PAGE FOUR
HENOERS3!I DAILY DISPATCH
Ertahilahed Augwt It, 1914
FobUahed Every Afternoon Except
Sunday by
HENDERSON DISPATCH 00., INC.
at 199 Young Street
HENRY A.~D ENNIS, ~re». and Editor
IC. L. FINCH, Saoi-Ti jas., Bun. Mgr.
TELEPHONES i
Editorial Office COO
Society Editor Cl 9
Buxines Office 010
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member of the Associated Prtsc
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tiation and the North Carolina Pro.**
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Otherwise credited in this paper, aui
flso the local news published herein, j
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FROST, LANDIS A KOHN
250 Park Avenue, New York
860 North Michigan, Ave. Chicago
General Motor* Bldg., Detroit
1413 Healey Building, Atlanta.
Entered at the post office in Hender
*on, N. C., second cless mail matter
THIfFiRST CHRISTMAS
ST. LUKE 2:1-16
And It came to pass in these
days that there went out a decree
from Ccasar Augustus, that a'l the
world should he taxed.
(And this taxing was first made
when Cyrenius was governor of
Syria.)
And all went to be taxed, every
one into his own city.
And Joseph also went up fri m
Galilee out of the city of Naz
;ireth, into Judea, unto the city of
David, which is called Bethlehem;
(because he was of the house and
lineage of David:)
To be taxed with Mary his es
poused wife, being great with
child.
And so it was that, while they
were there, the da>s were accom
plished *hat she should bo de
livered.
And sht brought forth her first
born son, and wrapped him in
swaddling clothes, and laid him I
in a manger; because there was
no room for them in the inn.
And there were in the sane
country shepherds abiding in the
field, keeping watch over their
flocks by night.
And, 10, the angel of the Lord
came upon them, and the glory of
the Lord shone round about them:
and they were sore afraid.
And the angel said unto them
Fear not: for, behold, 1 bring you
good tidings of great joy, which
shall be to all people.
For unto you is born this day
In the city of David a Saviour,
which is Christ the Lord.
And this shall be a sign unto
you; Ye shall find the babe wrap
ped in swaddling clothes, lying in
a manger.
And suddenly there was with
the angel a multitude of the heav
enly host praising God, and say
ing.
Glory to God in the highest, and i
on earth peace, good will tovrard
men.
And it came t«) pass, as the
angels were gone awnv from them
Into heaven, the shepherds said
one to another. Let as non go
even unto Bethl. hem, and -ee thi«
thing which is come to pass,
which the Lord hath made known
unto us.
And they came with haste, and
found Mary, and Joseph, and the j
babe lying in a manger.
And when they had seen It, th«y
made known abroad the saving
which was told them concerning
this child.
And ail they that heard it won
dered at tkjsc things which were
told them by the shepherds.
But Mrry kept ail these things,
and pondered them In her heart.
And ihe shepherds returned,
glorifying and praising God for all
the things that they had heard
and seen, as it was told unto
them.
CHRISTMAS TONIC.
(Henry Van Dyke)
I am thirVing of you today because j
it i.s Christmas, anj I wish you hap
piness, ar>d tomorrow, because it will
be the day after Christmas, I shall
wi~.h you happiness; o.nd so on clear |
through the year. I may not be able i
to teli you a..out. it every day, be-j
cause I may be far away; or because
both of us may be very busy; or per
haps I may not be able to pay the
postage on ho many letters or find
time to -write them. But that makes
no difference. The thought and the
wish will be here just the same. In j
my work and in my business of life
I mean to try not to be unfair to you
or to injure you in any way, J n my
pleasure, if we can be together I
would like to share the fun with you.
Whatever joy or success comes to
you will make me glad. Without pre
tense and in plain words, good-will to
you is what 1 mean in the SJpiiit of
Christmas.
ANSWERS, TO
TEN QUESTIONS
Sen Back Pag 0
1. Kentucky.
2. Mrs. Julia M. Peterkin.
3. 1898.
