ASSOCIATED PRESS AND CENTRAL PRESS Schools To Start Here On Sept. 13 All White and Color ed Schools in City and County Are To Open Then White and colored schools of the city and county will begin their fall terms on Thursday, September 13, ae coiding to tentative opening plans an nounced today by Superintendent E. M. Ro.llins A meeting of the teachers will be held on th preceding day, Wednsday, Septmber 12, at which time instruc tions as to operation of the schools will be given. Registration and distri bution of 'book lists will be the chief business on the first day of school, and on Friday lesson assignments will be given, with regular class room work starting on the following Mon day, a3 has been th order heretofore for several yars. Whit it is very probable that these dates will stand, it was made clear that they were tentative and subject to change. COMMITTEE WILL PLAN CELEBRATION Meeting Called for Monday Morning To Set Preli minary Program Plans for the big celebration Hen derson is to stage in connection with the opening of its white way and the modern street lighting system on Garnet street will be giv«-n tentative form at a meeting of the committee in charge of f be undertaking, which s tj be held Monda* t it ft. m.. ii was said today by M. C. Miles, acting chairman. The committee will organize and take preliminary steps toward getting the movement under way Several dignitaries will be invited to attend, and it is planned to make the occasion one of she biggest the city has had in a couple of decides. One of the first things to be done is the fixing of t. date, and that is ex pected to be early in September, at a time after (be white way has been finished and before the opening of the tobacco market. The committee consists of M. C. Mile 3, acting chairman, J. Harry Bryan, D. C. Loughlin, S. S. Steven son. R. G. S. Davis and Henry A. Dennis. i REV. MrThALEY AT FIRST M. E. CHURCH Rev. Carl W. Haley, who is here during the summer assisting Rev. J. L. Joyce in the pastorate of City Road and White Memorial Methodist churches, is announced a* the preach er for the morning services at the First Methodist etiurch tomorrow morning at the 11 o’clock hour. The pastor, Rev. D. E. Earnhardt, Is ab sent on a vacation. The choir will give special music, and the public is invit ed to attend. NOTICE. Having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of William Champion, deceased, 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, or to her attorneys in Henderson, North Carolina, on or be fore the 28th day of July, iy3s, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to this estate will please make immediate payment. This the 28th day of July, 1934. CARRIE CHAMPION, Administratrix of the Estate of William Champion. Gholson and Gholson, Attorneys for Administratrix. Henderson. N. C. Wl Our service is as swift .as it’s sure and satisfactory. Call now. We’ll pick up your order—clean it beau tifully—return it prompt ly. J Men’s Three Piece Wool Suit Cleaned, Pressed. 7ft|* and Delivered , IvC PHONE 464 VALET Cleaning Co. Beef Cannery To Be Had Here If Good Offer Made Would Be in Connection With Government Drought* Re / lief Purchases; Quick Action Declared Necessary; Would Mean Additional Payrolls Here Relief administrators here today pointed out that Henderson has an op portunity to obtain one of the large canning establishments the State Re lief Administration wil lshortly estab lish for the slaughtering and preserv ing of the beef cattle shipped in from western drought states. It was pointed out that the require ments call for a building with a con crete floor about 90 by 200 feet in the dimensions, and that offers of such establishments will be received and forwardde to State headquarters for considerations. In view of the fact that large ship ments of the cattle are expected to be sent into this county for pasturage, the location of one of the canning plants here would be to great advant age. It was further stated that a number COE. HARRELSON IS KIWANIS SPEAKER State College Dean Talks on Merger of Three State Insitutions Colonel J. W. Harrelson. dean of ad ministration at N. C. State Coil g', Raleigh, was the chief speaker before the Henderson Kiwanis clun at its weekly meeting Friday evening, held at the Dabney high school at Dabney. He told the Kiwanians of the reor ganization and merging of the Uni versity of North Carolina, N. C, State College and the North Carolina Col lege for Women at Greensboro into one great University of North Caro lina. -m Colonel Harrelson was for a number of years director of the State Depart ment of Conservation and Develop ment after serving as a member of State College faculty and before re urning there. In his talk he pointed out how duplications in the three in stitutions would make for greater Bconomy and more efficiency in op iration and training. Miss Aliene E. Hughes sang