MARRIAGES parties
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
I'I,OWI*: K SKKDS.
i ( , llC |,t six packages of seed
v ||ir u'ocoi’s today.
. ~i to make my summer yard
f.'vu.'tinj: tad gay.
|,..u rm paper envelopes
, nl , w „i M'l.'k and while
lli'ld old-fashioned asters,
l» r lplni’.uims dt light,
I i k.-piM. oi marigolds
0l sturdy four-oVlocks.
,ui !i a splash or rolcM*
and hollyhocks?
womlei it is Ilia* I
Uj\ satisfy a need
~ , nioi'th> of glowing heauty
In ,ix packages of seen!
Josephine Bagot..
getui ns to Winston-Salem
vlr \ndrcvv .1 St nnn. who has
iirn- foi ten days on a visit to
irturned today to her home
f ,x
Winston Salem
Choir to Iteliearse.
H, r young people’s choir of the
M n ehurch will rehearse in
.y,' t -hiiich this evening at 7:30 o'clock
j, W:IS announced today.
In Finn Finals
yi I W Bovd and Miss Li/.n
gnvd left ' day to attend the finals
r Kl*•?> t'nllege at which Scott and
Mi,. Ku^t'iiia Royd will hr graduated.
Hetnrns to Haleigli
\(j„ Minellr Rankin has returned
Raleich to lesutne her duties, after
.tending the past week-end in tin’
r itv with lift parents, Mr. and Mrs.
i R Rankin, on Rowland street.
B. \\. Members Are
in Meet Wednesday
jhr members «»f tlm Business and
Women's Club are re
uuested to meet at Hie home of Mrs.
\y \V Parker on Chestnut streel
Wednesday evening at 6 o'clock to
pact ice songs and stunts for tli"
birthday party The meeting will he
,hort
Miss Ayscue and
Mr. Cottrell Wed
IV following annonneement will he
• • rived with interest:
Mi and Mrs. M. VV Ayscue
uinniiiHv the marriage of their
daughter
Sue Mae.
to
Klvin T. Cottrell
Saturday, May 18
n* then-and nine hundred thirty-five
Boyd ton, Va."
Mi- t‘ottre|| is the vve|| know’n
auchtot of Mi and Mrs. M. VV.
tyscue, of Henderson, Route 1, and
as a host of friends in her com
mnity.
Mi Cmt i ell also resides on Hend
oun, Route 1.
(SNGRATUWTIONS
A Daughter.
Mi arn| Mi Owen Tharrlngton an
um-r tito iitli of a daughter, Fran
r - Mai ie. Friday. May 2*. 1935, Maria
'n'liwm hospital. Mothei mid daugh
wpip i eported ♦<» he doing very
dee, v.
Old wear fatc&y/Wk
Vreshena <he mouth |
• Soothes she throat
fn \ /
Blanket Week
ALL NEXT WEEK
Get your blankets ready and have them
laundered and put away for summer.
SPECIAL PRICES
For Next Week Only
4% Double blankets
laundered for- A
S Single blankets a
laundered for . -
Phone us now to call for your blankets.
Henderson Steam
LAUNDRY '
Phone 508
r SOCIETY NEWS >
lELEHIONE 01.0 - HOURS 9 A. M. TO 12 NOON
Weds I wice in Day
J
Jessie Clyde Cavender
I‘olice in Memphis, Tenn., sought
a solution to the marriage puzzle
provided by Jessie Clyde Caven
der, who, unable to choose be
tween two sweethearts", married
both on the same day. The Mem
phis girl, held for juvenile court,
was said to have married Earl
Longmire at Marion, Ark., and a
few hours later wed Dennis Man
ning. When the husbands met.
fireworks started.
Miss Louise Finch
Birthday Hostess
Miss Louise Finch delightfully en
ertained a number of her friends at
>er horn* 5 at a party given in honor
f hri tenth birthday last Saturday
'fternoon at 3 o'clock.
A rainbow color scheme was car
ied out in the refreshments.
