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PAGE FOUR HbNUtHSDN UAILY UiSPAI CH August Li, IMW- Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday By BJEJVUEKSON Dl&l’AiCH CO., INC. t»i 109 Vouug Street. um:u r Y A DENNIS. Pres, and Editor li. L. FINCH, Sec-Treas and bus. Mgv. ‘ teLeI’UON es Editorial Office j**{ Society Editor Business Office I’he Hemleison Daily Dispatch is a member of the Associated Press, Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation and the North Carolina Press ABouciailou. - The Associated Press la exclusively enticed i 0 use for republicaUon an uews dispsichea credited to It or not ethei wise ci edited in this paper, and also the looal news pubiisued herein. figtits of publication of special aiepatcuce herein ale also reserved. 8 L BSCKIi’T ION PRICES. Payable Sirictly In Advance. On* Year Six Three Mouths week Uiy Carrier Only) ly Per Copy 00 NOTICE TO SIUSUIUBEKS. Look at the printed lanel on your paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Forward your money in ample time foi re newal. Notice date on label carefully and if not coirect, please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address on their paper changed, piease state in their communication both the ODD and NEW address. National Advertising Representative* BUY ANT, GRIFFITH AND BRUNSON, LNC., t> East 41st Street. New York. Mi' W. Michigan Ave., Chicago. 201 nvtuuou'iß ov»»v. General Motors Bldg., Detro»t. Walton Building, Atlanta. Entered at the post office in Hender *ou, N. C., as second class mail matter My HELP: I am poor and needy; yet the Lord thinketh upon me: thou art my help and my deliverer; make no tarrying, O my God.—Psalm 40:17. WUorosMp,of 4 yrayct> * ■ W Daily 'll r Lenten. DftOotion^p Prepared by Or Charles £ Jefferson far Commission on Evangelism and Devotional L ifo f= THURSDAY, March i'i— (Read Luke X: 17-24) •*I Bcliold Satan as Lightning Fall” The first recorded prayer of our Lord is a prayei of thanksgiving. It begins with, “I thank Thee.” The •eventy have just returned from their first campaign and are hilarious over I theii victories. Jesusl also rejoices, but! the ground of his I joy is deeper than I theirs. He is jubi lant before their sue cess is prophetic. It points to greater victories ahead. He sees in their initial triumph the doom of the empire of evil It crumbles before the eye of his mind. He also sees God’s willingness to use I common people to carry out heaven's plans. Ordinary men can accomplish extraordinary results. Obscure peas ants can understand things which lie beyond the reach of philosophers and scholars. Men of lowly station can do things which the high and mighty cannot accomplish. There Is hope for the world because the childlike spirit can get hold of the secrets of God. The Lord of heaven is <jlso Lord of the earth. Wonders take place on the earth through men who are link ed with the King of heaven. Prayer: O Thou lover of the com mon people, we rejoice that Thou canst carry out Thine eternal plans through the aid of ordinary men. De liver us, we pray Thee, from the curse of self-depreciation and the paralysis of unbelief. May we leap for joy be cause our names are written in heaven. Amen. My by Ja mes As well 'New York, March 22—(Possessed of a slightly morbid bent, this reporter walked into Greenwich Village the other afternoon to gaze at the house in MacDougal alley where a lady was reported to have been recently beat en to death. Murder cottagep, like poison pen authors, are usually dull. This one was no exception. But a small boy was standing in the middle of the quaint street peer ing intently at the roof of the house, which was one of the converted stable variety. In the belief that he might have spotted something I overlooked I asked him what he saw hovering over the scene of the tragedy, “Oh, you mean that killing?” he asked, with an absent-minded stare, “I wasn’t, interested i n that. One of my pigeons got lost and I thought 1 saw it around the roof there.” Perhaps the appetite for hair-rais ing crime has been dulled in Manhat tan youth. Yet there is one encour aging sign. They never fail to re spond and go completely agog at the passage of a bellowing fire truck. PEOPLE J. C. Nugent is another comedian who has reduced laughter to a sci