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PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH —teMhikii AUirt 11. 114 Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday By HENDERSON DISPATCH CO, INC. at 109 Young Street ioBNUT A. DJBNNIS. Pres, and Bditor ML Ik FINCH. Sec-Treas and Bus. Mgr, TKLBPIONII ■dltorlal Os flee uui.. IM Boclsty Editor >wi— mi tie Business Office .. CIO The Henderson Daily Dispatch is a member of the Associated Press, Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation and the North Carolina Press Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for republication ali news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the looal news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION PRICES.. Payable Strictly In Advance« But Year ~••• $6.66 Six Months »•* • m m w% Three Months «...<« 1.66 Psr Copy . . .’r. . • »r».. .......... ■>). »M HOTICB TO SUBSCRIBERS, liook at the printed label on yout E.per. 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 Representntlvos PROMT. LANDIS A hOil.M >•• Park Avenue, New York City; Si Bast Wackor Drive, Chicago; Walton Building. Atlanta; Security Building, •t„ Liouls.. Bntered at the post office In Hender son. N. C., as second class mall matter fcwas«Waa>Sa.et»iafeaMaiL-fnleliaMß WARNING TO MEDDLERS: He that ipasseth by, and meddleth with strife belonging not to him, is like one that taketh a dog by the ears.—Proverbs 258 17. Aswell Enters Germany And Finds AllO. K. At Least Hamburg Has No Great Excitements Hamburg, July 20—Firsit Night: All European towns. Invaded by In- 1 Utocent American tripipers, should be entered at night. They have then a pungent strangeness, a vast loneliness a call to youth. 1 I remember whisking out of the Paris Gate du Nond when 1 wae 17, iin a taxi honking like a frightened (goose . . . Rut this is Hamburg, Ger many; another year, by a long shot, and another country in a time of vir ulent upheaval, according to she home Papers. ; A peaceful lat esun is shining when we arrive. I peek out of my railway compartrrent, half 7 ' to see the Elbe running, red arid the drift of guntsmke adr6ss the sfaltion square. I look Ini Vddn for anything except a solid medieval oily, contemptuous of any possible temporary agitatfiona among men. ,) A NEW YORKER’S REACTION There are not many America ns in habiting the vast pile of plush and elegance called the Atlantic hotel, bus all Sts Oriental-German sumpttuous mesu remains. I stand at my w*i!ndow and look out upon the fifrsst darkness along the Alster, that knob of the Elbe which makes a seirtHake In, the cen ter of the town. Cyclists wheel airly along. Lovers E 1 roll, arm-locked, along the shore. On the water are sailboats, and two crews sprimitinig in ma|ch-stick stceaks acTo&3 the glass surface. I hear no shots. I see no troops; lam possibly a practicing chronicler of hullabaloo. Going out, later, through the lobby. I pee a group of frantically esfleited Gormans at a corner table. Ah, I say. here was Intrigue, a group of Nazis plating something sufficiently reprehensible. At that moment they adjourned hastily and filed out, leav ing behind a document. Self-consciously and guiltily I g raced at it. It was, unmistakably, a racing form for a course near Ber fr. Hamburg, whether I iked if or net, insisited on presenting herself to ire in tranquil mien. It was as well. I have not <he temperament for sharp indignation in political affairs. I was glad that the chances seemed to be I’d be able to poke about Germany examiining the •t’rrie fascinating trivia, in the main, which occupy ms in Manhattan. And that is whaf I shall do; I shall not I'ook so rhatreds and unhappiness, rnd un’ess these ovei-whelm my re port or ial senses, I slhall leave them to the accredited correspondents. So I hopped a, cab for St. Pauli, the Broadway of Hamburg, a blazing boulevard of modernis/tic cabarets, automat restraints (even as at home) and coffee shops thronged with sail ors on leave. .11 1 TODAY TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1304 —Francesco Petrarch, famous Italian poet amd humanist, horn. Died July 18, 1374. I 1793—John I. Howe, inventor a nd manufacturer of the first practical piA* making machine, born at Ridge 'TODAY is the DayKHS ARK KINNAIPD gjSgHgHfffH 0 i 039 roe tw* utvypAPcc 8v cinthai pem AtrVi. 