Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Aug. 2, 1937, edition 1 / Page 5
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carriages, parties SOCIAL ACTIVITIES < 1111-DBEN’S ROOM thl , teacher’s gaze a little Beneath i/idren's faces lie Of ch , . on a quiet stream flowed 11 , [jKe 111 , 110 skv. M' 11 ' 01 * J moment’s hurried mood W* "he speaks. rkness settles down, T |ie d ‘ ho fining waters lie M otl ' do ws of her frown. rhe dm sends across the silver when - pool J. smile or word. 1 5 dimples with response & eS iv.ms with thoughts she And S k ‘“j‘ pool the hermit thrushes so mou * .. fhaim the heart like this C nool of little lives that love *® rp L nnV smiles bright kiss! T he Sl ‘ ’ Arthur Wallace Peach mTmatvkk example j jarthworm— r annulate i en gth from* hole in the lawn. | r nii-ht have thought you most , undecorativo and commonplace, -j vetv undistinguished. , n you are not, it seems; features you have the greatest 1 strength for vour size, „ ..-i-o man tells. ! “ d watching you stretch and swell. w 1 mhberv form, our L you are one of the earth’s If myriad little miracles. r J your way, delving and twist °U jng' and boring among grass- and purposefully, St being- vour appointed work. h ruc appreciation I salute you, in the universe. ell Dolores Cairns Away For Week-End Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Kelvin spent the reek-end in Durham. Visiting In Statesville jTiss Ada Rose Yow is visiting lends in Statesville. Returned Home Miss Jeanette Stallings has return i home from Norfolk, Va. At Music Camp EUard Yow has gone to Davidson o attend the Music Camp. Week-End At Beach Travis Credle and Dick Burrell pent the week-end at Morehead City. Week-End Guest Jack Tillory, of Halifax, was the reek-end visitor of Bennett Macon, at | Ipsom. Visits In Nrtriana Miss Dorothy Newman visited Überta Laughter in Norlina during he week end. Returns Home Miss Crystal Beard, who has been isiting in the city, has returned to er home in Florence, S. C. Attending Convention Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Adkins have left jr Myrtle Beach, S. C., to attend he Standard Oil Co., convention. Return To City Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Rose, Jr., and hildren have returned from White ake. where they spent a few days. Returns To Thomasville fe Constance Branch has returned »Thomasville, after visiting her sis er. Miss Dorothy Branch, in the city. From Warrenton Miss Mabel Grissom, of Warrenton, jvisiting her cousin, little Hilda Mae fesom, at her home on Highland henue. Miss Ellis Home Mollie Bugg Ellis, who has wn ' n York for the past three has returned to her home on tie Raleigh Road. Returned Home ks. R. G. Young and children, a ' e roturn ed from {Emporia, Va., „ n :, re visited Mrs. Young’s °ttiw, and the beach. Return To City ‘ r an< * rs - Will Mitchell have re norf . ° ap ter their honey an'* are making their home on ' orth Barnett street. jj I!f T e Fro »> Meadville, Pa. Itp’ / J°tinson and two chil •*, o Meadville, Pa., are visiting -parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Falk er ' on Charles Street. Th„ n h u ila,hoa C,ass Meeting % p, ' llathoa Class of the Meth the Church will meet at W,? 5 ° f . Mrs ' W - T - Nuckels o’clock Tu' Au & ust 3, at 8:00 A. a v , hostesses will be Mrs. Jr arui C ‘ s Mr ’ s ’ w - w - Parker, -I"! Mrs - Margaret Rainer. Vou » f . . 'form^T U USC because 3 u,c k-actinir n ™ U a co . nta ins several .‘ en,s many ? Scr, P t, on-type ingre **jgbe. y ph y si cvns commonly !^ ne ural R 1 | S ?" aost effective for reliev* . " lple head col ! ns ' due to s’muscular 5 ’ muscular and Ousn e*vl 0< and 2 Seizes. > SOCIETY NEWS -r TELEPHONE 610 • • • . , , “. . . **•*• * •••• HOURS 9AM.TO 12 NOON Miss Gooch Joins Dispatch’s Staff Effective today, Miss Page Gooch becomes a member of the editorial staff of the Daily Dispatch. She succeeds Miss Evelyn Garrett, who on next Saturday will be marriel and will move from Henderson to Winston-Salem to make her home. Miss Gooch has already started her duties. Miss Garrett’s departure is great ly regretted in the office, where she has been capable and efficient, and has done a good job during her two years with the Dispatch. Miss Gooch is a graduate of Hen derson high school and of Duke University. For some time she has been in the Rose offices here, and comes to her newspaper work with an enthusiasm for it and with a fitness it is believed will cause her to be of great service to the pub lic of the community. Meantime, the same cooperation which has hitherto been given is requested for Miss Gooch. All