PAGE TWO * Ksat. ..... . Hendricks Fans 12, Allows v Four Hits; Play War renton Today With Hendricks in fine form despite the cold weather, Middleburg whip ped Oxford Orphanage yesterday aft ernoon at Middleburg 16 to 2, Hen drick fanning 12 visitors, allowing four hits in the seven inning game, Full fragrance, fine flavor, real body, have made MINT SPRINGS the value leader in the limited budget whiskey market; No wonder—it’s a Glenmore product! OSI rum ores ftlint Springs map*, ov 1 *•/«'1 /. Mi title cu. Ingredients From Sea, Soil, Mines Are Needed To Grow High-Priced Tobacco ■ Ilf | H ROM islands in HI lEJI the South Seas, i 111 l we import bird-guanos m for Robertson’s Fer (f tilizers. They contain many needed plant foods in valuable forms. SROM vast pits are mined the bones of prehistoric animals. They’re treated to make “digestible” superphos- , i phates so important to quality and yield. For different crops and soils, we choose from such materials as Sulphate of Ammonia, Nitrate of Soda, Urea, Bird Guano, Animal Tankage, Cottonseed-Meal, Vege table-Meal, Fish, Blood, Super phosphates, Sulphate of Potash, Muriate of Potash, Sulphate of Potash Magnesia. RobertsoK'S^^Fertilizers •OLORELIMLE 111 *j O INGREDIENTS ’ *COU> fSSitt#® IS* PACKED IN COTTON BAGS PROVEN FOR/sAU LAS FOR EVER Y C 1R O P cut short by cold. Middleburg batters, led by Hen drick, Jackson and Wrenn with three out of five each, touched Oxford hurlers for 17 safeties. McCullock got two of the visitors four hits. Middleburg will play Warrenton high at Middleburg this afternoon, and will go to Oxford Orphanage next Tuesday afternoon for a return game. Score by innings: R Oxford Orphanage .... 000 110 0 — 2 Middleburg 065 500 x—l 6 McCullock, Williams and Baggart; Hendricks and Watkins. Inscoe Will Probably Pitch; Game Set for 3:30 P. M. At League Park Henderson high school will prize off its baseball lid for the season Friday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock at League Park with Roxboro furnishing he op position to Coach Tom Fallwell’s charges. The game was originally scheduled for today at Roxboro, but was trans ferred here a'. t!:o rcruect of Roxboro officials. Claybourne Inscoe will probably get the nod for pitching duties with Mc- Ghee or Rideout behind the bat. Ayscue can be used as a reserve hur ler if need he. Weather has kept the boys idle much of the time during their train ing season. M’Donald Not To Clear Up “Error” (Continued from Page One.) owned some valuable property on which the Centenary Methodist church is now located and bought additional property from R. J. Rey nolds in the same block and gave all of this to this church for its present plant—the same church in which Dr. McDonald was at one time superin tendent of the Sunday school. It is es timated that this property was worth at least $500,000 and that if Mr. Gray had not given this to the Centenary Methodist church, that his property would have been on the Forsyth coun ty tax books at a figure in excess of $1,000,000. . ~4 ... ; Not All Listed. Dr. McDonald knows these facts now, of course, and could have known them before he made his speech by merely going to the trouble of look ing at the tax books in the same court house in which he made his speech, it is generally agreed. Some of his friends here are pointing out that Mc- Donald was still “technically correct” ‘ Is ROM packing houses, lUI we bring rich blood and tankage to nourish crops thru long months of steady growth. Many other NATURAL plant foods are used in Robert son’s. 1 H T our Norfolk factory, Kj| ships unload vast stores of quick-acting Nitrogen and the several kinds of Potash that plants hunger for. Dolomitic limestone is added , .. allowed to “cure” . . . RESULT: Non-acid fertilizers-—rich in magnesia—recommended to pre vent frog-eye and sand-drown. Demand them. THEY CONTAIN 50% MINERAL AND 50% OR GANIC NITROGEN. (N. C.)’ DAILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1936 in his statement that “this man’s name” is not on the tax books in that the property is listed jointly by Mir. and Mrs. Bowman Gray and not by Gray singly. They also maintain that he had a great deal more property whioh was not listed, but they are un able to state what this property was. The belief in most circles here as to why Dr. McDonald is not going to attempt to explain this “error” in his speech is that there is really no ex planation for it. UNC GOLFERS MEET GEORGIA TOMORROW Chapel Hill, April 9—Varsity golf ers and freshman netmen are the only University of North Carolina ath letes to get into action Friday. The linksmen will oppose a strong team from Georgia on the course here while the tennis team will journey to Duke. Coach Chuck Erickson has been working hard with the Carolina golf aspirants. Against Dartmouth in the only meet of the season to date, the Tar Heels displayed much promise. With the lowest ranked men playing better golf than the leaders, the Caro lina team defeated the Indians 18-9. Coach Erickson has Dick Harris as the only veteran of the crew. The rest