PAGE FOUR HENDERSON DAILYDISPATCH BfrtablUheM A—st IX IM4. Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday By HENDERSON DISPATCH CO, INC. at 109 Young Street PNRT A DENNIS, Free, and Editor L, FINCH, Sec-Treas and Hue. Mgr. TKLKPMONKS Editorial Office . M ».. Society Editor »n»nw* •• • «i.r> .••••«•• Jit Bail ness 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 ali 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. •VBSCHirnoN raicEs. Payable Strictly la Advaaee- Bns Year •res.s • •••••• Six Month* •* • «|E* *(*!••<* ♦• • • »»*•*’•» •••“ Three Month* »<•••«>.'•*>>••.» ■••■• Per Copy a- >°* NOTICE TO SLHSCRIBEHS. Look at the printed laoei on your {iaper. The date thereon show* when be subscription expires. Forward your money in ample time for re newal. Notice date on label carefully Bad if not correct, please notify us ai once. Subscriber* desiring the address on tbelr paper changed, please state in their communication both the OLD and NEW address. Rational Adverttalug liepresentatlwea FROST, LANDIS A KOHN MO Park Avenue, New fork City; *b Bast Wacker Drive, Chicago; Walton Building, Atlanta; Security BuliQlug, ■t.. Louis.. Entered at the post office in Hender son. N. C., as second class mail matter CHRIST FOR ALL-ALL FOR CHRIST kwOibflinkniiMinwA-Millt: MR SOLITARY IN FAMILIIES: "Clod Settet’h the solitary in families: he (bringetlh out those which are bound iwitih' chains; but the rebellious dwell up a dry land. —Psalm 68: 6. O New York, August 3—Heat! There s a special' quality in Manhattan heat. It smothers down like a red wool blanket .steaming', malignant. Chicago heat fries on a modernistic griddle. Florida heaifc. ds lush and ungle.ly. But New York heat is like . the throb of a glimimieiring brass gong it gets the neirves o n those days when .1 possesses the town. For some, ih/gh temperatures open brain cel’s like pores and best work results. Gaugin, the painter, was cne cf those. A crispy autumn day froze r -*-s muse, whiiil e after h's exodus to the South Seas hie was happy work ing ten hours a day in a i-teraming rrjytive hut. Er nett Hemingway, greatest of liv -nior authors, in the opin an of this i-e --’"•erte.r, thrives on heat. He has spent the summer so far fishing off the Florida X?ys and working through the sub-tropic nights. He removes his outer garrne/ntst perspires and vi ‘"is. oblivious of thermometers. Cold weather slows his output. Joseph Hergeshe/mer, cn the other ’ und. hates hot weather but somehow imanagtes to write ten and (twelve thousand words on days when the run attacks relentlessly. He has de. scribed graphically hi« bouts with composition when garments cling damply to his rotund, frame and hisi l ight work-desk crawls slowly back i" nd forth across the room of his Westchester, Pa., home—propelled by f.rl'ous pushing of a pen. COATS OFT’ The convention of rctaim’nig coats in public is most strictly observed by American men. Abbroad, the Indies lit no disapproving eyebrow when t’..?ir menfolk doff jackets in case or .? ftauranit. / I have never had the • rlv n to follow this fundamental' urge to comfort, siinoe the day in the har bor of Port! of Spain, Tr’nidad, with .tr-e mercury at 109 degrees, when an ofiicious head waiter of an American to. at refused me admission to the din ting room until I had gone up and c’znmed a coat. I was tho only passenger i'n the room at the time! | ,’ | MHO CAN STAND IT? Rar al backgrounds cr.© eV airly ap parent in the behavior of Manlhaiftan. ,’t's wih"ii the mercury gers winging. Hotel kitchens and laundries, Where r ’ton the heat 1 reaches staggering f guires are tenable only by those v th gonietriatfonis of hea t behind 'them. Norwegians and Swedes can seldom si.and the gaff. •Filiptaoes. On bh eother hand along '"■l i'h the southern Europeans and ■Chinese, seem adaptable o jobs which entail semi-suffocation. Yet I once knew a family on Long Island with an Arab buibJer. Who fainted whenever the Ugat row above 85 degrees. TODA~V TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1802—Sairalh P. H. Doremus, a New York wthose labors for *ood are worthy of remembrance, bcm in New York City. Ded there; Jan. 29 1877. ’ ’ 1808- Hamilton (Fishi.. New York governor U. 8. JSenf.itor and Gran’ s Secretary of State, brn in New York. Died Stfgt, .6 1893. TODAY is the f s S’ • | 23 24 2S 26 27 2g 29 yCLARK KINNAIRD! 