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PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH INUhlislicd August 12, 1914. I‘iiMistml L\try Afternoon Except Sunday by HENDERSON DISPATCH CO., INC. at ivy Young Street HENRY A. DLNNIS, Pres, and Editor. At. t,. KINCJI, Soc-Trcas and Bus Mgr. TELEPHONES Editorial Office 590 Society Editor 910 Business Office The Henderson Daily Dispatch is a .neniber of the Associated Press, Bout hern Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation and tlie 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 published herein. All rightsof publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable Strictly in Advance One Year * 5( ? 0 Six Months 2.50 Three Months 150 One Week (by Carrier Only) ... -15 Per Copy 05 NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Look at the printed label on your paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Forward youi money in ample time for renewal. 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 and NEW address. National Advertising Representatives BRYANT, GRIFFITH AND BRUNSON, INC. 9 East 41st Street. New York 230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 201 Devonshire Street, Boston General Motors Bldg., Detroit Walton Building, Altanta Entou-d at the post office in Hender sou, N. C\, as second class mail matter C IRISt FO® Al.-AIL t*OU CURIST ikf mmri w, a*, ■"a,MI., U , fc|tt ml, mi >«IV lit: M CHRIST'S BENEDICTION: Peace 1 leav with you. my peace 1 give un to you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neithej let it be afraid. — John 11:27. EOI)AY TO l)A VS AN NIV LIES ARIES. 1731 Daniel Boone, pioneer of the American frontier of his day, Indian fighter, whose name is synonmous with dating deeds and ready wit, born near Reading, Pa. Died in Mis souri, Sept . 2(5, 1820. 1705 James K. Polk. Tennessee lawyer, congressman, governor, 11th Presidnet, born in Mecklenburg Co., N. C. Died at Nashville, Tenn., June 1819 1820 Benjamin Pet ley Poore, noted Washington. D. C., editor and author of his day. born at Newburyport, Mass Died in Washington, May 30, 1887. 1833 Horace H. Furness, noted Shakespearian scholar and father of a noted Shakespearian scholar, born in Philadelphia. Died there, Aug. 13, 1912. 1831 Levi Z. Lei ter. Chicago mer chant and capitalist, born at Leiters burg, Md. June 9, 1901. 1805 Warren G. Harding, Ohio newspaper publisher, U. S. Senator. 29th President, born in Morrow Co., Ohio Died in Office, San Francisco. Aug. 2. 1923. TODAY IN HISTORY 1805- National thanksgiving for the restoration of peace. 1889 North and South Dakota ad mitted to Statehood. 1904 General Evangeline Booth ap pointed commandin' of the Salvtaion Army in U. S. 1918- American forces keep push ing forward on western front. 1920 KDKA at East Pittsburgh, Pa. put on first national radio broadcast. TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Maj. Gen. Fox Conner, U. S. A., of the First Corps Area, veteran of 10 years in the service, born at Slate Spring. Miss., GO years ago. U. S. Senator Richard B. Russell Jr., of Georgia, horn at Winder. Ga., 37 years ago. Herbert Fleishhacker of San Fran cisco, banker, born there, 02 years ago James E. Watson of Indiana, for mer U. S. Senator, born at Winehest i r, Ind, 70 years ago. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE Affectionate yet taciturn and pos sibly sarcastic, perhaps fickle, this nature is hard to understand, for often when it is merely playful it ap pears to he malicious and it may he deceptive. It is capable of attracting friends without assuming anv obliga tion thereby, but is open to attacks of slander and opposition that are decid < dly inimical to fortune. ANSWERS TO TEN QUESTIONS See Uncle I'nyc " J. The Hague., Netherlands 2. The Mesozoic. 3. The Pyrenees, between France and Spain 4. Formal announcement of hostile intentions by one country to another, 5. Celebrated sculptor of ancient G recce. d. "The Decline and Fall of the Ro man Empire.” 7. He was hanged us a spy during the American Revolutionary War. 8. Franz Mesmer. 9. San’.eul Hahnemann. 10 Brothers-in-law. OUR YESTERDAYS When They Had Fun Back in the Gay Nineties By Going for Rides in Buggies and Rowboats At Coney Island At the beach 11 AVIN<! KI N hack in the gay j •nd nauuhty nineties meant some- | thing 1 entirely different to Die young j people than having a good time j does to modern youth. At that ! time there was no ’bought of night | clubs, cocktail parties and the like. | SIMMONS CALLS FOR NEW DEAL APPROVAL Raleigh, Nov. 2 Senator F. M. Sim mons, for a third of a century North Carolina’s representative in the ra tion's legislative forum, has issued s statement from his home at New Bern, at the request of the State Dent ocretic Executive Committee, and re leased by State Chairman J. Wallace Winborne .calling upon the people of the State to suppor the New' Deal and vote their full strength for the rational. State and local Democratic candidates next Tuesday. “Nothing can be more