PAGE FOUR
UENOEHS ON DAILY DISPATCH
August Ui lUI4.
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pENkY A. DENNIS, Prea. and Editor
M. JL. PINCH, sec-Treaa and Bus. Mgr.
XEJLEI'Hf PS
Editorial Office WO
Society Editor t>lo
Business Oliice 01b
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IPIST FOP AIL' *I-L TOR
lndSiUmosM-fwniar.Mg
all ARE INVITED: Come ye, and
let us go up to the mountain of the
Lord, to the house of the God of Ja
cob: and he will teach us of his ways
and we will walk in his paths.—lsaiah
2: 3. _ . LoJtfilt;.
\My •'{ o tV
* b y
I Jamsß AswelL
New York, June 27—The beggars of
a town provide a fascinating index for
those who would get at the essential
mood of the community. New York
mendicants, in answer to the sus
tained campaign through posters and
the vigilance of guards to oust them
from the subway, have replied by dis
guising their profession in various
ways.
Not for a week have Ibeen “stem
med” in the old-fashioned ways:
“Please, mister, gimme a dime, etc."
The "lottery” gag has replaced some
of that spiel, and the flower salesmen
who tout an endless succession of fete ;
days account for another segment of
ex-panhandlers. i
Perhaps the new newspaper inter
est in foreign sweepstakes has put a
bug into the bonnets of street pound
ers. Anyhow, strollers on all the
town’s thoroughfares are asked to
purchase chances on everything from
five-pound boxes of candy to mythical
limousines.
Most of these solicitations are 18-
karat phonies. But a friend the other
afternoon contributed a dime to a
haggard old lady who sadi she was
raffling of a radio. Carefully she took
his name and address and he smiled
skeptically as he gave her tho infor
mation.
Today he was informed that he had
won the radio. With as little interest
in the gadgets as your correspondent,
he is wondering what to do with it.
He has about decided to present it to
bis aunt.
ALL DOORS OPEN
Whenever I see an article which
purports to compute the “chances of
young writers” with this or that mag
azine, I snort loudly. Actually, there
is no publication which frowns on new
writers; or none that I have ever had
any knowledge of, and I have con
tacted most in the past 10 years.
A good story by an absolute Un
kknown is pounced upon eagerly by 99
per cent of the magazine reading
staffs, and unles it concerns a darkly
morbid or ponderously heavy theme,
it will be snapped up.
ODDS AND END-PIECES
The two hat stores a few doors
apart in Fourteenth street, gave a
giggle with their pictures of identical
celebrities wearing rival headgear and
insisted they would don no other. ...
Park Avenue, the dizzy \nd the fizzy,
dives so suddenly into the slummy
purlieus of Harlem Market above
100th street that you experience a
minor riches-to-rags sensation, whiz
zing by in a taxi ... Old pictures of
Greta Garbo are amazing; no one
could recognize the Greta of today
and the plump, high-spirited Swedish
girl of 15 years ago ... Which has
given rise to the usual crop of silly
stories that the old Garbo and the new
are two different people!
1850 —Lafcadio Hearn, lone, ill-fated
genius, author and interpreter of Ja
pan, who lived many years in Ame
rica, born in the lonian Islands (fath
er a British officer and mother a
Greek). Died in Japan, Sept. 26,1904.
imcAX
TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES
1696 —Sir William Pepperell, Colon
ial merchant, jurist and general, the
first American to be created a baronet
of England, born at Kittery Point,
Maine. Died there, July 6, 1759.
1806 -tPaul F. Eve, the South’s great
est surgeon of his day, born near Au
gusta, Ga. Died in Nashville, Tenn.,
Nov. 3, 1877.
1834 —(100 years ago) Erastus Ly
man De Forest, noted Mathematician
born at Watertown, Conn. Died June
6, 1888. 1
1846—Charles Stewart Parnell, fam
ed Irish statesman, born. Died Oct.
6, 1891.
1872—Paul Lawrence Dunbar, one
of the greatest poets and Negro race
has produced, born at Dayton, Ohio.
