guns SIGN ON advertising plan Secre t Committee Will Pass on Projects Asking Merchants’ Aid ili,ui campaign to sign mer -1,1 t)-., city against the use of cl Kin freakish advertising sP UIu> ‘ 1 ' ,| U , junior Chamber of Com s’,l,ltl< i, signed about 75 business w; ,s learned today from fI,U \1 i' ii a prominent leader in inl lnnioi chamber. t he \ v i- c.vplained that in the near ' ! ' ' s , cn>t committee would be to serve in passing on all •-m ■ propositions offered to* ,C .' li ii ; Tin 1 committee will recorn r’V t ‘, ,} u . business community t'. illegitimate and what not of ftia nnorous schemes that are from time to time, merchants who have signed the ,j' furnished them have pledged fnwclves not to place any advertis of any kind with any person or ir ® m! j except newspaper advertis '"unless the advertising committee approves"" the proposal, whatever it "•Ur 1 Alfmd said he believed those _. ho signed the agreements would re- Thom and the decisions of the tmimittee that has been planned to function in that respect. Mr. Alford said that as far as he kl ‘ eW the agreement was now in full force and effect. Hit and Run Driver Held for Superior Court; Other Charges Heard Recorder R. E. Clements gave hear lU .. !0 four defendants today, one of -kern being hound over to .uperior court, in county court. Charles A. Crane, charged with reckless driving and hit and run, war ordered held for the next term of Vance Superior Court when probable cause waa found. Wesley Tart was charged with being drunk and disorderly, but the prose cuting witness was allowed to with draw the warrant upon paymen tof the costs. Henry J. Abbott, convicted of ope rating an automobile without a driv ers licen-.0. had prayer for judgment continued upon payment of the costs and securing the necessary license. George Alfred Wilson was fined $5 and costs for driving with improper brakes. . , , f I LEGION WILL MEET ON MONDAY NIGHT The regular monthly meeting of Henderson Post, No. GO, of the Amer ican Legion will be held Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock in their hall on Garnett street. There are several Phone W ML Watch Our 775 If A N C-. Mi Pictures Now ™ dSam Don’t Miss ’Em SUNDAY NIGHT B:3O—MONDAY and TUESDAY nother musical that you’ll enjoy every scene.. She’s beautiful, she’s ite, she'll entertain you every minute. [Jessie \fcl mnnHEius \ t <= jtve, (/OjaAtwUj Jj "EVERCRE^I life She * s ° Pe PP er ’ u P per She’s ° Ste PP er_u PP er Ml Also Universal News and- Mack Sennett Comedy » If-'I \v w Irene Dunn and Melvyn Douglas in “Theodora Goes Wild” Stevenson Monday and Tuesday ✓ i. '• ppsr WWjrf •* i' ' *'•' , i %. M Wm. Powell and Myrna Loy in “After The Thin Man” Stevenson Thursday and Friday matters of vital importance to tie dis cussed and acted upon at this meet ing. The community center that the Le gion is sponsoring will be discussed and it is expected that plans will be laid for furtherance or this project. It will be definitely decided whether the Legion will put on an automobile show and merchants exposition again this spring. If it is decided to put on the exposition plans will be made at. this meeting. Commander J. C. Cooper will pre side, and urges all Legionnaires to attend as he has a spendid program prepared for this meeting. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, >1937 - CITY PROPERTY IN DEEDS RECORDED Four realty deeds filed yesterday with the Vance Registry covered pro perty in or near the city. J. H. Zollicoffer, commissioner, sold to J. P. Zollicoffer for $6,000 a lot on Granite street. J. P. Zollicoffer and wife conveyed to Mrs. Moss Rose White for $lO and considerations a lot on Granite street. David Lee and wife sold T. P. Ghol son for $lO and considerations lots on Kittrell street. Hilda J. Rowland sold property in South Henderson to the Southside Drug Co., for $lO and considerations. JUNIOR ORDER IN REGULAR MEETING The Raymond B. Crabtree council of the Junior Order held its regular ' session Thursday evening in the or- ; der’s hall. A lengthy session was had with im portant matters coming before the group. ' Arrangements were made to give to the Flood Relief of the American Red Cro:s. The degree team will be on hand at next meeting to confer degrees. A flag and a Bible will be presented 1 to the new Henderson high school, it was stated. Encouraging reports were heard concerning membership drive, now underway. Girls Lose~~TUt72s-23, But Boys Are Victorious By 20 to 13 Henderson high school basketball team again divided two games wjth South Hill, Va., last night, this time, I the boys winning their game 90 to 13, | while the girls dropped their tilt 25 to 23. In a previous meeting here, the lo cal girls whipped the Virginians, while the boys were losing. The girls fought valiantly through out their fray, edging closer and clos er to the Virginian’s lead. The girls fought valiantly through out their fray, edging closer and clos- I or to the Virginian’s lead. Miss Frances Daniel and Miss Blake did the best offensive work for Hen derson, getting 15 and seven points respectively. Miss Clements was best for the winners, getting 18 points. Billy Peace led Henderson with sev en points. Vaughan got four. Some good guarding was turned in by Tur ner and Mcllhenny. WINTER GRID WORK AT U. N. C. DRAWS 80 Chapel Hll, Jan. 30—Approximately gD candidates reported for the first week of the University of North Car olina’s winter football drills which ended today. Practice work was held this week under the supervision of Lieutenants Johnny Vaught and Bill Lange. Head Coach Ray Wolf, who has been at the bedside of his sick mother-in-law at Graham, Tex., for \ 4 : S" . ~-y •• Jessie Matthews, in “Evergreen” at Vance Sun day night at 8:30—Also Monday and Tuesday .7 Ji| BMpf &f.J| . ''i i;t vK /„ ! fa. UA& Herbert Marshall and Katharine Hepburn in “A Woman Rebels” Stevenson Wednesday HH * lliliiiiilL / “Crack Up” State Sunday and Monday the past ten days, Is expected to re turn during the week-end. The (tig squad was compelled to work indoors three days on »account of the weather. Coaches Lange and Vaught devoted most the drills to callisthenics, jar sing, blocking, and tackling fundamentals. Seven Home Games For Carolina U. During Next Week Chapel Hill, Jan. 30 —Seven homo contests feature the University of North Carolina’s athletic program next week. Tar Heel varsity and ON OUR STAGE BERTJZMtTH Prices 20 and 35c f Js ■ I All Seats ... 