Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH ftfbltoW AICMt la. IW* * Published Every Afternoon fexcepi Sunsday By HENDERSON DISPATCH CO., INC. at 109 Younf Street BBNRY A. DENNIS. Pret end Editor M. I*. FINOh, S<pc-Tr«a* and Bue. Mgr. " tklrphovbi Editorial Off lea •ocUty Editor }}• Mmtnrea Office 919 " Th# Hrndrraon Daily DiapatoU la a •Miabar of th« Aaaooiatad Praaa. Newa- MLpr-r KMirptiM AMWittlon, South ern N««>»hp«r Publisher* Aaaoeia*l©n end the North Carolina Preaa Aaaoele- Tha Aayoolatad Tryaa la •scluslTOlY •etltlod to «a* for ropubllcation all arts%* Ai*pAt«ho« orrdltod to It or not ovedittd In thia paper, and aleo tho local new* published herein. Alt it* Ms of ouhlioatlon of special •Wr-A..'ho* herein are alao reserved. IIUMKIIMU» rRMKs. Payable ttrlitlr la Advance. Pat Year t 1.09 Six Months e ava » e-e ••. *e • e*e ale e'e I*®® Three Months t><* Per Copy ; >M r - * NOTICE TO SMISCKIHKRS. Look at the printed label ou your Eiper, The date thereon shows when e subscription expires. Forward your money in ample time for re newal. Notice date on label carefully and If not correct, please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring: the address on their paper changed, please state in their communication both the OLD and 'NEW address. Rational Advertising Itepreaentntlvos FRONT. I. Aft IMS A KOHN MS Park Avenue New fork City; S& Meat Wacker Drive, Chicago; Walton Building, Atlanta; Security Building, Be. Louis, Entered at the post office in (lender s' n. N. C.„ as second class mall matter £»— l lli* If «K«| let, Md«lUlii*<»a t iWIMI RULES FOR RIGHT LIVING: He hath shewed thee, O man, what is flood; and what doth the Lord re quire of thee, but to do justly, and to loye mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?—Micah 6:8. New York, May) 10—What-nots, Wiilly-nilly: A correspondent wonders why there isn’t a single automht restaurant in Brookly n . . A swanky and ruddily plushy night club in the process of failing makes me think of the pal aces of Viennese nobles come upon evil days . . . Placard in one of thfe shrill little meetings which diverts Union Square daily: “Comfmlunism, the Future Government —Vegetarian- ism the Future Diet—Chiropractic, the Future Healing.” Maurice Chevalier has learned Eng lish so well that he has to brush up periodically on his piquant Frenchy accent < . . Irene Bordoni, singing in a late place, evokes the wonder what it was that appealed to audi ences when she was at her peak . , Emile Coleman, the jazzmast.er .tells me that Bee Lillie’s charm rests a good deal upon evocation of quaint old London memories . . I’m glad to get some light upon a blind spot. You s«e people in Harlem you nev- I er see at any of the other bejazzed retreats . . . Secretary Woodin al ways makes me think of Samuel Pepys. . . John D. Rockefeller has enrolled his chef i n an American cooking school to learn how to make homey custards—an indication of the swing in the uppity eateries away from elaborate and flossy dishes . . Huapaj*. t ' V ' t:'~\ j j ' ■ ROAST « I sat with Irvin Cobb the other night on the occasion of his newly inaugurated radio program . . . Be cause his line is more or less along that politico-ribbing joshery of Will Rogers, conversation turned upon Will . . Cobb told me of the time he was toastmaster of a dinner to Rogers at the Friars club . . These feasts hr a notable in that the guest o ss> hdnor mrust submit to sustained and fazor-edged ribbing . . The idea is to flatter him and him feel silly at the same time. 1 ' So Cobb went to work and dug up 1 one of the first press mentions of' Rogree, in an obscure paper, now de funct ... It was a review of Rog ers, then billed as Sherokee Bill and! His Performing Horse, in some mid-; die western town . # . The toastmast er read it without comjnaent ,byway of' introduction , “This alleg' d cowboy plays with a tope while he talks to hs horse. We’ •felt several times that it would have been better had Cherokee Bill shut' up and let the horse do the talking.”