4. Ishtar, of Istar.
5. A section of a circular cone made
by a plane parallel to an element
or generatrix.
6. Alexander he Great.
7. Max Baer.
8 Scottish writer.
0. The whale.
10. The race is exclusively for three
year olds
l HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1936
IS THERE A SANTA CLAUS I
In 1897 the New York Sun
received an inquiry from a little
girl regarding the existence of
Santa Claus. Her letter was
referred to Francis P. Church,
a member of the editorial sHvf < ’
of the Sun and the masterpiece
which we are reproducing be
low was the result. On each
Christmas since it first appear
ed. it has found its Way back
into print. If you have read it
previously, still another read
ing will be worth your while,
and if perchance it has escaped
your notice until now, we com
mend it to you as a gen ex
emplifying the true ‘‘spirit of
Christmas.” Here it is reprint
ed from the New York Sun of
September 21, 1899:
“We ipke pleasure in answer
ing at once, and thus promin
ently. the communication be
low. expressing at the same time
our great gratification that its
author is numbered among the
friends of The Sun:
“D'-'ar Editor—l am 8 years old.
“Some of my little friends say
there is no Santa Claus.
“Papa says ‘lf you see it in the
Sun it’s so.
“Pleo.se tell me the truth, is
there a Santa Claus?
“VIRGINIA O’HANLON.
“135 West Ninety-fifth Street."
“Virginia, your little friends
me wrong. They have becu af
fected by the skepticism of a
skeptical age. They do not be
lieve except what they see.
They think that nothing can be
which is not comprehensible by
their little minds. All minds,
Virginia whether they be men’s
or children's are little. In this
great universe of ours man is a
mere inject an ant, in his intel
lect, as compared with the
boundless world about him, as
measured by the intelligence
capable of grasping the whole
truth and knowledge.
“Yes. Virginia, there is a
Santa Claus. He exists as cer
tainly as love and generosity
and devotion exist, and you
know that they abound and give
to your life its highest beauty
and joy. Alas! how dreary
would be the world if there w T ere
no Santa Claus. It would be as
dreary as if there were no Vir
ginias. There w T ould be no child
like faith then no poetry, no ro
mance, to make tolerable this
existence. We should have no en
joyment, except in sense and
sight. The eternal light with
which childhood fills the world
would be extinguished.
“Not believe in Santa Claus?
You might as well not believe in
fairies! You might get yen,
papa to hire men to watch in all
tiie chimneys on Christmas Eve
to catch (Santa Claus, but even
if they did not see Santa Claus
com.’:;,- down what would that
prove ? Nobody Santa
Claus, but that is no sign chat
there is no Santa Claus. The
most real things in the world
are those neither children nor
men cun see. Did you ev r see
fairies dancing on the lawn? Os
course not, but that’s no proof
that they are not there. No
body can conceive or imagine
all the wonders that are unseen
and unseeable in the world.
“\ou mav tear asunder the
babv’s rattle and see what
makej the noise inside but there
7s a veil covering the unseen
world which not the strongest,
man no r even the united
strength of the strongest men
that ever lived, could tear apart.
Only faith, fancy, poetry, love
romance, can push aside that,
curtain and view the picture
the supernatural beauty and
glory beyond. Is it ail real? Ah
Virginia, in all this world there
is nothing else real and abiding.
“No Santa Claus? Thank
God! He lives forever. A thou
sand years from now Virginia,
nay 'en times ten thousand
years from now, he will con
tinue to make glad the heart of
childhood.”
Roosevelt Greeting Card
Washington, Dec. 24 (AP) -A sim
ple pencil sketch of a tiny, snowbound
farm carries the Christmas greetings
of the President, and Mrs. Roosevel'
this year. The card is a greetings,
which carried miniature departure
from previous holiday photographs of
the Chief Executive and his wife in
some fireside scene.