items about parties, societies, cluhs and individ ual visitations will be welcome for publication. Please telephone No. 610. Retrned Home Mrs. Osborne C. Jones and small sons, Bobby and Billy, have returned home after spending several days in Hillsboro with friends and relatives. Back From Beach Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Finch and chil dren returned today from a week at Virginia Beach and Manteo. To Whiteville Market W. B. Daniel, Jr., returned to the Whiteville tobacco market today after spending the week-end with his fam ily here. Here for Week-End Miss Mary Hayes Blacknall, of Wil son, spent the week-end with her pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Blacknall, at their home on Charles street. Returned Home Misses Alice Vick, Amy Vick, Flor ence Brown, and Minnie Lou Parham have returned from Myrtle Beach, where they spent several days. Expected Today Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Peace and Miss Ann Peace were expected to arrive today from Morehead City, where they have been spending several weeks. Week-End Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Alton Ford and Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Green, of Richmond, Va., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Stone during the week-end. Visitors Here Misses Pela Love and Carolyn Bobbitt of South Hill, Va., and Miss Nancy Wilkinson of Kembridge are visiting Misses Glenn Ann and Agnes Patterson. In Valley of Virginia Mr. and Mrs. N. D. Holloway and children have returned home after a trip through the Valley of Virginia and other points of interest last week. Here from Washington Miss Madge Walters, of Washington, D. O , is spending sometime in the city with her brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Walters at 141 Young Avenue. Home From Camp Misses Rowena Daniel, “Billie” Rose and Neta Allen have returned from near Lynchburg, Va., where they have been at a girls’ camp for a month. From Manteo Mrs. R. H. Duke and children, Mrs. Charles Sellars and Ransom and Car olyn Duke were expected home to night from Manteo, where they spent the week-end. Returns To Burnsville Mrs. C. H. White has returned to her home in Burnsville, after spend ing sometime in the city with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hunt, and at Virginia Beach, Va. Returns To Angier Mrs. A. B. Currin and little grand daughter, Dot Currin, returned to thdir home in Angier today after spending a week here with Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Daniel, Jr., and other rel atives. Returned Home John Rose and sons, John Jr., and George, Mrs. George Rose, and Mrs. B. G. Allen have returned home aft er visiting Misses Billie Rose and Neita Allen at Camp Chilaina, near Lynchburg, Va. Visiting in Manteo Mrs. R. H. Duke, Caroline Duke, Ransom Duke, and Mrs. C. P. Sellars spent the week-end in Manteo as the guests of Miss Ann Davis. While there they attended the Virginia Dare celebration. Returns To City Mrs. J. B. Jones, Miss Lucy Plum mer Jones and Mrs. M. L. Bradley of Tampa, Fla., who is the house guest of Mrs. Jones, have returned home after traveling for a few days in the west ern part of North Carolina. Visiting Here Mrs. L. T. Waddill, of Jacksonville, Fla., and children, Betty and Edmund, are the guests of Mr- and Mrs. E. F. Shaw on Garnett street. Richard Jones, Jr., who has been visiting Mrs. Waddill, returned with them. To Visit Parents Mr. and Mrs. William S. Green and little daughter, Edna Catherine, of Statesville, are cxectcd to arrive to morrow to spend the week in this city as the gue3ts of their parent.,, Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Goodrich. HENDERSON, (N. CJ DAILY DISPATCH, MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 1937 Young Roosevelts in Paris ■ 111 H 9H yv: Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., and his bride, the former Ethel du Pont, display happy smiles as they enter a taxicab outside their Paris hotel. The couple is making a tour of Europe on their honeymoon. (Central Press) PolJyanna Poems I wish I could walk up the wall Just like the little fly; No matter how high up he gets He never seems to fall. Now upside down he skims along Across the ceiling high. v But if I WAS a fly, I ’spose They’d swat me and I’d die. Miss Gupton Weds Earl Satterwhite Miss Mary Helen Gupton and Earl Thomas Satterwhite were married in a quiet ceremony at the First Baptist church on Sunday morning, at 8 o’clock. The ceremony was perform ed by the Rev. A. S. Hale. Only a few friends and relatives were present. The wedding music was