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PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH Established August 12, 1014. Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday By HEN DEB SON DISPATCH CO., INC. at 100 Young Street. hkmry A. DENNIS, Pres, and Editor M. L. FINCH, Sec-Treas and Bus. Mgr. telephones Editorial Office 500 Society Editor 610 Business Office 610 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 all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news publisned herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. 8 U BSCKIPTION BRICES. Payable Strictly in Advance. On* Year $5.00 Six Months • 2.50 Three Months 1-50 Week (By Carrier Only) 15 Per Copy 05 NOTICE TO SUBSCUUSEUS. Look at the printed label on your paper. Tbe date 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 the address on their paper changed, please state in their communication both the OLD aud NEW address. National Advertising Representative* BRYANT, GRIFFITH AND BRUNSON, INC., W East 41st Street, New York. N. Michigan Ave., Chicago. 20i Lf.iuuoliUc General Motors Bldg., Detrou. Walton Building, Atlanta. En'ercd ct the post office in Hender son, N. C., as second class mail matter C.-IRIST FOR ALL-ALL TOR CHRIST th— ><tl » W■A* Nil« H|it f ytV—IIV: HR THE FEAST OF HARMOY: Better it; a dry morsel, and quietness there with. than house full of sacrifices with strife.—Proverbs 17:1. felloroslxtp of [ * Trayeio * IT Daily yT Lenten Deuotion Prepared by Dr Charles f. Jefferson for Commission on Evangelism and Devotional Life ~V _J_ Copyrisht:l934 MONDAY, March 12— i Read Matthew XVIII: 28-35) “Who Is This That Forgiveth Sins?” We have the tight to prayer for forgiveness. The Son of God says so It is one of the most amazing of all our privileges. It seems too good to he true. Not only may we ask to be forgiven but we can be sure that our request will be granted. There is nothing concerning which certainty is more important than forgiveness. Not to know we are forgiven is to leave us in hell. To ask God again mid again through months or years to forgive us for the same old sins is to doubt Him and to rob us of all the joy of forgiveness. It is because we are so reluctant to forgive others that we find it hard to believe that God forgives us That there is such a reality in God’s universe as full and f r e e forgiveness everv man can find out for himself by forgiving. Ts man can forgive there- fore God can forgive and will. Jesus was positive and emphatic that every sinner can secure forgiveness pro vided he makes himself capable of receiving it. Player: O Thou God of compas sion, help us to believe in Thy pity. We have been told that though our sins be as scarlet they shall he as white as snow and that though they he red like crimson, they shall be as wool. Help us to bclievo it. Amen. iocav lonA VS V N NIV KKSAItI MS Hixf) Geotge Berkeley, celebrated English philosopher, born. Died Jan. 14. 1753. 1713 John G. E. Heckewelder, Mo ravian missionaiv to the Indians 6f Ohio, recorder of Indian life, born in England. Died at Bethlehem, Pa, Jan. 31, 1823. 1775 —Henry Eckford, noted New York shipbuilder, maker of ships for the American navy, born in Scotland. Died in Turkey, Nov. 12, 1832. 1781—Anson G. Phelph, philantho pic New York merchant, was devoted part of his annual income to charity horn at Simsbury, Conn. Died Nov. 30. 1853. 1705 -William Lyon Mackenzie, not ed Canadian journalist and political reformer, born in Scotland. Died in Toronto. Aug. 28. 1861. 1801 -Joseph Francis. New York builder, designer and inventor of life boats and life-saving apparatus, hon ored the world over, horn in Boston. Died Ma.v 10. 1893 1834—<100 vears a trot Hillarv Abner Heiheit, Alabama lawyer. Confederate soldier, congressman, Secretary of the Navy, 1893-97, Washington law yer, born at Laurens, 4s. C. Died at Tampa, Fla., March 6, 1.94,9. 1835-Simon Newcomb, famed Navy and Johns Hopkins astronomer, born in Nova Scotia. Died in Washington, D. C., July 11, 1909. TODAY IN HISTORY 1804 John Pickering, Federal Judge for the District of New Hamp shire, removed from office after im peachment trial before U. S. Senate. 1888- -Beginning of the great bliz zard which smothered the North At lantic coast and by which all bliz zards since have been measured. 1912 —Founding of the Girl Scout movement in America when Mrs. Ju liette Low and eight girls in Sc?van nah. Ga. t took Girl Scout oath. 1932—Ivar Kreuger, Swedish “match king," and arch-swindler, committed suicide. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS U. S. Senator Arthur R. Robinson of Indiana, born in Ohio, 53 years ago. Adolph S. Ochs of New York City, noted newspaper publisher, born in Cincinnati, 76 years ago. Maj. Gen. George S. Simonds, U. S. A., born at Cresco, lowa. 60 years ago. Anette A. Adams of Son Francisco, a noted lawyer, onetime assistant at torney-general of the U. S„ born at Prattville, Cal., 57 years ago. Harvey Dow Gibbson of New York banker, born at Conway, N. H., 52 years ago. Col. Edward A. Deeds of New York a noted manufacturer, born in Ohio 60 years ago. John Henry Nash of San Francisco master-printer, born in Canada. 63 years ago. Gamricle D’Annunzio, famous Ital ian poet, novelist and dramatist, born 70 years ago. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE This day gives a curious mixture, with a strong but confflicting mind There is quickness of thought and action and great executive powers. The determination will often bring results, but they are not always of the best. You should always work in a strong light and in dark moments do not brood over perplexities. SIDESHOW By Clyde West Uncle Sam is still paging Insull. He evidently doesn’t know Sam has a Don t Disturb sign on his door. With Mussolini standing on the Austrian border and Hitler trying to get across trouble has almost turned the corner. Why shouldn’t Uncle Sam give us old guys pensions? Many of us who never saw a battlefield are all shot to pieces. There ought to be a law against toy pistols. It’s very easy to get almost shot with one. The way Senator SchalT is demand ing a “showdown” on the NRA you’d think he was from Missouri, instead of Minnesota. HotV by James Asicell New York. March 12—Prelude to Spring: The organ grinders are back again, and they made a wistful and a piognant tinkle ... If you are sus ceptible to this hurdy-gurdy music it does things to you and pompous whine of Metropolitan Opera tenors fail utterly to do . . .- The organ grinders are back, and from the little Italy and aiteries into the Bowery they are renting organs ... No more monkeys now ... They used to rent monkeys, too. but various societies de cided it was cruel, and now the mon keys no longer tip scarlet fezzes and beg happiny .. 1 chatted with the perennial organ grinder of my neighborhood yester day afternoon ... He is one of the few who has not been conscious of a depression. . .His whole life has been a continuous depression. ..If anything pickings have been a little better the last few seasons. . .Don’t ask me why -or him...He doesn’t know... But he grinds his music box in neighborhoods of dingy poverty always...He tried the snooty purlieus briefly a long time and found them barren... . A maid threw a coin wrapped, in a piece of paper ffrom .a seventeenth story window, ..It lodged on‘a high cornice and he never got. it...So he went back to the pennies of the poor. • ••He is a Sicilian... He works hard and if he takes in $5 net. in a week, he is able to get by...Even with a more modest haul, by some slight-of hand of economy, he make!- both ends approach enough for sustenance... the rest givers Now chatting with him a question occurred to me... What type of hu man, if there was a type, gave most freely uner the caress of his tinkly tunes?... Why, East Side housewives, of course. . .Pennies 'lways, but pen nies mounted up... And the least re sponsive class were the Park avenue strollers, who were perhaps afraid that a contribution would imply a confession of faulty taste in music. . .. (Champagne cocktails in the lobby of the Metropolitan sold for $2.50 a gargle on opening night)... The dandies and their dolls are the most miserly toward the hurdy gurdy men, according to this practioner’s story There Is one other class even more stony about parting with small change. .This is the type which goes to mass meetings 'protesting some- f * ~m.s wfi| vl JI w JI *i, , ' iMf . 