of the dub is made up of sopho mores, including Horace Hamilton, Dupont Kirven, Lawrence Grover and Ben Wyche. Eden Is Informed of Bold Stand by French at Geneva (Continued from Page One.) peal to Italy and Ethiopia to abstain from the use of poison gas in the East African war. The decision, made upon the recom mendation of British Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden, was approved without passing upon allegations that Italy has already used gas in her Ethiopian invasion. The committee action urges the two governments to observe the provisions of the anti-gas convention and follow ed an appeal by Eden to Italy not to use poison gas against Ethiopia. In a meeting of the League Coun cil’s “commtitee of 13”—which com prises every member of the Council except Italy—Eden also demanded an immediate investigation to determine the truth of the allegations. The British cabinet minister sug gested that, in order to make the Lea gue’s attitude impartial, both Italy and Ethiopia given pledges not to re sort to the use of gas, which is pro hibited in warfare under international treaties. In the course of his speech, Eden remarked that when armies in the field or aviators use poison gas, it was always with the approval of their high command, thereby insinuating that Premier Mussolini’s general staff authorized the use of gas. Eden declared that it was known that since the beginning of hostilities Italy had shipped 259 tons of poison gas through the Suez Canal. mftjjttJL 100 Miles Planned by State Highway Commission if U. S. Helps Dali; Dispatch Btirena. In The Sir Walter note*. By J. C. BASKERVII.Ij Raleigh, April 9. —At least 100 miles of “cotton roads” will be built in North Carolina if the U. S. Bui’eau of Public Roads grants the request of the State Highway and Public Works Commission for cotton fabric to use in the surface treatment of that many miles of highways, Chief Engineer W. Vance Baise said today. The Federal government has already appropriated to provide enough cotton fabric for at least 1,000 miles of roads to he distributed to the various states and North Carolina has asked for a sufficient amount to use on 100 miles of new work and reconstruction work. “We have every reason to believe that the Bureau of Public Roads will grant our request for enough cotton fabric for 100 miles of road surfacing, since the plan is to allot all this fabric to the various states to be used by them in building experimental roads in order to test thoroughly the use of cotton fabric as a binder between the base and the bituminous surfac ing of roads,’’ Baise said. Warren Is Included. It is planned to use this cotton Crowds Are Still Coming And Shoes Are Still Going At Great Sacrifice Prices Thousands of Pairs of Famous Brands to Fit the Entire Family— •_ - r tor - _. f. *» jf. . - i . • ' -’• y ; * Shop This Sale for Your Shoe Needs THE SAVINGS ARE GREAT Men’s Shoes Men’s Dress Shoes Big Rack of Men’s W. L. Douglas -Sports, blacks and tans, Shoes for Ladies Shoes, in sports. Special, ja Including whites. Sizes A • 3 to values to $4.00, $Z*47 Men’s W. L. Douglas 8 Shoes. New styles, Macks In whites, sports, blacks LadieS Shoes and tans, values to $5.00, and tans< Special, B ig lot ladis# > arch BUp . 1 #47 port and comfort * hoe8 ’ Sizes 1 to 6. $1.47 sl*B3 $2.88 Big Stock Os Men’s Work Shoes Children’s Shoes Ladies Shoes At a great savings. Oxfords and straps, Ladies’ blue and gray Men’s good plow shoes, whites and patents, shoes. Big values, at $1.47 97? SI.BB . AtfMPk Ladies’white novelty A A Ah dlra shoes. Values to $4.00, JL , This Sale Now Going On At— Vance Shoe Store Location . v 'S.* ■ • _ ; j , ... Dbh’t Miss This Opportunity. Come—lo Extra Clerks To Serve You y f '■ fabric in the construction of several new roads in Gastcrv, Sampson, Dup lin, Wake and Warren counties and in the reconstruction of 60 miles of present roads, Baise said. If Route 277 in Gaston county can be complet ed this summer, it is planned to sur face it and use the cotton fabric bin der, Baise said. This strip of road is about six miles long. It is also plan ned to construct about three miles of experimental road here in Wake .w- . t ® ozesl Girl Champion—Dixie—Dunn No. 2 I Henderson, N. C. county, near Raleigh, and another strip of road in Warren county on Route 43. The longest single stretch now contemplated is between Clinton and Faison, in Sampson and Duplin counties, of about 15 miles, on which the cotton fabric binder will be used. 11,000 Yards Per Mile. Approximately 11,000 yards of fabric per mile are needed _in the surface treatment of 18-foot roads and 11,400 yards are needed per mile on 20 foot — rr-r— . —TT-; roads, Baise said. The new roads on which the fabric will be used will be 20 f jot roads while the retreated roar's will for the most part be 18 foot roads, Baise said. If the state had to buy the cotton fabric, the cos? would be from $750 to SI,OOO a mile more than when it ,s not used. 1866—’First G. A. R. Post organized at Decatur, 111.

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