Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Dec. 13, 1934, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO (WANT ADS I I- GET RESULTS | MULES AND HORSES—JUST UN- I loaded the best lot of mules and I mares that money can buy, also j good lot of medium price mules. I Come, to see us. Westers. 7-6 ti j BIG SUPPLY OF MORTON S AN- ' chor Brand salt. Morton's sugar cured Smoke-Salt and Morton’s j sausage seasoning. H. B. Newman. 1 _ FOR SALE—NINE GOOD USED pianos, different makes, all in good condition. Priced from $25 to $75. Also tune and repair pianos. J. R. Collins, near Epsom, Henderson, route 1. 10-6tl MEN’S STRONG STURDY WORK | shoes with leather or combination , soles. Just what you want for rough I outdoor wear. All sizes at $1.95. j $2.45. $2.95 and $3.95. Tucker Cloth- i Ing Co. 12-2 ti | WE USE QUALITY MATERIALS i and do high grade shoe repairing of all kinds. Only expert workmen j employed Carolina Shop Shop. 23-ts | COME SEE US TODAY— I Save wear and tear on your i shop-weary feet. Open j nights ’til Christmas. Lough lin Goodwyn. PIxENTY OF GOOD DRY WOOD and coal. Best service and lowest ; prices. Phone 546-W—we deliver. ' Linden ar old Henderson Coal and • Wood yard. North Henderson. 13-ts I THE NEWEST THING IN BAT' tery radio, L-Tatro Radio, uses only •3-volt battery. Guaranteed to oper ate on less than 3 cents per day. Loughlin-Goodwyn. 20-ts MEN’S AND BOYS WOOL AND wool mixed lumber jackets. Boys sizes at $1.95 to $3.50. Men's at $2.50 and up. Boys sheep lined coats $3.95 Buy 'em now and get full benefit. Tucker Clothing Co. 12-2 ti FREE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY— One package of Chinese fire crack ers to every child visiting our place accompanied by either one of their parents. Fireworks of every kind for Christmas. H. B. Newman, next to Square Deni Case, North Hen derson. 11-4 ti WANTED: GIRLS LEARN BEAUTY Culture. Best paying professions available to women. Earn while learning. For particulars write Con tinental College, High Point. N. C. 12-2 t GIFTS THAT KEEP THE budget sunnyside up. Beauti fully engraved and boxed at no extra cost. Loughlin Goodwyn.. * * MTJI.ES AND HORSES—JUST UN loaded the best lot of mules and mares that money can buy. also good lot of medium price mules. Come to see us. Westers. 7-6 t! FURNISH YOUR HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS A MESSAGE ” OF IMPORTANCE TO THRIFTY-MINDED FURNITURE BUYERS Let Your Dollars " Do DOUBLE DUTY Fee Our Stock of Modern, New and reconditioned furniture bargains and SAVE MANY DOLLARS on Your Purchases. SPECIAL EASY TERMS * HOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE 101 N. Garnett St.. Phone 80 For Good Used Cars —See— Legg-Parham Co. I Coal and Wood I CITY FUEL CO. I Ransom Duke, Prop. I —Phone 180— I Wall Papering—lnterior Decorating— Painting— Roofing— All kinds of building. B. H. Mixon Contractor and Builder “Builds Better Buildings” PHONES: Office T* Residence 47SJ I All keyed ads are strictly con fidential. Please do not cal l the office for their identity. • FOR RENT—STEAM HEATED BED j rooms, reasonably priced. Close in. ' Mrs. A. H. Houff. 179 Zene St. i Phone 396-W. 12-2 t! FOR SALE—PIANO IN GOOD CON- j 1 dition. Wil] sell for balance due at j a bargain for cash or terms can be j arranged. Write. Straube Piano Co. ! care Dailv Dispatch. OUR LOW PRICES ON GOOD DRY cleaning will enable every-one to I keep diessed-up through the holiday I season. Let us clean them now. I Phone 296. Nu-Way Cleaners. Mrs. j i R. E. Faris. Mgr. Luther T. Hughes, i route-man. 10-6 ti i ■ -■■ ■ ■ -■■■■ - ' A NEW CLASS IN EITHER STENO graphic or Bookkeeping work will 1 begin at the Henderson Business School December 31. This is your opportunity. 13-lti i BIG LINE OF MEN'S SHFEP LlN ed coats at $5.85. Also suede leather ' coats at $5.50, $6.50 and $7.50. All sizes, get yours now. Tucker Cloth ing Co. 12-2 ti COME SEE OUR HIGH GRADE ! Cedar Chests. Gate leg tables and I novelties before you buy. W. D. Burwell Model Wood Work Shop, 141 Horner street, Henderson, N. C. 13-3(1 ] I WE HAVE FOUR GREAT LINES of Battery Radios to select from. One for every person and every home. Philco, Sentinel, Bosch, L- Tatro. Loughlin-Goodwyn. 20-ts BIG ASSORTMENT FIREWORKS. Pollyanna Service Station. Oxford Road, 1 mile from Henderson. 13-lt 24 HOUR WRECKER-TIRE, BAD tery, mechanical service. O’Lary's Garage, phone 470-J. North of Ice Plant on Highway. 