Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / May 7, 1932, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE TWO Henderson Beats Rocky Mount In Second League Game MS MADE IN TIN DOTHE WORK Watkins Good Ac • count o £ Himself on Mound for Henderson The Henderson AthiMkj two run* In the seventh inning of th? bat ti* yesterday m'ii ->-«v Mount to reaar from ‘'*hir*J .trd win 6-4 after adding, one more tally in the ninth. The game was played in Roekv Mount Watkins turned in a nice pet for man*? on the mound for the locale. Hi &Jlowed 11 hits, whim ne kop' well scattered, while Page wus pounded for six hits in the lucky seventh by the A’s. "will ti hut of a celebration was had at Boles Field in Rocky Mount for the opening of the Bright Belt League in that city. Mayor W. D. Munn pit ched the first ball wild, but received a big ovarian. The locals are at the top of the Lea gu». with two wins and no defeats. Rooky Mount A|nln Today. The locals neturned to Rocky Mount this afternoon for the second game of the two game series. Manager HJtiman will probably use Davis this aitaraooo in an effort to annex his third, victory. Score bv innings: Haadatson 200 010 2JO--6 Rocky Mount 200200 000- -4 Watkins and E’arnah; Pago and Hairtson. Kentucky Derby Being Run Along Louis\ ille Track By AL.iN GOULD Louisville, Ky.. May 7 iAPI —Tick On. Mack beauty of the east, gained further support today as the stand out fkrorite for the Kentucky Derby ss an even acoie of threc-year-okte formally were entered for the 58Mi runaing of America’s most famous hor-e race this afternoon. The swing in expert sentiment to ward the star of the Ix>ma Stable, owned by Mrs. Louis G. Kaufmann. of >Trw York, was accelerated by a rma-hing workoid this morning. TYie flashy son of On Watch ran rhre* furlongs, according to Trainer Man Hirsh's time-piece, in 33 3-6 sec onds. Other wwiehes showed a frac tion aiowe- but the performance was Hone to the American rerord of 33 1-2 aeoonda and satisfied the raiP b:nds that Tick On is :n the peak of condition. lbdayj( fames PKBBMONT LEAGUE Graeneboro at Raleigh. Winston-Salem at Charlotte. WHnxmgton at Durham. Asheville at High Point. AMERICAN LEAGUE SI Louis at Boston. CNncagt* ai W’ashington. Detroit at New York. Cleveland at Philadelphia NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn at Chicago. New. York a» St. Louis. Philadelpliia at Pittsburgh. Boston at Cincinnati. HKj SiSTEK lt’» a Secret < Mfcaifr JfcJXB FQfeGftAVB ' OODOV, vAiE C£OTA _n “ t<^ r V-JHV, vT N*iA?S \X*ORTW 1 A{siQ HSF% N OM \tO /, ( IkEW \A)E U- TEll EM OUR ) !«Ts/e T=*mO ! ’ It) HONfi So VJOO T HWe TO REMEtv«BEft!fOCJr A.NWORO [ TRIP. MV.*' / rr. Vot CAM P**TC\-< 010 SO ■sw«\_<_ VJ(MX.SD PWITD sAX/avi. 010 VAER.. "TO BETH C*ft OOJIOtE '"TIL. I /ft WOWT-Ortey OESORm'SCO FLOAT \AJ(TH ___ ' IMBN \AJ6LL DRAnW OF TWe 'AiE GET THE QDAT UP/ r >UJ AND "TlCK.l_eO? ) ■ ooc\ra.o?. jvmm l sajav \«e to bou-d _ s —-> cohere tvhhv- | -? ~ r " E z '"**'' r ~ Jj | THE GUJHP3 TjtE LETTER NEVJM CAME (fi?,E tLlie&E car 4k PJ*OKBS»- LB*, - 111 ll.j ~i/P ,X • TtCK TOCK - TICK TO.CK.