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PAROLE IS BETTER THAN RILL PARDON Commissioner Gill Says It Is Better for Prisoner and Public Daily Diwiuift’li rttsrcnn. In llio Sl:* \\allt*r I Into!, f.y .1. Itaskt'i't illt*. Raleigh. > o\. 2 it is much better for a prisoner to be paroled, troth t'ot the priront " and for the public, than in let > pnsonet complett bis term and then be turned loose in society ii.i without any check or any mean. ( >i keening track oi him, provided there is adequate parole tni'Chinory U keep :t tek of tlicse prisoners, accord 3 Mi nut as To Relieve I n v i ves t ton! Di.n't suffer from indigestion whih 11 lirt • let nimn-Kex. the delicious I lastit g ant acid powder that gives las; j jim teli-f in 3 minutes. It acts font wax s. m til ral i/.es excess acid, relieve; the stomach of a.as. soothes irritated membranes and ids di.n't stion of food: must likely to fennent. liKNKKOI " BOTTLE 1 11 UK. 'fry Bistna-Tlex absolutely without rest to volt. Simply present this cent I alt find yet a tlia] bottle of i’isina ilex absolutely FIIEE amt without >bligation. All you have to do is ti present this coupon at Parker’s Hex ill Duty Store. This coupon entitles me to a snnif 1* rif nisma-Rex. the wonder relief foi indigestion, nbsohitely witliout cost Wifne ftiidi’e.-s . j Our Amnversary*Sale S ■ <-©fti3HU©S. with jo*% ■*& M; Greater IP Values T T . S. Ao. 1 Maine Cobbler J: Fg% s f* mwwo%W* *\ i M 1 i ’ i wgr i&ftM %*#• jfl 10 100-lb. $ I te. gffi. m *g w SOI,? r#:3 2 WKis y*3 l*oߥ CAKE §g N. B. C. CHOCOLATE TOT .$ !L 21c a ( hum HHJ X”. •: T'U w |UC I fj «■ «#w 3a lllfill a wl# 15c ; rz L ; tc" ■'■'■' '’<,k BEANS 3 ***s 2«-i j i s&idsuß 2 »•**. 25c Soups xcsni G!*r $»*«; ■;’©? r. lona Yellow Clin# PEACHES & urse cms 29c Sparkle eialin Dessert nr Chec. Pudding 4 Pkgs- 1 7 C I BUTTER Si: ■ 31° ORISOO, .‘5 pound c in ■> 55c ( amphclls j j Post Toasties Assorted \ j or Kellogg’s SOUPS || Corn Rakes 3 esus 2S& jj 3 pkg*. 20c nmTimt ROLLS *«• 6C BANANAS, golden ripe, 4 lbs. 25c i LETTUCE, large hard head, 3 for 25c CELERY; well bleached, 2 for 15c GRAPES, red Tokay, 2 lbs. 15c CARROTS, fresh green top, 2 bunches _ 15c I io Edwin M. Gill, commissioner oi j paroles. l*o. when a prisoner is re leased under a parole, he is out on I good behavior only and can be re | | turned to prison again if boa. mv i tCrmS ° f hi ’ S Parole | i here are still a good many peo ple, however, who sue opposed to the parole of any prisoners, and who be Hove that every prisoner should serve out his entire term, regardless of eir- I eumstunces,” Gill said. "Hut they ovi ucntlv do not understand just what a parole is, or that when a prisoner completes his prison term and is dis charged. the State has no way what ver to follow him or check up on what he does or where he goes. But v/hen a prisoner is released under a parole, the terms of the parole specify that he must report at least once a month to the county welfare office who in turn reports back to the pa role commissioner. In this way we re able to keep track of the prison-' ■rs who are paroled. “Since the paroled prisoners know j we are keeping track of them and j hat if they do not ’go straight’ their ! •affiles will be invoked and they will ; have to return to prison, they make ! I gi eater effort to get jobs and do 1 j be right thing. On tin- other hand, j I when a prisoner is discharged at the j ( ’ornpletion or a sentence, be knows ' that no one is going to check up or I ' im. with the result that a. great •ri n v go right back to their old aunts and old gangs and soon get j Uto trouble again.” The reason Governor Ehringhaus j caroled Gits C. Langley instead of ! ■ranting him an outright pardon. Gill | xplaiued, was because, while Lang ( V was found to be not guilty of the ! lime charged, he has not bad a very ■ ood record otherwise. So the gov-'! t nor thought it best to give him a : 1 arou.‘ in order to keep track of him. : Xnv. 2. ISB9 - North and South Da kota (meaning in Sioux the alliance j /f friends) because the 29th and 10th States. North's motto: Liberty and i'nion. Now and Forever. One and j Inseparable. Flower: Prairie Rose, j South’-; motto: Under God the People 1 Rule. Flower: Pasque. HENDERSON, '{N. CJ DAILY DISPATCH. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1934 The World War 20 Years Ago Today %%%* < •• . . ..... ; Once there was * forest here —Ypres. *0 Ycitr* Ago Toeing: British suffered tremendous losses at Ypres under pressure of the German main army, but held their ground with such heroism that Ypres is regarded as the “supreme national monu ment oi' the British regular army.” Gen. Von Biasing-was made military governor of Belgium. Russians pushed back Germans and Austrians on the whole eastern front. See “Today is the l)av” Today is the Day With DAY-BY-DAY STORY OF THE WORLD WAR 20 Years After By CLARK KINNAERD Friday, Nov. 2; 306th day of the year. 53 more days till Christmas. All Souls’ Day Mercury becomes a morning star. Moon: last quarter. (New moon: Tuesday). Zodiac sign: Scorpio • THE WORLD WAR DAY-BY-DAY Nov. 2. 191! Exactly 20 years be fore, Nicholas Romanoff had been proclaimed Nicholas 11, emperor of Russia, czar oi Poland and grand duke of Finland. We know from his cousin and broth er-in-law, Grand Duke Alexander, that “an ignorant nurse and a negli gent nhvsician were responsible for Nicholas II wearing the crown, hav ing overlooked the illness that attack ed his elder brother, a lusty infant named Alexander.” The Grand Duke continues. Thus, he had become the heir appa rent by virtue of an accident. The disappointment of his parents could he well imagined. He felt it keenly .and developed a pronounced shyness. He never cried He rarely laughed. He did not like to play. The sur roundings of his childhood were gloomy. Constant talk about attempts on the life of his grandfather. Ab sence of hoys of his age. “He drew as his teachers a sim ple-minded Russian general, a senti mental Swiss tutor, and a young Eng lishman who was extremely fond of outdoor life None of the three had the remotest idea of the task facing the future czar of Russia. They taught him all they knew, which prov ed to he little. . . “He developed an immense liking for the military service. It appealed to his passiv enature. One executed orders and did not have to worry over the vast problems handled hv one’s superiors. The death of his j father found him in the Prebrajenskv i Regiment of the Guard, at the head of a battalion and wearing the stripes ROSE’S s, io & 25c STORE 10th Annual Peanut Sale Saturday, November 3rd through Saturday. No\, loth. Fresh Roasted New Crop Spanish Peanuts Special 10 a Pound “M” SYSTEM STORE Free Delivery Service Phone 177-J Ballard’s Flours Satisfy CELERY, fancy bleached stalk 8c LETTUCE, firm crisp head _ 10c BEEF ROAST, boneless, per lb. 15c SIRLOIN STEAK, per lb. 20c VEAL STEAK, per lb. _ 25c SAUSAGE, all pork, per lb. 20c SODA CRACKERS, per lb. 15c CORN FLAKES, 2 pkgs., for 15c SUPER SUDS, 2 pkgs., for 17c «===== OCTAGON SOAP OR POWDER, 6 for 14c I!—o-f) OCTAGON TOILET SOAP, . " ■ 'sj—/ 3 for . 14c STERLING HEALTH SOAP, 4 for 19c of a colonel. He kept that rank din ing the rest of his life It reminded him of his car-free youth . . . “People die every day, and we should not attach any undue historical signi ficance to the death of a man we loved, but the passing of Alexander 111 decided the ultimate fate of the Russian Empire. Everyone gathered around his lifeless body realized our country had lost the only support which kept it from falling down a pre cipice. Nobody understood it clearer than Nicky. For the first time in my life I saw tears in his eyes. He took me by the arm and led me down stairs ot his room. “He knew he was emperor now. and the weight of this terrifying fact crushed him. “Sandro, what am I going to do,” he exclaimed pathetically. “What is go ing to happen to me, to you, to Xenia, to Alix, to mother, to all of Russia? I am not prepared to be a ezar. I never wanted to be one. I know nothing oi’ the business of ruling” . . . This was the man who had plunged Russia’s millions into war. At that moment Russia’s military fortunes were running at high tide. For more than two weeks its armies had moved westward over a whole battlefront from the Baltic to the Carpathians. Every German and Austrian effort to make a final stand had failed. The Russian advance had Almost reached Posen, home city of Von Hindenburg; it had passed the Wartha River and driven to Austrian army back on Krakow. But disaster was in the offing. A stronger man than Nicholas II could have averted it and changed the whole course of European history. HISTORY UP-TO-DATE Nov. 2. 