ence. He never laughs at a joke an rarely smiles after the most hilarious sallies. Usually when a friend tells him a quip, he responds with expla nation of how the point could have been stated for theatrical purposes. Selection as the most soothing art ist’s name: Dan Content. And the least caressing: Ben Ali Haggin. Katharine Hepburn, who displays a formidable quantity of temperament back stage and on the movie lots, nevertheless is the first, to laugh at exaggerated caricatures in newspap ers and mgazines emphasizing her worst points. Her friends rush to her with the offending drawings and demand protests, but Katharine only giggles. Fhil Baker is reputed to be the most modest of ether comedians, al ways fearful lest his newest program fail to eleik. Peter Randall, the lad who keeps the ceremonies mastered at the Tic Toe Club, is going with a young lady who must get up every morning for her picture work ut the Biography Studies at 6 a. m. Peter gets away from work at 4 a. m. Thus when he is working she is sleeping and vice versa. TODAY TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1599 —Anthony Van Dyke, famed Flemish painter, born. Died Dec 9, 1641. 1822 —Rosa Bonheur. French ani mal and landscape painter, born. Died May 25. 1899. 1834—(100 years ago) Charles W. Marsh, Illinois inventor of the first practical hand-binding harvester, edi tor, born in Ontario, Canada. Died Nov. 19, 1918. 1845 —John Banister Tabb, Mary land’s R. C. poet-priest, born in Ame lia Co., Va. Died in 1909. 1853 —Herman H. Kahlsaat. the Chi cago restaurant man who became a noted newspaper publisher and friend of Presidents, born at Albion, 111. Died in Washington, Oct. 17, 1924. 1857—'Paul Doumer, President of France, born. Assassinated May 5, 1932. ' 1862—Laura Jean Libbey, Brooklyn. N. Y., society matron and society leader, author of love stories which sold in the millions. born in New York. Died there, Oct. 25, 1924. TODAY IN HISTORY 1783—Congress voted five full years pay to officers of the Army of the Revolution in lieu of half-pay pro mised for life. 1820—'Stephen Decatur, noted Ame rican naval hero, killed in duel. 1832—Goethe, world famous German poet. died, aged 82. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Dr. Robert A. Millikan of the Cali fornia Institute of Technology, famed physicist and Noble prize winner, born at Morrison, 111., 66 years ago. Kent Cooper, general manager of the Associated Press (A.P.), born at Columbia, Ind., 54 years ago. U. S. Senator Arthur H. Vanden burg of Michigan, born at Grand Rap ids, Mich., 50 years ago. O. Max Gardner, former governor of North Carolina, born at Shelby, N C., 52 years ago. Dr. Thomas E. Jones, president of Fisk University, Nashville. Tenn born at Fairmount, Ind.. 46 years ago’ Dr. Robert L. Kelly of New York executive secretary of the Association of Amercian Colleges, born at Tus cola, 111., 69 years ago , S ’ 4 Chapman Simms, ethnolo £nm d k eCtor ° f Chica S°’ s Field Mu um, born at Georgetown, D C 71 years ago. ’ ' * eyllßer ’ b ° y Story writer > born at Hoboken, N. J., 50 years ago. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE " olden times this was the begin ning of the vfiar i Deffm fu] "j meyear. It , s a very force litti V ’ Tlather to ° aggressive, a le quarrelsome, and likely to be uncontrdiawe if antagonized. II „|„ tter that this nature be left to TTTT 'T own destiny ’ rather than try to direct it If any agsistance be proffered, let it be made in a very circumspect manner. Factograplis Alexander Agricola was one of the most famous composers of the School of Netherlands. Gullistan was the most famous work of the Persian poet Sadi. Alairc was the great, chieftain of the Visigoths. kossils of the forerunner of the horse have been found on the Ameri can continent, but it is generally be lieved that the American horse of today is the descendant of animals biought here by Europeans and the first settlers. Baron II Kamon No Kami was the Japanese statesman whose wise and vigorous statesmanship led to tho opening of Japan to foreign nations and the establishment of friendly re lations with them, Hermann Helmholtz, German phy sicist, wa gone of the most distin guished sctantilfic men of the nine teenth century and an authority in several departments of science. In the