- WE'IOUT Wl»* 'TMA.T^t The Piedmont rafTmC Cap* n—ntß Pnta. Garnering 21 hits, tha Raleigh Capa i swamped the Greensboro Patriots at | the Capital City yesterday 17-4. Greensboro pulled a triple play in the sixth inning with three Caps on the paths. Bulla Top Tare. Farrell's two base lick in the ninth scoring O’Rouke to enable the Bull City nine to top the Wilmington Tars in Durham yesterday 13-12, Wilming ton oounted five times in the ninth to tie the count. Thirteen doubles and one borne run were clouted in the slugfest. Pointers Nose Out Tourist. Tying the score in the ninth 3-3. the Pointers carried its game into thir teen innings before they were able to nose out the Asheville Tourist 4-3 Kola Sharpe went the route for Ashe ville. Takach relieved Appleton in the ninth for the Pointers. Bee* Ix>se Again. Winston-Salem's league leading I%’ ns were in Charlotte yesterday licking the rsees again this time 13-7 by rapping the fence with 23 base hits. The Hornets "ot an even dozen i hits including two homers by Cul ; breth and one each by Pond and t Smith. j FIKDKOffT I;BASIUK Club W. L. Pet. Winston Salem g 2 .800 Ireenaboro 0 4- .600 Raleigh 5 5 500 Asheville 4 4 .500 Wilmington 5 5 500 Durham 5 5 500 High Point 3 5 3E5 Charlotte 2 8 .200 LRAdMJR Club W, L. Pet. ! Washington 14 5 .737 | New York U. 6 .647 Detroit .. 12- 7 .632 j Cleveland 14* 9 60* J St. Louis 10 12 .455 ! Philadelphia 8- 10 444 Chicago 6 14 300 i Boston 3 15 .167 ! NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pot. ! Chicago 14 6 700 j Boston 12 0 .667 I Philadelphia 10 9 .526 Cincinnati 11 ll .500 j St. Louis 9 12 .429 j Brooklyn 7 10 .412 j New York 7 10 .412 Pittsburgh 7 13 .350 ilE^§Mi±s PIEDMONT LEAGUE Raleigh 17; Greensboro 4. Winuton-Salem 13: GimrtoUe 7. j Durham 13; Wihnington 12. High Point 4; Asheville 3. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago 5; Washington 3. St. Louis 6; Boston 5. Philadelphia 5; Cleveland 2. New York 1; Detroit 0. NYMAHAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 14; Boston 1. | Philadelphia 4; Pittsburgh 2. : Chicago 3; Brooklyn 1. New York 4-; St. Louis 3. HENDERSON, (N. C„) DAILY DISPATOI, SATURDAY, M A Y 7, 1932 flowing for tHrf Wuftrafev ms tm • This fine action photo shows one of-Ihe crew* at Wellesley College bend ing the ash to force the shell against the current at Wellesley, Mass., during a practice workout on the river. The college boasts five crews, but so far none of the five has been designated as the varsity color-bearer. Consequently the girls are battling tooth and nail for the coveted honoc. JEFFRESS WARNS AGAINST RAIDING STATE ROAD FUND (Continued from Page One.) licy of the State so far and of all past general assemblies, to hold the high way fund inviolate for the exclusive purpose of paying the bonds and in-1 terest for highway construction, for maintaining the road*- and the high way organization, and then to build new roads with any balance left over. "But this year al.eady we have had to stop all construction and have not even been able to matoh Federal aid road funds for new construction and even then, with decreased salaries, sliced appropriations and other econo mies. we will probably have a small deficit at the end of the year,” Jef fress said. “There are 32,090 fewer automobiles registered in the Stat this year than last year, aijd collections from the sale of automobile licenses are ap proximately $700,000 behind the esti mated revenue from this source, so that this difference must be made up from the gasoline tax. In fact, there are fully 100.000 fewer automobiles li censed in the State now than in 1929. The only thing that has kept the gasoline tax revenue up has been the increase in the number of trucks op erating in the State in the past two or three years and the much larger volume of gasoline consumed by these trucks. “Indications ore that the number of automobiles is going to decrease rather than increase, so that n steadily diminishing revenue can be expected from licenses and from gas oline consumed by passenger cars. And if the General Assembly ever decides to adopt some of the legisla tion to curtail the trucks, such as has been proposed