STATE ASLEEP ID ITS OPPORTUNITIES Outside Industries Knock ing at Door but Get Little Welcome. Charlotte, Nov. 6. — Pointing out that no additional capital is needed, a New Hampshire woodworking manufacturing concern has written the Carolinas. In., that it is interest id in locating in some Carolina town of 5.000 to 10,000 j>opulation. Specific information regarding hardwood raw material and skilled labor available for such an industry has been request. , <1 hv the concern, according to Cole man W Roberts, executive vice-pre ■ idem of the newly formed non-profit organization, which recently began ulvertising Carolina opportunities to (iiospective investors, manufacturers, agriculturalists, honieseekers and re , [canonists. j. This inquiry is one of the most in reesting of many received the past week from many points throughout the nation requesting a variety of in formation Considerable interest centers in mining products particularly kaolin ami dolomite. Mr. Roberts said, in mnouncing that The Carolinas. Inc., is building a publication on mineral, industrial and agricultural properties iv ail able in the Carolinas. A New Jersey party is interested in dolomite i adjacent to rail transportation and an I unfailing running water supply. "Our next week’s bulletin to The • Carolinas, Inc., members will list ri.* in\ inquiries from portics inciicut- ; ;i K interest in the Carolinas/ he said. i atolina climate is u partculnr ap peal, as many speefv they are seeking .t mild climate. "While many citizens htroughout I'violimts have requested further in formal inn on some the inquiries, h absolutely astonishing to leiirn of ;f,> -theriant attitude of many com liiur.iitt . and organ i/at ions supposed ■ r <• alter and working for tin s' out. Slut drV> lopiiietil of 111 Ci r SCC biitieilns are present Ing many :i, ‘d slates. 1 .sav this because I’li mint oppotiuiiit jes for organiza- Coi. uid Individuals of follow up. to “Ivi'e what they have to offer to iiini the demands of the inquirers, tan apparently most of them are asleep and do not choose to take ad vantage of the opporlunities that The < arollntis, Inc., is now bringing to " r in North and South Caro lina ” BLACK-DRAUGHT '•Such a Good Laxative,” Says Nurse from her home in Fes tus, Mo., Mrs. Anna LaPlante says; “I am a practical nurse and I rec ommend to some of my patients that they take Black-Draught, for it is such a good laxative. I took it for constipation, headache and a dull feeling that I had so much. A few doses of Black-Draught and I felt Just fine.” Beenwse so many people know from baeißf used it that Thedford’* Black- Oraught In a food, purely vegetable laxa tive, millions of packages of it *re sold titty year. NOTICE Having qualified as Administrator <" trnpie R If. KICKS, Trustee, lb I -let on, N. C. ■ >'., in her 17, 1931. I < t ItF.CLOSI!RK SALF. fly virtue of power contained In a died of trust executed by Richard Hr nderson and Elizabeth Henderson. r T wife on the 9lh day of January 1520, and recorded in the office of tin" 1 li or.‘.i ter of Deeds of Vance County in Hook 9f( at Page 250, default having been made in the payment of the d f bt therein secured, on the request of the holder of the same, I shall sell b; public auction, to the highest bid • ler. for cash at the Court House door in Henderson, N. C. at. 12 o’clock. Noon, on the 18th day of November. 1 931, the following described prop erty: Begin at a stake, corner of farm number 4 in Cooper line, run thence East 1,921 feet to stake. Cooper corner, thence N. 5, E. 1,774 feet to ; take, Burton corner, thence N. 85 W 1,822 feet to stake, thence N. 68 W ■sßb feet to stake thence south 2,850 feet to the beginning, containing 10ft acres more or less. J. C. KTTTELL, Trustee. This 16th day of October, 1934. The World Wat 20 Years Ago Today 2£?2l£%?££ The Japs blasted the Germans out of Tsingtau. *0 Ago 7 odajf: President Wilson proclaimed the neutrality of the United Slates in the war between i urkey and the Entente puwer*. Tsingtau surrendered to the Japanese and British, and Germany lost it.