1 W:-:Mfe- : y : » HENDERSON, (N. CJ DAILY DISPATCH, MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1934 thing or other in behalf of the com mon people.. .Radical jamborees, es pecially- - .Once upon a time reason ing logically enough that a Commun ist mass meeting would be a good place to play, he took up his stand near one in Union Square...He even, at some trouble and expense, got hold of an organ with the Internationale in its repertoire. . .But not a. red cent — or one of any other color—did he. pocket for his pains... The Commun ists. some of whom looked fairly pros perous, passed him by stonily, evi dently unaware that the “divvy-up” all around philosophy had any appli cation for a Communist with change in his pocket. cwaTvui Cut 5,000 Each Week Dally Diupntvh Karens, In the Sir Walter Hotel. IIY J. C. DASKERVILL. Raleigh, March 12—Workers will continue to be dropped from CWA projects at the rate of 5,000 a week from now until April 1, so that not more than 23,000 will remain employ ed on projects after that date, it was learned today at the office of the Civil Works Administration. It was also pointed out that while some CWA projects will be continued until May 1. that, effective April 1, all work pro jects, inc’uding CWA projects, will revert to the control of the work re lief division of the Emergency Relief Administration in the State, since the Civil Works Administration as a sep arate entity, will officially die at mid night, March 31. These two agencies have really been the same, but for the difference in the names, since the same personnel has administered both since the CWA was created. Thus on April 1. Mrs. Thomas O’Berry, who has been both Civil Works and Emer gency Relief Administrator in North Carolina, will ievert to her original status of Emergency Relief Admin istrator. The Emergency Relief Administra tion will be much larger hereafter and take in a much wider scope than before, it was pointed out. since it plans to organize and continue enough work projects in the State to take care of -ill the really needy unemploy ed who are entirely dependent. But no jobs will be given to any who have any other means of support or to any in which any member of his or her family is employed, thus keeping it entirely on a relief basis. The wage scale will be not les than 30 cents an hour for unskilled and up to 75 cents an hour for skilled labor. The enlarged and re-vamped Emer gency Relief Administration will also be divided into two divisions. (1) The division of rural rehabilitation, and (2> the division of work relief. This plan of organization for the division of rural rehabilitation is now being worked out in a regional conference of State relief directors in Atlanta to day and tomorrow. mshlngtonl at a Glance By CHARLES F. STEWART Central Press Staff Writer Washington, March i-.—A very lit tle (as yet very little, but it may glow) tentative agitation in favor of a unicameral congress is developing out of a senatorial dissatisfaction with small-group control of the House of Representatives©. Senatr Goorge W. Norris’ fight for a unicameral legislature in his home state of Nebraska perhaps has had something to do toward encoutaging the movement on a national scale— if there is enough of it to be called a “movement.” Anyway, it is Senator Norris, ex pressed opinion that, should the Corn husker Commonwealth adopt the uni cameral plan, it will prove so satis factory that other states speedily will follow suit. The Nebraska solon does not say he thinks that the tendency, then, would be for the voters to in sist on a similar legislative consoli dation in Washington. It would be a natural thing to expect, however—as suming, of course, that state-wide ex periments with the system had turned out as well as Senator Norris prop hesies. SENATORS RESPONSIVE The present congressional set-up, to be sure, by no means is what the Founding Fathers provided. Their scheme was to make the house of representatives a popular body, by having its members popularly elected for short, two-year terms, as they still arc, but to make the senate serve as a brake on rapidfire legislation, by having its personnel long, six-year terms, and having it chosen by the barious state legislatures, as actually was done until 1913, when ratification of the Seventeenth constitutional amendment gave the popular form to senatorial elections also. Since then the average senator has been more responsive to public op inion than the average representative, for the reason that a senator is pretty conspicuous among only 96 senators, and must watch his step oorrespond igly, whereas one representative a mong 435 representatives is more or less lost in the crowd, and doesn’t have to account for himself so strictly VOTE AS TOLD Moreover, a house of 435 members is so large that it scarcely can act business unless the rank and file of its two main parties follow their respective leaders’ orders without much wrangling. Tl. result is that the bosses (about half a dozen of them on each side? have all the “say In the lower house of congress; the rest vote as they are told to. vote, or are soon blackjacked into submission, <by parliamentary methods. There are a few