in the last one or two sessions, this source of revenue wil) be cut off and the State will then be in a tight plaae to get sufficient revenue for its highway bonds, in terest and maintenance expense to say nothing of any new construction. "In my opinion, it would be a very dangerous thing to divert $2,000,000 a year from the highway funds for hte maintenance and operation of the school buses in the State. In the first place, there is no more reason for school buses to be operated from highway funds than for school funds Mis*Wig Cadet m "iS Hb HL h ' L " 1 A recent photo ot Allan Jackson Light, 21-year-old Washington, D. C., youth, who is one of the West Point Cadets being searched for by Academy, local and State polio* patrols, With a 00m rad*. Adolph Skeim. of North Dakota, Light went canoeing on the Hudson River toward the Storm King Mountain. The canoe was later picked up near Newburgh. N. Y., but there was do trace of the cadet*. to ba uaad to- suwnbaae mad mac hinery for the highways. If' some of the highway money is diverted for sohool transportation, ton* ona elae would want to use It fbr soma* other state purpose, and' the rwid would - be on.’’ The amount originally appropriat ed for all highway purposes ttllfc year by the IMI General Assembly wan $23,538,824, Jeffreas pointed ovr. while the estimated - revenue it only. $21,- 916,396. In order to hold - expenditures within revenue. It has been decided to eliminate ail oonstruotton. Including Federal aid- construction, which will just about hold expendi tures within the revenue. HAWAII'S HOPE FOR STATEHOOD DASHED (Continued from mge one). part of the whites in general against the original Kanaka residents of the archipeiogo is evident from his re ferences to the chief opposition he has sensed, from the first .to the ter ritory’s acceptance on a statehood basis. The strongest single strain among the islanders is native-born Japanese, and, as the delegate says, rather im patiently. "The navy always sweats peril in anything it fancies bears the Japanese label, although these peo ple are as fully Americanized as-.any element of alien ancestry ever were.” Parenthetically, the delgate himself should apeak without bias- the son of an American admiral and himself an Annapolis graduate .with a naval career of nearly 30 years behind him. Gs- the sort of order which existed in Honolulu jpst before the war some oonoluaion may be wasrn from the cincumstanoes of a jail break which occurred there when I chanced to be a visitor in the city, in earty 1914, There was but one prisoner in it at the time -a petty distruber of the peace while intoxicated- and he dug his way out through the wali with a teaspoon. To my suggestion that it could not be much of a jail, local of ficialdom replied apologetically that it was so seldom occupied as to have been permitted to fail into disrepair. It is difficult for me to believe that so naturally well-behaved a com munity would have degenerated into what it is represented to be at the present day if the newer comers were We Write all forms of INSURANCE Fire, Life, Accident, Health, Liability, Compensation,, Plate Glass, Use and Oc cupancy, Rents, Bonds, etc. Only strong stock companies represented. Let us assist you in securing the proper protection for your property. Henderson Loan & Real Estate Co. Phone 139-J not n sponsible for -t Os course a good Hawaiian past record by no nvans excuses such acts of vis-erice as the one perpetrated agamsi Mrs. Masai*. Nevertheless, it doss hint at a pos sibility that the liawoiians perhaps regard the naval contingent as too unfriendly, on general principles, to make !: sale to aik>w, them to deal vit h Hawaiian suspects according to ifaeir own ideas —xrtiich may account for the verdict of guilty in what would seem to be a justifiable un written law case, if. ever there was one. Whatever the explanation, indica tions are that the Massie affair has indefinitely ended Hawaii’s hopes of statehood. To Be* a* t 4 . ys *\ TM* ■■ .AxjjPT'* ■ r . <¥ C . A i iff' Wife of the Honorary Counselor of the United States Embassy in Lon don, Mrs. David E. Finley will be one of the twenty-two American women who will make a curtsy be < fore King George and Queen Marx at the first court of the season in Buckingham Palace. The Amari. cans will be presented by Mme. Da Fleuriau, wife of the French Am bassador to London. fmm. nexo fc*y;T s U< r R 6.0005. <A* yc. w sw , Jj - I ( vou Re. ) . — I !’ 4 I v- * ' I 4*' _ I f ■ Dispatch I WANT ADS Get Desalts I PGTATG PLANTS- NANCY HALL 1 Cheap. Marv'n E. Falkner Rouu I 1, Henderson, N. C. n.|, ( FOR RffiNT— MODERN FIVE ROOK house on Oxford Road Phone ii. or see F. M. Dorsey. 30-Ls; MONEY TO LOAN OF FIRS: uiortgage on real e-»tau? Apply u Perry and KiUiell. H E Cr^w K 1 WANTED: A SECOND ~Hajj E large oMldts bed: Muix be in pt ■ condition and reasonable Call 6AI - or see O. C. Jones at Dispatcn u 1 rice 7c TRY PULLER'S SERVICE STATION for egpert auusonohtte sarvtce <Jt every kind including repairs A work guaranteed satisfactory k> sell tire*, tubes and batteriw Ak, battery repairing. $»! PGR RENT MODERN APART mente in the Stonewall. 215 Y«usi Avenue. Prices attractive First: second floor. Steam heated E.v G. Flannagan. Phone 535 or 215-j Sat-ts I'SKD m BARGAI\» 1930 Chevrolet Sport Coup- w I 1928 Pontiac Ct upe. slsuu> 1928 Ford Coach $135 (X» 1928 Oakland Sedan s]st)<»» 1927 Chevrolet Sedan 560.0 U 1927 Pontiac Sedan $9500 MOTOR SALKS t«» Phone 832 QUALITY DRY CLEANING AT LOW prices for next week- Two suits f“t 75c. one suit for s©c, one suit and one hat for 75e, one piece plain dre; for 50c I-Yione 464. Valet Cltomni Co. 7-l:i FOR SALE AT REAL BARGAIN prices twelve used doors, two mir ror doors, five merchandise disphy tablee and ono ir<m safe Hendft son Auction House. t-® l '' FOR RENT SIX ROOM HOUSE ON Rowland with water hfh’ £ and garden Kent reasonable Ap ply to S. O. Spiuili or phone 417-W 3-5-7 GROCERY STORES. FISH DEAL ping paper. Use old newspapers - ' era and. markets safre-an your wrap- Ge 4 a big bur.ole at the Daily Dl‘- padch office for IGe. 21-*^ THE DAILY DISPATCH IS NOW ON sale at The Smoke Shop. Jefferson Case, Hhnderscn Candy Kitchen and Wiggina Drug Store. You may ee our* a copy from any of these places at the regular price of sc. 29-if SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY TRAINS LEAVE IIKNIIKRWIN AH FOLLOWS No. NORTHBOUND l<jfr~-g:4M A M for Kick mend Washington, New York, oonnect ing at Noilina with N« 18 at riving PortiHiiouth-Norti.lk 12:«.i P M. with parlor-dining car art vine, 4 P. M. for Richmond and Portsmouth, Washington New York. 192—9:48 I*. M for Richmond Washington and New York. 6—3:28 A. M for Portsmouth Norfolk Waahlnglwn. N**w York No. SOUTHBOUND 191—5:43 A. M for Savannah, Jacksonville, Miami. Tampa. St Petersburg. 3—3:12 IV M. for Raleigh. S»n fold, llamlet, Columbia. Savan nab, Miami Tampa, St Peters hurg. 167—7:55 P M for Raleigh. H*t»» led. Savannah, Jak'imdlk Miami. Tampa. Sf Peters bur* Atlanta, Birmingham 5 A M. for Atlanta. Bhw ( Ingham, Mimphis. For infhramrion call mi H f -1 Pleasants »J‘A , Raleigh. N < :or M O ’ Cappa, TA , Hendertß" N. C.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 7, 1932, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75