1751 A committee authoriz ed by the Pennsylvania Assembly sent an order to London for “a good hell of about 2,000 pounds weight.” I* was ordered that there he well shap- SUN MON TUE WEp'IHU MB i *«7 r^« 1112 1.114 IV*U7 l» I» 20 21 22|271f24 2'* 2« 27 211 2»|:iO ed large letters around it: “Proclaim Liberty Through All the Land Lnto All the Inhabitants Thereof Levit. xxv. 10.” Thus Liberty Bell was dedicated to liberty 25 years before the Revolu tion ! Nov. 2, 1777 The war ship Ranger, commanded by John Paul, known as John Paul Jones, sailed away from Portsmouth. N. H. the first naval ves sel to fly the nwely adopted Stars and Stripes. Nov. 2, 1783—Lieut. Gen. George Washington made a farewell address to the Continental Army at Rocky Hill, near Princeton, N. J., and it was disbanded. The United States w'as without an army for the next 25 years! NOT» RLE NAT I V I T I ES Daniel Boone, b. 1734, explorer, Amerindian fightre and first settler of Kentucky. The Blue Grass State is currently celebrating his centin i.ial . . . Joseph Jeanne Marie Ant oinette, h. 1755, daughter of an em peror, wife of a king, who died like the commonest of criminals in the guillotine . . . James Knox Polk, b. 1795. He was defeated for x'ice pres ident in 1840, became president in 1844. He shares this birthday with PIGGLY WIGGLY Watch This Paper for Opening Don't You Want the - Best LAUNDRY WORK? Sure you do. Then why hesitate about getting it? Why continue a service that is most unsatisfactory when you can have the very best? You don’t have to make out with shoddy work and poor service. You can have the best of both if you patronize this laundry. We are prepared and equipped to serve you in every particular and are awaiting the opportunity to show you how much more satisfaction you can get out of wear ing your clothes if you let us do the work. Why wait any longer? Phone us now and our truck will stop and pick up your bundle. Henderson Steam LAUNDRY Phone 508 ‘ Warren G. Harding, b. 1865, 29th Pre sident. Richard B. Russell, Jr., b. ISS7, senator from Georgia. Win throp W. Aldrich, b. 1885, banker brother-in-law of John D Rockefeller Jr.. Herbert Fleishacker, b. 1872, San Francisco banker and philanthropist. Adna W. Leonard, b. 1874, Methodist Episcopal bishop. Harlow Shaplev, b. . 1885, astronomer. Alice Brady, b 1592 ' elinemactress. James Dunn, b. 1905. cinemactor. YOU WRONG IF YOU BELIEVE. That the Marseillaise is a French revolutionary song. That celery is “good for” nerves. That if you touch a hop-toad you’ll have warts on your hands. That Welsh rarebit is a Welsh dish That Thomas Paine was an atheist That snakes are slimy. If you doubt it, write Clark Kin | naircl. care this newspaper, for proof, j enclosing stamped self-addressed en- I velope. | - . . - Insurance Agents In Warm Protest (Continued from. Page One.) j terests of both the purchaser and | creditor are covered and that these | insurance contracts are negotiated by persons who are not authorized by law to make insurance contracts. We are convinced that, the dealers arc not willfully a party to this abuse and that the part they plya is only incidental to the system. The evil arises from highre up in financial or insurance circles.” The brief further sets forth that to j expedite the routine detail required jto insure a car and because the ! dealer regards insurance as being j only incidental to the sale of the car. 1 “a monopolistic system has grown up in connection with this class of in surance and that both the purchaser and the legitimate insurance agent have been denied the right of free choice in placing insurance where the car purchaser prefers to place hir business. We further maintain that this practice is contrary to the law: j of this state and in violation of the National Recovery Administration principle of widespread employment and the right of trade distribution. ” Buy Our MEATS And get the best. TURNER’S MARKET Phones 304-305 PAGE THREE WH.' edtmmmL First Quality Sweet pickles, 1 r | each . Small cured hams, lb. Round steak, 15c pound . . . Sirloin steak, 20c pound . . Boneless jy l-2c rump roast, lb. Boneless stew 1 9 l-2c beef, lb. Country pork 20c hams, lb. . . . Pork | Co shoulders, lb. Bologna |2c sausage, lb. Smithfield 29 C sausage, lb. Dressed 25c hens, lb. Boneless veal 20 C roast, lb. . Veal IC r chops, lb. Barbecuing pigs, any size, lb. Standard 39c oysters, qt. Large select 55c oysters, qt. . Don’t Forget The World’s Best Drink, D. P. Coffee. Pender’s Market Near Fire Station