outlaws, but not enough to signify. BASKETBALL* CHIP Local Negro School Defeats Mary Potter at Shaw’ U. For Title Raieigii, March 12 The Henderson Institute team captured the basket ball championship among Negro high schools of Eastern North Carolina by defeating the Mary Potter High team of Oxford, 23-14, Saturday night. The game climaxed a tournament, held at- Shaw University, in which 25 teams' participated. Henderson took an early lead in the title game and remained in front throughout. At the half the score was 12-5. Gee, center, made 13 points, to pace Henderson to victory against the team which won last year’-’s tourna ment. Henderson will meet the Western champions tonight at 8 o’clock at Shaw for the State title among Negro schools. Action Deferred On Reducing Size Great Smoky Park Washington, March 12. (AP)-At the insistence of Republicans, the House Public Lands Committee today delayed action on the Weaver 'bill to reduce the minimum area of the Great Smoky National Park, and to allow land to be bought with $ 1,500,- 000 allocated by executive order to Oe added to the park. A majority of the committee indicat ed it would vote to report favorably the bill, but two Republican members asked that a vote be delayed until to morrow. Both criticized that section of the bill dealing with expenditure of funds under a presidential ordei. Hour For Debate Given Each Group As Battle Begins ((JonPnued rrom ’"age One.) want to get their names in the Con gressional Record tomorrow.” It was noticeable during the cie-. bate on the motion to consider tm bill that none of the Democratic lead ers spoke in opposition. Representative Isabelle Green way, Arizona, close friend of the Roose velts, voted for consideration. Representative Byrns, Tennessee, the Democratic leader, voted against. Doughton, Democrat, North Caro lina, of the ways and means commit tee, voted to discharge his own group and bring the bill before the House. The Senate attitude toward the pro posal is not clear. A White House veto has been pro mised if the legislation is enacted. House leaders said bonus advocates could not enlist a two-thirds major ity to pass it over a veto. The vote was forced by 145 peti tioners. W. O. W. HEAD HOLDS OFFICE 35 YEARS Woodmen of the World members throughout the entire country are celebrating the month of March in a gigantic campaign in honor of Be E. Bradshaw, president, who BSK ' I jm~ Hot v De E. Bradshaw has served W. o. W. in At official capacity for thirty-five years. Thousands o£ YV. O. W. camps In every state will hold special cele brations and programs during March to pay tribute to the long end faithful service of Mr. Brad shaw. Mr. Bradshaw, whose life has been typical of the log cabin boy who has risen to dizzy heights, wns honored at hig birthplace In Izard county, Arkansas, where local and national W. o. W. officials gathered f° r a special celebration. His mother, 97 years old, still lives near his birthplace. Mr. Bradshaw has always been a strong church worker, having served as president of the Arkan sas Sunday School association. He a i So p res j(i eut 0 f the Arkansas Lumane Society and has partici pated in scores of charitable and civic endeavors. Nature touches us through the con- S . aiK * richly varied appeals to our sense of the beautiful which it has itself created within us. | y Forced Down! 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By virtue of the power contained in a Deed in Trust executed by Adkins Chavis, Mamie Chavis and Cleveland Chavis record’d in the office of the Register of Deedfe of Vance County in Book 104, at Page 10, default having been made in the payment of the debt therein secuied, on request of the holder of the same, I shall sell for cash, by public auction, at the Court House door in Henderson, N. C., to the highest bidder, at twelve o’clryk noon on the the sth day of April, 1934, the following described property: The same containing one acre, more or less, adjoining lands of Allen Eaton, Tony Eaton and others in Henderson Township, N. C., about one-half mile south of Henderson, N. C., in section known as Mobile, said land having been purchased from Allen Eaton. B. H.. HICKS AND BELLE 1%. PURVIS, * Executors of Will of T. T. Hicks, Deceased, Trustee. . Henderson, N. C„. ..March 5, 1934. 