The little hostess was the receipient
f an umber of gifts.
Miss Finch served delicious refresh
nents, consisting of ice cream, cake
ind mints to the following guests:
Misses Virginia Satterwhite, Nellie
»rey Mustian, Annice Mitcheil, Ann
vliustian, Elizabeth Beard. Virginia
Robertson, Rachel Peoples, Bernice
Beard, Evleyn Neathery, Lila Harris,
Louise Finch, and Louis Mustian,
Jack Intone, Allison and Wilbourne
4 "i neb.
Registeriny; For
Reading on May M
* i
(By The Perry Li* iary.)
All boys and girls who want to en
joy the reading course at the H. Lei
ie Perry Memorial Library this sum.
*>er may register at the library any
ime on or after Friday. May 31. at ten '
’’clock in the morning. The (books will
«e arranged according to grades, and
-redit will beg iven in scTidol-foe, tire*,
books read. When two books have
'men read, the reader will be given
a notebook in which to keep his rec
ord. At the end of the summer, cer
tificates will be presented to those ;
who have read as many as ten books. I
Stats will i v e awarded those who got !
certificates last year. To Clark Street, |
Central, or West End school, a prize
for the library of that school will
be given. The award will be made to
the school which has the largest per
centage of boys and gills receiving
certificates and stars. North and
South Henderson schools will also
compete for a prize in the same man
ner.
City and county children ate es
pecially invited to register at the li
brary for the course.
Cards Are Received
For Waller-Ayscue
Wedding On June 1
1 lie following invitations have been
received in this section:
“Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Henry Ayscue
request the honor of your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
Sallie Lou
to
Mr. Phillips Goldsborough Waller
on Saturday afternoon, June first
nineteen hundred and thirty five
at tlue o’clock
St. Paul Methodist Protestant church
Cambridge, Maryland."
HICKSBORO NEWS
% MISS HIIUKNfK B. WOOIIY.
The superintendent at Island Creek
was made glad Sunday by such a
large gathering to worship in the
Sunday school.
Robert Edward Shanks, who has
been in school at Wake Forest this
year expecis to return home with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Shanks
for the summer.
Mr. and Mrs E. T. Hicks also Mrs.
F. 11. Hicks, Mrs. C. L. Tucker and
Mrs. W. J. Woody visited relatives
at M<anson Sunday.
Miss Rosa Mae Woody who has been
confined to her room on account of
sickness, was out yesterday to the joy
of her many friends.
Gertie Stovall returned home Sat
urday, after spending the week with
her sister Mrs. James Tilley of Cteed
noor.
Miss Alma. Green was the guest of
friends in Hicksboro Sunday after
noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Breedlove,
two small children. Wavel.v and Nell
were Sunday guests of her uncle. W.
* Woody here.
M is.s Jennie Gill spent Saturday
night with Mrs. Carl O’Brient of
Stovall.
F. H. Hicks and children spent Sun
i <*ay afternoon in town at his broth
ers. J. C. Hicks.
Little Myrtle Woody of Stovall was
aturday night guest of Ann Satter
vhite.
'Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Woody was Sat
urday night guest of Mr. and Mrs
Johnnie Knott and Miss Sue Stovall
"f Stovall.
Mrs. M. D. Woody and Florence
Woody were Saturday night guests of
their aunt. Mrs. S. A Green.
Y. P. S. L. CAMP FIRE
HAS BEEN CALLED OFF
Due to the advice of physicians, the
district meeting of the Young Peo
ple's Service League of the Episcopal
f *hurch has been postponed, and the
Camp Fire in King’s Daughters Park
has been indefinitely deferred. Phy
sicians advise against any public ga.th
erings at the present. Reported.
