PAGE TWO
LAM’S HOMER
WINS FROM LEAFS
Circuit Clout in Ninth
Gave Goldsboro Three
Runs, and Victory
One of the best crowds of the sea
son turned out yesterday afternoon
at League Park to see Henderson To
bacconists and Goldsboro Goldbugs
stage a free scoring ball game that
was not settled until the last man was
out in the ninth, the Bugs copping the
tilt 13 to 12.
Big scoring innings were enjoyed
equally by both clubs with the Leafs
getting out in front in the early
stages of the game.
Otto Pahlman, skipper of the Bugs,
brought along mostly recruits, giv
ing them a trial against the locals. He
was much pleased with their showing
in the contest.
Laval, visiting left fielder, won the
game in the ninth for the Bugs with
a home run with two mates aboard
the hassocks. Henderson rallied in
the final frame to score three runs,
but could not push over enough to
win. Thre walks aided the Leafs in
their effort.
Score by innings: R
Goldsboro 101 203 123—13
Henderson 11l 330 003—12
Jackson, Shepard and Williamston,
Williams; Woodlief and Beaman.
AA’S ARE TO PLAY
IN OXFORD SUNDAY
The Henderson AA’s, local Negro
team, will play in Oxford tomorrow
afternoon, at 3:30 o'clock, taking on a
semi-pro club of Oxford. Henderson
has been making a fine showing
against opposition so far this season.
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Club: W. L. Pet
Norfolk 20 9 .690
Portsmouth 16 13 .551
Durham 16 14 .533
Rocky Mount 14 15 .483
Asheville 12 16 .429
Richmond 9 20 .310
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Club: W. L. Pet.
St. Louis 20 10 .667
New York 19 12 .613
Pittsburgh 16 14 .533
Chicago 15 15 .500
Cincinnati 15 17 .469
Boston 14 17 .452
Brooklyn 13 19 .406
Philadelphia 13 21 .372
.AMERICAN LEAGUE
Club: W. L. Pet.
New York 22 11 .667
Boston 23 12 .657
Detroit 19 14 .576
Cleveland 17 15 .531
Chicago 15 14 .517
Washington 17 18 .486
Philadelphia 10 20 .333
St. Louis 7 26 .212
Todays Games 1
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Rocky Mount at Richmond.
Durham at Portsmouth.
Norfolk at Asheville.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia at New York.
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati.
Boston at Brooklyn.
Chicago at St. Louis.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit at Cleveland.
St. Louis at Chicago.
New York at Philadelphia.
Washington at Boston.
B. H. Mixon
Contractor and Builder
‘‘Builds Better Buildings’ ’
All kinds of Building
Wall Papering Painting-
Roofing and Interior
Decorating.
PHONES* ° ,,lce 1
rnUIHL3. Residence 47W
f FredßTHigh^^B
INSURANCE
RENTALS
REAL ESTATE
Citizens Realty &
Loan Co.
JOEL T.
CHEATHAM
Manager.
I “(Service That Satisfies”
Ends Grid Work
CoflCfi RrtVMOHD v}qlf ~
SPRING GRID WORK
AT UNC IS ENDED
By SMITH BARRIER
Chapel Hill, May 23—Coach Ray
mond (Bear) Wolf prepared to send
about 0 Tar Heel football aspirants
through a full afternoon of funda
mentals, signal drills and possibly a
short scri here today as the
University of North Carolina gridiron
squad made ready to conclude its late
spring practice.
The second off-season practice was
due to the selection of Coach Wolf
only a little more than two weeks
ago. Coach Wolf came from Texas
Christian University, where he was
athletic director, head line coach and
head baseball coach.
Rigiltsl
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Durham 7; Portsmouth 3.
Asheville 10; Norfolk 1.
Richmond 6; Rocky Mount 1.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia 15; New York 0.
St. Louis 11; Pitttsburgh 4.
Boston 3; Brooklyn 4.
Only games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
St. Louis 3; Chicago 4.
Detroit 13; Cleveland 10.
Only games scheduled.
Shake-Up In Minis
try of Britain Seen
(Continued from Page One.)
alty, Viscount Monsell.
Sir Samuel Hoare, original scape
goat of the Italo-Ethiopian crisis, now
being haled as a far-seeing prophet
for his peace plan to give Italy only
part of Ethiopia, might return to the
cabinet as secretary for the domin
ions, informed sources said.
