Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH Established August 12, 1914. Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by tfFNDERSON DISPATCH CO.. INC. at 199 Young Street MJSNRY A. DENNIS, Pres, and Editor. 1(. I*. FINCH, Sec-Treas and Bus Mgr. TELEPHONES editorial Office 600 Society Editor OiO Business Office 010 The Henderson Daily Dispatch is a member of the Associated Press, Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation and the North Carolina Pres.> Association. *ll ie Associated Press is exclusively ; entitled to use for republication ah uewi dispatches credited to it or not i otherwise credited in this paper, and j also the local uews published herein All rightsof publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. . SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable Strictly in Advance One Year 45.00 j £ix Months Three Months 1-60 One Week (by Carrier Only) ... -16, Per Copy 05 NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Look at the printed label on your paper. The date thereon shows when the *ub«cription expires, f orward yom money in ample time for renewal ! Notice date on label carefully and it not correct, please notify us at once, j flubsoribers desiring the address on their paper changed, please slate in their communication both the OLD «.nd NEW address. National Advertising Representative* ' BRYANT, GRIFFITH AND BRUNSON, INC. • feast 41st Street, New York m 330 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago i 201 Dovenshire Street, Boston T General Motors Bldg, Detroit Walton Building, Altanta Bntered at rhe post office in Hender eon, N. C., as second class mail matter ; k(U MU a? mt—N« U>: W ' IJVING BREAD: I am the living thread which came down from heaven: I 'if any man eat of this bread, be shall live for ever: and the bread | that I will give is my flesh, which | "I will give for the life of the world. t-John 6:.M. / y TODAY r TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1706 —William Coleman, noted New ; York City Federalist journalist and ! editor of his day, born in Boston. Died j in New York. July 13, 1829. 1817 -Frederick Douglass, the Sou thern slave who escaped to the North and became a celebrated abolitionist, j orator, newspaper publisher, marshal ! and diplomat, horn near Easton, Md. Died near Washington. D. C., Feb. 20. 1895. 1824 Winfield Scott Hancock, Un ion general, unsuccessful Democratic \ candidate for president in 1880, born at Montgomery Squat .’‘a. Died Feb | 9. 1888. 1833-William W. Folwell. first pres- j ident of the University of Minnesota, j author, born at Romulus, N. Y. Died Sept. 18, 1929. 1842—Juliet Corson, pioneer teacher of cooking in the schools of America and Canada, horn in Boston. Died in New York City, June 18, 1897. 1847 Anna Howard Shaw, Metho dic preacher, physician, leader in the woman suffrage movement, lecturer, born in England. Died at Moylan, Fa.. July 2. 1919, lSst>—Frank Harris, author, horn in Ireland. Died in France, Aug. 20 1931. 1864—Israel Zangwill, English auth or, born in Ireland. Died in Fiance. Aug. 26, 1931. 1864 Israel Zangwill, English au thor and Jewish leader, born. Died August 1, 1926. TODAY I HISTORY 116-4—St. Louis founded. 1785—Kienlong, Emperor of China, ' made a feast for the ancients of the country, centenarians receiving 50 i bushels of rice and two pieces of silk, all people exempted from taxes for ' the year which was th • 50th of his reign. IRSJ- Oregon admitted to Statehood, i 1876- Dr. Elisha Gray of Chicago tiled advance notice of intention to patent telephone a few hours before Alexander Graham Hell filed a simi lar patent- fought bitterly for years In court with Bell Ihe ultimate winner. 191 w—Arizona admitted to State hood . 1929 St. Valentine Day massacre in Chicago seven gangsters lined up and stint by fellow-gangsters. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Rear Admiral William C. Watts, U. F. N., born in Philadelphia, 55 years ago. Judge Thomas S. Williams of Louisville, 111., of the U. S. Court of Claims, born at Liouisville, 63 years ago, George Jean Nathan of New York, dramatic, critic, author, horn tit Ft "Wayne, lnd., 53 years ago. ; Bishop Wyatt Brown, P. E. bishop nf Harrisburg, Pu„ horn at Eufaula <Ala., 51 years ago. I Dr. Robert u. Park, University of (Chicago's professor emeritus of socio logy, horn in Luzerne Co., Pa 7J years ago. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE *' An intellectual person is here indi cated. with a scientific mind eager to experiment, and with fluency of cx , pression. Under some aspects it may * develop a malicious teudency, which 4. should lie curbed to avoid danger of 4 frenzy, since unrestrained it might 'JQefcd to mania. Today is the Day By CLARK KINNAIRD Copyrliht, 1454. fur this Newapaper by Central I'nh Association Thursday, Feb. 14; 225th day’. 159th | year of U. S. independence. State | hood Day in Oregon and Arizona, j Morning stars: Neptune, Mars, Jupi- I ter. Evening stars: Mercury’, Venus, Saturn. Uranus Zodiac sign: Aqua rius. ! It is, of eourse. the traditional St. j Valentine’s Day now almost everv -1 where a degenerated festival largely’ | given to exchange of jocular anony- I mous drawings or commercialized I sweethearty greetings. The custom of 1 observing the day in this fashion is older than St. Valentine and Chris tianity’; its association with the saint, a Roman martvred in the 3rd century, is accidental. It began in pagan days in the worship of the goddess Juno. HISTORY UP-TO-DATE Feb. 14, HOO Richard TI, 33. king of England, was murdered at Pontefract Castle. The world remembers this unim portant man because Shakespeare plagiarized a plot from Holinshed’s Chronicles and wrote a play which he called Richard 11. None mourned Richard as he had mourned his wife. He was so strick en with grief when she, Anna of Bo hemia. died at Sheen Castle. Surrey’, that he had the great house torn down and every vestige removed. Feb. 14, 1764 —St.' Louis, Mo., was founded. Pierre Ligucste Laclede, head of the Louisiana Fur Co., who in 1763 obtained from the director-general of Louisiana a monopoly of the fur trade with the Amerindians of Missouri, sent out the party under Auguste and Pierre Chouteau which established the post. St. Louis’ founders were 25 and 15 years old, respectively. Feb. 14. 1779 Captain James Cook. 51. was killed in what is now Karnka koa Bay, Hawaii. Thus ended the career of the great est of explorers of the Pacific while his ship was bound on a trip around the world. The spot where he was done to death by treacherous natives is marked today by one fit the strang est monuments in the world: it was constructed under water and remains so. At high tide it may not be seen. Feb. 14. 1866 - The wot Id’s first bank holdup was staged at Liberty. Mo. By Jesse and Frank James and the Younger brothers. They got $72,000, no part of which was over returned, uml for which they were never pun ished legally, that is. Feb. 14, 1872—Jack Gaffey, gambler, was hanged for shooting a man to •loath in a card game in a Buffalo, ; N. Y. dive. He is remembered solely’ because lie was hanged by a sheriff destined Jto become President ot the United j States, Grover Cleveland. The fol lowing September, Cleveland carried out another execution. In both in stances Cleveland sprang the trap with his own hands. Feb. 14, 1879—A colored man presid ed over the United States Senate. During the debate on the Chinese immigration bill. Senator Blanche Kelso Bruce of Mississippi, born a slave in Virginia in 1841, was in the chair. The bill, restricting Chinese entries into the country, was passed by’ Pres ident Rutherford B. Hayes vetoed it. Bruce was the second and last col ored man to serve in the Senate. ANSWERS TO TEN QUESTIONS See Itn rlc friqt 1 One which tends almost inevitably to a fatal issue. 2 Denmark. 3 Pendulum. 4. Two hundred and thirty-one. 5 Saint Boniface. 6. Twenty-one to 22 months. 7. A species of wild duck. 8. In southern Georgia und northeast Florida. 9. Daughter of Icarios of Sparta and Perihoea, and the wife of Odysseus. 10. American jurist, son of John Au gustine Washington, a younger brother of George Washington. Abyssinian Rulers %H H Mm h ' f • : . ■ /.% * JR, x Their majesties, Emperor Haile Selassie, and bis empress, Manmn Mikail Asafau, both of whom trieg their ancestries back to tribes ruled bv Queen of Sheba of Biblical fame. The emperor is head of the Cbri£ tean Coptic Church, one of the olep Ml breaches of Christianity. (Central PrtitJ HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935 7 FEBRUARY IUN MON lUt W«D THU- Wt SAT I 34 a♦/. V*> 101 112 If I 4 10 1718 18 2V yi‘2J 24 25 2637>gr NOTABLE NATIVITIES Juliet Corson, b. 1842, pioneer in | teaching of cookery in schools in U. ■S. ... Anna Howard Shaw, h. 1847, I British-born pioneer in woman suff erage movement in U. S. ... Frank | Harris, b. 1856. British-born American cowboy, editor, critic and author. His j frank autobiography is barred from