PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILY DISPATCH Batabllalie4 Am»« U 114 Fablisfced Imr KxM»t Sauday By gCNDERSON DISPAI'CI CO* IHO« at 10 Yuan* Street HENRY A DENNIS, Prea. and Editor 1L L. FINCH, Sec-Treas and Bua. Mgr. TELEPHONES Editorial Office 660 Society Editor ....>, 61b Muaineaa Office 610 The Henderaon Daily Dispatch is a member of the Associated Press, News paper Enterprise Association, South ern Newspaper Publishers Association and the North Carolina Press Asaocla tlon. The Associated Press is exclusively Mtitled 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 rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. SUnSCKIPJ'IO* PRICKIi. Payable Strictly in Advance, One Year 16.06 ■lx Months 2.60 Three Months ..... 1.60 Per Copy .06 NOTICE TO S|) 11SCRIIIERS. Look at the printed label on your gaper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Forward your money in ample time for re newal. Notice date on label carefully and if not correct, please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address on their paper changed, please state in their communication both the OLD and NEW address. Batlonal Advertising Representative* PROMT. LAMMS A KOHN 136 Park Avenue, Netr fork City; 26 East Wacker Drive, Chicago; Walton Building, Atlanta; Security Building, ■t. Louis. Entered at the post office in Hender son, N. C., as second class mail matter CHRIST S-OP iUL-ALL rO” CHRIST mmmmm rUrt.n4«Ucta»if Tilk—rwlallS: MB 7 MY STRENGTH: I will sing of thy power.' Unto thee. O my strength, ■will I sing: for God is my defense, and the God of my mercy.—Psalm 69:16, 17. * RESTORE THE ERRING: Brethren if a man ba overtaken in a fault, ye which ate.- spiritual, restore such a one in tffc spirit of meekness; con sidering thyself, lest thou also be tempted. Gala'tians 6: 1. TODAY I,' *• , >; -i r | n’ TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1760 Matthew Carey, the greatest Ameircan publisher of his day, born in Ireland, died in Philadelphia, Sept. 16. 1839. v 176S —Jean ‘‘Lefacvre de Cheveurs, first Catholic hfslrtop of Boston, later becoming a Cardinal in France. Died there, July 19, 1836. 1814 —Henry N. Hudson, Shake speairan scholar, born in Vermont. Plied at Cambridge, Mass., Jan. 16, 1886. 1822 Alexander Cana* dian statesman and Prime Minister, born in Scotland. Died in Toronto, April 17, 1892. , 1833 —Charles, George (Chinese) Gordon, famous British soldier and administrator, born. Killed in bat tle, at Khartum, Nubia, Jan. 26, 1885. i r TODAY IN HISTORY 1871—Surrender of Paris to the Germans after 131 days’ siege. first telephone ex change established in New Haven, Conn. ' ■; ■ , : 1932—Japanese attack on Shanghai. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Daniel Willard, president of the Baltimore and Ohio, born at Hart land, Vt., 72 years ago. Augustus Lukeman, great New York sculptor, born in Richmond, Va. 62 years ago. j Theodore J. Hoover, Stanford Uni versity’s Dean of Engineering, broth er of the president, born at West Branch, lowa. 62 years ago. Charles S. Barrett of Georgia, for many years president of the National Farmers’ Union, born in Pike Co., 67 years ago. • William S. Lee of Charlotte, N. C.. noted hydro-electric power engineer, born at S. C., 61 years ago. 1 TODAY’S HOROSCOPE • 7 This is one o fthe strongest of days. It gives an original, daringg, inde pendent. forceful temperament, which has a little too much desire for free dom. Impetuouslty is the great drawback, and must,* as it can, be curbed. Unrestrained, there is dan ger of i noi'srmneni threatened Stevenson —Last Times Today W fcjecnes from Ttu Night* in a Barroom Shaw-Henderson Festival Next Week At University ;• Pjjr-r* f ? H t Bra, W ibkt jB ttjSg:. jßsCr vv3B pi ARCHIBALD HENDERSON AND GEORGE BERNARD SHAW r I By If;. W. MADRY Chapel Hill, Jan. 28—During the coming week the University of North Carolina community will pay formal famous Irish wit, and his authorized tribute to George Bernard Shaw, the biographer, Archibald Henderson who is a distinguished member of the Uni versity faculty. The celebration, which is being spon sored by the Carolina Playmakers, under the guidance of Director Fred erick H. Koch, is to take the form of a Shaw-Hender.son Festival. The event is chiefly in recognition of Dr. Henderson’s latest volume, .