helpful at this stage of our recovery program than a sweeping endorsement of the President and his co-workers at the polls on November 6”. Senator Sim mons, admittedly one of the ablest and most honorable representatives this State has ever had says in his state ment. CLERIC’S ACCOUNTS NOT YET SETTLED Negotiations for a final settlement of the accounts of the late Colonei Henry Perry as clerk of superior court of Vance county are still in progress, out ate expected to be ad justed at an early date. The trust fund department was cleared up some months ago. The fine and fee items are now under discussion, with prospects of an early agreement be tween county officials and attorneys representing the Perry estate. \ l ife. Preservers Mis. George Marlin suggests that w lion stitching satin or other Jtlnn silk a newspaper be placed under Hie material while the stitching is in progress. Afterwards the paper may be torn off and Hie material "ill not be drawn or puckered. KINGSFORD-SMITH CALLS PACIFIC “TOO TOUGH" Reaching Honolulu «s the first flyer to conquer the west-cast crossing from Australia to Ha waii, Sir C/haHci tings/ord • HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, lor>4 | Going places and doing things then I meant a Lug-.y ride, or if the scene was N'cw York City, an outing - at ! Coney Island or a cool spin along 1 the river Boating traffic 10 years j aim wasn’t imp'd, t by sand and j coal barges, and riv* r banks were Recent Studies Shed Light On Gall Bladder Physiology By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. A GREAT DEAL of new light has been shed on the physiology of the gall bladder by studies made within •he last three years. This little sac. which bangs un- Dr. Clendcning: • salts may begin :o deposit around foreign substances -itch as germs or small pieces of mucous, and form stones. When these stones begin to wander from the gall bladder down tlie ducts, their passage produces a set of pains of extreme severity called “gull stone colic”. The pain itself is hard enough to bear, but repeated attacks fre quently upset the digestive functions so that they become a menace to health. The bile is discharged into the in testine thiough the duct, which comes front tiie gall bladder appar ently only in times of digestion When no food is present in the stom ach and. therefore, none is liuditig its way into the upper part of the intestine, tlie bile remains in the gall bladder. ■ The size or tlie gall bladder Is no larger than the bail ol the thumb on the average, and it may seem strange that so small a receptacle should be used for storage material of this im portant substance, but nature has provided for this in a truly remark able way. From the inside of the gall bladder a membrane, which is thrown into many folds, dips down into the reservoir of bile and drinks up the fluid which is in it. just as the sun draws the water from the sea. leaving the salts and solids be hind. Thus the hile is greatly con centrated, and the gull blatldei can Smith declared five years of hard work will be needed to develop planes suited for transpacific serv ice. Kingaf<*rd-Smilh Is shown, centers of imc h uaiety. It vai *. lot of fun to t.( on A party which obtained a l.„re tov.noa? and went otit for a i o.v. A.:d the young: ladies m those days ,b in't consider it too undlgTiifUd o lend a hand occasionally at the oars store from ten to twenty times as much of the essential constituent as would otherwise be possible. When digestion begins, this concentrated bile is diluted by fresh bile coming from the liver. A great many conditions tend to predispose to gall bladder trouble. Ii is easy to see if there are digestive I GALL LIVER. BLADDER u | l Jiiipir CAU BLADDER i LIVER TO INTESTINE] INTESTINE TliC null bladder and its duels, shun - in// Us relation to tit a mid intestine disturbances, H people do not cat regularly, the gall bladder will not be emptied. Tho same i - true sometimes in cases of constipation I‘inspect i \ t mothers ;i re liable to develop gall bladder trouble parti' because or the sedentary life that they have to lead and partly on account cl the lottsli patiou which attends lire condition. Any infection going from i lie in testine into the liver ir. liable to be dumped into I lie gall b’adder. and typhoid lever is Irequently followed by infection of the gall bladder and the formation of gall stones. EDITOR'S NOT 1C: Six pamphlets by Dr. Oleiidemng can now t.c ob tained by .sending id cents in com. for each, and a self-addressed envelope stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Or. Logan Clendeiiing. in care ol this paper. The pamphlets are: “Indigestion and Constipation.” “De ducing and Gaming." “Inlant Feed ing." “Instructions lo: the Treatment of Diabetes." "Feminine Hygiene' and "The Care of tiie Hair and Skin. ’ derncath the liv er and into which bile flows from the liver bile ducts, may be the cause of a great deal of trouble. It acts as a sort of res ervoir for bile before It is eject ed into the intes