Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / July 2, 1936, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO HENDERSON LOSES TO OXFORDGOLFERS Inter-City Match There Was : Close With Oxford Win ning, 36 1-2 to 32 1-2 h. West End Country Club golfers • bowed to Oxfoid yesterday on the J Granville capital's links, 36 1-2 to 32 *rl-2 in one of the closest matches of • the current season for the locals. • . • O. T. Kirkland paced the Hender 4'eon team around the course with a • .sparkling 72, while Oxford golfers • turned in nice games on their home course. •, Oxford will furnish the opposition here next Wednesday afternoon in "’an inter-city match. Yesterday’s match was the first un .der Captain D. J. Cooper, who suc 'ceeded O. T. Kirkland. PIEDMONT I.EAC. I E Club: W. L. Tct Norfolk 45 21 <582 Rocky Mount 35 32 .522 Durham 35 35 .500 Portsmouth 30 34 -46a Richmond 31 37 .t >t> Asheville 24 41 .369 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet. St. Louis 13 26 .623 | Chicago 41 25 .621 Pittsburgh 39 31 .557 Cincinnati 36 30 .545 New York 37 32 .536 Boston 33 36 .465 Philadelphia 23 46 .333 Brooklyn 23 47 .329 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet. New York 46 22 .666 Detroit 37 32 .536 Boston 38 33 .535 Washington 36 33 .535 Cleveland 36 33 .522 Chicago 31 36 .463 Philadelphia .. 24 43 .358 St. Louis 22 42 .344 GLENMORE DISTILLERIES CO., Inc. Louisville • Owensboro COME TO NEW YORK FOR 3 GLORIOUS DAYS All for $lO Meals and Admission to Special Events Included Choose any 3 days you wish and let the HOTEL PRESIDENT show you the town! Dine at the famous Hollywood Cabaret. Ride through the entire city with an experienced guide. See the current performance at the Radio City Music Hall in Rockefeller Center. Look out over fifty miles of country from the 65th Floor Observation Roof of the R. C. A. Building. Be comfortable in a large, modernly furnished room with Radio, Shower and Pri vate Bath. Enjoy your meals in the main dining room of the Hotel. Write now for literature describing “three most exciting days In New York,” and information regarding our 2,4, 5, and 6 day Tours. HOTEL PRESIDENT 48th Street West of Broadway New York City J. S. SUITS, Manager JtOSQUjroes, BLACK WIDOW a*d other insect pests / A swoon If. easy to get rid „t flying i„ Mts _ whcn yo „ A / c/I?"?®"'“*?'*e?Vfr‘'” , r ®ESHßy ► ►►►►►►►►►► Insects witli Bee Brand I nsect JkKWSW nani I ’ * finer-ground 'r-conlainn more killing particles per ounce-lulls 32# quicker in actual tests. HERNDON’S TRIPLE GfVESLEAFS WIN Tenth Inning Smash De feats Oxford Dodgers 6-5 at League Park Carl Herndon’s triple in the tenth inning, his second for the day. drove Ra/.z Breedlove across home plate in the lat half of the 10th inning ye terday at League Park to give the Henderson Tobacconists a 6 to 5 ver dict over the Oxford Dodgers. (Jimmy Ed Wards and Robertson hooked up in a nice hurling duel, « ueh pitcher fanning 10 batsmen, but Edwards got the better of the pitch ing assignment, allowing only eight hits while the Leafs were getting to opposing pitching for 13 safeties. Henderson tied things up in the ninth when Short followed Horton with a triple. Henderson’s best inning was the fourth when they got half of their tallies. Woodruff led off with a sin gle and came home on Breedlove’s double. Herndon fanned but Ed wards sent Breedlove home with a double. Scoggins was out second to first, but Horton sent the pitcher home witlr r r;n~!o. Horton, with iour for four, Breed love and Herndon, with three each, led the Henderson hatting attack. Trayham led the visitors with three singles out of five attempts. Score by innings: R Oxford 200 110 100 OS Henderson 000 300 011 I—6 Robertson and Mangum; Edwards and Re am an. Remits PIEDMONT LEAGUE Durham 2; Norfolk 7. Asheville 5; Rocky Mount 2. Richmond 4-7; Portsmouth 2-4. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 6; Boston 8. St. I |»uis 4; Pittsburgh 9. Philadelphia 1-10; Brooklyn 6-3. No other games played. AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 0; New York 5. Detroit 21; Chicago 6. Washington 13-14; Philadelphia 5-3. Cleveland 12-5; St. Louis 16-5. Today^Gjmes PIEDMONT LEAGUE Rocky Mount at Durham. Norfolk at Portsmouth. Asheville at Richmond. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. New York at Boston. Chicago at Cincinnati. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Philadelphia. Cleveland at St. Louis. Boston at New York. Detroit at Chicago. 1825 Richard Henry Stoddard, noted New York poet, editor, critic and journalist, born at Hingham, Mass. Died May 12, 1903. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1936 Plain Dams As Cushion To Drought {Continued from Page One.) years as threatening indications of a shift in climate. Wallace, heading for St. Paul and Duluth, Minn., on his tour, asserted rainfall the next three weeks would determine whet lief the current drought would equal the destructive siege of 1934. The Weather Bureau at Washing ton decided the need of precipitation was “more widespread” than during the same 1934 period. Fiscal Status of Nation Is Better, Morgenthau Says (V ? (Continued from Page One.) diers’ bonus at a cost of $1,700,000,000. “The actual receipts coming into the Treasury during the year aggregated $4,116,000,000,” said Morgenthau. “This is $316,000,000 more than came in dur ing the fiscal year 1935, notwithstand ing the loss of $141,000,000 through the elimination of processing taxes. But revenue from other sources in creased $716,000,000,000, a gain of 23 percent, due in large part to improve ment in business and agricultural conditions.” Good Reaction to Roosevelt Speech (Continued from Page One.) a comparatively wealthy man and President Roosevelt is not, the pic ture drawn may be that of a silent, simple, cautious man against an “ex travagant” landed squire. ERRORS? John D. M. Hamilton, the national Republican chairman, however, has made some errors. In his enthusiasm to boat the Democrats to the gun, ho actually has lost some ground. For example, it was straightforward but not wise to visit Oil iMjagnate Pew in Philadelphia during the Democra tic convention ,to discuss the Repub lican war fund. Mr. Pew, chief G. O. P. fund raiser, guaranteed a large one. It will be. A person need merely to traverse the financial districts of New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Boston and Chicago to ascertain the hatred of Mr. Roosevelt. The same is true in smaller financial centers. The Republicans say they are fight ing an “immense” Democratic cam paign fund in the form of relief ex penditures. Even so, the flaunting of millions coming from industrialists will have a contrary effect on the mass of voters. In fact, it lends point to the Presi dent’s speech—underscores it. Then, Hamilton evidently made a break, also, in welcoming the Cough lin-Lemke party—not because he de sires to see it win, but because it will take votes, from the Democrats. The new party is abhorrent to Re publicans—as it has as its chief plank the revaluation of money. To invite such a party to step in to take all it can, on the chance that it is likely to take more from the Democrats than from the Republicans does not seem sound judgment to many G. O. P. leaders. An independent movement can become more damag ing than a known opposition party. FAVORING F. D. R.? Father Coughlin’s continued asser tions that President Roosevelt’s poli cers are communistic and that people who favor them are communistically minded also are having a reverse ef fect. Opposition to Father Coughlin has been trying to pin on him the Fas cist badge—and now that opposition believes it has the circumstancial evi dence. ' k T~ ~- / of* ranoNMELy Outlook Is Very Poor in Southern Piedmont and Western Counties Dnliy niNpiitch Unreal*. In The Sir Waller ll«(«>, Bv J C. It A Sli KltV I LI/ Raleigh, July 2. —The outlook for anything like a normal cotton crop in. the southern Piedmont and western counties is very poor at the present time, while indications are for almost no cotton crop at all in several coun ties, Frank Parker, of the State-Fed eral Crop Reporting Service of the State Department of Ariculture, said today. In the eastern counties, cotton; is doing very well now since the rains of the last two weeks, with the re sult that a fair crop is in prospect throughout most of the eastern sec tion, although there has been so