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PAGE TWO Henderson Eliminated Bv *■ Cary For District Title •> Two Tall Players for Cary Prove Too Much for Locals To Handle; All Bulldogs Turned in Fine Perform ance Despite of Big Fellows; Edwards Leader Carv high swamped Henderson hoys lasr night in Cary 51-25 to win the Plsuiet Class H title in tin* finals. go ing into the semi-finals of the eastern dist rior The tale ot their victory rests on the shoulders of their elongated Cope land and Holloman who did practi cally all of the scoring. Henderson just could not cope with the height ot these two players. Copeland stood six feet and three inches while his running fate. Holloman, center, stood six feet seven. Copeland got 1- points and Holleman got 31. The Bulldogs turned in a nice game AYCOCK WINS TWO FROM NORLINA HIGH i Play Middleburg at High Price Friday, Two Games; Girls Undefeated Ayooek won a doubleheadet front | .Not linfl high here Tuesday right, the girls winning theii eighth game against no defeats this season by 24- 21 and the hoys got a 24-20 edge ovc the visitors. Miss Kthel ( Copies paced her team to victory, scoring 10 points. Misses Loretta Huff and Louise Peoples ac counted sot the remaining eight points. Miss K. Duke led Norlina with 17 points. A. Hoyle was the best for the Av cock boys, scoring eight points. Lloyd led Norlina wits -i\ points. j Ayooek meets Middleburg in a 1 dnubleheader Friday night at High Pi ice warehouse at 7:30 o'clock in ! what should he the best doubleheader ; of the season for the schools. Both schools have been pointing to these I games, and a latge crowd is expected to attend. HIGH GIRLS ARE TO MEET NORLINA HERE Henderson high school gills will meet Noiliua girls here tonight at 7:30 j o'clock on the High Price court, it was announced today This will he the only game played. ‘ The* hoy- were eliminated in the di<- : trict finals of class B hv Cary last j right 51-2e. l' h.* plains thr til ji VP!oij-*l»'<//<ir«/ S 1 1 'treatment whirh is bunging ? gflftlfc' niazitjg islift. Sold on iroud.ui ■ '—{ money-back uuarantee. > ■ PRICELESS INFORMATION J | for l Lose Buffering from a f -STOMACH OR HI ODtNAI. ■ afat^*i- rL<;,cß! *' hook diocs- ■ HON, ACID DYSPEPSIA, 2 .SOCK STOMACH, CANSI- m f ; NESS, HEARTS CRN, CON* Z yj SI I PAT! OV, BSD HKKAIII, 3 SLEEPI ESSNKSS OH HEAD- 3 ACHES, DUE TO EXCESS ACID. ■ /■** :or a tree copy of WUlartl't Message. \\ •• 5 *rt Authorized Willard D*-alei« ■ I'uge-llorutt Drill;' Co. a TVavel anywhere..any day on the SOUTHERN ** I/£ Afare for evertf purse...! * u , 1f ; ®ONE WAY and ROUND TRIP COAC.II TICKETS . . . I’or Kai h Mile Traveled ! * ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 15 Day* i wi™ . . . for Cut'll Mile Traveled * ROUND TRIP TICKETS—Return Limit 6 Month* | for Furh Mile Traveled ; * jta ONE WAY TICKETS for Eat'li Mile Traveled *Cood in Sleeping and Parlor Care on payment of proper charge* ft»r spare oeeupietl. No surcharge. I Economize by leaving; your Automobile at home and iisin*: the Southern Excellent Dining Ear Service Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel J. S. Bloodsworth, D. P. A. Raleigh. N. ('. Southern Railway System ALFORD v S PRIN T SHOP Telephone 62 QUALITY WITH SERVICE PROTECT YOUR HEALTH BY DRINKING b I BUCKHORN WATER I In Sterilized Bottles. A Mineral Product of Nature t A Light. Pleasant Tasting Water Has Given Satisfaction for Over 25 Years I Deliyet ed any’vhero in Hcrutsrgon, Fresh every Saturday 40e per gallon in half gallon bottles and 5 gallon demijohns ■ Analyze*! Even, Thirty Days 0 Oi doi Direct from I'age-ITocutt Drug Company I|| • ft- A h It /» V . Salesman 0 Bullock, N. C. in spite of the fact that 1 ught was nn overwhelming feature in their de teat IFudd Hdwards, Duke* and Stninback were scoring leaders. Ed t»eelvhr.m got four points when he was substituting sot .J. H. Hicks, who cored two points. Wilkerson got three points. Most of Henderson’s scoring came in the second half. At the end ol the first half, Cary was leading rhe locals 22-,S. The Bulldogs have more games card od during the remainder of the sea -on, hut tne dates that they will he played warn not announced hv Coach Powell, pending further negotiations. MIDDLEBURG WINS OVER TOWNSVILLE Boys and Girls Get Wins at Middleburg; Play Ay cock Here Friday Night Middleburg war, a tlouhleheader from T< wnsville 1 uesday night at Middleburg the girls getting a 33-7 verdict and the boys were pushed to the limit to win 29-25. Misses Newton, with 13. 