several numbers for the club members, ac companied by her mother, Mrs. I. W. Hughes. The club applauded its ap preciation of her offerings. L. P. Denmark, of State College, ac companied Colonel Harrelson and was a guest of the club, as were Miss Hughes and her mother, Mrs. J. W Sanders and Mrs. A. H. Flynn, the lat ter two wives of Kiwanis members. The program was in charge of Geotge Leggett and C. O. Seifert and the attendance was 25 per cent of the flub’s membership. The supper was ’served by the p. T. A. of the Dabney high school, and brought praise and appreciation of the members for the fine meal. BOUND OVER UNDER BREAKINGCUARGES Jack Ford Held for Entering Partin’s Shop; Mayor Has Other Cases Jack Ford, white man, was held for superior court in bond of SBSO by Mayor Irvine B. Watkin3 in police court Friday when probable cause was found in charges of breaking into J Wl Partin’s repair shop early Friday. The man is charged with having stolen tools valued at $lO. Paul Williams was charged with as saulting and beating Mary F. Wil liams and was discharged. At today’s session of the court, P. C. Arrington, Jr., was charged with giving a worthless check for $1 to Leggett’s Department Store, but he was called and failed and a capias wa: issued tor his sizure. Edgar Capps, white man. was charg ed with being drunk and cursing George Frankas, and was fined $1 am 1 costs. < l Plummer Hedgepeth, white man. I was fined $1 and costs for ‘being drunk. Prisoner’s Leg Crushed As Dirt Caves in on Him Woodrow Small, 18, Negro youth, suffered a badly crushed leg today when a wall of dirt caved in on him at a bridge project being carried on near Vicksboro by State prisoners. It was believed that a rock in the dirt that caved in must have been pressed against the man's leg The bone was not broken but was badly crushed, which is a condition much worse. J. H. Gupton, supervisor of the State Highway Commission prison camp here said the boy was taken to Jubilee hospital here for treatment. While the injury is not considered of a very serious nature, it is such that it will be a long time improving. Small was a prisoner at the camp. Beddgelert, a village of some 1,200, | i 4 the mo9t famed village in Wales. Henderson Daily Dispatch of workers would be given employ ment, and that the plant would afford a payroll of some proportions. Esti mates are th atthe plant would be in operation through the emergency, and might continue so rtwo or three years. Those who have been active in bring ing the cattle into this state say that a packing industry might well result from this nucleus as a sarted, and local persons interested in obtaining one of the canning establishments for Henderson say it would be a big asset to the community. One of the requirements is that the property would be furnished to the government rent free, with some pro vision made locally to reimburse the owner of the property. Those having property to offer that might meet the requirements are asked to confer with Mr. Dorsey at once. Speaks to Kiwanis ■I TIB I mm v .JB«I COL. J. W. HARRELSON Cattle Os ERA May Be Sent Several carloads of Federal Relief Administration cattle shipped in from the drought regions of the west are to be sent to Henderson in the next few weeks for pasturage in this coun ty, it was stated today by relief agents here. E G. Dorsey is in charge of the placements, and all of the cattle to be receivedjhere will be transported to pasture lands in Townsville town ship in the lowlands south of the Roanoke river, it was said. No definite date has been fixed for the cattle shipments to reach here, nor is it known just how many head will be sent to this county DR. G. CHEATHAM DIES IN NEW YORK Former Practicing Physician Here Had Suffered With Heart Ailment Dr. Qo,ode Cheatham, 59, for many years a pi noticing physician here un til recently, died yesterday morning at Endicott, N. Y.. where he has been making his home with nis son. Dr. Goode Cheatham. The body is to be taken to Brevard for burial, according to latent, advices reaching here, and funeral services and ‘burial will occu* *.nere Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Dr. Cheatham lived and practiced at Brevard for uany years after his first practice in ■ his community, and before he return ed here some 12 years ago to resume his practice here. He went to Bre vard for nis health which he complete ly regained and then returned here. Di. Cheatham is survived "by his widow and one son. Dr. Groode Cheat ham, of Endicott. He was a member of the First Presbyterian church here. Efforts were being made by rela tives here to have the body brought here for interement, but definite an nouncement had not been received early this afternoon as to the final decision. Dr. Cheatham had been in ill health for more than a year. Three weeks ago he suffered a heart attack, and last Monday was taken to a hospital, where