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Henderson daily dispatch. (Henderson, N.C.) 1914-1995, May 13, 1935, Image 8

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn91068401/1935-05-13/ed-1/seq-8/

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ASSOCIATED PRESS AND CENTRAL PRESS
60 Farmers
Off On Trip
To Capital
Will Give Backing
Tomorrow to AAA
Program, Whi c h
Has Helped Them
Vance county sent a delegation of
nearly 60 farmers today to the great
gathering in Washington tomorrow of
farmers mostly from the South who
are making there for the purpose of
giving a demontration in behalf of
the policies of the Agricultural Ad
jutment Administration.
An even forty left shortly after 8
o'clock this morning by bus. and two
private cars carried others, with two
other private cars due to go tomor
row, the four taking an estimated
total of 20 in addition to the bus
paty.
It is estimtaed that some 3.000 grow
ers will Ibe in attendance. The meet
ings tomorrow will be in the Depart,
ment of Labor building, starting at
10 a. m. Final plans for the trip were
made at a meeting held in the court
house* Saturday afternoon.
In the bus party were the follow
ing :
T. B Parham, Jr.. W. W. Currin.
E B Wiggins. Ned Wortham John
B. Wiggins, I. J. Jackson. W. W.
White, F H Spain, N. G. Knott. H
W. Longmire, C. U. Samford. J. E.
Gill, C. I, Vitchell, H. J. Parks. S
P. Brummitt. V*. E. Hight. J. E. Kim
ball P L. Overby, F. H Ellington
E. C. Huff, Arthur S. Falkner. H. G.
Ellington G. Badger Harris. C. B
Baskett. G W. Knott. Med Roberson.
G. W Adcock, N. W r . Currin, J. T
Adcock. Hamilton Stewart. E. G
Breedlove, R W. Norris. J. H. Brewer,
Alton Grissom. F. G. Hester, C. A.
Wortham B E. Wiggins. P P. Jack
son. J. T Ellington, and J. A. Wil
son, of Warren county.
Private cars going today were those
of M. T Greenway and C. E. Hoyle,
while J B Smith and H M. Robinson
are to go tomorrow
Dr. Albert Coates
To Speak Here on
Thursday Evening
Attention wasc ailed again today to
the visit here of Dr. Albert Coates,
of the University of North Carolina,
and director of the Institute of Gov
ernment, who will speak in the court
house Thursday evening at 8:15
o'clock on “Juvenile Delinquencies."
Tho address is under the auspices
of the group that recently was form
ed here to study welfare questions
and the plight of the underprivileged
child.
The pu/blic is;invited to attend, and
there will be no charge, it is announc-:
ed.
if /(( \ \ QUALITY PtOOUCTS Sine* tl
- Uif
?™T:O I X E D
PAINT
An Extra Measure of Quality
in every can of
Woolsey*s Mixed Paint
Extra brilliance—extra life—
extra spread mean real econ- ()
©my in using woolseys Mixed g=g
Paints. It’s like getting an extra ■ j
measure for your money.
—For this paint is made of the
purest and best ingredients—it will beautify
*3Ui
npt crack, peel or disintegrate from
contact with the elements or the
heat of the sun.
When you have a wooLSEYjob—
your property doesn’t need repaint
ing as often. Low upkeep cost has
made woolsey’s the choice for
mere than 75 years.
Alex S. Watkins
“The Place of Values”
WOMAN’!! PLACE IN
WORLD IS SUBJECT
Dr. Culbreth Discusses Wo
man’3 Activities In Moth
er’s Day Sermon
“Are Women Becoming Inferior?"
was the subject of the Mother's Day
sermon by Dr. J. M. Culbreth. the
pastor, at the First Methodist church
Sunday morning. He discussed the
greatly increased interests and ac
tivities of women in the modern world
He said in part:
“Feminine rs one of the key words
in the English language. It opens the
door to the world of culture and
refinement which woman has creat
ed through the centuries-long strug
gle for the superlative values of life.
Get *irness and leautv and taste, skill
and art and sympathy—all are im
plied; and distinction, uniqueness, in
body and carriage, in appearance and
function, in employment and aim and
ideal, this is the sharp and challeng
ing accent that belongs to the world.
It stands for decisive contrast to the
traits that are called masculine.
“Has woman put this distinctive
quality of her character in jeopardy?
Is she willing to obliterate the marks
that separate her from the world of
masculine experience? Her severest
critics answer yes. What else, they
urge, make her growing Indulgence
in tobacco. In drink, in sex irre
gularities. her refusal of motherhood,
her disloyalty to the home, her fierce*
competition with men in activities and
pursuits best suited to masculine
gibilities. It is important, however, to
remember that the most serious char
ges against women have been made
by those who desire to substitute li
cense for the restraints which culture
has developed.
