Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Jan. 6, 1936, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR Hi NOEBSON DAILY DISPATCH (established August 12. 1»U * Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by HF.N PERSON DISPATCH CO., INC. at 109 Young Street HENRY A. DENNIS. Pres, and Editor M. L. FINCH. Sec.-Treas.. Bus. Mgr. TELEPHONES Editoria! Office Society Editor 610 Business Office 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 republieation 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 Bix Months “r: Three Months Weekly (by Carrier Only) 15 Per Copy • National Advertising Representatives FROST, LANDIS & KOHN. 250 Fark Avenue, New York 560 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 SEIZING OUR OPPORTUNITIES: See then that yc walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as w’isc, redeeming the time, because the days arc evil. —Ephesians 5:15. 16. TODAY jr TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1412 —Joan of Arc. the remarkable girl whose heroism and devotional fer vor inspired the French, born. Burn ed as a heretic, May 30, 1431. 1807 —Joseph llolt, kentucky lawyer, postmaster-general, secretary of war, Lincoln’s judge-advocate-gcncral, born in Breckenridgc Co., Ky. Died Aug. I. 1894. ■ .1811 —Charles Sumner. Massachu setts' great senator, orator, writer, anti-slavery champion, horn in Bos ton. Died March 11, 1574. 1822—Heinrich Schlicmann, famed German archaeologist, born. Died Dec. 26, 1890. 1832 —Gustave Dorc, celebrated Frrench artist, born. Died Jan. 20, 11883. 1536 —(100 years ago) Truman H. Safford, noted astronomer-mathemati cian. connected with Harvard, the University of Chicago, and Williams College, born at Royalton, V t. Died at Newark, N. .1., June 13, 1901. 1842 —Clarence King, geologist and mining engineer of the Ear West, or ganizer and director of the U. S. Geo logical Survey, horn at Newport, R. | Died at Phoenix, Ariz... Dee. 24, 1901 TODAY IN HISTORY 1821 —Indianapolis so-named by Leg islature in second year of its existence 1838—Morse made his first experi ment in telegraphy in a Speedwell, N J. factory room, with three miles of coiled copper wire stretched around room. 1872 —Col. James Fisk, notorious Wall Street broker, shot in New York City by Edward S. Stokes —great scandal in those days. 1912—New Mexico admitted to Statehood as the 47th state. 1919 —Died Theodore Roosevelt, 26th president, at Oyster Bay, N. Y., aged 61. TODAY’S BIRTIIDAY’S U. S. Senator Duncan U. Fletcher of Florida, born in Sumter Co., Ga„ 77 years ago. Admiral Hugh Rodman, U. S. N., retired, horn at Frankfort, Ky., 77 years ago. Judge Ferdinand Pecora of New York, horn in Italy, 54 years ago. Carl Sandburg of Herbert. Mich., poet-author, horn at Galesburg, 111.. 58 years ago. Felix Morlcy of Washington, D. C. newspaper editor, born at Haverford, Pa., 42 years ago. Tom Mix. screen star, horn in El Paso Co.. ’lex., 56 years ago. Alice H. Wadsworth of Geneseo, N. Y., woman leader, horn in Cleveland, 56 years ago. Horace M. Albright of New York City, former director of the National Park Service, horn at Bishop, Cal., 46 years ago. TODAY'S HOROSCOPE A kind and sympathetic nature, adaptable to circumstances, is indicat ed for today. With good commercial abilities, high-minded and suave, the fortunes will probably he good. Un der circumstances, however, there is danger of being wronged by others, owing to the sympathetic nature. #,Stamr ALBUMS®! Argentina issued this stamp in 1930 to commemorate the 437th tajOiversary of the discovery of l*i Columbus. Today is the Day By CLARK KINNAIRD Copy right, 1936, for this Newspaper by Central Press Association Monday, Jan. 6. —Epiphany Hand sel Monday. Pioneers’ Day in Libe ria. Tcbet 11, 5696 in Jewish calen dar. 21th anniversary of the admis sion to the Union of New Mexico, the 47th State. Epiphany still is the day observed as Christmas in Bulgaria, Jugoslavia, Ethiopia and other countries adher ing to the old style religious calen dar. Similarly, in the Delaware, Maryland and