PAGE FOUR
ANDERSON DAILY DISPATCH
Established August 12, 1914.
Published Every Afternoon Except
Sunday by
HENDERSON DISPATCH CO, INC.
at in Young Street
iipCNRY A. DENNIS, Pres, and Editor.
It. L. FINCH, Sec-Treas and Bus Mgr.
' telephones
Editorial Office §o °
Society Editor J lO
Business Office •*
The Henderson Daily Dispatch is a
member of the Associated Press,
Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso
ciation and the 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.
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National Advertising Representatives
BRYANT, GRIFFITH AND
BRUNSON, INC.
9 East 41st Street. New York
T'.ul I venihire Sc.'ceL,
General Motors 131 J&.. Detroit
V'-vlteti Building, Allan ta
Erstf.re<) M the p*.tst office in Hendei !
•ou, N. e;., « second cLow mail matter
CHRIS' roe all-MLi. FOR CHRIST
HHMSWa
niVhßf unto,
TRUST IN HIM: Offer the sacrifice
of righteousness, and put your trust
in the Lord.—Psalms 4:5.
y TODAY \r
TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES.
1717 —Maria Theresa Austrian Em
press, born, Died Nov. 29, 1780.
1742—Manasseh Cutler, Hamilton,
Mass Congregational clergyman, phy
sician, botanist and pioneer, who had
much to do with the historic Ohio
Company which first settled the great
Northwest, born at Killingly, Conn.
Died July 28. 1823.
1813—John S. Wwight. famed Bos.
ton musical critic of hLs day, born in
Boston. Died Sept. 5, 1893.
1825—John L. LeConte. noted phy
sician. naturalist and entomologist,
born in New York City. Died in Phil
adelphia. Nov. 15, 1883.
1837 —Daniel G. Brinton Philadel
phia’s noted physician and pioneer
American otherologist, born at Thorn
burg, Pa. Died July 31, 1899.
TODAY IN HISTORY.
1607 —Jamestown. Va., first English
speaking colony in the New World,
settled.
1783 —Officers of the Cantonment of
the American Army, encamped on the
Hudson, met at Maj. Gen. Baron de
Steuben’s quarters to found Order of
the Cincinnati.
1835—Died, aged 94, Elizabeth Cook
widow of Capt James Cook, famed
British circumnavigator, whom she
survived 55 years.
1857 —Dedication exercises of the
Michigan State Agricultural College,
first State agricultural college in
country.
TODAY S BIRTHDAYS.
Bavx3 B. Robertson of Cleveland,
president of the Brotherhood of Lo
comotive Firemen and Engineers,
born at West Austintown, Ohio, 59
years ago.
Leonard H. Dyer, of New York City
ar.d New Brunswick, Cana., noted in
ventor, born in Washington, D. C., 62
yeaj-s ago.
Mlaud M. Lindsay, of Sheffield, Ala.,
kindergartner and author, bom at
Tuscumbia, Ala., 61 years ago.
Stanley Field of Chicago, merchant
born in England, 60 years ago.
Horace Bowker, president of the
American Agricultural Chemical Co.,
of New York, born in Boston, 58
years ago.
James P. Archer, of Chicago, onti
time famous catcher of the Chicago
Cubs, bom in Ireland, 52 years ago. ’
TODAY’S HOROSCOPE.
The past week has shown some de
cidedly uncomfortable tendencies, but
they now are passing by. The dilig
tho Borenn born todav will
r success Th -re is much evidence of
thrift and industry which will at
ract friends and fortune.
ANSWERS TO
TEN QUESTIONS
See Back Page
1. Vrey sharp lines, more or less
raking masts, and great spread of
canvas, with a view to speed.
2. Charles Dickens.
3 In the Pacific Ocean, roughly fol
lowing the 180 degree meridian of
longitude.
4. 1898.
5. Court of Cassation.
6. French protectorate in French
Indo-China.
7. Closed Shop.
8. The Volga.
9. The first is commerce between
the staif.es; the second is commerce
within a state. i
10. Six feet ! >' ,
Today is the Day
By CLARK KINNAIRD
Copyright, 1935, for this Newspaper
by Central Press Association
May 13; Iyar 9. 5695—J. C. Garland
Day in England, when flowers are
taken out to sea as an offering to
Neptune. Festival of San Costanzo in
Capri. Zodiac sign; Taurus. Birth,
stone: emerald.
You don’t talk over the telephone.
The telephone doesn’t transmit your
voice, ,only electrical! impulses. You
talk to the transmitter, it "translates”
the sounds you make into signals
which the receiver at the ond of the
wire retranslates into sounds.
Alfalfa isn’t a grass.
It’s a legume, as Frank Trask, Deer
Lodge. Mont., points out. Mr. Trask
also tells us we’re wrong if we be
lieve (as we said! that toads are re
ptiles. "They are batrachians, along
with frogs and salamanders”. Both
reptile and bartrachia are amphibia.