! BABY SHOW At the Reinhardt Galleries, In Fifth ' fevenue. is the strangest baby show;' of the year . . . Hundreds of pho tographs of chlldrc n are on view, in-, »eluding shots of most of the famous' social and theatrical folk of today. When they were moppets . . . Wish- ' fully, the grand dames of Park ave nue wander through the various rooms, murmuring, "To think! I looked ike that” ... I was struck by the camera portrait of John Barrymore, at 9 in a wing collar and looking like he ha djuat been caught breaks the window across from the baseball lot. » Roxy, back at his desk as caar or the Radio City theatres, recalls that during hie absence the ornate apart ment he maintains above the Music hall has been maintained durihg his tteence to ya staff of ijmwitto, Juit THE NEW DEAL ** How President Roosevelt' Is Meeting Vital Issues of Today What Is Occurring In U. S.J Writer To Explain Measures Bewildered Citizens May Find Answer to Questions (Thtsi s the introduction to a series of brief eas.v-to-read articles on how President Roosevelt is meeting the various important Is sues.) By LESLIE EICHEL Washing!on. May 10. —"What is oc curing in the United States?” bewild ered Americans ask. “Whither are we bound?” More has occurred in ten weeks of the Roosevelt administration than in four years of others administrations. The vety government of the United 'State has changed. There now ex ists a form of dictatorship. Measures passed and being passed by congress give the president pow ers that literally no Other chief ex ecutive of a nation possesses. Even a Stalin in Russia, a Mussolini in 'ltaly, and a Hitler in Germany, do not alone possess some of the powers that congress has given to President Roosevelt. Those dictators have to consult their parties. President Roose velt has to consult no one. Congress has been driven on to sur rendering these powers by a people, desperate for a change for the better. The peopl have placed great hope in Franklin D. Roosevelt. He in turn, has offered, with startling speed, an array of measures that not only seem to strike at issues which chiefly in terest the people, but which likewise as if he were occupying it . . . Each night his bed was turned down, I hear. > ! i TODAY TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1778—William Ladd, a distinguished pioneer in intrnational peace activi ties, born at Exeter, N. H. Died at Portsmouth, April 9 1841. 1789—Jared Sparks, American his toria land Harvard president, born at Willing-ton, Conn. Died at Camb ridge, Mass., March 14, 1866 1 1813 —Montgomery Blair, Maryland lawyer, Lincoln’s Postmaster-General, born in Franklin Co. Ky. Died at Silver Spring, MJd., July 27, 1883. 1838 —James Bryce, celebrated au thor of the “American Commonwealth British Ambassador, born. Died Jan. 22, 1922. \ 1841—James Gordon Bennett, who succeeded his father as proprietor of the New York Herald, an able edi tor in his own right, born in New York. Died in France, May 14 1918. 1850-Thomas J. Lipton, famed English merchant and sportsman, born. Died Oct. 2, 1931 # 1854—Ottmar Mergenthaler, inven tor of the linotype, born in Germany. Died in Baltimore, Oct. 28, 1839. TODAY IN HISTORY 1775 —Historic capture of Fort Tic onderoga by Ethan Allen. 1818—Paul Revere, Boston patriot, died there aged 83, 1927 —Lindbergh < then an unknown aviator, hopped off at San Diego on: his epochal solo flight to Europe. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Judge D. Wilbur of San I’ra.ncislco, of the 9th Federal Circuit < netime Secretary of the Navy, born at Boonesboro, lowa, 68 years ago. Dr. Howard J. Savage, secretary of the Carnegie Foundation for. Advancement of Meriden Conn.,'47 iyeirs ago.* Admiral Richard H. Jackson, U. P. N., retired, l>orn at Tuscumbia, Ala., 67 years ago. Admiral Samuel S Robison of Maryland,, U. S. N., retired, born in Juanita CO., Pa., 66 years ago. William H. MhMaster onetime gov ernor and U. S. Senator from South Dakota born in lowa, 56 years qgo. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE You should be able in execution with powers of resource; endowed with a receptive and dissective mind, you Should m)ake a mark in the world. There is an indication of indolence cr an inclination to depend to.