11. Short, with 12. Currin. with ti and Satter v.hiie. with two, were the scorers for Middleburg. Misses Stegall. 4. and Capps 3. were the Townsville scorers. Robertson led the Middleburg boys to tlicit win with 19 points. Hendricks got 7 ami Jackson, 3. Twisdale was best for the losers, getting 17 points. Sparrow got four. Norwood and Wil son. two each. Middleburg will meet Aycoek in a dnubleheader here Friday night on the High Price court. Aoah Numskull BAN<&c?i|r D£=AFl NOAM = will i DEVELOPS A, -TEf^F?.\e,LE TEMPER )F | DP.INK. ENOUGH POMVC>EI6 teaT Joyce B^oßAi-ce, SAW PIHSO, CALir. DEAR NOAM =- IF I TAKE A SCHooMEfe OF W/NH' WILL I SEAPofeT? O C JOHNSOM, MIMNETAV-' oILS / MMM DEAfe NOAM - |F 'TooftHoine NEEOED REPAYS , WOULD 'TOO CALL. THE House Docrof&T R> daciEm . CO ei a I . BZNHEBSCK, (K. C.) Tj AIL" mSrATCK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935 If the Colonel blver Awards a Medal for Usefulness | MrtiMl. N ,.U, w.» ' , College Station, Raleigh. Feb. 14 County farm agents have played a piominent role in bringing farm pros perity bock to North Carolina. Dean I O. Schaub. of State College, declar ed today. t Tn the past two years, he said, their work in administering the agricul tural adjustment programs has at tracted wide attention, although this i. only one phase of their activities. The dean said that the adjustment programs deserve much of the credit for boosting North Carolina farm in come, which has risen 150 per cent since 1932. with their policy of con trolling production so as to raise prices and of distributing benefit payments to cooperating farmers. The tremendous amount of work required to administer the programs could not have ben carried on without the help of the county agents and the extension service, Dean Schaub said, for only an established organi zation reaching into practicality every county, and familiar with agricultu ral conditions of the State, could be capable of administering the pro grams efficiently and effectively. The agents acquainted the farmers with the purpose of the programs, ap pointed and supervised committeemen who went into every nook and corner of their counties, saw that the con tracts were prepared correctly and that the farmers complied with the provisions of the contracts, and dis tributed the benefit payment checks. Whenever problems arose, the farm ers have gone to their agents for help kittle 0) Sister (s(s) by MARGARET VWI/ W/DDEMER CH aH'RP- •&? • so TRA’L' was iff ; ■ ‘ \ Mrs. Johnston-Fjedgefc; hteid played Addisoh along to save the Manor beach for the manor. She didn't care if the whole thing went to total smash. She had fooled the other Fern woods, she and her corps of trained lieutenants. * into thinking they’d have something better, heav en knew what she had promised them if they gave her their word (on paper, of course, if you knew Flor ence Hedges) to lay off the Manor beach! . . . Or perhaps she was the person who had advanced enough money to carry the place this far. A mortgagor is in a good financial position sometimes. Addison w is on his feet again; he was trying wildly, hysterically, to say something, and again he was being suppressed, this time by Aunt Minnie, who couldn't bear scenes. | The mayor rose, and began to talk. 1 He had a good carrying voice which j put Addison’s completely out o-f the running. “We never thought.” he began, "when a young man from the city ( very quietly married one of our ; Fern wood girls this spring, and set- | down to live with her in Fern- : wood Manor, that he was bringing j with him an