Baldwin, with the “national union”
character of his cabinet broken fur
ther by the downfall of the former lab
orite Thomas, was expected to seek
to strengthen the largely conservative
ministry, at any rate to hold it to
gether until King Edward’s corona
tion next year, when many believe the
prime minister himself will retire.
Hoey Management
Much Encouraged
(Continued from Page One.)
than Graham will be in second place
and frankly admit that this suits
them. For most of the McDonald
workers agree that in a second pri
mary Graham would be a more dan
gerous opponent than Hoey. They
maintain that McDonald will defeat
Hoey overwhelmingly in the second
primary since they are confident that
the greater portion of the Graham
vote will go to McDonald rather than
to Hoey.
The Graham managers and support
ers are as enthusiastic as ever and
are convinced that both the Hoey and
McDonald managers are going to get
the surprise of their lives on the day
of the primary. They are as confident
as ever that Sandy is now running
neck and neck with Hoey and that
by June 6 he will be able to nose into
second place ahead of Hoey and thus
make it certain that Graham rather
than Hoey will oppose McDonald in
the second primary. They also point
out that they are talking less and
Writes Volume
on
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IsSSSSSSSBmSHESSSmS
Dr. Arthur Palmer Hudson, of the
University English Department,
whose book, “Humor of the Old Deep
South,’’ an anthology of regional hu
mor, has just been released by The
MacMillan Company of New crk.
" KEtfDERSON (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1936
working harder than are the hackers
of either McDonald or Hoey.
More Hoey Optimism.
There is no denying the fact, how
ever, that there is more optimism and
more odor of victory in the Hoey
ranks now than at any time so far.
The backers of the Shelby candidate
maintain that the most accurate part
of the straw poll is that portion which
comes out new each week, or the new
votes cast each week, rather than
the totals for all the weeks, since the
totals do not. allow for changes in
sentiment. They also point out that
this past week (Mir. Hoey received 1,-
113 of the ballots and MeDonald 1,-
663, while Graham got only 556. With
two weeks still to go, and claiming
that McDonald is slipping steadily
and rapidly in the eastern counties
and making very little headway in
the western counties, the Hoey stra
tegists are convinced that by the day
of the primary the Shelby orator can
and will be in first place, even tho
ugh it may be by a very narrow mar
gin. Nor are they worried in the least
by the claims of the Graham backers
that he will be able to pull up and
pass Mr. Hoey.
The blues now pervading McDonald
headquarters here, in spite of the
“we’re sitting on top of the world
with the nomination in the bag” at
titude his workers attempt to con
vey, is due to the fact that the peo
ple are getting wise to the fact that
his promised “New Deal” is actually
a “Raw deal”, his opponents main
tain.
Board Ready To Begin
Pay For Pensions
(Continued from Page One.)
the effective date —July 1 — of the
pensions and the tax.
The prospect of payments actually
beginning then was clauded somewhat
however, by the possibility of an ap
peal if Justice Jennings Bailey rules
against the railroads.
The retirement board is going
ahead with investigation of the 18,000
pension applications it already has re
ceived.
The litigation has delayed handling
of the pension requests, board mem
bers said today, because some rail
road joining in it have refused to co
operate in establishing employees’ re
tirement rights. Other railroads are
furnishing needed data, the members
asserted.
New Rotary Head
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Edmund H. Harding, of Washing
ton, N. C., new governor of the 57th
district of Rotary International, who
was elected at the tenth annual con
ference in Winston-Salem Tuesday.
Harding won in a brisk contest with
Major William A. Graham, of Kinston
Approximately 600 were registered for
the conference.
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DEAR INOAH IF~A CAT
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WOULD THE. TREE BARK?
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N. C. STATE COLLEGE CAMPUS LEADERS
MftTTHZtiS
The recently elected campus offic
ers who will direct the activities of
the major campus organizations on
the North Carolina State College
campus for the 1936-37 school year
are pictured above.
Lloyd Brown of Charlotte will serve
as president of the State College stu
dent body and will be assisted by
Charles Matthews of Albuquerque, N.
M., vice president of the student body.
These Awarded Washington Trip
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College Station, Raleigh, May 23 —
Selected on a basis of their success in
their 4-H club work and because of
their community and leadership acti
vities, the four club members seen
above have been selected to represent
30,000 club numbers of North Caro
lina at the Tenth National club camp
to be held at Washington, D. C., June
18, to 24.
