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PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH RfttfthllMlMHJ Auff’iHt 12, 11114. Publtahcd Every AHernoon Exijept Sunday By HENDERSON DISPATCH CO., INC. At 100 Voung Street. HENRY A. DENNIS, Pres, and Editor M. L. FINCH, See-Treos and Bus. Mgr. telephones Editorial Office 800 Society EciOor 010 Business Office CIO The Henderson Daily Dispatch is a member of the Associated Press, Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation and tht* North Carolina Press Association. The Associated Press la exclusively antitied to use for republicaUon all news dispatches credited to it or not atherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein All rights of publication of special dispatches herein arc also teaerved. ' SUBSCRIPTION PRICES. Payable Strictly In Advance. On* Year 1 5 - 0 ® Six Months 2.50 Three Months l‘Bo Week (By Carrier Only) 15 Per Copy NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. Look at the rrinted label on your paper. The date thereon show.# when the subscription expires. Forward your money in ample time for re newal. Notice date on label carefully and if not ccirect, please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address on their paper changed, please state in their communication both the OLD and NF.W address. National Advertising Representative* BRYANT, GRIFFITH AND BRUNSON, INC., 9 East 41st Street, Now York. 230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago. 201 Devonshire Street, Boston. General Motors Bldg., Detroit. Walton Building, Atlanta. Entered et the post office in Hender son, N. C., as second class mail matter MIV roa —4 *«!»*»»*» atlwi.uii li|i) uti «j >»i ~h«Jo ll*-aa A GREAT PRAYER: Let. dot them that wait on tiioe, O Lord God of hots be ashamed for my sake; let not those that seek thee be confound ed for my sake O God of Israel.— Psalm 69.6. fellowship of [ * *, W Da ili) % Demotion jig Prepared by Dr Charles £ Jefferson . , for Commission on Evangelism and Devotional Life A— r- Ct WEDNESDAY, February 21— (Read Matthew VI: 5-8) “When Thou Hast Shut. Thy Door” Insincerity is a sin which easily be sets us and the Master guards us against it by serious warnings. There is a constant temptation to convert prayer into a performance. This is the special peril which haunts all whose business it is to conduct public worship. There are times when it is good both for ourselves and for oth ers that we should pray in public. But publicity subjects us to a new set of dangers. It is easy to think more of people than of God. But as soon as the people slip in between us and God prayer becomes a show. Most of our praying should be! done in private. The) inner chamber is the best room ir the house for prayer and the door must be shut. The soli tude should be com plete. It is only then that the heart dares to be itsell and to speak out boldly the whole story of its woe and sin. Prayer at its highest in confi dential!. $t is a conversation between the soul and God with no third per son looking on or listening in. Prayer: O Thou who art our pro tector, our refuge and our fortress, we would shut ourselves in with Thee. In the time of trouble Thou dost hide us in Thy pavilion, in the secret of Thy tabernacle Thou dost hide us. Thou dost set us up upon a rock. Amen. New York, Feb. 21-^Randomusing: I wonder about the young boys and girls who are coming to New York in these days . . . What are they liko? ... Do they tread the crooked street of Greenwich Village, eyes astir with strange excitements, looking for places to camp preparatory to the siege of Manhattan? ... Or are they quiet, decorous, puritanlal—like tbe sub-deb crowd I hear about? Ten years ago young folk arriving or McDougal street or Horatio; little little flats in West Thirteenth street, here wanted Freedom . . . They took remodeled places, wallk-ups with* Vienna, The Watch Tower Os Europe, Becomes International Powder Box * % All Eyes on Austria as Nations Await Out come of Crisis Whit Burnett, formerly an Amer oan newspajier correspondent In Vien na. Is an authority on central Eu rope. lie was a witness of the I'i'rim