“Bernard Shawl Playboy and Pro phet,”) which represents the culmina tion of 29 years of literary laborx Dr. Henderson ha sput into work about the famous Irish playwright. With the passing of Anatole France, • 11 —;• J —ir- Readable Books About Likeable People Shown (By cat Reasons •Why (hilrireti Will Mortal By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. CHILDREN who do not eat unless coaxed usually do so for psycholog ical reasons. Or to put it more plainly and mote accurately, they i __ refuse to uat be -ause they have PPPthe parents’ JML H§ Children, espe- J|| dally those who i)r. ciendening admired. They v make a sort of rite out of a meal, pausing over every mouthful and demanding to be watched as i hey put a spoonful of food In their mouths. The best way to handle this situa tion Is to put the meal on schedule and let the child understand plainly that that Is the way It is to be done. Sweets are prohibited except In Rtnail quantities at the end of the meal. Water is not to be taken un til after the soup. The food should be served rapidly, and the second course be placed before the child Im mediately after the first ts removed. Conversation at the table in front of children of this kind is a mistake, as Is alio admiration of their move ments. .■ , Coaxing seldom does any good. Jn Ihct, It 'biuatfly doee harm' because It creates p diitast© for food and spoils the child's appetite. People who are over-solicitous i BfamL who think too much HENDERSON, fN. Cj DAILY DISPATCH SATURDAY JANUARY 28 1983 ~Dr. Henderson regards Mr, Shaw as / the world’s “grand old man of let ters,” and he regards this last volume as his principal literary achievement to date. i _ Dr. Henderson says that in his last book about Mir. Shaw, he has brought up to date th e whole story of Sbaw’s remarkable career. Doubt less he says this seriously, for it- was only last week that he sold his Valu able Shaviana collection at public auction in New York. The collection brought around SB,OOO. Tributes From Many Authorities The climax of the Shaw-Hebderson Festival is set for Sunday night, Feb ruary 5, when, at -a celebration in the Playmakers Theatre, Professor Koch, presiding, will read tributes from distinguished men and women of jitters. < thing else of the same type, the li brary staff has collected from the shelves and put on display three dozen “readable books about likekable peo ple.” Lists for distribution are being printed. These are headed by a quqo tation from Stopford A. Brooke: “A little love, a little trust, A soft impulse, a sudden dream, And life as dry as desert dust Is fresher than a mountain stream.” • The list falls naturally into two groups, the books about real persons and those about fictional people. In spite of the dominant theme of these • books, they are quite varied. Some ‘ are travel books; some are biography; • a few are letters; several are reminis- < cences, and a number are just stories. Some are old and some are quite new. All are hrauan; all have a quiet charm; all are charactized by delight ful personality. Real l*eople An American Family « Abroad— Robert Gordon Anderson. Grandmother Brown’s Hundred about it and talk too much about It, have a bad Influence on a child. The best way Is to assume that eat ing food Is perfectly natural, or noi j eating it if you don’t feel like it It. perfectly natural, and let it go at that. Trying to make the child eal food that you think Is good for It, when the food Is distasteful, when the parents themselves do not eat it.. Is equally a mistake. Many children are badly trained Ip that they are allowed to eat food at Irregular times and. therefore, do not have any appetite at regulai meal times. In general, children should be considered more Important than their elders In the matter of tho regularity of meals, and no child should be kept waiting an unreason able length of time If father or mother is late to a meal. It Is unwise to asstime that a child Is naughty or ill because it does not like certain foods which