Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Aug. 11, 1934, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO Tar Heels Call For Grid Drills To Begin September 4 George Barclay Heads ;21 Letter Men Called Strong From Tackle to Tackle; Must De ; velop Ends a : n d ! Backs Ghapel Hill, Aug. 11.—Coach Carl Suavely, who comes to the University cf North Carolina this year utter hav ing made a splendid record as men tor of the Bucknell Bisons, announced today thai. he would begin early prac tice on Tuesday September i, and that he ha 3 called 49 members of the Tar. Heel squad back by letter going out this week. Coach Snavely reported last winter in tim e to conduct the off-season prac tice and to ground his squad in the fundamentals of the adapted Warner system which he will install here During the eight years, 1926-33 that Chuck Collins was coach the Tar Heels used the- Notre Dane attack. Although he had to return to Buck nell to coach oaseball, completing his contract at the Pennsylvania insti tution, Coach Snavely has since kept in close touch with the individual players through a series of letters dis cussing the results of winter prac tice, play of the different positions, summer training, 2nd so on. , -The 49 players receiving call to. early practice include 21 lettermen, headed by George Barclay, All-South ern and All-American guard, who will captain the 1934 eleven in its bid tor gridiron glory. It is interesting to note that both the new coach and captain hail from Pennsylvania and that Barclay is a former star at Kiski famous football plant, where Mr. Snavely coached in 192>. Coach Snavely has had little to say about his opinion of procpects. His only comment today was "The sche dule is undoubtedly difficult for the team. Our hope is to have a team which, thougn it may be outclassed in some of its games, will play good foot ball and fight its hardest every min ute. The consensus of opinion among the team’s followers here is that Car olina should have a strong line from tackle and that th e success of the season will turn on the way the ends and backs came through. The center anr guard positions will show identically the same faces as in 1933. Two big sophs, Trimpey and Wrenn, make up for the loss of Bill Collins at tackle. The ends will be new but big. The leading candidates are Moore and Barwick, who won let ters as understudies, and Buck and McCarn, sophs. The proolem in the backfield lies in developing a few new men outstanding in all departments of play from the quantity of pros pects available. MOTM f The Loss Puts M. E/s Out of The Running; Lions-M. • P’s to Meet for Flag The M. E, Baracas forfeited their last chance to be in the City League play-off series yesterday afternoon when they failed to have a full team at League Park to meet the M. P. Ba racas. They have no numerical chance of finishing in second place as the re sult of their loss. With the dropping out of the M. E.’s the Lion sand M # P.’s are left to battle for the top place in the loop and the flag. The Lions are leading the loop with the M. P.ss not far behind in sec ond place. Only one more full week remains to be played in the circuit. KtSE^^copnJl Ml f" +ts: ■ i H| PHOHt £O4 *«.,<’ V »B HR ; HLNDEPSON.N C H Specials For 'Monday ■ Men’s 2 or 3 piece suits, cleaned 35c v Linel and wash suits, cleaned , 65c Plain one piece dresses, cleaned 35c of Week Men’s 2 or 3 piece suits, cleaned 'SOc ; Linen and wash suits, cleaned i.‘ 85c ’ Plain one piece dresses, cleaned 50c This is a special price for July and August. We haven’t an office under another name taking .dry cleaning at one price and the plant taking it at another price. We have only the price quoted above. We call and deliver. 'Perry’s Dry Cleaners 405 N. Barnett Street. . t Phono 373 iToda^fimes CITY LEAGUE (Monday) , Legions vs. M. P. Baracas. .PIEDMONT LEAGUE Greensboro at Wilmington. Charlotte at Asheville. Norfolk at Richmond AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia at Washington, New York at Boston. St, Louis at Chicago. Cleveland at Detroit. NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh. Chicago at St. Louis > Boston at New York, CITY LEAGUE M. P.’s 7; M. E.’s 0. (Forfeit.) PIEDMONT LEAGUE Norfolk 7; Richmond 6. Greensboro 5; Wilmnigton 3. Charlotte 5-4; Asheville 4-8. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 10; Boston 3. Philadelphia 8; Washington 6. St* Louis 8; Chicago 6 Detroit 6; Cleveland 5. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 6; .Boston 3. St. Louis 17; Chicago 3. Pittsburgh 8; Cincinnati 7. Brooklyn 5; Philadelphia 3. Tourist, Bees Split t Asheville and Charlotte spit a dou bleheader in Asheville yesterday, the Bees winning the first contest 5 to 4, and the Tourist copped the nightcap, 8 to 4. , Pats Win, 5-3 Greensboro Patriots won over Wil mington Pirates last night in Wilming ton by asto 3 score The Pats got off to an early start, gettiiW. thre runs in the first stanza. Norfolk Tops Richmond Norfolk scored once in he ninth inning to defeat Richmond last night in the Virginia capital 7 to 6, Both teams had big innings, scoring four r V»ns. . , STATE PLAYS TWO NIGHT HOME GAMES College Station., Raleigh, Aug. 11.—* It was definitely announced today that N. C. State’s home varsity foot ball games this fall with Wake For est and South Carolina will he play ed at night. The games will be played on Riu dick Field, the Deacons on October 6, and the Gamecocks October 13 of Fair Week. State will open its 1934 schedule in a night game with Davidson at Grensboro, September 29. Six other games will be played in the afternoon They are: Florida at Tampa, October 20; Carolina at Chapel Hill, October 27; Clemson at Raleigh, November 3; V. P. I. at Portsmouth, Va , Novem ber 10; Georgia at Athens, November 17; and Duke at Durham, November 29. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1934 4 PAHLMAN’SCHW Take On ’Hillsboro Here At . League Park 3:30 p < m.; Pleasants To'Hurl Otto Pahlman and his charges, the Henderson Independents, were prim ed today for their meeting with the Statesmen of the Central State . League at League Park tomor row afternoon at 3:30 o’clock. Don Pleasants, who mastered the hard hitting Clarksville team here ! Thursday afternoon will be sent bacK | to the mount again Sunday cmfwy | to the mound against Sunday’s op ponents by Skipper Otto. When Pleasants ‘‘fire ball” is working, he’s practically invincible and he • has lit tle trouble handling the opposing bat ters. If he falters. Pahlman has two "dark horse” hurlers in reserve, ready to drop into th e breach and save the day The visitors are by no means a set up for they finished the first half of their league race .deadlocked With Durham Bulls for first, place. The Bulls nosed them out in the play-off. The pulls from Durham are well known here, having trimmed the lo cals nr an early season encounter in easy fashion. CITY IEAUIX Team W L Pet Lions 16 4 .800 M P. Baracas 13 6 ,684 M. E. Baracas 7 12 .368 Legions 3 17 .150 PIEDMONT LEAGUE Team: W. L. Pet. Norfolk 27 i , 14 .659 Wilmington 25 17 595 Charlotte 22 17 .564 Greensboro 18 20 .474 Richmond 16 23 ,410 Asheville 11 27 .289 AMERICAN LEAGUE Team: W. L. Pel ■Detroit 69 37 . .651 •New York „ 65 39 > .625 Cleveland 57 47 548 Boston 56 52 .519 Washington 49 56 . .467 St. Louis 45 56 , .446 Philadelphia „ 40 61 .396 Chicago 37 - 70 .346 NATIONAL LEAGUE Team - W. L Pet New York 69 39 .639 Chicago .„ 64 42 ‘.604 St. Louis 61 44 581 'Boston .... 54 53 .505 Pittsburgh 50 53 .485 Brooklyn . 45 59 .433 Philadelphia 53 63 406 Cincinnati 36 69 ‘.343 Large Scale Itifla. tion Is Feared - (Continued from Page One.) ment saying that “for the present” the more expansive policies would not be followed on the silver pur chases that! recently included na tionalization of the nation’s bullion Stocks. Disclosure of th e Treasury’s silver plans coincided with the release of figures by the comptroller- of the cur rency showing that the money in cir culation per capita had dropped from $42.46 to $41.99 during the month of July. These compare with a per capita circulation of th e $44.76 on July 31, 1933, and of $53.21 for October 31, 1920. Total /circulation tis 'silver . certi ficates amounted to, $494,732,801, -of which $85,752,515 was held by the. Fe deral Reserve Bank. The total amount of money in cir culation July 31 was $5,317,455,610, as compared with $5,373,469,752 on Jpne The relatively minor cir position of silver was shown -by a per capita figure of $3.15 as compared to $24.05 of Federal Reserve notes, and by $6 99 of national bank notes. Officials have indicated, privately more than once that they did not ex pect the issuance of, new silver cur rency to result in much of a circula tion increase, as it was believed they would in many cases merely supplant outstanding Federal Reserve notes. 