* lasi stronghold outside of Europe. See "Today i* the Day’’ Today is. the Day. With DAY-BY-DAY STORY OF THE WORLD WAR 20 Year* After __ R y CLARK KINNAIRD Wednesday, Nov. 7; 311th day of (he year; 48 days till Christmas. Prolntarinn .Revolution Dav (17th) in U. S. S. R. Morning stars: Venus, Mercury, .Mars, Jupiter, Evening stars: Saturn. New morn. Zodiac sign: Scorpio. THE WORLD WAR DAY-BY-DAY. Nov. 7, 1934 Virtually the entire town was in ruins from the bombard ment. The defenders used nitro-gly cerino plentifully and blew up what was left of the Tit is, Bismarck, Mnltlie and Kaiser forts The wireless station hummed its last message to Berlin. Governor Meyer-Whldeck or dered white flags hoisted, and sent an officer under a flag of truce to the Anglo-Japanese lines to arrange the surrender. Thus terminated German rule in the Pacific. The fall of Tsingtau de prived Germany not only of the Kino chow leasehold, her ln.;i possession on the Asiatic mainland. 1 ui of the only Good Taste / .... ... o<(f,Tit*tit. i*;n Tie joiiiiiu .. The clean center leaves are the mildest The cmmmhe Crop leaves —they cost more they taste better —so of course, Luckies use only N the clean center leaves —the choicest “It’s toasted” Turkish and Domestic tobaccos. «/ Your throat protection—against irritation—against cough Hhjl jdEkSON, (In. C.) DATLY DISPATCH, WEi/nESD IY, NOVEMBER. 7, T9R.J strategic possession outside of Eu >'°pe. The defense was hopeless from the first, and was made only for the honor of the German flag. For two months the German garrison, almost wholly composed of 2,500 reservists ivho wrote living in China, held out i against the air, laiui and sea attacks ol the 20,000 Japanese and 1,000 Bri tish and Indian troops. Japanese of ficers paid unstinted tribute tQ thd bravery of the Germans, who fought | tenaciously to the last, and courteous j lv allowed the German officers the freedom of the town after the sur render j 4liA'j|tt Same d ay, American newspapers published President Wilson’s proclam tion of neutrality in the war between Turkey and the Central Pow’ers. As Entente ambassadors departed bag and baggage, the American envoy, Os i car Straus, became the protector of j the interests of a half dozen govern- I ments. , vvK IVOVKMRKR SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT 4571* ft # io 11 12 k • As Mt 17 I« !» 2©rril22 2.1 21 25 26 27|28|2t> HO 11ISTOK 1 U I’-TO-DATE. Nov. 7, 1811 —William Henry “Tip pecanoe” Harrison, 9th and shortest tremed President of the U. S. (one month), won his nickname. Aged 38, he led 300 regular infantry and cav alry and 500 militia to victory over 3000 to 5000 Shawnee, Creek and Seminole warriors led by Chief Te cumseh of the Shawnees, at Tippe canoe Creek, in Indiana. Tecumseh survived, to become a brigadier-gen eral in the British army. Nov. 7. 1874 The elephant became the symbol of the Republican party. It was first to represent the party by Thomas Nast in Harper’s Weekly of this date. The Democratic Donkey also created by Nast, was then four years old. Nov. 7, 1576 —Ghoulds perpetrated the most celebrated case of body snatching in American history. The corps of A. T. Stewart. New York merchant, was stolen from a. down- ! town Manhattan graveyard, shipped ; ‘ to Canada, held for two years until i 820,000 was paid by ihe family The ghouls were never punished for the crime. Nov. 7. 1917— Almost on the 70th anniversary of the issuance of the historic Manifest der Kommunisten by Henrich Karl Farx and Friedrich Engels, Bolsheviks in Petrograd rose in the epochal 25th of October Revolu tion (according to the Greek calen dar.) Alexander Kerensky, dictator, proclaimed loudly to the population that he had taken the necessary mea } sure to suppress any attempt at re volt. In reality he had no troops back of him except two battalions of military cadets and a company of women soldiers. “The self-constituted ! commander-in-chief of the Russian army relied on speeches against ma chine guns, as the Chinese generals of 1860 had relied on painted dragons against the rifles of the English and French expeditionary force.” Bolshevik sailors surrounded the ! winter Palace, and after a brief scrap ! with the women arrested the women. ; Kerensky had disappeared. He made good his escape by connivance of the chief of the British dipiomatc mission. Bruce Lockhart, and lives today to I tell his gloomy tale of his blundered I opportunity. A man who had never worked. 