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ASSOCIATED AND CENTRAL PRESS SERVICE C ?S JUNE 3 52 Vance Unemployed To Report in Raleigh For • V Forest Work FIRST FROM COUNTY Numerous Other Counties Also To As semble Quotas During; New Two Weeks To Fill State’s Full Quota Vance county’s first recruits from /the ranks of the unemployed to be Summoned for forest conservation camps has ben ordered to assemble on Saturday, June 3. Fifty-two men have been called from this county. ' The contingent is ordered to as semble in Raleigh, along with siniilar groups from Nash county, with 82, and Chatham county, with, 48, on the, eame day. , Orders for this recruiting were is sued yesterday from the Governor’s Offire of Relief in Raleigh. And cover % large number of counties in the imitate. North Carolina’s original quota for the relief camps, in the first re crui'ing schedule issued from Wash ington several weeks' ago, was'6,soo. To date 1,800 men have beep'enrolled knd the remaining 4,620 are being called to report at various, cities in the State within the next two or three yyoeks on different days so that they may be assimilated and seiW into,the forests for work. * t ; ; *, WPiile no definite information on! that phase of the procedure was available today, it is presumed that the Vance county men and others from Eastern North Carolina will be sent first to Fort Bragg for two weeks of hard work to condition them for the outdoor life of the forests. Warren county's first contingent of 51 men have been ordered to report ih Raleigh on Wednesday, May 31. along with 20 from Northampton and 101 from Edgecombe county. Gran- j v.ille's first quota of 72 will assemble' ih Raleigh on Thursday, June 1, to gether with 108 men from Durham county. '»A number of men in this city and county have already been given pre liminary physical examinations here gild are ready to report to Raleigh on the date designated for them. | AL. B. WESTER All Forms of Insurance— V Life, Fire, Casualty, Bonding. ' —Rentals— Ph»rme 139-J —" ♦ - ' PROTECTED? of course not / * AMO Maasi The gentleman above is just as well protected from the ele ments as you would be from + be winds ( of chance—unless you carry .COMPLETE IN SURANCE COVERAGE! Drop in for a chat. We may make some valuable suggestions. JAMES C.COOPER § {^INSURANCES' PHONE 204 J HENDERSON. N.C SAVE MONEY Buy Now—As Prices Are ADVANCING We Have a Complete Stock of Genuine Tennessee Cultivated MILLET SUDAN GRASS Mammoth Yellow Soy Beans Tokio Soy Beans O-too-tan Soy Beans Biloxi Soy Beans Mixed Peas Coffee Peas Blackeye Peas Legg-Parham Co. BUDGET DEFICIT OF COUNTY IS HIGHER f Over-Expended Items sl,- 882.47 as of May 1, Ac countant Shows Vance county’s budget position as of May 1, shown in a statement today from the office of G. W. Adams, coun ty accountaant, reveals a slight in crease in the aggregate over-expended items of the budget for the current fiscal year. The total is $1,882.47. The last previous statement showed the figure much smaller than that. There are sizeable unexpended funds in each department, however, with indications that the possible shuffling of funds for variqus items in the separate departments might make it possible for the fiscal year to be ended June 30 without a, deficit. The general fund shows budget ap propriations of $30,183.39, of which $25,222.36 has been spent, with $6,809 - 27 unexpended and an over-expendi ture of $1,848.24. The additional oyer expenditpre figure is only $34.23 in the poor fund, and was for supplies for the county hospital. The appropriation forth epoor fund was $10,150.61. of which $9,322.36 has been spent and -$862.48 is unexpended, with total over-expenditures of $34.23. The salary fund has no cfver-expen diturs items at all. Appropriations in j that division were $17,757.50, of which $11.586 66 has been spent and $1,170.84 lemains intact. The health fund, with an approp riation of $5,740.55 has spent $0,300.'- 56, and has left $139.99 with no over expended items. The statement by Mr. Adams was dated May 15, and covers the period to May 1, and was addressed to the Board of County Commissioners, and Vanceis to be presented to the board at its next meeting. ° GIVETHRRPLAYS » t Only Members of Club In (Cast For One Act Plays Thursday At 8 p. m. The Dramatic Clubs of the Hender son high school will present three one act plays in the Central school au ditorium on Thursday evening at 8 o’clock, it was announced today. The first play to be presented dur ing *he evening will be “Gaius and ’Gaius, Jr" a Carolina folk-play by Lucy Cobb. The scene is laid on a plantation near Demopolis, N. C. in *1859. Thq plot being in two scenes and is comical from the beginning to its concluson when the hot-tem • 'ered master of the plantation finds that he no longer suffers from his imaginary illness. ’ “The House of Grasly Crews," a ccmedy of passing Southern aristo cracy by M. Shannon Morton will be the second play to be presented dur in gthe evening. The scene is laid in a small Southern town at the present 'ime and shows the struggle between the old social order and the rising in dustrial democracy. The final play of the evening will be “Pierrot’s Mother” a fantastic play by Glenn Hughes. Its scene is. laid in the cozy living room of the former home of Pierrot. The play shows the separation and reunion of two young lovers, the “losing and finding that keeps love strong." The casts for the plays has been "elected from the membership of the Dramatic Club at the school and the plays are under the direction of Miss M. Shannon Morton, a member of the school faculty. 