Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / March 17, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO Memorial Services Held For Late Judge Pittman s .. Bar Hag Exercises for Deceased Dean and President; Re solutions Are Presented and Several Brief talks Are MfcJe by Hendetsoft Attorney* Memorial exercises In honor of the • late Judge Thomas <M. Pittman were • held Tuesday in Vance Superior Court, which la sluing in the civil term for March, with Judge Henry A. Grady. • of Clinthn. preaiding. A memorial by ’ the bar association was presented, and • se.eral addresses by members were • made. A number of relative* and i ritksens Joined with tb* b«r In »«- tending the exercises. Judge Pittihan was for many years prior to his death • dean of the Henderson bar anti presi • dent of the association. The report of the committee n a tried • by the bar asaocialloh, Which con i fisted of a memorial tb Judge Pitt man. was read oy J. H. Brideers. who was a law partner of Judge Pittman's. • and who Was elected by the bar to succeed him as presioent. H is nc** ' the dean of the bar association. ) Following the reading of this mem orial J. C. Kittrell presented fine other speakers. These were J. B. • }!icks law partner of Judge Pittman, who spoke feelingly of his association • with the deceased; and J. P. Xollieof f»r, who spoke for the bar assocla , tion and was foiolwed by Henry T. • Powell, representing the younger • members of the bar. R. 8. McCoin also • spoke briefly, and was followed by Coolnel Henry Perry, clerk of Yance Superior |Court for more than *0 years, who was intimately associated ’ with Judge Pittman in many cap acities. • The services were simple and brief, occupying less than an hour, and were declared impressive and ap propriate. The memorial by the bar associa tion. submitted by a committee con sisting of J. H. Bridgers. Irvine B. Watkins and J. C. Kittrell. follows In full: “A good man. an accomplished scholar, a great lawyer left us on February A when Honorable Thomas M. Plfrman. after almost fifty-five years of active service as a lawyer fell upon the final sleep. "Bom November 24. 1857, he was only seven years old at the close of the Civil War. he began life at the • time when the economic condition of our State #aa the poorest. ; "His opportunity for education #ds . limited to private schools, and his own efforts. As a mere boy in Char lotte he attracted the attention of a firm Os able lawyers, who gave him the opportunity. Before he was twenty-one years of age he passea | the examination required by our Su • preriie Court for admission to the bar. . This only a beginning for study. • He made himself a master of the • principles of what we call the Com mon Low; that Is the law 6f Eng . land as it was. unless changed by • fbrltnte or unsuitable to out form of • Government. . "He early acquired and mastered . the leading cases. Coke on Littleton. Fearae on Remainders—a full set of • English Reports. "This study was reflected through out his fife as a lawyer. It has bfftn | given to few men to express them ] reives In lerfal papers in strth classical language. • “At the beginning of his career he ; witraeted Statewide attention by J bringing a suit alleging it Was the i duty of carriers to have sufficient em • pkiyees on their trains to protect pas j sengers from insult or humilitation. , "Coming to Henderson in 1888, he • was soon established in a large gen eral practice, without any special in- J tfrest. Ills clients came from every , walk of 11/ee and station in life. The i poor and unfortunate always railed • on him for help in the time of trou • hie or affllcKion. Hrs study and re search never ceasCd. He soon began • to collect early North Carolina docu ' mems. dealing With the several gov ernments of the Colony. Province or • State, whether that of the Lords Pro ; This Woman Lost 64 Pounds of Fit Mrs. H. Price of Woodskie. L. 1., writ..* "A year ago I weighed MO !bs I rtafted to take Kruechen and niw I weigh 126 and never f«#t betr '*r in my life and what's more. I look >* "re like 2 n yrs. old than the toother . of 2 children, erne 19 and the other 18. 