Virginia peninsula and sections of the Carolinas where the early England stock still predominate, the families wait until Jan. 6, to hang up their Christmas stockings and ob serve the Nativity. When the pre sent calendar was adopted. Christmas was changed from Jan. 6 back to Dec. 25. TODAY’S YESTERDAYS Exactly 1400 Years Ago—Two monks came from "the Indies” to Constantinople, bringing with them the secret of the manufacture of silk and the first silkworms to be smug gled out of China. The silkworms did not thrive, but a means was found to bring out more raw silk and work men instructed in the art of manu facture carried it thence into Italy and throughout Europe. For centu ries it was an offense punishable by death to take one silk worm from China. This happening of 1,400 years ago today is of importance in American history. For European princes and lthe : > ladies (eventually become so used to silk finery that when troubles in (he Near East interfered with caravan transportation of it, kings were moved to send navigators to try to find a sea route to the East for the traders, and the discovery of the OTHERS’ VIEWS FORMER PASTOR OBSERVES HENDERSON AGAIN. To the Editor: The funeral of a good friend gave me some weeks ago the occasion to. look over Henderson and to reflect on the changes brought by the Ihu j teen years since I left the city, whei* 1 spent nearly ten years as pastor of | llio First Baptist church, it was a joy to meet many of the friends of other days, and to be present at the mid-week prayer service, and to hear the Thanksgiving sermon of Pastor A. S. Hale. 1 found him delightfully popular, and 1 could well understand it after being in his home and hear ing him preach. The growth and im provement of the city in so short a time astonishes and bewilders one. Several reflections growing out of my late contacts with place and peo ple may seem worth while for your readers: 1. T was impressed anew that god liness and t l>e commonplace virtues, pay enormous dividends in the long fun. The influence and training of godly parents actually show through the years. In general 1 found the “pillars of the church” standing solid. The children of the pillars as 1 knew them*twenty years ago arc growing into the pillars of today and tomor row. I saw in the choir three from the same family, and 1 could not for got their godly parents of two de cades ago and the lasting fruitage of that Christian home. By and large it will he found, despite the cynics, that where the true Christian home and the ehureh get a good chance to func tion in character building it stands the test, of the passing decades. 2. I saw anew the tragedy of neg lecting religion and these common place virtues. On the streets and in j places of business 1 chanced upon | convincing evidence. A man spoke to me whose features slowly came hack. I remembered that long ago things were getting shaky in his home. Long ago the home had .broken, he told me, and the child had grown up limping and saddened from the wound dealt. him by a father and mother who owed him the joint sup port of their love and training in a real home. I chanced to meet a nianlwhuin I knew casually and liked a decade and a. half ago. likable, generous, a fond, indulgent father. Once I ventured to ask him if he did not fear to indulge his hoy so far. to gratify every wish. I had often wondered what the re sult. would he, I lie more since the father did not follow .strictly the way of the sterner virtues (I omit any de ail |o identify him). With deep in terest I asked him about the hoy. Pitifully and decidedly he answered, “lie has grown up utterly worthless and had." Aiml I reflected again, "What a tragedy for parent and teacher and society to miss a chance wit It a life!” 3. I met new evidence that, of all things in the world, a. little kindness pays I lie largest dividends. People here and there told me of trivial acts of kindness completely gone from my memory that had held their gratitude through all the years. A neighbor said once lie was sick and l came with some hoys and shoveled the snow from his door. Why should I remem ber such a commonplace? 