Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / July 31, 1934, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR HENDERSON 0 AIL V DISPATCH Established August 12, 1914. Published Every AfternoQn Ktcegt Sunday by HENDERSON DISPATCH CO., INC. at 'lO9 Young Street HENRY A. DENNIS, Pres, and Editor. M’ L. FINQH, Sec-Ereas and Bus Mgr. TELEPHONES Editorial Office 500 .Society Editor 610 Business Office . The Henderson Daily Dispatch is a member of the Associated Press, Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation and the North Carolina Press, Association. i The Associated Press is exclusively i entitled 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. SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Payable Strictly In Advance One Year $5.00 Six Months 2.50 Three months *-50 Weeks (by Carrier Only) 15 Per Copy . orv | NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS Look at the printed label on your paper. The date thereon shows when the subbscription 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 OI.D and NEW address. I National Advertising Representatives BRYANT, GRIFFITH AND BRUNSON, INC., 9 East 41st Street, New York 230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago | 201 Dovenshire Street, Boston General Motors Bldg., Detroit Walton Building, Atlanta Entered at the post office in Hender son, N. C-, as second class mail matter ■aifcw.n4tl4fat.BT »ti—Pato IfrTfaiii THE BEST MEDICINE: A merry heart dooeth good like a medicine; but a broken spirit drieth the bones. — ' Proverbs 17: 22. TODAY • TODAY'S ANNIVERSARIES 1763 —James Kent, New York lawyer • professor and jurist, author of the celebrated “Commentaries oon Ameri- 1 can Law,” born In New York. Died I there, Dec. 12, 1347. j 1803—John Ericsson, famed Swedish , American inventor and engineer, build t er of the “Monitor” of Civil War fame, born nl Sweden. Died in New York, 1 March 8, 1889. 1808—Frederick W. N. Crouch, Eng liah-American composer, author of the music of "Kathleen Mavoureen,” born in England. Died at Portland, Me., Aug. 18, 1896. 1816—'Lydia Moss Bradley, of Peoria, 111., philanthropist, born at Vevay, Ind. . Died Jan. 16, 1908. I 1836 Paul B. Du Chillu, explorer of j Africa, born in New Orleans. Died j in Russia, April 3, 1903. I 1867—Joseph M. Dixon. Montana ( lawyer, Senator, governor, born at , Snow Camp, N C. Died May 22, 1934. TODAY IN HISTORY 1566--St. Ignatius of Loyola, found er of the Society of Jesus, died in Rome. 1777—Lafayette, not quite 20, com- | missioned as American major-general by Continental Congress 1790—U. S. Patent No. 1 issued to ■ Samuel Hopkins of Vermont for a 1 process to make potash and pearl ashes. ; < i ' 1914—War closed stock markets the world over. '♦l'jdftjih TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS ' Guy Emery Shipler, distinguished j editpr of The Churchman, born at * Warsaw, N Y., 53 years ago. Scott Turner, director of the U. S. ' Bureau of Mines, born at Lansing, Mich., 54 years ago. Taylor Bransoon, leader of the U. fi. Marine Band, born in Washington, D. C-, 53 years ago. ’ | Dr. Theobald Smith of Princeton, N. J., famed pathologist, born at A.l- 1 bany, N. Y., 75 years ago. ® r * Herbert E. Ives, noted American physicist, born in Philadelphia, 52 years ago. Hon. Charles a. Dunning, Canadian businessman and statesman, born 49 years ago. I |.i TODAY’S HOROSCOPE l In this nature spirituality is added to the benign influence of this week and the rise in fortune will be largely due to a just, aspiring ardor. The mind is intuitive rather than logical but always sincere, a very valuable trait wfren properly balanced by push I and endurance. ANSWERS TO TEN QUESTIONS See Back Page .— I 1. Wj’oming. B. April 14, 1912. 3. Henry George. 4. Abolition of slavery. 5. New Jersey. 6. Eouisa M Alcott. 7. *t. George. 8. That day was fixed by Act of Con gress. 9. Xanthippe. 10. Gtnfrfl Lew Wallfe*. Today Is the Day nr-*r I With DAY-BYBaY STORY OF * 2 wJAE I I THF WORLD War JO Years After 1 * 213 1 4 ! l ———■ Isl fo | It QUIRK KWNAJBP 22 2l 3 1 E£6 27 28 f Coprrfakt IIS* Ontral Pr*s» AMOcUtlaO 2ft Tuesday, July 31; 212th day oof 1934; 41st day of Supiiper. Moaning stays: Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn. Evening star: Jupiter. Full moon. (Last quarter Thursday.) I EVERY DAY IS A HOLIDAY: St. Ignatius’ Day in Spain. (Anniversary of death oof Inigo Lopez de Racalde. known as Ignacius de Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus, or Jesuit order or teachers.) 