“HEARTS IN BONDAGE”
AT THE STATE THEATRE
The feature picture “Hearts In
Bondage" showing at the State Thea
tre today will surely appeal to most
of the p >ple of this section. It is a
story everybody is familiar with and
the settings for the photoplay were
.-...de around Norfolk, Va. Th* ist
is headed by James Dunn, Mae CUu k
and David Manners.
The humming-bird of the Amazon
grows no larger than an Inch and a
half.
Today is the Day
ty CLARK BNNAIRD
Copyright, 193*, for tkia Newspaper
by Central Press Association j
Christmas Eve, Thursday, Dec. 24;
Fast of Pebet —Tebet 10,5607 in Jew
ish Calendar. Morning stars: Mars,
Neptune. Evening stars: Mercury,
Venus. Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus.
TODAY’S YESTERDAYS
Dec,' 2ii, ISo3—Jerome Bonaparte,
19, youngest, brother of Napoleon, wed
Elizabeth “Betsy” Patterson, store
keeper’s daughter in Baltimore.
When he took her abroad, Napoleon
refused to recognize the marriage,
compelled Jerome to divorce her, be
trothed him to a princess and made
him king of Westphalia.
Betsy bore Jerome a son whose des
cendants chose both French and
American allegiance and live in both
countries today.
Dec. 24. 1822 —Dr. Clement Clarke
Moore wrote “A Visit from St. Nicho
las," popularly known as “The Night
Before Christmas,’’ to amuse the chil
dien in his family. It was first pub
lished, anonymously ami without his
permission a year later, and he did
not acknowledge its authorship pub
licly for 22 y ears. He was ashamed
of itl
FRIDAY IS THE DAY
Friday. Dec. 25, a legal holiday in
every country of the world except
Soviet Russia, Iran (Persia) Bulgaria
ar.d Yugoslavia. In the latter two it
is observed on a later date in accord
ance with the old calendar. It was
once a illegal holiday in this coun
| try! The General Court of Massa
chusetts enacted a law which stood
for 20 years; “Whosoever shall be
found observing any such day as
Christmas or the like, either for for
bearing of labor, feasting or any other
way, As a festival, shall be fined 5
shillings.”
CHRISTMAS
Dec. 25 was celebrated as a feast
ing, gift-giving holiday long before the
birth of Jesus in 4 B. C.
It has no Christian significance un
til 354, when Pope Julius chose it as
the date for observance of Christmas,
largely because it coincided with the
j greatest of pagan festivals—celebra
tion of the Winter solstice. It was the
diplomacy of the early church not to
forbid customs associated with the
ok! religion, but to consecrate them
to Christian uses. The great spring
festival of the pagans became Easter.
Before the sth century, the birth
day of Jesus was observed variously,
on January 6, March 25, April 19-20,
May 20, Nov. 17. Even in these times
Christmas is still observed in some lo
calities in January.
Any state legislature could abolish
iChr.stmas, as Massachusetts once
did. Christmas is not a national legal
holiday in this country. It’s a holi
day declared by states. Congress has
no power to declare a holiday for
anything except the District of Co
lumbia. And. legally, this is not a
Christian nation.
the “Star of Bethlehem" was prob
ably one of the rare conjunctions of
three planets—Jupiter, Mars and Sa
turn. They appeared in the Constel
lation Pisces, the Fishes, and the as-
of the day, who had no teles
copes, -night easily have mistaken
then- for a single symbol and con
trued their bright light to hold spe
cial significance for the Jewish oeo
ple. This triple conjunction happens
What Do You
Know About
North Carolina?
By FRED H. MAV
1. In what way did the coming of
the first train to Raleigh nearly craze
some people?
2. How many North Carolinians
were killed at the battle of Gettys
j bu r&?
j 3. What was the total amount of
I retail sales of all North Carolina
j stores in 1929?
4. What qualifications does the con-
I stitution require of a governor?