1 A>ry one of my friends say ft’s m*r | '-lons the way I reduced.” To lone fat SAFELY and IURI|. I ESSI.T. take a half teaspoonfffl of ? Krusrhen in a glass of hot Water in - fhP morning before breakfastr— don't n.i-s a morning- a bottle that 'nrtn 4 t weeks costs tort a trifle—hot don't • lake chances—be sure it's KrusChen - your health comes first—get it at I barker’s Drug Store or any drugddrr . in America. If not Joyfully mturted e after the first bottle-money back S . W a ! QUICK l RELIEF from i HEADACHE i ' J! pwdy fmetioai! - . r« N ** sturilgi* Mja a «r*P»* Aeke. sot. throat trbr f«T,r JXZ * eold *- “**'« boa* *eh« •ad MifoaUMM iiaatwek Hadukt Poed4r» ht >»re» LW* far tfta name SiaabaHc H«ed<,g V 'IW blw .ad ,lt»» naefeaga ST iuaa tha unfair offer o t aawetbiM iiLt » i°o4 " Get WMbaak k lot beta ffnn ~Whp« SwliU •S reltW (rota tka »bo»« a<-fe«* aixi aaiaa for -2 m fkn They art sot m*d» out as ootum ? wwaktrn. adtias at .ilortl wff tarw^J aaktt. Ask for kaabaafe UesdSebe KeeC *1 jams >ad cat Ut *M iu let. Mt prietors The Crown, or after the State Was established under a Con stttutMwi. His collection of North Car oling historical documents, pamphlets, and books. (Comprise several thou sand. Hie pride in and love of these is knotkn to all who kneW him. "H» wrote HHafiy paHiphlCts. de livered many addresses, always of a historical nature. Nothing could have been more fitting, or more to his lik ing then his service bn the State His torical CdtilfnWkidh. The inconveni ences of travel, and his deprivation of home, were too much for his health to do the work of a Superior Court Judge In away satisfactory to himself, so he resigned. He would have given the People and the Bar a splendid service. “He had the moat pronounced ideas of the HghtA of the individual. He believed that every mail had the right to express himself and to be heard. To Illustrate, he Waa opposed to Con stitutional Commissions, and so ex pressed h mself. He said. 'Let the people ! 1 a Convention.' "His ife as a churchman is well known. No church that did not hold the right of the Individual as a car dinal principle of its policy, could have claimed his devotion and ser vice. "The practice of law was not a business tb him. It was a noble pro fess loti. licensed by the State to pre serve the State, and to see to the proper administration of its laws. "At the hands of the public, his clients, his church, bis State he re ceived. and woh worthily their esteem and honors. "He approached the end. calmly, serenely, unafraid. He was con scious of having walked humbly be fore God. and of dealing justly with his fellow man. “We submit these important points of his Career as a lawyer." Whnt h Thyroid Glands How Hoes It Function ? hf LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. IN THE LARGE eorres|ibnden«e addressed to this dc[mrtmeni there have been many requests lately lor goiter. The urtl aMßls ' - .W Dr._ Clendentng information kboul cles thlfc week will Ceprtsem an a cftkowledgmenl tff thbse request*. Goiter is en largement of the thyroid gland The thyroid gland Is sltuatec at the base of the nick, partially locirc ling the Witidpipe. There are aa many kinda of goiter aa there *re ea n d Mates for president and they are far mord diverse. the one from tbS other. It la not possible to understand them unless you have some preliminary knowl edge of the anatomy and physiology of tb« thyroid gland. while the thyroid t* a true gland with nutnerOuft gland crypts and •ecrating a substance called "colloid,’* which can be seen In the center of Hieae crypta when the gland Is re- Aeved and put under the microscope, U does not pour thiff secretion Into any definite body cavity. Tbe aa- HYary glands pour their secretion Ihto tha mouth, whete they are fifed fee digestive purpose*. The mucous gteads es the trachea peur their Pe er* tk> ns into Its cavity, where we know they are mtd to engulf dust and germa so these can be removed. But whet does the secratltm of a gland, which apparently goes no where, do 7 It task a long time to find out. Tho secretion Is evidently absorbed Into the blood stream. By feeding people extra thyroid secretion It eras found this increased jhe body heit, * Snowbound in Maryland it -i* '<4UH| I .. .. . . w .-yr-e^’^f^^^. v , l* _ - V'c *''» * r* ??• **** M , We » Os th« aeverhy t ini marked tke arrital oi _'“* i Win tf l ' >n Maryland. A terrific snowstorm that aprOeted tree* !Pf aJIf. d *2£ t«le« r aP h w dislocated traffic In many parts of ,vL?,.~!