Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / March 7, 1936, edition 1 / Page 3
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Coil trotted Inflation Is r Possible, Economist Says Chapel Hill, March 7—That the fed eial government has adequate safe guards for controlling inflation, stumid an emergency arise, was the opinion expressed here last night by p... jonn B. Woosley of the University School of Commerce in an address be for the Chapel Hill Rotary Club. Introduced by Rotarian Milton Ho u;ln of the Bank of Chapel Hill, Dr. Woosley discussed the underlying principles of inflation movements, de scribed methods that may be used to expand or contract the currency, and concluded tht “there is no reason at present, so far as I can see, for being alarmed about the possibilities of in flation.” •While it is believed that the Unit ed States could finance an inflation equal to that of the war period through the printing press or expand ed bank credit, no considerable infla tion is likely under the present ad ministration in Washington,” Dr. CURB MARKET SALE IN FEBRUARY GOOD Durham, March 7—“ l was parti cularly proud of the home demon stration curb market sales during the month of February in spite of the bad weather and the worse roads,” said Miss Rose Ellwood Bryan, home agent of the State College Extension Service. The \ural club members brought their products to market each Satur day. she said, and sold during the month $1,603.32 worth of eggs, poul try, cakes, meat, butter, fruits, Vege tables, canned goods, flowers, and the like. The produce was purchased by 1,150 buyers, most of whom were Durham housewives. NOTICE OF SALE. Under ana by virtue of the power and authority contained in that cer tain Deed of Trust executed iby Sid ney Hargrove and Lucy Hargrove, his wife, recorded in the office of the Re gister of Deeds of Vance County, North Carolina, in Book 172, at page 217, default having been made in the payment of the debt therein secured, at the request of the holder of the note, the undersigned trustee will of fu for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Court house door in Henderson, North Car olina. on Tuesday, April 7, 1936, the following described real estate: That tract of land in Nutbush Township acquired by Sidney Har grove as set out in Book 9, at page 237 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County which tract of land was finally divided by court de cree as recorded in Deed Book 139 at pages 311 and 312 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County and by which decree Sidney Hargrove was allotted 61 and 4.10 acres as shown by platt recorded in Deed Book 139 at page 313, designated as Tract | 'A in the office of the Register of Daeds office of Vance County. How ever, 22 and 8.10 acres of this land, fey deed recorded in Book 139 at pages 492, 403 and 404, as platted in Plat Book B, page 32, office of the Register of Deeds of Vance County, was sold to Robert E. i-icott. This deed of trust therefore, conveys herein the remain ing 38 and 6.10 acres of the said Sid ney Hargrove. See all deeds and plats and references herein for further de scriptions. This the 7th day of March, 1936. T. P. GHOLSON, Trustee. I A DOLLAR'S WORTH 1 £ Clij> this coupon and mail it with $1 for a six weeks’ trial subscription to 4 j; THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR ] ► Published by The Christian Pcibnce Publishing Society * *, Boston, Massachusetts, U. S. A. 4 t In It you will find the daily good news of the world from its 800 special writers, as well as departments devoted to women’s and children’s interests, sports, music. 4 r finance, education, radio, etc. You will be glad to welcome Into your home so fearless an advocate of peace and prohibition. And don’t miss Snubs, Our Dog, * and the Sundial ar.d the other features. 4 ► The Christian Science Monitor, Back Bay Station. Boston. Mass. 1 Hease send me a six weeks' trial subscription. I enclose one dollar ($1). , ► 1 £ '-Q, (Name, please print) I°*%* : < (Address) 4 l %% « L •£. -* (Town) (’State) 4 L.A.A.A.A «. »■ A,A.A.A.A.A-A.A.A.A.A.A A ♦ A ,A^A.A.A.A.A.A.j Well Known PRACTIPEDIST will tell you how to STOP FOOT PAINS mrr information fKLt NO OBLIGATION We have been fortunate in securing the services of MrG. A. Meacham, practipedist, of the Jung Arch Brace Co., Cincm nati, who will be in our store &All Day, Monday March 9th He is here to give you information on relief and correction of foot pains, acKes, tiredness, , calluses, corns, bunions, - excessive perspiration* ingrown toenails, and other foot ailments. Jupg Service We offer a complete foot re lief service, with a complete stock of Jung Foot Aids, popularly priced and guar anteed to give relief. When you use Jung Foot Aids you are SURE of relief. Parker’s Drug Store Henderson, N. Carolina I Woosley said. "All bills aimed in this direction, such as the Patman bill have been killed.” Showing how inflation could be caused through expanded bank credit, through tho C ° Uld bG brousht *bout through the reserve ratio being low “We could have an expansion in bank credit of from 60 to 80 millions and sfd l within the legal reserve hmu requirements,” he said eX ? GSS reserves - he explained, are due to the open market opera nd Pederal Reserve banks nd the heavy gold imports in the re cent months. To check inflation, the Federal Re serve banks might begin selling secu nties on the open market, increase the rediscount rate, and raise their reserve requirements, he said. Trying To Prevent Commercialization Os N. C. Game Fish Daily Dispatch Bnreaa „ In I The Sir Walter Hotel, By J. C. B4SKERVILL Raleigh, March 7. —Game and fish protectors of