1 sat at a table to a Thanksgiving dinner, and my gracious hostess told me of the fine hoy absent in college in another slate, where lie is making an admir able record. Sin; (old me gratefully as she let me read his last, beautiful letter, that my last act as her pastor before leaving (own was to come (o see the little boy, then quite sick, and pray for him. She let me feel that forgotten trifle had made me in s measure the happy owner of a share of stock in that fine family. Why not all of its invest daily in a few trifling acts of kindness and win dividends as lasting as eternity? S. L. MORGAN. Creed moor, January, 1, 1936. P. S.—The only thing to mar my visit was dropping somewhere a red little memorandum hook, valueless to oth ers. but invaluable to me for Its full _ data about two church congregations HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1936. JANUARY sun mon ivi. wco"ihu nttAi Sj ■ |4t I O A T 8 9 1011 <lls 18 1718 I 22 23 24 25 8 29 30 3 I new continent resulted. Jan. 6, 1412—Jeanne or Joan Dare, incorrectly called Joan of Arc, was born at Domremy, France, the daughter of noble parents who gave her to a peasant family to raise. She was 17 when she became the victori ous leader of the French army; 10 when she was burned at stake by the French clergy. One of the counts upon which she was found guilty of heresy was that she didn’t like to wear silk, but preferred rough, man nish attire. Jan. 6, 1811—Charles Sumner was born in Boston, destined to become a senator at 40 and the leader of the fight in Congress on slavery. After the war on slavery was won, Sum ner became the bitter foe of U. S. Grant, who won it. One day when George F. Hoar was passing Sum ner’s house in Washington with Pres ident Grant, Hoar, casually remark ed that Sumner didn’t believe in the Bible. “Os course not,” said Grant, “he didn’t write it.” Jan. 6. 1896 —Discovery of what he named X-rays tbecause of the uncer tainty of their nature) was reported by 50-ycar-old Wilhelm Konrad Ront gen, German physicist. The discov ery was an accident, and X-rays were not thought of as treatments for ail ments until they had been discover ed to be injurious to health! They were first used medically to cure a hairy mole. FIRST WORLD WAR DAY-BY-DAY 20 Years Ago Today—Lieut. Gen. Sir Fenton John Aylmer. 54. author of an important tactical study on Pro tection in War. practised some of his preachings .with success. With all available units of two Indian dibi slons dispatched from France for an expedition to relieve Townsend’s army besciged in Kut-el-Amara, he forced h‘ battle upon the Turks at Sheikh Sa’d on the Tigris and defeated them with heavy losses. The War Office had been as lax as usual in providing proper support, and he did not have the powerful ar tillery necessary for turning the de feat into a rout. His enemy remain ed strong enough to block his imme diate hopes of cutting his way to Kut. IT’S TRUE Sha Jaharv. who built the Taj Ma hal as a tribute to hi,s favorite wife, Muiiil.t/ Mahal, and made it one of Ihe world’s supreme architectural achievement % was deposed by his son for bis wastefulness. (The Taj Mahal,. India’s most famous building, was not designed hv an Indian. It is the work of Utad Isa, a Turk.) In 1929. Joseph Dunningcr trans mitted a message telepatliically to an audience assembled by a national radio hookup and asked listeners to tell him what it was. Fifty five per cent sent in correct answers. The sun’s heal is used for cooking in a solcT. stove used for getting reg ular moats in Moscow. There is a spring which gushes mil lions of gallons of fresh mineral wa ter from the bod of the ocean a short distance offshore, nine miles below St. Augustine, Fla., and the water may he scooped up separately from seawater. Not. the hot Summer hut January is the worst month for hydrophobia. There are more eases of mad-dogs in lhe record for the coldest month than for the warmest. Queries, reproofs, etc., arc