industrial blessing. J Some of you may remember, some ! years ago, in an interview with j Hargess Huntingdon, the automobile j manufacturer, his impassioned brief 1 for the forgotten white-collar class; j that the normal human being of the future should Jive in a house of six j to eight rooms, with as much com- j fort as possible, together with recre- ! ational facilities close enough so that any group of human beings wishing j It should have comfort, work, and . play. In the depression just passed [ most of us had to forget such Utopian schemes as this; but Mr. [ Huntingdon and his son have not forgotten. Some of us have won- | riered how young Addison Hunting- j don. with little visible means, living ( simply among us. could hopefully i carry on this building operation j which has given life-saving employ ment to the workmen in our vicin ity. We know now. He was the brilliant and capable son of a bril liant and capable father. Within a month or so the Fernwood Waters development will be complete. Bus lines will run from It to the new j and in nearly all cases the agents were abel to iron out the difficulties. 1 the dead added. The worth of these men has been ! attested by the fact that most of the | few counties which do not have coun i ty agents are now taking steps to se ' cure them in the near future, he point jed out. BROOKLYN DODGERS WILL KEEP STENGEL Brooklyn. N. Y., Feb. 14 <AP) The j Brooklyn Dodgers of the National | Baseball League today signed Casey Stengel to a new three-vear manage rial contract running through 1937, j after cancelling a previous agreement which still had a year to run. Counsel To Eight In Highest Courts To Save His Life (Continued from Page One.) meets for its next term late in May. The court of pardons will not hear it before October. The jurors who sentenced him show vd more emotion than did Hauptmann i as he stood before them at 10:45 p. i m. last night. With a look of affection, the 36- jof the curious. Hauptmann burst in j to tears. The jurors required more than j eleven hours to reach their verdict. 1 They were closely guarded after the j branch of Mr. Hargess Huntingdon/? .J 9)Otoc Wliicli -apier' to ' l>e ' far jfe,'h^t3^f!frOTO l> ‘out- suburb so "that. . smoke and noise shall not affect, so cially or financially, our fair Fern : woods. This development will be. it is understood, rented or sold at the lowest possible cost price to the white-collar group of the new fac tory, although I understand that there is already keen competition on the part of other? than these for houses and plots in this charming spot—and small wonder, with its bathing beach, community house, i and all its other conveniences. J understand that another acreage, somewhat nearer the factory, is to be developed on the same lines for the workmen of the plant. We thank the Huntiugdons. father and son. for their forward-looking puhlio spirit, their generosity, and their magnifi j cent forwarding of the new day.” I Leila’s eyes went down the table |to the last quiet comer; the man , who had dropped into the last empty j chair. A small, conspicuously erect | man of fifty or so. very much what j Addison would be then, if he became j a personage and the world thought I well of him. ( "It is now rny pleasure and privi | lege.” the mayor said, "to introduce I to you the gentleman responsible not j only for Mr. Addison Huntingdon. i but for—in a greater measure than j his modesty has heretofore allowed jus to know—this new enterprise. I Fern wood Waters.” j He sat down, gesturing toward j Hargess Huntingdon, j What he said when lie rose Leila j never knew. He spoke almost as | awkwardly and shyly as his son did. ! Leila was too busy watching the others. For once in her magnificent , life, Mrs. Johnston-Hedges was sur- J prised. She was murmuring angrily to Orton, who was beside her. and i through Mr. Huntingdon’s voice J Leila could catch an occasional word, j "... Should have told us .. . ridir j tilous secrecy . . The mayor’s wife. ( beside her, was trying to calm her. [ and