2018 t day of 1933; 30th day of Summer. Morning star — Saturn; evening stars — Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter. In the French Revo- h lutionary Calendar, the Ist day of Thermidor. * * * Sign of the zodiac: Cancer, symbol: the crab. A good day to cultivate friendships. Be ware of smoking in bed. * * * The coldest place known on earth is 10 miles above the Equator, where temperatures of 150 degrees below zero, F., have been measured. At the same altitude above the polar regions, the temperature is not so low. NOTABLES BORN THIS DATE MAHAI, born 1922, ex-king, now crown prince of Roumania; Frank P. Walsh, b. 1864, distin guished lawyer and liberal; Ernest Hutcheson, b. 1871, pipnist and composer. Francesco Petrarch, b. 1304, one of the earliest and great- It was on Good Friday that Petrarc upon the poems inspired by hi est of modern lyric poets, the first of the great humanists of the Renaissance. When he was 23 he first saw Laura, who inspired him with a passion which has become proverbial for its constancy and its purity. She has been identified as the wife of one Hugo de Sade, to whom she had been married two years at the time when Petrarch first met Laura, and who died, the mother of 11 children, 21 years later, tut there is no certainty of this. He never ceased to mourn her, exiled himself from Avignon, where she had lived, shunned honors, died in 1374, two days before his 70th birthday. * * * 1577—0 n this date, according to Richard Hakluyt’s Divers Voyages Touching the Discovery of America, the Gospel was first preached in America, at Newfoundland. [The author’s cousin, another Richard Hakluyt, was influential in arous ing English interest in coloniza tion of the New World. It was in his lodgings, as a result of con versations with him, that his cousin was inspired to make the researches and write the books to which we owe so much of our knowledge of early European voyages to and settle ments on this continent.] * * * 1820—A cloud of bees, a swarm of swarms, attacked travelers on the field. Conn. Died near there, Sept.. 10, 1876 * 1832 —Alexander L. Holley, noted scientific writer, mechanical engineer metallurgist and inventor of his day, born at Lakeville, OonnJ Died in (Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan 29, 1882. 1838—Augustin Da'iy, great New York City dramatist and producer, a creative artist, bcr n as Plymouth, N. C. Died in Paris, June 7, 1899. 1814 - Marquis of Queensibetry, er ratic English nobleman, part author of i'he boxing rules bearing his name, (born. Died Jan. 31, 1900. 1873 - Alberto Santos-Dumont, Bra zilian aeronaut, known in South Ame rica a s the “father of aviation,” con (tempotrary of the Wright brotheirs in the early experiments of the 1890’s, bom. Died July 24, 1932. TODAY IN HISTORY 1577 —The Gospel said to have been first proclaimed i n the New Wlorld, in N ew found land. 1833 —Ninian Edwards, Illinois U. (S. Senator and governor, deed. * 1903—Pope Leo XIII died, aged 93. 1923 - Gen. “Pancho” Villa of •liex ico, assassinated. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Prof. West el W. Willoughby of Johns Hopkins University, interna tiona lly-know, n political scientist, born a t Alexandria, Va., 66 years ago. William F. Willoughby, twin broth er. director of the Institute for Gov ern mcn-t Research, Washington, D. C. born at Alexandria, Va., 66 years ago Errebt L. Cord, automobile and air plane manufacturer, born at Warrens burg, Mo., 39 years ago. Dr. Richard H. Creel of the U. S. Public He a lth Sexvice, stationed at. Baltimore, born at Blackburn, Mo., 55 years ago. < Bishop Charles L. Mead of the M. E. Church, stationed at Kan/sas City, Mo., born at Vienna, N. J., 65 years ago. f ' 1 Prof. Herbert E. Bolton of the Unwensiity of California, a noted Ame rican, historian, bor n a t Wilton, Wis., 63 years ago. Ernest Hutcheson of New York, famed pianist, bom in Australia, 62 years ago. Howard Thurston, noted magician, bom ait Columbus Ohio, B 4 years ago. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE This is a day giving capacdfp for p a tient endeavor and faithful service. While the native may not attain to eminence by reason of a lack of self assertion, there is much quiet force and great endurance, coupled with, a rendering of faithful service that will assuredly bring some honor■ much re spect, and possibly a liberal share of the world’s goods. The Women’s International Zionist Society unites Jewsh women the world over in work for the welfare of Jew ish women and children in Palestine. ~ HENDERSON (N.CJ '*s•***;"- high-road between Wittenberg and Berlin, killing horses, stinging a coachman until he was crazy, driv ing ladies and gentlemen from their carriages. * * * 1835 —First railroad train en tered Washington, D. C. .. . 1861 —• First meeting of the Congress of the Confederacy, at Richmond. [lt had assembled on Feb. 4 at Mont gomery, Ala., and elected Jefferson Davis, president.] . . . 1864 —Battle of Peach Tree Creek, Ga., one of the decisive engagements which opened the approaches to Atlanta to Sherman. The 4th, 14th and 20th Union corps, under Maj. Gen. G. H. Thomas faced Gen. J. B. Hood’s army. Losses: Union, 1,710; Confederate, 3,800. . . . 1929—At lantic City’s $15,000,000 auditorium, seating 4*1,000, opened. , ch first saw Laura! His fame rests tis unrequited passion for her. 1881 —Sitting Bull, chief of the Sioux, surrendered at Fort Buford, North Dakota, terminating the war growing out of the invasion of the Black Hills by gold-hunters who chased the Sioux from their hunt ing-grounds. A great warrior and leader, he had to submit to seeing his proud free race sink to the po sition of beggars and children, for bidden to trade, forbidden to hunt, debarred from their traditional and natural amusements like convicts, herded like cattle, condemned to wear the white man’s cast off cloth ing, ordered to farm the land, an occupation for which they were ill fitted by temperament and experi ence. He lived peacefully, but with a heavy heart, until 1890, when his people refused to let him be sepa rated from them by the govern ment that was supposed to be his friend and protector. Unarmed, un resisting, he was shot to death by red Indian police, members of an enemy tribe, as he pleaded that there be no violence, on Dec. 16, 1890. (Questions, objections, ete., may be addressed to the author in care of this newspaper.) ■ - ’ ' ■ l Tomorrow; THE FIRST TRAIN ROBBERY IN HISTORY DICTIONARY. While I am earnestly, Entirely whole-heartdely, Looking for the pronunciation Os a big, important, pompous word, The big book of words Inquiries somewhat quizzically of me, Just in passing. Whether I know That one of your names, buttercup, Is giltcup. ■Gilteup? Suddenly a little gilded cup Os blight rememberings Spills I rst, a great deal of child-laughter, Then, small fingers clutching a yel low flower, 'Then: “Do you like butter?”— c Then, a very sober peering Under a white chin, Then, the triumphant verdict; “You do! You do! “You do like butter! Rou do like butter, awfully!” Then a very great deal of child laugnter! Certainly a' most romatically grace ful way Os ascertaining One's quite prodigious predilection For butter! Giltcup? Yes,— A very precious little gilded cup. Now, what was that big, important word I was looking for? Myrtle Sutherland, New School Bus Bodies Are Best State Ever Had - I" Sir Walter Hotel. Daily Dlxoatcb Rarena »*V j C. R^KRRVILI, Raleigh, July 20.—The 300 school bus bodies just contracted for by the Division of Purchase and Contract for the State School Commission are the safest and best bodies the State has ever purchased, according to A. 