And he reminds us. spiders are not
insects.
May 13. 1915—The British battle
ship Goliath was sunk in the Dar
denelles by a Turkish destroyer, Mua
venet-i-Millet, and 500 men were
drowned. It was anchored in the
Morto Bay when the destroyer came
down on her in the mist and put three
torpedoes in her vitals.
The terrific and futile cost of the
Allied venture in Gallipoli was mount
ing daily, and the worst was yet to
come. German submarines were on
their way to the Dardeneles, intent
upon breaking up the daring raids 1
British submarines had been making
through the Strait.
Every- one of these passages of the
British submarines up the Dardenel
les were heroic ventures, made with
in range of Turkish forts, in mine
Lieut. Corr.dr. T. 5 Brodie had pass
; .. ir m gjj -e is m \pril ir and
been grounded Kefez Bay .Lieut.
i nidi Eric fi bins i■ lash< i] ;
a picket boat and torpedoed it. to
prevent it falling into enemy hands.
Lieut. E. C. Boyle followed in the
E-14, running submerged for 44 hours,
with hidden mines all around him.
and. torpedoed three ships, including
the Turkish transport Gul Gemel,
with 6.000 troops.
When AE-2. commanded by Lieut.
Comdr. H H. G. Stoker tried it, it
broke surface suddenly, was spotted
by Turkish gunners and sunk. The
French submarine Joule followed, hit
a mine, went down.
Not daunted. Lieut. Comd. M. E.
Nasmith made the passage in the
E-11, sank 10 ships, penetrated into
the Bosphorps and torpedoed the
transport Stamboul and the ammuni
tion ship there. Coming back, rising
to the surface, he discovered a deadly
mine neatly perched on his bows.
He dropped it neatly by dipping and
ALBUflsMj
IN the days when civilization
centered around the Mediter
ranean, Greece, Egypt and Rome,
when each was at the height of
its power> found that supremacy
at sea was vita! to their-ambi
tions for an empire. Galleys,
j propelled by sail and oar, pic
turesque and stately, were the
battleships of old. Chained to the
oars were slaves, or captives
taken in combat from another na
tion. Their hopeless existence
and cruel toil usually ended only
with death from fatigue or when
the galley went to the bottom,
dragging the helpless wretches
their doom. Egypt issued a stamp
... r, u -a rantil
Wanna Buy a Yacht?
§L fj
|jj ■ •- . ■ "•——
§ J \\ I Vgf
j| ■ 7 jjj
Hi!
:
mi■ /< i m m . i
The “Mayflower,” President!*!
yacht for Theodore Roosevelt, Tafts
Wilson and Coolidge, languishes in
New York boat yard for sale at
$200,000 to anyone who can use the
famous vessel discarded by Presi
dent Hoover.
(Central Prese,
mmmm u«. l.j
MAY
SUN MON iui WtD THU mi EF
■ T | ”71 1* IA |4
« f) lO I I
1 ,r » ■« *7 18
1 Alllyi 22 28 24 23
2«]Wfgß 20 30 31
going astern.
Yet aJI this heroism oi the British
at sea. and the Austrialians and New
Zealanders on shore, at Gallipoli, was
in vain. Half a million lives were be
ing uselessly and hopelessly sacrificed
What Do You
Know About
North Carolina?
By FRED H. MAY
1 — When did a judge order wiskey
wagons to be removed from near the
court house?
2 When was it offered to settle a
deadlock for the hopse speakership
by rolling high dice?
3 What North Carolinian refused
to accept four years salary legally
due him as an army officer?
4 What North Carolinian, was cre
dited with (being one of the most bril
liant men to graduate at West Point?
5 What was the traveling time
from Philadelphia for a North Caro,
lina delegate in 1779?
6 What prominent member of the
legislature was born in the “King
fish’s” state?
ANSWERS
I—Judge David F. Caldwell of Salis
bury, holding court at Jewel Hill, the
first count seat : ’I.:.?!. :: county,
Monday October 1 ' LSS3 Di inks >.d
caused the, court considerable trouble
and Judge Caldwell ordered the wa
gons removed
- —iu is*4 the whigs and democrats
were in a deadlock over the speaker
of the house. The Whigs offered to
settle it by throwing dice. The demo
crats refused this plan and finally
turned their support to Burgess S.
Gaither, a moderate whig, of Burke
county.
3 Colonel Henry L. Scott. On ac
count of physical disabi’ity Colonel
Scott retired in 1861 ar.d went to Eu
rope to rebuild his b jdlth. Shortly
afterwards he tendered ids resigna
tion. After returning to the United
States he learned his resignation had
never been accepted ;.nd tbit he l ad
an accumulation of four y?-u's pay
due him. He had a right to the
salary feut he refused to accept it.