6 Metal (Fr.) 7 Suffix used .to form nouns oil agency fi—A rich sauce 9—Boat implement 10—To twist 13—Converse IS—Bitter (Heb.) 19—Scorn 21 — Together with 22 Period time 23 Sardinia (abbr.) 24 — Form of meet 27—Governor of Minnesota 29 A mountain range in Utah 30— A state (abbr.) 31— A peninsula in S. Alaska 33 An occurrence 34 — A fiat plate of »U>n« 36 —Masculine name 38 —Land measure 41—Longitude (abbr.) 43 — Man's nickname 44 Stannum (symbol) Answer to puzzle pL & MJ_ 41 & NOTICE OF SALE. j Under and by virtue of a Court Or der made in that Special Proceeding entitled “Ophelia •Crosson and The Citizens Bank and Trust Company, Administrators of the Estate of An nie Norman, deceased, vs. Ophelia Crosson and Hubert Croson, her hus band; Joshua Norman (Minor); Theo dore Norman (Minor); Nicholas Nor man (Minor); and James Hunter Norman (Minor); heirs at law of An nie Norman, deceased,” the same be ing upon the Special Proceeding Docket in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Vance County, North Carolina, the undersigned Com missioner will on Thursday, Match 29, 1934, at 12 o’clock, Noon, at the Courthouse door in Vance County, North Carolina (at Henderson, N. C.),’ offer for sale to the highest bidder, Cash, that certain real estate lying and being in Vance County, North Carolina, more particularly described as follows: Begin at a stake, (iren) Blackwell and Kelly's old corner; and run (In n..- S. 32 1-2 E. 69 ft. to an iron pin; thence S. 60 E. 1444 1-2 ft. to an iron pin, Kittrell’s old corner in Buchan's line; thence N. 31 1-2 E. 60 ft. to an iron pin; thence S. 62 1-2 E. 189 ft. to an iron stake in West side of New Street; thence N. 31 1-2 E. 90 ft. along said street to an iron stake (in road); thence N. 55 W. 74 ft. to an iron pin; thence N. 70 W. 199 ft. to an iron stake; thence N. 28 W. 50 ft. to an iron stake in red gulley; thence S. 65 W. 154 ft. to the beginning. Also re ' fee to Book 43, at page 351, in tin office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County, for a more particular description. This the 26th day of February, 11*31 T. P. GJHOLSON. Commissioner. SALE OF VALUABLE FARM PROPERTY. Under and by virtue of the authority confer! ed upon us in a deed of trust executed by Walter Williams and wife Martha Williams on the 18th day of November 1925 and recorded in Boon 130, Page 12S, we will on Saturday (lie 24th day of March 1931 12 o'clock noon at the Courthouse door in Vance County, Henderson, N. C., sell at pub lic auction for cash to the highest bidder the following land to-wit: Begin at a stone on the W. side of the Mill Rd. Morgan’s line, thenee along J. G. Morgan’s line W. 24 ehs. to a stone; thence S. 7 chs. 92 Iks. to a white oak; thence W. 15 chs. thence N. 67 W. 4 chs. 16 Iks, to a cedar; thence S. 26 1-2 W. 20 chs. 27 Iks. to a white oak, Morgan's and Tayloi s corner; thence S. 18 E. 21 chs. to Dogwood, Edmund's corner; thence S. 56 1-2 E. 15 chs. and 5 Iks. to a pine; thence S. 5 chs. 8 Iks. to a stump; thence E. 12 chs. 38 Iks. to a dogwood; thence N. 51 E. 4 chs. 70 Iks. to a stone; thence E. 18 chs. 70 Iks. to saw mill rd. thence along the said road to the beginning, con taining 236 2-3 acres, more or less. This sale is made by reason of the failure of Walter Williams and wife. Martha. Williams to pay off and dis charge the indebtedness accrued by said deed of trust. A deposit of 10 per cent will be re quired from the purchaser at the sale This the 19th day of February, 1931. INTERSTATE TRUSTEE CORPORATION. Substituted Trustee, Durham, N. C. SALfe OF VALUABLE FARM PROPERTY. Under and by virtue of the an thority conferred upon us in a deed of trust executed by A. D. Danse .ui'J wife, Mary B. Dause on the 61 h day of April 1926 and recorded in R ,M, k 127, Pago 289, we will on Safin day the 21th day of March 1934, 12 o'clock noon at the Courthouse door in Vance County, Henderon, N. C„ sell ul I'" 1 ' lie auction for cash to the highest bidder the following land to-wit Begin at a point on road leading from Bobbitt to Bear Pond, ne; i red oak tree; run thence along road N 12 E. 658 ft. to a stone on road; thence S. 80 E. 2325 ft. to stake; thence S. 6 1-2 E. 440 ft. to stake, thence N. 85 W. 2491.5 ft. to road, the 'Place of beginning, containing 3b acres, more or less. This is the «anie tract of land conveyed by J. C. Kit trell, Trustee to A. D. Dause by need dated Feb. 4, 1922 and registered in Book 100, Page 557 Register of Deeds office, Vance County. This sale is made by reason of the failure of A. D. Dause and wile. Mary B. Dause to pay off and dis charge the indebtedness secured |J > said deed of trust. A deposit of 10 per cent will be required from purchaser at 'be sale. This the 13th day of February, l- ;!! INTERSTATE TRUSTEE CORPORATIION. Substituted Trustee, Durham. N- ‘