Died there, Feb. 9, 1906.
1892 —O. L. Bodenhamer, American
Legion head in 1929, born. Died June
19, 1933. * i
TODAY IN HISTORY
1770 —a party of friars from Mont
erey reached the present site of San
Francisco and there, established a
Spanish mission.
1776—Thomas Hickey, American
guard, convicted of plotting the cap
ture of Washington, executed in New
York City—first American Army ex
ecution.
1844 —Joseph Smith, Mormon lead
er, killed by mob at Carthage, 111.
1933- -New York, California and
Wlest Virginia voted to repeal 18th
Amendment.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Helen A. Keller, among the great
est of living women, deaf and blind
scholar and author, born at Tuacum
bia, Ala., 54 years ago.
Dr. Rufus B. von Kleinsmid, presi
dent of the University of Southern
California, horn at Sandwich, 111., 59
years ago.
Dr. David P. Barrows, onetime pres
ident of the University of California,
born in Chicago. 61 years ago.
William T. Grant of New York,
merchant, borrnat Stevensonville, Pa.,
58 years ago.
Dr. Frank R. Lillie of Chicago, zoo
logist, born in Toronto, 64 years ago.
Julius Klein. Hoover’s Assistant Sec
retary of Commerce, born at San Jose,
Cal., 58 years ago.
TODAY’S HOROSCOPE
Here is a loving and trustful nature,
which may not gain much knowledge
of human weaknesses, and is vqry
liable to be decceived. The attach
ments are strong and the sympathies 1
tender. A happy marriage is probable
and the social life is predominant.
This should be a contented life, full
of good works. There is a measure of
success, depending largely on. the oth
er aspects, such success as it seems
to desire.
TELLS HOW TO GET
STAFFS AT COLLEGE
Chape, Hill, June 27.—Asserting that
while the size of salary does not nec
essarily determine the excellence of a
teacher, Dr. John J. Coss. of Columbia
University, told delegates to the In
stitute of Education here today that
’’the administration in any institution
ought not to regard itself as a giver
CROSS WORD PUZZLE
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3s gßjjjJpe y7 ggrapS"" "
W 33 41 g
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I _ _ SB ____ ' 89
ACROSS
1 — Forbid
♦—Reclining position
7 Correlative of neither
9 Male child
11— In reference
13—Large books
—Behold
K—Possessive neuter gender pro
noun
13—Form of to be
19 —Discern
W—lnstrument for playing pino
chle. poker, bridge, etc.
I'i —Wooden rod
—A Chinese coin
15—Sun god
55—In the army, a meal
18—Holiday
10 — Short for sister,
U—Unit
13 — Organ of heart* g
15—Old Testament (ahbr)
W—Smudge
18 —Opposite of yes -
*9—Small nodule of earth
10—a bay (Spanish)
12— -Machine for moving jHPKurr
**—Fgg nf insect
* DOW*)
2 Article
I—ln no manner
i—Cali of distress a? r-ea
5 Opposite of out
6 Prefix meaning thraa
8— Avenue t ..k
--9— Trickle
o—-Dee^v
HENDERSON, N. C., DAELY DKPATCH,'WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1934 .'
of jobs and a driver of bargains, but
ought to count its resources, consider
its long-time plan, ensider the num
ber of students that it can adequately
care for, and then from the resources
at hand fix salaries with candor rather
than with compulsion.
“A whip-snapping ring master-ad
ministrator will not have much better
than trained seals or snapping tigers
in his circus and there are not good
animals through whom to instruct the
young”, he said.
Dr. Coss pointed out ways in which
the morale of the teaching staff might
bem aintained and emphasized the
need for administrators to do some
teaching themselves and thus engage
in the common enterprise of a plan
ned institution,
[.WORLD.
lat Glance
By LESLIE EICHEL
(Central Press Staff Writer)
Cleveland, June 27. —If a person de
sires to see the difference between city
manager and old-time political mayor,
visit Cleveland. Some years ago, Cleve
land politicians booted out the city
manager and had the old form of gov
ernment restored.