the dietary authority says are good for it. A child is perfectly within its rights not to like certain foods and not to eat them If it does not like them. There are very few foods in the world that are so important that a child should be made to eat them if they are distasteful. And there are very few foods which are so impor tant that they cannot be replaced with others having the same nutri ment and chemical content, which l the child does like. I EDITOR'S NOTE: Six pamphlet*, by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by' sending 10 cents in coin, for . each, and a self-addressed envelope stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, In care of i this .paper. The pamphlets are: i "Indigestion and Constipation," "Re- I duclng and Gaining.” "Infant Feed ing,’'“lnstructions for the Treatment ! of Diabetes." “Feminine Hygiene” 1 §2l? "Tjie Care of the Hair and Ski^,' Years —-Harriet Connor Brown. Martha Berry; 'the Sunday Lady of Possum Trot—Tracy Byers. A Goodly Hertiage—Mary Ellen Chase. , My Father, Mark Twain —Clara Clemens. \ My Lady of The Chinese Courtyard —Elizabeth Cooper. M Life of an OrdinaryWoman—Anne Ellis. f The Lone Winter—Anne Bosworth Greene. Manbacka—Sefeia Lagerlof. >£l Soldier of the South—General George E. Pickett. Sand in My Shoes—Katharine Rip ley. Abandoned Orchard—Eleanor Ris ley. f Risley. - The Road To Wildcat —Eleanor A-Rafting On The Mississippi— Charles Edward Russell. Letters of A Woman Homesteader — Elinore- Pruitt Stewart. I A Daughter of the Samurai—Etsq Inagaki Sugimoto. Green Life: A Country 800k —• Christine Swayne. Southern Exposure—Peter Mitchell Wilson. { People of Fiction Lantern In Her Hand —Besse Street er Aldrich. Choir Invisible— James Lane Allen. Father —Countess von Arnim. YeYars of Grace—Margaret Ayer Barnes. Death Comes For the Archbishop — Walla SibePt Cather. Young Mrs. Maigs—Elizabeth: F. Corbett. Diary of A Provincial Lady—E. Elizabeth De La Pasture. Madame Claire—Susan Ertz. Quare Women—Lucy Furman. Abbe Constantin—Ludovic Haievy. Maria Chapdelaine—Louis Hemott;j\ TJje Lady of the Decoration—Fan nie Chldwell Macaaulay. Parnassus On Wheels —Christopher D. Morley. / Son of John Winteringham— War rene Piper. The Widow—Alice Grant Rosman. All Passion Spent—Victoria Mary Sackville-West. Aimee Villard: Daughter of Fiance —Charles Silvestre. Miss Mole —Emily Hilda Young. “Rich" East In Same Boat As Mid- West f ’ * l , r ■ t Writer Traces Income of .Farmer and Wage Earner* ( ..VtS • ‘ ‘' r ■ (This is the twenty-first of a se ries of sketches d.i problems fac ing the incoming president of the United States. In these conclud ing articles, means’ a escape from the depression are presented—as leading economists see them). By LESLIE EICHEL A proposal that 31 states secede from the United States, leaving only “rich” eastern states, is put before the North Dakota legislature by a state senator. Pleas are made by the “rich” states :of New York and Pennsylvania for funds from the Reconstruction Fin ance Corporation to save thousands from starving, f As a matter of fact, the whole na tion is in the same boat. Some Large Dividends ' It is true that some large eastern banks do have ggreat wea th aAd that they continue to pay what may be considered abnormal dividends, due undoubtedly to a concentration of wealth (as farmers allege). It is true that railroads, crying for funds, are overcapitalized, that they speculated in stocks of one another, and are paying eastern bankers for indebtedness on highly infflated values. \ It is true (government reports show that the farmer doe snot begin to share in proportion to the earnings of industrialists, bankers, financiers. Neither do city v/orkers. At the very peak of prosperity, the farmer’s income was shrinking. And (government reports further show the income of ithe majority of lower pa*d workers likewise was shrinking. Fugitive Prince m|l ?ajSI IfeKT, ' ~ Npl tfffilfPi ||J||| i:, 'IS H Prince Alfonso de Bourbon, cousin of former King Alfonso of Spain, is shown soon after his arrival at Cerzumbra, Portugal, in a fishing smack following his escape from Villa Cisneros, Spanish penal set tlement in West Africa. The