5. What was the first railroad char
[ ter issued in North Carolina?
i 6. Wnat was the weight of the lar
gest gold nugget ever found in North
Carolina?
ANSWERS
1. Paul C. Cameron, of Raleigh,
I wrote a friend under date of March
■, 26, 1840, “Our rail road ig nearly com
pleted. Cars now come daily to the
j depot, and judging from the noise
[ 'hat we hear at this distance, the good
j people of the town seem well nigh
| crazed."
I 2. Seven hundred. The total Confed
-1 erate losses were 2,392 killed and 12,-
j 707 wounded. The killed for the states
(were as follows: North Carolina—7oo;
! Georgia—42s; \lirgUnia—399; Mi/;is
' sippi*—2sß; South Carolina—2l7; and
Alabama —204.
3. The 28,831 retail stores in the
state reported for that year total sales
of $653,419,000.
4. He must have attained the age of
30 years, he must have been a resi
dent of the United States five years
and of the state two years before the
election. He can hold only four year
term within an eight year period, un
less he attained the office from the
lieutenant - governorship. The same
qualifications are required of lieute
nant-governor.
5. The Peter sburg Railroad in 1830
with -a terminus on Roanoke River
at Weldon’s Orchard. Two years later
this was followed by the Portsmouth
and Roaqoke route also building to
Weldon’s Orchard, now Weldon.
6. Twenty-eight pounds, found at
the Reed mine on the farm of Joel
Reed, Cabarrus county in 1803. This
nugget was dug up by a Negro labor
er. It was valued at SB,OOO. Other nug
gets found at this mine weighed 16
pounds, 13 1-4 pounds, 9 pounds, 8
pounds and many smaller ones. It was
estimated in 18291 that $10,000,000 in
gold had been taken from this mine.
I December!
Imm 58BHW» wtd few m Wl
next, in the 25th century.
The World War 20 Years Ago, Deo.
24-25. 1916 —‘From Feb. to Sept., the
monthly average of all Allied and neu
tral merchant ships sunk of German
and Austrian submarines had been 76
ships and 153,521 gross tons. But now,
figures showed, the monthly average
had risen to 173 ships and 346,405
gross tons, and the campaign had ex.
tended with success to the Azores.
Canaries and Madeira, where Fun
chal was bombarded by a converted
mei*chant-shii>.
IT’S TRUE
Greenland has no laws against mur
der, and never has any murders.
The size of children is affected by
the United States in which they live.
“The first conscription was not in
1814, but in 1781 when George Rog
ers Clark was given the power by Vir
ginia to draft men for the expedi
tion in that year against Sandusky
and Detroit,” says Earle R. Forrest.
Washington, F4a. But he overlooks
the conscription of men in New Eng
land for the Amerindan wars.
The tarpon can swin 80 miles an
hour!
Queries, reproofs, etc., are welcom
ed by Clark Kinnaird.
> TODAY
TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES
1745 Benjam.n Rush, physician,
Pennsylvania signer of the Declara
tion of Independence, born near Phil
adelphia. Died April 19, 1813.
1794—Chauncey Rose, Terre Haute,
Ind., philanthropist, founder of its
Polytechnic School, born at Wethers
field, Conn. Died Aug. 13, 1877.
1809 Christopher (Kit) Carson,
guide, western scout, hunter, one of
the advance guard who spanned the
continent, born in Madison Co., Ky.
Died at Fort Lyon, Cole., May 23, 1868.
1815 Orr.ngton Lunt, Chi
cago’s noted merchant and philanth
ropist, born at Bowdoinham, Maine.
Died April 5, 1897.
1822 —Matthew Arnold, English es
sayish and poet, born. Died April 16.
1888.
1864 Fred B. Smith, Y. M. C. A.
worker, moderator of the National
Council of Congregational Churches,
peace worker, born at Lone Tree,
lowa. Died at White Plains, N. Y.
Sept. 3, 1836.