er “putsch” in 1931. He has written numerous analytical articles on Aus tria and the Balkans, and while in Vienna founded the magazine “Story’* which he has since transported to Ne%v York. In a series of three articles of which this Is the third. Whit Burnett takes the llde off the Austrian elvH war and explains what It Is all about. The civil war, he says, goes hack to the 'Treaty of Versailles and the disunion which resulted. By WHIT BURNETT Noted Foreign Correspondent Written Especially for Central Press and Daily fMspattth. New York, Feb. 20. —With red Vien na red no more, the fifteen-year-old advance thrust of political experiment in the conservative body of Europe jpolltics has been withdrawn. But as the dagger is withdrawn is not the. wound more deadly? Today all Europe gaze* upon the war-struck body of Austria, counts •the dead, and counts the cost. No matter how fast events may move, whether toward Austrian 1 Nazi fleaticn, another European war, or merely more localized civil strife, all Europe has something now to worry over. Great “If” of Europe Austria is the great If of Europe. If Austria goes Nazi ,what then? » If France backs up the fascist-fa green binds and mauve-tileld baths. Tin* wastebaskets outside the door of mornings were full of synthetic gin bottles . . • They were the last of the post-war revolt and they knew it. Now things arc different . . ’ Girls go to the Y. W. C. A., where., they must register in a big book if they want to stay out after 10 p. m. . . . I looked at the big book there re cently and there were few names in It . . . The reaction is in full tide now —the reaction against reaction . . The nudist movement is gaining re cruits among the youngsters, hut they are unconscious of any collision with convention in joining. They want sound, healthy bodies and sunburns and they Won’t stand for tomfoolery in the process of getting them THE IHKING CRAZE Then, too, the out-door groups, the hikers, the bird watchers and flower sniffers have ballooned into huge so* cieticn . . . Every morning, at un • holy hours, the trails of Westchester and Jersey echo to the shouts of the clubsters . . . Even the farmers of these regions, once resentful of the waste paper atrewn about and spare banana peels, rejuoice that the cur rent groups are full of social spirit and whenever they hurl a peanut shell they call the shot ... I know one young man who resigned a newspaper job because he was full of disappro val for the antics of the riotous gray beards among whom he worked; they tell me that Sunday school classes have increased rapidly during the past year. The increase of the army of stamp collectors fits in with all this . . . The younger brothers and sisters of those of us who gather ash trays from foreign bars now pore over the stamp books for past the age at which the hobby is likelly to be most appealing . . . The recent stamp show at Rockefeller City brought out so many thousands that special police were needed to regiment the milling philatelists . . . Three request* this week have reached this reporter: “Do you get letters from foreign countries, and if so will you save me the stamp. I graduate from Princeton this year etc., etc.” SIDESHOW By Clyde West Wo haven’t heard much about, the tariff sinco Mr. Payne and Mr. Aid rich built a wall around us that was so high if anybody wahted to buy any thing from us he had to use an air plane to get to one of our "barement bargain” counters. Repeal has helped. Many a man oan now get lit who previously had to turn out the light and go to sleep. La Belle Prance calls her Fascists “Prancists” probably because it sound more feminine and the female of the species is more deadly than the male. The Eternal Triangle. Judge: “What do you know about this woman?” Defendant: “I never saw her before in my life.” Woman: “That’s almost the truth judge. He's my hurfband.” Somebody has discovered that all the big figures in Hollywood are not on the movie payrolls. That Smithsonian rooster without wings is probably the one the hens have been laying for. A Gail For Old Uuole Ned- With the price of cotton rising In Iho south, it’s time to lay down