Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / May 11, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO HENDERSON SPLITS WITH OXFORD TEAM Wins Saturday, 13-8, but Loses Sunday Game in Oxford 9-11 The) Henderson Tobacconists, so named by Ed Powell for this grow ing leaf mart, broke even with their two games in Oxford Saturday and Sunday afternoon, winning Saturday 13 to 8 and losing Sunday 11-9. The teams will clash here Wednes day afternoon, according to the man ager. In Saturday’s game, Henderson scored most of their runs in the third and fourth innings of the short affair, getting five and seven runs. Thar !i ington pitched the victory. Pleasants worked Sunday afternoon, and got off to a nice start but Oxford soon got to him for victory. Saturday’s game: R Henderson 005 700 I—l 31 —13 Oxford 011 032 I—B Sunday’s Game Henderson Ah R II A Scoggins ss 3 1 0 1 Pah 1 man lb 2 11 1 Tutor If 5 2 1 0 Hoyle 3b ♦... 5 0 2 2 .Breedlove 2b 11 0 4 Perry cf 4 2 1 0 Savage rs - 4 2 2 0 Beaman c 4 0 1 0 Pleasants p 4 0 0 1 Tharrington p 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 9 8 9 Oxford Ah R II A Saunders 3b 5 1 0 5 Hedgepeth lb . 4 2 1 0 Tippett ss 5 1 3 4 Isenhour 2b 5 0 1 3 Burnett cf 4 3 2 0 Wilson If 5 1 3 0 Oakley rs 4 11 0 Mangum c 2 1 0 1 Hebuck p 3 11 1 Totals 37 11 12 14 Score by innings: R Henderson 123 120 000— 9 Oxford 002 522 OOx—ll GOLFERS TO GATHER AT CLUBJONSGHT Lay Plans for Tournament and Name a Board of Directors for Year I Members of Henderson Golf Club will gather tonight at 8 o’clock at West End Country Club to talk over the gqlf season for the summer, and to select a board of directors for the coming club year. Tournaments and course changes will also be talked, it was understood. West End course will be one of the bes£ anywhere in this section when the grass tees and grass greens come into use shortly. They will probably be used by the time of the annual tournaments. STOMACH ULCERS helps, to nd you of pain, nausea, and riolli d 'n7 nfol ? s ' Improvement is steady f/’L.F 1 * ';,. H* I ** ,s . hl £ h *y recommended for ••S™?''..!? .Dyspepsia, Heartburn. Indigestion, •nd Gas 1 ains, when due to excess acid FDFETa For quick, pleasant relief you ■ HCts weit to yourseif to get a YREE SAMPLE of Udga at Parker’s Drug Store. LESS THAN HALF PRICE There are f?ood use d car values and lots of used cars advertised daily. Let’s analyze what really constitutes a good used car value. First, we think that the mileage has a lot to do with a car. Certainly a high priced car such as a 90 Buick with very low mileage is a good value when it can lie bought for less than half its original sale price. The second thing is the condition of the tires and the general appearance of the car inside and out We have a9O Buick that has been driven only 5000 miles. It is a 1934 model—Club sedan i which means that it has a trunk. It has six wheels and is in good condition. In fact, it is just as good mechani cally and in appearance as the day it was built. You can buy this car for $1,380.00 less than it sold for new or for $1,000.00. It is the biggest bargain you will ever have the opportunity of buying. Come around or call 65 and let us show you that this car is a rare op portunity to get just the car you have dreamed of own ing, and lor less than half its original sale price. Legg-Parham Co. Buick Dodge and Plymouth Dealers 120 Wyche St. Phone 63 UNC Golf Captain :‘x|v Captain Dick Harris, above, will lead the Carolina golfers this week against two Big Five toes as the Tar Heel linksmen close their 1936 sea son. On Tuesday the Carolina four some will play host to Wake Forest and on Thursday to Duke. Harris has been the outstanding Tar Heel drive and putt athlete this spring, having handled the No. 1 as signment throughout the season against some of the best collegiate stars in the South. He is a senior and is from Valdosta, Ga. The Tar Heel foursome, which is coached by Chuck Erickson in his first year at the post, has been composed of Har ris, Kirven, Hamilton and either Hicks, Clark, or Wyche. PIEDMONT LEAGUE Portsmouth 2; Richmond 6. Durham 6; Norfolk 8. Rocky Mount 3; Asheville!. NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 5; Ghicago 1. New York 6; Philadelphia 2. Cincinnati 6; Pittsburgh 0. Brooklyn 4; Boston 5. AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 9; Detroit 7. Philadelphia 2; New York 7. Chicago St. Louis rain. Brooklyn 4; Boston 5. SHAW AND STRAUSE WERE HOSTS AGAIN Ed Shaw and Nathan Strause were again “hosts” to J. H. Brodie and O. T. Kirkland at West End Country Club golf course yesterday afternoon, coming out on the short end of the score for the 18 holes. This is the second consecutive Sun day that the latter have been “enter tained” by ,the former, and their gen erosity was much appreciated. HENDERSON. (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, MONDAY, MAY 11. 1936 Stafkkb^s PIEDMONT LEAGUE Clpb: W. L. Pet. Norfolk 13 5 .722 Portsmouth 10 7 .588 Rocky Mount 9 9 .500 Durham 8 10 .144 Richmond 7 H .389 Asheville 6 11 .353 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet. St. Louis 14 7 .667 Pittsburgh 12 9 .571 Chicago 12 10 .545 New York 11 10 .524 Cincinnati 11 13 .45,8 Philadelphia 10 14 .417 Brooklyn 10 12 .455 Boston 9 12 .429 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club: w. L. Pet. New York 17 7 .708 Boston 17 8 .680 Cleveland 14 9 .609 Detroit 11 10 .524 Chicago 9 10 .474 Washington 13 14 .481 Philadelphia 8 15 .348 St. Louis 3 19 .136 Toda^G^rnfes PIEDMONT LEAGUE Durham at Rocky Mount. Norfolk at Portsmouth. Richmond at Asheville. