Independents Take Lawrenceville By Score Os 6To 2
Harris Hurls Effective
Ball For Locals Win
Gets Out Bad Hole
In Sixth In Fine
Style; Mates Miscue
Five l imes
Bulldog Harris pitched effective
baseball yesterday at Leagu e Park as
the Henderson Independents were de
feating Lawrencevi)le 6 to 2.
The Henderson hurler allowed the
visitors seven hits, one less than the
locals got off the offerings of Bras
well. His mates bobbled five times
whilf Braswell’s suppport miscued
only twice.
Works Out of Hole
Harris worked himself out of a
mighty bad place in the sixth inning
in a masterful way. With three men
on base and none. out. two were out
on attempted “squeeze” plays while
Harris picked the third man off third
base. \
Henderson scored three runs in the
first inning, enough to win the game.
Playing Today
Henderson was to meet Clarksville
this afternoon, getting a chance to
avenge a defeat suffered at the hands
of the Virginians som e weeks ago.
The box score:
Lawrenceville Ab R H Po A E 1
Harkins, ss 4 1 0 11 0
Hobgood lb 3 0 1 9 1 0
Newsome, 3b 3 0 2 3 11
Braswell p ... 4 11 0 2 0 .
Rawlings c 4 0 2 4 0 0
Newton 2b 4 0 0 2 2 1
Moseley if 4 0 0 2 0 0
B Hobgood cf 3 0 0 0 0 0
Mallory rs 3 0 1 0 0 0
Totals 32 2 7 24 7 2
Henderson Ab R H Po A E
Hedgepeth 2b 4 2 2 3 4 1
Pahiman lb 4 11 10 0 I
Langley 3b 3 0 11 11
Poole c 4 1 2 6 0 1
Woodruff If 3 1 0 2 0 0
Smith rs 3 11 0 0 0
Diliihay rs 1 o 0 0 0 0 '
Scoggins js 4 0 1 4 0 1
Fox cf 0 0 0 1 0 o
Terrell cf 1 o o o 0 0
Harns p 3 0 0 0 4 0
Totals 30 6 8 27 9 5
Score by innings: R
Lawrenceville 101 000 000 —2
Henderson 300 002 lOx—6
I
Two base hits: Hedgepeth, Poole and
Smith, Thre base hits: Langley. Hits
off Braswell 8; Harris 7. Base on balls
off Braswell 2,
Remits I
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Richmond 0; Charlotte 8.
Asheville 1. Wilmington 0.
Norfolk 0-0; Greensboro 2-3.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Cleveland 11 Chicago 4,
Boston 11; Philadelphia 4.
New York 2; Washington 9.
Detroit 7; St, Louis 6.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia 2; Boston 3,
Brooklyn 2 New York 0.
Chicago 7-14; Pittsburgh 4-3,
St. Louis 10; Cincinnati 4.
I
FORECLOSURE SALE .
By virtue of the power contained in (
a Deed in Trust executed by Fred O.
Mabry and his wife Della L. Mabry,
recorded in the office of the Register
of Deeds of Vance County in Book
169, at Page 74, default having been
mad e in the payment of the debt 1
therein secured, on request of the I
holdei of the same I shall sell for
cash, by public auction, at the Court
House door in Henderson, N. C., to the ;
highest bidder at 12 o’clock, Noon, on
10th day of September, 1934, the fol
lowing described property: ,
Being lot No. 4 as shown on map
c£ G. W. Knott property recorded in
Beck 100, Page 638 of the Register of
Deeds office of Vance County. Said
lot fronting 575 feet on Chestnut
Street and| extending tack along
Perry avenue a distance of 100 feet.
For a more detailed description see
the following:
Begin at a stake in the intersection
of Perry Avenue and Chestnut Street,
corner of lot No. 4 and run thence
along said Chestnut Street 67 degrees
West 57 1-2 feet to a stake corner of
lots 3 an d 4; thence at right angles
with said Chestnut street in a south
erly direction one hundred feet to a
stake corner lots No. 3 and 11; thence
N. 67 degrees east 57 1-2 feet to Perry
Avenue, thence along Perry Avenue
one hundred feet to the beginning.
JASPER B. HICKS, Trustee.
Henderson, N. C., Auguss 9. 1934.