the fiddle and the bow and pick up the shoved and the hoe. Every now and then we hear re ports that somebody in Washington is about to resign and later we find out that somebody only died. I HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1934 ißk > *8 ■ HHPpH Sgt « frJln J| 9k vored Heimwehr, what docs fascist Italy do? If the Heimwehr of Austria go inio complete control soon, what do the Viennese Jews do? If the Germans come down, like a wolf on the fold, what says the Lit tle Entente? If Austria is absorbed by Germany as it might well be now that the chestnuts of Austrian Socialists have .been picked out of the fire by Doll fuss and the fascist-like Heimwehr, Germany becomes a new power in Central Europe, and repeats the old menace of the “push to the Balkans and the East.” Shot* in tho Arm If Germany so pushes to the East and the Balkans, France will imme diately see her little Entente powers in the Balkans threatened; and Italy will be nervous at a Deutschland at the Brenner pass. If France backs the Heimwehr, which also seems probable, Austria may continue its independence for years, almost as it was, the indepen dence of the old shots in l the arm from French loans— almost the only thing what has kept, it alive since the World War ended. Whatever the outcome, the crisis in Austria has demonstrated the for lorn fact. that, even Austria now, the last of the peace treaty dismembered states, has finally given urp its hope in peaceful waiting and praying to the League of Nations. To the very last, begore the guns went off, Aus tria was still looking to the League, although none of the great powers of TODAY TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1795—Antonio Lopez de Santo Ana, dictator, president, soldier, outstand ing figure in Mexican history, born. Died June 20, 1876. 1801 —John Henry Newman, famed English Cardinal, author of “Lead, Kindly Light,” born. Died Aug. 11, 1890. (1815 —Jean Louis Meissonier, famed French painter, born. Died Jan. 31, 1891. 1816—Ebcnezer R. Iloar, Massachu setts jurist, Attorney-General under Grant, Congressman, born at Con cord, Mass. Died there, Jan. 31, 1895. 1821—Elizabeth R. Thompson, a not ed and beloved American philanthro pist of her day, born at Lyndon, Vt. Died at Littleton, N. H., July 20, 1899 1824—Mother Angela (Eliza Maria Gillespie), Catholic educator, Super ior of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, Civil War nurse, born near Browns ville. Pa. Died March 4, 1887. 1832—Louis Maurer, artist-designer and last of the noted Currier and Ives (New York) artists, born in Germany. Died in ’ New York City, July 19, 1932. 1855—Alice Freeman Palmer, pro fessor and president of Wellesley Col lege, University of Chicago dean, lead er in college education for women, horn at Colesville. N. Y. Died in France, Dec. 6, 1902. TODAY IN DISTORT 1677—Benedictua de Spinoza, phil osopher, died at The Hague, aged 44. 1878—First telephone directory is sued by the New (Haven Telephone Company. 1885— Washington National Monu ment dedicated in national capital. 1916— I Great German attack on Ver dun began. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Admiral Arthur L. Willard, U. S. N., who today reaches the statutory age of retirement, born at Kirksville, Mo., 64 years ago. Dr. Augustus O. Thomas, former superintendent of Maine schools, gen eral-secretary of the Worlld’s Asso ciation, of Educational Associations, born in Illinois, 71 years ago. Otto 11. Kahn of New York City, banker and patron of the arts, born in Germany, 67 years ago. Rabbi Jonah B. Wise of New York son of a noted Rabbi, born In Cincinnati. 