the main it was a conventional blow-out. The New Yorker, however, said a few words to his hosts just lie fore it broke up, and this little speech inqtw.stimiably was a tremendous hit from the correspondent la 1 standpoint It was "off the record," as the say ing is in Washington. That is. the understanding was that ‘he speaker was not to be quoted. Without any further pledge than a casual assurance from President Tim mons of the club that what he said A'ould go no farther, the governor promptly took it for granted that m ; ne, among the 500 or so. whom ht was addressing, would violate his con fidence, and expressed himself in per fect freedom. The correspondents like this, nat urally. Aside from his talk, they liked the nresident-elecfs manner. He had just comp from what they all knew must hae been a mighty ticklish interview at the White House. There was little concealment that President Hoover’s aim was to link his own foreign deht policy and his successor's together in such a fashion as to constitute one continuous pol icy. Now. it obviously was by no means to Governor Roosevelt’s interest to have the beginning of what he hopes, of course, will be his own successful administration coupled, im advance onto the vanishing end of his pre decessor’s decidedly disappointing ad ministration. Nevertheless, it cannot hut have been exceedingly difficult for the New Yorker to reject the ostensibly and maybe genuinely well-meaning efforts of the Californian to merge their two regimes, as to the war debt problem. From this battle of wits, over an issue of primest consequence in post war history to date, the governor em erged as cool and collected as if he and Mr. Hoover had been indulging in an exchange of the merest polite ness and pleasantries. In point of fact, it must have been as exhausting an experience as any* athlete's effort to break a world’s record, but one never would have! guessed it. EHRINGHAUS SITS WITH BUDGET BODY (Continued from Page One.) i haus showed unusual familiarity with many of these departments and In stitutions and asked many pointed questions both concerning the re quests made and the activities of the various departments. He particularly has shown an inclination to know the reasons for every request and just how the money is going to be ex pended and why. "The most interested and alert marl in all these hearings has been Mr; Ehrlnghaus, who is letting nothing get by him," according to one whd has been in most of these hearings! "His insight into governmental mat- 1 ters has been unusual and his interest has extended into the workings of every department and division of thef State government. He is going to know more about the facts and the problems he is going to have to face as governor before he goes into of fice than any other governor in rb cent years." Just as Governor O. Max Gardner' is going to leave office the best in-; formed man on State government and its problems in North Carolina and probably one of the best in the en tire country. Mr. Ehringhaus is going into office as well equipped as pos sible. it is agreed. In ancient times men saw the threads of their lives passing thro ugh the hands of three sister-fates -- of one who held the distaff, of an other who offered flowers, and a third who bore the abhorred shears of death. STATE COSTS CAN I DROP VERY LITTLE (Oo*>umMa tftaa P*E* OM» Copt to lake care of the eurrPrtt d# flcit and these must neeeaAartly tt* ■ short term bonds." The total Rthte debt at the preaerit lime is 3188.487.34E as compared with a total State debt for ail pttrffctoe* Ih 1932 of only 352.958.598. This Incrfeaftfe has increased the ocat of the Statfe government (including highway*) from 333,981,000 in 1922 to slight!? more than 353,000.000 in 1982. The per capita indebtedness at the present time, based on thf< grots* debt, lk $5T r 40. while the present cost of operat ing the State government, including debt service, is 316.16 for each person in the State. Treasurer Johnson point ed out. 1 Out of the total of 333,000,000 ete • pended last year by the State gov ernment. 