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| SCOTT’S SCRAPBOOK - . By R. J. Scott ~ *''' .. •*HToTaL number . fK^\^- cpD cF j>OsMf>S AROUND y fyE <H.‘i WdsV U % <o D/kl% [ Svh'E SCALED of IKEL COD FISH APE ONE. oF IHC */r. A' Jfi mo ) 1N P R E DIE NTS ll 51 D iU -IHfe M AMU F ACTU RE. M s<*/&&% MAIN VARIETIES QF ARTIFICIAL PEARLS IHIMBLE THEATRE Starring POPE YE A Permanent Wave fjy E. C. Segar ( A NEW MAN \ ! 1 OH. VA LCfMTTS TO SFLC IF \ v\ i show va T w ttr mp k "' " 1 '■• ~>--- - —— L .— . . IVE GOT TO FtND Out ) t kin T AKE it, CH? GiMME ) MuSKLES STRONG As)~\ ( \ THERE‘S \ /* \ s~\ ?\F HE CAN TfcKE IT J A KNIFE AN VU_ SHOW! p* > -4 SuSnM V ou FOOL]i l \ Oil KN\FE ) /->V. J II ) <t- — vgu uww i K.K < v —r^(£Pr - * ~ 2 ——_ a.CCC V ‘ /ii _' n a j :;.'*;-r";^ X ' ( BIG STS I l-K The Price of Peace By LES FORGRAVE ' TPvV<k" Ty-AHNi, VkUNYTAMp W' I’LL l'U_ JOST 'BTTCHA >IE O\OV4'T \ VOu CAvM BBT INA (SOVNIGTO \ 2*l ChG " Vo vooß WBA«XS J* follow TrAE DvRE:CTVOYS RV6KT ) WXVGVATY C Vao T CONTENT GOT OON'T f SAY AMOTvFER \FJ THE. FIRST PLACE, OR MAYBE/- Tt-WG TVKAE AMO <SEE \E MAE J JfOGV STOP PE’STEQ.XMG jrTHANKS, E\IER VAEAGTtOM THAT I njOOQD ABOUT \NE COUNTED WRONG, OX* OvO tv\Ay<B A Na\STPkWE . «r-^ ~T' . T^ fc^*** rr -- ,m - ~ - ' Wi// '‘ V • M TT —_ , ,„ ,M. ..; Red Hot Clues By PAUL ROBINSON' I /J&urr*- ro°^rs <E i.?rr —7 r";i;i'i ho« re.o osappfaced I ihats Ojeeiz-CArz-feAocs l ~) J <ms Mosr at rue bacm- v<hm - TWteEs' F' I _ J v .u^ 5 ~ EINCS Held sro ME PLACE | LEADING UPfoTHArOLD HOUSE - I A CATS IN THErSE" A NE.LLQ\n CThiDP > I r~z* —ha^vgota I —! rzzzzz) [ }^ SWPO^D r a x «« N teFO « E .? // ;A *A cmance f “fc? s » bedkoted ; ' ! —SSJ-' _jfi 1 ’ 1 ' : " r -' r ' ! ' r~ — | ■ y THE GUMPS —WHEN GUMP VISITS GUMP ANP HIS UTTLE BMbE NAME OUST SPEKT If' \mELV.- FAA GLAD I OOULbM'T HA\Ji f7^T NC v th£ AIRS PUTS^^^ 1 * f,l,Ba,i,, “ l, "* il "*aM^^ A QUIET £\iEhlN6r 'WITH ANDY AND /V.IN- . / THATS QMER- WHAT 1 STOOD IT ANOTHER . ON WITH U$- THE QUEEN W OH-WELL- W COULPRT COKAE, OYiING TO A SUODEN /AN EVENING !OF ALL x NvIHUTE - THE W/vf CONTES TO VISIT A COUPLE M \mc ONLY HAVE BAPPT COUPLE ARE UUST LEAVING yHE INSIPID flS TE cnSr S | S /' OF HER SUBviEDTS -Jp To | EE HEP . ONC.E To HAVE SEEN YOU, FOLKS-\ 1 ALL. HE COULO TALK J™* *&)*(*• FLIRTNG ALL TOTING TO TREAT US / )K1 A vohilE- BUT -ED XNHEN OUR FAVORITE UNCLE ) ; ABOUT WAS THAT DUfAB A L\KE HER ‘HUSBAND'S ( f Sira- HP H THE BEST LOOKING BRIDE J V v i-r-ri ir RLONDF - ”/ \ HERE - >NWY IT WAS l L ItXTv odc i i i THINK OF BIAA- HE \ REI.*TWJS— I H> - TCI UJ E HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4. ISB4 Highway Arrests Ijj crease Dnilj Dispatch tturcni, In rtoe Sir Waiter Hotel Hr J. Baakervllle. Raleigh, Dec. 4.—Many more actual arrests for violation of the motor ve hicle and highway laws were made during November by the State Hign way Patrol than in preceding months, although the actual number has not yet been tabulated. Captain Charles D. Parmer, commander of the patrol • said today. The reason for this in crease in arrests was the order is i sued early in the month for patrol men to stop giving warnings and u> make more arrests for highway and traffic law violations. A tabulation of the attests and con viction during November is also go ing to show that most of the judges imposed heavier fines or longer sen tences than has usually been the case, i Captain Farmer said. I ‘‘Almost a month ago orders were I issued to all the patrolmen to stop giving warnings to motorists and to i start arresting them instead.” Cap tain Farmer said. “We have been let ting thousands of drivers go with warnings for several years now, and they apparently