30 31 A I AUGUST 193 J J Q .933 roe THI> BY CENTRAL XtETt AUk Thursday, August 3 17 g 9 10 J u Slsth day of 1933; 51 days till Autumn. Morning star Saturn (till Sunday); evening stars—Ve nus, Mars & Jupiter. Full moon Saturday. * * * Zodiac sign: Leo. A day of accidents and unforeseen ijiisadventures. * * * In contrast with inland continental areas, where the seasonal and sometimes even the daily, temperatures vary greatly, the temperate change over oceanic and insular regions in a year is comparatively small. The reason is the effect of solar radia tion upon water surface. NOTABLES BORN THIS DATE Rupert brooke, b. iBB7, noted poet, who was killed in action in 1915, when he was 28, and is buried where he fell. He had written: If I should die, think only this of me: That there's some corner of a foreign field That is forever England. • There shall be In that, rich earth a richer dust concealed; 4 dust whom England bore, shaped, made arvare. Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam, A body of England's, breathing English air. Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home. Russell C. Westover, b. 1886. dis tinguished newspaper cartoonist; Charles Edison, b. 189 Q. successor t<) his father as head of the Edison Dplores Del Rio, b. 1905, and A'dHenne Ames, movie beauties. ♦ * ♦ 1492—Cristobol Colon, called Col umbus, sailed from Palos, Spain, in 3 vessels with 120 men to “search for and take possession of certain islands.” He made a short stay in the Canary Islands, set sail again on Sept. 6, reached an island in the west on Oct. 12 which he named San Salvador. Queen Isabella’s jewels did not finance the trip. Columbus, who had received large sums of mon ey for previous service at the Span ish Court, demanded a peerage, the office of admiral and that of viceroy of any lands he should discover, and laid down other conditions under which he would seek a new route to the Orient by sailing westward. His proposal was rejected, he expressed his disgust to Luis de Santangel, a Jew, chancellor of Aragon, started to France. Santangel induced Fer dinand and Isabella to recall him, showed them the advantages to Spain and the fame that would ac crue to the sovereigns if Columbus did find a new way to India. Be cause the royal treasury was empty, and the Queen’s jewels already pawned, he offered to provide the needed money from his own funds. He advanced 1,700 ducats without interest. [Columbus’ second expe dition was financed by funds real ized frfim the sale of confiscated possessions of the Jews who were expelled from Spain.] 1811 -Elisha G. Otis, inventor of the ArTHTTmcif safety device making the elevator pos (jI kl M IJv* t/lH lA/X sable, manufacturer, born at Halifax. ” * HJmIVm V ft M V>t. Died at Yonkers N. Y., April 8 TT ON DRY ARGUMENTS. 1821— Uriah S. Stephens, the clergy To the Ed Va^ h j 1: t delphia taiior ’ who I have just‘read the article of Cale wi. i 10 Philadelphia garment work- K . Burgess, campaign director of the founidrd' the Knights of Labor dry forces, appearing in the State (1869), forerunner of the American! press of recent date, and the sum total Federation of Labor, bom near Cape of my reactions thereto is: If the May, N. J. Died Feb. 13, 1882. i philosophy of his argument is Chris 1853—James I. (Buchan, prominent tian record me a pagan, please. Pittsburgh business, civile and Ma- Now, Mr, Burgess is a licensed law sonic figure, bom at Hamdltton, Onit., y er considerable reputation; but Cana. Died c|n PiittSiburgfhj Jan. 2, the license that he holds does not in -1931. elude the license to assume that he 1867-Augustus M. Herring, noitable prase " ts th® Christian forces of Arr.erkan pioneer in aviation, born at 1 P l /. al .° ! na ; opening sentence Covington Ga. Deed Brooklyn. N. . lcl f C ,S to /^ s ‘‘ Th « v 17 IQ9R United Dry forces of North Carolina” icq" y r , il . -o’ .. .. , . . e^c - have opened their campaign 1887 Rubert Brooke, the lamented headquarters in the Bland Hotel and English post, one of itihe brilliant men throughout his article thereafter uses ithe World War took off, bom. Died tha term “dry forces” only once, April 23, 1915. while he uses the term “Christian forces” an even dozen times. This TODAY IN HISTORY manifest .attempt to invest this re- 1492 Columbus and h s three sh'ps 'P cal campaign with the spirit of a left Palos, Spain, on the hittor’ic trip Christian crusade is doomed t© dis ■which dTecoverel the New Wtarid . mat failure, tor the simple reason that 1907- atondard OU Company timed s , uch “ no .