early Roman religion. Quir inus was the name of the third great god, ranking next to Jupiter and Mars jllpl I m v ' Vi AK Jr J wjßf m&k. v4HI HENDERSON, (N. CJ DAILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY, MARCH 22; 1934' ' Last Rites for Airmail Victim 111 > Body of Lieut. Otto Wienecke, Army airmail pilot who died in crash ol his plane at Burton, 0., is laid to rest with full military honors at Patchogue, L. I. The victim’s mother and family are shown in center background, behind the casket. Republicans Not Elated at Naming Bland Upon Board Dilily Dispatch Burma In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, March 22.—Republicans are not going to protest him because they like him so greatly, but they feel in the appointment of T. Leßoy Bland of Raleigh, to membership on the State Board of Elections they are get ting the same sort of Republican re presentation that the Democrats got when President Hoover named Frank R. McNinch on the Federal Power Commission. The Republicans used to smite the governors for putting such Republi cans as the late J. Elwood Cox of High Point and Claude R. Wheatley, of Beaufort, on the State Highway. Commission. Mr. Wheatley told every body that he voted ror A1 Smith and everybody told the world that Mr. Cox was very much mixed in his State politics. The same thing is be ing said about Mr. Bland. He is a duly accredited national Republican, certainly was until Mr. Roosevelt came along. But the Republicans say that is just the point. Mr. Bland is a good rational Republican, but an indepen dent in State politics. That he votes sometimes for Democrats is admitted. And Republicans say they most need a Republican on the State Board of Elections. It is in that court that the Republicans must often appear and generally without much luck. They think they ought to have two stal warts on the board. There will be no public point made of the Bland appointment. Governor Ehringhaus did not choose to appoint Mr. Bland on the new highway and pnh'ic works commission. An entirely new hoard was picked for that ser vice. There was no objection to Mr. Bland. The governor is in part set ting Mr. Bland right before the pun lie. His excellency regards the hotel man good enough Republican to fit into the requirements of the election law. CHILD HAS RIGHT TO BE WELL-BORN EDITH F. LEE. Alcohol is a racial poison. A child of alcoholic parentage is not. well born. The knowledge that the use of alcohol by .parents causes injury to the children is very old. Plutarch remarked “Drunkards beget drunk ards:” Gellies, “t?he‘ children of drunk ards are not likely to have sound brains.” All through the nineteenth century opinions of this kind continu ed to be expressed by physicians and scholars. .• . ' ' » “Surely infants have a right to be born healthy” said Dr. Mary Sturge. Lunier estimated that fifty per cent of the idiots and weak minded in Fiance had notorious drinkers for New Surgical Treatment For Dizziness Is Cited By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. AMONG THE many important ad vances in medicine and surgery of th* past year, is the possibility of the eradication of a disease known as x : - : : : vi : SB llrat iLJ H Dr. Clendening canals. These are placed in the body so that each canal lies in a cei’tain plane, and the thin fluid inside these canals moves when the head is held in different posi tions, so that the sensation of bal ance is communicated to the brain. It is this function which is disturbed in Meniere’s disease. The cure consists in cutting: the nerve which goes to these canals. The nerve also goes to the ear, and the cure results in deafness, but since the patients are getting pro gressively deaf anyhow, that is not a very serious matter. The treatment has been performed on over 30 cases, and not a single patient has had an attack of Meu- their fathers. The inter-relation of parental drinking an dinferior pro geny has been studied in various ways over a long period of time, by ex perimentation with animals and in vestigation and observance of human relationships. Arlin, Wells and Nicloux tell us that experiments show that alcohol has especial affinity for the germ cells, as it has for nerve cells also. One of the earliest attempts in the United States to collect statistics