welcom ed by Clark Kinnaird, OXFORD APPROVES PHONE FRANCHISE City Commissioners Okay 25-Year Contract With Carolina Company Oxford, Jan. C—A franchise for the fCarolinti Telephone and Telegraph company to operate in Oxford for 25 years passed its third reading and granted by the city of Oxford Friday night at "a called meeting of the board of city commissioners. An agreement was reached where by the privilege tax of $1 per pole would he repealed provided that the company establish and operate with out charge a. fire alarm system throughout the city, and to grant the city nine telephones which would be used for municipal purposes only. It is understood that within a shoi t. time, the fire alarm system, together with the dial telephone system, will he established in Oxford. Mayor J. A. Taylor president at the meeting Frilay night, the city com missioners being Cameron Easton. D T. Currin, D. F. Lanier, J. P- Harris. J. W. Medford, and J. E. Pittard. _______ 10 HENDERSON BOYS ATTEND N. C. STATE College Station. Raleigh, Jan. 0— ’Fen Henderson students arc listed among the 1.246 student scnrolled at North Carolina State College this year, according to information releas ed by the College registrars office The Henderson students at State College rank in years from freshmen to seniors and arc represented in many of the departments and schools on the campus. A number of them are prominently engaged in many lead lug campus activities. Th e Henderson students, their year and the course they arc pursuing are as follows: John B. Bullock, fresh man in the electrical engineering de partment; S. P. Cooper, Jr., fresh man, agriculture; H. R. Crawford, freshman, mechanical engineering; William W. Green, freshman, electri cal engineering; A. G. Lancaster, sophomore, textiles; Francis Martin, junior, tevtilcs; L. T. May, freshman, chemical engineering; Gus Palmer, sophomere, ceramic engineering; and Robert S. Watson, Jr., senior, elec trical engineering. 1914 Ford’s $5.00 daily wage am nouncement startled country and first • brought him into the public eye. ZSL Likely To Speak in Winston Following Snubs i*n His Home Town. Ilnll? DlN|»nt«’h llureaw. In The Sir Walter Hotel, II v J. C. ll ASKIOIt VIM. Raleigh, Jan. 6. —Senator Josiah W. Bailey is believed more likely to ac cept tlie invitation extended kirn by the Wilsonian Democratic Club of Winston-Salem to address their Jack son Day dinner Wednesday night, than any other, especially since many still think that Congressman Frank Hancock of the fifth district, which includes Forsyth county, may become a candidate for the Senate against Bailey. The Durham County Young Democratic Club invited Senator Bailey to be the principal speaker at the Jackson Day dinner there, but the senator declined on the grounds that he would not be able to leave his duties in Washington at that time. It is also understood that he indicated he might not .be able to be in Win ston-Salem for the same reason. But political observers here are in clined to believe that if it is at all possible. Senator Bailey will find a way to be present at the dinner in Winston-Salem. For if Congressman Hancock does decide to become a can didate for the Senate, Bailey will have need of all the good will and all the votes lu* can get from the coun ties in the fi(th district —and Forsyth is the , populous comity in the district. The fact that Senator Bailey was not ystyed to speak at the Jack son Day dinner in Wake <• Aunty" bis home county—or in Guilford county. • regarded as the seat of his political j organization with LeUoy Shaping as one of his principal lieutenants, is re garded by some, as indicating that Bailey will he more inclined than ever i to accept I tie Winston-Salem invlta j lion. Others, however, think that since he was more or less snubbed by i the Wake and Guilford Young Demo crats, he will probably not attended any of the Jackson Day dinners in the State. F i The recent announcement hv Solici tor Allen T. Gwynn, of Reidsville, that lie will be a candidate for Con * gross from