I marriages PARTIES
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
I'IJGHT OF FEET.
,h it the morning - glistens, and
* hand in challenge, and the
narrn"
, ( 0 f her feet, like pebbles skim
%wr wuU ‘ r .
,hit the nver drops a silver
jv’oW in<
arrow—
jl | H , a swift to follow, as the
1 swifter , , •
.I,o' of clouds that she has sought
to rare;
I when we teach the river 1 shall
lift her
, )„■ shall see her on enchanted
And sin
face.
Marion Stobel. in 1 !*>»t City.”
Visiting Here.
V, and Mis. Ballard Egerton. of
..„,, )f .i)oto. are spending a few days
1 l(l) , c .j, v as guests of Mrs. Ed Hines
j )(1 Mis doe B. Jones
hi »\ asiiingum.
M, and Mi W It. Vaughan, Billie
\ nj-IMM and Mi.'S Mildred Vaughan
, |„.|ulitte the week-end in Wash
.ay,., with Mrs. I*l D. Bruin.
Here for Week-Eml
Mjns Annie May Hunter, of Durham
~ .pending the week-end in the city
vrjth her mother, Mrs. Claude Hunter,
c n Horner street.
Auxiliary To Meet.
sh. AMMiiaty of the First Met h 0,1,1
,1,1 |’-,:te :,nt chinch will mee* Mon
,|i)V evening at 7:150 o’clock in the
•unJay school room it was aunonne
,J today.
(i. A. To Meet.
Tin Intermediate (1. A. of the First
jlaptist church will hold its regular
meeting Monday afternoon at 3:15 at
'ji t home of Miss Mildred Finch on
Andrews avenue with Miss Finch and
\jis.s Sara Bruce Gooch as joint
I wet esses.
Mission Society
New Bethel Meets
The Woman’s Missionary Society of
\vw bethel Baptist church at Epsom
in the home of Mrs. C. S. Stokes
Sunday night. About sixteen members
:J several visitors were present.
The following program was given:
Hi le Study Mrs. L. D. Frazier,
president.
Prayer, Mrs. F. L. Ayscue.
"Jesus the Persecuted” Mrs. T. H.
U.idon.
Persecution and Growth,” Mrs. C.
G. Stokes.
Duet Misses Fannie and Estelle
Stokes.
'Story <*f a Fin” Mrs. S. C. Mur-
I'ltv
A Story of Two Dreams” Miss
Alary Belle Ayscue.
The society decided to give a Home
Mission program at the church Sun
-lay night. March t. as part of trie
observance of tiie week of prayer foi
Home Missions.
The next meeting will be with Mrs.
Jaek Tharrington. Reported.
'Medicated/
Ingredients of Vicks
'Vpoßub in Convenient Candy Form
VICKS COUGH DROP
| / Reckless romance, intrigue,
'tfnkX'S \ ' drama, at the cross-roads of the
ss world the picture that ran for
IfQh ’ t four months on Broadway comes
m you at last, with the
★ Marip DRESSLER ★John BARRYMORE
★ WALL ACE BEERY ★JEAN HARLOW
ftt&m ★LIONELBARRYMORE ★LEETRACY
HBHBrm. ★ EDMUND LOWE ★ BILLIE BURKE
* MADGE EVANS * KAREN MORLEY
it JEAN HEP.',HOLT * PHILLIPS HOLMES
ORPHEUM THEATRE
OXFORD, N. C.
Mon.-Tues.-Wed., Fed. 26-27-28
Matinee Daily at 3 P. M.—Night 7 and 9 P. M..
* SOCIETY NEWS x
—- ELEIHONE 610 :;;; f; l: !! it; :: : !;: : : :i: HOURS 9A.M.TO 12 NOON
Mrs. Margaret Moran
Weds Fuller Parham
Mrs Margaret Pou Moran, daugh
ter of Representative and Mrs Ed
ward William Pou, of Smithfield. and
E. Puller Parham, of this city, were
married in Washington this morning
at 11:30 o clock at the Washington
Heights Presbyterian church by Dr.
John C. Palmer, pastor of the church.
Only members of the bride’s imme
diate family and Dr. and Mrs. W. A.
Morgan and Mrs. Morgan’s mother,
Mrs. Olivia Shumate, of Raleigh, and
the grooms father, Asa Parham, and
>wo cousins, A. J. Watkins and S.
H. Watkins, of this city, present.
Immediately after the ceremony,
the bride and groom left for New
York, where they will stay for a few
days focfoie leaving for a tour of
Florida. They will be at home in this
city', where Mr. Parham is widely
known in social and business life.