‘ bas “! U P°" sensa nor 18 ■529.240.000 for fcbaf llllj to U. S. Court 11 k\ ke „ ep ’" g f w " h de “T' --ci- Thje inspiration that he obtains Chi'cago-Never paid “fine which was the resußs she gUte Qf dismissed liator on appeal. Tennessee is not such as to warrant 1914—France and Germany declared any rcvival of dry hopes. The truth war Cm each other. of that campaign is that the bootleg- — gers and Republicans of East Tene- TGDAY’S BIRTHDAYS nessee made common cause after the Chairles Edison |oif Wiosit Orange, partisan appeal of Postmaster Gen- N. J., son of tih e laibe great inventor, eral Farley to the' Democrats of the piesidmt of Thomas A. Edison In. to ™te repeal as a party mat- dustries, bm there 43 yettos ago. ter ‘ Norlh Carolina is not going to Arthur A. BaltantiPe of New York. ™ k f e any such mis ake. The repeal , , , | fight in North Carolina is non-par- lawyer, former assLstawt-secretary of (isan and non . sectal4an , and the di •the Treasury, bor n at Oberlin, Ohio viding Hne wj]l be betwee , n those who 50 years ago, believe that national prohibition as a Lester H. Woolsey of Washington, national policy has been a failure D. C., noted lawyer, onetiime Soli- and those who believe to the con icitofr of State, born at Stbne Ridge trary. The church ,as such, if it is N. Y. 56 years ago. ■ properly advised, wil Itake' no part Samlueil M. Sihorttrtdge of Cal/forniia in this campaign. former U. S. Seator. bom at Ml. “North Carolina is not cursed with Pheasant, lowa, 72 j’ears ago. presence of large and corrupt Clara E. Laughlin of Chicago, not- .cities,” argues my friend. How fa wi . i k i u: mihar is that sort of argument corn ed author of travel 'books, born m . - , , ? ~ ■m/ i i >ng from dry sources! Lets reverse m w ’ » u- ...u »or luduslry and commerce Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin, English tbat cauge tbe concentration of pop statesman, born 66 years ago. illations in order that the prohibi- King Haakon VII of Norway, bom ti O n millennium may obtain. Since 61 years ago. | wets are wicked, of course, their con- gregation in any community will TODAY’S HOROSCOPE make such community wicked. That The persn born today is firm, stead- is the characteristic theory of the fast and sure; itihe disposition is dip. prohibitionist lomaltac and calculating, and carr'Os But I never thought that thei Chris considerable success in several lilnes of tian philosophy taught the egetting effcH. Them a rit im ng tendency to of the “under-hold,” as we boys used iwony over business matters, and un- to call one wrestler got both , . . , , , .. •, arms about the body under the 1 arms h Tn Jr ° f the That was con - a dangler that th ehopes will not bear g . dered and resorted fruit on account of this. t 0 only when there was a recognized -w-. disparity, of strength between the two r rank O Neil Here wrestlers. But listen to my friend. He Frank C. O Neil, who attends Har- savs: “Delegates to the proposed con vard Law School, Boston; Mass, is vention are allocated to the counties spending a month in the city at his on the same basis as -representatives l’ heme on Chestnut Street. in general assomtyy and -this HENDERSON, (N.C.J SAEA dfSPAIOH. AUGUST S, IMS ’’ I 1914—Germany, having invaded t Luxembourg and having made the - gesture of requesting passage i through Belgium for troops being . sent to France, declared war on BeL 1 King Albert appealed to ‘ King George V. and Britain began , mobilization. *♦ * 1916 —Sir Roger i Casement executed, for having en i listed German aid in fomenting a • revolution in Ireland aimed at free i ing it from British rule. ♦ ♦ ♦ 1807 i —Aaron Burr, who had received the samQ number of votes for President as Thomas Jefferson, went on trial at Richmond, Va., charged with treason. He was accused of con spiring to seize New Orleans and the territory west of the Missis sippi, then a part of France, and set up an independent republic there. The jury brought in a “Scotch” verdict: not proved to be guilty. * * » HOW MONTH GOT ITS NAME The Roman month Sextilis was named Augustus in honor of Au- A contemporary statue of Augustus survives today gustus (originally Octavianus), adopted heir of his granduncle, Ju lius Caesar and first