“There are on the other hand, those
who hold that woman today occupies
a position of power, of command, of
creative opportunity unequalled in
any age of the world. ‘Women and
their causes.’ we hear, ‘surge with
cyclical rhtymn.’ Barely a hundred
years ago. they began to enjoy the
privileges of higher education, of self
expression through clubs and societeis
of participation in trade and politics
and industry. Today, they* are the
teachers of our youth, they nurse the
sick, are guardians of the weak, bring
to the professions a fresh idealism
and delicacy of challenge the
brutalities of production and exchange
“A generation ago. Benjamin Kidd
declared that not the might of the
fighting male, but the strength of the
suffering female is the basis and
guaranty of civilization, that renucia
tion. not aggression, is the motiva
tion of true culture Motherhood is
the crowning achievement of this
principle. Art with its sure insight in
to the deeper ritlities impressively
portrays this sacrament. A Maes gives j
the Germans a figure of am ‘Old Wo
man' whose very pose reveals the se
cretive serenity of completed mother
hood A Whistler puts into his por
trait of a mother the rapture of crea
tive motherhood. The Italian masters
paint their madomas showing an
gels. wings and cheruib faces break
ing through clouds of light-svmboliz
ing the spiritual potencies of mother
hood."
Henderson Daily DispatcH
Exposition Closes
In Great Tributes
To The Loughlins
Flowers Are Presented and Appreciation Read; Expo
sition Is Declared Success in Every Sense of Word;
Saturday Night Crowd Large for Closing.
Tributes to the retiring Costello fa
mily, known here in their hometown
as the Loughlins. famous for three
i generations in the amusement world,
was the outstanding feature of the
final evening of the Henderson Auto
mobile Show. Merchants Exposition
and Circus, held Saturday evening. In
the circus tent and on the ballroom
floor tributes were paid.
A crowd that almost filled the “big
top" gathered for the finale of the
bareback riders and trapeze perform
ers. who are retiring from profes
sional activities to continue in their
business here.
The exposition ended a success in
eveiy sense of the word, with prob
ably the best crowds and the best ex
hibits of any of the four that have
been put on here over a period of
years. D. C. Loughlin. general man
ager of the exposition, was greatly
pleased today by the results of the
week's entertainment, as were also of
ficials of the American Legion post
and the Legion Auxiliary, who spon
sored the event. J. W. Jenkins was
general manager for the Legion.
After the last of the bareback rid.
ing acts had been concluded (by the
Costellos in the tent Saturday even
ing, huge floral wreaths were brought
out and presented to them “from
those who love you.” as the announcer
made plain. There were many wet
eyes as they witnessed the end of
P.O.S.A. LEADERS
COMING TONIGHT
Officers’ Conference At Ho
tel; Convention Opens
T ornorrow
Officers of the Patriotic Order Sons
of America were grriving here this
afternoon for the opening of the State
convention of that group to be held
here tomorrow and Wednesday, and a
conference of officials has been ar
ranged for tonight at the Vance hotel,
which is to be headquarters for the
convention
It is expected that 150 visitors will
be here for the occasion.
The first business session will be
hdd tomorrow afternoon, starting at
2 o'clock in the Company C Armory.
Tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock the
annual banquet will be held in the
of the First Methodist
church. Business sessions ©oth morn
ing and afternoon, will be held on
Wednesday to bring the convention to
a ■'lose.
A number of social events have been
arranged for the visitors.
Drunk Cases Are
Principal Amount
Os Police Docket
Charges of drunkenness made up
the principal part of the docket in
police court today.
Nat Hunt, colored, was fined $5
and costs for being drunk,
Henry Davis, white, was charged
with being drunk and fined $5 and
costs.
George Daniel, colored, was charged
with trespassing on the premises of
John Magby after being asked not to
do so. He was discharged.
Sandy Harris, colored, was fined $5
and costs for being drunk.
Hopeful for Mooney
James F. Brennan
That Tom Mooney’s life «e«te«*«
will be commuted to time already
served by Gov. Frank Merriam of
California, releasing the labor
leader who has been in prison
since 1916, is the predictipn of
State Assemblyman James F.
Brennan, following a conference
with the governor* Brennan
prosecuted Warren Billings, con
victed with Mooney for the San
Francisco Preparedness day bomb
ing which killed 12 persons.
three generations of performances by
this family in circus arenas, at fairs
and on other amusement occasions
throughout this country and elsewhere
The flowers were given to iMirs. D. C.
Loughlin, Miss Sylvia Loughlin. an
only daughter and Mrs. Edith Walton
O’Lary. Theo thers in the family ap
pearing for thel ast time were D. C.
