PAGE FOUR HENOERSON DAILY DISPATCH Established August 12, 1914 Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by HENDERSON DISPATCH CO., INC. at 109 Young Street HENRY A. DENNIS, Pres, and Editor M. L. FINCH, Sec.-Treas., Bus. Mgr. TELEPHONES Editorial Office 800 Society Editor 610 Business Office 610 The Henderson Daily Dispatch is a member of the Associated Press, Southern Newspaper Publishers Asso ciation and the North Carolina Press Association. The Asociated Press is exclusively entitled to use for republication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Payable Strictly In Advance One Year $5.00 Six Months 2.50 Three Months 1-50 Weekly (by Carrier Only) 15 Per Copy 05 National Advertising Representatives FROST, LANDIS & KOHN. 250 Park Avenue, New York 360 North Michigan Ave., Chicago General Motors Bldg., Detroit Walton Building, Atlanta Entered at the post office in Hender son, N. C. as second class mail matter CHRIS f FC* Ak. _-A> , I'OR CHRIST PEACE AND SAFETY: Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee: because he trusteth in thee.—lsaiah 26:3. REWAID OF THE RIGHTEOUS: Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright: for the end of that man is peace. —Psalm 37:37. s TODAY s TODAYS ANNIVERSARIES 1775 —Lyn Han Beecher noted Presby terian clergyman, father of noted ( sons and daughters, born at New Haven, Conn. Died in New York, Jan. 19, 1863. 1808- Victor P. Considerant, the French Socialist who established a short-lived Utopian settlement in Texas, born. Died Dec. 27, 1893. 1810—Helena Modjestka, noted Po lish-American actress,, born. Died rear Los Angeles, April 8, 1909. 1844—Charles King, soldier, histo rian and novelist, born at Albany, N. Y. Died in Milwaukee March 18, 1933. 1846 —Louis E. Levy, noted Phila delphii photo-chemist-inventor, born in Bohemia. Died Feb. 16, 1919. TODAY IN HISTORY 1492 - Columbus discovered the New World. 1788 -John Fitch’s 60-foot steam boat, regularly engaged carrying pas sengers between Philadelphia and New Jersey, covered the 20-miles up stream in little over three hours. 1802 —Joseph G. Swift, later to be come a general, West Point’s first graduate. ) 1870 Died- Robert E. Lee. famed • Confederate leader, at Lexington, Va., I aged 63. | 1915 —-Edith Cavell British nurse, | shot at Brussels by Germans as spy. ! TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Wilberforcc Eames, noted New ; York City Public Library bibliograph ei, born at Newark, N. J., 80 years ago. Most Rev. Michael .T. Curley, Cath olic Archbishop of Baltimore, born in Ireland, 56 years ago. Peter B. Kyne of California, nove list, born in San Francisco, 56 years ago. Howard M. Gore of West Virginia. 1 one-time governor and secretary of agriculture, born at Clarksburg, W. Va., 48 years ago. Rt. Hon. James Ramsay MacDon ald, British statesman, born 69 years ago iLyn Harding, English actor, born 68 years ago. TODAY’S HOROSCOPE The child born today will be. a ruler. It is a masculine nature and which ever the sex, the native will take the lead whether it be on the playground or in the field of work. The nature is a trifle mystic and studious. WRITING WRONGS You’re wrong if you believe That Queen Isabella pawned her jewels to finance Columbus’ trip to America. iShe didn’t. Her jewels were al ready in pawn. The money for the expedition was raised by I.uis do Santa ngel, Jewish apostate chancel lor of Aragon among his friends. That Columbus regarded his first voyage to the New World a3 a suc cess. He didn’t! Tie had undertaken it in hopes of finding a sea route to India and raised money for a Cru sade. He didn’t succeed in either objective and was aware of the fact. Queries, reproofs, etc... may he ad dressed in Clark Kinnaird, care this newspaper. ANSWF.RS TO TEN QUESTIONS s, . t and religion, went to Moroco and became a Mohamme dan . (This was found in Spanish records by Sir Charles Beazeley, British his torian) . Columbus never saw any part of North America, which has a popula- ! tion of at least 1,115,000 when he first sighted the Caribbean island which he thought was near India. Despite popular legend to the contrary, there is a wealth of evidence that Columbus’ rediscovery of a western continent was purely accidental. Oct. 12, 1870 —Robert Edward Lee died at 63, murmuring, ‘Strike the tent!” SUNDAY IS THE DAY XVTT Sundav after Trinity. Oct. 13, beginning of the 42nd week of the year. Full moon. Zodiac sign: Lib ra. NOTABLE NATIVITIES William Z. Ripley, b. 1867, Ameri can economist, specialist in railroad affairs. . . S. Parker Gilbert, b. 1892, onetime, agent-general for repa rations who naturally became a nart rer in J. P. Morgan & Co. . . . Irene Rich, b. 1894, cinemactress . . . TODAY’S YESTERDAYS Oct. 13, 1792—George Washington laid the cornerstone of the first pub lic building in the city named for him. It was the “President’s Palace,” which was not to be known as the White House until after the British bad burned it in 1814. The site was selected by a French man and the building was designed by an Irishman. Washington never lived in it. October 13. 