*lB75 —-Will.am B. Wherry, Univer
sity of Cincinnati’s noted bacteriolo
gist, born in India (of American par
entage). Died in Cincinnati, Nov. 1.
1936
TODAY IN HISTORY
1803—Marirage of Elizabeth Pat
terson of Baltimore to Jerome Bon
aparte, Napoleon’s brother.
1818 —“Silent Night, Holy Night”
(Stille Nacht) a poem by Josem Mohr,
village priest, first sung this Christ
mas Eve, at Oberndorf, Austria.
1827—General strike in Philadel
phia, first begun by carpenters for an
S-hour day; out of which grew first
union of organized workmen in city.
1865 — -Ku Kluz Klan originated in
Pulaski, Tenn., by six young Confed
erate soldiers, and intended as a so
cial club.
1925 —Closing of holy door in Rome
ended Holy Year—next one opening
Christmas Eve in 1950.
1929—Police guarded new grave of
Father Patrick J. Power at Malden.
Mass.-, scene of pilgrimages and mir
aculous cures in the preceding months
TODAY’C BIRTHDAYS
Harllce Branch, second assistant
postmaster-general, horn at Polkton,
N. C., 57 years ago.
Prof. Robert M. Lovett, famed Uni
versity of Chicago’s retired professor
of English, born in Boston, 66 years
ago. s
Ruth Chalterton, actress, born in
New York City, 43 years ago.
JLucrezia Bori, soprano, born in
Spain, 48 years ago.
Edward G. Lowry of New York,
journalist, born at Atlanta. Ga., 60
years ago.
Dr. Thomas R. Garth of the Univer
sity of Denver, noted psychologist
born at Paducah, Ky., 64 years ago.
George P. Schaller of Chicago, pres
of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago, born 63 years ago.
TODAY’S HOROSCOPE
Today’s disposition is apt to be va
cillating and uncertain. There is not
the force of yesterday and procrasti
nation may be a besetting sin.
There is considerable ability and there
is no reason why the labors should
not be crowned with success, if the
mind can only be kept tied down and
concentrated.
(December 25, 1936.)
TODAY’S ANNnTRPARTES.
1642—3ir Isaac Newton, famed Eng
lish scientist, born. Died March 20
1”27.
1793—Edward T. Taylor, Boston’s
noted Methodist chaplain of seamen
making port there, born at Richmond
Va. Died April 5. 1871.
1818—William 11. Herndon, Lin
coln’s hw partner and bicgvafphor,
born at Grecnohu g, D:_-’ Ma-ch
18, 1891.
1821—Clara Barton, Civil War
nurse, founder-organizer the National
Red Cross in the United States, torn
at Oxford, Mass. Died April 12, 1912.
1829—Patrick S. Gilmore, noted
American bandmaster, born in Ireland
Died in St. Louis, Sept. 24, 1892.
1840—Princess Agnes E. Salm-Salm,
the American-born wife of a German
soldier noted for her attempt to save
Emperor Maximillian in Mexico, nurse
in the Franco-German war, born in
Franklin Co., Vt. Died in Germany.
TODAY IN HISTORY.
1776 —Washington crossed the Dela
ware at night, amid snow ants r leet
and ice, to surprise British at Tren
ton.
1868 —Pres. Andrew Jchnsj:: pro
claimed full amnesty for those en
gaged in the late rebellion.
3.914 — English and German troops
fraternized in trenches this first
Christmas of the war.
1925 — iMarshal Chang-tso-lin (fath
er of the rebel Chinese marshal who
lately kidnaped the Chinese war lord)
“IN THE LAP OP LEGENDS OLD?
having captured a rebel leader and
his wife, mutilated them both and
then had them killed.
1928 —Maj. Chester P. Mills award
ed $25,000 Durant prize for best plan
to make prohibition effective.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS.
Robert L. Ripley of “Believe It or
Not” fame, born at Santa Rosa, Cal.,
43 years ago.
David Lawrence of Washington, D.
