43 Licenses Revoked
For This County
(Continued from Page One.)
vocations to the population in the va
rious countie-4 was not then available.
The percentage tahle was just com
pleted today and released without any
comment by the highway safety di
vision.
There are three counties in the
State in which not a single license
has been revoked for drunken driv
ing or any other violation of State
drivers’ license law, the figure show.
These are Clay. Graham and Mitchell
counties, all in the western part of
the State, while Allehany county had
only one revocation and Dare, Surry
and Swain counties only 1 two revoca
tions each, while Hyde, Macon and
Orange counties have had only three
revocations each since the law went
into effect November 1, 1935.
The percentage of driving license
revocations to the population in some
of the other counties, as well a s the
actual number of revocations, follow:
Crunty Percent Number
Beaufort 10 38
Caldwell 15 44
Camden 09 5
Carteret 03 6
Catawba 11 54
Chowan 12 14
Currituck 07 5
Dare 03 2
Durham 11 83
Edgecombe 11 55
Forsyth 16 179
Franklin 09 29
Gaston 10 85
Pasquotank 12 24
Pitt 17 98
Rowan 21 120
Vance 15 43
Wake 16 163
Wayne 03 51
Wilson 19 86
Warren 07 17
Parker Reprimand
Is Given Approval
(Continued from Page One.)
of Raeford, was convicted of drunken
driving before Judge W. B. McQueen
of the recorder’s court there, who
revoked his drivers’ license for only
three months, although the State law
makes it mandatory that it be revok
ed for one year. At the end of 90 days,
McQueen gave Williams a permit to
drive, regardless of the State law.
When Williams was arrested and
taken before Judge McQueen again
for driving without a license, he was
dismissed and the highway patrol
man reprimanded. Recently Patrol
man R. M. Brooks again saw Wil
liams driving a car, went before the
grand jury and secured a true bill a
gainst him. Judge Parker, who was
Watch for opening
of New State
Theatre.
STEVENSON
MONDAY AND TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY—FRIDAY
M EDWARD
ARNOLD
LEE TRACY
BINNIE BARNES
-in
“SUTTER’S
1:111 I) 77
VJV/ajL/
“What—No* Spinach”
.-<**&*/ $ jji News Novelty
—1 11—Lfa—rf—
-1 SATURDAY
SS" Sir “AND SUDDEN DEATH"
HENDERSON. (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 1936
Stevenson Theatre Wednesday
■ xiggHk- ' *
Richard Adlen in “The Mine With the Iron Door”
presiding over superior court, issued
a capias for Williams. When officers
found him, lie was drunk, but main
tained he had not been driving while
drunk. But the jury convicted him
of driving while drunk and Judge
Parker sentenced him to 18 months
on the roads and to four months more
for driving while his license had been
revoked. Judge Parker also reprim
anded Judge McQueen from the
bench, telling him:
“I don’t know what I should do
with you. You are a party to aiding
and abetting in breaking down the
laws you are sworn to uphold and
enforce.”
The records of the highway safety
division on Williair.o were also pre
sented to the grand jury by Arthur
Fulk, director of the division.
Wite Preservers
KreOftm ‘ Bil
Artificial silks may be easily
distinguished from pure silk by
burning a small piece. Artificial
silk leaves a large quantity of
ash in the form of a ball, and
gives off the odor of burning
feathers.
Francis Lederer and Ida Lupino in
“One Rainy Afternoon."
At The Vance Theatre
Monday and Tuesday
"buck -JONES
C*. "SILVER. SPURS"
UNIVERSAL PICTUA.G.
At The Vance Theatre
Friday and Saturday
CLEANER GETS WINTER
FASHION INFORMATION
Advance fashions for women’s
dresses this Fall and Winter include
dazzling arrays of metal and velvet,
according to Valet Celaners, who get
advance information on the peren
nial joy of the housewife and buga
boo of the harried husband.
The list of materials and fabrics
women will have to wear this year to
be in style with the gals who walk
down the pavements of Paris and the
avenues of New York reads like a fe
male Arabian Nights dream, accord
ing to this organization. Women will
slither down the floors of Gotham’s
best ballrooms and adorn the banquet
tables of the best hotels and clubs in
town in shimmering dresses which
mmsE
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WRON6 OS *
/TeLEiSRA/A fAV IU&r
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fVSLE “To
"} This VfAfe.
Stevenson Theatre Monday and Tuesday
Kay Frances in “The White Angel”
WiiMiiMmSß. :::: •?'
mMM wiL Si.
■npan , n
At The Vance Theatre Wednesday, Thursday
Scene from “Easy Money”
will look even more exotic than the
variety of materials they contain
would seem to warrant.
This firm has some news on dress
es that would knock the average fe
minine buyer into ecstasies and or
gies of buying. It also gets in a lit
tle two-cent piece of its own that a
bit of advice on how to clean these
da'zzling garments if you drop part
of a baccardi or gin fizz on one. It
is also remodeling part of its plant
and hiring several experts who will
do all the work on gowns such as
these when they are sent to the clean
ers.
Tea carriers from China carry tea
across high mountains into Tibet on
mule-back or by porters; the mule go
ing twice as fast as the human por
ter but carrying only half of the load
of a man, a man’s load being, on an
average, nearly 200 pounds, in some
exceptional cases more than 400
pounds.