on the relation between parental al coholism and mental effects was made by Samuel G. Howe who found that 99 idiots out of 369 concerning whom information was available, had drunk en fathers. Weeks found a constant excess beyond expectation of epilep tic and feeble minded children from alcoholic parents. Most investigators ieel that there are too many criminal, imbecile, in sane and unhealthy persons among the offspring of drunkards to dis miss the matter as a coincidence. Al cohol impairs ability to resist many diseases and diminished normal powd ers of resistance. So when the ques tion of alcoholism is viewed from all angles the children of the drunkard would seem to run a double menace of misfortune, since they may be sub ject .to both the direct effects of poisoning by alcohol and the results of inheritable degeneracy. Alcohol poisons the body cells so they do not work accurately. Work ing ability impairedo by alohol re sults in diminished earning capacity or waste of money, and works out into lower scale of living in the home as the food, housing and clothing, whoich react unfavrably op health. There is a better average of health in non-drinking homes where money instead of being spent,for liquor is spent for good food, a comfortable home, care of the children and their mother. Practicality aljl investigatora have observed greater infant atid child mortality in the families of* drinkers than in sober families, which they ex plain partly by the less hygienic con ditions and lack of cave, often prevail ing in drinkers’ homes and partly by Congenital weakness. (Child Wel fare Department, Evanston, Illinois.) LIST SCHOLARSHIPS AT U. N. C. SHORTLY Chapel llill. March 22—Scholar ships to the University of North Caro lina for 1934-35 will lie awarded next month, instead of waiting until the summer as has been customary in the past, . ‘ AH applications are due to be in the hands of the scholarship committee, of which R„. B House is. fhairpmn. by April 15. Mr. House said today. Successful applicants, who will pre sent testimonials as to need, charac ter, j „ahd scholarship, will be notified of thoir £electioi\ by May 1. The university has 100 endower scholarships, Between 30 and 40 are awarded to new students and the re mainder to old students who have convincing records. iere’s disease after the operation. Nor has there been a single case of death following the operation. * • * * QUESTIONS FROM READERS H. W.: “I to have lost my sense of taste since the influenza, which I had a few weeks ago. What is the explanation of this and what can be done about it?” Answer: The sense of taste very largely depends upon the sense of smell. When the sense of smell > temporarily destroyed, as by a cold in the head, the sense of taste goes along with it. After the acute infec tion Is over, the sense of smell usual ly returns, and with it the sense of taste. When we smell anything it is necessary that particles of some kind b* carried to the uppermost portion of the nose, to that region in which the terminal filaments of the nerve of smell are situated. There may be a mechanical disturbance in the upper part of the nose, either acute or chronic, which disturbs the sense of smell, and this will Influ ence tbs sense of taste. 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 axe. “Indigestion and Constipation, Re ducing and Gaining, Infant Feed ing,” “Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes” “Feminine Hygiene and “The Care of the Hair and Skin. “Meniere’s dis ease”, by surgi cal means. The principal symp tom of the dis ease is dizziness. Nobody who has not experienced it can realize how crippling and d i sa b 1 ing this affliction can be. The function of equilibrium lies in three bony Hngs near the internal ear—the semi- circular The Line Needs Lengthening! i~ ~ ' CROSS WORD PUZZLE y- rr I M* IM’h Li IA 111 is HI hs n i 5 m&twm isT*’ 2oT 2i ilgigaa 23 |H|a4- 2s 'be'"!lP M* s ||pop' m 37 " 3ft jSsT |iS<3 lil ai Ke ' 111 3 * “HI 55 t 11 n Urn 11 □ ACROSS 1 — The system of natural existences 6—Sharp or projecting corners 10— Decay 11— -Word used in German names 13 — Poetic for over 14— Masculine name 15 — An eagle 16— Specific amount of labor 18— Each (abbr.) 19— An Arab poet and warrior 21 — An eye (Scot.) 22 Military posts 24 —An