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PAGE FOUR xfNOEaSONOAILrDISPATGH Rutahllahwl August 12, 11*14. piihltnhMl Every Afternoon Except Sunday By HF.NIIF.RSON DISPATCH CO.. INC. Hi IOH Young Street. HENRY A. DENNIS, Pres, and Editor 51. L. FINCH, Sec-Trea-s aud Bus. Mgr. TELEPHON ES Editorial Office 600 Society Editor 010 Business Office 010 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 •ntitled »o use for republlcaUon ati oews dispatches credited to it or no! otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news pubhsned herein All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION PRICKS. Payable Siridiy In Advance. One Year *6.00 Six Months 2.50 Three Months * 6o Week (By Carrier Only) 1& Per Copy NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. Look at the printed label on your paper. The dale thereon shows when the 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 'he address on their paper changed, please state In their communication both the OLD and NEW address. National Advertising Representative* BRYANT, GRIFFITH ANO BRUNSON, INC., 9 East 41st. Street, N< w York. 230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago. 201 Devonshire Street, Boston. General Motors Bldg., Detroit. Walton Building, Atlanta. Entered ct the post office in Hender son, N. C., as second class mail matter 4fc« hf hrt.uA » *«kl H»T N»hl IIV: W> IMPORTANT MAN: In God have I put my trust: I will not be afraid what man can do unto me.—Psalm 56: 11. A COMPLETE DELIVERANCE: De liver me from blood guiltiness, O God thou God of my salvation; and my ton gue shall sing aloud of my righteous ness. —Psalm 51: 14. TODA Y TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIKS 1736 Richard Montgomery, the American Revolutionary general who fell before Quebec, born in Ireland. Died Dec. 31, 1775. 2760 —John Breckinridge, Kentucky Statesman, U. S. Senator, Attorney general, born near Staunton, Va. Died at Lexington, Ky., Dec. 14, 1806. 1833 —Conrad Sigmund Fritschel, not ed Lutheran clergyman-professor of the Wartburg Seminary of lowa for a full generation, born in Germany. Died at Dubuque, lowa, April 26, 1900. 1840 —Franklin L. Pope, noted elec trician, born at Great Barrington, Mass. Died there, Oct. 13. 1895. TODAY YIN HISTORY 1762—Touro Synagogue, Newport, R. 1., oldest Jewish house of worship in, country, dedicated. 1823—President Monroe’s message to Congress enunciated for the first time what is today known as “the Alonroe Doctrine." 1833—'First session of the 23rd Con gress began. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Lewis W. Haskell of Columbia, S. C. U. S. Consul General of Zurich, who retires this month, horn at Pastorii, Ark., 65 years ago. Dr. John L. Elliott of New York, leader of the Society for Ethical Cul ture, born at Princeton, 111. 65 years ago. * Dr. George R. Mitiot of the Harvard Medical School, born in Boston, 48 years ago. Dr. Walter F. Rittman of Pitts burgh, noted engineer, born in Ohio, 50 years ago. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE The person born on this day will have great executive ability. There will be an adaptable nature with good powers of imitation, enabling the na tive to display the faculties in such a degree that success and fortune are almost certain. With any reasonable aspects, considerable lame should he acquired. Governor Seeking Better Prices For State Peanut Crop Unli? Uixfwitft, Rm-nna In the Sip Walter Hotel HY .» €\ ItASKIonviM Raleigh, Dec. 2~Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus is in Washington today, together with Julian Wood, of Eden ton; Sam Clark, of Tarboro and N. G. Bartlett, of the Eastern Carolina Chamber of Commerce, conferring with Agricultural Adjustment Ad ministration officials in an effort 1o increase peanut prices. Administra tion officials have already indicated a willingness to stabilize prices on the basis of a loan value of two cents a pound, but the peanut growers in this State want the loan valu eincreas ed to two and three-fourths cents a pound. The fact that the Georgia peanut growers have already agreed to the 2 cents a pound loan value is going to make it difficult, to get. this . increase, it is feared. THE RUSSIA WE HAVE RECOGNIZED Soviet’s Modern Divorce Law I las Its Cruel Side, But People Are Satisfied n , 1 . tegs pjjj f jmk Mr •' This is a typical scene in a Moscow criminal court. (Edtor’s Note: This is the fifth of a series of instructive articles on Russia, as seen through the eyes of an American editor.) By EMILE GAUVREAU Editor of the New York Mirror Writ ten for Central Press and Daily Dispatch. New York, Dec. 2. —To understand the Russian divorce law it is neces sary to appreciate the somber Rus sian temperament. At heart, the Rus sian is melancholy but he is a born philosopher. Often he reasons as a child might reason. He spends much time wondering why things are as they are. When he finds a solution he uses it quickly, almost cruelly, but frankly. The honesty of it often shocks the rest of us who spend much of our lifetime beating about the bush. In the new Russia the law of the Soviet is treated with respect. Di vorce, for instance, is stripped of any sentimentality. Not being compelled to marry for support a Russian