53 years age Leonard Merrick, noted English au thor, horn 70 years ago, TODAY’S HOROSCOPE Tills dav gives a nature apparently placid and calm, but with an under current of feeling that may tend to ward the sensuous. Adversity or a little opposition may awaken a desire that will overcome obstacles. Your disposition Is by no means as weak as it often appears from the indlf * Western Europe were interested in it. At Lesson Learned. ► The Social Democrats, who have > learned the same lesson in Austria that, they learned, also too late, in . Germany, that, is, that after coop eration with jin exiting government that government in a crisis imme • diately outlaws the (Socialists, may i have to go underground a they have t in Germany. With the Socialist mayor of Vienna out of the picture, with the party it self outlawed and its fighting mem bers due to stand trial and perhaps •be shot for treason, it is still pro blematic whether they would corn,bine underground with the Communists. The Socialists have never been ex tremely militant reds, in the Russian sense. They have been parliamentary revolutionists, although the civil war showed they had not. lost the use of their arms even after they had been forced a year ago by the national gov ernment to abandon military weapons and organizations and go under cover into sporting societies. The anti-semitism of the eimwehr in Austria has never been so pro nounced as that of the Hitler Nazis in Germany, In Vienna this would be extremely embarrassing. The reason is that ,very very much of Vienna is Jewish. Even the owner of one of the Heimwehr sympathizing newspaper.*, the Wiener Journal is a Jew, In Central Europe Vienna has a name. It is called the Wiatch Tower of Europe. When -the watch tower crumbles. Who is to say what hap pens next? ference to affairs that interest the average person. Habeas Corpus Os Bankers Thursday (Continued from Page One.) J. Will Pless to appear for the State in opposing the making of the writ permanent. So the Brevard men may get into the State Prison before the Luke Leas. In spite of the Statewide campaign for sympathy the four men have teen carrying on for several weeks, the re cords show that they were duly con victed of conspiracy by a jury of 12 men, that, they were first sentenced to pay a fine and to serve a term in prison by Judge Hoyle Sink. When this sentence was reversed by the State Supreme Court on the grounds that they could not be born fined and imprisoned, Judge Nat Townsend sen tenced them to prison and did not impose a fine, stating later that he was afraid that if he imposed only a fine, they would all take a pauper’s oath, evade payment of the fine and go free. He diu say that if and when they restored $30,000 to the county that he would recommend a parole. But they did not make restitution of this money to Transylvania county, keeping strings on it with which to jerk it back if they failed to get paroles before they even started serv ing their sentences. So the governor refused to consider granting a parole. HOT, DRY WEATHER KILLS INSECT PESTS College Station, Raleigh, Feb. 21. The unusually hot and dry weather last year resulted in a marked de crease in the infestations of North Carolina’s maojr insect pests, accord ing to C. H. Brannon, extension en tomologist. a,t State College. However, the work of fighting in sects was handicapped by the fact that the county agents could not de vote the customary amount of time to demonstrations while carrying out the emergency work of the AAA* pro grams for crop adjustments. The boll weevil was so scarce in many sections that demonstrations: had to be discontinued for lack of weevils. The red spider and other cot ton pests were also scarcer than or dinarily. The tobacco flce-beetle caused lit tle damage to plant beds, but consid erable injury was done in the fields. A small midge, affecting tobacco plant beds, wrecked much damage in eastern Carolina. .! I ffl ft l-JlAAoived.* jHH| ssusw-s'^|rvag <* M ’ ■•mAfalaiß****** f The Landing Field! CROSS WORD PUZZLE r* 5" “ ™ s" c" "™ 7 s" ?"" »4 is 1C 17 l£> !i ii“ „iii iHiliJii; -_-i- -ii ‘.fcj Jl I IT bkR-|-Ei ACROSS l—Pressing t —To reply 10 — Skill in applying knowledge 11— Goddess of dawn 33—A Greek poet 14— A bay 15 — Reptile 17— Worthless leaving 19— Girl’s name 20 — Resembling rosea 21— Hearing organ 22 Soft and tender 23 To free 24 — A bay 25 : —Not fit or suitable 25 — Accomplish 29 — Doctor of laws 30 — A Michigan county 31— Musical note 3a —Preparation for raising dough 37—Like 39 Idle chatter 41 — Pertaining to the kidneys 42 Parcel of land 44 —Ladles out with a bucket 40 — a sticky substance (Si.) 47 — Female sheep 48 — Tendon 49 An age 