THE OLD HOME TO\S7Kt |- R«gi«tered U. S. Patent By STANLEY ! «* r 1 ■ i ■■■■ ! rrFj(no-no -1 (Zspose its t^at\ Reported/ its youe (kino mother, wants, ) CHICKEN )ISPESDIN& SHES CLEANING /A \ rs GXa, .Sk'iJ 'Round tub I lavender dress! J hereabout V -that bEW) JP \ — v ' 1924- LiKw.jrANUT it -j4 - 34 SCOTT'S SCRAPBOOK [ LEAD SHOT FROM A Hl Urwasa g®£fa|a [ •«..«,V " ------ • '*• , ■•'*• ’■ '•’ * HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATUB, TUESDAY, JUNE S, 1934 New Uniforms Are Being Issued To Independents Suits Are Gifts of Merchants, White With Blue Letter ing And Stripes GAME SLATED TO BE CALLED AT 4 O’CLOCK Manager Boyd Will Send Harris or Pleasants To Mound With Hamm Re ceiving, While Visitors Battery Will Be Ellington or Breedlove With Jack son Catching The Her.ut.6uu independents, all dressed out in new uniforms, will play Middleburg here tomorrow afternoon at^‘o’clock at League Park as a fea ture event of the first Wednesday that the business houses »v she city are closed. The local base-hall nine will appear for the first time in their new uni forms, contributed -by the merchants of the city. The suits are white with blue stripes. Across the chest the word “Henderson” i‘s written in blue letters about four inches high, while on the backs of the uniforms are writ ten the names of the contributing firms. The suits were being passed out today, and any memDer of the team who has not secured one. may call at the Green Grill, where Otto Pahlman will pass out the “togs”. The dope coming out of Middleburg give the battery for the game as Ellington or Breedlove and Jackson, while Skipper Boyd, of the Independ ents, will have his choice between Harris and Pleasants with Hamm do ing the receiving. A very large crowd is expected to turn out for the game, and a small admission will be charged for this and all games played by the club dur ing, the summer months. *KG SISTER Friendship’s Obligation By LES FORGRAVE NQjbiO, 6ETH IVQO BvTT Ivoo CAb* ’STF** A VJMV ©F COGRSt, NAO’STM’T TAU< bf *SAvLLY , I StT LOGGER.. I “SALLY > VOO ov= GOIKJG H CAbVT '&TAV E VF VOO L-OVE. ME J FEE\_ TVAAsT >NAV MOME .NOTPOR yjk - ' ( AQOOt \T I srtOM'T 'jgT jSO '.aT. . j.-.T . O, DEAQ. .O.OEI AR'. *swe \N AUT-S TO (30 VF I COOLOOWLN PRONE’\t! VAONME ,N>qv-W \F E D\o TvAAX DAD nMv-AV THAT‘S nkJvAAT tNE GOT \ \MOOUD "e>H_ "50RE. «SV\R TOOK VWS f TO DO! I’ME JOSTGOTTO P*** P\b\. AvtfD -SVAH D\OM'T'. I Jy OO vT! SOT VACvO 1 h -SVAE OOH' T Bucs Best Colts Shuney Brittain’s home run in the tenth inning with one on gave the Bucs a 7 to 5 victory over the Rich mond Colts last night in Wilmington. Home runs featured the game four be ing knocked. Bees Defeat Tars l • Charlotte’s Bees continued their league leading yesterday by defeating Norfolk in the Queen City 7 to 5. The losers outhit the winners 10 to 9. Game Rained Out The Greensboro-Columbia game was rained out. Tbda^^mes City League Lions vs M. P. PIEDMONT LEAGUE Richmond at Wilmington. Columbia at Greensboro. Norfolk at Charlotte. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia at "Washington. Cleveland at Detroit. St. Louis at Chicago. > New York at Boston. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at New York. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Chicago at St. Louis. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati. StdgjhAs PIEDMONT LEAGUE Team: W. L. Pet. Charlotte , 27 KX .730 Columbia i 20 19 .513 Wilmington 212 21 .500 Norfolk 21 22 .488 Greensboro 17 22 *436 Richmond ,15 27 .357 CITY LEAGUE Team W L Pet. M. E. Baraca .• 1 0 1.000 M. P. Baraca 1 0 1.000 Lions .