For the wedding, the bride wore a
In Raleigh
Miss Claudia Hunter is spending
the week-end in Raleigh with friends.
Auxiliary Meets
Monday Afternoon
The Presbyterian Woman’s Auxi
liary will meet in the church Mon
day afternoon at I o’clock, it was an
nounced today'. This is the annual
special meeting for the study' of Home
mission work of the Southern Pres
byterian church. Mrs. T. S. Royster
will have charge of the program. All
members are requested to be present.
Number Children
Hear Story Hour
•By the Perry Library)
Did the childrne enjoy story hour
yesterday at the library? We would
say yes and yes judging from the
crowd that literally overflowed the
staling capacity of the assembly room.
Every chair was filled and the wall
space and stage banked with an eag
er audience. One hundred and forty
'•hildren were present. ,
’This was the first of the series of
giant stories known as ’’There Were
Giants” that the H. Leslie Perry Me
morial Library is featuring.
Mrs. John Lee Wester took the chil
dren to Norse Land journeying
hrough Asgard Land showing every
phase of a Giant life ending with a
Giant wedding and a sumptuous wed
ding feast.
The children showed their keen ap
preciation of Mrs. Wester's wonderful
talent as a story teller by the apt
attention which they gave her and
ihe roaring applause at the end.
Another treat awaits the children
next Friday at four o’clock.
Billy Southerland Out
Billy Southerland, son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. R. Southerland, who has been
confined to his home on Young street
for sometime with pneumonia, is able
: o be out again.
HENDERSON, (N. C.j DMLY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1934
three-piece tan suit and tail acces
sories, and a streamline hat. Her cor
sage was of orchids. The swagger coat
with the suit was o ftan beige and
brown plaid. Her sister, Mrs. Thomas
Anthony Wadden, wore a brown coat
with Eastern mink stole, and a new
off-the-face hot. Her mother, Mrs.
Pou, wore a black velvet dress, black
hat and gardenias.
The bride is widely known in Wash
ington and North Carolina society.
'She attended St. Mary’s School, Ra
leigh, and is a graduate of Gunston
Hall, in Washington.
Mr. Parham is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Asa Parham, of this city. He
was graduated from the University ol
North Carolina in 1922. He is a. mem
ber of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fra
ternity, and is vice-president and gen
eral manager, of the Carolina Bag
ging Company in this city.
O. E. S. Meeting.
The James B. White chapter of the
Order of the Eastern Star will hold
its regular meeting Monday evening
at 7:30 o’clock in the Masonic Hall,
it was announced today. All members
are urged to be present.
Attend Raleigh Funeral
Rev. W. C. Gumming and Mrs. J. R.
Rankin went to Raleigh today with
Rev. J. W. Lacy, of Oxford, in order
to attend the funeral services of Dr.
McC. White, pastor of the First Pres
byterian church of Raleigh for 26
years.
Drewry News
By MRS. IIENRY WHITE.
Mrs. J, H. Bullock is spending sev
eral days with Mrs. C. G. Patterson m
Henderson.
Miss Irma Paschall returned Friday
after spending several days in West
minister, Md., with her sister, Miss
Kathleen Paschall who is a member
of the faculty of Western Marylanc
College.
Miss Alice White of Denton spent
the week-end at her home here rt*
centliy.
Henry B. White, Jr., and Misses
Katie Mae Newton of Middleburg ane
Vera Newton spent last week-end a:
My trie Beach. While there they were,
guests of the Newtons at Palmetto
Inn.
Friends of Mr. J. A. Kimbail, who
was painfully hurt recently when hi.-,
automobile was wrecked, will be glad
to know that he is much better.
“Uncle Josh” played to an appre
ciative audience at the Drewry school
on Tuesday evening. A large numbet
of people came out to hear him in
spite of the cold weather.
Rev. J. A. Daily and Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Wilson were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry White on Sunday
evening.
Mrs. John Wilson, Miss Etta Flem
ing Eugene Wilson spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller ol
Louisburg.
L. G. Walston was painfully hurt on
Wednesday when he was struck by a
falling tree.
Miss Irma Paschall spent Tuesday
in Norlina.
Thank Offering At
M. P. Church Sunday
A program to be followed at a
Thank Offering Service at the First
Methodist Protestant church tomor
row evening at 7:30 o’clock was made
public today. The service will be li
charge of the Woman's Auxiliary of
the church.
The program follows:
Organ prelude.
Call to worship, Leader.
Hymn: “O Day of Rest and Glad
ness.”
Prayer: Mrs. C L. Finch.
Scripture: Acts 10:9-16 and 31-35.
Hymn: “Jesus Shall Reign.”