i entry into U. S. ... Israel Zangwill, ■b. 1819, inventor of first successful I typewriter .. . Winfield Scott Han ! cock. b. 1824, federal general in W]ar j between the States who was an un | successful Democratic nominee for j Presidency. I George Jean Nathan, h. 1882. Ft. Wayne, lnd. —born cosmopolite and critic .... Charles Rann Kennedy’, b. 1871, dramatist upon whose play’s Na ■ than heaps scorn .. . Paulina Long : worth, b. 1925, granddaughter of Roosevelt I ... Benny Kubelsky’, known as Jack Benny, stage and radio comedian. In one recent week Mr. Benny’s earnings were SII.OOOO ! Jessica Dragonette, radio canary’ .. . ! Stuart Erwin, cinemactor. YOU’RE WRONG IF YOU RELIEVE — That Henry Ford was the first mass ; producer of automobiles. He was preceded by R. E. Olds. | who turned out 400 cars his first year 'and 1400 his second. ' Jneidently. Henry Ford’s father tried ] to prevent him from getting into the j automobile-manufacturing business. ; Mr. Ford quotes him as say’ing: "You are getting into the automo | bile business too late. By’ the time j you are ready to produce cars every j one in the United States who can as- I ford a car will have bought one.” Write a Wrong: Address Clark Kin ; naird care this newspaper. Bill To Regulate Photo* j graphers Beaten by House (Continued from Page One.) pitais for the care of sick and af flicted persons. The House got bills to prohibit persons under 18 years of age from | playing slot machines, to provide for I continuance of four special superior court judges, to repeal absentee bal lot laws and to increase allowances of j wine for religious uses. Work-Relief Bill Facing Hard Road in the Senate (Continued from rage One.) Bruno Richard Hauptmann was on i every lip, but official administration comment was withheld in what was ; considered strictly’ a state matter. Before the Senate Finance Commit j tee, Henry I. Harriman. president of : the Chamber of Commerce of the I United States, urged several funda j mental changes in the administra | tion’s social security program. Across the Capitol plaza the House i Ways and Means Committee continu ed to labor on the bill behind closed j doors. Three cabinet officers. Secretaries Wallace and Roper and Attorney Gen j eral Cummings, found Arthur W. Cut ' ten, famed Chicago operator, guilty of j violating the grain futures act "by attempting to manipulate prices.” Cutten was barred from trading on grain markets for two y’ears. $3,000,000 Road Bill i Will Pass ; Daily Dispatch ilitrena, In the S]r Walter Hotel. Raleigh. Feb. 14 —The House is ex pected to pass the $3,000,000 emer gency highway maintenance bill within the next two or thre days, which will permit the State Highway and Public Works Commission to use | $3,000,000 of whatever appropriation j is later made for it between now ■ and July 1. The bill has already been | passed by the Senate, was reported | favorably by the House Committee on Roads this morning and is now on the calendar in the House. It is ex pected to pass without any opposition as it did in the Senate. The bill does not make an addi tional appropriation for • highway maintenance, hut merely empowers the Highway Commission to use $3,- 000,000 of whatever appropriation it may get in the regular appropriations bill between now and July 1, so that it will not have to wait until that date to start work on thousands of miles of roads that need immediate attention right now, as well as hund reds of bridges. The maintenance fund for the present fiscal year has already been virtually exhausted so that if this hill is not passed and this $3,000,000 made available immediate ly, the highway department would have to wait until July 1 before it could do any except the most neces sary maintenance work. Jf this bill passes, as is sure to, the highway department can at once be gin work on the roads and bridges: that are most in need of immediate' repair. It can also purchase some more equipment by means of which, it. can get much more work from the, thousands of prisoners in the prison camps. Many of these cannot now bo worked at all because the department has no funds with which to buy shov els, mattocks and additional dump trucks needed in maintenance work. The bill was amended by the sen ate to provide that all maintenance forces should he paid on the basis of ton hours a day instead of eight hours as in the past, although most of the employe? have been working tec. t.id even twelve hours a day. This will give them a pay increase of oVcut 25 pet cent. RENTAL TEXTBOOK^ Commission Would Select and Adopt Texts As Well As Rent Them Dally Dispatch Barca*, In tlic Sjr Walter Hotel. HV C. BASKERVILI.. Raleigh, Feb. 14.