apparently succeeding; she j quieted by the time the elder Hun tingdon’s speech was through. “And now-,” said the mayor, “mav we hear from our fellow citizen as well as our benefactor, the younger 1 Mr. Huntingdon?" Addison sprang to his feet, pant ing and protesting. "I—l never meant to do anything j case ended, but a court house report was that two of the four women had : held out for a recommendation of 1 mercy. That would have meant a life j sentence. j There was no mention of mercy ( when the jury was polled. , With stuttering words, Foreman j Charles Walton announced the ver i diet. He who had listened to the evi i dence for more than six weeks even | twisted the. defendant’s name in his ! fight to remain calm. “Guilty.” he announced. “We find I the defendant Richard Bruno Haupt ’ mann guilty of murder in the first de gree.” j An insignificant piece of paper rustled in his trembling hands. He I glanced at the paper with unseeing ! eyes in pretense of consulting it. ; A few strides away stood Haupt ! mann, jaw set. face so pale and hag -1 gard it was ghastly in the electric lights. Sharply erect, he tottered slightly as he heard the foreman's words. A few minutes later. Justice Thomas • W. Trenchard quietly imposed sen | fence. I So ended the long kidnap trial. It : began in Featherbed Lane, Hopewell, ! the night of March 1. 1932, when the wind was howling over the lonely Sourland mountains, on which Col onel Charles A. Lindbergh made his home. It ended in a prosaic court j room, littered with papers and cig l arette stubs. Si of th« sort.” he began. “I—ft wa.« r j thej furl best idea 'from 'my mfnd.” tie 1 i was going further when his angry - j face suddenly changed to a dazed one. His father had come from t where he had been sitting, and dropped into a chair which some ; body s assiduous hands pushed close beside Addison. Addison, conscious of his father’s presence, stammered, i and sat helplessly down while tli* • audience applauded. • Before he could rise and begin ! again Bet intervened. In all her madonna-like blue draperies, with her most soulful expression, she gave , him a quick wifely perk which kept i him where he was. and rose in hi* stead and began to talk in a voice that carried all over without aid of ' the microphone. “My husband's modesty, and hi* pleasure at meeting lhs father after a separation of some months.” sh* began, prevents him from continu ing. J hope I may be allowed t« substitute tor him. as an old Fern wood Manorite. one who has conse crated both goods and goodwill to this enterprise from the beginning and been, I hope 1 may say without immodesty, its co-planner from its inception! My husband and I like my father-in-law.” she want eu calmly, “feel that though too much can never be done for the proletariat, the class to which we ourselves be long. that which is the brains of the machine has been in danger of being forgotten.' (She was repeating al most word for word an article in last month’s magazine, but that was nothing new.) “We are remember ing them. We have made a place here, on easy terms, for the white collar classes. We are. as you have heard, throwing open to all the tern woods our new-made casino and bathing beach, our cabanas, our pool, at the same fee that one may pay at a public beach. But this is not a public beach; it is for tbe Fern woods only. We only ask old-fash ioned. right-minded American b«- hav.or a return to the standards of he pilgrims, of our fathers who knew that right and wrong were different things, and were not afraid Lo, Y n™ ha,Cl 3nd fast ru,ef » for them. Post-wnr wildness and lack of standards are past. Und*r these tales our Fernwood Waters will flourish. You are welcome. W» thank you.” (TO BE CONTINUED) i That Goes for Most Work ers, Not Only A. F. of L.; Difference Seen By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Staff Writer Washington, Feb. 13.