8-6 t LOST—WHITE AND BLACK spotted male setter dog. Re ward for any information leading to recovery. R. S. Johnson. Phone 282. 13-2 t MAN WANTED FOR RAWLEIGH Route of 800 families. Good profits for hustler. We train and help you. Write today. Rawleigh Co., Dept NCL—IIB—SA. Richmond. Va. 6-13-20-27 | SPECIAL PRICES ON TABLES— | Cedar Chests and cabinets until Christmas. W. D. Burwell Model Wood Shop, 141 Horner street. 13-3 t BREEDLOVE PRODUCE COM pany and Central Fruit Store. Meet Santa Claus at these two places. Santa Claus says he has been coming to Breedlove Produce Co. for five or six years and that he can sav that Breedlove Produce Company and Central Fruit Store have the best oranges for Christ mas they ever had. Nice apples and nuts. California Christmas trees. See our stocks and get our prices before you buy. 12-ts OUR WOOD WORK NOVELTIES specially suitable for gifts to friends and relatives. W. D. Bur well’s Wood Work Shop, 141 Horner street. Henderson. N. C. 13-3 ti JUST RECEIVED A FRESH SHlP ment of Martha Washington Candy —Come by and take a box home tonight. Page-Hocutt Drug Co., Phones 404, and 403. Mon. Thurs DOLL HOUSES—SPECIAL VALUES $1.50 to $4.95 and. up. Made of 3-ply , wood veneer. E. M. Teiser, Oxford Road. Phone 1-J. 13-2 ti BUY OLD NEWSPAPERS FOR wrapping purposes ■ and kindling fires. Big bundle for 16c, three for 25c at Dispatch office. 11-ts I NICE LOT OF PIGS AND SHOATE for sale at'Bearpond Service Sta- I tion. Frazier Brothers. 13-2 ti 1 KEEP DRESSED-UP FOR THE I ’ holiday season. Have your suits and t dresses completely cleaned by Valet 1 Cleaners ahead of time, and be pre- i pared to "go” at a moment’s notice! 1 Phone 464. Valet Cleaning Co., To < the rear of Rose’s 5-10 c Store. 10-6 ti 1 - j Father of 35 a ' SI 1 PRNI M?*-- ■ *1 %. ' ' 1 i -w- wt i II .fjß \ JL- J i • j: :>?• ■, z ._ Joseph Sears. 84, of Dedham, Mass., a carpenter, is revealed as father of 85 children and claimant to title or the all-American father. His first wife, who died 80 years ago, bore him 18. His second, with whom he now lives, is mother of 17. He haq 240 giving : luLNDERSON, (N. C.)’ DAILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1934 WILL NOT BALANCE « BUDGET UNTIL ’37 f I Financial New York Will Be J Pleased If It Is Done Even Then ? By LESLIE EICHEL i Central Press Staff Writer J New York. Dec. 13.—0 f course the Federal budget cannot be balanced ■ for the fiscal year of 1935-36. * Financial New York will be satis fied if there is even a semblance of > I a balance by 1936-37. Federal spending will continue up- V ’ ward during this winter. The greater th e Federal spending, > 1 the less private money is inclined to * j come out of its hiding spots. $ Thus the government becomes more I and more responsible for all business. That, in the end, would cause this to ’J ! be a nation in which all the business 4 that does not pay dividends Would be in the hands of the government—and * all the business that pays dividends g would be concentrated in a. few pri vate hands. \ IMPOSSIBLE, IMPOSSIBLE! , S Some weeks ago, we asked three fi rhetorical questions in this column. > Edward J. Quirk, of East Rocka- v way. N. Y., answers each with an 4 "impossible” (as have many other > persons.) We re-quote the questions: j “How can the government proceed $ on the one hand increase costs to the producer and on the other hand X expert larger consumption? > "How can monopoly be maintained without increasing the number or un employed? * "How can the mass share (to the extent of a livelihood) in the monop dies unless the monopolies become co-operative?” ONLY A SALES TAX B. L. Barnes of Nashville, Tenn., writes that we all are “darn fools” for v voting for a multiplicity of politicians to fill a multiplicity of offices who levy a multiplicity of taxes. > Mr. Barnes suggests: "There is only one logical way to overcome this particular situation and that is to have only one form of V taxation, which would hit all of us 4 alike—a general sales tax on every thing- sold in the United States. Then * have only one receiving agency—the federal government, which wouid dis- 4 burse to rnch state the amount it X needs. "We do not need state, county, city 4l governments and what-not, each coi- J i lecting a tax just to keep some poli- | * ticians from starving to death.” •- i National Capita] J T« Enjoying Boom J (Continued from Page One.) influx, in fact, has Been of war-period