1 Pickets Form As Two Men Injured; One Is Arrested (Continued from Page One.) workers’ union a “closed- shop" con tract and recognition of the union as the workers’ collective bargaining agency. J. P.- Howlett, of New Kensington, a vice-president of th e National As sociation of. Aluminum- Workers, af filiated/ with the American Federation of Labor, said the strikers, represent 80 percent of the He claim ed 90 percent as union, members. In announcing shutdown of the plants, R. M. Ferry, work superin tendent at New Kensington, said only power operatives and maintenance forces are being kept on duty. Although rumor has for a number of years linked the Aluminum Com pany of. America with th e vast in dustrial interests of Andrew W. Mel lon, former, secretary- of the treasury, company heads deny it. LABOR RELATIONS BOARD PREPARE FOR NEW TASK / Washington, Aug ; ll.r-(AP)—; -The Labor Relations- Board. prepared ♦to day for a tussle with another new strike th e conflict between the Alu- fUmdl MPf; ~ \ Is sraHagl mm W i Wmk <Mm x /j Pictured above is a model barracks ready for inspection, being prepared by the Service Company of the 105th Medical Regiment under the command of Captain James N. O’Neil at Camp Jackson, S. C., during a recent encampment of the regiment. The unit hails from Henderson. Col Hodge A. Newell, of this city, and Col H. B. McMurdo, of Fort McPherson, Ga., were loud in their praise <w.-»:<« - x->z>:- ■•■ ■ w 9 JMMDM jiPC- H IB Hi # HHHHHH & I * 4 i.'X’b. »M ' 'I $ Ift £ i •i » > .2 s' X I, Jfc s A, ' r I * i * 1/1 -' Am'tX i*l/*1 a I iwiKa Members of 4-H clubs in North Carolina who attended the annual short course at State College, July 25-30. The group is shown on the steps of the college library. The enrollment this year was $163 boys, 209 girls, and 43 club leaders. The short course is a minum Company of America and its union workers. The strike, said to involve 15,020 workers, was called for midnight last night. Today the status of the board in the dispute still was somewhat be clouded. It said no formal co??iplaint had been made but stood ready to “as sist disputants in reaching a satis factory settlement.” BADEN ALUMINUM PLANT RUNNING REGULAR TIME Baden, N. C., A u ß\ 11.—(AP) — S. A. Copt, general manager of the Caro lina Aluminum Company here, said the plant was running on its regular schedule today with all operatives at their posts, despite a call for a strike in all plants of the Aluminum Com pany of by the aluminum workers council. The Baden plant is a subsidiary of the aluminum com pany. “Early morning shifts went to work as usual, and were continuing thro ughout the day," Copt said. The plant employes about 426 persons at the present curtailed' schedule. Dr. Theodore L # Shearer of Prince ton, archaeologist, born at New Lon don, N. H., 54 years ago. Few of Those Who Complain Os Stomach Have Serious 111 By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D. OF ALL the. people who complain of their stomachs and their diges tions, very few of them have any organic disease r-’ —* Dr. Clendenimr . vicuueiuug . „ , * cent of the indi gestion in the world is due to ulcar, the rest of the dyspepsias are func tional. We do not mean at all when we say that an illness is func tional, that these people imagine all their distress. We simply mean that in its secretion or in its movements, the stomach does not do its 3moothly, and Hence produces symp toms. There is no sympt orn dyspepsia that cannot be associated with a purely functional disorder. Belching of gas, pyrosis or sour stomaefr, dis comfort after meals, heaviness be fore and after meals, nausea, bilious ness, may all occur without any ac tual structural disease of the di gestive tract whatever. People who are born with these Model Barracks At Camp Jackson) By Service Company Four-H Club Members Attend Meet at State College Canadian Events Boost