^ W ' *_^ ot6 5l! OWB twu of the ntany automobile vittima of the «2 a •» *2\ These cars were snowbound, frostn Mid abandoned on Frederick Pike. near Lisbon. All westbonm) traffic IN* baited beyond tfcM ooinw HENDERSON, (N. C.,) DAILY DISPATCII, THURSDAY, MAkCH i'7, 1982 NEW CAPITOL FOR NORTH DAKOTA ——————^ North Dokot;iV rspitol. at Bit-mark, "ill he the t.lllest I “ building in th»- ?tnt<\ The admin- j • I'Trative knit at the right is 18 stories high The enpito! will or- F Cff JITIB cupy one of the most beautiful im 11k X sites ih the State, facing south- ■ ,* f ' Imfl f | ward across the Missouri river H |'i|| f|» 111 | valley Here a reprttluftlnn «f Hi | i PHARR WRITES IN FOUNTAIN'S BEHALF (Continued from Page One.) leigh who is not personally acquainted with Rharr at all. hoWeCEr. The letter is on the stationary of Pharr and Currie, attorneys at law, and bears the names of both Pharr and his law partner, E. Me A. Currie, who is chairman of the eMecklenburg Cotinty Democratic Executive Com mittee. The letter is signed only by Pharr, however. It has been reported here for some time that Charlotte and Mecklenburg county were overwhelmingly for Fountain for governor and until re cently It was expected that Fountain would name James DeLaney, of Charlotte, as his campaign manager. It is understood tbht DeLaney has since announced that he did nOt ex pect to become Fountain's manager. Some eaie now wondering if Pharr may not become his manager, per haps unofficially. The strength of Fountain in Charlotte and Mecklen burg was attested to here this week by Hamilton C. Jones, of Charlotte, and former chairman of the Mecklen burg County Democratic Executive reduced weight, and made the pulse more rapid. This was corroborated when people from whbm (be gland had been removed were studied: th*y were found to produce less body heat, to gain weight and to bav* a slow pulse. The first conclusion, then, about the usefulness of the thyroid gland was that it regulated the general rale of all body processes - th* rate at which tp* body cells used up oxygen, at which tissues ar* torn down And built up, etc. In technical terms this Is called th* bfaal metabolism. Most patients who have been sus pected of thyroid -iisease are ac quainted with the test known aa the basal metabolism test The object of this is to determine how much oxygen the patient uses up per minute. A small tank Is filled with oxygen and through a mouth piece the patient breathes In and out of thla The nose ts stopped up so no breathing except Into the tank will go on. When the oxygen In the tank la ex hausted and the time thus required is computed, the oxygen consumptiea per miilute Is known. Th4 amount of oxygen a person should consume is determined by the size of the body—weight and aspe daily body surface. The physician doing the basal metabolism teat has a table of these amounts for people of all weighta, etc, showing what each Individual should consume When the teAt is completed the real flguris are compared t 8 the normal ones. If a patient persistently consumes more oxygen per minute than normal, it is considered to be due to an In crease in the secretion of the thy roid gland. On the contrary. If the oxygen consumption is low, S is an Indies tioh that not enough thyroid secre tion Is bAing produced. , NEXT: How Thyroid Create* Simple Form sf Goiter. committee, who told several that Fountain was far In the lead In that section. The letter seen by this correspon dent is dated March 12. 1982. It is re garded as significant by those In po litical circles here Who hove seen the letter or know of It. 9<any think it indicates that Fountain's campaign will be conducted from now on from Charlotte, whether he formally names a campaign manager or not. WORST NOWOVER, STEDMAN ASSERTS (Continued from Page One.) have been made In real estate In the past and will be made in it In the future. “As a third step in bringing back normal business conditions, 1 advise the purchase of North Carolina bonds. They are backed by all the resources of North Carolina. The character und integrity of 3,0u0,000 people are pledg ed to their support. Ih spite of the operating deficit for 1933, the total State debt is being reduced at the rate of from $19,000,000 to $20,000,- 000 a year. There is no better invest ment than a North Carolina bond.” In discussing past depressions, Sted man pointed out that the attitude of the people had been almost the same in each one--In 1837, 1888, 1900, 19(77, 1920 and 1929. “In each of these depressions, the people have taken a defeatest atti tude. the same as today," Stedman said. “They could toot see where there would ever be any light of prosperity and thought, as many think today, that the country had gone or was go ing to be the bow-Wows. “Following the depression of 1886. the United States commissioner of labor. In a published statement said: ‘That rapid development of machinery has brought on What is commonly called over-production. Harbors, rivers, water and gas works, tramways and sb on are largely Provided for. There ts hot much romX forMarked exten sion. The day of Targe profits is pro bably past.' That w»s back In 1886. Many people are saying exactly the same thing today. Yet I am convinced CROSS WORD PUZZLE * ■ AtttOSh l Genus of. maple* & Color 10 Yarn 14 Asked 15 Uncanny 16 Molding 17 Ship's prison 18 End wall of a building 19 Old European coin 20 Properties 22 Newspaper heads 24 Citric fruit 26 Pronoun 27 Mountain mint 30 Short sleep 12 ftrt. to the city 16 Involve 38 Doll 40 Irish 11 Literary scraps 12 Indian ceremonial pipe It Man’s name - !