'S. Biower, director of the division. All of these bus bodies are to be built according to certain minimum spe cifications worked out more than a year ago by a committee from the old Board of Equalization, the Di vision of Purchase and Contract and the body manufacturers. Now all the bodies are so safe and strong, that they could be rolled down a bank several times without being damaged Brower said. The fact that the State could buy these bodies now at unusually low prices; averaging S2O a body less than the prices bid a year ago, caused the State to increase its contract from 100 to 300 bodies. Brower said, since it was evident that prices were going to increase rapidly from now on. Thus the total saving on this contract for 300 truck bodies amounts to about $6,000. The average price quoted in this last lett-ng was about §295 per body as compared with an average ]Price of $315 per body a year ago. The. 1 lower prices bid this time are attri buted to the fact that most of the manufacturers have maerials on hand to complete this order that were bought at the low price levels. They indicated that any subsequent con tracts will have to be a considerably increased prices. North Carolina is the home of the school bus body industry/ since this was one of the first States to under take the transportation of children to and from school in motor trucks, Brower pointed out. Many of the school bus bodies.;used in other states are built in North Carolina aoid this has become one of the state’s leading industries. As a result it is possible to buy bus bodies at lower prices here from Noirth Carolina manufacturers than in any other state, Brower point ed out. The standard specifications now re quired by the School Commission provide for the reinforcement of all body struts with steel, for the treating of the wood parts so they will not rot and for the more adequae exits and other safety features. State College’s Gram Judge Team Is Off to Canada Raleigh, July 20.—The N. C. State College Crops judging team will leave Friday morning, July 21, for Regina, Canada, to compete in the world-wide intercollegiate grain judging contests to be held there in connection with the World’s Grain Exhibition and Conference, July 24 to August 5, W. H. Darst, professor of agronomy at State, is in charge of the students and will accompany them to Canada. The trip is heing financed by stu dent’s .activity, fund of the college. For the past months, students have been working at spare times for positions on the team The four who have been selected are: W. E. Adams; of Dunlap; John L. Harrison, of* Blanch; J. A. Lutz, Jr., of Newton, and C. Y. TilSoh,"'of Mars Hill.' ; ' h% A number of cash prizes including four scholarships are offered for the winners of the different classes. The actual w r eight of air over every square inch of the surface of the earth is nearly 15 pounds. NEW PHOTO OE MRS. MATE HOMMEL This is the latest picture of Mrs. Mate Hommel, who declared her three children were born by scientific methods when she was a resident of Detroit. Her state ment was made durine the hear What Medical Education Means in Modern Science 6y LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. DURING ALL the long period of the depression, medical students are among the few people who have had w |LaJ| ; Dr. Clendening who has not in ■, vestigated the subject hitherto, will find graphically represented the diffei’ent studies which the modern medical student has to go through before acquiring his degree. The elementary sciences, physics, chemistry and mathematics, are ex plained in outline. Then the biologic sciences of botany and zoology. The work of a plant is shown, with water rising from the root to the leaf and nutritious material manufactured by the leaf flowing back into the stem and trunk. ? ,The principles of hered ity—a good example Is the Roosevelt family tree —a sturdy and distin guished stock, side by side with the tree of a family which, in spite of its opportunities, has always been steeped in poverty and crime. These’ fundamental sciences, how ever, have to be studied before the student enters medical college. Dur ing his first year in scftooi Mr*. Mate Hommel ing of her suit in Los Angeles for an equal share of the $500,000 estate of her divorced husband, Dr. Wesley Hommel. She is shown at her home in Los An sreles he studies anatomy, and many mod- •" els in the Hall of Science illustrate anatomical teaching. Then, the cell and the microscopic structure of the body. Physiology and the action of drugs come in his second year, as do bacteriology, the science of germa and organisms causing infectious diseases, and pathology, the study of the appearance of disease in the body. In his third year, the study of methods