Loughlin, eldest of the family, C. C.
Loughlin. Sr., and C. C.. Jr., and Ed
ward C. Loughlin. In addition to this
presentation, the announcer at an
other point in the program read a
tribute “by proxy” of those in the
circus world, and said among other
things that the performances of the
Loughlins had added character and
prestige to the amusement world. The
same appreciation was read on the
dance floor afterwards. The final
night’s dance was dedicated in honor
of the Loughlins.
Saturday night’s attendance at the
exposition, while naturally the smal
lest of the week, was considered very
good, in view of the fact that so many
people were engaged in their places
of business that night.
Most of the amusement people left
for ether engagements over the week
end. and today merchants and busi
ness people who had exhibits at the
warehouse were removing them.
There was general satisfaction with
the success of the enterprise on the
part of all classes, including the pro
moters, the exhibitors and the visitors
HONOR LOCAL MEN
AT T. P. A. MEETING
Rev. Mr. Hughes, Chaplain,
Baity and Petty Conven
vention Delegates.
Hnederson was largely represented
at the annual convention of the
Travelers' Protective Association of
North Carolina in Wilson on Friday
and Saturday of last week, and
honors were bestowed upon several of
the group.
Rev. I. W Hughes, rector of Holy
Innocents Episcopal church, who has
reen State chaplain for many 1 years,
was re-elected to that office for an
other term. He has held the office
more than 15 years.
J. M. Baity, of Henderson, was
elected second vice-president, and I.
M. Petty and J. M. Baity were elect
ed delegates to the national conven
tion in Louisville next month.
The list of delegates from Hender
son were: A. D. Patterson, president
of the local post: E. O. Falkner. vice,
president; H. A. Jordan. E. C. Powell,
Rev. I. W. Hughes. I. M. Petty. J. M.
Baity and R. L. Bennett.
CAN YOU ANSWER
THESE OUESTIONS?
See Page Four
1. What were the characteristics of
the American clipper sailing ships?
2. Who was the author of "Nicholas
Nickleby ?”
3. Where is the International Date
Line?
4. In what year was the war be*-
tween U. S. and Spain fought?
5. What is the name of the supreme
judicial tribunal of France?
6. What and where is Tonking?
7. What is the name for a shop
which is restricted to the employment
of union labor?
8. Name the largest river in Russia"
9. What is the difference between
interstate commerce, and intrastate
commerce?
10. How long is a fathom"
Wife Preservers
Half a cup of crushed peanut
brittle will give variety to a tapioca
r.ustard. if von 'o**“ flavor.
Wife Preservers
m
If you’re carrying a pie for any
distance which has no upper crust
and is covered with meringue. In
sert four toothpicks cr more around
the center, then the oil paper with
which it is covered won’t come »**
contact with its nienngue-
EXPOSTION GROUP^
Concert and Refreshments
Given Oxford Children
Saturday Afternoon
A group of those connected with the
Henderson Exposition, which ended
Saturday night, went to Oxford Sat
urday afternoon and took a treat to
the 400 or more children and officers
of the Oxford Orphanage.
Joe Basile and his orchestra gave
a concert of about an hour and the
clowns and bicycle performers did
their siunts for the children. Mem
bers of the American Legion and
Auxiliary who sponsored the exposi
tion and members of the Masons took
Dixie cups, candy, peanuts and other
refreshments for the children. The
affair was held in the grove on the
orphanage campus.
In the party that went from here
were Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Loughlin, E.
W. Powell, S. H. Allen, Al. B. Wester.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Jenkins, Mtrs. A.
A. Hardee, and Mrs. W. C. Cates, in
addition to the entertainers. It was
said the idea originated by E. W.
Powell.
METHODISTS TO GO
TO DISTRICT MEET
Delegation Named To Attend Raleigh
District Conference At Fu
quay Springs
Delegations from local churches
are to go to Fuquay Springs tomor
row and Wednesday for the, district
conference of the Raleigh district of
the Methodist Church, South, which
will be held there. Dr. J. M. Culbreth.
pastor of the First church here, will
be one of the leaders of the con
ference.
Rev. J. C. Williams, a former pastor
of Tar River circuit in this county,
is the host pastor a.t, Fuquay. Rev. B.
O Merritt, of the same circuit, will
preach there lonight as the first event
of the conference.
Dr. Culbretn on Sunday morning at
his ciiurch announced the appointed
delegates from his congregation to
the conference as follows: C. A.
Crews, F. M. Barnhart, T. B. Rose,
Jr., W. E. Moss. Mrs. P. H. Rose.
Henry A. Dennis, J. H. Bridgers.