have had no effect, since the number of accidents has been increasing instead of decr.eas (ing. So front now on the highway pa trolmen are going to mala, actual at tests of motorists found violating the I traffic laws, unless the violations are evidently of a very minor nature. The motorists have had plenty of tune to • become familiar with the laws and now if they continue to violate them, •t is going to be just too bad for 1 them.” ! Most of the courts in the State seem to he more “safety conscious” now than they have been and seem to be realizing the need for more drastic action to reduce the number of au tomobile accidents in the State, Cap tain Parmer said. As a. result, most of them are imposing heavier fines or sentences, especially for drunken driving, reckless driving and other major traffic law violations. State Historical Convention Opens (Continueo from Page One.) of poetry, was born of uneducated parents in a log cabin atop a North Carolina mountain, and grew to man hood on a tenant farm with almost no educational advantages and no encouragement to develop his inborn poetic genius. He has made his life as a poet and his living as a farmer and country printer. Tomcrfow night in the Hugh Mor son auditorium, the principal address of the annual meeting will be deliver ed at 8:30 o’clock by Dr. Douglas S. Freeman, editor of the Richmond News Deader, noted public speaker, author of the definitive four-volume biography of Robert E. Lee, and pres lessor in Columbia University. At this meeting Governor Ehringhaus will present the Mayflower Society Cup to the North Carolina author of the best book of the year. Tomorrow morning in the Sir Wal ter Hotel, the Association will present a program of historical papers deal ing with North Carolina. In the aft ernoon, the North Carolina Folk-Lore Society will hold its annual meeting Three Towns Destroyed By Honduras Earthquake (Continued from Page One.) cion, 3,000, and San Fernandino, 1.500. Owing to the wreckage of commun ications systems, the government had difficulty in determining any details regarding the fate of the inhabitants or the exact time of the quake, but it was regat ded as probable that the shock was the same one which struck Honduras day before yesterday. A report from San Salvador said the Honduran village of Santa Rita, in the Copan area, was destroyed by the quake. The western region of the republic was rocked all day yesterday. No report had come through today from the eastern region of the coun try. Although communication lines were known to have been destroyed, there were no indications of damage htere. Claims European Munitions Makers Scuttled Control (Continued from Page One.) expedite international action on Am erica's recent proposal to control the manufacture and sale of munitions. Secretary of State Hull has called Hugh R. Wilson, United States min ister to Switzerland, to Washington for a conference. After discussing the proposal in the light of European re action. Wilson will return to Geneva in time to push for its adoption at the January meeting of the disarma ment conference’s special arms con trol committee. Assassins Os Soviet Looked For (Continued from Page One.) of 71 White Russians, who face a speedy trail for their lives on char ges of preparing terroristic acts a gainst Soviet officials. Thirty-nine were arrested in the Leningrad section and 32 in the Mos cow’ area but ii w’as not announced whether they are accused with direct complicity in the slaying of Kirofr. AGITATION AGAINST REDS SERIOUS IN LABOR CAMPS Beilin, Dec. 4.