tine. The bile is con centrated in the gall bladder, and on account of stasis, the bde n/c 7 ith Capt P G - Tayior, navigator, and their plane, Lady scout, Cross, i n which t h e 3 ' loo - m, '<- night wa ß made. The New Wolf Much Relief Work Just Plain Waste (Continued from Tag© One.) are not actually as cro3s as tfis. Their system is more in the lino of razing perfectly good, entirely satis factory government buildings, to re place them with new ones, at the ta:v layers’ expense. Erecting them docs provide consid erable artificial employment, it's true —and probably it is made, v/orl: disguised that the workers don’t rec ognize it as such, and their self-re spect really is saved. But unfor tunately the contractors -re the folk who reap most of the benefit —which only goes to prove, as aforesaid, that it’s a mighty expensive way of dis pensing charity. Commission Gives Supple ments for Superintendents (ConUntcd from page One.) ment.s for principals a.s well as so. the superintendents. A good many of the: budgets asked large supplements for travel ex penses of superintendents. One small city in a Piedmont county proposed to grant n supplement of $550 to the city superintendent, in addition to llie $l5O for travel a.lowed by the State, which would have made a total of S7OO or enough to permit the city superintendent to travel over 13.000 miles. The school commission fell that the superintendent would have to spend more Inn in his automobile than/ in his office to spend this amount fer travel, so slashed the re quest accordingly. Another budget asked/ a travel supplement of SBOO for a county superintendent who alreaoy had an a.lotment of SIOO from the State for travel. If granted, this would have given this county superin tendent $1,200 a year for travel alone, or enough to permit him to drive over 25.000 miles. The school commission did not see how 7 it would be possible for this superintendent to need to drive 25.000 miles a year within his county, so cut th e supplement from SBOO «.o $250. In most cases however, the supple ments asked were regarded as being reasonable and necessary and were applied with only slight changes. The 22 counties and cities in which supt'lemtnts lor i-upc: mtendents wei-t, approved a id the amounts of these supplements are as follows: Unit Salary Supplement Morven $1,200 $ 200 Lenoir 1.824 900 Davie County ..... 1.400 300 Durham 2.768 1.252 Forsyth County . . . 2,250 750 ltoanoke Rapids . . 1.992 -.608 McDowell County.. 1.400 400 Mitchell County .. 1.400 3m, Southern Pines ... 1160 1,090 Rocky Mount 1.000 Orange County . . . 1.450 350 Pender County .... 1,550 155 Richmond County 1.894 506 Hamlet 1,736 MOO Rowan County ... 2.350 lOp Stanly County 1.750 4&0 Stokes County .... 1.650 400 Mount Airy 1.920 300 Raleigh 2,592 650 North Wilkesboro. 1.472 616 Edgecomb County. 1.850 474 [UQUID^TABUETS 13 Salaries Paid Utility Man Were $500,000 a Year t Continued from Page One.) ing to avoid coming back to Chicago and being prosecuted as part of a po litical canipaign—purely!” ilie 1 4-year-old deiendant almost shouted, waving his hand emphatical ly at the jury. When he arrived in Greece he had “somewhere between $3,000 and sl,- 000,”* Insull told the jury. “Now,” he said, he “had no income whatsoever.” “Have you any property?” asked Defense Attorney Floyd E. Thompson. “Not that I am aware of. I would very much like to find some.” A whispering campaign was direct ed at Insull’s companies in 1930 and 1931, the utility man testified, in an effort to drive down the value of his stock and to hurt Insull’s credit. Insull told of rumors directed against him in that period, including one that J. F. Morgan & Company, New York financiers, were “out to dome up." This testimony came after he had admitted that Insull companies dealt in the stocks of other Insull com panies in 1929-31, but defended it has PIGGLY WIGGLY Watch This Paper for Opening WEBB PRINTING COMPANY Thonc 2(52. JOB POINTING OF ALL KINDS EXPERT TYPEWRITER AND ADDING MACHINE REPAIRING REBUILT TYPEWRITERS," STANDARD OR PORTABLE—FOR SALE OR RENT ASK FOR DEMONSTRATION OF THE NEW L. C. SMITH TYPEWRITER. Special for Monday Men’s 2or 3 piece suits, cleaned ... 35c Plain One Piece Dresses Cleaned 35c Balance of Week Men’s 2 or 3 piece suits, cleaned 50c Plain One Piece Dresses Cleaned 50c We Call and Deliver. Perry 's Dry Cleaners 105 N. Garnett Street ' Phone 373 as away of supporting security val ues for the stockholders, and one practiced even by the Federal gov ernment. Admitting that he “supported the market” for his securities, Insull said he did no more <’:an was done by the United States government. It was because “many people would have been seriously affected by a drop in Insull stocks, he said, that he o) dered his associatco to deal in those stocks. “We stood between the market and extreme demoralization,” (he utility man declared. AUCTION SALE Saturday—Seaboard Square Special Bargains Tn stoves, furniture and other household goods. AT YOUR PRICE. F. B. I light, Auctioneer