emperor of Rome. Augustus wanted the month to be as long as Julius’ (July), so a day was taken from February. Though married three times, he had no sons, was forced to leave his em pire to his stepson, Tiberius, son of Livia, who had been yielded to Au gustus when he was 21 by her com plaisant husband. Livia took good care of her husband, picked his mis tresses for him, kept his food from , being poisoned. Sole master of the Roman world at 34, he ruled wisely and well for 33 years. But his reign is best remembered because of an event in his empire of which he never heard: the birth of Jesus, in 6 B. C. I Tomorrow: THE GREAT POET OF MANY LOVES. means mat, even if the wets should get enough votes in the large centers to out-number the votes of the farm ers, the margin would have to be tre mendous before delegates representing the wets in the cities would out-num ber the delegates from the rural coun ties.” This is doubtless prohibition Christianity, but it is not just repre sentative government. Then the stock argument is advanc ed that we should not prohibit mur der, arson, theft and rape by statute because such statutes are violated if we are going to repeal prohibition be cause this statute is violated. Now, I may be congenitally perverse, but I can see, to save me, how any ra tional man can place taking a drink of liquor, wine or beer on the same footing with murder, arson, theft or rape. I know that there is no moral turpitude or criminality involved in taking a drink of liquor, wine or beer. It is at most only malum prohibitum, not malum in se, as my friend well knows. So why insult my intelligence by using any such agrument? > There may be considerable money expended by the liquor interests in this fight for repeal, but I have never seen a cent of such money nor have I heard of any one who has. Walter Murphy may have some money for or ganization purposes. If he has he has nothing, I dare say; more than the dry forces have. But it must take some real money to debauch the Am erican electrorate. Twenty states have voted in favor of repeal to none against. The ratio of votes thus far is a little better than 3 to 1. This may represent liquor-purchased votes, but if it does the money has been ef fectively expended in fact, more so than has ever heretofore been the case. Now, I do not apprehend that North Carolina is going to act the dog-in the-manger role. She is convinced that the great majority of the people of these United States are in favor of a repeal of the 18th Amendment. She knows that public opinion can render mugatory any suptuary law. She knows that a law unenforced and in great areas of the country unen forceable is infinitely worse than no law on the subject at ail She will not attempt to take an “unded-hold’’ up on the American people, though pro hibition Christianitl and constitution al technicality offer an opportunity to do so. She prefers the pence, trans quility and solidarity of the Union, an din preference will give repeal some fifty to one hundred thousand majority. JNO. W. HESTER. Washington, D. C., July 31st, 1933. UP AND DOWN IN KENTUCK. (This will interest many of our young people with whom “our Pattie” worked so acceptably before going to the Extension Board. —J. O. A.): During most of the year Miss Pattie Lee Coghill is employed by the. Church Extension Boards to stimulate young people and (religious education ai tivities among our churches in Flor ida which are wholly of “Congrega tional” ancestry. It happens that Miss Coghill herself comes of good “Chris tian” training. For the past two years she has capitalized her antecedents by spending a portion of her summer in pioneer work among a group of rural “Christian” churches scattered among the hills of Kentucky and West Virginia. The following paragraphs were taken from a detailed record which she has kept. These particular incidents took place in,the summer of 1931, when she was accompanied by Betty Bonney of Hartford Seminary, who was then in Summer Student Ser vice: ,r The GregoryMiUe Church is the best organized and has the best build ing in the Kentucky State Conference. I wekt to spend the week there when the pastor, W. E. Robinson, invited me, and I was accepted wholeheart edly because he told the people that he had bee'n with me for several days and could recommend me as a Chris tian. He could not have said anything which one