34.1 per cent was expended by the State Highway Commission on highway construction and main tenance, while 31.8 per cent was spent ■on the public schools and 21.8 per rent for debt service. Mr. Johnson pointed out. ThLs means that only 10.1 per cent of all the State’s income was spent on maintaining all the State departments and institutions, including the University and higher educational institutions and the State judiciary'. Only 1.6 was spent on pen sions and only six-tenths of one per cent was spent on the maintenance of the State Department of Agriculture. The important thing to notice is that more than one-fifth of all the State revenue collected is needed to pay Ih terest and principal on Indebtedneas. Johnson said "The great problem that will con front the 1933 General Assembly when it meets in January will be: first, what expenditures can be eliminated bv the Slate government, and. sec ond. where enough revenue can be found to meet the expenses after all possible reductions have been made/' Johnson said. "There is a universal demand that the 15 cents ad valorem tax paid by the counties to supplement the school fund be taken off. This tax last year netted the State $3,850,000 and when it is taken off will mean that ad ditional revenue must be raised or an additional cut in State expenses mtist be made amounting to approximately $10,000,000. This does not take into consideralion the accumulated deficit at the end of this present biennium of approximately $12,000,000, which will have to be funded with a short term bond "The credit of the State of North Carolina is good and will continue to be good, but only if the 1933 General Assembly balances the budget by eli minating even,' possible unnecessary expense. It' is absolutely necessary that this be done if we are to main tain our credit as a State. To make It possible to do thus, the people of the State must make up their minds that they must sacrifice governmental ser vice which they have demanded in the past.” ESPEY'S SUCCESSOR IS TOPIC AT STATE Raleigh, Nov. 30. Who will replace Capt. William “Red” Espey at center on the 1933 State College Wolfpack is now the chief topic for discussion . f CROSS WORD PUZZLE ] ■ 1 I ■ ■■■»' ■■■ !. ■■■■■ ■■■■■■ ■■■■■■ ■ ~ ! —i!--. m— \a 13 i* n » 3£- JS“ -zm 5rT3?“ r - SFT3i 255! S5~ “" ; * *Pj I4S 1 Bl mp *“*■ * ,— t ~ ACROSS 1 —Musical term s—Assuages lO~An msect 12—Beast of burden U—Denomination of the Trote** tant church tabbr.) l*i—Parts of a stove IV—Older person (abbr.) 20—Avenue (abbr.) 22—Biblical character 25 — Mist 24—A ftsh 26 — Liow singing vole* 27 — Sun god jjj—To increase 30 —preposition used in name phrases 31 —Window pan*. > 52—To command ' ! 34 —Night (abbr.) SS—Young lamb 3* —English translation (abbr.V 39— Sleeping couches 41 —Spool »3—Ownrf 44— Those vrho tell falsehoods 1 8—Very rare 49 Either 50— Skle* 52—A day' (»bbr.> s* Extinct" Whd 64 —Aged (abbr.) 64—Holds IT a mu«k*l work DOWN j River IS Siberia j__A primary color 4 —RMf 6 Sharp projection -—Letter of tbo> alphabet TfuSVSh | The Losd ; UGetting. A Bit Heavy! --- I ■*-»■ • ■ •- ■ In the western section of the North Carolina capital city. Captain Espey completed his foot ball days at State last week and when he is graduated in June, the West Raleigh schoo iwill have lost one of Its greatest all-round centers. Many think Willie Hanimerick. big 190 pound sophomore, will be Espey's successor. Hammerick played only one quarter this fall, but in those 15 minutes demonstrated that he will have to be reckoned with in 1933. Leon Thompson, sophomore weighing j 165 pounds, will also be anxious for the post. Red Utley may be shifted back to' centei* from tackle. Utley played cen ter his freshman and sophomore years, but during winter practice of 1932 Coach Clipper Smith moved him to tackle. The Concord boy was an all-State high school center. He weighs 195 pounds. Both folly and wisdom come upon : us with years. li — A green fly 19—Jargon 15— Girl's name 17—Female parent 16 — Every one (abbr.) 19—Drunken brute 21 —Duties 23 —Swifter •s—Breathes heavily 26—Viper 28— Beverage 29 Deer 99—To hate 96—To work with a loom SS—Spanish measure 40 —Otgan of hearing 42 —To corrode 44 To Jump 45 A state (tH>r.) 44 —In the matter of (abbrj , A7Hfp break > 55—-Gfrdertiq*»tdil t m ',_ itl —To observe- _, •• ffs—Myself * 55—Proofreading mark Awaaeoe to Previoee Paaaii Da. K. H. Paiiehso* Est Si(bt Sftruhu REKDBKBOH, N O For Rent We have a number of desirable houses tW rent. Modern, irood locations, i\u reasonable. Let us show them to you. Henderson Loan & Real Estate Company Phone 139-J. _ I NO DISCOUNT I Will Be Allowed On / I County Taxes I After December 1 I I Pay now—this is your last chance to get I I V 2 %—Discount—V2 % I I j. E. HAMLETT I Sheriff of Vance County Dtepatefti Advertising P ajr|