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York at Philadelphia. Brooklyn at Boston. Only games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at St. Louis. Cleveland at Detroit. Only games scheduled. DURHAM TO BEGIN , NIGHT BALL SOON Durham, May 11. —Everything is in readiness at the local ball park for +he inaugural of night baseball here Thursday, when the Bulls and Ashe ville Tourists clash at 8 o’clock. The local lighting plant has always been deemed the best in the Pied mont loop, probably equal to the best lighted field in minor league baseball. Nothing has been left undone by General Manager Frank Lane of the Bulls tc put the park and lighting plant in ship-shape order for Thurs day’s contest under the mazdas. The reflectors have been completely paint ed and refinished, inside and out, and the stands thoroughly cleaned—in fact, everything possible to add to the comfort of patrons at Durham Ath letic park has been aken care of. WEEPING WILLOWS PLAY FIVE GAMES The schedule in South Henderson playground baseball league this week calls for five games by the Weeping Willow nine, all of them being played at South Henderson and at 4 o’clock. Monday afternoon, the Lucky Strike nine will be the opposition; Tuesday, North Henderson; Wednes day, Bobbitt, Thursday, Dabney and Saturday, West Durham. The youngsters have been flashing a fine brand of baseball, winning nine games for the season and losing none. 15 DUKE CLASSES TO HOLD REUNIONS Durham, May 11.—Fifteen classes are to hold formal reunions on June 8, the concluding day of Duke univer sity’s eighty-fourth commencement, the program for which has just been released, A feature of the day’s alumni activities will be the annual alumni-alumnae luncheon, to be held at 1 p. m. in the university union. The classes staging reunions this year are: ’7l, ’76, ’Bl, ’B6, ’9l, ’96, ’Ol, ’O6, ’ll, ’2l, ’26, ’3l, ’34, and ’35. For a second year Duke is staging its finals program over a week-end, reducing to three the number of days covered by the annual events. RADIO PROGRAM BY ELON ON TUESDAY Elon College, May 11.—Alumni of Elon College will hold a “radio re union” Tuesday evening, May 12, tun ing in from all parts of the South on broadcasts over four stations. They will hear music by present or former members of the Elon music department and familiar voices tell ing about the $250,000 Development Program which is now under way to provide for the present needs and fu ture growth of the college. In many centers the former stu dents are holding dinners or other gatherings in observance of Alumni Day. TWO DEFENDANTS IN RECORDER’S COURT Recorder R. E. Clements tried two defendants in his iourt today, both of them on minor charges. Skeeter W. Rogers, colored, was given six months on the roads for tbe theft of chickens, the sentence to run concurrently with a previous term. Porter Alston, colored, was charged with trespass and assault, and prayer for judgment was continued on pay ment of the costs, failure to pay which would invoke a 30-day sen tence. Qreat Dfeiciency Bill Is Passed by the Lower House ’Continued trom Page One.) presentative Taber, Republican, New York, to send the big bill back to the appropriations committee, with in structions to substitute his previously defeated amendment for State grants, with local administration by non-par tisan bo, ar ds and State contributions of at least 25 percent. The State grants fight was sche duled to (be renewed in the Senate, where the measure goes from the House. - . .. . Hoey and Graham Rel you Workers (Continue/* from Page One.T to make 14 campaign speeches this week —his managers now clearly real ize that only more intensive organiza tion and personal work can enable him to overtake McDonald and put Hoey in first place in the first pri mary, it was indicated. It was also emphatically indicated that there is absolutely no possibility of Mr. Hoey or his managers easing up in theip campaign or of throwing their influence back of Sandy Gra ham as some rumors have indicated for several days. In fact, the bad feel ing between the Hoey and Graham camp is becoming more intense and more bitter every day, with the re sult that open warfare between these two groups is expected to flare out at any time now, in spite of the efforts of the Hoey managers to keep it down. It is no secret, however, that for the last week or ten days, and especially since Graham’s radio speech of Friday night, in which he charged that former Governor O. Max Gardner was running Hoey’s cam paign and seeking* to rule the State by long distance telephone from Wash ington, the resentment of the Hoey forces towards Graham and his fol lowers has been at a white heat. Gra ham’s bitter attack on Governor J, C. B. Ehringhaus and his administra tion, including the administration of the highway commission, the Depart ment of Revenue and other State de partments, is also inciting the wrath of the Hoey supporters, some of whom are claiming that Sandy is making just as bitter attack on Gard ner and Ehringhaus and their admin istrations as is McDonald. But whether Hoey and his workers will start lashing back at Graham as well $s at McDonald remains to be seen. The belief in most circles here now is that Hoey will probably take What Graham is saying about him, Max