Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / May 14, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO HENDERSON WHIPS i OXFORD TEAM, 124 - 11 J; Rejuvenated Tobacconists *, Flash Fast Brand of Basei ball in Victory ** • - The HendeiPAbn Tobacconists ■ flash * ed the fastest brand of baseball seen ‘ Jiefe for many moons yesterday aft ernoon as the£ whipped Oxford Dodg .. ers 12 to 4 at League'Park, fc Henderson got off to an early start, f scoring four runs in the first inning, end was never threatened through « out the remainder of she game, Thar ringtbn and Pleasants hurling,the vie *' tory. attendance was fio|t ■*. what it should have been, but those e* who saw the contest were of the opin ion that one of the best’'ball clubs for some years had been assembled here and fans are looking forward to a fast •* Ibrand of baseball fqr the coding season in the Virginia-Carolina league Score by innings: R Z Oxford .. 011 000 002— 4 - Henderson 400 043 lOx—l2 Robertson nd Mangum; Tharring ton,'Pleasants and Beaman. y ■ **¥' ■■■-' ’ " —■ - » | [Toda^Gflmes PIEDMONT LEAGUE - Durham at Rocky Mount. Norfolk at Portsmouth. Richmond at Asheville. NATIONAL LEAGUE - Cincinnati at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Brooklyn. Pittsburgh at Boston. ~ Chicago at New York. AMERICAN LEAGUE T Philadelphia at Cleveland. - Ne* York at St. Louis. r Washington at Chicago. ~ Boston at Detroit. 33 1852—'Alton B. Parker, New York State lawyer and jurist, Democratic - opponent of Theodore Roosevelt for -the Presidency in 1904, born at Cort land, N. Y. Died May 10, 1926. HEADACHE? BASEBALL Friday Afternoon 4 p. m. League Park r Henderson Tobacconists vs Home Security of Durham Admission -25c —Ladies Free MAKE YOUR Soft-Stilled Gin m Mix your favorite gin drink with King Arthur. Dufc to jW Soft-Stillihg the full but mild flavor remains until the; || j|| very last drop. Tests show King Arthur Gin retains its I /f‘"9 llf flavor even when mixed with as much as i 6 parts water. I seagtams f§/ KING ARTHUR gin London Di-y Gin. 100% Distilled from AmeticdH Grain 90 FROOF Seagram Distillers Corp. Distillery; Lawranceburg, Ind. Executive Office: New York Leafs Play Three Games Week-End Three games have been carded for the Henderson Tobacconists during the week-end. Henderson meets Home. Security of Durham here tomorrow after noon at 4 o’clock and again Satur day at 3:30 o’clock, and then the team goes to GoldsbOTo to tackle Otto Pahlman’s Goldbugs in the Coastal 'Plains League. PIEDMONT LEAGUE Club: w. L. Pet. Norfolk 14 7 .667 Portsmouth 12 8 .600 Durham 10 11 .476 Rocky Mount 10 11 .476 Asheville 8 11 .421 Richmond 7 13 .350 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet. St. LoUis 14 8 .636 New York 13 10 .565 Pittsburgh 12 10 .546 Chicago 12 11 .522 Boston H 12 .478 Cincinnati 12 14 .462 Brooklyn 10 14 .417 Philadelphia 11 16 .407 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet. New York 18 8 .692 Boston 18 9 .667 Cleveland 15 9 .625 Detroit ’l2' 12 .600 Chicago 10 10 .500 Washington 13 14 .481 Philadelphia 8 15 .348 St. Louis 4 21 .160 PIEDMONT LEAGUE Durham 14; Rocky Mount 3. Asheville 4; Richmond 1. Portsmouth S; Norfolk 0. » NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 7; Philadelphia 9. Pittsburgh 3; Boston 4. Only games played. AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 3; Detroit 1. New York 4; St. Louis 1. Only games played. Graham’s Tactics Please McDonald (Continued from Page One.) has recently decided to sock Hoey, Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus, former Governor O. Max Gardner, Assistant Commissioner of Revenue Marcus Cicero Stephens Noble, Jr., and vari ous and sundry Others and branch out into the heavyweight centipede class, many are beginning to wonder wheth er he is helping his own campaign or that of his opponents. McDonald Delighted. The McDonald managers and sup porters are elated and delighted at tHe rtetfr tactics Os Graham and main tain that his attack on Governor Eh ringhaus, the present Democratic ad ministration and on O. Max Gardner is merely making more votes for Dr. McDonald by proving the contentions of the Forsyth college professor that the State has been and still is dom inated by the Ehringhaus-Gardner