the fifth district, the one | which Congressman Hancock now re presents. is regarded by a good many as indicating .Hancock will be a can didate against Senator Bailey, For many here who know both Congress man Hancock and Solicitor Gwynn regard them both as liberals and both as strongly pro-Ncw Deal. According ly. it is dif/i/ult for many ,h.evt to be lieve that Gwynn would animmicc as a candidate, for',the seat in; Congress now held bV'Hancock uhlc.4s he felt pretty sure Hancock'was going to run for some other post, presumably the Senate scat now hold by Senator Bailey. There are those, however, who maintained that Gwynn and Hancock are not as close as some think and that Gwynn is out for the fifth dis trict seat in Congress regardless of what. Hancock does. The smell of tobacco is clearly scent ed by some observers, who point out. Gywnn comes from Reidsville. home of sonic of the largest American To bacco Company factories, also that j Winston-Salem is in the fifth district, II is an open secret that Hancock -has not been and is not now popular with any of the tobacco companies, because of his advocacy of the Flan - nagan tobacco grading bill in the last 1 session of Congress. To Split Field. There arc some here who see the entry of Gwynn into the race for Con gress as a move friendly to Hancock and to split the field against him and Mi us lessen the chances of Allison James. Winston-Salem man who is al ready an announced candidate, of winning the nomination. For with both James and Gwynn opposing him, Congressman Hancock could easily win tlie renomination, some obser vers here maintain. But this is ad mitted to be the purest sort of poli tical speculation. At any rate! most observers here believe that whether Hancock decides to run against Senator Bailey or not, the senior senator needs all the sup port he can get from any section he can get it these days, and that he would not make a mistake if he should find it possible to attend and address the Jackson Day dinner in Winston-Salem Wednesday night. Molher of Mrs. John D. Cooper To Be Buried To morrow Afternoon. Mrs. A. C. Hinton, mother of Mrs. John D. Cooper, of Henderson, died in the forenoon today in a Raleigh hospital, where she had been under going, treatment for some time. Funeral services will be held at 3:30 o’clock Tuesday afternoon from the First Presbyterian church in Raleigli, of which the deceased had been a memlber for many years. Besides Mrs. Cooper, one other daughter. Mrs. Thad Page, of Wash ington, D. C., survives, together with three sons, A. G. and R. S. Hin-ton, both of Raleigh, aad Jack Hinton, of Crr.edmoor. OO’Lary’. Larage 24-lloiir Mechanical and Wrecker Service. Telephone 470-J. THE PATHS OF GLORY \\ ANSWERS TO TEN QUESTIONS .sVf Back I J (iyv 1. A triangular gable-cud, crowned with a raking cornice which fol lows the slope of its upper edges; or a silimar form used decoral ively. 2. The President, of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Rep resentatives. 3. The Amazon. 4. Karl Marx. f» # French philosopher and man of science. <5. Yes. 7. The Treaty or Guadalupe Hidalgo. 8. A professional rider of race-horses. 9_ Franz Liszt. t(). In making perfumes. Genuine goodness rests upon the knowledge and muatry of evil. NOTICE OF SALE. Pursuant to an order issued by the Clerk of ; (he Superior Court of Vance County. North Carolina, ill the Spe cial Proceeding docketed in the office of the said Clerk entitled “Leonard M. Hicks and wife, Ella llieks, Plain tiffs, vs. Vera 11. Grissom and hus band, A. T. Grissom; Edith H. Daniel and husband, Henry Daniel; James H. llieks and wife, Viola llieks; George VV. Hicks and wife, Vcrlic Moseley Hicks; Lucy H. Rideout and husband, J. L. Rideout; Elizabeth H. Edwards and husband, Boyd Edwards; Virgie H. Tucker (minor) and husband. James Tucker; and Frances Rose Hicks, (minor), Defendants,” and by the authority of the said order, the undersigned Commissioner will offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Court house door in Henderson, North Caro lina. at 