ENVIABLE RECORD
BY DREWRY YOUTH
i
ferry Wilson Has Outstanding: Ach
ievement in Chemical Engineer
ing Department
< Reported to Daily Dispatch)
One bf the most outstanding rec
ords made by any boy of this section
oh the .State recently at State College
at Raleigh will be completed next year
by Perry Wilson, of the .Drewry com
munity. Mr. Wilson is enrolled in
the chemical engineering department
jof the engineering school and will
j graduate with the class of 1936 with
I some of the highest honors any stu
■dent can obtain at State College.
! Not only making Phi Beta Kappa
grades in his studies hut also ranking
as one of the most popular boye at
StaV he has held the following major
offices: During his sophomore year
he was secretary of his class. During
his junior vear he was elected vice
president of his class and he has just
recently been elected president of the
rising sanioi elass. He is also presi
| dent of the Chemical Engineering So
! eiety. secretary of the Blue Key. an
honorary organization of the college
and last week he was tapped into
membership of the Golden Chain a
senior leadership organization. Only
twelve students from the student
hodv weie chosen for this high honor
and they were chosen for their ability
as outstanding leaders. He is also a
member of the Tau Beta Pi honorary
engineering fraternity.
Young Mr. Wilson is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Wilson, of Middle
burg. Route 1. and a graduate of Mid
dleburg. high school.
ROTARY CLUB WILL
MEET OUT AT DABNEY
The regular weekly meeting of the
Rotary Club wilt he held this evening
at 7 o'clock at Dabney with the Dab
, f .y high school P. T. A serving the
supper, it was announced today.
Dr. I. H Hoyle will he in charge
i of *he program,
i
I MJddleburg l,of Sold —In a real es
♦ ate deed filed today with the regis
ter of deeds R. T. Stewart and Jasper
B. Hicks, trustee, sold to T. W. Mc-
Cracken. property at the corner of
Broad and North Lee street* in Mid
lleburg for SSOO.
Cardui Built Up Her Strength
She had lost strength and fallen of’
< n weigh* until her clothes would no’
*it. writes Mrs. A. S. Curtis, of Wins
l on. Va. “I knew 1 must get some
,v >in.e to bui* H me up if I kept going."
she says. “My aunt suggested that
I try Cardui. I am glad that I did.
for it built up my strength. I have
taken if at intervals since then, when
*ver I felt the least run-down."
Cardui revives the appetite and iir>
nroves nurition in cases where such p
medicine is needed. Thousands of
I women testify Cardui benefited them
If it does not benefit YOU. consult a
| physician. _
HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1935
Pulitzer Prize Books
Note A1 Perry Library
Recently the Pulitzer Prize awards
weir announced, and many of the pa
trons have been borrowing tire books
from t lie library. Those books which
the library did not have, have, been
purchased, as well as other new books
of fiction and non-fiction .
One of the prizes was for the best
AgiieriorP {biography* teaching pat.
riol.ic and unselfish setvic.es to the
people and this award went to Dr.
Douglas Freeman for Ins **R. E. Lee.”
For tlie best i oow of the year upon
the History of the United .States
'Colonial Period of American History:
The Settlements," by Charles M. An
drews was chosen. "In this new his
tory of the colonial period the author
lias approached his subject from the
English end and has broadened its
scope to include all England’s,, coir
oniai settlements in the West that
were founded in the seventeenth cen
tury. This first volume iy chiefly de
voted to the colonics in Virginia and
(Vfp.ssachusetts. with chapters oh the
early years in Bermuda and on New
foundland and Nova Scotia.”
The Pulitzer Prize for fiction is
given for the best American novel
published during the year, preferably
one which shall best present the whole
atmosphere of American life ‘‘Now in
November" i’;y Josephine Johnson
which received the award this year v>
a realistic story of far mlife in the
Middle West. Margei, second of three
daughters of the Haldmarnes, tells
the story “In November” looking hack
over the ten years of the family’s life
on the farm, and particularly the.last
year, when drought, debt, and . the
knowledge of coming madness, all fed
the growing fear of imminent, disas
ter.
Mazo De La Roche has a new book
"Young Renn.v (Jalna-1906) Those
who know the Whiteoak family will
he delighted to meet Rennys father,
Philip and to see Gran at eighty when
she is as commanding as an old oak.