1914—The Belgian cap ital was in France! The German in vasion forced King Albert to move his government to Havre. Oct. 12-13, 1915 London was bombarded by Zonpelins and 55 were killed, 114 injured. The French foreign minister, Del casse, resigned. The happening of the day to which the newspapers gave the most at tention, however, when it became known, was the execution of Edith Cavell. a plain-Vooking middle-aged English nurse who had a private r ursine home in Brussels that some how survived the German invasion. Btbo he’ped English and French cap tives to escape. An informer expos ed her to the German governor and she fell before a firing squad after the AmoHonn ot.voy in Belgium had tried to save her. According to the rules of warfare the. Germans were unquestionably en titled to execute her. But any politi cian could have told them the execu tion was going to arm 100,000 more men against them. British propaa gandists made Edith Cavell a symbot* of German “savagery.” Mile. Louise Thulicz, Frenchwom an, who was sentenced to death with Miss Cavell, won a commutation and Aids Ethiopians _ | • §L '* • / ...... 1 jjjjjjljL : I——————■ 11 i .i i • H. Murray Jacoby, onetime special envoy of U. S. government to Ethi opia, is newly appointed representa tive of Ethiopian Red Chose in the AJ. tiu-. HENDERSON. (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1935 wbH LT „ Pi 1 * 6f 8 9 131415 10 1312 202122 23 27 28 29 30 31|~[ lives today. One Gaston Quien, Bel gium was promptly hanged at the end of the war as the informer who had betrayed Miss Cavell, friend of his country, for a few miserable pieces of silver. ) What Do You Know About North Carolina? By FRED H. MAY j 1. How much value is added thro ugh the manufacture of North Car olina raw products? 2. What was the penalty in 1778 for harboring a person voted into military service? 3. What bold and impetuous act at King’s Mountain cost Charles Gor. don a broken arm? 4. Why was the seat of State Sen ator Philip Alston, of Moore county, in 1786 declared vacant? 5. How does North Carolina rank with other states in the output .of furniture? 6. How did J. W. Alexander, Con federate naval officer, attempt to es cape from Fort Warren, Boston? ANSWERS 1. In 1927 the total value of pro ducts manufactured by North Caro lina factories was $1,154,617,636. The raw materials, fuel and power, a mounted to $562,086,283, leaving a value added by manufacturing of $592,531,353. This value of one year’s business is slightly more than the combined state, county and municipal | debt. 2. Any person convicted of harbor ing or concealing any person voted into the Continental Army was con sidered to be a Continental soldier himself and was required to serve three years in active service in the army. 3. Gordon, a young officer in the Wilkes militia, suddenly rushed into the midst of British and Tories, seiz ed an officer by his cue of hair and started dragging him towards the American lines. The Tory drew his pistol and shot Gordon, shattering his left arm. Gordon released his pri soner and killed him with his sword. J. L. and J. H. P. Cilley, Hickory business men today, are great-great Near Last Journey —— ——l " I- " ' I t K n syr \imM' fi ■V-' •- m ggg& .g ■> wwi'imxbggmgy «| IMP: -. I 'TiTi » •*.. * y /$j Maj. Gen. A. W. Greely, U. S. i Army, retired, famed as Arctic ex- | plorer, is reported near death in ' Washington, D. C. This is latest , photo. (Centred Press) WARDEN BALKS AT KILLING, QUITS Gerald Thompson Warden Frank D. Whipp Because he has become ui«.