—(AP)- I The news paper Mittags Zeitung. in a dispatch | from Relsingfors, Finland, today said serious anti-bolshevik agitation has PAGE FIVE developed in Russian labor camps in: the dehselv wooded territory between. Leningrad and the White Sea. Intervention of Soviet troops, the dispatch asserted, has been frequently necessary recently. Fugitives covered their flight, it was said, by starting huge forest fires blit the Russians are so closely guard ing the border that escape into Fin land is almost impossible. Long Fight Ahead l o Pick Jury For Grice-Sasser Case Goldsboro, Dec. 4. — (A'P) — At torneys predicted a protracted struggle before the jury box is filled as ten Wayne county de puties today began the task of summoning 350 prospective jurors fr.r the trial of Mrs. Ruby Grice, 30-year-old widow, and her broth er, Donald Sasser, eharged with complicity in the . year-old slaying of her husband, Herbert Grice. Drawing of the name of the ape-, eial veniremen was not complet ed until last midnight, and their summoning was expected to take until tomorrow morning, when court is scheduled to reconvene. WANT ADS Get Results FOR SALE-FRESH MILK COW? Apply to Miss Laurie Rullook, Wil liamsboro. 3-2 ti WE USE QUALITY MATERIALS and do high grade shoe repairing of all kinds'. Only expert workmen employed. Carolina Shoe Shop. 23-ts PLENTY OF GOOD DRY WOOD and coal. Best service and lowest prices. Phone 546-W—we deliver. Linden at old Henderson Coal and Wood yard, North Henderson. IS-ts I*OR RENT TO COUPLE OR small family, two or three down si airs furnished rooms with private hath. Vacant Dec. 10. “Apartment”, Care Daily Dispatch. 4-lti THE NEWEST THING IN BAT tery radio, L-Talro Radio, uses only 6-volt battery. Guaranteed to oper ate on less than 3 cents per day. I joagh I in-Good wyn. 20-ts WANTED TWO ROOMS, UNFUR nished, for light housekeeping'or one room with board for wife and Imby. Phone Vance Hotel. Felton Jernigan, 3-3 fl WE HAVE FOUR GREAT LINES of Battery Radios to select from. One for every person and every home. Pliilco, Sentinel, Bosch, L- Tatio. f .mighlin-Goodwyn. 20-ts NEW AND USED FURNITURE AT sacrifice prices, bedroom, living room and dining room suites. Fur niture that will suit your home At a price that will fit your pocket book Home Furniture Exchange, 101 N. Garnett Street, Phone 80. /'■ 23 ts BUY OLD NEWSPAPERS FOR wrapping purposes and kindling fires. Big bundle for 10c, three for 2f»e at Dispatch office. 11-tf' For Good Used Cars —See — I.egg-Parham Co. a I , Coal and Wood CITY FUEL CO. Hansom Duke, Prop. —Phone 180— Candy! Candy! CANDY! See ns now for ■ T 5 Christmas Candy R. E. Satterwhite Co. Wholesule Phom 170 FORKCLOSURE SALE. By virtue of authority conferred in a certain deed of trust executed iby George Burton, Jr., and Minnie Bur ton his wife, on the 4th day of April, 1929, and recorded in Book 151, Page 347, Register of Deeds Office of Vance County; default naving been made in the payment of the debt therein secured, at the request of the holder of the same I will offer for sale at the court house door in Hender son by public auction for cash a%}2 O’clock on the sth day of January, 1935, the following described lot of land: Begin at the George Burton and Annie Kelly corner, on the right-ot way of the Southern Railroad, and run thence along Annie Kelly’s line in a North Western direction 200 feet to a stake; thence along a line paral lel with railroad in a Westerly di rection 100 feet to a stake, thence in a Southern direction and parallel with Annie Kelly line 200 feet to a stake, on the railroad right of way, thence Easterly along said Railroad right aj f way 100 feet to place of be ginning, see deed of Geo. Burton to George Burton, Jr. This 4th day of December, 1934. A. A. BUNN, Trusts*,