1920—Joan of Arc canonized, near ly 500 years after her death. B. H. Mixon Contractor and Buildeir Building, Remodeling, Repairing Wall Papering, Concrete Work Faulting, Etc. Estimates Furnished on Request Office Phone 62—Residence 476-J HrttheratmJljttlg JHtspafrlj REVIVAL STOICES Rev. H.C. Cayiness Again Preaches; Miss Smith Leads Singing The evangelist, Rev. H. C. Cavi ness, preached last night in the union revival services at the Big Hender son Warehouse. The audience gave strict attention and sympathetic hear ing to the message, considered a stir ring gospel sermon. Miss Smith, one of the two ladies who have been here for ten days •playing instrumental pieces during the meeting, was in charge of the sing ing last night, since Johnny Jones had left after directing the music for four weeks. Regular morning services at 9:30 a. m. and evening services at 8 o’clock are to be the order for the remainder of the week, except on 'Saturday. The revival is to close next Sunday. The evangelist, in his sermon last bight, said, in part: “The text we are thinking of to night is 11 Cor. 4:6. ‘God who com manded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God, in the face of Jesus Christ. ’ “The Bible is a Book of Potraitg. One there finds the pictures of the Federal heads of humanity, Adam and Eve. Abraham, that mighty man of Ur, of Chalea, who stepped out in faith from his home in Mesopotamia, 'amidst the rivers, to follow God across the ways faith decreed, and •beneath the Syrian stars beheld the glories of God’s grace as perhaps no other man ever beheld in an ancient •past. Even before his picture was drawn, Enoch appear sin company with God, and as he walked with Him in those decadent just be fore the flood and the fall, how his face must have caught something of the expression of God as he gazed long and deeply into those d.ivine eyes- ‘Enouch walked with God and 'he was not, for God took him.’ Gen. 5:24. Three statements are made In the Bible about Enoch, ‘He walked with God.’ Gen. 5. ‘He witnessed for God.’ Judge and he, ‘pleased God.’ Hebrews. Oh; what a picture. How marvelously drawn. Before the Flood and the Fall, God walked with man. What a marvelous drawing, greater than any modern master hath ever achieved, or of ancient past. This I'ficture of God walking with a man. Down through the years, God was Up taker for Enoch and Elijah, He was Undertaker for Moses. He is Care taker for His children.’ Heb. 15:5. ‘I will never leave thee nor forsake thee.’ What a portrait of Divine grace. “But in this Dlivine Art Gallery there is One Face whyich is supreme ’in its beauty. As one studies the features of the rest always perhaps flaw can be found therein shadows are seen and often sin leaves its mark and evidence its mastery. But this Face, ‘the face of Jesus Christ,’ is one unmarred by sin ana whose beauty •challenges all creation in its supreme loveliness and grace. And it is our purpose to think for awhile now of some of the characteristics of this Divine Face as painted on the im perishable canvass of God’s Potrait Galley. “We think of Him first as possess ing a ‘Face of Sadness.’ ‘Jesu3 Wept.’ John 11:35. Shortest Bible verse, but Oh; how expresVve. How beautifully tender is this picture of the tears of Jesus Christ. Surely He here confirms the prophecy of Isaiah, ‘A an of sorrows and ac quainted with grief.’ Isa. 53:3. He •has come to the tomb of His dead friend, Lazarus of Bethany. Coming with his silent sorrow, but bringing a sympathy more precious than gold or gem or transient glory. Yet thank God He had more than a man to rfive. Men have long mingled their tears, expressed mutual sympathy, and drank of the same fountain of sorrow but here is One different from all the rest. He brings more than His tears, more than His sympathy, He bring! resurrection. ‘He cried with a loud voice, Lazarus come forth, and he was that dead came forth.’ John 11:43. And Lazarus came hack as a witness to His resrrectyon, as a chal lenge to every enemy, even that hith erto supreme enemy which no man has ever conquerored until Christ came, and as a victory which forever vindicates the virtue of Calvary. Man brought from the dead to represent Christ Jesus. Here we find the pic ture changes for a moment, out of the tears there came th eresurrection out of His griefs there came a sympathy which was supreme over sorrow, a dead man raised fro mthe tomb. Dost thou bring unto those who are dead la like sympathy, a like sorrow? A like tear stained face? I am not speaking of a physically dead man? We all, perhaps, have mingled our tears with those who weep, over the physically dead. But we ar e speak ing of the spiritually dead. The dead in trespass and sins. The dammed already, though they move in animat ed bodies of youth, because they be lieve no ton the Lord Jesus, and upon whom the wrath of God already rests “Does thou come, as a Christian, in tears in agony, in sorrow, on be half of their lost souls to their tombs, and cry to God for their salvation? ‘They that sow intears shall reap in joy, he that goeth forth weeping, bearing precious seed (the word of God) shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bearing his sheaves with him.’ Psalm 126:5-6. Christian friends one of the indictments of our profes sion these days is our indifference to-’ ward those who are in the tombs of spiritual death. We shed so few tears over their lost condition, of if we do, tears is about all. we spend. We carry so seldom the Word of God. “Woe t© them who are at ease in Zion.’ And we have been told, that when ‘Zion traveleth sons and daughters shall be born. • ; , t1 1 *i— ni^-. Champion Orator *’ • v.';.•' innL TOfflHgSgjg yy mm: . - ■ Ml 7 40/W/e.'*>Vo-rr The forensicj record f Lonnie M. Knott, Jr., of Wendell, during the past two years as a member of the debate teams of North Carolina State College in unequalled in the history of inter-collegiate, forensics since the first such contests were held in 1890 according to Prof. Edwin H. Paget < coach; Knott, a senior this year, has dur ing thfe past two years won the Sou thern oratory championship, and Southern , after-dinner speaking title, the Southern extemporaneous speak ing title twice',-the NCIFA extempor aneous sneaking championship twree, the Tri-State South Atlantic and Na tional titles in extemporanous speak ing, Tri-State title in after-dinner speaking, Winner of a S4O Peace ora torical contest, finalist in the na tional extemiporaneouis speaking con test in which he finished ahead of some 70 speakers ffrom all parts of the country, and in addition, was a member of the debate team, which reached the sixth round in the na tional tournament in 1932 and a memlber of the team this year which won the Tri-State debate champion ship and tied for first in the South ern contest. Knott wlas also a member of the State College debate tegm chosen to go to Los Angeles last December to demonstrate the new Direct Clash de bate to the Eighteenth Annual Con ventio nos he National Association of Teachers of Speech, the first student team ever to receive such an honor. “We see another scene of this tear stained Face. $t is now in Jersualem. ‘When He was come near He behld the City and wept over it.’ Lukei 19:41. Heaven must have hushed its songs that hour when Jesus wept. He knew all about the cruelty, the envy, the lust, the self righteousness the pride of the people, the hypocrisy, the horrows the hells of the town. All about the horrible decree of death which waited Him there just six days from thence. But Jesus ‘wept over it. ‘Hast thou wept over this City? De spite its terrible sins, its indifference, i’s callousness, its hypocrisys. Art thou concerned about its citizenry. ,Agor;’i ngly ,‘anxfoius labout (Us fu ture? This Town’s supreme need is a revival of the religion of Christ Jesus, without which it is destined to be dammed. All history is written in tears, tears of remorse or tears of triumph. Tears of remorse worketh Hnath, but tears of triumph coming through intercessory prayer and pub lication of God’s Gospel of Grace, have changed the currents of civiliza tion. Dost not the conditions of your City move you to tears? Matt. 26:40. ‘What could you not watch with Mo one hour?’ Oh; what a question. Awaken, us Lord from the sleep of in difference. The legarthy of unspiri tualhy. The tolerance of evil. The empty dream of a progressive civili zation through disobedience to God’s law. Waken, Oh! awaken us, our God, from the empty paralysis of a prayer life which hath no tears, no travail, no agony, no concern for child or citizen. May we see His tear stain ed face as Ke moves among us even now. And may such a picture move us in a goldly agony and concern for our children and friends.” DR. Ai m IS ZEB VANCE SPEAKER To Deliver Baccalaureate Sermon tSunday, May ( 28, at 11 a. m. Dr. A. D. Wilcox,, 1 president of Louisburg College, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon at Zeb Vance high school on Sunday morning. May 28, at 11 o’clock it wlas announced today by C. A. ‘ Dees, principal of the school, inaugurating the com mencement exercises at the School. On Monday afternoon a field meet and May Day exercises will be Wad, with exhibits of the 1 year’s work shown in the school library. The May Day progra mwlll be a contribu tion of the elementary school to the comtmencement exercises. The declamation and recitation contests for the high school students will be held on Monday evening at 8 o’clock. At the same time,, read ing circle and attendance certificates, as well as seventh grade promotion certificates, will be awarded. A baseball game Was been carded for Tuesday afternoon at 3:fl0 o’clock with the commencement address and the awarding of senior dlipomias tak ing place at 8 o’clock Tuesday even ing. Miss