*crved at each of the live executions at which he has officiated, Warden Frank D. Whipp, of the Joliet- Statesville prisons in Illinois, has submitted his resignation, effective one minute prior to the next scheduled execution. One minute after midnight, on Oct. 14, Gerald Thompson, 25-year-old Peoria slayer ®f Mildred Hallmark, 19-year-old case hostess, is scheduled to go to the electric chair. Warden Whipp, a veteran penologist, asserts: “I don’t believe the punishment should fit the crime. That isn’t Any longer considered penology. The aim is to turn out men in Condition to have a chance to re-enter society. Some criminals, however, should be locked ud for iiie,” Italian General » ' " ’I Charting course of invasion of Ethi-' opia, as member of Italian board of strategy in Eritrea, is Gen. Terruzzi (above), veteran of the World War and numerous colonial campaigns. i fb—: i New York, Oct. 12. —Lawrence Tibett would be a remarkable man for his looks, even if it were not for his voice. That surprising, bulging forehead, tapering suddenly to heart like chin; the little mu;|ache below the large, candid eyes and the re trousse nose—all stick in the memory He is recognized on the street, in theater audiences, everywhere, more quickly than many a straight roman tic lead, and the autograph hounds give him no peace. In the taxi, on my way to the high, bright apartment overlooking the East River, in which Tibbett lives, I said to the driver: “I'm going to call on Lawrence Tibbett. W'hat do you think of him?” “He’s a wow of a singer,” my pilot declared with a toss of Tarzan should ers, “but he’s terribly conceited. It’s a shame.” “How do you know? Have you ever met him?” “No but everybody knows how con ceited he is.” I had heard the charge before, seen it implicated even in the exceedingly polite screeds of the fan-magazine writers. Now that I have met him, talked with him for an hour and am conviced that what people vaguely identify as conceit is another quality entirely, the rumor interests me even more than it did before. Tibbett is not conceited at all—if by conceit you mean the small and stupid sort of arrogance, the pea cock preening some baskers in the THE FORTUNES OF WAR ' ON THE MILITARY FRONT AND ON THE DIPLOMATIC FRONT limelight effect. Instead he is tall, carries himself erect an< is very ar ticulate. These things could easily be confused by people used to another kind of matinee-idol behavior with the aura called “conceit.” Moreover, with a public used to crooners, who insinuate themselves in to the good graces of listeners in a sort of super-modofit gliding tech nique, moving in upon them with gen tle melody and sentimental urges rather than thrilling them, the Tib bett technique, bold, dramatic and as sured, may shock listeners even as it pleases them into some such opinion as my taxi-driver commentator s. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer tain Deed of Trust executed by Wil lie Jackson and wife, Josephine Jack son, recorded in Book 162, at page 210, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County, and under the authority contained in that cer. tain judgment recorded in Book 166, at page 273, in the office of the Re gister of Deeds of Vance County, North Carolina, substituting the un dersigned as trustee in the said Deed of Trust, I shall sell by public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash, at the Courthouse door in Henderson, North Carolina, on, Tuesday, Novem ber 5, 1935, at 12 o’clock, noon, the following, described real estate: Ist Tract: Begin at a stake 108 ft. from corner of Hughes Allen and Ransom Street; run thence along Rantsom street N 60 feet to a stake, thence West along Ross line 120 feet to a stake; thence S. parallel with Ransom street 60 feet to a stake, thence East 120 feet to place of be ginning. For further description see deed from Henderson Loan and Real Estate Company to Willie Jackson, duly recorded in book 134, page 254, Register’s Office of Vance County. N. C. 2nd Tract: Begin at a stake on Hughes Street, Richard Northington’s corner; run thence along Northing ton line 108 ft. to a stake, Northing ton back corner in Willie Jackson line; thence along Willie Jackson line 10 ft. to a stake in Jackson and Solomon line; thence along Solomon line 23 ft. to a stake, Solomon line corner; thence along Solomon’s back line 54 ft. to a stake in Solomon line corner lot No. 4; thence along line of lot No. 4, 84 ft. to Hughes street, thence along Hughes Street 65 ft. to place of beginning. For further de scription see deed from Henderson Loan and Real Estate Company to Willie Jackson, duly recorded in Book 156, page 20, Register’s office of Vance County, N. C. This sth day of October, 1935. AL. B. WESTER, Substitute Trustee. Gholson and Gholson, Attorneys. Henderson, N. C. BE A PRINTER Hundreds of bright young men and young women are graduating from high schools. In a few years some of them will be leaders in great indus trial projects. PRINTING is among America’s greatest industries. Pre pare yourself to enter this great in dustry by taking from eight to ten months training in the SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF PRINTING, Write V. V. Garriott, Director for catalog giving complete information- Ad dress: 1514-16 South Street, Nash ville. Tennessee W. C. CATES 8 Insurance AGENT FOR STRONG MUTUALS Phones: Office 800—Residence 431 I WANT ADS Get Results FOR SALE—'HOUSES SIX AND seven room houses Belle and Hamil ton streets. Apply F. B. Hight. 