Responsive Reading: Page 57, Selec
tion 37.
Solo: Mrs. Theodore King.
Remarks: “World (Service Condi
tions,” Mrs. J. M. Baity.
Talk: Under Oath for Jesus” Di.
L. W. Gerringcr.
Offering.
Hymn: “Fling Out the Banner.”
Prayer and Ibenediction.
Demonstration In
Waffle Making To
Be Had On Monday
Mrs. Vivian Bushong, home econo*
mist of the Carolina Power and Light
Company, will give a waffle demon
stration in the show room of the com
pany Monday morning at ten o’clock,
it was announced today.
Mrs. Bushong. who is well known
here because of her contacts with
Henderson housewives through local
cooking schools and demonstrations
of various electrical appliances, ex
tends a cordial invitation to home
makers of the city to attend her de
monstration and lecture Monday mom
ing. Tables will be arranged and hot
waffles with maple syrup will i*.
served to visitors.
We hear much about “Miss Man
hattan” and “Young Man of Man
|hatt|an,” and now somebody intro
duces “Mr. and Mrs. Manhattan,”
which we suppose is all right, since
birth control, even in New York,
doesn’t mean, that we can’t have par
ents.
marian martin pattern
SLEEVES OR SLEEVELESS
IT’S EQUALLY SMART
PATTERN 9934
For sports and street dresses there
is nothing so attractive as the scarf
neck line. This dress has the addi
tional allure of a ruffle softening the
slightly tailored effect of the tie, and
adding, certainly, an interest all its
own. The dress may be smartly
made of one of the irregular new
weaves of cotton material, or a plain
silk, or of a small check in tan, blue,
green or brown. The buttons down
the front are worth noticing, too!
They are one of the special touches
belonging to the new season. Long
sleeves are included.
Pattern 9934 may be ordered only
in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 31. 336, 38.
and 10. Size 16 requires 3 5-8 yards
36 inch fabric.
Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins or
stamps (coins preferred) for EACH
MARIAN MARTIN pattern. Bo sure
to write plainly your NAME, AD
DRESS. the STYLE NUMBER and
SIZE of each pattern.
ORDER YOUR COPY OF THE
NEW MARIAN MARTIN SPRING
PATTERN BOOK —a practical
Spring sewing guide, offering stun
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grown-ups, juniors and youngsters,
and for the woman who needs slend
erizing lines. PRICE OF NEW
BOOK, FIFTEEN CENTS. BOOK
AND PATTERN TOGETHER
TWENTY-FIVE CENTS.
Send your order to the Henderson
Daily Dispatch Pattern Department,
232 W. 18th St.. Now York, N. Y.
* ‘Carolina ” Opens Monday
With Gaynor, Barrymore
The motion picture “Carolina,”
starring Janet Gaynor and Lionel
Barrymore, which had its world pre
miere in Charlotte recently ancl plays
at the Stevenson theatre here 3 days
starting Monday is of particular in
terest to Carolinians because many of
the important scenes were actually
photographed in the two Carolinas.
The story itself, written by Paul
Green, of Cha.pel Hill, is a story of
life in the Carolinas. Henry King who
directed the film flew his own plane,
all over North and South Carolina in
a. thorough search for authentic set
tings and material.
Teeming with emotion and abound
ing in richness and beauty. “Carolina”
is indeed a picture to please any au
dience in the country. The cast is
studded with seven great stars all of
whom do more than justice to the
film that promises to be one of the
outstanding productions to come from
Hollywood. The screen play depicts
realistically and dramatically the as
pirations and the struggle of the
south, and a Southern family to re
gain the glory that once was tlieivs.
’['he story concerns itself with a
poor northern girl who has gone south
to grow tobacco ou the plantation of
a decadent but still dignified family.
The young son of the family falls in
love with the girl over objections of
his mother. The young man. however,
is so impressed by the talk of this
young gitl That he is inspired to new
heights of ambitions and new ambi
tion and new vision ,of glory. The
strenuous objections and the hatred
that his mother bears toward the
“DINNER AT EIGHT”
HAS COSTLY CAST
Marie Dressier! John Barrymore!
Wallace Berv! Jean Harlow Lionel
Barrymore! Lee Tracy! Edmund
Lowe! Billy Burke! Madge Evans!
Jean Hersholt! Karen Morley! Phillips
Holmes!
These are the names in the amaz
ing aggregation of stars who appear
together in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer”s
sensational picture “Dinner at Eight”
which opens Monday,
the Orphan Theatre, Oxford as the
most remarkable picture filmed in the
last decade.