Roosevelt (Continued from Page One.) of reform, dictatorship or revolu tion.” Now, that coming from the mem ber of a Conservative cabinet, made American “Big Business” feel that the Roosevelt moves might after all, be mild in comparison to what could actually occur in “unbridled hands.” BENNETT’S DILEMMA Premier Bennett of Canada was placed in an embarrassing position by the statement. In the first place he literally is a Troy. He is against all change and considers even the New Deal as something to be abhorred. He sends Communists to prison for in credibl terms. But it was not of himself that Pre mier Bennett thought when the Stevens’ statement came to light, Minister Stevens named personal friends and business associates of the premier as alleged beneficiaries of the system he denounced. Minister ptevens produced i his statement in pamphlet form, mailed it to a selected list of persons and badly functioning stomachs, or with low stomachs, are likely to make themselves worse with all kinds of faddy diets—separating the starches from the proteins, going on vege table diets and buttermilk diets, and especially by trying to promote pro per evacuation with diets high in roughage. What most of them, need is a smooth, non-irritating diet, such as the following: Fruit juices, eggs, bacon, whit# bread, toast, butter, milk, young car rots, cooked., celery, Italian squash, turnips, musl.es without bran, puffed cereals, cream soups, beef, iamb; whitefish, chicken, oysters, sweet, breads, liver, potato, rice, sweet po tato. asparagus dps, beets, creamed spinach. Purees 6f beans, peas, lentils, lima beans or artichoke hearts; noodles, spaghetti, macaroni, sweet corn passed through a collander, tender string beans, peeled tomatoes, raw or cooked; canned or cooked pears and peaches, and bananas, preferably cooked; cottage cheese, simple pud dings, custards, ice cream, gelatin, plain cake, stewed fruit, baked apple, stewed primes. EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlets by Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents in coin, for each, and a self-addressed envelope stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: "Indigestion and Constipation,’’ “Re ducing and Gaining,” “Infant Feed ing,” the Treatment. j of Diabetes,” “Feminine Hygiene” «ad “The Car# of th# Hair and Skin.” of that organ. The only com mon disease in which there is a structural change in the stomach is ulcer. The only other organic disease of the stomach that is even fairly common Is can cer, and cancer of the stomach is comparatively a rare disease—at least, infrequent. About 10 per of the company’s work. Other companies at the camp were car ried through the barracks in order to give them some idea just how they should be kept. The encampment was said to have been a great success, the local units of the Regiment coming in for much praise at the camp. period of study and fellowship for outstanding club members in different counties over the State. L. R. Harrill. State leader, said the short course this year was the most successful ever held. I then (departed from (Ottawa on /a I western holiday with 2,000 other copies. Additional corpies were left behind in his own cabinet depart ment. Premier Bennett immediately confiscated those. 1833—Robert G. Ingersoll, famed lawyer and orator ,the “great agnos tic” of his generation, born at Dresden, N. Y # Died at Dobbs Ferry, N. Y , July 21, 1899. BANK-NEWS A MONTHLY SERVICE MESSAGE By the Citizens Bank and Trust Co. HENDERSON, NORTH CAROLINA Today, the banks of our nation are in excellent condition. They are in a position to assist busi ness and, individuals to greater financial progress. At this bank our complete facilities, our wide range of services, our strong financial position, and our personal interest in your af fairs are at your service to pro tect your funds, to help you pro gress financially. Come in, often! ♦ • v ■* Citizens Bank & Trust Company HENDERSON, N. C. Established in The Year 1889 My office is now located in Room No. 4. McCoin Building Clarence E. Greene Equitable Life Assurance Society Phone 139-J
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Aug. 11, 1934, edition 1
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