—There is strong sentiment in both the House and Sen ate for the enactment of a rental textbook law and the prevailing op inion is that before this session of the General Assembly adjourns it will en act such a law. Two bills are now before committees to provide for a Stalewide rental textbook system, one before the house committee on edu cation and the other before the same committee in the senate. The House bill was introduced Wednesday by Representative Gregg Cherry, of Gas ton, chairman of the House Finance Committee, and seven other members as follows: Representatives Johnston, of Iredell; Blount, of Beaufort; Hat cher. of Burke; Uzzcll, of Rowen; Bowie, of Ashe; Thomas, of Anosn; Tatem of Tyrrell, and McEachern. of Hoke. The rental textbook bill now before the Senate Committee on Education was introduced by Senators Gravely, of Nash, and Griffin, of Chowan. Those who have studied both hills are ,convinced that -the hill Intro duced in the house by Representative Cherry and his associates is by far the better and more workable hill, since it sets up definite machinery not only for the rental textbook sys tem but makes a number of changes in the procedure of selecting and adopting textbooks as well. The hill, if enacted, would greatly reduce the cost of textbooks to the Staet as well as reduce the cost of textbooks and supplies to the parents and children at least $4,500,000 a year( according to its introducers. Some estimate the saving will amount to as much as $10,000,000 a year. This bill authorizes the governor to create a State Textbook Commission of eight members, five to be appoint ed by the governor and with the gov ernor, the State Superintendent of Public Instruction and the Director of the Division of Purchase and Con tract as ex-officio members. Os the five members to be appointed, the hill provides that the two shall be active engaged in teaching or educational work in the public schools of the State and that three shall be business men. This commission would not only have charge of setting up the rental textbook plan, but would also take over the duties now being performed by three other boards and commis sions and select and adopt the text books for the public schools as well. At the present time the State Text book Commission and the High School Textbook Commission study the va rious textbooks presented and then recommend the adoption of multiple lists of the hooks they th»nk are suit able. The books are then adopted by the State Board of Education. These textbook bodies at the present time are composed entirely of school prin cipals. superintendents or professors from schools of education. The adop tion of the. books by the State Board of Education is regarded, according to one of its members as nothing more than a rubber-stamp formality. By consolidating the work now done l»v these three other boards in to one, it is believed that much use less expense can be eliminated and that the work can he done more quick ly. The requirement that three of the eight members of the commission be practical business men instead of sehool superintendents or principals is also regarded as being important and that it will result in more attention being given to the cost factor in the adoption of textbooks. The bill would also require textbooks to be adopted or re-adopted evry two years instead of every five years, as at present, on the grounds that lower prices can be obtained by opening up prices to com petative bidding every two instead of every five years. In order to give the state a club to hold over textbook publishers if they refuse to bring their prices into line, the bill also empowers the com mission to purchase manuscripts and print its own textbooks whenever, in its opinion, it can do this more eco nomically than purchase the books from publishers. With regard to setting up the ren tal textbook system, the commission is {directed to set. up this (system beginning with the school year of 1935-36. It. also provides for a fund of $1,500,000 to be used In launching the rental system, by the sale of state bonds if necessary, the bonds to be retired eventually from the rentals collected on the books. The hill fur ther provides that the teachers, prin cipals or superintendents shall re ceive some additional pay for super vising the rental