Probe Robed, Legion
Held For Slaying
(Continued from T'age One.)
the black legion “was known to the
police as the United Brotherhood of
America, but that among themselves
the members referred to it as the
black legion, which is the name un
der which it was organised.”
Literature of the United Brother
hood of America found in the hall
where it met and in the homes of
members indicated today that it was
anti-communistic, anti-Catholic, anti-
Jewish and anti-Negro. Police said
some of the members claimed it was
of pre-Civil War origin and was the
parent organization of the original
Ku Klux Klan. Several of the known
members, most of them factory work
ers, came to Detroit from the South.
Other officers are: Hal S. Overman,
Jr., Elizabeth City, editor of the Wau
taugan, humorous magazine; and
Tommy Goad, Raleigh, business man
ager; George Ashby, Jr., Raleigh, bus
iness manager of The Agromeck, col
lege yearbook, and Peter Ihrie, Jr.,
Rock Hill, S. C., editor; Hall Morri
son, Jr., Charlotte, editor of The Tech
nician, campus weekly newspaper;
and Frank Curry, Lebanon, Tenn., bus
Selection as a delegate to this na
tional gathering is regarded as the
highest honor that can come to a
club mejnber in North Carolina for
the reason that such selection not
only depends on success in project
work but also for outstanding leader
ship ability, says Dean I. O. Schaub,
director of agricultural extension at
State College.
Dogfight Likely
If Landon Fails
(Continued from rage One.l
the requisite appeal.
Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of
Michigan is even more distasteful to
the Republican Old Guardsmen than
Landon, while not much more in sym
pathy with the liberal faction.
Senator Frederick Steiwer of Ore
gon is even worse, from the conserva
tive standpoint, than Vandenberg, but
still not liberal enough for the pro
gressives.
Senator L. J. Dickinson of lowa is
conservative enough for any one, but
assuredly would be no compromise
with the liberals. He killed himself
politically with his recent “dog food”
speech, besides.
Almost needless to say, such sug
gestions as Representative James W.
Wadsworth or Ogden L. Mills of New
York are ridiculous.
iness manager. Jack Oaw of Greens
boro will serve as president of the Y.
M. C. A. and Jack Dossenbach, Leonia
N. J., president of the Interfraternity
Council.
“Cool—Air Conditioned”
STEVENSON
SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY
Sunday Shows at 3 and 9 p. m.
GREAT STORY... i
L t R G R« TE j^CTUR E!
Plus News and Comedy
I— WEDNESDAY—
“HALF ANGEL’’
With FRANCES DEE
JACK POT $25.00 £
THURSDAY FRIDAY
W x MBKLhJjr
Corn Mea! Baits
On Tobacco Worm
Proves Effective
College Station. Raleigh, May oo
No tobacco grower who has •,,,'. “
meal bait for bud-worm coi t-m
willing to go back to the oi l Y ls
picking method, said C H p‘ ‘ ana
extension entomologist at Smm ‘'p’l'
lege " -'Ol
- bail, is made tip of six hem i
tablespoonsful of arsenate of 1 , j
one peck of meal, or one pound ofY°
senate of lead to 50 pounds of L ‘',
when large amounts are desired
One peck, or 12 pounds, of the' miv
ed bait is enough for an acre Brin
non said. Applications should he made
early in the morning, when to-bacee
buds are open. Drop a small pinch in
to the center of each bud.
The first applications should he
made ten days to two weeks after
the plants have been set in the field
They should be repeated every w ,. t , k
or ten days until the plants are tn,
ped. p '
One part of Paris green to six parts
of slaked lime, applied at the rale of
five pounds to the acre, will offer
tively control tobacco horn worms'
Brannon added.
Where Paris green is not available
arsenate of lead dust applied at the
rate of four or five pounds to the
acre will give good results if applied
thoroughly with a good dust machine
Rotenone is not effective in con
trolling bud-worms or horn worms
Brannon warned.
AMUSEMENTS
I New Policy Next Week
Moon Theatre
Admission 11 and lGe
Everyday Except Friday
and Saturday
No Sunday Show—
No Cash Night—
Showing—
Monday Only
William Boyd—in
“Hopalong Cassidy”
He 4 and 16<