C., journalist, born in Philadelphia, 48
years ago.
Ferdinan A. Silcox, Chief U. S. For
est Service, born at Columbus, Ga.,
54 years ago.
Gldays Swarthout, singer born at
Deepwater, Mo., 32 years ago.
Kathryn Sellers of Washington, D.
C., lawyer, born at Broadway, 0., 66
years ago.
Paul Manship of New York, famed
sculptor, born at St. Paul, Minn., 51
years ago.
Gen. Evangeline Booth of London,
world Salvation Army head, born 71
years ago.
TODAY’S HOROSCOPE.
Today gives a profound mind en
dowed with prudence and foresight.
In some special way, today’s native
will show special ability and fame
will be the reward; not only a repu
tation at home, but scattered broad
cast over the world. Financially, it
is not always so successful.
amesAsweffl
i— m rrn
New York, Dec. 24.—Interview With
a Chinese Laundryman:
Q. Wfhat do you think of the kidnap
ing of General Chiang Kai-shek by
General Chank Hsueh-Liang
A. I am glad you asked. You might
have gone to someone of my country
men whose talents, while far greater
than mine, at the same time would
not have descended to the low level
of linguist. I am thus able to put my
poor thoughts into your beautiful lan
guage for I have made a study of it
for twenty-four years. General Chiang
Kai-shek is the savior of my people,
while his jailor, General Chang
Hsueh-liang is a wicked man.
Q. Do you think is was a genuine
I kidnaping? Or. was it the manifes
[ tation of some intrigue previously ar
ranged?
A. Nothing in China happens as it
I seems to happen. Thus the Chinese
| with a philosophical turn of mind
! lea ins to accept everything at face
; value. This is not as illogical as it
so nds. We Orientals try to avoid
;te mental effort. They tell me
General Chiang Kai-shek was abduct
ed. All right. He was abducted. Did
he arrange it himself? That is none
of my business. I know he is essen
tially an honest man, with a pure
heart.
Q. But what about Kai-shek’s hon
esty, if, as you admit is possible, he
deceived his people as to the true
status of his imprisonment by Hsueh
liang and then kept the people in the
dark as to the true nature of the ne
gotiations which followed?
A. I did not say I suspected General
Chiang Kai-shek, if 1 may boldly re
mind you, of any such thing. I merely
pointed out that in China things are
rarely what they seem. If Kai-shek
seems to have been kidnaped, he very
probably was not kidnaped. Do you
see, sir? The great general surely has
a true heart.
Q. Not very clearly, I am afraid.
What accounts for your admiration
for Kai-shek?
A. I sense in him a great leader of
my people, a man of absolute in
tegrity. Did he not accept the offers
of Borodin, the Red war lord, to be
his ally and then, when he had used
Borodin to the purposes of China,
throw him out along with the other
Red plotters who had followed in
Borodin’s wake?
Q. But isn’t China rather foolhardy
to talk of war with Japan when she
lacks the resources, the munitions and
the solidarity to wage a successful
war?
A. China talks of war. Japan often
wages it. Japan may well emerge with
a war won and solidarity lost while
China, still talking, may have achiev
ed solidarity. Do you get my point,
sir? And if you will excuse me, I will
now iron your shirts, otherwise I will
never have them ready for you—my
best and most honored customer.
Mom Numskuu.
DEAR. NOAH =IF » WERE
RUNNING A FILLING)
STATION, WOULD IT BE
OIL RIGHT TO <SAS WITH
MET CHAS. F ROY
SMITHVIU.E., TENN.
" . »< ■*■*€*■- ■
DEAR NOAH—IF YOU WENT
TO THE STORE FOR A
BOX OF SODA, WOULD
YOU BICARBONATE?
AM3S JOSEPH BURR.
BUFFALO, N Y.
SEND YOUR IDEAS TO^NOAH*
IN CARE. OF- THIS PAPEJS- —
ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE.