rendered by Miss Dorothy Patterson and Paul Pat terson, violinist. “I Dove You Truly” was used before the ceremony, with Lohengrin’s Bridal Chorus as proces sional, and Mendelssohn’s Wedding March as recessional. During the ceremony “Ave Maria’ was played. The church was attractively deco rated with roses and gladioli. The bride wore a suit of white with a white shoulder corsage. After a wedding trip through west ern Virginia the couple will make their home in Henderson. Mrs. Satterwhite is the attractive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. D. Gup ton of this city. Mr. Satterwhite is the son of Mr. and Mrs. R». E. Sat terwhite. The following announcement has been issued: “Mr and Mrs. Percy Daniel Gupton announce the marriage of their daughter Mary Helen to Earl Thomas Satterwhite Sunday, August the first, nineteen hundred and thirty-seven Henderson, North Carolina.” In Hospital Mrs. W. S. Richardson, of the Townsville community, is undergoing treatment at Maria Parham hospital. W atermelon Queen Wnm >•, Y|g| mMm jgs Wm WmmL .> iy ■■ • vi-lilS PTrv r jg| Mary Frances Coker This 17-year-old high school girl, Mary Frances Coker, will rule as queen of the annual watermelon festival to be held at Water Val ley, Miss., Aug. 5. —Central Prut Weiner Roast for Miss Garrett and Relwe E. Rhodes Miss Clara Fenner, Miss Sadie B. Parham, Miss Ann Stevenson and Mrs. Walter H. Stone gave a weiner roast Saturday evening at South Lake Lodge, complimentary to Miss Evelyn Garrett and R. E. Rhodes, of Wins ton-Salem, who will be married Sat urday mo v ning at Holy Innocents Episcopal church. About twenty guests attended. To Winston-Salem Miss Charlotte Wester went to Win ston-Salem Sunday to visit friends for a week. Here from Winston-Salem Mrs'. A. J. (Strum, former Miss lowna Daniel, and little daughter, of Winston-Salem, are guests of her sis ter, Mrs. H. A. Dennis, and other relatives in the city. Mr. Strum, who accompanied them here Sunday, re turned that night. Treasurer Johnson Gains Draw in Governor’s Race (Continued from r»age One.) division of the State government. For with its more than 10,000 paid em ployees in every county in the State and its 15,000 to 17,000 prisoners—for even prisoners have, political influence with their families and relatives and they are released to go back home — the highway department is credited with being able to swing and deliver not less than 50,000 votes for whatever candidate the chairman and the com mission happen to be for. The op ponents of every administration charge that this is the case and most of the administration leaders private ly agree that it is the case. As a result, any prospective candidate for governor wants to “stand in” with the highway commission, since 50,000 votes are not to be sneezed at in any elec tion. Johnson Vs. Pou While there is nothing to indicate that either Broughton or Smith have been making any effort to get the support of the new highway commis sion as yet, there are definite indica tions that a very strong under-cover contest has been going on between Johnson and Pou for perferred posi tion with the highway body. It is re called that back during the 1937 Gen eral Assembly, Pou is regarded as hav ing tried to get the new highway law amended so that he would be an ex officio member of the new highway commission, while he is also credited with having tried to exert a good deal of influence in the selection of new director for the prison division — a position he held back in 1933 after the prison system was consolidated with the highway department, ending his former jab as superintendent of the State Prison. It is generally known, of course, that Pou has been in sympathy with the group, compos ed largely of former State Prison em ployees, who have been bitterly op posing Oscar Pitts as acting director of the prison division, who is now as sured of staying on as chief assist ant to Robert Grady Johnson, prob ably as superintendent of prisons. Setback To Pou As a result, most observers see in the appointment of Robert Grady Johnson a decided blow and setback for Pou, as far as getting control of the highway and prison departments is concerned, and a victory for State Treasurer Charles M. Johnson. And if Robert Grady does as good a job of handling the prison division as his friends are confident he will—especi ally if he succeeds in making the va rious prison farms actually pay—he will admittedly be in a very strong position both with the pubiic and with the commission. For no one yet has been able to make the prison farms earn their maintenance cost. Washing Oil Odor Off But