DISTRICT MEETING
OF JUNIORS SLATED
For 20th District Will Be at Youngs
ville May 30; Tankersley To
Attend Many Groups
A district meeting of District No.
20 of the Junior Order is to be held
with the Youngsville council Thurs
day evening. May 30, and will be ad
dressed by C. F. Tankersley, Jr., of
Henderson. State councilor of the or
der. and othfci leaders. The meeting
is one of a series to be held over
the State, all of which are to foe ad
dressed by Mr. Tankersley. Gurney P.
Hood. State Dank commissioner, of
Raleigh, and Edgar V. Harris, or.
ganizer for the eastern half of’ the
State, are also to attend and address
all of the gtaherings, according to the
plan§, ■
It is> expected that a group of
local Juniors will, attend' the Youngs
ville, convention. *
Jean Starr Untermeyer of New
York, author aind poet, born at Zanes
ville, Ohio 49 years ago.
Ladies ’ Here’s An
UNUSUAL
Special Introductory Offer
We are holding a factory demonstration of ladies’ high class shoe
resolving and while the representative is here we will
Resole Ladies Fine Shoes
TUESDAY, MAY 14th
For Only
We do not use stitches or tacks in this work and it is a regular
SI.OO job in any city. This method of repair leaves the shoe as
flexible as a new one.
Remember, Only 48 c Tuesday
Henderson Shoe Hospital
We Call For and Deliver,
Phone 9138 Henderson, N. C.
MONDAY, MAY 13, 1935
City Property Is
Involved In Deeds
Made on Saturday
City property was involved in two of
the three real estate deeds filed for
record Saturday in the office of the
register of deeds.
George William sand wife convey
ed to George Williams and wife the
Taylor-ißullock home place for $lO
and other considerations.
Maria Lewis Crews and others sold
to William H. Young property on
Cleveland street for S6O.
A. A. Bunn, trustee, sold to Mary
Stamper and husband for SSO, pro
perty on Orange street.
P TOSENIORCLASS
Rev. A. S. Hale Preaches to
Middleburg Graduates
At School Sunday
Rev. Albert S. Hale, pastor of the
First Baptist church, preached the
baccalaureate sermon to the members
of the graduating class of Middleburg :
high school yesterday afternoon at
3:30 o’clock before an audience that
well filled the auditorium of the
school.
The program followed during the
afternoon was:
Prelude, Salut d’Anour, Eiger—Jes
sie Currin.
Processional, Load On O King Eter
nal —Senior Class.
Hymn No 2.
Prayer—Rev. ,T. A. Dailey.
Solo, Trust in Him. Hamblen —Mrs.
N. P Holloway.
Scripture Reading.
Hymn No. 36.
iSermon, Text: Be Ready in the
Morning and Come-up”—Rev A. S.
Hale. Exodus 34,
Benediction.
Recessional, “Guide Me O Thou
Great Jehovah —Senior Class.
Marshalls
Bertha Bender, Chief Marshall
Junior Class —'Bertha Bender, Helen
Short, Albert Hendricks.
Sophomore Class —Lillian Watkins.
Shirley Watkins. Robert Short.
'Freshman Caswell Smithwick.
James Williams, Dorothy Short.
License Is Issued —A marriage li- 1
cense was issued by the register of
deeds Saturday to Jim Chappell, of j
Henderson Route 4. and Mary Lee j
McKnight, of Henderson, a colored '
couple. 1
Good Used Cars
1934 Pontiac Sedan
1934 Chevrolet Coach
1933 Pontiac Sedan
1933 Chevrolet Sedan
1931 Buick Coach
Motor Sales Co.
Phons 832.
Program to Begin Nr,* c„
day; Seventh Gf«l e
Speeches Friday.
Commencement exercise- *
Henderson high school w>n h °‘ th ~
next Sunday morning,
laureate sermon hv Dr V v Cca -
Lingle, president of L
and will conclude with the f. B*’ 8 *’
exercises the following Tuesdiv atln *
morning in the Stcvo ns ,„‘ T \ m i °’ n
The class day exercises 'win y''*u*
at the Stevenson Monday ICM
beinß 11 a " ■■*» s:
Seven* v five youn gpeoplo w -iU ra
ceive diplomas at the Tuesda
ing exercises.
A number of social functions ha
already been held. Or. n ext" F rM
evening the seventh grade ,
and declamation contests will
at Central school ,eld
The last whole week for most of
city schools began today, and exarn
nations were given last week with
odds and ends of these tests set f
this week for those who will' need
them to graduate. ed
RE-ROOF NOW
Pay For It At Your Convenience
EASY TERMS
When yon need a new roof
let us protect you with
Gemsco
ASPHALT SHINGLES
Tanner Roofing Co.

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