1 Vladimir Hitch Ulianov. called Lenin, aged 17, member of a family nobler than the Mdivanis. became head of the Workers’ Government. YOU’RK WRONG IF YOU OKI IF.VE— That it gets too cold for snow to fall. This is disproven by the fact that snow falls in the coldest parts of the world. However, many of the heav iest snows do fall during milder per iods of winter. This, it is explained by the Weather Bureau, is because most rains or snows come on the east einly to southerly winds. Cold winds, then, are from the wrong directions to bring much snow. Also, you’re wrong if you believe That a heavy coat of fur upon ani mals forecasts a severe winter. That water rots the hair and causes baldness. \\ rite a wrong. Addrses Clark Kinnaird. care this newspaper. Shooting Season At Mattamuskeet Daily ItjoHiivct Huron, la Ike Jtir iVnller Hotel, Raleigh, Nov. 7.—Arrangements are now being completed for the operation of a portion of Lake Mattamuskett, in Hyde county, as a public hunting ground this season, under the super vision of the Department of Conserva tion and evelopment, according to State Game Warden John D. Chalk, who was at Lake Mattamuskeet yes terday. The migratory waterfowl shooting season opens tomorrow, November 8. and the days on which shooting will be permitted have ibeen designated as Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays of j each week through January 12, Mr i Chalk pointed out. Because of the. i limited number of hunters that will be allowed at Lake Mattamuskeet each shooting day, those interested in tak ing advantage of the shooting pr!vl ]prrr.c- rhereare: advised to write for reservations immediately to the Chief Warden. Lake Mattamuskeet, New Holland, N. C. They will then be ad vised as to wha.t days they can he accomodated. According to word received from the Biological Survey in Washington, which has immediate supervision of the lake pending its final purchase by the Federal government as a Federal refuge for migratory waterfowl, ap proximately 10,000 acres of the 50,000 acrese covered by the lake and sur rounding property, will be set aside: for the public shooting ground. Os these 10,000 acres on which shooting wil. he permitted, 5,000 will be on the New Holland side of the lake and 5.000 on the Fairfield side. A daily fee of $1.50 will be charged for the privilege of hunting in this area, while the fishing fee will toe 50 cents per day. The charges for guides will be regulated by the Department of Conservation. T he fees for guides has not been definitely fixed as yet, but Mr. Chalk assures the sportsmen who want to hunt in this area that the charges for guides win be as reason able as possible and that the cost will not be nearly as nigh as when the lake was operated as a private hunting and fishing preserve. Paroled Prisoner Wires Department To Get Job Back ll:ijl.v l>|s|t;i|elt Kumta, In Hu- Sir Wnlfer Biilcl, Raleigh. Nov. 7. —A paroled prisoner who was so anxious to get back into the Stnte Prison system that he sent) a. telegram to the prison depart ment at his own expense o see if he had not broken his parole and could hence be returned to prison, was th** | center of interest in the prison divi sion here today. Not on.v did he pay for the telegram he sent. but. asked the prison division to wire him col lect if and when it. could get him. The text of the telegram, sent from the Samposn county jail in Clinton, and addressed to the superintendent of the State Prison here, is as follows; ”Deat Sir. I am in Clinton, N. C., jai, and if I have (broke my parole I would like for you to come after me at once or let me know at once pay at. this end”. “Since the prison division has no record of the prisoner other than he had been paroled, the telegram was turned over to Commissioner of Pa roles Edwin M. Gill fro investigation. Commissioner Gill has written the sheriff of Sampson county to .earn what this former prisoner is charged with and whether he has violated liis parole. If he has violated his parole, (t will be revoked And the prisoner re turned to the State Prison. “We have had prisoners return voluntarily a good many times after they have escaped, hut this is the first time, a former prisoner has ever tele graphed us to see if he had broken a parole so he could return to prison”, Director J. B. Roach, of the prison di vision, said. "He evidently prefers the State Prison camps to the Sampson ! county jail”. PAGE THREE WANT ADS Get Results FOR RENT—THREE ROOM FUR nished apartment, modern con veniences Phone 105 7-iij WANTED—SIX ROOM HOUSE IN good location. Call G. L. Allen. A. A. C. Co. Phone 520. 