Gardner and Governor Ehring hsms without making any rejoinder, since if he gets into a second primary with McDonald, as he now confident ly expects to, he will need as many of the Graham votes as he can get. It will not help to, win these if Hoey should now start attacking Graham, it js agreed* The Graham forces are more en couraged since Sandy’s speech of Fri day night than at any time so far, both because it has made the Hoey forces fighting made and bceause they are convinced that this new line of attack by Graham is going to cut deeply into the McDonald strength. Sandy's strategists are now certain that one of the reasons McDonald has gathered the large following he has is because of his militant opposition to the “old guard” in the Democratic party, apd especially tq Governor Eh ringhaus, Max Gardner, former Gov ernor Capieron Morrison and the old, conservative Democratic organization which McDonald had dubbed “the machine.” They are also convinced that one reason Sandy has not been able to gain as mufch as he has is be cause he has not yet convinced the people of the State that he is not more or less connected with “the ma chine” himself. But his recent speech- Wife Preservers wlj*. tvln. vii r I ... iv boW through the loop a second time and the shoestring will not come untied. i North Carolina’s New Track Stadium es, in which he has been assailing Hoey, Gardner, Ehringhaus and the “old guard” just as stingingly as he has McDonald, is convincing the pub lic that Graham is just as independ ent and just as free from machine domination as is McDonald, his sup porters maintain. The Graham managers, however, are not depending upon Sandy’s change in speaking tactics alone to push him up into second place—the position in which they are confident he will be by June 6. They are also concentrating on organization work and personal contacts in every county and precinct. As a result, they are confident that between now and the date of the primary, Sandy will be able to forge ahead enough to dis place Hoey and that he, rather than the Shelby orator, will be in second place and that McDonald’s present lead will be greatly reduced. “I Can Laugh At Sweepstakes Winners” “Like lots of other young fellows, I got married on a shoestring. All of a sudden the thought hit me a wallop—What would happen to Betty if I should die suddenly? the first step, in an insurance sure. .But on my salary I didn't see how I could swing it. But an older friend showed me I was wrong—how I could at least make a beginning. Believe me, I took his advice, Now Betty will have enough to tide her over the first few years, no matter what happens. And that's just the first tsep, in an insurance program I'm going to build up, little by little, as I go along." If you are a young man and have observed the older men about you, you have probably concluded —and wisely—that you will never win big money unless you save it little by little. There are many good ways to save. But for the young man on a small salary, life insurance offers the largest protection features and the surest return at least cost. The sooner you plan your future, the better your future will be. A new, helpful booklet has been prepared by the 1936 Commit tee in charge of Life Insurance Week. It is called “Seven Wise Men" and was written to answer the universal question: “How can Ibe sure to have money when I need it most?" Ask our local representative for a copy, or write the Greensboro office. National Life Insurance Company Home Office, Montpelier, Vermont F. R. GUIN, Supervisor Borden Building Gpldsboro, N. C. CHAS, C. WIMBISH, State Agent, 922 Security Bank Bldg* Greensboro, North Carolina. Pictured above is the University of North Carolina’s new track stadium, said to be the most complete in the South, which was dedicated at exer cises held at Chapel Hill May 9, in connection wjith .the Carolina-Navy tract meet. The occasion was designated as Fetzer Day in honor of Robert Al lison .Fetzer, athletic director and track coach at the University for 15 years, widely known as dean of South ern track coaches, for whom the new field is to be named when the trus tees give formal approval at their commencement meeting. All Caro lina monogram men from this and neighboring states and a number of others visitors were invited to at tend this event as guests of the Uni versity Monagram Club. The new field, which is part of the intramural plant recently completed, has a quarteiymile track 30-feet wide encircling a football practice field, a 220-yard straightaway with eight lanes, permanent concrete stands seating 6800, and a small field house. In the above picture the field house, which is just beyond the right wing of the stands, cannot be seen. Inserts show Coach Fetzer, and four of the stars who competed in Saturday’s meeting. Left to right, at top, the track men are Captain Pat terson of Navy who runs the hurdles: Shetenhelm of Navy who runs the 880 and the mile; Graham Gammon ot Carolina who runs the half and the mile; and Co-Captain Tom Evins o‘. ! Carolina who holds the state record in the shot put and throws the dis cus. 1870 —Coker F. Clarkson, New York lawyer and technical director in the field of automobile engineering, horn at Des Moines, lowa. Died June 4, 1930.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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May 11, 1936, edition 1
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