• One of the Apostlea 48 Combat 19 Whirligig beetle Si Guide S 3 Indian totem pole S 5 Helps Si Incline head 18 Buddhist sacred ciiy 10 Noisy talk 64 Pattern form H Branches 19 Rent f! Part of pedeatal T 2 Cupid 73 Penetrate 74 Artificial butter 75 Desire 76 Decaying 77 Den I H? |3""P [5 IS p p 19 ho |l< |l£ 113 (4 i 5 “ “ »S IT” • A »9 sr— * —~■r — -5r TTWirr" —jJso - “ srfeTTsr ag“" ***"“ SHmkst ““ ““ T\ w n —^^ —?* — —W urarur W|n- —tfti' S> i n * f— n n * ft *‘T‘-~~~ THI-;v DIDN'T BECOME DLSCOl:ragei>" " * Mtk** TrayUt, g hA ftr* frftohrf trmim mtok old, mtm not tfUeokrtifCd % 9 tAa tong whlf Mini Naif fa « satcesi which tmtmmd to Bo tmrntob mhood. s i” n 111 1 ;' i' <?> vXi«* ’('i ll I l'.‘H : ’ J -- I. I i» : !■ i 1 i 1 a Rarhtay MbcDoomU, by oppotikg Britain’* par ticipation ih tho grOat war, iM rooßotl St a traitor by hi* otht-inftamad coaritrythOn. He a tar hot dir couragod. aMiMMa Gandhi, scrambling to escape being run down by the viceroy 's carriage, did not lose hope, although the road to sttcce** seemed beset by mssnrmoont abts obstacle*. that we are now disregarding the fact that economic adjustments have bean or are being made and that vte are on the threshold of a return of nor mal business.” Stedman then pointed out some of the basic facts about North Carolina, and that in spite of the depression, It ranks twelfth in total population, . first in value of manufactured tobac cto, first in the number of actlvfc spindles. DOWN 1 An abbot 2 ilachines 3 Prepare for publication 4 Raiment 5 Equip with Jewels 6 Debate 7 Spherical body 8 Allurement 9 In wont 10 Distort 11 Brokerage 12 Father of Cordelia 13 Morrays Jl Denoting a purpose 23 Symbol of iftdebt- Adheas 2$ Normal 27 Rafters * 28 Fruits of a benefice 29 Eye f 31 Dog (colloq I ■ f ...... i............... 33 Ctrarngvuua 34 Item in an < su.. 35 Approaches 37 Statute 29 Tree 43 Lenient 44 Rile 47 »*ert to l<en^ England 50 Maroon 52 Bunk 54 Pendant ornament 57 Strikes out 59 Cubic unit 60 Group of oarsmen 61 Fortified town near ftsa 62 biblical prophet C$ Tear 65 Cabbage (var.J 66 15<h pf March 67. riubfltrs. v> tti TKrtBP (Reprinted be permission of the Chisago Tribune) \ Me ) -to \ Js I'ye. Sox -To T1 r^V. of J gio^TY/ — Vou- (qp// LET Request for Bids on Stock and Fixtures of The fixtures. Abw “M” Systeto Grooery aW fixtures. Men> and grofcefy can be bought Business RtlU go ing on. Act quickly. Ale* S. Watkins, Receiver HENDERSON, N. C. For Better Printing Phone 62 ALFORD'S PRINT SHOP The largest and best equipped joh shop in town. EASTER EXCURSIONS SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM ONE PARE PLUS SI.OO ROUND TRIP BETWEEN ALL POINTS IN SOUTHEAST Including: Washington, Cincinnati, St Louis, Memphis, New Orleans, Atlanta, Birmingham, Vicksburg and Intermediate Points. Dates of Sale: March 23, 24, 25, 26 Fftutl Return Limit IS flay*. Consult Ticket Agents, or Address F. H. POSTON, Division Passenger Agent. 801-d Lawyer* Holtdlßg Phone «1 Raleigh, * < Today ho » one of tho mart trusted of the n Q . tidh’s financial leaden. He ha* lost non* 0 f t A, tithple democracy of hi* youth and hi* Kentuikv friends hap* he may gain the Democratic presiden tial nomination Today he i* the head of thi British government and upon him i* centered the hopes of the ncr .* for delivery from its crashing problems. v v-w 7csr/cv - Today GandAi hds the largest per-nnal f dlowin j of any Ruing man. In England he -f feared I t cause of his immense influence in India aid > spected because ho is proof against ell dip' i fltsttatp. Lamarck in 1801-9 published a theory of evolution baaed on the id*j of use-inheritance. GOUGHS Don’t let them pet a strangle W,d. Fight germs quickJy. Cmiiuulaion turn bines th; 7 best helps known to mod ern science. Powerful Lut harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Muncy refunded if any rough no matte' us bow long standing is not relieved. Aak jaar drqgeisi for Creumulaioa. (ad».l Repair Your Radiator Like New! . Hicks Auto Service Phone G 54. Carolina Service Station Repair Department Phone 504.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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March 17, 1932, edition 1
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