—'The case of j Recovery Director-in-Chief Donald Ft. | Richberg (also frequently refererd to, 1 much to his annoyance, as "assistant ; president") is difficult to diagnose with any.feeling of accuracy. Did he flop almost immediately fol- ; lowing his appointment to a. high ! NR A post, from ardent advocacy of organized labor's cause over to the side of capital?—as charged by Pres ident William Green of the A. F. of L. and other spokesmen for trades unionism. Or did workingmen, as a class, de mand that he favor ihem unfairly, as against the employing- class, in a role which required him to maintain a just balance between the two inter ests ? RICHBERG *$ HEW Answering- attacks on him by A. F. : of L. President Green and by Presi dent John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers, an A. F. of affiliate, Richberg takes the position that he Is criticized Germed a "traitor." in j fact) for refusing to show partiality i to a “particular labor group." Obviously the “particular group" he has in mind is the A. F. of J.. 1-Ie is mistaken, however, if he im- I aginos that labor’s hostility toward him is confined to members of the A. F. of L., which is, indeed, a small ish minority element of the workers. I have talked with leaders of all I sorts of working class organizations, I trainmen’s brotherhoods (unaffiliated with the A. F. of L.: the very or ganization with which he especially was identified as their legal adviser in pre-NRA days), to the most radical alignments, including as leftward an ; authority as the Washington repre sentative of “Tass" Soviet Russia’s of ficial news agency. Without one ex ception, they spoke of it as a matter of common recognition, by all of them that Richberg turned pro-capital and anti-labor soon after he joined NRA. ! It isn’t then, the A. F. of L. alone which is resentful. It's "Labor" generally. A DIFFERENCE To me it does not seem so certain that “Labor" (capitalized and in quo tation marks in order to give it an i entity) is 100 per cent right in its | conclusion concerning its old-time i champion. As labor’s lawyer Richberg- natural ly claimed everything in sight. When he was drafted for an arbi tral position labor probabty expected him to arbitrate just, as he had ar gued while representing only labor’s side of disputes between capital and the workers. But a judicial job is different from an advocate’s. Maybe Richberg has not changed very greatly; maybe it is his job that tna.kes him seem to have done so. x * PensreyS fop Afofc/t (b/aes in %iertCfithty Men! This Value Calls for Action! SUITS A Clothing Sensation at IT® $12.75 0 You can trust Penney’a tc ,\f 0 bring you the best possible ' ' 0 clothing values! Here they !§§! hvel Style-right suits, made from quality cassimeres, 0 worsteds, novelties. Stripes, plaids, checks, plain colors 0 Blues, greys, tans, browns A big selection, and a big value. See them tomorrow 1 Kecord-Breaktng Value! /J7 Men’s SHIRTS 79 c Man, oh man! You’d expect to pay a Hit more than 79c for this shirt’ WWfH •** Quality broadclo’h, cut to rigid WHSISm Penney specifications, ocean pearl buttons. Whites, solid colors. 14 L! Men and Young Men’s Semi Dress Pants 3081 Good serviceable fabric sorted patterns, dark coLl Ideal for everyday wear. 0s 0 &oFif vR 7 tarn Ka ml ‘jHHR w yl jWjap In one respect he h > what. He is far less he was. As labor's i BWV e- •! ' important part of his L,,',.,.'" to be accessible and :,ff-, ly with newspaper men-'". ’ y■- public opinion was vit-n interest?. He i, I"!" hl : ,"»« . Perhaps the tremendous , , ,lllV his duties as “assist ar- V,"* 1 .I’* 1 ’* '' makes it impossible. i<i<a. photoplays Stevenson THEATRE “PERFECT so, no- LAST TIMKs loo\\ Added Comedies ‘“This Country And “Songs That 1.h,-" Matinee: Admission p| lis Niffht _ lft-35e— !*|„ s Today’s guests are: Mrs. i llecht and Mrs. |{. |>, (.reen NOTICE W. ('. Fields—in “IT'S A GIFT” Will be shown Frida, s matinv.- front 2 ’til li p. hi Friday Night High School |»| av “THE PRICE TAG" ' iuuswm Show Sunday Viyht Victor McLaglen Edmund Lowe —in— “ Under Pressure” TODAY —ONK DAY 0.N1.V Moon Theatre Duster Crahhe—in “KING OF TIIK .lI’NGI.U Also: “Law of the Mild" With Kin-Tin-Tin, -Ir.