> much upon others; do not allow this to get control of you, for it is fatal to the proper operation of your inherent qualities. There is also an indication of considerable means, without much desire to add to them. Wife Preservers Grease the pan • with butter In which you are baking baking pow der biscuits. Put the biscuits In pan, then turn them over before baking. The top of each biscuit U greased and bakes a lovely brown. HENDERSON, fN.CJ DAILY DISPATCH, WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1938 |Hi JHH L Nl 'i>si'li in I* p is President franklin d roosevely • seem to alter the constitution. In order to clarify the issues .with which President Roosevelt is dealing and to tell in plain English how he is meeting them, this writer will pre sent. briefly and succinctly, the story I WHAT IS ; ~jUßh I FTlx II a I r*. V &tyoi i*jA*- * B JB <* I* •• I a WMif- i!pn ™?i Back Yard Design—Ovals ior formal garden, for an irreMulav -sKaped lot . Irregular-shaped lots caused by dia- , gonal or curving streets often offer a: garden planner. Nothing along the troublesome problem to the home usual lines seems to fit the situation. The oval garden is the best means of }pul!ing one of these odd-sided lots in to a semblance of regularity. An elliptical outline is drawn to as great a width as the lot permits,.with the ellipse running the long. wqy„.of the ground plaiting allow- • ance for space atooui;ir tt)?bg plsmtqct. wit h... yhjjubbery A e4lfp#sr are dj-awn v\rtTh,jprqS'jsf paths and the gardefr is later c&t " Tha£ corners may be filled with shrubbery and the central oval space will • pull the lot into an appearance of regularity which is glaringly lack ing with the usual circular or rect angular designs. The laying out of an ellipse is as shnple as that of a circle. Instead of the one central stake about which the series of circles are drawn there are two “centers,’ or more properly speak ing, foci. A cord is looped about the two focal stakes placed a short dis tance apart the long way of the lot an stretched taut and the ellipse is easily drawn. The distance between the focal stakes or centers regulates the proportions of the ellipses, the closer they are together the more nearly the ellipse approaches a circu lar outline. farther apart the longer the ellipse. The diameter is regulated by the length of the loop about thfe focal stakes. Ap with circular and rectangular designs the central oval space may be rr*j kfla^j^mes PIEDMONT LEAGUE \ Charlotte at Wiilmlington. . Durham at Greensboro. Richmond at Winstbri Salem. national league * Pittsburgh at Boston. • v Cincinnati at Philadelphia. Chicago at Brooklyn. at. Louis at New York. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Chicago. Washington at St. Louis. Boston it Clfcvwand. Philadelphia it Dttroit. of each issue and the manner in which it is being met. The first of these stories will ap pear tomorrow. It will be on a sub ject thjat interests everyone—infla tion. t left open as a small patch of lawn. ! It may be a flower bed or it may be utilized for an oval pool, a bird bath or sundial. The formal beds constructed of seg ments of the ellipse in the central (portion <j>f'tfre garden are best plant ed to annuals of a single color with the outer boundary of beds for peren nials, bulbs, and a supply of groups of annuals Jo supplement perennials ;,or bulbs which* have passed their hi doming period. r ine oval designs are very useful for triangular or trapezoidal spaces and with a littel experimenting it will be found that they are as simple to lay out as circular patterns. Like the circular garden, the beds need per manent edgings to retain their out lines from the encroachment of sod. Brick, stone, concrete, board strips or some of the close-growing compact perennials or dwarf shrubs may be used for the purpose. 1 Remits PIEDMONT LEAGUE $ Wilmington 10; Charlotte 5. Riichjmond 9; Winston Salem 2. Greensboro 14; Durham 6. NATIONAL LEAGUE (Boston 7; Pittsburgh 0. Others not scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 7; St. Louis 5. No others played. ROANOKE RAPIDS TO MEET MT. AIRY Chapel Hill, May 10—Mt. Airy and Roanoke Rapids high school nines will clash here Friday afternoon at 3 o’clock for the Class B. Champion ship of the State. The same two teams met in the finals last year with Roanoke Rap ids winning the title 9 to .6 after a thrilling game of rallies and counter rallie*. \ Large crowds are expected from Mt. Airy and Roanoke Rapids for the final gam® for both teams have come through with fine records this year, and each has high hopes of a vic tory. , So-o-o-Bgss ! hBKo Aycock Hurler Allows Two Hits; T. Hoyle and Wright Lead Winners J. Edwards twirled two hit base ball here yesterday afternoon to al low Aycock high school to defeat the Henderson, high school Bulldog nine 3to 0. Garland Harris gave out five hits for the locals but they came when they were needed. T. Hoyle and Wright were the leaders of the Aycock attack with two hits each with J. Edwards nail ing a triple for the only other hit. F. Mills and Inscoe singled to give the locals their two safeties. Aycock Ab R H Po A E Herndon cf 4 /I 0 2 0 0 J. Edwards p .4 0 1 0 0 0 T. Hoyle ss 3 0 2 1 2 0 Harris If . 