woman does not look upon divorce as a cal amity. Her sex has no bearing what ever on her salary. If she can do a man’s work, she receives a man’s pay. If divorce comes and she loses her husband, she can support herself. Men More Fickle In the majority of such cases, she remarries. Then men are more fickle than the women. A divorce clerk in Moscow informed me that, according to her statistics, husbands usually are the first to grow uneasy under the marriage halter. In a large number of cases the husband has conceived an affection for a woman who pleases him in a greater degree. T was lold of a case in Moscow, which .because of its unusual aspects illustrates the cruel side of the most modern divorce law in the world. It must be understood that in Russia the consent of either party is not nec essary to effect a divorce. Wife’s Ordeal A successful engineer, who had mar tied at an early age, found himself unsuited to his wife in many respects. In intellect he had grown beyond her, though she was devoted to him. They lived in one room in the Russian cap ital where apartments are almost im possible to find. His wife was re conciled to the inevitable and when he informed her he had decided to divorce her she accepted her fate with grim philosophy. Any protest on her part would have been futile. The engineer procured his Bronchitis in Elderly May Be Due to Infection By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. ELDERLY PEOPLE are not so likely to have acute colds in the chest, but they are more likely than anybody to have a chronic cough !)••. Clendening years. The in fected material from the nose drops constantly, day and night, into the back of the throat, and finally be gins to infect the entire bronchial * rf*e. It has been urged that the glottis, or voice box. is so sensitive to for eign material that it would protect the bronchi from this sort of inva sion Kill when it is remembered 1 bat the assault from these infected droplets goes on day and night, that when tlje person is sleeping or snor ing the glottis is less sensitive, and l hat sudden sucking actions will draw material into the chest, it must he admitted that it is possible for auch extension to occur. For many years the condition may remain as a simple inflammation of the bionchial tubes. Finally, how ever, their walls begin to weaken, ano wit h l lie loss of elasticity which cornea wdh old age. each tube nr ay wuien io«o a little Douefe, fS'ji we HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISFAVOR SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, i 933 freedom with the usual celerity. He lived with his wife in the same samll room. She earned her living and sup ported herself. Because of the crowd ed condition of the city she could not readily find another place of abode. With true Russian stoicism she mask ed her personal feelings for her di vorced husband for whom she still cared deeply. Brings Home Bride Some weeks after the divorce .while they still lived together in their one room under a strange, impersonal re lationship the engineer informed his former wife that on the next day he would re-marry. Finding it impossible to establish himself in another apart ment (at times it requires many months in Moscow to locate a single room) he announced he would bring his bride to the single room they were compelled to share. The divorced wife made no com plaint. The words that were in her heart were muffled by a silent de spair. But yet, it was all legal. It was the law and it could be done. If she had so willed it, she could have pro cured a divorce under the same cir cumstances, she she loved this man whom she had married when they were not much more than children. Perhaps she piled herself with a kind of impersonal pity, not accusing any one. There was only one good thing about it, liberty, the freedom at least to suffer after her own fashion. Ends Alimony Evil The bride appeared the next even ing. The martial bed was curtained off and the divorced wife slept on a cot on the other side of the room. Later she found another place to live Wife P reserver* fifTl iJLdIpSIM Make French dressing in quanti- Nes. pour into a bottle, cork and store in the refrigerator or other cool place. It will keep for a month, and serve a s a base for a variety of dressings. have the condition of bronchiectasis or dilatation of the finer bronchia) tubes. Pi s accumulates in these pouches, and the condition is then extremely annoying, as well as detri mental to health. Absorption occur? and the patients lose weight, the skin becomes white and clammy, and the ends of the fingers enlarge in a curi ous way and are called “drumstick fingers.” The proper treatment is by pre vention, to clear up the nasal infec tion early in life, and the greatest lesson of the disease is to remind those in middle age that such treat ment is necessary. Another condition which Is often called bronchitis in late middle-aged or elderly people, consists in heart failure with congestion of the lung. I remember once making the mistake of prescribing over the telephone for a patient who said that she had a cold in the chest. For two or three weeks ! kept prescribing cough medi cines for her, which didn’t do her any good, and finally I came to my senses and demanded that I be al lowed to make an examination. I found that she had an irregular heart, with heart failure and congestion of the lungs as a result, and it was this congestion, with the exudation of fluid into the air sacs, which caused the cough which had been called a cold in the chest. 