> 11 .500 Legion 0 2 .000 NATIONAL LEAGUE Team W. L. Pet. St. Louis 26 16 .619 New York 27 17 .614 Chicago 27 17 !614 Pittsburgh 23 17 .575 Boston 22 17 .564 Brooklyn 17 24 .415 Philadelphia 12 26 .310 Cincinnati 9 29 .237 ’ AMERICAN LEAGUE Team: W. L. Pet New York 24 17 .585 Detroit 24 18 .571 Cleveland 21 16 .568 St. Louis 20 19 .513 Washington 22 22 .500 Boston 20 22 !476 Philadelphia 17 24 .416 Chicago 15 25 .375 Remits City League Legion vs„M. E.— rain. PIEDMONT LEAGUE Wilmington 7, Richmond 5. Charlotte 7, Norfolk 5. Others, rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE No games scheduled, NATIONAL LEAGUE No games scheduled. i PAGE SEVEN Eleven Prisoners In Jail at Close Os Month of May Jailor K. P. Davis reported to the Vance Board of County Commission ers Monday that there were 11 prison ers in his care at the end of May. He reported 25 persona nad been in the jail at different times during the month, and that there were 333 jail days served by these prisoners, or aa average of a little more than 17 days each. ROUTES FOR TRUCKS ADOPTED BY BOARD Constitutes Principal Business Before County Group at Meeting Held On Monday Routes for school buses during the coming school year were adopted by the Vance County Board of Education at its reuglar monthly meeting yester day, and that business constituted all of the business of importance trans acted at the time, it was stated. The adoption of the bus routes cov ered- all parts of the county served by the trucks in transporting children to and from the sch*ools. FOB RECORDER I am seeking the office of Recorder of Vance County in the general elec tion in November, running as an inde pendent Democrat. Your vote and support will be greatly appreciated. JOHN W. BECKHAM. Stevenson LAST TIMES TODAY Admission 10-86e Clark Gable Claudette Colbert —IN— “IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT” Added Comedy—News Wednesday—Thursday Geo. Raft Adolphe Menjou— Frances Drake —IN— “THE TRUMPET BLOWS” $5.00 in Cash —Groceries Tickets, Etc., Given away at Moon Theatre TONIGHT Bring your numbers—Everybody attending tonight will receive a number. SHOWING TONIGHT “AS THE EARTH TURNS” And Novelties Admission llc-21c J| Henderson. Lodge No. 229 A. P. & A. M. will meet in regular com muriication tonight at f \ eight o’clock. Master Masons are invited to attend. AL B. WESTER, Master P. J. T. RAWLINS* Sec. Dispatch WANT ADS Get Results CLIPPER BLADES SHARPENED. Let O’Neils’ Everything in Hard ware put your shearing equipment in first class shape. 5-lti HOES, SHOVELS, COW chains, well buckets, wash tubs and boards. Heavy tin 12-quart milk bucket at 45c eacn. Alex ;S. Wat kins. 5-lti VISIT OUR DISPLAY OF ELECTRI caI refrigerators. Compare ma chines—compare p’-ice- Lowest in terest charges in entire city. Loughlin-Goodwyn, phone 118. 16-ts FOR SALE—MODERN FIVE-ROOM house on big lot. Will trade for larger house. S. P. Patterson. 5-2 ti FIRE SALE NOW ON AT O’NEIL’S. Everything in Hardware. Baseballs 10c to ,sc. Hand saws 19c to $1.95 (Disston). > 5-lti AUTHORIZED AUTOMOTIV E RA? diator service. We clean, xepair ol recore any make of raditov. Motot Sales Co. 2.8-ts WANTED —SALESMAN, NATIONAL organization, 40 hours per week, good pay for industrious man, no investment, thorough training. Ad dress J. B. Hunter, care of Daily Dispatch. 5-lti PLANTS CABBAGE AND COL ' lard 15c 100; $1.25 1,000; sweet pep pers 10c dozen; improved stone to mato 25c 100; $2.00 1,000; potato plants 20c 100. W. A. Pardue. Hen 'derson, N. C., R. F. D. 1. 5-lti GET JOHNSON’S GLO-COAT FOR floors, shellac, denatured alcohol and Johnson’s paste wax for floors and automobiles at “The Place of Values”, Alex S. Watkins. 5-ltl