machine. W. L. Lumpkin, State cam paign manager for Dr. McDonald, to day issued a statement in which he gloatfed and exulted over the new Graham tactics and pointed out that all Graham is now doing is to sub stantiate the charges of machine domination which McDonald has been making since the beginning of the campaign. The Hoey forces, which are becom ing increasingly toitter towards Gra ham because of the attack he is mak ing on both Governor Ehringhaus and Max Gardner, are convinced that he is making a tremendous mistake, also that he is driving more voters away from the Graham camp than he is attracting into it. They are convinced that some of these ate going over in to the Hoey camp, because of disgust .at the new Graham campaign meth ods, but fear that a larger number are going into the McDonald army, since they maintain that Graham is now making the same charges against HEMfififiSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, ’THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1936 IT’S lly WOey SPENT 36 HOUK CUN6IN6 10 DRIFTING WRECKAGE . COMEDIES FOUR YEARS AGO I V JMA f AFTER A SHIP DISASTER! VIT-H fcAUREI ! g|\ \ \Wf! \ i fcfew York, N. Y.,—“IT’S TRUE! that Balfe’s famous light opera, ‘The Bohemian Girl,’ was first produced in London at the Drury Lane Theatre, November 27th, 1843”, says Wiley Padan. “Hal Roach, the dean of Hollywood comedy producers personally supervised the filming of M-G-M’s screen version of this musical gem.” Stevenson Theatre Today and Tomorrow the present administration, Mr. Hoey, Gardner and Ehringhaus which Dr. McDonald has made throughout the campaign. As a result, the Hoey forces are more than ever convinced that all Graham will do is to run a poor third in the primary. They also fear that this new line of attack which Graham is using will make it more likely that those who do vote for Graham will be inclined to vote for McDonald rather than Hoey in a second primary. Graham Group Pleased. The Graham strategists, however, are not only pleased, but enthusiastic with the piiblic reaction to the new line of attack by Graham in which he is socking both McDonald and Hoey and maintain that this new offensive is helping Sandy Graham more than any orie else and that the claims of the tival candidates are toeing made merely to keep tip their own courage or tb muddy the already dirty poli tical waters and iriake them still mud dler. They maintain that Graham is not only branding Dr. McDonald as a youthful and imported political theorist who is seeking to experiment on the Democratic party in North Carolina, but that he is also branding tMr. Roey as an ultra-conservative candidate under obligation to the “old guard’’ or the “machine” in North ■ / one/ m 'inning fame as the smoothest £7G//Tin the tvorh/ I New peaks of performance, economy and distinction in the new Pontiac Eight xzxg**-******** NESS! What’s behmd die fame of the You'll have to go to twice as many m _ Pontiac Eight? It sam.racleol smooth- cylinders to match that kind of perform- H| JPHTA ness Put th«e two sects togetHet and ance! Just as you must climb the price W ' you 11 know What eight to buy. You'll scale to approach Pontiac’s overall quality. M J— mm pick a Pontiac. Becaust Pontiac’s smooth- Every Pontiac feature is the finest money m ness ,s boi!t-,n smoothness. Thanks t° can buy! Moreover, under official super- ~r raoofneb^^^t6tt^^ la ~- W l th ° VCr ' visi ° n ’ *“* bi S car averaged 22 miles per .V £l&^' Kv ptntllf ni alancer ' gal Ion! These facts will be enough for the M md/w * Introduced by Pbntiac—and to the super- motor-wise. If you want the greatest MS mCO/* W precision balance of rotating parts , the smoothest eight you'll buy a PontUcT M *a£0 ,G /SM*T List prices at Pontiac, Mich., beiin nt ixiK r . „ Xrf*' f Safety pluto glass stahdird on De LUie Sir *°J l ht> . Six 2 nd 9730 foT tha Ei 6ht (Subject to chkkiMm without Hotiamt * * 1 -•fafttayjaSi MOTOR SALES CO. GILLAM AUTO CO. Henderson, N. C. Warrenton, N. C. ENTER PONTIAC’S NATIONAL ECONOMY CONfIST —FREE CARS-164 CASH PRIZES Carolina and more or less committed to a Continuation of the present re gime in the State government. The result, according to the Gra ham managers and strategists, is that those Democrats to whom Dr. Mc- Donald