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 Dr. Logan Clendening. in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: ’lndigestion and Constipation." "Re ducing and Gaining." “Infant Feed ing." “Instructions for ttie Treatment of Diabetes," ’’Feminine Hygiene ' and "The Cart of this Bair and Skin whi&h is some times called “chronic bron chitis”. and per haps more prop erly called “bron chiectasis”. The origin of this condition is not perfectly clear, but in most cases I believe it is due to a long continued infec tion in the nose and the nasal sinuses which has been neg lected for many in and continued her work. Such stories are unusual, grim enough for the art of Gorki and Tol stoi. They may be difficult for Ameri cans to understand, but, yet such a law, cruel as it may be at times to accomplish its purpose, which is gen erally good, prevents a woman from hounding a man for the rest of his life for alimony. That piece of hypo crisy cannot be found in the Russian system. Affair at State College Next Friday Night Will Be Big Event ilnilf uapflim Bureaa. in the Sir Waiter Hotel. BY J. CJ. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, Dec. 2.--Not just a cos mopolitan gathering but also a hetero geneous group may be the term ap plied to the crowd due to assemble in Raleigh next Friday evening when North Carolina editors stage their an nual Governor’s Dinner in the big dining room at State College. On two previous occasions, in 1931 and again in 1932, makers of State newspapers assembled for a confab with their Governor and talked about things that make for State Progress. Before Governor O. Max Gardner fin ished his term he had most intimate contact with State newspaper folk and it is quite evident that he was re sponsible for arousing their full en thusiasm just as he himself received encouragement from them. On previous occasions discussions centered around the Live-at-Home Program, emphasized so emphatical ly by Governor Ehringhaus who was present at the 1932 Editors’ Dinner. The theme, of the main thought, so to speak, at the 1933 gathering will be the recovery and reconstruction plans which both President Roosevelt and Governor Ehringhaus have im pressed on the minds of loyal Tar Heels. The utilization of waste lands, the employment of idle labor, the tuning of idle mchinery, and the revival of latent talei\ts, are due to be mention ed by the Governor, according to ad vance reports of what he is planning to say. A discussion of “The Passing Shadows’’ will not doubt indicate that North Carolina’s alert Gover nor is foreseeing brighter days ahead. The State Department of Agricul ture, the Extension Division, the De partment of Conservation and De velopment, an dthe Employment Ser vice, through recent reports show that The Old North State has stepped along quite actively since “The New Deal” came into being on March 4, 1933. ft is significnat that little is heard nowdays about “The Depression.” In Eastern North Carolina, where tobac co is bringing higher prices, someone may ask “Wbat Depression?” if the subject is raised. Those “starving ci tizens” that relief agencies thought about last winter evidently have van ished and so Dean I. O. Schaub of State College probably will point out on Friday evening, most of the three million or more live Tar Heels seem to show little suffering from lack of f ood. , Not all the editors’ program wili be serious. There will be a gridiron ses sion under the direction of J. L. Horne, publisher of the Rocky Mount Telegram, in which Tar Heels of prominence will be satirized by news paper people who know them well. The details seem to be a dead secret and surprises are anticipated. Finding the champion liar of the State will be the task of Don Elias of the Asheville Citizen-Times. He has selceted six candidates and they will do their stuff before the distinguished gathering. The musical feature of the event will be under direction of C. D. Kuts chinski, recently appointed director of the State College Band. His fifty men will present a bright and snappy program of band music and musical specialties. Another unique feature will be a program of fancy dance numbers con ducted by Miss Louise Williams and her well-known Raleigh Studio of Dance. Miss Williams, herself, is con spicuously adept in terpsichorean art and will be on the program. According to John A. Park, chair man of the program committee, all events will be timed and carried out strictly according to program. Auto Plate Sales Very Satisfactory Friday, First Day Dally Disunion Rnrena, la tne Sir Walter Hotel. ar j v haskervili, Raleigh, Dec. 2 —The sale of auto mobile license plates on the opening day of the new licnese period yester day was regarded as unusually satis factory by Commissioner of Revenue A. J. Maxwell and Director L. S. Harris, of the Motor Vehicle Divi sion. For while the total amount of sales yesterday was not yet avail able this afternoon, since not all the 45 