would appreciate more than that, or feel more as if one must measure up to their standard of a Christian. “I conducted meetings for young people every night from Monday thro ugh Friday. They came from miles around and from the hollows and up the creeks. One night I counted more than 90 present. Handling them was a real problem, for they had never been in a young people’s meeting before and there were so many it was Impossible to conduct a discussion Successfully. We had the inside, and then on three evenings playted games 4*l the churchyard, which were thoroughly enjoyed. “I taught them to sing one verse of ‘Day is Dying in the West,’ and had a real glow when I later returned to Gregoryvllle and one of the young men said to me, You remember that song you taught us about day is dy ing in the West? Well, while we were coming home from a ball game the other afternoon, when we got to the top of a mountain I said. Let’s sing that song Miss Coghill taught us. I had never noticed a sunset before, and that wa : a pretty one, and the' moun tain was pretty, too. That song just seemed to belong there.’ “We had a vacation school every afternoon. I ate dinner and supper in a different place each day. Some times I had to walk several miles from the church when vacation school was over ,and then walk back to the church after supper. The Gre go ryville Church is on a lovely new highway to Louisville' and they had electric lights in the church, so that it can,no longer be said that they live secluded lives. “I was delighted to have Betty Bon ney, of Wakefield, Mass., come back with mie l from Blue Ridge for the re mainder of my time in Kentucky. When we arrived in Ashland we found that we were completely stranded as we were due in Beechburg, seventy five miles away, for a meeting the next day, and had no way to get there. When we discovered that we could not rent a car we decided to try to buy one. After much shopping, we secured a Ford sedan for $35. I did not have that much money, but Mr. ainey endorsed a rcte for me. As I had al ways wanted to own a car it was with much pride that we drove away with thaz Ford But before we had gone a bi'a.k and a half we had vur first blow out. “Mindful of our tires, we drove slowly th.- next -ay—and missed pur j Uncle Sam: “He’ll B e Your New Partner!” | J JU 77 ~ z * W n Du - ,- -?as. '1 iL■'^-Hil* r^Hfc ■•'S sjj /gfi-. a® rJ?j £ :*?J®f ’-'- By/ f flWwfer 10l Kvtl M<H M:M ‘« ■■■^-® W WKv*%Hl CaMr wasßF- 3H&f%vs!E» «W.wsa 3SI dg Ik/'x h*. “-Ssl wllafrv £t '-Wai lilfiF jRIil ,M. >.'- meeting. In the afternoon we came i to an old-fashioned resort and de cided to spend the night there. Our most embarrassing moment was when we started, to close the car for the night and pulled up the windows, on ly to find printed on them in a vi cious shade of orange, ‘s3s.’ We had much fun naming the car, but finally decided upon ‘Mascaro,’ as Betty hails from Massachusetts and I from North Carolina. “Betty and I coaxed Mascaro six miles up the mountainside on the even ing before and spent the night at a fishing camp in order to get an early start in the morning to see J. M. Liles, pastor of a group of churches of which Blankenship is the chief. During the six-mile drive up the mountain we fre quently put water* in our radiator, using Betty’s rubber overshoe for a dipper. When we thought we had reached our destination we discover ed that Mr. Liles lived on the other ■ CROSS WORD PUZZLE | I''T I* I'T'T hl° I* ITI ■ ■ l4_ "77Z 1-7 -—,— t>/ / " te> is 6>> eo 21 32 23 2A 25 ' 27” “Ea ’ ” J a ®g23~ 30 —— 211LZE, 53 34- 35 36 | 38 SS 40 44 ~ —■— 7~Z 44. ““ £22 47 pa so 22? si sz 53 bllLZqfcztliZ t fl ± ACROSS I—Maiden 6—Formal 11 - ■ Matron 12—Greedy Vhile 15—Burrow *» z inch 17—Preposition 18—Chance . 