T. P. A. BARBECUE
Members of Post I, are invited to the annual
T. P. A. Barbecue Supper
Friday Evening, August 10, at 6:30 O Clock
At “Red” Taylor’s, Hill Top No. 2— Raleigh Road
All members are expected. It’s ’Free —Come one, Coipe a
J. M. BAITY, Secretary, Po«t I
CITI LEAGUE
Team W L Pct
L, ions 15 4 .789
M. P. Baracas 12 6 667
M E. Baracas 7 ’339
Legions 3 16 158
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Team: W. L. Pct
Norfo,k 26 13 667
Wilmington 23 16 *590
Charlotte 21 16 .568
Greensboro 17 19 472
Richmond 15 2 2 405
Asheville 10 26 '278
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Team: Vfi. Pc|
Detroit 67 37 .644
New York 64 39 62 1
Cleveland 57 46 553
Boston 55 51 ’.519
Washington 49 55 471
St. Louis 44 55 ’444
Philadelphia 39 60 .394
Ohicago 37 eg 349
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Team W. L. Pet
New York 67 39 .632
Chicago 64 41 610
St. Louis fio 44 '577
Boston 54 52 509
Pittsburgh 49 53 ’.480
Brooklyn 44 58 .431
Philadelphia 43 62 .410
Cincinnati 36 68 ,346
CITY LEAGUE
Lions vs. Legion.
(Tomorrow)
M E. Baracas vs. M. P. Baracas,
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Greensboro at Wilmington.
Charlotte at Asheville.
Norfolk at Richmond
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York at Washington,
Boston at Philadelphia.
Cleveland at Chicago.
St. Louis at Detroit.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
St. Louis at Cincinnati.
Brooklyn at New York.
Philadelphia at Boston.
Chicako at Pittsburgh,
WWI
Tourist Blank Bucs
Asheville blanked the Wilmington
Buccaneers in Wilmington last night
1 to 0 with Grayson Wolfe, Asheville,
hurler, and Junie Barnes hooking up
in a beautiful hurling duel. The win
ners pushed over their tally in the
second.
Bees Sting Colts
Charlotte stung the Richmond Col
last night in Charlotte, defeating them
3 to 0 for their second straight win
over the Virginians. Durham allowed
the Colts but three hits.
Pats Trim Norfolk '
Greensboro trimmed Norfolk last
night in Greensboro, winning two
games by the shutout route, the first I
2 to 0 and the second 3-0. Andrews
held the Tars to one hit in the short
game. ’ ’ -
This possibly is history, neither of
the losing teams throughout the league
were able to score.
Here’s Sample Os
Federal Spendng
(Continued from page One.)
and Hawaii, of which the
latter is demanding statehood mighty
ur^e W as Dr. Hour’s notion that his
department’s raison d’etre had about
Pe The d lnt U e t rlor department housed
th’.‘late Franklin K U>»e.
llsons interior secretary,
Lane rather over-bujit it, m fact.
HENDERSON, (N. C.)D*.ILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY.'AUGUST 9. 1931
interior department of his day (no
longer ago than the war period, be it
remembered), on moving into it, found
of its beautiful offices, try as the in
sauns Xubpi ’dn ;i rij 04 aiqeun
.terior departmental personnel might,
to occupy them all, remained vacant.
Today Secretary of the Interior
Harold L. Ickes, Secretary Wilbur’s
successor, is Laving plans drawn for
an annex to the interior department
building—the old one, built by Secre
tary Lane, 'being entirely too small
for the official family he has gath
ered about him since March, 1933, de
spite the fact that the department’s
tenants all have been crowded out;
some of them into rented quarers,
nowjhsanding h enormous building
program that Uncle Sam has been
carrying on. j
An annex.
Secretary Lane’s building cost $3.-
000,000 at wartime construction costs.
Secretary Ickes’ annex is scheduled to
cost $10,000,000, at deflated prices of
1934.
Garnett Street To Be Com
pleted, Curves Eliipinated
(Continued from Page One.)
limits, all the way through the city,
including the business section, to An
drews avenue, and there stopped for
lack of funds to go further. The new
Work is to be financed out of a gov
ernment road building fund made
available by the last Congress, as the
work already done was likewise fi
nanced by the Federal government
and carried out by the State Highway
Commission.
There was no indication today as to
when work would commence on the
new projects. The Associated Press
story said a survey would be made of
the North Henderson curve elimina
tion area, but was not specific as to
when it would be done.
On Tobacco Market
Wilson Smith and Q. W. Knott have
gone to Loris, S. C., to be on the to
bacco market.
On Lumberton Market
M. L. Stone has gone to Lumberton
tobacco market as buyer for Liggett-
Myers Tobacco Company.
Changes Mind
I I f J
li* US HI
Lord Edward Montagu
After flying to France to join the
French Foreign Legion, Lord Ed
ward Montagu, son of the Duke of
Manchester, decided to return to
London instead of proceeding to th«
hot sands of Sahara. So he fleu
right back again.
/Central Press
/<oah Numskull
h A? <lf
* f
W2X W
67 0 “jf//
E>E>Mfc NOAH - WHATS
- ALL- "THIS LOVE, 'TnS'r
TALK ASauT /Al THE
Ve/MNIS RACKET’
MRS -
G,R.£-Bvm, QMIOz
DEAR NOAH = OF AEL THE
U-ADIES WHO 7AINA
THEY ARE HITS - ARE
SOM'S MISS-S ?