there are still other factors to indicate that the appointment of Robert Grady as director of prisons has already helped Cousin Charles, or will help him., One of these is that Robert Grady will, of course, have to resign his job as executive secretary of the Petroleum Industries Committee, which in plain English means that he was chief lobbyist for the gasoline MARIAN MARTIN PATTERN PATTERN 9371 Just the captivating little frock for the budget-minded girl who makes her own clothes, is Pattern 9371! You, too, can add this exciting little sports and runabout frock to your already s~art wardrobe at a very low cost, and have lots of fun, besides, stitch ing the gay pieces that go together so easily. This model with its frivo lous puffed sleeves, flattering pointed collar and militant little buttons run ning down the front, and buttoning up the back, is a joy to behold! The simplicity of the skirt with its eight gores will do much to enhance the figure of any “ten to eighteen!” Make it up in sturdy shantung, linen, or dot ted swiss for mid-season wear. Going back to school this Fall? Then make it of jersey or sheer wool. Complete diagrammed Marian Martin sew chart included. Pattern 9371 may be ordered only in misses’ sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18. Size 14 requires 3 1-2 yards 36 inch fabric. Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for EACH MARIAN MARTIN pattern. Be sure to write plainly your SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, and STYLE NUMBER. Hurry! Hurry! Hurry- Be first to order a copy of our NEW MARIAN MARTIN PATTERN BOOK! Be first to discover the easy making of sum mery afternoon frocks, free-for-action play clothes, and alluringly lovely evening fashions. There are styles for every-one—Mother, the Bride, ’Teens and Twenties, Juniors and kiddies. Fabric tips, too, as well as many a slenderizing design. Don’t miss this fashion parade of easy-to-make pat terns. ORDER YOUR COPY TODAY BOOK FIFTEEN CENT’S. PATTERN FIFTEEN CENTS. TWENTY-FIVE CENTS FOR BOTH WHEN ORDER ED TOGETHER Send your order to Henderson Daily Dispatch, Pattern Department, 232 W. 18th St., New York, N. Y. Miss Paris, 1937 i I liillBL; WMmm, mgW- jra||||||| f.i „ \ > Lily Lamb Only 17, and with curly blonde hair, Lily Lamb has been selected as “Miss Paris, 1937”. —Central Press and oil trust in North Carolina, which in turn is dominated by the Standard Oil Company. Indications are that Robert Grady was only too glad to get out from under this job and that Cousin Charles was even more glad, since too many were beginning to think, if not to say, that both Robert Grady and Cousin Charles were get ting to smell entirely too strong of gasoline and Standard Oil grease. Friends of both are hoping that the pungent odor of gasoline that has sur rounded both for some time will com pletely disappear before June, 1940, as a result of Robert Grady’s resigna tion as chief oil trust lobbyist here. Grooming New Chairman? Still another factor that may react even more favorably to the benefit of Cousin Charles, is that some see in the selection of Robert Grady as pri son director the possibility that he may be being groomed eventually for the chairmanship of the highway com mission. It is no secret that there is already considerable dissatisfaction with Frank L. Dunlap as chairman, and some are already predicting that he is going to find the job too irk some, if net too big, and cite the fact that now since Johnson has been nam ed to relieve him of the prison end of his job, the State is now paying sala ries of $13,500 a year to two men to do what E. B. Jeffries and Capus M. Waynick did alone for $6,000 a year. So, looking at the situation entirely from a political standpoint, State /ImhNumskuu. DEAR. noah=how much TENNIS - COURTING MAXES A LOVE. AAATCH? J. B BOWCS SAN AT*TONICV DEAR. NOAH* IF YOU WORE. YOUR HAIE POMPADOUR- STYL.E, WOULD IT BE BECAUSE YOU LIKED your comb SO WELL YOU WOULD NOT)PART WITH IT? MC PfeWE-t-t.-&OVMU N<s 6B&EW/Q. DEAR NOAH*=IF I SLEEP IN THE CHIMNEY, WIUL I WAKE UP WITH THE d-ue-? auce I Treasurer Johnson is regarded as sit ting pretty tight now, as a result of beating the other candidates for gov ernor to the draw in lining up the highway and prison departments. The only trouble is whether he can hold on to this advantage for three more years. New Dealers Anger Many By Tactics (Continued from Page Orfe.) additional power produced at the new dam. Would Have Made Many Jobs “The construction of this new dam across the Yadkin river would have done more to hasten recovery and end unemployment in the counties in this area than anything that has been proposed in several years, and the merchants and business men were al ready feeling the results of better conditions as the engineers and work men were already starting to come in to go to work,” a resident of Stanly county who was here today, pointed out. “Several of these engineers had already traded for new cars, had rented houses and were preparing to set up construction camps. Now that the Federal Power Commission has NOTICE— GENUINE CHINESE Chow puppies for sale. Call at 338 Winder Street. 