4 * „ » THE WORLD WAR 20 YEARS | AGO TODAY I July 31, 1914— The German govern ment sends a threat to St. Petersburg: it will mobilize its army if Russia dooes not put a stop within 12 hours to the military measures that tfa-eat en Germany and Austria-Hungary. I Kaiser tells Czar: “No one threat ens the honor and might of Russia, Which might have awaited the result of my mediation.” The Czar dodges the issue, as might be expected ... I A true story told by Princess Krop otkin illustrates his statecraft. Nicho las was receiving ministers, who were submitting their opinions on import ant matters. “I quite agre with you,” he said to one minister, who was then ushered cut Another entered. He discussed the same matters, but his opinions were entirely different. I “I quite agre ewith you,” said Nich olas again. • The German-born Czarina who had been listening, told the Czar: “How can you possiblv agre with both men? Their ideas are as far apart as the poles.” (“My dear, I quite agree with you”... The Czar will not halt the mobiliza tion, but he pledges his word his troops will not undertake “any challenging action” as long as th enegotiations con tinue with Austria concerning Servia. The Czar will get his country into war because he dodges issues, the Kaiser will plunge his country into war because he doesn’t. Wilhelm knows Germany is prepared to fight, he believes Russia isn’t. He forces action. Consequently (we are told by the German ambassador at_ London when the war began, Prince Karl Lichnowsky) Germany is replying to. Russia’s mere mobilization by sending an ultimatum to Petersburg, although the Czar had pledges his word —delib- erately destroyed the possibility of a peaceful settlement. | Since Wilhelm already has rejected the British proposals of medi ation (quoting Lichnowsky)” it is not surprising that the whole world out side Germany attributes to us the sole guilt for the world war.” I Is the Kaiser a madman? No, he is trying to be a strong man. He is seeking to atone for the bitter disap ' pointment felt by the most ambitious 'people on earth when Britains’ bluff induced him to forego carving a Ger man possession out of Morocco—the Agadir incident, a humiliating surren der that threatened to dethrone him. After Agadir there could be no peace In Berlin, in Paris, in Petrograd, in, London, the question became—-; “When”? When the Austrian ultima tum was sent to Servia ,men in all four capitals simply said, “So it has I come at last!” [ Nor is there any doubt elsewhere that this is Der Tag. On this date every stock exchange in the world closes. , GREAT DAYS 146 B. C. —Carthage was captured; and a city of 700,000 was completely destroyed to wreak revenge upon one man: Hannibal. | When the Roman senate learned Cathage had fallen, after a war that ( was to setback the development of Africa a thousand years ago, it order ed Gen. Scipio Aemilianus to wipe it off the earth. He did so literally! Roman troops plundered and burn ed; temples, houses and fortifications were razed and the materials scatter ed. the ground ploughed and salt sow ed in it. —-~ ! July 31, 1790—The secretary of State granted the first United States patent —to the wrong person. It was given to Samuel Hopkins for a process of making pot and pearl ashes. Actual ly, the process was the invention of his wife. | (Second patent was granted James S. Sampson, for making candles; third to Oliver Erane, for making flour and meal. These were the only patents the first yaar.) NOTABLE NATIVITIES Frederick Croubh, b. 1808, Confede rate soldier who composed the immor i tal Kathleen Mavourneen ... Helen P [Blatavatsky, b. 1831, founder of sophy. it holds that the essential di vinity is in man, evolution taking place by successive reincarnations or reembodiments . . . John Ericsson, b. 1803, Swedish-American whose in ventions revolutionized navigation Among them: the screw-propeller. I W. Warren Barbour, b. 1888, senator from New Jersey ... Sebastian S. Kresge, b. 1867, merchant. ASTRO-PROGNOSTICATION Zodiac sign: Leo. Persons born this date are interpreted by astrologers as of being of spiritual nature, unconcern ed with frivolous things and disposed ,to be intolerant of the diversions of others. Their minds are intuitive rath ler than logical and they intensely dis like to be shown in error. Unhappi ness results unless they consider care fully their own temperaments In choos I n g mates for wedlock. FIRST OF ALL Not New York or Washington but Cleveland was the first city in the United States to have electric steel lfmp* They were installed by Ch»rles | HENDERSON. N. C„ DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1934 a—Mi THE WORLD WAR 20 YEARS AGO TODAY By CLARK KINNAIRD Copyright I»J4, Ctntrol Pns» jjdfih| 7 A —- < . I A* Lichnowsky leave* the British foreign office his bowed head be* trays his feelings When the German government sent an ultimatum to St. Peters burg, 20 years ago today, threaten ing to mobilize if Russia did not cease mobilization, the German am bassador to