4 William Mcßee of Wilmington,
graduate of the class of ISO'S. ATrR< e
was chief engineer in the U 5. Ar:rv
the Niagara frontier in the War of
1812. General Winfield Scott said that
"Os the whole aruiv he combined
o ne genius and mh-tary science -with
the high courage than any other of
ficer who participated” in that war.
5 Whitmill Hill, delegate from
North Carolina to the Continental
Congiess, rode horseback from Phil
adeifhia to his home in Martin coun
ty in seven and one-half days.
6 Representative Tam C. Bowie of
Ashe county was born at St. Joseph.
pOTII
IT’S^ To
I' v )•
RADIOPHOTO OF KING AND QUEEN IN JUBILEE PARADE
This picture, pushed to New York i
via radio, shows King George and j
Queen Mary in their open stat* .
Wins Purdue Trophy
W t - m |
[ ~ j
Don Powejl
Rangy Don Powell of Fort Wayne,
Ind., freshman football end, wins
the Purdue freshman footbaN
merit trophy, a SIOO gold watch,
as the Boilei'makers conclude
spring practice. Powell bids to
become regular varsity #nd next
fall.
Louisiana in 1876. Ashe county has
sent Representative Bowie io the leg.
Lslature eight times since 1909.
Farmers of South Move On
Capital To Back if he AAA
(Continued from j-h ge One.)
predict" : would orir.g 3,000 to the
capita!:
"We felt the administration needed
some support up here.”
Delegations on their way last night
included 250 coming by train from
ed his intention of vetoing it soon
after it reaches him, probably tomor
row.
The Senate itself launched into an
other debate over strengthening the
Tennesesee Valley Authority, while
the House, well along on its legisla
tive duties, took up the last big ap.
propriation hill of the session.
In a report to the House, the ways
and means committee asked passage
of laws to strengthen the govern
ment’s operations against liquor smug
glers “whose operations now have in
creased to alarming proportions.”
Downtown Washington saw the ar
rival of the advance guard of South
ern farmers coming here, they said,
to "offset some of this opposition
noise” to the administration’s farm
program.
‘‘Uncompromising”
Drys Are Blamed
(Continued from Page One.)
have been held. Under the Day bill,
which passed the House and which
was defeated in the Senate through
through the efforts ofß urgess and
Senator Horton, 51 counties would
have had to vote wet before a single
store would have been established.
Because Senator Horton struck an un
compromising attitude and applied
•the pairlitementary 'clincher ,<to the
defeat of the Day bill by the Senate
a two-thirds majority in that body
had to fee musterted before it would
be considered again. Despite the ap
peal of several legislators who voted
against the Day bill the Senate refus
ed to reconsider the measure. Thus
have Burgess and Senator Horton
been the means of their own undoing.
The “uncompromising drys” are in
far worse condition than they would
have been had they permitted the li
quor control system to be voted upon
by the State at large. By clinging
to the extreme Tight - on the control
question they have virtually stricken
from the statute books their dry act,
the stringent Turlington law.
In addition to defeating their own
purpose Burgess and his cohorts have
succeeded, unless conditions change
within a short in Injecting li
quor as the No. 1 issue in the 1936
local and State elections, a thing they
have repeatedly declared they did not
want to do because of the politically-
landau passing through the streets
of London in a parade from Buck
ingham palace to St. Paul’s ca-
Another Air Tragedy
dry Republican party. On tHeo ther
hand many of the ardent drys now
see that they erred in causing the
defeat of the Day referendum. The
referendum would have been held next
month, the issue settled for a while;
certainly it would have prevented li.
quor feeing the prime issue in 1936.
Last midweek legislators who fa
vored modification of the State’s dry
laws virtually conceded defeat when
they offered the resolution to name a
committee to study liquor control.
Coming directly on the heels of dry
exultation over the gesture of defeat
was a favorable report on the wine
bill. Offered by Senator Coburn, of
Martin, as a temperance bill, it was
passed by the Senate. Less than an
hour later it had been approved by
the lower house and is now law. It
permits the sale, manufacture and
transportation of naturally-ferement
ed vrines and is Statewide in its scope
with the sole exception tha boards
of county commissioners may pro
/fahH Numskuuu
CsP ' {QA You
- )USTA -
DEAR. NOAH=!S AM
ELEPHANT'S TRUNK
EXCESS BA&SASE?
MRS. H E. SRVAN
roueuc, gh'.o
DEAR NOAH=WH!CH 'S
WETTER, A MAM WITH A
CREEK fM HIS S ACK AMD
A MOTION! INJ H' S MEAD,
OR. A WOAA.AM WITH A
ripple im her lau&h amd
A WAVE 'tvJ HETR HMR?