3 0 0 1 0 0 L. Hoyle lb 3 0 0 9 0 0 Frazier rs . 3 0 0 3 0 0 O. Hoyle 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 Wl- Edwards 3b 3 1 0 ;1 3 0 Wright c 3 1 2 10 1 0 Toals 29 3 5 27 71 Henderson Ab R H Po A E Edwards rs. 3 0 0 1 0 0 J. Mill s lb ........ J. 4 0 0 8 0 1 Scoggins ss 3 0 0 4 2 0 F. Mills If 3 0 1 3 0 0 Inscoe 2b .3 0 1 2 1 0 liight 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 Turner cf 3 0 0 2 0 0 Keamey c 3 0 0 6 0 0 Harris p 3 0 0 1 0 0 Totals 27 0 2* 27 4 1 Score by innings: R Aycock 002 010 000 —3 Henderson 000 000 000 —0 Summary—Three base hits: J. Ed wards. Stolen bases: Turner. Sacri fices: Edwards. Double plays: Ins coe, Scoggins and Mills. Left on bases: Aycock 6; Henderson 3. Base On balls —off J. Edwards 1. Struck out by J. Edwards 9; Harris 5. Hit by pitcher—by Harris (T. Hoyle). Wild pitches: Harris. Losing pitcher: Harris. Winning pitcher: J. Ed wards. Umpires: Boyd and Mitch ell. . | PIEDMONT LEAGUE Club , W L Pet. Richmond .....12 8 .800 Wilmington 8 7 .533 Charlotte 77 .500 Wlinston Salem 7 id .412 Greensboro 6 9 . 400 Durham 6 10 .375 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: W L Pet). Pittsburgh 14 5 .737 New York 12 7 .632 St. Louis 11 10 .524 Chicago 10 10 .476 Cincinnati 8 10 .444 Brooklyn 8 10 .444 Boston 10 13 .435 Philadelphia 6 13 .316 AMERICAN LEAGUE . Club; W L Pel. New York 14 7 .667 Washington 14 8 .636 Cleveland 13 8 .619 Chicago 11 10 ( .524 Detroit 10 11 476 Philadelphia 7 11 .389 Boston 7 12 .368 St. Louit 7 16 .804 • .J- • ■ ' • ■ Between irx • xj iß®ls Tars Advance The Wilmington Tars advanced to second place in the standing ladder last night in Wilmlington by defeat ing the Charlotte Bees 10-5. A big third inning netting six runs aided much in the win. Pats Even Series The Greensboro Patriots evened their series with Durham last night in the Gate city by taking the-Bulis by the horn to the tune of 14-6 in a CROSS WORD PUZZLE r*"" 2™" 3"" y" 5"" T" s“^ I l ,fc> n ' I lie> 20 r"" 1 P 1 " 1 * did 23 Sr j 125 Sr i?7 “ 26 ‘ 23 r"TSo 3l ■ mild —ii 3-4 is] 36| |37 “ '3b 39 40 rrp rnp ~~~~ 44 “""I" 1 * "■"Hpir I"""" pal iSs - ’ ~so" 1 |si ' ~lr W— s#l I 1 -TM ACROSS I—Capitall—Capital of the republic of v Argentina in South America, 11— Heavenly body/ 12— Midday .. A * ' 14—Wild (Scot.) 16—Redacts 18-r-Spotj 20 — One indefinitely^ 21— Entire | 22 Goddess Os the earth (GroelC: myth.) 23 Two (Sp.)\ 25—Curmudgeon „ . . _ 27—Eye 28—In the 30—Raved " 32—A constellation] S3—Bon.l "" 11 34 —The love apple} ! 37—A spice/'* y 40—Knock / w Eagles { _ i 43 —A cebine monkey, 44 — Neuter pronoun (. . 45 Suffix denoting Occupation - 46—Right (abbr.) w ’ , 47 —Masculine name 49—Nerve networks 51—A number [ 's2—Chinese coin] 154—80 x 56 —lialf spheres^ * DOWN] 2 —Employ ' 3— And (1..) 1 /«—No (Scot.) w s— Appoint t 16—Horn “ J 7—lsland in tlio Aegean ,8 —International language pro^ | posed by; iL r.Fosttr/^ 9—Conclude • v lancC 1 : loose game. f Colts WUn Again The Richmond Colts evened their series with Winston Salem last night in Winston Salem by drubbing the Twins 9-£. Baker Colt hurler al lowed the Twins five hits. BULLDOGS TO PLAY LOOISBURG COLLEGE Henderson high school Bulldogs will play Louisburg College here on Friday afternoon at 4 o’clock at Lea gue Park, it was said today by ath letic officials at the local school. ! ' The Collegians boast a, strong team j and ar e being tutored by Don Hyatt, 1 former Duke Star. ' The locals will return the game oa I Friday week, it was said. 13 —A horse 15—Masculine name 17—Kiqd 11*—A reverse shaped curve 24 — Impress 25- 20—Estimates 27—Paces 21* —Epoch 31—Pinch suddenly’ 34—Proof * 35-*-A cereal (pi.) 30 —Bay windows 37 Die 38— Merit 39 Religious ceremonies^ 42—Seine* 48 — Devoured 49 Portuguese coin 50 — Mimid 51 — Crudd metal \v 53 —Porm of to he t 65—Lund measure 1 # ILiTlE|6ju|C| l iflrilplcMs J_nlma,plap_h*Lf £. Q. J- 1 *S JL ii <= s A iCEILEeIeM J-3 OS. §,131