2-2 ti. ATLANTIC ALL T Hf 1 V WEEKEND EXPENSE ill TOURS Go Friday or Saturday morning—arrive Atlantic City same afternoon. Leave Atlantic City Monday or Tues day morning or evening. Tours—for two full days at Atlantic City—s3l.ls for travel in air-conditioned, de luxe reclining seat coaches; $43.30 in air-condition ed Pullmans. NORFOLK "= Go in safety and comfort —by train— Ihe safest transportation in the world. Ani Wj# i ■ A»T Go on any Friday or Saturday | . train, or Sunday morning train, Return as late as Monday. Child* jfc r%'n five end under twelve, half . fare. Consult your local Seaboard ~"v. * Kw agent for further PAGE FIVE CHURCH SOCIETIES ' ANNOUNCEMENTS ' held up action on the dam permit in definitely, the contract -has been can celled, the engineers are turning- back their new cars and moving on to other jobs—just because some bu reaucrats in Washington want to take a slap at the Aluminum Com pany of America and Andrew Mellon. President Roosevelt may be all right hut some of his appointees and bu reaucrats there in Washington are undoubtedly nit-wits.” Tactics Don’t Make Sense Others here are unable to reconcile the President’s declarations urging private business and industry to ex pand and increase employment, that recoveiy may be hastened, with the tactics being employed by such governmental agencies as the Fed eral Power Commission and the Rur al Electrification Administration, to deliberately block expansion effort by private industry. They maintain that there must be a screw loose somewhere in .Washington, if not a whole flock of screws. Some think that the President either does not mean what he has said or that he has nuilt up a New Deal Frankenstein that has gotten so out of control and veered so far to the left that the President does not seem to be able to get it back under control. Bureaucrats in Saddle According to press reports from Washington, the Carolina Aluminum Company applied to' the Federal Power Commission some weeks ago for a permit to build the new dam, believing that the permit would be granted without opposition, since four dams have already been built below this new dam site and one above it. But instead of granting the permit, the power commission called for r„r. oral hearing before a special master, who raised the question as to the ef fect this dam would have on naviga tion in the Yadkin river, despite the fact that the Yadkin never has and never will be navigable, that the United States Army Engineers have so held, and that there are no locks in the five dams already constructed in this vicinity. As a result, a good many observers here are wondering if the 1937 edi tion of the New Deal is not more in terested in punishing power compan ies and in retarding private business expansion hacked by Republican cap ital, than it is in providing jobs for the unemployed and in hastening re covery. CHILLS AND FEVER Fast Relief for Malaria With This Proven Treatment! Don’t go through the usual suffer ing. Stop Malaria chills and fever in quick time. Take good old Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic! This is no new-fangled or untried preparation. It’s a fa mous medicine you can depend on. Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic con tains tasteless quinidine and iron. It quickly stops the chills and fever. It also tends to build you up. That’s the double effect you want. The very next time you feel an attack of chills and fever coming on, go right to your drug store and get a bottle of Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. Start taking the medi cine immediately and you will soon get the relief you want. All drug stores sell Grove’s Taste less Chill Tonic, 50c and sl. The latter size is the more economical. Cost of tour* Include* nil necessary n> penses from the time you leave homo until yow return. You travel in safety— free from highway hazards and danger*. Get descriptive leaflet and details from yow local Seaboard agent.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 2, 1937, edition 1
5
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