50— Yale 52 — A number 53 Light knock 5-1 —Distributes 55 —(.’allege heads • DOWN 2 Pouring 3 One of a privileged class of nobles in Spain New Bus Schedule Leave Henderson Tor: Durham at 6:35 a. m., 11 a. m., 2:40 p. m., 4:40 p. m., 8:55 p. m. Raleigh at 1:40 a. m., 6:35 a. m., 11:05 a. m., 2:40 p. m., 8:55 p. m. Richmond, Washington and New York at 12:45 a. m. 5 :45 a. m., 11:35 a. m. ( 3:20 p. m., 7:30 p. m. East Coast Stages Union Bus Station Phone 18 4 A diminutive suffix 5 High adult male voice «—Requested 7 Note of the diatonic seal* 8— A lover 9 To place a car on rail* 12 —Fertile spot in a desert 14— A reasoned exposition of principles 15— Senior (abbr.) 16 — Printer’s measure Is —Transmission of knowledge 26 Post meridian 27 — Roofing material . 28 —Period of time 82—Reign 34 Erbium (abbr.; 35 A sea 36 Prys into things 38 — Scattered 39 Manner of going on legs (pi.) 40— To mix together 43 Derived from Greek far 44 A degree 45 — Compass point 51—A state (abbr.) 53 —'Tantalum (abbr.) Answer to previous pusxle INSURANCE—RENTALS REAL ESTATE—BONDS AL. B. WESTER Phono 130^1—Office 115 Young st, Npim This is notice 1.0 all persons that Will Crocker, who was sentenced t.o a term of fifteen months on the Roads at the June Term, 1933, for an assault with a deadly weapon, will apply to the Governor of the State of North Carolina, through the Com missioner of Paroles, for a parole. All persons opposing the granting of this parole will please forward their ob jections to the Commissioner of Pa roles, Raleigh, N. C., immediately. This the 2l.st day of February, 1934. WILL CROCKER K.VF.OIJTOR’S NOTICE. Having qualified as Executrix of ih<s estate of Henry Perry, late of Vance County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at rlendreson, N. C., on or before the 15th day of February, 1935, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate •will please make immediate (Payment. This 12th day of February, 1931. (Mrs.) JANIE HALL PERRY, Executrix of the Estate of Henry Perry. FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Under and by virtue or authority contained in a certain deed of trust executed and delivered on the 21st day of October, 1926, by LaFayette Hicks and wife to R. S. McCoin, Trustee, said deed of trust duly re corded in Register’s Office of Vanca County, N. 0., in book 140, page 175, and that certain judgment substitut ing Al. B. Wester Trustee in lieu or R. S. McCoin, said judgment duly re corded in book 166, page 273, Regis ter’s Offioe of Vance County, N. C„ default having been made in the pay ments secured in said deed of trust, and at the request of the holder of same, I shall sell, by public auction, to the highest ‘bidder for cash, at the Court House I>oor in Henderson, N. C., at 12:00 o’clock, M., on Saturday, March 3, 1934, the following described property, to-wit: First Tract: Begin at an iron stake, Eatons corner on. Sherman St., Hen derson, N. C., rim thence along Sher man St,. N. 55 1-4 W. 50 ft .to an iron stake, Nancy Hamp corner; thence along hen lino to an iron stake, in Lassiter thence S. 59 14 E. 5° ft. to an iron stake, Eaton corner in Lassiter line; thence along said Eaton line S. 37 1-4 W. 160 1-2 ft. to the beginning, being lot deeded from R. H. Hood to Al. B. Wester, recorded in book 141, page 230. Register’s Office of Vance County, N. C., and from Al B. Wester and wife to LaFayette Hicks and Audio Hicks, by deed <>f oven date herewith. Second Tract: Begin at an iron pin in J. A. Harris lino and run S. 18 E 7.20 chs. to a stone, corner of lot N>>. 9; thence & 78 W. 13.20 chs. to a stone, corner of lot No. 10; thence N 6.65 chs. to a stone, corner of lot No. 10; thence S. 78 E. 3.63 chs. to a stone in the Henderson road; thence along the road N. 3 14 W. 2 chs to a stone in J. A. Harris line; thence. N. 75 E. 14.55 chs. to the place of h" ginning, containing 9.4 acres, if ing lot No. 11 in the division of land of Thos. B. Hicks allotted to LaFayci te Hicks by deed of J. H. Thomas and John H. Bullock, commissioners, and duly recorded in Register’s Office ot Vance County, N. C. This the 30th day of January, 1031 AL. B. WESTER, Trustee. 31-7-14-21