20—Lukewarm ■'2—A famous woman ’’-•Cod of lov© 25 Negative 26 Irird fuel 27 Set b’ck 29—Annun’ly 31—Negv'vt ?; * ae £°istantlan symbol 33—Metallic cc- -ent <1 Y ? \ St p,ain in eastern Europe . / tV? k , 42 —Corrode 14—Iiigh’ /ay ’••—Part v common verb Im —A mat-rial A Hebrew priest <s—Letter of alphabet ’ 60 -None excluded jl Large vessel 53—War decoration E' Face of a timepiece ms —To the end 57 Vigor 58— Re-establishes DOWN 1 who distributes *— outer’s degree *—-Icurnfiii 4—Send forth c Incredible story C-Soundness of mind 7 ~at:n poet 8— ;> rt of the face 1h« most important man of a newspaper (abbr.) 10 —number _ ■ I side of the creek. There were two ■ ways of getting across —a swinging bridge high in the air and a little rowboat. We chose the latter. I got in while Betty ‘showed off’—only she failed to hop in>, starting me off alone. Then came the worst moment of the summer. The creek was as rough and as deep as a river. I could not touch bottom with the oars, and neither could I row across against the cur rent, and so I put back to shore with an expression on my face which frightened Betty. “Finally getting across the stream | we found Mr. Liles to be one of the most interesting men whom we met all summer. He and his family were very cordial to us and mapped out for us a three days trip up and over the mountainside. One of his sons rowed us back across the creek. “We crossed another swinging bridge to reach the Blankenship ■Church, but were very pleased with 17—Elliptical 19—Small one 21— River in Italy 22 Eyer 24—Yellowish-red color 26—Sheet of thin fibrous materttti 28—A shy female animal 30—Common abbreviation for tele phone lines coming from main switchboard 53 Globs 34—Verba* 35—80 y 36 —Actually 37 — Dutch coin 38— Ainericarf poet 39 Tropical plant , 40—Decrees 43—Preposition 46 Dross of a metal 47 Part of a church 50—Style 62 s —A number 54 Latin prefix concernlnj 56—Musical note Answer to previous puzzle> , t [rlu & lol /xlu sJe T Il I 15 l Iri'riX bjrl l ii*’ U | I j what we found—a nice little building set in the midst of grass and trees. “We went two miles further up the mountain to Laurel’s Point, which Mr. Liles said would be a find place to hold meetings. Then? is a school house on top of the •hill and a lodge building nearlby where -Mr. Liles preaches occasionally. As it;-was noon time we went in and visited the teacher. She said she had an enroll ment of 83 pupils, and that all of them lived ithin three miles of the school. What an opportunity! Because of the buildings, the abundance of children, and the lack of a Sunday School this would be one of the finest places to hold a church vacation school. It seemed too bad -to have to wait a year before starting work. “Raccoon School is another place where Mr. Liles preaches from time to time. They had not had any ser vices in the neighborhood for fifteen years when Mr. Liles first went to them a few months ago. When he started a Sunday School, an eleven year-old boy wiilkcd five miles to join, and has kept it up since. This is another good place for a vacation school. “This was a great day’s journey. We rode many miles during the day up creek beds and sometimes forded swift streams. Wc climbed another long, hard mountain after leaving Raccoon, had trouble with our car, and walked another mile for help. Coming down the ‘other side of the mountain was the most danegrous ride of the summer. Tt -was steep, rocky, and had not been much traveled for a long time. But a Model T will go anywhere, and we managed to creep down. We had more car trouble and rode into Olive Hill just at nightfall —tired, dirty, and hungry. As we had not had, any lunch we uach had a fifty cent supper ..w.hich left us with just nineteen bents between us. But we boldly registered at the little hotel and then slipped away to Gregory . ville in the morning to get a check cashed.” Concerning her plans for the com ing summer, Miss Coghill writes: "I shall be in Kentucky for only a month this summer, and by myself as there is no money with which to send a helper. I intend to work in fewer places, but to stay longer, holding va cation schools and young peoples meetings. We should like to hold some sort of a young people's summer con fernce, but this may not be possible.” —The Congregationalist and Herald of Gospel Liberty. Drink To The Chief Out of the SIX GLASS TUMB. LERS GIVEN YOU FREE with every purchase cf $1 or more . . • All day Friday . . . at BILLER’S SALE Henderson. N. C. EXECUTORS’ NOTICE. Having qualified as Executors of the Estate of W. S. Parker, deseased, 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, N. C. on or before the 28th day of July, 1934, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immedia’ 3 payment. S. T. PEACE. SCOTT P. PARHAM. Executors of W. S. Parker. This 26th day of July, 1933. Perry and Kittrell, Attys., Henderson, N. C. ■MiMMijiHiiiiK W.C. CATES! INSURANCE I I At A Savin;: Henderson, N. C.

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