age of the universe 27 Smallest In degree 28— To tread upon forcibly 29 A state (abbr.) 30— A glistening brightness* 32—A prefix meaning with oi together 34 —Couplings for oxen 36 Stannum (symbol) 37 To assert as a fact 40— Assist I 41— A company of persons 43 A beverage | 44 — Tattered cloth 46—Same as 43 46 Permits 47 Small eagle I DOWN | 2 Any open space 1 3 Measurement of weight ft 4 An Indian ft PROTECT YOUR HEALTH BY DRINKING I BUCKHORN WATER I 111 Sterilized Bottles. A Mineral Product of Nature A Light Pleasant Tasting Water I Has Given Satisfaction for Over 25 Year* ■ Delivered anywhere in Henderson, Fresh every Saturday 20c per gallon in half gallon bottles and 5 gallon demijohns Analyzed Every Thirty Days Order Direct from Page-Hocutt Drug Company W. L. NEWBY, Salesman Bullock, N. 0. 5An occurrence 6 Girl’s name 7 8— A grassy field or pl&itt o—Language of the Gae!£ 12— Worthless leavings 14—A facsimile 17—Possessing 19— Skillfully 20— Piexiforrn arrangements 22 A matter of taste 23 — Suffix used to indicate fullness 25 Mineral 26 Diminutive of Nancy 30— A combining form meaning shade or shadow 31— A fence of bushes 33—Broadly elliptical 35 Boat implements 36 A. large knife 38— A measure of length 39 An automobile 41— To choke up 42 Entirely Answer to previous puzzle m|b [o|njJdßßa|p.Jc * of Working towards justice, and free dom and health, and social harmony, is working with God, NOTICE. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer tain Deed of Trust executed by J. W» Scott and Lillian Scott, his wife, recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County', North Carolina, in Book 140, at page 260. de fault having been made in the pay ment of the debt therein secured, and at the request of the holder of the note, I shall sell by public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Coutrhouse door in Henderson. North Carolina, at Twelve O’Clock. Noon, on ; SATURDAY. APRIL 21. 1931, the following described property: : All that certain real property to gether /with improvements thereon containing one (1) acre, contained and described in that certain Deed (dated March 9. 1903, from J. M. Young et al to said J. W. Scott, recorded in Book 35. at page 149, Vance County .Register of Deeds office, to which •reference is hereby made for more accurate and complete description. This the 22nd day of March. 1934 JOEL T. CHEATHAM. Trustee. U— FORECLOSURE SALE. , Under and by virtue of power con tained in a certain deed of trust exe cuted 'by E. M. Gupton. and P. !> Gupton arid Sarah Gup-ton. his wife on the 26th day of July. 1926, and rec orded- in book 140 at page 132 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County, N. C.. I will sell, by public auction, to the highest bidden for cash, at the Court House dooi iu Henderson, Vance County. N. ■•(*, at 12 o’clock, noon, on Monday the 16ib day of April *1934, the following de scribed property: Begin at a stake on the east sitle of William Street in the City of Hen dersop, at the west corner of Alex Cooper yard and lot, and run thence along the said Coopers line 75 feet and 7 1-2 inches to a stake, Hoods corner, then along Hood’s line 55 feet in a southerly direction and paralell with Wlilliam street, then paralell to the first line 11 1-2 feet toward Wil liam Street to the end of a wall, then along said wall conveying one hail thereof for the privilege of joining the same ui feet more or less to William Street, thence along William Street 55 feet to the place of beginning be ing the lot on which a Brick Garage is situate. This 15th day of March. 1934. W. H. FINCH, Trustee. If You Will Learn You Can Earn By learning to do one thing well your earnings and future are lim ited only by your efforts. Unlimited opportunities are open for qualified young men and young women In the printing industry. Why not lsarn so you can take advantage of these golden opportunities. WE OFFER A MODERN WAY TO TEACH AND PREPARE YOU FOR SUCH PLACES. Instructions given on Linotype, Monotype. Hand Composition, Press Work and Proofreading in Ameri ca’s outstanding printing trade school. Tuition charges and living expenses materially reduced Write for oatalog and information SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF PRINTING v Wl4-16 South Street Nashville, Tennessee