PFLua DAIBY-
McAlBstEW, OKLA-
PUT ON YOUR NUMSKULL CAP
and send in some numb
notions to pear. NOAH-NOWI
SEASHORE
Week-End Fares
Henderson To
Portsmouth-Norfolk
$1.75
Tickets Sold for all Trains Friday,
Saturday and morning trains Sunday
until September 30, 1934.
Limited Returning Following Monday
For Information See Agent.
Seaboard
AIK UNB SAUWAY
The Only Air-Conditioned
Trains in The South
STATE 4-H HONOR CLUB
" x “"' - 1 —
‘ •• WWW
yb S
B i g| t W.
Members of the 4-H honor club who
attended the short course at State Col
lege this year reading left to right:
L. R. Harrill, state club leader, Bea
trice Sherrill, of Iredell; Max Culp, of
Iredell; Edmond Aycock, of Wayne;
Ruth Kiker, of Anson; Dorothy Lloyd
Wake Shows Way
In Tax Valuations
(Continued from Page One.)
he will be regarded as having done
an excellent job.
Thef irst thing Young will under
take will be to locate unlisted prop
erty in Wake county. It is generally
agreed that there is plenty of ; this
property both in the county and in the
city of Raleigh. It is a matter of
common knowledge that som e of the
most valuable property in the county
is either not on the tax books at all
or on them at only a fraction of their
actual value. Associaied with Mr.
Young in this work will be O. Sted
man Thompson, former assistant
commissioner of revenue, and for 26
years associated with either the State
Corporatipn Commission or the De
partment of Revenue and regarded as
an authority on all questions pertain
ing to taxes and taxation.
no
\ \ RSSjfr* - Mw
\ In Amazing
\|!^ Grindstone Test
I at the World’s Fair
TEMPERED RUBBER outwears concrete and
is as tough as steel— /»- ■-
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U. S. TIRES (PEERLZSS TYPE) U> S« TIRES (fiUUU) TYP»
America'* highest guafitr fow-nricod tira
4:40-21 .... $5.70 4:40-21 , . . . $4.95
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A Full Stock of U. S. Tires Are Carried By These Retail Dealers
City Service Serve-All Service Scoggin Chevrolet
Station Station Company
William Street William Street Garnett Street
of Durham; Joe Pou, of Iredell; Be
atrice Rimmer, of Iredell; Esley For
bes, of Gaston; Fred Bass, of Wilson;
Ruth Wildman, of Martin; Mae Swann
of Cumberland; Fannie Brothers, of
Pasquotank Charles Palmer, of Cleve
land; and Miss Ruth Current, girls’
club leader for the State.
Pres. Graham Talks
About Farm Needs
(Continued from Page One.)
University of Winconsin, has yielded
more additional income to the farm
ers of Wisconsin than the cost of the
University."
Turning to the needs of North Caro
lina farmers, President Graham said
that when “farmer? clearly realize the
value of scientific research to their
soils, seeds, feeds, forests, livestock,
homes and rural life .they will justly
demand direct and more adequate ap
propriations for this purpose. The
farmers are turning from a hot-house,
destructive agriculture to the plan
ned scientific research education and
organization for cooperation in the
winning of a more decent income am'
in buildin a fairer and spiritually more
more beautiful way of life.”
Mussulini Is Next
Problem In Europe
(Continued from Page One.)
was one of those dislodged from office
and jailed. ;
Now the Mussolinized Austrian fas
cists art trying to placate the Social
ists, before world opinion catches up
with what actually has been going on
in Austria. But there isn’t much
chance, especially when an Austrian
policeman tries to kill a man who
hands out anti-war literature (as
dispatches tell us).
Mussolini thinks in terms of force.
A Tyrolean’s View
Since Austrians cannot speak free
ly in their own country of muzzled
speech and press, they speak their say
in the United States.
Here is a letter to a New York
newspaper from a “Tyrolienne”.
“It is awfully tiresome to read al-
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POOR f Utt AND T ;
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WITHOUT THE COO/J
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Telephone 62
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PAGE THREE
I ways about Austria’s independence,
I while poor Austria simply gets no
! qhance to be independent. Why .not
let it decide for itself, instead of dic
tating to it from all sides? z ‘
“If Austria wants an with
Germany, which it seems to need, Why
force fascism upon it and try to .Ita
lianize all of Austria, as has already
•been done to the poor Tyrol? /this
will never bring peace. .Isn’t qnybody
afraid. Mussolini’s power win .tig- •
cqme .too great. Does everybody have
to concentrate on keeping the b Ger-
( man nations down?’* ”
, Os course, the eGrman nations
seem to be concentrating on keeping
themselves down—through Hitlerisih.
The British say, however, that Hitter
is on the way out—and the Briti'sh af e
cautious and cagey observers.
Has Operation
Mrs. L. F. Jackson underwent an
operation at Maria Parham‘hospital
atuiday and was said to be doihg very
nicely today. ' ’ ’ * r '