12-2 LOST— BOY’S ALL WOOL BROWN sweater, slip-over zipper style. Re ward for return. Phone 758-J. 3-ti LITTLE RED SEED WHEAT FOR sale $1.50 per bushet. J. H. Brewer, Townsville, N. C. 8-10-12-14 CALL US WHEN YOU WANT choice Western meats or Ballard’s flour. Complete stock of staple and fancy groceries. “M” System Store. Phone 177-J. 30-ts ATTRACTIVE PRICES FOR A short time. Brirklcy Photo Studio, 228 Winder street. Tues.Thuns-Sat. Winder street. Tues-Tliurs-3at.-tf FOR SALE TWO NICE FRESH four gallon Guernsey milk cows. Ap ply to C. W. Finch, 12-2tl LOOK!—817 N. GARNETT STREET, Buy here and save money. Motor oil 11c to 20c qt. Greases, patching. Al so White Gas for cars and trucks, stoves, lamps, etc. 10-3 ti FOR RENT 5 room apartment with heat ing plant. E. G. DAVIS & SONS CO. THE TALK OF THE TOWN— DOW ney Flakes doughnuts. Made fresh before your eyes. See them made on the automatic machine in our win dow, take some home —23c per dozen, six for 15c. Two doughnuts and cup of coffee 10c. Special for Saturday one doughnut free wi*h every cup of coffee. Vance Case. 11-2 ti FOUND SHELL RIM GLASSES. Owner can get same by paying 50c for this ad. Apply at Dispatch of fice. 12-2 ti LF ITS BUILDING MATERIALS, paints, heaters or cook stoves? It . will pay you to visit “The Place of Values.” Alex S. Watkins. “Where quality tells and prices sell.’’ 1-tr | I HAVE OPENED A NEW typewriter and adding ma chine repair shop over Jef ferson Case. Seventeen years experience, factory training, all work guaranteed. S. P. Ellington. 21-Wed-Sat_tf. I WISH TO ANNOUNCE TO MY friends that I am now with Wes. tor’s Stables on Wyche street selling and trading horses, mules and cows. I will be glad to have my friends call to see me. A. P. Paschall. 8-sti dm °’ Lary ’ 8 Garage Sl-llour Mechanical and Wrecker Service. Telephone 470-J. I All Forms of ma, INSURANCE RENTALS REAL ■ ESTATE Al. B. Wester Phone 139-J | FORECLOSURE SALE. By virtue of authority vested in undersigned as trustee in a certain deed of trust executed by P. s. Davis dated December 18, 1933, and recorded in Book 147, Page 126, Register of Deeds office of Vance County; de fault having been made in the pay ment of the debt therein secured, up on request of the holder of the same I will offer for sale by public auc tion for cash, at the court house door in Henderson, N. C., on Monday the 14th day of October, 1935, the follow ing described property Begin at a stone Linehans line, cor ner of lot No. 3, in Geo. Hughes division, near Greystone, run West along the line lot No. 3, 522 feet to a stone in the Linehan line, thence S 418 feet to a stake or stone, thence E 522 feet to a stone in the Linehan line, thence N 118 feet to place of he. ginning, being 50 acres more or less, see deed A. A. Bunn and wife to I'. S. Davis dated Dec. 18, 1933. This mortgage is given to secure the bal ance of the purchase price for said land. This 13Lh day of September, 1935. A. A. BUNN, Trustee. NOTICE. The undersigned having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Mrs. Laura D. Collins, lately of Vane* County, N. C., this is notice to all persons having claims against the said estate to exhibit them to the un dersigned, or his Attoreys, in Hen derson, N. C., on or before Octobar sth, 1936, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This sth day of October. 1935. A. W. CHOLSON, JR., Administrator of Mrs. Laura D. Collins. Gholson and Gholson, Attorneys. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer. tain Deed of Trust executed by B. B. Bragg and wife, Maylon C. Bragg, recorded in Book 151, at page 150. in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County, and under the au thority contained in that certain judgment recorded in Book 166, at page 273, in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds of Vance County, North Carolina, substituting the undersign ed as trustee in the said Deed of Trust, I shall sell by public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Courthouse