North Carolina are mak ing a determined effort to put an end to illegal commercialization of game fish, one of the greatest handicaps to the development and maintenance of good angling, John D. Chalk, state game commission, said today. Mr. Chalk pointed out that it is il legal to sell game fish in North Caro lina. The species on which a ban has been placed include black bass, trout, ibream, crappie, robin, blue gill, gog gle-eye, and flier perch. In addition to the State law on the subject, iMr. Chalk said it is also a federal offence to sell black bass where this is prohibited by state law. The commissioner said that there is a growing and insistent public de mand in North Carolina for the pro tection of game fish and that the de partment is receiving strong encour agement in its program to protect this type of wildlife. Protectors in various parts of the state, he continued, have conducted prosecutions recently on charges of sale of game fish and their efforts will be continued. Announce Prizes On Livestock for 4-H Club Projects College Station, Raleigh, March 7 National prizes to be awarded this year in 4-H club livestock projects were announced today by L. R. Har riil, state elub leader at State College. The prizes are offered bona fide 4-H club members engaged in baby beef, purebred beef animals, market hog, breeding hog, market' sheep, or other livestock projects. In each county the winner will be awarded a gold-filled medal of hon or. The state winner will receive a 17-jewel gold watch valued at SSO. Four sectional winners, from the east, south, central, and west, will be given trips to the National Club Con gress at Chicago, and the three high est in the national contest wil lre ceive college scholarships valued at S3OO, S2OO and SIOO respectively. Stevenson Monday and Tuesday "ANYTHING With Bing Crosby, Ethel Merman and Chas. Ruggles Stevenson Wednesday Only mbT • Bu ' ■■■ • l |V Gene Raymond and Margaret Callahan in “Seven Keys to Baldpate” Stevenson Thursday and Friday pXv.jXv • a*-' • '»v»> «Keep that twinkle in your eye!” is this brave little colleen’s chant, and the title of the hit song JANE WITHERS sings in her grand new Fox picture, “Paddy O’Daylt’s crammed with song, laughter, fun and heart : :tgf. Stevenson Saturday Only JjjjjM BOSE OF THE RANCHO March Is Time to Start Garden for Early Vegetables College Station, Raleigh, March 7 A number of garden crops set out in March will supply the family with fresh vegetables during the spring and summer. Such cool season crops aB cabbage, HENDERSON, (N. C.)_ DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1936. lettuce, garden peas, beets carrots, onions, and Irish potatoes should be planted early in the month in Pied mont and Eastern North Carolina, say extension horticulturists at State College. With favorable weather, tomato seed may be sown in outdoor, cloth covered frames during the first week or 10 days of March, the horticultu rists continued. i n the Piedmont the date is a week or 10 days later, and in the mountains it is around the first of April. ... Middleburg. Teams Will Play Henderson in Last Home Appearance The basketball curtain on the home season .for Henderson high school boys and girls basketball teams will be rung down Monday night when the teams meet Middleburg in a doubleheader on the High Price court at 7:30 o’clock. In a former meeting, the local lads dropped their game to Middleburg, but the girls eked out a 17-16 win. Coaches Pigford and Crosby have been working the beams to the ut most, and they, hope for a double victory. Monday night. The Middleburg boys are consider ed quite strong, having been in the district elemination race and the ACC tournament at Wilson. GIRL GAGERS GET ANOTHER VICTORY Henderson girls chalked up anoth er basketball win last night, defeat ing Aycock high school 25 to 17. This was the second win in as many starts for the local lassies, and the team proved itself superior to last night’s visitors. r /he girls will play their final home game of the season Monday night with Middleburg. DICK HARLOW LIKES CAROLINA’S METHODS Chapel Hill, March 7—Dick Harlow, Harvard’s head football coach, is fav orably impressed with the methods be ing followed in spring football prac tice at the University of North Caro lina. Here to observe the processes em ployed by Coach Carl Snavely and his assistants at Carolina and to ex change views, Coach Harlow said to day he liked especially the competi tive spirit of the candidates. Telephone Decisions For April (Continued from Page One.) required for Judge Cowper, to study and digest them, Winbome said. Lengthy Trial. This rate case is the outgrowth of the order issued by the Utilities Com mission more than a year ago, order ing the Southern Bell Telephone ana Telegraph Company to reduce its rates in North Carolina by approxi mately 15 per cent and thus save tele phone users in the State at least $300,- 000 a year. The telephone company re fused to obey the order and appealed to the courts. The case was tried (be fore Judge Cowper several months ago'in a. trial that lasted some seven weeks and in which more than 1,000,- 000 words of testimony were heard. Since the close of the trial, Judge Cow per has been studying the record, pending the submission of briefs by both sides. Arranging for Date. At the present time, Judge Cowper has only two weeks open in which he could preside over another special term to hear additional oral argu ments and hand down a decision, Com missioner Winborne said today. These are the weeks of iMSarch 23 and of April 27. The Utilities Commission is now communicating with Judge Cow per asking him to set the special term for the final disposition of