Today only every other street light
burns in Cleveland, and garbage may
be collected once in a while, but there
always is a job for a politician and
a ward-heeler, even if there are no
funds for payrolls or relief
* * *
“Investments”
Americans evidently like to take the
risk of foreign investments. Perhaps
for the higher rate of interest.
The Cuba of President eGrardo Ma
chado was a favorite investment spot.
Investors did, not stop to examine
whether the vast sums this dictator
borrowed went fully into government
projects or not.
But the present Cuban government
did go into that little matter.
As a result, it looks as if $61,000,000
in loans may be repudiated.
Os that, individual American inves
tors would lose $40,000,000 and two
New York banks and one Chicago
bank would Lse $20,867,000.
A Cuban commission has decided
that the loans were in violation of
the Cuban constitution.
For the banks little pity is express
ed, as they made the loans largely to
gain dominance in Cuban industrial
and political affairs —in short, to con
trol the country. As usual in such
cases, there is a revolt.
But it’s hard on the stockholders of
the banks. And even the depositors—-
ofw hom this writer is one -ought to
have a word to say.
* * *
Meat Profits
Market writers are unintentionally
putting some “radical” thoughts into
minds concernini the meat packing in
dustry
Those writers are pointing out that
packing companies will make large
profitsthis year because they bought
livestock at distress prices and will be
able to sell the meat at the new high
prices 1
Now the question arises whether
meat packing isn’t a public utility. The
same question arose previously con
cerning milk. It may arise concerning
■vll foods.
Certain it is that life has become so
complex, the producer gets little of the
ultimate price of the food he pro
duces. A processing tax is no solu
tion. Taxes on foods merely cut con-
12 —And so forth
14 — Mister (abbr.)
15 — Sheltered side
17—Transactions
19—Writing tablet made of stpnf
21—In law. a thing
23 —Mineral to be mined^
26—Lace glove
* 27—Few
28— Dread
29 Bring forth young
30 — Sun
32—Northeast (abbr.)
34 —Decay **
86 —Japanese coin • <t .
*7 —First name of famous dos
St— Tantalum (abbr )
41—Three-toed sloth
Answer to previous puzzle
E- re. p |V
KBBIMu tst
s_ o MjßxTnT|Bp|erS
n o jhlEMk c T to]
fcfN c|&l
EiMlßlckl.
sumption—and that is bad for the na
tion.
ANSWERS TO
TEN QUESTIONS
See Back Page
1. Cotton gin.
2. Louisiana.
3. The Ottawa River.
4. C. JL. Dodgson, who wrote under
the pen-name Lewis Carroll.
6. Franz Joseph Gall.
6. Hawaiian Islands.
7. The Sierra Nevada.
8. “The Three Musketeers,” friends of
D’Artagnan.
9. “Our American Cousin.”
10. Libby Prison.
Kentucky, New York
Receive Potatoes
Bought In State
Dnllr Dl«pntph Darraa.
In the Sir Wnlter Hotel.
BY J. C HASKERVII-Ij.
Raleigh, June 27—The Emergency
llna yesterday purchased 60 more car-
Relief Administration in North Caro
loads of potatoes to be sent to the
Kentucky Relief Administration, ac
cording to Mrs. Thomas O’Berry,
State relief administrator. Forty more
carloads wil be purchased from Ken
tucky and orders were received from
Washington to purchase 200 addition
a lcarloads to be sent to New York
State to be distributed to relief fami
lies.
Up to last night there had been no
change in the price being paid, which
has been $1.25 a barrel, despite the
fact that potato growers have been
complaining that this price was too
low and far below the cost of produc
tion. It was pointed out at the relief
office here, however, that potato grow
ers were free to sell at higher prices
when they could get them and sold to
the relief buyers at 51.25 a barrel only
from ohter buyers. It was also point
when they could not get better prices
ed out that potato prices have streng
thened on many of the markets and
that the relief buyers are not able to
get any at relief prices in some places.
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Another Trunk Mystery
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