has seemed too radical and Mr. Hoey too conservative, but who feared that Graham was also too close ly linked with the present adminis tration, are now realizing that Gra ham is the only safe, sane, free and unfetterd candidate in the race, neith er too liberal nor too radical. Accord ingly, he is cutting deeply into the McDonald following in many coun ties and even drawing some away from Mr. Hoey his workers maintain. They further insist that the only way to cut into the McDonald following was for Graham to indicate that he was not the fair-haired favorite of the present administration by making a clean break with the present pow ers that be to the extent of denounc ing both Governor Ehringhaus and former Governor Gardner. Substantiating McDonald. The opposition candidates, and es pecially Sandy Graham, are only serv ing to substantiate the charges which have been made all along by Dr. Mc- Donald in his ; campaign for the Dem ocratic nomination for governor to the effect that the North Carolina State government is dominated by "machine politics,” W. ts. Lumpkin, State campaign manager for Dr. Mc- Donald, said here today in an exclus ive statement for the afternoon news papers. “The charges which have been hur led toy Sandy Graham against the Gardner-Ehringhaus Combine and the reply by O. Max Gardner in which he expressed regret that Graham should attack his former political bed-fellows only go to prove that Dr. McDonald has been correct in his claims from the outset,” Lumpkin said. “At the very beginning of the cam paign, Dr. McDonald charged that Clyde Hoey and Sandy Graham were tarred with the same stick and that they were important cogs in the poli tical machine that is dominating North Carolina, Dr. McDonald was then attacked by his opponents as being a Republican and as a traitor to the Democratic party, under whose banner he is running for governor. Graham Accuses Gardner. “Rut now, lo and ibehold, here comes Mr. Graham charging that Max Gard ner is dominating North Carolina by long distance telephone. In his des peration, he has broken with the ‘ma chine’ with which has been connected for 15 years in a futile effort to block the leading candidate, Dr. McDonald. All of which injures the feelings of Max Gardner, the head duster of the machine. They had been political bed fellows for so long that Max can’t understand how Sandy could allow political expediency to overshadow his loyalty to the ‘machine.’ Its a very sad day for the ‘machine’ in North Carolina. It looks as if the old ‘ma chine’ is just crumbling to pieces be fore the courageous onslaught of Ralph McDonald. “It won’t be long now. Primary day is just aroujrd the corner. The people are going to the polls thfen and cast their votes for McDonald, the can didate who has scared the daylights out of the ‘machine’ and whose elec tion will mean the end of irng domi nation in North Carolina.” Oklahoma Fugi tives Still Gone (Continued from Page One.T brickyard foreman, and escaped in a guard’s automobile during a bloody break from the prison yesterday, isl which 24 convicts took part. Three others are at large. Prison Secretary Fred Daughtery said the five convicts with Doak and the two guards as hostages seized another car and split into two parties east of Blanco, Okla., 20 miles south west of McAlester. He said that the two cars had been seen with only one hostage, (believed to be doped. He said the guards were thought to have been thrown from the speeding automobile. The two carloads of flefeing con victs were heading tdwdrd the Ar kansas border, DaughtCry said re ports indicated. Posses spread out over the Kiamichi mountains in an attempt to head them of£ From one of the recaptured prison ers retaken after the knife flashing break from the prison brickyard, the warden learned that one of the two hostage guards, Tuck Cope, was wounded. iip Otjß <joot> Tooi^ — x Garden Rakes 59c and 98c each Garden Hoes 59c and others Garden Plows —high wheel $3.50 each Hand Flower Garden Tools special 10c 9 3 for 25c LOW CASH PRICES Watkins Hardware Co. Henderson, N. C.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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May 14, 1936, edition 1
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