40c * I Mirth Melody Music J SCREEN with Phil Regan, | Evelyn Venable >« ' freshman teams will swing into action in 10 events. Carolina’s varsity and freshman basketball teams will be the busiest of the lot. Thc-y will engage in no less than seven of the 10 meets. The White Phantoms will open the competition Monday night by batr tling North Carolina State’s fast-step ping Red Terrors here in a return meeting, and on the following night play ho:l to Davidson in a second en gagement between the Tar Heels and Wildcats. The Phantoms swing northward on the week-end, taking on Virginia at Charlottesville. Friday night and Maryland at College Park Saturday night, Couch Skidmore’s tossers will ,b 0 playing the Terps and Cavaliers for the Second time this season. LEGISLATIVE CHATTER Mnily DUpntch Iturenn. In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Jan. 30—Those on the in side and who often know just what makes the legislative wheels go round are whispering that thoughands of federal patronage are disturbing law makers who want to vote against rati fication of the child labor amendment. Those scions, undercover operates report, know just what kind of ma chine Jim Farley runs and the kind of tabs he keeps on friends and foes of the administration, whose full pow ers are being exerted to put over the amendment. Therefore, the story runs, they will hesitate for a long time to antagonize the Washington powers that-be, for every politician—and most legislators are —has an eye on a good soft Federal post. Those who thought the reapportion ment debate produced fireworks just “ain’t seen nothing yet.” Let them tune in on the child labor amend ment debate Monday. They’ll get two earfuls (or is it earsful) of “dangerous encroachment on the sovereign pow ers of this great State,”’ “Defense of our children,” “Stand by our great President,” and ether resounding ora torical phrases. Echoes of the reapportionment fight ... “Pete” Murphy, telling the House Mecklenburg and Guilford ought not to want anything because “Mecklen burg has the Hornet’s Nest Riflemen and the Mecklenburg Declaration; Guilford has the Guilford Courthouse Battlefield and the Keeley Institute” ... New Hanover’s Tom Cooper con sulting “all the male dealers I could Pnd every one of them thought this bill unconstitutional. No three law yers could agree” ..., Rupert Pickens, author of the measure declining to yield for questioning ... Willie Lee Lumpkin using the debate as a vehicle for his anti-administration propagan da ... Cherokee’s Harry Cooper, farth est west, voting “No”. Advance rumors of wholesale “trad ing” were hardly borne out by the reapportionment vote. It seems many western representatives who were nat urally expected to be for the bill reached] the honest conclusion thle measure was unconstitutional. Nobody ever found out exactly why the huge pile of whisky bottles and fruit jars was brought into the hall of the House for the liquor hearing Thursday afternoon. They were con spicuously placed under personal di rection of a large lady who wore a red hat and was said to be one of the “drys.” But about the middle of the hearing somebody ordered them tak en out and quite a diversion came when a page dropped several bottles with a resounding crash. One wag suggested the bottles had been found Thursday morning in rooms of the legislators. “Then they didn’t get half of them” retorted another. “There are only a STEVENSON MONDAY and TUESDAY WEDNESDAY ' TWO BRILLIANT STARS! llWjMpfj A DAV JACK. FUI \wimm/Pwm 915*®® a! s meis’ Names will be drawn until some one answers or attended the nriati- THURSDAY and FRIDAY mmimmnmm with James STEWART Elissa LAND! Joseph CALLEIA Jessie RALPH A M-G -M Picture » * wVL IT—TIIM T —>l I 111 II I Hi II i ■ —i >1 111 in iMAMniMMBHi PAGE THREE couple of hundred bottles in that pile.” Those who thought a group had been found who did not object to being taxed by the State were brought back from the land where dreams come true to this mundane sphere recently. At an early revenue committee hear ing Commissioner of Revenue A. J. Maxwell said the State Fair Associa tion agreed there should be no exemp tion from taxation for carnivals showing in connection with agricul tural fairs. A day or two ago this was shown to be a misconception as fair asso ciation officials appeared and pro tested vigorously against levying a S2OO tax on carnivals showing any where, whether at fairs or not. GYM icHEDULEOF JR. HIGH IS GIVEN Mrs. W. D. Payne, recerational di rector, has announced the junior high school gymnasium schedule for the month of February. The sessions will be held from three to four o’clock on these days: Mon day, 6th grade fcoys, basketball prac tice; Tuesday, 6th and 7th grade boys, setting up exercises; Wednesday, 7th grade boys basketball; Thursday, 6th and 7th grade boys setting up ex ercises; Friday, teams of 6th and 7th grade boys selected by coaches and Mrs. Payne. The STATE Thone 817 Prices 10 and 25(1 TODAY ONLY “TIIE 3 MESQUITEERS” Serial Comedy SUNDAY and MONDAY V J | V * Special Scenes from the flood area. TUESDAY ONLY On The Stage “The College Rhythm Revue” On The Screen “RIDING ON” with Tom Tyler