of diagnosis, examination of the body, and its treatment, in the three great departments of medicine, surgery and obstetrics. Later, the specialties of the eye. ear, nose and throat, skin, diseases of children, orthopedic, rectal, urologi cal surgery, diseases of the nervous system and of the mind, are taught by bedside teaching and work in the clinic. Last, his year of interneshlp, where he comes in contact with pa tients more or less on his own re sponsibility. The aspirant for the medical life should certainly visit the Hall of Sci ence at the Century of Progress and get some idea of the long and ardu ous path that he must follow today before he is ready to practice, and decide whether he Is capable of the strain of that long, hard grind, EDITOR’S NOTE; Six pamphlets by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents in coin, for each, and a self-addressed envelope stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Sr, Logan Clendening, in care of thla paper. The pamphlets are; "Indigestion and Constipation," "Re ducing and Gaining," “Infant Feed ing.*’ “Instructions for the Treatment Diabetes,** Hygiene" and “The Csurshf the Hair and Skim" little interest In it. They have been so interest ed in acquiring know ledge of their subject. And fortunately the medica.. schools have suf fered compara tively little from economic strin j geney. In the Hall of Science at the Century of Prog ress, the layman Speaking.of Globe Trotters— •j * t. •.♦•yT* ** " s .... ** | CROSS WORD PUZZLE film mil w- IS Is ZZZZZWZ. ZMZZZZZ T™ m p 6 I i~ 21 ZZ 23 24- I ii “““ ?i j^3i is 34- 35“ 36 “ mm mii| IkfeH n I liMi ACROSS I—Warlike 7 Seed of a plant 9—Gas used for sterilizing » water 12— Root used in making perfnm*’ 13— rertaining to the poles 14— A brilliantly colored bird 15— Imitation ivory 17— Warm primary color <pl.) 18— Girl’s name 19— Color formed by combining two primary colors 20— River flowing into North sea 21— rert. to an ascu.s (hot.) 25—Last letter in Greek alphabet 29—Cicatrix 32 Urge on 33 Contrive 35—Loosened 37 Nobleman 38— Anything horn-shaped 39 Ribs 10—Servers tl—Doctrines of Certain sect DOWN l—Gloomy i—Seed ccveringj s—Replace t . 4—Kind of column 8— Russian sea B—Cataract In Cumberland. England 7—More sensitive NOTICE. Under and by virtue of authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed by the Vance Motor Company, (a corporation) dated the 20th day of September, 1928, of rec ord Book 151, at Page 171, Vance Re gistry, default having been made in payment of the debt thereby secured, and upon the request of the owner and holder thereof, the' undersigned will offer for sale at noon on Satur day, the 29th day of July, 1933, at the Court House Door in Vance County at public auction, for cash, to the highest bidder, the following describ ed real property: Begin at a stake on Perry Avenue, 100 feet from the intersection of said Avenue and Chestnut Streets, corner of lots Nos. 4 and 11, and run thence along said Avenue in a Southerly direction 150 feet to a stake; corner of lots Nos. 13 and 14; thence South j 67. West, 115 feet to a stake, corner B—Superciliousness 10— Nostrils 11— reople socially prominent I!—Dionysian revel 16—Tell 22 Strike-breakers (colloq ) 23 Water-way 24 Biblical mountain 26 City in India 27 Hard wood 28— Species 30—Taut 31 —Passageway# 34—Barbarian 36—Acknowledged standard Answer to previous puzzl# tremorlfooter likpl % p l p & _L I I t|STEKMEPjp O Ho WA, Ft djTE v__l e. d KeITC IjgNull §p*pg IgP v l L.N |s|l &e:plv^ra i d>e.p M N t |s|g|s J R E| S | of lots Nos. 7,8, 13, and 14; thenc® at right angles with' last line in a Northerly - direction 150 feet to a stake, corner of lots Nos. 2,3, 6 and 0.1; thence North 67 East 115 feet to a stake on Perry Avenue, the place of beginning, being lots Nos. 11, 12 and 13, as shown on the G. W. Knott property plat made December 30, 1919. Reference to said plat is hereby made. For further description see also deed from W. S. Richardson to Vance Motor Company, dated September 25th, 1928, and duly recorded in Re gister of Deeds office of Vance Coun ty, North Carolina. This the 28th. day of June, 1933. D. P. McDUFFEE, Trustee. Try The Want Ads