system. Hill’s Liquor Bill To Get Favorable Report in Senate (Continued from Page One.) mitt.ee. which will hold the hearing on the Hill bill, for a short and snap py presentation of agruments. One member, who would not permit his name to be used, said, “There aren’t any new arguments on either side. t We know what the drys will say— the same thing they’ve been saying for nobody knows how long. And the wets will say the same things they’ve been saying, if they say anything at all. which ten’t likely, becuse there is no wet lobby. I think we ought, as a committee, to limit the entire hear-' ing to one hour.” To date no newspaper men have been able to find any wet labbyists in the capital city. The drys, however, under the leadership of Cale K. Bur gess. have a legislative committee which has been sending to legisla tive committee which has been send ing to legislators avalanches of pro tests and 'other JBurgess is sago nnown to have talked with Africa Speaks! several legislators in his crusade to keep intact the State dry law’. How ever, no drys are registered as lob byists despite their activities. Beer Plus Liquor. The hearing of the United Dry For ces and other drys before the House, Judiciary Committee No. 1 on the question of raising the legal content of beer turned out to be a pro-Hill bill demonstration. Dr. Henry Louis Smith, former pre sident of Davidson college and Wash ington and Lee university, who came dow’n from Virginia, unwittingly pre sented a strong argument for the Hill liquor control bill w’hen he told how much liquor is being sold to North Carolinians and others in Danville, Va,, ABC stores. The hearing, held because of the introduction of a biD oy Representa tive Palmer, of Cabarrus, W’hich would increase the alcoholic content of beer from 3.2 to 4.5 per cent, was con siderably draw’n out. by drys w’ho would not stay on the subject at hand: Beer. Instead, they siezed the opportunity to denounce whisky, gin and bitters w’ith much bitterness. The situation grew so acute that Repre sentative Luke Stevens once inter rupted Dr. Smith by addressing the chairman. "Mr. Chairman,’’ said Mr. Stevens. “I rise to a point of order.” He was told to state it. "Well,” resumed the dougfy Cam den countian, "It was my understand ing that we came here to discuss North Carolina beer and not. Virginia whisky.” Dr. Smith was told to proceed, but when he had finished Acting Chair man Representative Sparger, of Stokes, asked the drys to please con fine t.heir statements ot beer, adding that the committee had nothing to do with whisky or the Turlington act. Poteat Speaks. President-emeritus W. L. Poteat. of Wake Forest college, spoke. He ask ed for more stringent enforcement of the State dry law, denounced the Hill bill, and erpressed a doubt os to whether or not a whisky drinker could be “weaned” away from w’hisky to beer, emphasizing the necessity for sobriety among railroad engineers and automobile drivers. Ed Cansler, of Charlotte, introduced by Cale K. Burgess, major domo of the United Drys and master of cere monies at the hearing, as “one of the most brilliant lawyers in the State,” demonstrated his immovable dryness by speaking from the' /rear of the House chamber, although Burgess asked him to "please come up front” and said that he was against, any thing with alcohol in it. “I cam e up here from Charlotte,” he said, "under a misapprehension. I thought I was coming to talk about, the Hill bill. I think we, ought to have a regular field day here in the very near future to discuss beer, whisky and all other intoxicating be verages.’ Mr. Cansler then seized op portunity by its foremost lock—he de nounced the Hill bill and all or any other hills to modify the Turlington act. He was plainly against beer, and. it seemed, almost everything. I W. C. T. U. Head Applauds. Mrs. W. B. Lindsay, State president of the W. C. T. U., sat just in front of Mr. Cansler and led the cheering of the drys. She clapped her %an<ls very audibly and forcibly, and looked around to see if othed drys applaud ed denounciations of whisky, beer, and so on. The only person to appear in favor of the increase in alcoholic content of beer was I. M. Bailey, who said that he was substituting for someone else and that he favored the increase. He spoke less than one minute. Absent was Representative “Billy” Sullivan, of Buncombe, chairmen of the committee. Representative Bar ker, of Durham, presided in his stead for a time, then excused himself be cause of "other business” and turned the chair over to Representative Spar ser. A favorable report, on the increase in alcoholic content is expected. WANT ADS Get Results FOR SALE CHEAP ONE LARGE kitchen range in good condition, will use either coal or wood. Ott’s Amer ican Tourist Camp. 14-lti FOR SALE FORTY CORDS OF DRY pine wood eight feet long. $4.00 per cord delivered. E. J. Knott, Towns ville, N. C. 13-3 ti VVIE CLEAN AND BLOCK LADIES Knit Suits —Call 464 for free de livery service. Valet Cleaning Co. 12-4 ti ENJOY THE BEST. EAT CHERRY Stone oysters at Otto’s American Tourist Camp. We serve them any style, seasoned for any taste. 