the rate case for one of these two dates and is hoping he will select the week of March 23. If Judge Cowper rules for the State and the Utilities Commission, the telephone company will be compelled to disgorge more than $300,000 it has collected in excess of the rates order ed by the commission since January 1, 1935. Wishes for Telephone TVA. It would be a fine thing for tele phone users in North Carolina and all over the country, if the Tennessee Valley Authority could build telephone lines and set up telephone exchanges in addition to power lines and dams, Utilities Commissioner Stanley Win iborne pointed out here today, since if the TVA had this power, telephone rates would already have been re duced in the same proportion that electric rates have been cut and with out long delays and expensive litiga tion. . “If the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company had the threat of some competition from some agency like the TVA, it would have acted as have all the power companies and reduced their rates long ago, in stead of fighting in court the rate re duction the State Utilities Commis sion ordered more than a year ago,” Commissioner Winborne said. “Thus the users of Bell telephone service alone would have been saved more than $300,000 in excessive telephone charges last year and even more this year, since their business has been steadily increasing this pas? year in spite of the excessive rates charged. When we issued the order for the re duced rates, the Southern Bell com pany had about 70,000 subscribers in North Carolina. We now have reason to believe that they have nearer 80,- 000 suibscribers now than 70,000.” Lower Bates Help. It is rather paradoxical, but one reason for the increased number of Bell telephone subscribers is undoubt edly due to the fact that many people have the impression that the rates have been reduced, in accordance with ithe commission’s order, and accord ingly have put in telephones, Win borne said. So the result is that the ; order for lower rates has actually helped the business of the Bell com pany, increased its revenue and thus made it better able to put into effect a substantial reduction in rates. If the Bell telephone company would - go ahead and reduce its rates, ’it would have the same results as the reduced rates by the power compan ies have had, namely result in more users of telephones and a greater vol ume of business, Commissioner Win borne is convinced. But so far, the telephone company is standing pat. Grave Chn» For Europe k Raised by Action of Hitler (Continued from Page Ona.) government cancelled all army leaves today as German troops moved into the Rhineland. The military decision resulted from a conference of high officials which also started drafting- a formal protest to the League of Nations against Ger many’s deunciation of the Locarno treaty. The note was being supervised by Foreign Minister Flandin at the same time that Premier Albert Sarraut call ed the French “war council” into ses sion. French officials declared the de cision to proceed before the League Council was particularly appropriate, because Germany, under the Locarno treaty, is barred from the Rhineland r.one. Simultaneously, French officials disclosed that General Bertrand Puzo had been placed in command of tne French aerial defenses of the Rhine land, with orders to perfect his or ganization by March 15. Announcement of the German de cision precipitated an immdeiate con ference of high officials as Foreign Minister Flandin called British, Ital ian, Belgian and German ambassadors for a session this afternoon. HITLER’S ACTION BRINGS GRAVE CRISIS TO GENEVA ‘ Geneva, March 7.—(AP)—League of Nations circles declared today that Adolf Hitler’s deunciation of the Lo carno treaty had precipitated a grave political crisis which made the Italo- Ethiopian war insignificant in com parison. League officials predicted an early extraordinary session of the Council— possibly together with the Assembly —in a great world peace conference, called in an attempt to draft a sub stitute for the Versailles as well as the Locarno treaties. Chamber In Criti cisms Os Taxation (Continued from Page One.) “the outlines of this gigantic under taking” are still “too weighty” to “permit of determining its broad sweep,” but it said there was “indica tion of many difficulties.” “There is much doubt of their fea sibility,” the Chamber added, in com menting on the President’s proposals. Searching questions are being asked as to this and that possible effect and as to “methods of photecting business firms and the country from possible danger.” STEVENSON . MONDAY W OOC*•) ■rl 'll nin r crosby / IrM ETHEL MERMAN / m:m-m. PLUS COMEDY—AND METRO NEWS WEDNESDAY ONLY GENE RAYMOND MARGARET CALLAHAN “SEVEN KEYS TO BALDPATE” JACK POT THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY ■ First outdoor musical k \V' romance of the * retklets days of *491 til lIM . tmvtimr * Thrilling Rainger & JANE WITHERS t Robin music sung by PINKY TOMLIN • the golden-voiced iff RITAi.CANS.INO Gladys Swarthout |1 JANE DARWEIL 1 n iM QROROB PIVOT qnd Joh>> Bole>< PAGE THREE PHQTQELAYS Stevenson Saturday Night 11 p. m. Also Sunday night at 9 p. m. p CLAIRE TREVOR IjflSl RALPH Ijf BELLAMY UjjL WVkATHUEN / I y NORRIS’S igi rmite •NT - -. • »**.... . . *.. i I Moon Theatre ■ Everybody 11 and 16tf r| MONDAY ONLY m TOM KEENE— H ELEANOR WHITNEY— M DICKIE MOORE— -1 “TIMOTHY QUEST” rjjH Pathe News Cash Now .SIO.OO TUESDAY ONLY M RICHARD DlX—in “THE ARIZONIAN”
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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March 7, 1936, edition 1
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