much rain in some sections that grass and weeds are causing a lot of trouble. “The entire western part of the State, including the western edge of the Piedmont section, is suffering greatly from lack of rain and all crops are in poor condition,” Parker said. “In many counties the farmers are really in distress because of the drought. This is especially true in Cleveland, Mecklenburg, Gaston and Union counties, where the cotton is just now beginning to come up fol lowing a light rain there last week. This cotton is coming up so late that it is impossible to tell whether it will make a crop or not. And unless more rain comes very soon, it will burn up in the fields. The corn, hay an<] small grain crops have also been very seri ously curtailed, by ihe dry weather. I would say that throughout the west ern Piedmont and most, of the moun tain counties, distressing crop condi tions exist because of the lack of rain. “In the eastern counties , where there has really been too much rain during the past two weeks, the weeds and grass are causing a great deal of trouble in the cotton, tobacco and corn crops and threatening to cur tail production, although all these crops are now growing nicely and promise a fair yield, though nothing like as good a yield as last year, since the drought which preceded the re cent Tains in the east has thrown all the crops very late. Hoey Might Carry 24 Os Counties in Eastern Carolina (Continued from Page One.) will get a majority in 23 counties. In analyzing the 45 counties west of Durham, including Durham county in this number, present indications are that Dr. McDonald will again carry all of the 18 counties he car ried in the first primary with the ex ception of Beaufort county, but that the loss of Beaufort, now generally regarded as likely to go for Hoey in the second primary, will be offset by the capture of both Pitt and Cum berland by the McDonald forces, thus bringing the total of easterp counties regarded as certain to give McDonald a majority up to 19. Both Cumberland and Pitt counties went for Sandy Graham in the first pri mary on June 6. Vance Is Doubtful The 19 counties now regarded as likely to give McDonald a majority are Durham, Wake, Cumberland, Bladen, Johnston, Franklin, Warren, Nash, Wilson, Wayne, Pender, New Hanover, Lenoir, Edgecombe, Halifax Bertie, Martin, Fitt and Hyde. If McDonald can also carry Granville, which went for Graham in the first primary, and Vance, which he car ried in the first run-off but which is now claimed as a Hoey county, he will be able to get 21 instead of 19 counties in this eastern group of 45. The 24 counties which are expected to give a majority to Hoey in the second primary July 4 are Harnett, Robeson, Columbus, Brunswick, iShmpsoii, Duplin, Onslow, Jonps, Greene, Hertford, Northampton, Cra ven, Carteret, Pamlico, Beaufort, Washingtons Tyrrell, Dare, Gates, Chowan, Carteret, Pamlico, Beaufort, Washington, Tyjrrell, Dare, Gatos, Chowan, Perquimans, Pasquotank, Camden and Currituck. If Vance and Granville counties also go for Hoey this time, as the Hoey forces claim they will, the total of Hoey counties in this group of 45 will reach 26, pro vided he does not lose any of these others. Graham Counties for Hoey? Os this group of 24 counties now expected to give Hoey a majority in the second primary, ten went for Gra ham on June 6. These ten are Dup lin, Onslow, Jones, Greene, Craven, Chowan, Perquimans, Pasquotank, Camden and Currituck. Two of these 24, Columbus and Beaufort, went to McDonald in the first primary. All the others were carried by Hoey. Dr. McDonald will probably get from 7,000 to 10,000 more votes from this block of 45 counties in the east than will Hoey, despite the fact that he is slated to carry fewer counties, the survey shows. The reason for this is that the 19 counties which are conceded to McDonald are larger and more populous than the 24 conceded to Hoey. Majorities for McDonald In 'She first primary, McDonald received 86,650 votes in these 45 counties, Hoey 56,750 and Graham 71,650. It is now estimated that Me- Wife Preservers Try creaming cream cheese, using a little milk or cream, to make it of a consistency to spread, and top ping the gingerbread with