14-lti FOR RENT STORE HOUSE ON corner of Wander and Wyche street formerly occupied by Piedmont Supply Co. Apply to Mrs. C. H. Parrish, Stem, N. C., or to A. A Bunn, attorney. 7-9-12-14-16-19 NICE LOT OF CABBAGE PLANTS. Also full assortment Qf field and garden seed. H. B. Newman. 13-2 t WANTED: TWO GOOD USED BUG gy wheels, Must be in good condi tion and cheap for cash. Bring to Henderson Dispatch. 1-ts PIGS FOR SALE, ALL SIZES, right prices. See them back of Hight’s Store. Walter “Booty” Hayes. 14-2 ti U. S. P. O. HENDERSON, N. C. Offiw of the Custodian. Sealed bids in duplicate subject to Executive Order No. 6646, dated March 14, 1934, will be publicly opened in this office at 3 o’clock p. m. on March 15, 1935, for furnishing all labor and materials and performing all work for repairs and reconstruction at this building in accordance with the specifica tions, copies-*of which may be ob tained from the custodian only. R. B. Carter. Acting Postmaster, Cus todian. FOR SALE SEVEN ROOM HOUSE Chavasse Avenue on 100x200 foot lot. Will sell cheap to quick pur chaser. See I. M. Petty, phone 455-W 12-14-16 WANTED A TOBACCO FARMER who has own help and team for farm 10 miles from Chase City, Va. See me at home Saturday afternoon from 3 to 7 o’clock. John D. Wil liams. 233 Gholson Ave. Phone 543-J _____ 13-3 t ‘ IF FIGURES TALK WITH YOU, read these:—Jeschke sells $36 Ist 2 days; Dees s7a Ist. 3 1-2 days; Cul lison slll Ist 5 days. Established Rawleigh Dealers sell up to $373 a week; best Dealers averages $3 9 0 week after week. They make these large sales because of Rawleigh quality and methods. If yo u to make more money, it will pav you to write Rawleigh’s, Box NCB -93-3, Richmond, Va. 7-8-13-14-15 PERSONS INTERESTED IN~BALL, room tap, acrobatic or to e dancing may take lessons. For Information and enrolment call 42 5 before Feb. 20. Mary Worley Massey, 13-2 ti BUY OLD NEWSPAPERS FOtT wrapping purposes and kindline fires. Big bundle f or l 0C( three so? 2Rc at Dispatch offic*. xi-tt ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE. Having qualified as administraliix of the estate of Joseph Smolinsky, de ceased, late of Vance County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Henderson, on or be fore the 14th day of February. i93tl, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt ed to said estate will please make im mediate payment. This 14th day of February, 1035. FANNY SMOLINSKY, Administratrix of the Estate of the late Joseph Smolinsky. Irvine B. Watkins, Attorney. FORECLOSURE SALE. Under and by virtue of the power and authority vested in the under signed as trustee in a certain deed of trust executed by James Williams and wife* Haittie Williams, on the 23rd day of July. 1929, and recorded in Book 151, Page 416, default bavin? been made in the payment of the debt herein secured, I will offer for sale by public auction, at the hourt house door in Henderson. N. C„ on the 2f.tb day of February, 1935. at. 12 O’clock, the following described property Begin at an iron stake Waller Brodie new comer, in W ■!>. Horner line; run thence along said Brodie line S 87 E. 132 feet to a stake, with Mingo Brodie line, thence along Minim Brodies line N 6 E, 50 feet to a slake, thence N 87 W, 127 1-2 feet to a stake in W. D. Horner line, thence along said Horner line S 12 W. 50 feel to beginning. See deed of Henry Durham to James Williams. Same being the place where the parties of the fit-t part now live. This 241 h day of January, 1935. A. A. BUNN, Trustee. Coal and Wood CITY FUEL CO. Ransom Duke, Prop. —Phone 180— Fred B. Hight Co. —lncorporated— Real Estate-Rentals Insurance ftnd Auctioneering Telephone 289 B. H. Mixon Contractor and Builder “Builds Better Buildinn-" All kinds of Building Wall Papering Paint i ftp Roofing and Interior Decorating. PHONES Residence 47&M £ Phone 24,1m,r 470-j Tires, Wrecker, Batteries O’Lary’i, North