Helen Kimball will present her music recital on Friday evening May 26, at 8 o’clock as the first event I thg school’s closing. ; MRS. L T. TUCKER CALLED BY DEATH South Henderson Lady Passes at County Hospi tal; Funeral Tomorrow After an illness of five days,-Mrs. Annie Alien Tucker, wife of Lucius T. Tucker, died at 5 o’clock this morn ing at the Vance county hospital. She was 36 years old, and a native of Vance county, having been bo-rn in 189 Y. Mrs. Tucker had resided at her last address about 22 years. The deceased was the daughter of Sidney Allen, who died 13 years ago, and Het Woodlief Allen, who has been dead seven years, both natives of Vance county. Surviving are the husband and seven children, Hodgie, 16; Sammie, 15; Lessie, 11; Thomas, 9; Edward, 6; .Rebecca, 3; and Ossie, 8; together with four brothers, Jessie, Oliie, Ray mond and Sidney Allen, all of Vance county. Mrs. Tucker was a member Os the Pentecostal Holiness church at South Henderson, having united with that fehurch ten years ago. Funeral services will be held from that church tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o’clock with the pastor, Rev, E. G. Parrom, officiating, and with in terment in the family cemetery in Kittrell township. AROUND TOWN No Police Court— No session of the police court was held today .there be ing no cases for trial. No Deeds.—Again yesterday no reftl estate transfers were recorded in the office of the register o fdeeds. There have been comparatively few deeds filed this month. White Couple -Licensed. —A white couple, Worth Matthews and Jane Faucette. both of Vance county, ob tained a marriage license yesterday at the office of the register of deeds. It was only the third license to be> issued in May, half of which has now passed. To Declaim Patrck Henry.—A trails position played havoc with one bnd speaker in the list appearing in the Dispatch yesterday for the high high school declamation and recita; tion contests tonight. Bennett Noell is to declaim Patrick Henry’s “Give M,e Liberty or Give Me Death’’ ora tion. The error was in the copy fur nished to the Dispach. jj jfjje; |gfli Today we offer an amazing new Frigidaire that operates on as little current as one J|||A ordinary lamp bulb. Remarkable also in its new conception of convenience... this Frigidaire has auto- Slllll 1* matic defrosting—automatic ice tray re- (f V s j'A * leasing—l/4 more food space—extra room \ f for tall containers. 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TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1933 Ji BIG FEEDFRIDAY Losing Side In Recent Con test To Entertain Win ners at Rock Mill Cliipaxing a recent membership con test conducted by the Junior Order United American Mechanics, in which a large number of new members was added to -the order, the losing side, haeded by Hugh A.. Jordan,: will give a fish fry and barbecue at the old rock mill, three miles east of the city Friday evening at 6:30 O’clock, to the winners captained by E.jo. Falk ner with a large number of the mem bers expected to be present, it was said today. A. J. CHEEK SAYS HAS FINE GARDEN •" ' y "y A. J. Cheek is the first gardner in this section to report t 0 the Daily Dispatch that he has gotten Irish po tatoes from his garden this year. He stated yesterday that he had them for lunch at his home. Mr. Cheek also stated that he had young tomatoes on his Vines in'his garden about the size of bird eggs. This is the further-j est advanced of any reported of so far! this season with many people just setting out their plants. COLORED PUPILS TO GIVE PLAY MONDAY “How the Princess’ Pride was Broken,” a play for children in two acts will be dramatized from Hans ; Christian Anderson’s fairy tale, “The Swine heard” and < presented by the j sixth grade of the colored graded *’f * -f* s '> ‘ i Maybe YouVe Lucky And Will Never Have A Fire Thousands of people are that way, through no effort of their own. But there are other thousands who haven’t been so lucky. The chance is too great to take—insure yfciur property today. Citizens Realty & Loan Co. ; JOEL T. CHEATHAM, Pres. Henderson, N. C. school at the Henderson Institute Monday evening at 8:30 o’clock it ° n announced today. ’ WESTENDGDLFERS Locals Hold Wins Over All Teams In Association Except Louisburg The West End Country Club’s g olf team will meet Louisburg here tomor row afternoon on the West End link" in regular tournament. pi ay in * Central Carolina Golf Association * The locals, paced by Lee Averette won handily over Roanoke Rapids on last Wednesday in Roanoke Rapids and .already hold a win over Warren ton, and now they are meeting the only team they have not had a match with in association play this year They expect plenty of opposition from the Franklin county team but the de fending champs ar e expected t 0 turn them back. Attilio Piccirolli, noted New York City sculptor, bor n in Italy 65 years ago Stocks, Bonds, Investments DAVID TERRY Investment Securities Phone 1398-W Raleigh, N. C. Specializing in the preferred stocks of Carolina Power and Light Com pany. Will either buy, sell, or trade. Let me handle your Inquiries.