Prince and several other political prisoners who escaped with him were four teen days at &e& la th& jiaii craft. Flunked Out! 1 ————— — —— ———— ■»— ————_ —» A careful survey of the nation shows that the average easterner, if anything, is worse off than the aver age westerner. He is farther from the land —and food. Thus, any settlement of our prob lems will have to be on a national basis, and in all probability on an in ternational basis* the majority of eco nomists say. < But, from a purely American point of view, let us see why American pur chasing power declined (and by far the bulk of purchasing power lies within a nation itself). George Soule, in “A' Planned So ciety,” explains why. “Half the farm, incomes (in terms of purchasing power) did not increase (during the last period of prosperity, 1923-28.) They were as low as be fore the war. The other half increas ed only slightly . Workers’ Wages Down “Manufacturing wages were lower 1 CROSS WORD PUZZLE [ 7-- -"777- 777 - L _ Vsfr vyy' z ,3 14- is ie 17 — s aa £3 24 pp 25 r 23” Li ’ _____ B-—-_» ______ ___ 32 I j 33 3T” 3S 37 jp^ 38 3 33 40 43 44 1 : gg*r ACROSS I—Oversight 11— Mohammedan of distinction >2—More painful 14— Sustenance 15— Mineral spring 17— Take out 18— Last month (abbr.) 19— Austere 21— Marry 22 Saints (abbr.) 22—Pertaining to Nova Scotia 25 One of the original 13 colonies (abbr.) 26 Bedouin 27 Up above 29 Repulse 30— Awkward 31— Faucets 33 —Affirm 34—Done in faith (abbr.) 36—Adjusts 38— Portugal (abbr.) 39 Cob (mining) *l—Shines 12— A sea god of the Gaels 13— Ancient stringed instrument 15— Notable sayings 16— Ancient seat of Ireland 17— Long 49—Send 50—Restorable' * DOWN 1— Productively 2 Spikes 3 Instigate 4 Spot "6—Verb (abbr.) . <*—Lassoed 7—Plural in 1928 than in 1923. Mining wages were lower. Transportation wages were slightly higher. Building wages were higher. Although the average annual real earnings of wage workers probably increased no more than 5 per cent from 1923 to 1928. They in creased, that is ,at tihe rate of not more than one per cent a year. “At the same time there was a volume of unemployment throughout these years which seemed unduly large for a prosperous period. Man ufacturing, transportation, mining and agriculture all had far fewer peo ple at work in 1928 than in 1923. This further limited purchasing power. , “Yet industrial production increased at the rate of about 4 per cent a year, or four tmies as fast as wages. Distribution Increased “Railway ton-miles (tons carried one mile) increased at the rate o about 4 per cent a year. This indi cates . a growth of distribution par- 8 — Be drowsy 9 Company 10 —Catcher of eels 13—Renew 15 —Pierce 16 —Elaborate solo 19— Surgical knife 20 — Citizens 23 — Scopes 24 Day in the Roman calendar 26—Liable 28 —Equivalence 32 Portico 33 — Feminine name 35—Meeting place in a theater 3< Invigorating medicine 38—Danger 40—Hillside 42—One who is innocent 44—Bitter vetch 46—A beverage 48— Greek letter 49 Right (abbr.) Anzwer to previous puzzle |B|R|elc|K|i |n|r|i IdIsIe WL obSl e S NslHiEEpl.ai g.DJ_kESpS P LXEB. iisisfeEislY JEEp Jlls.EE.as Unap. ikklNE^aslsEk Is 1C IE is is h lolMt I i?FF allel to the growth of product’ion. “Here is a puzzle: How could we keep on increasing our production and distribution of goods four time.; as rapidly as the increase of real in comes with which to buy them in the hands of farmers and wage-earners?” We shlal try to trace th eanswer, as economists see it (not forgetting meantime that immediate aid is need ed in forestalling mortgage foreclos ures, raising prices, providing actual .cash or substitutes good for barter.) Next: The Manufacturing Pyramid. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Mrs. Mary E. Hicks, (deceased, 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 7 th day of January, 1934, or this notice will 'be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All, persons indebted to said estate will please make imme diate payment. <■ j This 7th day of January, 1933. , BENJAMIN H. HICKS, \ Administrator C. T. A. of the Estate of Miss. Mary E. Hick 3 NOTICE Default having been made in thfc payment of; the bond secured by that