Having qualified as adminis
trator of the estate of John Bul
lock, deceased, late of Vance
County, North Carolina, this is to
notify all persons having claims
against the estate of said deceas
ed to exhibit them to the under
signed at Henderson, N. C., on or
before the 24th, day of December,
1937, or this notice will be pleaded
in bar of their recovery. All per
sons indebted to said estate will
please make immediate payment.
This 24th, day of December,
1936.
CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO.
Administrator of Estate of
John Bullock.
B. H. Mixon
Contractor and Builder
“Builds Better Buildings ,,
All kinds of Building
Wall Papering Painting—
Roofing and Interior
Decorating.
PHONES: Residence
FOR SALE
108 acre farm near Townsville.
72 acre farm near Hicks Cross
roads.
150 acre farm near Hicks Cross
roads.
390 acre Young land near Mc-
Millian place. ,
Store building on Gambit street
occupied by A. & P. Tea Co.
Al. B. Wester
Phone 139-J.
WANT ADS
NOTICE—MOTOR OIL 10-15-25* QT.
at 847 Garnett Street. Come here
and save. Greases, patching tires.
Also white gas for cleaning pur
po es, lamps, stoves and cars. 21-3 t.
SECOND HAND TIRES OF ALL
sizes and makes. See us before
trading for new tires and let us save
you money with Firestone. Carolina
Service Station, Firestone Distribu
tors, Garnett St., at Andrew? Ave.
12-ts
THE HENDERSON BUSINESS
School offers professional and
thorough training in all commercial
subjects. New term begins January
4. Phone 868 so: appointment. S-ts
LADIES TRY BAKERS FOR
, your next full soles or 1-2 soles, we
sew them only. No nails. Hats
cleaned and blocked 39. Call Baker’s
Phone 42-J. 26-ts
WANTED TYPING AND MULTl
graphing work. Miss Gussie Black
nail. Phone 568-J. monlthufs
TURKEYS WE HAVE A FEW
turkeys left. Billie Roy Service Sta
tion, Norlina Road. 21-4 t
STRAYED FROM MY HOME
Liver colored setter about 8 months
old. Liberal reward for return to 0.
V. Faulkner, route 1.23-4 t
RADIOS, ELECTRIC, WINDCHARG
er apd battery, also electrical sup
plies. Mod srn Electric Appliance
Co., across from Busy Bee Case.
sat-tues-thurs.
LOST BILL FOLD CONTAINING
$73.00 —23 ones, one twenty one ten
and four fives. $25.00 reward for re
turn. Thcs. E. Falkner, 225 Davis
street. 24-lti
SEE OUR SELECTIONS OF
of gifts for the entire family
at prices you can’t beat. Tri
cycles, wagons, scooters, and
. ’dolls at reduced prices. Spe
cial lamp and shade combina
tion 97 c. Home Furniture
Exchange. 101 N. Garnett
Street. Phone 80. 18-6 ti.
READ THIS AND SEE WHY
crowds are always at Student Cen
ter. We sell gigantic milk shakes,
sc; delicious toasted sandwiches. sc;
cigarettes, two packages, 25c. 21-4 t
WANTED YOU TO KNOW THAT
you can get rid of the itch and
other forms of skin trouble without
advertising the fact by using Tol
son’s Scabeknox. It is odorless and
every jar is guaranteed. Two size.?
75c and SI.OO. Sold only by People?
Drug Store, Henderson, N. C.,
manufacturing and dispensing drug
gists aid chemists. t&t-tf
PHONE 820—THE PEOPLES GRO.
and Meat for quality and service.
Your patronage appreciated. V T e
carry a full line of choice wines and
beers, nuts and mixed candies. A-k
for James. 332 Winder street. Free
Delivery. - 10-24 ti
We Sell
Real Estate—lnsurance
And collect rents.
List your property with us.
"Service That Satisfies’’
Citizens Realty and
Loan Co.
Phone 628
JOEL T. CHEATHAM, Pres.