C.J.HARLCiN CR.ESCC, IOWA
PLRAee Po9rc»« e
IDEAS TO NJOAH
Central Press Radiophotrs
thedral for jubilee ceremonies ob
serving 25 years of their reign.
The entire empire is celebrating.
hibit the sale of such wines.
Gathering courage a» a result of
enactment of the wine law the lit
erals struck swiftly, passing in the
Senate the Cooper bill exempting New
Hanover county from the Turlington
act. From that point the liberals went
on until they succeeded in exempting
18 additional counties.
ISs7—Sir Ronald Ross. English dis
coverer of the malaria parasite, born.
Died Sept. 16, 1932.
1934 —Catholic churches in Peru clos
ed for 24 hours in protest of divorce
law.
AoaH AfUMSKUU.
ft) Fe ow^'
vsrn* ■ \ A \\\
DEAR. MOAN* HOW DID
LOT'S WIFE TURIM TO
SALT, WHEN SHET HAD
ALREADY TURKIED TO
RuBRER?
C,«MU£S SCH!hfOEI-e-AWWL>;iOWA
DEAR M
CELERY LOSE HEART
»»=■ SHE. SAW THE
POTATO E MAS HER.?
RES-l NJALD KIOWELL.
ISHPEMINJg^TAIC-H.
A POSTCARD SENT TO NOAH
CARE. OP THIS PAP&R.vmiIL
(SRUwe IM VO UR. \OE.AS _
Dr. Warren W. Wilson I
Osteopathic Physician
Phone 61-W Telephone Bldg, j
SHHWWBaHBHBPBi
Seashore Week-End
Fares To
P or tSmouth-N or folk
From:
Neuse $3.20
Wake Forest 3.00
Youngsville 2^90
Franklinton 2 75
Kittrell 2*75
Henderson 2.50
Tickets sold for all trains Friday and
Saturday also Sunday Morning trains
until September 29, 1935.
Limited returning following Monday
For information see Agent
Seaboa&j
■ ~ AIR LINK RMLWAV
The only completely air-conditioned
trains in the South
Notice Change Bus Schedule May 1, 1935
bound SOUTH BOUND WEST bound
(Richmond, Washington (Raleigh) (Durham. Greensboro
and New York) an d Charlotte)
eave 5: 15 A. M. Leave 11:40 A. If.
Leave 9:45 A. M. Leave 3:55 P. M. Leave 6:55 A N
t .leave 12:30 A. M. Leave 5:40 P. M. Leave 1140 A M
~eave 12:55 P. M. Leave 8:55 P. M. Leave 3:55 P M.
Leave 7:00 P. M. Leave 6:55 A. M Leave 6:55 P
Atlantic Greyhound Line
East Coast Stages Phone IS ■ . sVj
WANT ADS
Set Results
FIRE. TORNADO. BONDS AND Au
tomobile Insurance are all written
by us. Best and strongest Companies
we can find. Come to see us or
phone 212 First National Co. J. C.
Gardner, Mgr., Henderson, N. C.
12-ts
WAP7TED A JOB AFt A COOK OR
general housework. Apply 602 Row
land street.
FOR SALE HOT WATER HEAT
ing system suitable for five room
house. Raditators pipes, valves etc.,
all in good condition. Apply 10
Biller’s, phone 547. 9-13-15
PLANTS FOR SALE—NANCY HALL
and Porto Rico potatoes, sweet
peppers, tomatoes and cabbages,
good strong ones. A. J. Cheek,
phone 387. 13-lti
HAVE YOU SEEN THE NEW SlN
ger Vacuum Cleaner. Most power
ful cleaner built. A demonstration
will not obligate you. Call 623-J and
let us convince you. Singer Sewing
Machine Co., 119 Garnett street. H
C. Abbott, agent. 15-ts
FOR SALE NANCY HALL AND
Porto Rico potato plants, also Jer
sey cabbage plants and pepper
plants. W. T. Taylor. 408 Rockspring
Street. 13-lti
WANTED CROWD AND CASH
Watkins Hardware Company. 15-ts
BUY OLD NEWSPAPERS kmp
wrapping purposes and kindling
fires. Big bundle for 10e. three for
itfir at Oiepatr t •rtf
LEARN A GOOD TRADE.
Young men and young women seek
ing profitable employment should
first learn a good trade. Printing is
a good trade and a valuable asset.
Fourteen hundred young men and
young -women have entered the
printing industry by having learn
ed linotype operating, monotype
keyboard and castor operating,
presswork, hand composition and
other phases of the industry. A
leading trade school for more than
fifteen years is the Southern School
of Printing. For complete informa
tion write V. C. Garriott, 1514-16
South Street, Nashville. Tennessee
Patronize The Leader
©
Wrecker, Tires and
Butteries. Phone 170-J.
We Never Sleep
I INSURANCE |
RENTALS REAL
Al. B. Wester
Phone 139-J