Those who have never read the Jalna
hooks will want to read this one be
fore leading the others as it i.s the
first one in point of imte though not
the first one written.
Life in Rhodesia is the background
of Shelia Macdonald’s “Mr. Crusoe’s
Young Woman." The interest centers
Commodore Now
i i.
m jjjjjl r**
Sam Kosoff, immigrant lad who
worked his way to top of big con
struction company and built New
York subways, now is becoming
shipping magnate. Having taken
over Hudson River Line, he is re
ported to be negotiating for one of
the important coastal steamship
lines. He’s seen on bridge of one of
tits ships, acting part of captain.
— — l Central Press j
Holland’s Princess Engaged?
jhHH |f|i|||P
B|| Jg HCjUh iwj IpL il .
mmi ■ HUBBUB!
Reports from Amsterdam say that the betrothal of Crown Princes!
Juliana of Holland, daughter of Queen Wilhelmina, to Prince Charles ol
Sweden (both above), will soon be announced.
(Central Press)
in Katherine Overton, the paid com
-1 pan lon of old Mrs. CLi e’erstone, and
! o. innmnce in which members of t.lie
| Ct i’derstone family are involved.
"Evening of a Martinet” by Jane
Oliver is the first serious novel by a
Young British woman who Iras already
gained a reputation for light-hearted
wil. It is the story of a successful,
respected headmistress of a girls'
school and a delightful love story of
one of her favorite pupils.
Busan Ertz always writes an inter,
psting novel of her "Now We fc'et Out"
is a gay comedy of a stormy pair in
their first six months of married life.
Publishers and reviewers say that
"National Velvet" by Enid Bagnold
lis different from any novel that.
| you’ve ever read. It is a pleasantly
i told tale of a young girl and a bores,
which she rode in the Grand National.
“An Almanac for Modren,” by Don
ald Peattie is a book of observations
: pertinent to the day or season and
| philosophic reflections concerning na
j turc and science. Lynd Ward’s draw
■ ings of the. Zodiac signs add to the
i interest and charm of the hook.
| Jeffery Farnnl readers will enjoy
| his “John O The Green*’ with its
I romance and exciting adventures.
‘‘lnsurance and Annuities From
j The Buyer’s Point of View” by Har
! wood and Francis is a Look which
j will be useful for the patron consid-
J cring buying insurance. t
Returning from her post as United
I States Minister to Denmark, Ruth
j Bryan Owen spent several weeks on
i the Danish ship, Disko. visiting the
i isolated settlements along the coast
of Greenland. Her “Leaves* from a
Greenland Mary” recounts this in
formal voyage to this little-known re
gion of the globe.
' MRS J. B. WESTER. OF
RALEIGH, PASSES ON
Former Resident of Henderson Sur
vived by Number of Relatives
In This City
Mrs. J. B. Wester, a former resident
cf Henderson, died at eight o'clock,
this morning al the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Josic Adams, in Ra.
leigh. according! to announcement
here.
Funeral services will he held in Ra
leigh tomorrow afternoon at two
o’clock and the body will be brought
here for burial in Elmwood cemetery.
Mrs. Wester is survived by the one
daughter. Mrs. Adams, and by one
son. A. B. Wester, Loth of Raleigh;
and two sisters. Mrs.’ G. L W.
Pcgranr and Mrs. T. F. Wiggins, both
of Henderson, ami one brother. E.
B. Wiggins, who resides in this county
POST OFFICE WILL
OBSERVE HOLIDAY
full holiday will he observed at
the post office on Memorial Day
Thursday, it was announced today by
Postmaster R. B. Carter. There will
be no rural or city delivery service at
all, but the stamp and general de
livery windows will be opened as us
ual on holidays, from 10 to 11 a. m.
lee Cream
Special
Wednesday Only
Our delicious ice cream
25c a quart
'Fry our fresh fruit, straw
berry. Chocolate, vanilla or
coffee flavor with dates.