12 o’clock noon, on Thursday, February 6, 1936, the following de scribed real estate: Described on the plot as share No. 7, containing 11.2 acres, assigned to (lie heirs of James W. Hicks, deceas ed, viz: Leonard, Vera, Edith, Jim, George, Lucy, Elizabeth, Virgie and Frances Hicks, same being described by metes and bounds as follows: Begin at a. stone in the S line of share No. 5; run thence S 81 deg. 30' E 792 feet (o a stone; thence S 1 deg. W 351 feet to a stone; thence .S 19 deg. 15’ W 681 feet to a stone, in the bottom near the creek; thence N 32 deg. 45’ W 693 feet to a stone; thence N 21 ( Jeg. 50' W 528 feet to place of beginning. This the 61b day of January, .1936. T. I*. GHOLSON. Commissioner. NOTICE OF SALE. Pursuant to an order issued by the CDi k of the Superior Court of Vauce County, North Carolina, in the Spe cial Proceeding docketed in the of fice. of the said clerk entitled “L. M. llieks, Administrator do bonis non of (lie Estate of J. W. Hicks, Deceased vs. Leonard M. Hicks and wife, Ella Hicks; Vera H. Grissom and hus band; A. T. Grissom; Edith H. Daniel and husband, Henry Daniel; James 11. Hicks and wife, Viola Hicks; George W. Hicks and wife, Verlie Mosely Hicks; Lucy H. Rideout and husband, J. L. Rideout; Elizabeth H. Edwards and husband, Boyd Ed wards; Virgie H. Tucker (minor) and husband, James Tucker; and Frances Rose Hicks (minor)”, and by the au thority of the said order, the under signed Commissioner will offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Courthouse door in Henderson, North Carolina, at 12 o’clock noon, on Thursday, Feb ruary 6, 1936, the following described real estate: Begin at a stone J. T. Hicks’ cor-, ner in Cooper line; thence S 12 1-2 W. 18.70 chains to a stone; thence N 88 W 16.74 chains to a stone; thence i N 12 1-1 E 18.10 chains to a stone, I Slainback’s corner; thence S 88 E 16.70 chains to (he beginning, con taining 30 acres. Reference is made i 11» P.nok 7», page .144, Vauce County Registry, for further description. . This I lie 6th day of January, 1936, T. I*. GHOLSON. j Commissioner. NOTICE OF SALE. Pursuant to an order issued by the , Clerk of the 'Superior Court of Vance i County, North Carolina, in the Spc j cial Proceeding docketed in die office j of tiie said Clerk entitled “L. M. I Hicks, Administrator of the Estate ' of Martha Paschah llieks. Deceased, vs. Leonard M. llieks and wife. Ella llieks; Vera H. Grissom and husband. A. T. Grissom. Ed ill) H. Daniel and husband, Henry Daniel: James H. llieks and wife, Viola Hicks; George W. llieks and wife, Verlie Mosely i llieks; Lucy H. Rideout and husband, J. L. Rideout; Elizabeth 11. Edwards ! and husband, Boyd Edwards; Virgie H. Tucker (minor) and husband, James Tucker; and Frances Rose llieks (minor).” and by the authority i of the said order, the undersigned ' Commissioner will offer for sale at ' public auction, to the highest bidder I for cash, at the courthouse door in | Henderson, Nortli Carolina, at 12 o'clock noon, on Thursday, February ■ 6, 1936, the following described real ! estate; It is that tract of 38 1-2 acres of land bought of C. W. Finch and oth ers Nov. 12, 1896, sec Record Boos 11. page 116, Vance County Register’s Offiee boundaries as follows: Begin at a stone James G. Rudd’s old corner in Shocco Creek and run thence N 87 W 145 poles to a stone Mrs. Peggy Rudd’s corner in R. J. Wortham’s old line; thcncc N 1 1-2 E 41 poles to a stone in Wortham line; thence E 146 poles to a stone in Rudd’s line; thence S 2 W 48 poles to the place of beginning, formerly known as the ol«l Boh Wright place. It is (he same land described in Deed Book 16. page 489. in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County. This the 6th day of January. 1936. T. P. GHOLSON, Commissioner. NOTICE. 