London, Prince Karl Lichnowsky, realized better than any other German that the Kaiser had deliberately destroyed the pos sibility of peaceful settlement, and he had the courage to say so. For complete details, see TODAY IS THE DAY F. Brush, Clevelander who invented the lamp. Pendulum Swing Scaring Liberals (Continued from Page One.) “They the liberals) ( come 4.0 the conclusion that they have been defy ing fate and that the liberal cause is hopeless, wherefore what has been : must be. A more logical conclusion would be that only the illusions they cherished were baseless and that they never had servedtheir cause. ...” ‘We are likeiy now to drift into a form of fascism on the spacious prag matic ground that liberalism, demo cracy, and the whole system of nine teenth century beliefs cannot func tion. That may be so, but we have no way of knowing. They have never been tried. No serious effort has been made to applpy democracy or to sav** it. . . * * * The NRA Peffer says of the New Deal and the NRA: » "The New Deal was proclaimed as the translation of reconstruction and the NRA as the translation of the New Deal. The nation was swept by fervor. No peace-time act in Ameri can history had been similarly pro claimed, particularly by the intelli gentsia. < “Mr. Roosevelt’s sincerity was mov ing, his declaration of principles was convincing, and his appeals were win ning. They deserved the response they received. “Characteristically, however, we concentrated our attention and ou* <oyalty on the admittedly fine gener alities, and only the churlish pointed out the hiatus between the general ities and the concrete provisions for carrying them out. It was ungracious to read the National Industrial Re covery act critically’. Hitler Will Try To Be President of German Reich (Continued irom Page One.) communique added, his condition sud denly grew worse. “In view of the advanced age of the field marshal-general, serious ap prehension is well founded,” the state ment said. “Physicians in charge are *ll present at Neudeck. A continuous bulletin service will be mained.” The president’s mental abilities have remained unimpaired, it was stated. ILLNESS OF HINDENBURG IS ALLURING TO FRANCE Paris, July 31 (AP) —The illness of Von Hindenburg today alarmed the French government, on belief of which a spokesman said that his death would create “a very difficult situa tion.” Officials said that they assumed Chancellor Hitler, in the event of Von Hindenburg’s death, would seek the presidency, therebby giving him a free i rein in German affairs. | Thi« French fear of Hitler’s com- ’ plete domination in the country across the Rhine was pot allayed in «my way by (he report of a. Yugoslav warning to I(aly against that nation’s lone handed military activity on the Aus trian border. Louis Barthou, French foreign min ister, is understood to have served notice to Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia and Roumania to “keep hands off; leave decisions to the big powers.” His warning was said to have respit ed from the announcement of the Yugoslav legation in Berlin that the League of Nations is “the one and only body competent to make deci sions” on the Austrian situation. New Forest Fire Control Programs Are Being Set Up Dnlljr Di«|)nt<4 Bnreim, In the sir Wnlter Hotel, nv .» e. i» iskeii vim, Raleigh. July 31.—Plans for the re arrangement of personnel affecting the supervision of all counties coop erating with the state in forest fire control were announced today by W. C. McCormick, assistant State forester with the epartment of Conservation and Development. The new plan, under the rigid eco nomy program of the department, gives technical supervision over two districts toa trained district forester. W. K. Beichler, Asheville, will have charge of the work in districts one and two at Asheville and Lenoir, with a chief forest warden at each place. E. P. Simmons, chief forest warden at Lenoir, goes to take up work in the same capacity at Whiteville, which will be headquarters for the program in Bladen, Brunswick and Robeson counties. Columbus is expected to be gin cooperation soon, giving a solid block of counties in this District. District Forester W. A. Peterson, Fayetteville, will furnish the techni cal supervision of this district and al so the third of which Fayetteville is headquarters. T. R. McMillan, Fay etteville, is chief forest warden in the third district. Arrangements have been completed for the transfer cf district headquar ters of the fifth district from Wind sor to Greenville in order that Dis trict Forlester B. A. Carter may be in the center of his new territory which includes the fourth district W’th headquarters at New Bern. F. L. Hooker continues to serve as chief forest warden for the fourth district and J. R. Miller in me same capacity for the fifth district. Mr. McCormick said that on the whole, the counties cooperating with the State in forest fife protection are grouped more nearly in blocks this yearthan ever before. This fact, he continued, makes the rearrangement of districts and supervision easier and should work toward more efficient op erations, especially in the control of flames, which sweep into organized counties from those without organiza tion. Morehead Beaches Have Best Season In Many Summers Daily Dlapntcli Bnrpni, In the Sir Wnlter Hotel, nr J f RASKERVILL. Raleigh, July 31.