It’s delicious—See it made,
PABKEITS
Drug Store
“The Rexall Store”
Marland Martin Pattern
PATTERN 9381
The attractive, neat, trim, tailored
type of woman is certainly coming
into her own these days! And this
frock was designed with her espcially
in mind. Every detail in it is tailored
with the fastidiousness that would do
credit to a great dressmaker. But it’s
been simplified to the point that it
will probably prove the easiest thing
you ve ever made! Isn’t it olever the
way the front yoke and pocket are
both squared? And the lapels can
he buttoned right up to your throat,
if you like. Perfect in striped shirt
ing or a good-looking wide wale pique
in a solid color. Complete, Diagram
med Marian Martin Sew Chart in
cluded.
•'Pattern 9381 may be ordered only
in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20. 32, 34. 36, 38, 10
and 42. Size 16 requires 3 5-8 yards
36 inch fabric.
Send FIFTEEN GENTS In coins or
stands (coin® preferred) for EACH
MARIAN MARTIN pattern. Be sure
to write plainly your NAME. AD
DRESS. the STYLE NUMBER and
SIZE of each Dattern.
Send your order to Dally Dispatch
Pattern Department, 232 W. 181’ "R..
New York. N Y-
Planning Board
To Meet Friday
(Continued from frage One.)
view to getting the required allot
ments and loans approved as soon as
possible.
“We at first had planned to have
this meeting Wednesday, but after
talking with Dr. H. G. Baity, State
PWA Engineer in Chapel HUT. we de
cided to hold the meeting Friday in
stead," Waynick said.
The State Planning Board was ap
pointed by Governor J. C. B. Elu ing
haus several months ago to act as «
coordinating agency for all projects
which might be constructed entirely
or in part with Federal PWA fiinov
The board will select those projects
which it considers the most worth
white and then make an effort to get
them approved as rapidly as possible
: *> Washington, so that construction
may *’ce started and people given em
ployment at the earliest possible date.
Chairman Waynick believes that
North Carolina should get at least
$100,000,000 of the new Public Wbrks
allotment and he and the other mem
bers of the Planning Board are going
to do everything possible to see that
the State docs get at least this much.
Cince the President has recently re
duced the interest rates on PWA loans
to three per cent and has announced
that the government will now give an
outright grant covering 45 per cent
or the cost of certain proved pro
jects instead of only 30 per cent in
»<)€■»( H—M H—»()-
! Summer Fabrics j
|"j
| COTTONS !
SI leer and puffed in that cool, charming I
| way that is so effective.
(Jorde-lace, eyelet embroideries, Swiss I
c organdies, chiffon voiles, as well as or- |
ganza and net are the fabrics that take
I every smart trick.
• Wednesday Specials i
Beach robes, slacks, shorts tor sea side — c
A Lot of Rayon and Cotton, plaids, prints and stripes,
once 35c and 48c—now 19c
Remnants, from lot on sale last week at hall price,
I this week at one third of first price. i
Evening dresses, from $5.95 to $25.00, reduced
one tenth to one half.
I Girls sport oxfords, brown and white with low heels, 2
marked from $3.85 to $2.79
Sports shirts with short sleeves, all sizes, blue
and white broadcloth 43c
j GROCERIES |
I 2 packages corn flakes .*. 14c
I 1 quart jar relish spread 41c f
C 2 quarter pound tins Twilight Tea 36c 1
! E. G. Davis & Sons Co. j
p |
CHURCH SOCIETIES
ANNOUNCEMENTS
.*• . i.
‘ho past, thr* belief is that count
cities and towns will be more anxious
than ever to take advantage of PWA
loans to build needed improvements.
B. H. Mixon
Contriidiir awl Builder
“Build* Belter Buildings ”
All kinds of Building
Wall Papering Painting—
Roofing and Interior
Decorating.
PHONFS- n,fi « p 7
Residence 4Yft-,l
PAGE FIVE