1 The property hereinafter described having been offered for sale on the 271 h. day of December 1935 and a bid of $200.00 having been received for same an«| thereafter such hid having been raised to $220.00 and an order <>f re-sale having been made by the Clerk of 'Superior Court of Vance County: Now. pursuant to said order oT re-sale and pursuant |«_> the |,., n , s anil condition of that certain deed or I rust executed by Penny Kingsbury ami husband. Jo*' Kingsbury, dated (he 21st. January, 1931 of record Book 162 Page 317 Vance Registry, the un dersigned will offer for sale for cash to highest bidder at courthouse door in Vance, County at mid-day on Wed nesday 22nd. day of January 1936, the following described real property, viz: Begin at edge of Water street or road corner of lots 10 and 11, and run thence along said street or’ road s - 78 I ' 2 E 70 feet to corner of lots 11 and 12; thence along line of lot No. 12 N 7 degrees E 200 feet lo avenue; thence along the avenue *8 1-2 degrees W 70 feet to corner of lots 10 and 11; thence along line of lot No. It S 7 degrees W 200 feet to the beginning. , This 6th. January, 1936. D. P. McDUFFEE. Trustee. FOR RENT: THREE ROOM FUR nished apartment, first floor; four rooms unfurnished, private bath on two floors, garages, front and rear entrances. One block from Post Of fice. Mrs R. G. Bobbitt, 303 Wil liam street. g_2ti WANT ADS Set Results MERCHANTS NUMBER 138028 wins one thirty-two pieee dinner set free.. Ask us for particulars. R. E. Satlcrwhitc Co. 6-lti JUST RECEIVED A CARLOAD OF U. S. G. Asphalt shingles and roll roofing at “The Place of Values.” “Where quality tells and prices sell.” Alex IS. Watkins, Wholesale Retail. 6-11 i ’Aid, US WHEN YOU WANT chorne Western meals or Ballard's flour. Complete stock of staple and fanev groceries. *‘M" System Store. Phone 177-J. 28 If. SHIRT SALK ANOTHKR bijr shipment of Marlboro shirts. Special, SI.OO. All Jayson shirts on sale $1.55. See our windows, (100. A. Rose and Sons. 0-2 ti. W.E DON’T CARE HOW DIRTY your old hat is. we guarantee to make it look like new again for on ly 39c. Call us, 112-J. Baker’s. G-ts USED TIRES. ALL SIZES INCLUD ing twenty and twenty one inch. O’Lary’s Garage, North Henderson. 30 11 Just received a fresh stock of Red Top Plaster, finishing lime, Keene cement, rocklath and metal lath. Alex S. Watkins "The Place of Values.” 6-lti NOW GEl’ THE NEW PHTLCO battery radio for unwired home.'). You. 100. can have wonderful re ception. Sec it at Loughlin Good wyn. 25 If REPRESENTATIVE: MAN WITH some sales ability to represent lo cally, leading national concern in its field. Company rated AAA-1, Dun & Bradstreet; product firmly established throughout nation. Like ly minimum income $1,500 first year. Commission averages 20 per cent plus bonus. Excellent oppor tunity for right man to build per manent stable business for himself. Wrilc giving complete details about yourself. Address Box 235, Hender son, N. C. 6-lti NOTICE OF RE SALE. North Carolina: • Vance County: Directed by an order issued by H" Clerk of the Superior Court of Vance County, North Carolina, in a Special Proceedings entitled Al. B. Wester, Administrator of the Estate of Sarah Morris. Deceased vs. D. A. Thomas el al, which order is docketed in she of fice of the said clerk, an advance bid having been made as by law provided, and under further order of the Court. the undersigned Commissioner will on Monday, January 20th, 1936 at 12 o’clock noon at the Courthouse door in Henderson, N. C., again offer f<.i sale to Ihe highest bidder for cash, that certain real estate, lying ami br ing in Vance County. N. C.. and mure particularly described as follows: Beginning at an iron pin on Vaughn Street, M. T. Hawkins corner ami run thcncc along his line in a north west erly direction 150 feet to a pin, Haw kin’s new corner thence Northeast along Kittrell and Powell’s line 50 feet to a pin, Eaton’s old cornet : thence along Kittrell and Powell’s line and parallel to the first line 150 feet to a stone on Vaughn Street; t’ •nice along Vaughn Street in a Southwcst ly direction 50 feet to the place of be ginning. This 4th day of January. 1936. v HENRY T. POWELL. Commissioner,
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Jan. 6, 1936, edition 1
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