6-2 ti A BIG SHIPMENT OF NEW DOOR?* and windows arrived at “The Place of Values. All heart for windows that will last, longer. See them. Alex S. Watkins. 7-1 m WE USE QUALITY MATERIALS and do high grade shoe repairing of all kinds Oriy expert workmen employed. Carol in a Shoe Shop. 19-if WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF building materials, and with Shor win-William line of paints we guar antee satisfaction. Vance Coni and Lumber Co. 7 and J WANTED—FOUR OR FIVE ROOM unfurnished apartment. Ueate.l apartment close in preferred. Ad drer-s Apartment, care of Dispatch. 7-3 ti FOR SALE—’TWO JERSEY MILK cows. Ballard S. Mitchell, Kittrell, N. C. 6-2 ti SPECIAL PRICES ON DRY CLEAN ing at. James Dry Cleaning Co., phone 246. We do altering and re pair work of all kinds. Let us reline .your winter coat. Prices reasonable. 7-2t.i WILL ‘ UNLOAD FRIDAY Morning a car of extra choice Tennessee mules. Come and look them over. We can save you money. W. C. Hight’s Store. 7-ts. GET OUR PRICES AND SEE OUR materials iff you are figuring on re pairing, remodelling or building. Phone number 30 for real service. Vance Coal and Lumber Co. 7 and 9 MORE VALUE IN HEATERS AT 411.25, 31.60, $2.50. up. Fuller size. Stove pipe 15c. Alex S. Watkins. (Next to Rose's Gin). 7-lti FOR SALE—MODERN FrVE-ROOM house on jot 50x110 feet. Will sell for cash or terms. Apply to H. E. Elington at Valet Cleaning Co. 5-3 ti IT’S A VALUE. “MY SPECIAL” floor wax at 44c pe- lb.; Johnson’s Wax, 65c; Glocoat, 65c pint; also ShelJac and Alcohol at “The P.ace of Values.” Alex S. Watkins. Phone 33. 7-lti JUST RECEIVED NICE SHIPMENT oysters to serve any style. Remem ber our special merchant’s .unch at 35c. Otto’s American Tourist Camp. 7-lt.i WE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANGE new and used furniture, stoves and ranges at sacrifice prices. Home Furniture Exchange, 101 N. Garnett St., phone 80. 1-ts PLANTS DELIVERED FROST j proof Wakefield cabbage, 500 75c; 1.000, $1.40; 5 and 10 thousand, $1.25; Strawberry, Rockingham late variety, 300 $1.00; dewberry, 50 SI.OO. W. A. Pard tie, Henderson, N. C. Route 1. 7-’ti SLIGHTLY DAMAGED PLAIN AND glass doors, also a few French doors, and what a. price. See them at the Vance Cua.l and Lumber Co. 7 and 9 DO YOU HAVE A STORE, DWELL ing or farm that is not producing the income you think it should? Ts so, place it with me to handle for you. Ask. any of those for whom T collect if satisfied. 3-t.f A; R. Wester Insurance Rentals Phone 139-J WILL UNLO Al) FRIDAY Morning a ctir of extra choice Tennessee mules. Come and look them over. We can save you money. W. 0. Night’s Store. 7-ts. WfONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO make $240 a month, $45 first, week. Be a grocery dealer. I furnish you complete. No capita] "needed. Write Albert Mi,ls. 6668 Monmouth. Cin cinnati, O. 7-lti For Good Used Cars —See— Legg-Parham Co. NOTICE OF FORKCIiO.SURE OF BEAL PROPERTY By virtue of power contained in a deed of trust executed b> R. i*. Harris and Eliza Harris, his wife, on the first day of December, 1927. and of record in the office of tn*- Register of Deeds of Vance County in Book 140 at Page 477, default hav ing been made in the payment of the debt therein secured, on request of the holder of the same, T shall sell by public auction, to the highest bin der, for cash, at the court house door in Henderson, N. C., at 12 o'clock, noon, on the 16t.h of November, 1934. the following described real estate: The lot lying on the east side of Rowland Street, and on the north side of Rock Spring street described as follows: Begin at the intersection of Row land street and Rock Spring street, and run thence along Rowland street N. 22 E. 42. feet, to a. stake, (Caroline Hawkins corner), thence S. 68 E. 100 feet to Carolina Hawkins back corner, thence N. 22 E. 37 feet and 8 inches, thence S. 68 E. 109 1-2 feet to stont, thence S. 22 W. 79 feet 8 inches to stone, Rock Spring street, thence along Rock Spring street N. 68 W 209 1-2' feel to the place of beginning This 16th day of October. 1934. T. S. KTTTRELL, Trustee,