The picture is based on the play by
George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber,
■which ran on Broadway for more than
a year. It describes the emotional
experiences of a hererogeneous group
of people, who are brought together
at a dramatic dinner party.
Shifting it 3 locus from one angle
to another, the camera picks out a
retired musical-comedy star, a ship
builder facing bankruptcy, a “wasli
ed-up” matinee idol on the Verge of
suicide, an unscrupulous millionaire
and his faithless wife, a Broadway,
theatrical agent, a philandering young
doctor, a Park Avenue hostess, a
cook with a toothache. Each of these
individuals has his or her own emo
tional conflict and then they are
brought together in one blasting dra
matic climax.
This million dollar cast, comprising
most o the outstanding stars in Holly
wood, sets a new record for lavishness
in film entertainment. It has nev
happened before, and in all likelihood
it will never happen again.
j ' ” ~ ;r '
Henderson Insurance
Agency
Thus. E. Faulkner, Manager
Fire Automobile Life
Sill, ;}
J M 19934,
gitl, finally forces her to leave.
When the young man learns of this,
threatens also to leave the family. His
mother, rather than lose her son, re
lents, and the. girl returns to bring
happiness and prosperity to the once
run-down plantation.
Miss Gaynor and Barrymore give
superlb. portrayls, Robert Young, Hen
rietta Grosman, Richard Cromwell
and Mona Barrie heads the .support
ing cast, and each and every one of
them turns in an unforgettable per
formance. Others in the cast arc
Step in Fetch it. Russell Simpson. Ron
nie Cos,bey, Jackie Cosbey, Almeda
Fowler and Alden Chase.
THE ROMANCE OF A GIRL C Tr vcMQnW
WHO DIDN’T "BELONG" I
until love helped her shatter Wednesday I
the shackles of tradition •• 10 i,i( I
; MM ii of | l,l n ' s
■ \
/Oinmg Attra< lion > From Wg,
V “TIIK HOUSE OF
Thursday Only / 1/14,1 CONNKLLY”
“8 Girls In r’J(M / lc{y 3‘ahounas ow>
A Boat” 1 I
f 1 VII fl D I
WILSON P _ f ® V m I H Pfg
DOI GLAS jB SjJL I N 11
MONTGOMEItV IfeiP WM ■ ■ vi 9MP P 9
Li o n e I I
Tonight”
■ OADDVIIIIDC I
DAnnl nilnc I
Saturday Only, |^|
March 8 ■ //XV a
/ a nr\i Ig/a I
“Hi, Nellie” %^/ftft \JL ttWft I
, Coming with
•™j“ ROBERTYOUNG* RICHARD CROMWELL I
--- HENRIETTA CROSMAN* MONA BARRIE I
T _ Added: Culbertson Bridge Series—
SiFrlN FFTfHIT* Pathe News and Warner Bros. Musi*
*■* "■ I tl villi cal Short “Castillian Garden”
“Street Os Dreams” Plays
At Stevenson Tonight
Jack E. Mosser present “Street of
Dreams,” a revenue in fifteen scenes
carrying two complete shows, each
show fifty minutes. Complete change
of costumes, wardrobe, scenery, com
edy, dancing and novelties. Carrying
twelve drops. Girls make at least five
complete changes in each show.
Producer and owner of this show,
Jack E. Mosser, is a. veteran of show
business, with such successes to his
credit as Geo. M. Cohans “Mary” show
“The Obrien Girl” and the “Gingham
Girl.” with the original cast of forty
weeks on Broadway.
He was with the A. *B. Marcus
shows for five years as producer and
production manager and has played
his own revenues in every larger city
from coast to coast and Canada.
I —STEVENSON I
THEATRE
Henderson, N. C.
MIDNIGHT SHOW
Tonight Only
Starting At 11 O’Clock
JACK MOSSER’S
“Street Os Dreams”
125 People—ls Scenes
Glorified Girls—
Beautiful Scenery
Gorgeous Costumes
Direct From Chicago World’s Fair
Featuring “The Girl in Bronze”
PERC WAGNERS’
Original White Cotton Pickers
All Tickets 3Gc—lncluding Slate Tax
CHURCH SOCIETIES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Mr. Mosser is not only featured in
tlv show but also designs and execu
tes all wardrobe and scenery, which
is without a doubt. Ihe most outstand
ing i:i the show world today.
Doing Nicely.
A. J. Owen, of route four, Hender
son, was said to be doing nicely at
a Durham hospital, where he recent
ly underwent an operation.
lie-MOON-16c
MONDAY and TUESDAY
TAMES CAGNEY—in
“ ITCTU R E NN ATCIIER”
PAGE THREE