branch offices had been heard from, the reports generally showed that many more people had purchas ed their license plates the first day than had been expected. One reason for the large number the first day, however, was ascribed to the fact that many people had un doubtedly been waiting unlil Decem ber 1 to buy new cars, so they would not have to buy two licenses. “If the sale of licenses only keeps up as well as they have started, we should have the greater part of them sold by January 1 and thus 2* aye enough money on hand for the Sta e io pay its January deM P a y ,tien 8 without borrowing, as the governor hopes we can do,” Director Harr s said. A New Day! (.'aurteau The XlitVouuuH /’it*# sSefilled They Continue To Be Flood* ed With Unemployed Looking for Work Dolly ninpatob R*rt>4» In ll* e sir Wtillcr Elut*l. «▼ J v AtASHKnvn.t.. Raleigh, Dec. 2. —Reemployment of fices throughout the State continue to be flooded with unemployed who are registered in the hope of getting work on Civil Works projects, with the result that registrations of un placed unemployed have increased to more than 75,000 on the basis of re ports received up to today. State Di rector C. M. Waynick of the National Reemployment Service, said today. When all reports are in for the pre sent week he expects the total num ber of unplaced registrants to amount to between 80.000 and 85,000. Total placements reported so far last week amount to 1308, while indi indications are that the number may run as high as 1500 when all offices are heard from. This figure does not include any Civil Works placements, since Civil Works Administrators in the various counties could not begin drawing labor for Civil Works pro jects from the Reemployment offices until after December 1. For up to that time the quota of 34,000 had to be drawn from what were formerly the Emergency Relief rolls. From now on however, all of the laibor for Civil Works projects must be obtained from the Reemployment offices in the va r!ous counties. Director Waynick point ed out. “There were a few counties this week in which the quota from the re lief rolls had been used up and which accordingly were forced to obtain some of their Civil Works labor from our offices, but not many,” Waynick said. “But from now on, all of the Civil Works labor will have to be ob tained from our offices’’ Although the quota of workers which are to be furnished for Civil Works projects by the Reemployment Service amounts to only 34,000, Di rector Waynick believes that the ser vice will ;be able to place many more than this in jobs, since all contractors holding Public Works contracts must get their labor through these offices also. A large number of private em ployers are also using these offices more and more, Waynick pointed out. Wile Preservers * Dutr# ma u.t»u on rep m is, eras stove saves fuel, because it can be heated by one burner. It roasts meat and bakes cake and bread wltJ» less overheating of the kitchen Wife Preservers To remove iodine stains from a printed dress, moisten with rub bing alcohol, then rinse tn luke warm water and wash m mild *a«.p*uds. Probable Route of Lindberghs -- AZORES VORK ir vv ■ -T 7 / / *. <? t i ?-s tip II // • rv*yf. , Cana“ * W A ron . \ **” v *.* CAPE vr wo' £■ SOUTH / L~aher.ica vl The probable route of Colonel and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh or. their homeward return, according to plans announced by the Colonel at the Azores, would follow line shown on map via Madiera, Canary Islands, Lisbon, Cape Verde, across the South Atlantic to Pernambuco and up the coast on the regular Pan-American Airways route to New York, (Central Press) CROSS WORD PUZZLE MHpnaaeaHHßH| ■■■«■■■■■■ \ £345 Q» 1 & S iO ll id 13 IA “ IS IG ” ‘ ' \i ” 75* ' 20 " zs - 2-3 — 27 2S r* _ 35 ffc" 37 UUr-T 41 [42 43 "“‘"“■■Plla 4sl '" r~ br~ I - 4-e, <43 50 tejsi 52 53 54 5s 57 jp^fe S 3 eo Gl ■■ G 2 * 64 35 G 6 f I _l S 3" ~ | lfl j L - J ACROSS I— East Indian game (pi.) 6—Boy head dress 9 Eating implements 14—Prevent 15—Pronoun 16— Think 17— Water barricade 18— Verb 19—To fee again 20—Before 21—Gyrates - 24—A newt 25—Loose ends 27—Slips away 29—Father 30— Auto device 31— God’s creature 34—Standard of judging 38— Card game 39 Writing tablet 10— In debt ll Leaving no will «4 —Cautious 46—Nipple# 17— Hack 18— Performance (mus.) 61 — Restoration 65—Friend (Fr.) 60—See-saws 68— Hasten 59 —Try to vomit 81—To clear 62 — Roman magistrate 04—Concur 65—A period 06 —Lease anew 07 —Chinese coins 08—Animal lair 09—First principals DOWN 1— Pointed stakes 2 Public 3—Starting bar 4—Crude metal 6—Pert, to the breast bone 6 Layers 7 Luminous emanation 8 — Past 9—Abandon 10— Unclose (poet ) id —Observances 12—Cutting tool 13—Clans 22—Uneven 23—Exult 26 —Suffix, relating to 23—Bt 30— Cther people’s children 31— Adopted son of Mohammed 32 No (Fr.) 33—Obtained 34 — Caused to rattle 35 Electrical particle 36 — Possess 37 French marshal 39 42 And so forth (abbr.) 43 Boils 44—Incense burners 45—Fear 47—Pronoun 48 — Four grains 49 Greek letter 60— Saltpeter 61— Fortification 62 A time 63 Was in pain 64 — Lists of candidate# 67—Fatigue 60—That (FT* 63—English river Antwer to previous puz/l* l Isa £. £*. Si 3ls l— G htc. gAo a fe ijj^ Ipt £ f hr Is Pp o nl'i leL Ji NEMemdft h