—1 n the midst of the best summer season they have CROSS WORD PUZZLE | I 2 3 4~~ 5 6 7 Q> 9 \o U KggjlZ 15 U gggJlG n li6 ggSf 15 2ogssas’i £T| 123 ‘ 2A 25 2& mA 2 -' 7 E9S*2£> ioT 31 I HT™" “ —1 is” 55 = " W S 3 _ 4-1 ’ Efi 68 ACROSS l • — 2.000 pound*, 4 —Stocking* B—Level 10 — Ls sickly 11— Not common 12— At a slant 14 — Attorney (abbr.) 15— Established (abbr.) I »i—Tree ll—Twe|\ e months IK—Lay as a table, 21— Thus 22 — Tones acqin 25 —Preposition 27 — Jutting rock 28 — Not one 31 —Shortened form of omnibus 33 Possessive neuter gender pro noun • 34 — Boy 35 A niotlu.sk «pi ) 37 Measure of duration 38— In regard (abbr) 39 City in Austria t"—Prophet 11—Advertisements (abbr.) down 1-Willie earth) substance de posited on tin teeth —Unit < < —Northeast <al»bi ) j i »—Hurry r The Fruits of Victory r > j * had for years, the people of More - head City and: Beaufort are becoming more and mere optimistic about the future of their section as summer and ! beach resorts, even without the aid 1 of the new port terminal soon to be * built at Morehead City at a cost of * $425,000 and the dredging of the ! channelthrough the inlet to the ter minal, to cost nearly $2;000,000 more. Engineers are already at work making | borings and soundings for the ter ■ minal while the . S. Army engineers ‘ are making their preliminary surveys in preparation for the channel dredg ing operations. “While we are confident that the port terminal and the deeper channel are going to prove wonderful things for Morehead City and Beaufort and this entire section, we believe that the people of the State are also becoming j convinced that we have the finest beaches and best fishing to be found in the State,” said Captain Ira Willis, of Morehead City, to this correspond ent Sunday. “Now that the State has bought the * toll bridge across to the beach and removed the tolls, thous- s—Fuel5 —Fuel d—Kili 7—Anglo-Saxon 3lave* f—Entreat of Qod 9 —Opposite of early 12 — Classify 13 — Couple 1$ —Steep in water 20—Number 23 — One who work* 24 Contract bodies 25 Prefix meaning away 26 French possession in Africa 29 Title 30 — Paradise 32—Mentally capable 36 Wrath * 37 — Small boy 4 $9 —Bachelor of arta Answer to previous puzzle pstUol |b|m|a £jQ ftyfsA E* U_ nTble Ps C T & E- R £ eJMmsTK HI £NV L- Q R. M- A KfeJ-rl IsldE.; • ands of people are visiting the beach every day and from 10,000 to 12,000 every Sunday. And when they come once, they want to .come back again.’’ The hotels and Doarding; houses were almost full to capacity this past weelc-enda nd at most of them it is necessary to make reservation? sev eral days in advance. Forrest and Frederick Miles, who are operating The hotel this season, told the w'riter they have done four times as much business t(his season as has been done in any previous season in the past four years. The Villa, since the old Atlantic hotel burned last year, is now the only really modern hotl at Morehead City and proving increas ingly popular. The only other resort hotel open this summer is the one over on the ‘beach. Many people are still objecting to the charge of 25 cents being made by the management for bathing privilee| gto those wno go to the beach in in bathing suits. There is talk about opening up a public beach soon. Five Objects Os Our Bank 1. To keep funds safe and em ploy them wisely 2. To foster thrift and promote prosperity 3. To further the interests of our customers 4. To help build up our town and community 5. To render valuable service to local business / First National Bank In Henderson Henderson, N. C. Deposits in this bank are insured up to $5000.00 through our membership in the Temporary Fund of the Fede ral Deposit Insurance Corporation. I 7 -1 : ECZEMA For twenty years I made a study of ECZEMA and have a satis factory treatment. P. H. Hardee, M. D. Stem, N. C. Wall Papering—interior Decorating— Painting— Roofing— All kinds of building. B. H. Mixon Contractor and Builder “Builds Better Buildings” PHONES: Office 7 Residence 476-J
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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July 31, 1934, edition 1
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