STEVENSON
—SUNDAY NIGHT
DOORS OPEN AT 8:45
\\ \' .V
iff “TIMES SQUARE TOPICS”
Featuring Sherman and McVey —Lute Bros. Quinn Sisters
and Harrison —'Buddy Mack “The Boy From North Carolina
; . —and —
M JOE CLAUSER AND HUS COLLEGIANS—
STAGE BAND
' a\\\. NOTICE This stage show comes to us recommend
ed as one of the best of the season and we believe
you will thoroughly enjoy it.
\ ROGER PRYOR /
m ’WENDY BARRIE — JF
\ “A TICKET TO /
\ PARADISE” g
gg/gm Admission:
ft
Stevenson Theatre Saturday—
Randolph Scott in “And Sud
den Death”
The East and the Ear East beats us
in production costs through the com
bination of automatic machinery and
l starvation wages.
SONG HITS IN “ONE
Rainy afternoon?
“One Raily Afternoon” and “Secrfft
Rendezvous,” two tuneful new sorig
hits that are enjoying great popular
ity on the air are featured in “Onte
Rainy Afternoon/,” Pickford-Lask y’a
gay comedy romance, starring Fran/cis
Lederer, which begins a two day »en
gagement at the Vance Theatre
Monday and Tuesday.
Film fans will have their first
chance to hear the romantic Lederer
sing in this film, which marks the
pfirst offering of the newly organized
producing company headed by Mary
Pickford and Jesse L<. Lask.y. lie sings
“One Rainy Afternoon,” while thp
other song is sung by Seger Elds and
Margaret Warner.
Five Famous Comedians
Ida Lupino plays the romantic
Czech’s leading lady in this sparkling
Parisian comedy depicting the amaz
ing developments that en sue; when a
handsome young man kbses a strange
beauty in a dark movie theatre, while
five famous comedians play import
ant supporting roles, Hugh Herbert,
Roland Young, Erik Rhodes, Joseph
Cawthorn and Donald Meek.
The music of both songs was writ
ten by Ralph Irwin, Jack Stern and
Harry Tobias collaborated on the ly
rics of “One Rainy Afternoon” while
those of “Secret Rendezvous” are
from the pen of Preston Sturges.
Stephen Morehouse Avtiry prepared
the screenplay and dialogue from the
French story “Monsieur Sans Gene.”
Additional dialogue was contributed
by Maurice Hanline.
Rowland V Lee directed the com
edy, while Pevereil Marley is respon
sible for the photography. "‘One
Rainy Afternoon” is released through
United Artists.
Landon Speeches
Not Spectacular
(Continued fro tn Page One.)
steering as clear as« he can from a
type of contest in which the President
is a recognized champion, but in
which he is not muc-h good; in which
Wife Preserver*
In choosing a new cloth coat
for winter, choose cloth of good
quality fibers and well-con
structed yarns, saya the U. S.
bureau of home economics.
Choose a firm, close weave that
will not stretch out of shape or
snag.
NEW VANCE
Children #■% WM *• Jk #|% W% M Adults
Always JL MM MU JnL JL XI MU Always
10c Phone 775 25c
COOL AND COMFORTABLE
Monday Tuesday
A Kiss in the Dark
Brings to Light the
Merriest Love Story
of the Year!
She sighed.. .when the great lover
on the screen gathered the hero
ine in his arms. But she scream
ed when a handsome stranger in
the next seat kissed her!.. .And
that scream was only the begin
ning! Go see ‘ A,
i r
“One Rainy Afternoon”
It’s a riot of fun all the way
through.
Wednesday Thursday
A gangster picture that every
body will enjoy. Fake acci
dents do happen, and gang
sters are at it again, with an
easy money racket that never
fails, see it yourself.
Friday Saturday
The screen’s most loved ac
tion star. See him in his
latest picture.
They could think him yellow.
They could suspect him of
rustling. They could accuse
him of robbery. But when
they stole the girl he loved,
PAGE THREE
he is untrained, anyway?
HIS ATTITUDE?
The Democratic criticism of Lan
don is that he generalizes—suggests
ideals that are all but fails to
explain how he proposes to,.realize
them.
He has supporters who want him
to tell how.
Possibly he doesn’t know. He ip
honest enough to imply as much, if
80.
In any event, he does not like what
the New Deal seems to be trying to
accomplish. That is as. far as lie goes.
He says, in effect, that, even if he
has not a program, neither has the
New Deal.
NO VIOLENT ATTACK ’**
The G. O. P. management wants p,
violent attack upon Roosevelt isari and
Landon has not delivered om» yet.
The governor did not take, the of
fensive in his presidential 'acceptance
address. He was only politically
philosophic at YiTest Middlesex and
thenceforward. He did not tear into
the opposition and, while he did ex
press sentiment;* of his own, he did
not go into details.
Particulars aje - what the Demo
crats are dem inding and particulars
are what the , Republican manage
ment wants th.em to be met with.
OBmunm^g^s
1 1 S
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Sj^jgpSicES
PICKFORMASK^^P^^
Productions presents ’ ; f§f
m /ttumciL.
IDA LUPINO *HUGH HERBERT
ROLAND YOUNG .
Joseph Cawthorn- Erik Rhodes'
Directed by Released Ihru
Rowland V. Lee UNITED ARTISTS
B nttkJ i iLpiBB M
mu mm» mwm « wcteee
the girl who needed his help
L —it would have been safer
to sit on a mountain of dyna
mite!