it Barred as "Alien” r site: W: ■• & 3 . Nsfißsßy . *::*•:' •>'• r ' -:p Robert Rodenkirchen, Jersey City, N. J., school-boy sprinter, stole the show in the Olympic try-outs at Cambridge, Mass., by setting the sensational mark of 21 seconds for the 200-meters. He is now barred from the final try-outs because he is not an American citizen but may be accepted if his father becomes na turalized in time. /Central Press) Donald will get from 87,000 to 90,000 votes in these same counties and Hoey from 77,000 to 80,000 votes, de pending on how many votes are cast. The belief is that the voting will be almost as heavy in these 45 eastern counties in the second as in the first primary, due to the tense and bitter feeling which prevails between the Hoey and McDonald camps, in most of these counties. NeitheV the McDonald nor Hoey camp is willing to agree with the re sults of this survey, of course. The Hoey forces claim they will not only Carry Vance and Granville counties, thus assuring Hoey of 20 of these 45 counties, but that he has an excellent chance to carry Cumberland, Pender, Wayne, Wilson and Nash counties and thus give Hoey 31 of these 45 counties, with a proportionate de crease in McDonald’s expected lead in all of these counties. McDonald Group Disagrees The McDonald workers also main tain that this bureau’s survey of these 45 counties is all wrong, and that in addition to the 18 counties which McDonald carried in the first pri mary, he will now carry Granville Harnett, New Hanover, Duplm, Ons low, Jones, Craven and Pitt with a chance to carry Carteret, Pamlico and most of the five Albemarle coun ties —/Chowan, Perquimans, Pasquo tank, Camden and Currituck. They also maintain that Columbus, Pend er, Beaufort, Wayne, Wilson and Nash will stay in line for McDonald and give him a larger vote than be fore. Thus the McDonald forces claim On yonrlefi..an old favorite On your right..a newMcnd t Squeeze juice of half a x-v< / -1 pieces of ice Ls 17/ ttere m s a simple i ray to double your enjoyment of your GINGER t ~ U tarorite long tall drink. Now you can get two entirely different drinks out of the same long tall recipe. Occasionally try mixing it QQharged with Old Mr. Boston Sloe Gin instead of the old reliable Old Mr., r'- o '"' : yl*TEß Boston Distilled Dry Gin. Presto! Change! The old favorite long taW 1 I becomes a smart new drink. And what a drink, a thirst-drencher with Fill with ginger ale or a tangy, wine-like taste . . . not tart, not sweet ... that’s hard to describe but mighty easy to sip. Tonight or right now buy a bottle of Old Mr. Boston Sloe Gin (you have everything else right in your home. • • • lemons, sugar, ice and some sparkling water or ginger ale). Find out what a mixer you turned out to lie. Ben Burk Inc., Boston, Mass. they will carry a minimum of 27 counties in this group of 45 and that they will have a good chance to carry as many as 34 of them. If the McDonald forces should suc ceed in carrying as many as 30 or 34 of these counties, it is generally agreed that the Winston-Salem can didate would come to Durham with a majority of between 15,000 to 20,- 000 instead of a majority of from 7,- DRESS-UP FOR~~THE FOURTH At Tucker’s Men, we have everything to wear you’ll need to make the glorious Fourth a day of pleasure and enjoyment. Summer Suits i Cool as a sea breeze, in all sizes. Wash materials and tropical worsteds $8.50 to $19.50 Ties —Shirts —Hosiery— Underwear —Luggage Sport Coats and Pants Swim Suits All sizes for men and boys in a wonder ful variety of colors. Don’t leave on your vacation trip until you visit Tucker Clothing Co. A Quality Store at Moderate Prices. 000 to, 10,000 as shown by this survey. But even if the McDonald majority over Hoey in these 45 counties should run as high as 15,000, this lead will be wiped out and completely destroy ed by the heavy lead Hoey is expect ed to gain and maintain over Mc- Donald in the Piedmont and west ern counties, where most observers agree McDonald cannot carry more than four out of 55 counties.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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July 2, 1936, edition 1
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