J proportions. APARTMENTS FULL Washington apartment houses are 5 full-up. Homes of all sorts are in brisk demand. Vacancies no longer exist in 48 the business district. Rentals are be ing boosted. ® Hotel accommodations are a! a pre- 48 mium. There always is a rush into the capital on the eve of the reassembling of Congress, but the present rush is 48 almost unprecedented. Representatives of all sorts of in terests are arriving—to fight for legis- 4 lative advantages, seeking code con- m cessions, after government loans; de mantling, opposing, arguing. And they all seem to have plenty of money. Washington is getting it. 5 Washington also has one fairly thriving industry—-building. A Private building, to be sure, hasn’t S revived much, but the federal govern ment is busy with a local program 43 which, as Congressman Louis Ludlow 4J of Indiana repeatedly has pointed out has involved repeatedly ha* pointed § out, has involved an expenditure ten 48 or a dozen times the combined at , mounts of the Louisiana and Alaska purchases—all right here in the capi- 48 — * ' s Might Ask For S Better Enforcing (Continued from Page One.) 43 were reduced in number. He also took a crack at. the justices of the peace 48 court system in the State, without tj mentioning them by name, referring to them as an “inferior court system devised for a pioneer age and a mul- J? tiplicity of minor law enforcement of- 48 ficers inadequate to cope with pre- m sent day conditions.” >5 Whether this means that the gov- 48 ernor is going to make any definite £ recommendations to the General As- 5 sembly looking towards county con solidation or abolition of the justices 48 of the peace courts in North Caro- S lina no one her e is prepared to say. ¥< For while most observers are in com- 48 plete agreement with the governor on the need for county consolidation and jg the absence of any need for justices of the peace, they also agree that it would take a very brave man to ad vocate any cnanges in the present S system. They also agree that even if the governor should recommend coun- 48 ty consolidation and abolition of the m justices of the peace courts, that there is very little likelihood that the Gen eral Assembly would pay any atten tion to these recommendations. —— ___ 4 Dead As Resi> de nee Is Burned S e? (Continued from Pago One.) ing, and they were unable to identify 48 th§ others burned by names. Thero j* are 11 children in the family, but two V? were absent. ' * £8 Nichols, the father, was burned deeply about the arm and face and collapsed at the door of a brother’s house, to which he Went in his sleep- ing garments and for assis tance. Mrs. Nichols leaped from an upstairs window and was burned A about the face and hands and receiv ed a badly fractured - left wrist. She went upstairs to awaken the children and was trapped by the flames. Nich ols was taken to a hospital, A Gift Buyers Are Busy ? At The Shopping Center ? J Ladies Fur-Trimmed fH COATS Jk i Never before have we been able to offer such O lovely, well-made coats at such drastically ref l uc prices. Each coat tailored in the season s popular fabrics. They are ■ superb from fur to lining;. All sizes. f $S*95 Our Entire Stock of i|g| l|M| dresses B Greatly Reduced for Jv Christmas Selling Ready-to-Wear Section —Second Floor of Course she will Appreciate Give Him Pajamas PAIA IVI A 111 styles that blend with 1 AM IV A 4X the season. A gift that Plain and two-piece combinations in silks and e\er\ man ill appreciate. satins.. In materials that will wear long and well. In slipover, coats and Rus- All sizes— . T O sian styles. All sizes. rywwOMlM $1.98 to $2.98 Lingerie Section —Second Floor w Men’s Section—Street Floor Men’s Scarfs Made of all-woo] thistle- down material. In attrac- —™ VBBBV Hve styles that match every mKu Larkwood Ringless ; ji’y' f >Men’s Section—Street Floor < In sheer chiffon and ? •. n . . i service weight with li/I , T T ? ie needle IVI6D S 11OS€J 4 and thread in the hem of every pair. All L , x . i ; With that lasting Mo- sizes and shades. ' -Knit-Toe. wrapped in t "I attractive Christm a s 4 AM / packages. In assorted /U 97/ i PAIR « „ - 3 Pair $1 JO STOMP i Hosiery Section —Street Floor 4 Men’s Section—Street Floor 4S Leggett’s Dept. Store I “Henderson’s Shopping Center” S 48
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Dec. 13, 1934, edition 1
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