Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Aug. 21, 1937, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO EROSION STUDY ON BEACHESRENEWED Photos and Off- Shore Soundings Made on Carolina Coast Dally Dispatch UnreaU; In fix' Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Aug. 21. United States engineers have this week been taking aerial pictures of Oregon and New Inlets in connection with beach erosion studies by the Federal Gov ernment and the State, it was learn ed from the office of T. S. Johnson, chief engineer of the Department of Conservation and Development. In addition, the Federal men have been gauging the flow of tides at the entrance of these inlets, while work ers from the State department of con servation and development have been conducting off-shore soundings to a depth of 30 feet, along the northern section of the North Carolina coast. Study of the pictures made from the air will be used in determining just where the coast line is being eroded and just where the action of the tides is adding to the beaches. The entire coast has been divided into cross-sections during progress of these erosion studies, stakes have been set so that it can be readily de termined where erosion is getting in its deadly work. Activity this week does not indicate anv immediate remedial action, it was stressed but was a part of the long-time program of the Federal and State department. Various phases of the work have been carried on from time to time at Carolina Beach, Wrightsville Beach, Morehead City and Nags Head, a mong other places. MARINE STRIKE IN NEW YORK STOPPED Ships of Three I.ines Relieved, But Clyde-Mallory bine Is Still Tied Up * New York, Aug. 21 (AP) The Na tional Maritime Union, affiliate of the CIO, called off day-old sitdown strik es on ships of three lines today, but announced a similar ban against the Clyde-Mallory Line would continue in Atlantic and Gulf ports. Strikes against the Bull Savahhan and Waterman Line were ended, union * '■, WM 1 MMgg* ffifpjffiffig y \A • V^^V \^L^ 1 W OT TOt««-- ft featuring I CHABUE RUGGLES ■ FRED WacMURRJ' ■ FRANCES FAB» e I at the ~ I STEVENSON August 2 6-^ ONLY FRI6IDAIRE ■ brings you these I ftp tidffef 1 I I l sss«, 1 : 1 Cuts Current Costto the Bone! ft NEW ALL-METAt QUICKUBE TRAY ft with the Instant Cube-Release, ft q.WAY ADJUSTABLE INTERIOR * ■ ~ Wav Frozen - Storage Com m 2 ‘ 2-Way Cold-Stor • B |Srray-3-Way|li<iingSheU ■ !f 2-Way Multi-Storage See- I cOOD-SAFETY INDICATOR on OUT ■ft SIDE of DOOR. Hll AUTOMATIC TRAY-RELEASE. H e.ll4—The Safe Refrigerant. !H pROOUCTofGENER^JOTORS Henderson t Furniture Co. Charlie Ruggles Parks Himself in Coolest Spot in Hollywood ■J jJjj | jjj A newspaperman always is resourceful when it comes to digging up stories, chasing pictures or hunting a good soft spot in which to rest between assignments. Charlie Ruggles, star reporter in Para mount’s “Exclusive,” with Fred Mac Murray and Frances Farmer, is no exception. Here he is reading a picture magazine, cool as a cucum ber, inside a Frigidaire. In the picture, directed by Alexander Hall, Charlie and Fred Mac Murray take turns getting inside to see if the interior light really goes out when the doors are closed. officials said, because of the “anViety of the National Labor Relations Board to bring about peace on the water front.” The district committee of the N. M. U. charged the Clyde-Mallory Line refused to allow N. M. U. delegates aboard its ships. The committee claimed the liners Shawnee, Medin and Cherokee were tied up in New York; the Pawnee at New Orleans; the Colorado in Tampa, Fla., and the Harry R. Mallory in Galveston, Tex. COTTON MARKET IS STILL ON TOBOGGAN Prices 9 to 12 Points Lower At End of Day’s Short Session of Active Trading New York, Aug. 21.—(AP) —Cotton futures opened barely steady, down 4 to 7 points on lower cables, and re ports of further rains in the western belt. December sold off from 9.82 to 9.70 and was quoted at the low short ly after the first half hour, when the list generally was 8 to 11 points net lower. Futures closed 9 to 12 points lower. Spot quiet, middling C.CO. Open Close October 9.79 9.74 December 9.81 9.76 January 9.83 9.81 March 9.95 9.90 May 10.04 10.01 ENTIRE FRONT OF BUILDING MOVES IN NOVEL FILM SCENE a novel production idea is featured in Mascot’s “Harmony Lane,” which comes to the Vance Theatre, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. The picture is based on the life of Stephen Collins Foster, the man who wrote most of America’s most loved melodies includ ing “My Old Kentucky Home,” “Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming,” “Oh! Susanna,” “Old Black Joe,” "Beautiful Dreamer,” “Old Folks At Home” (Swanee River) “Massa’s In The Cold Ground,” “Camptown Rases,” “Lou’- siana Belle,’ ’and many others. In this particular sequence, Foster, played by Douglass Montgomery, is seen in a Cincinnati “Bier Garten” of the early ‘ fifties”. It is necessary to show quickly both the exterior and interior of the “Bier Garten,” the camera into the action which takes: place in ‘.de. The trick i ..sorted to, was to have the entire front wall of the “Bier Gar ten,” with its trellis work and huge sign, raised as the camera comes up o it, by means of specially construct -3d mechanism. This whole effect, which has never before been done in a motion picture, was conceived by Ralph DeLacy, Mascot’s production manager. In addition to Douglass Montgom ery, the cast of “Harmony Lane,” which comes to Vance Theatre in cludes, Evelyn Venable, Adrienne Ames, Joseph Cawthorn, William Fraw ley, Lloyd Hughes, Cora Sue Collins, Gilbert Emery, James Bush, Clarence Muse and the Shaw Choir, Florence Roberts, Ferdinand Munier, and a cast of thousands. yt ’T a ik t The i* icture The Phone /V IXI ■ M Whole World 775 V Jr\.L vJLj Is Enjoying. SUNDAY NIGHT—B:4S—ALSO MONDAY and TUESDAY Don’t miss this outstanding picture, it has everything to make you enjoy it. The life and love of the man who wrote “My Old Kentucky Home” “Sewanee. River” “Oh Susanna” and “Old Black Joe”. A Picture As Big As A Nation. Si "TleheartSJgofthS Y WROTE "MY OLD KENTUCKY HOME" ■ J NAI LtV'Nt /*. i»itu EVELYN VENABLE ADRIENNE AMES Also Universal News and Comedy. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1937 MILD ACTIVITY IN STOCKS IS NOTED Shorts Cover on Theory Market Has Already Had Good Sell-Out and Will Move Up New York, Aug. 21.—(AP) —Quiet buying in steels and specialties today managed to bring mild rejuvenation to a rather tired looking stock mar ket. In most of the two-hour proceed ings minor gains and losses were about evenly divided. Some short cov ering, based on the theory the mar ket has already had a good sell-off, then appeared and a slow upward trend developed. Transfers were around 300,009 shares. American Radiator 21 5-8 American Telephone 169 1-4 American Tob B 79 Anaconda- 58 5-8 Atlantic Coast Line 50 Atlantic Refining 28 1-2 Bendix Aviation 19 1-2 Bethlehem Steel 98 1-2 Chrysler 113 1-4 Columbia Gas & Elec ........ 12 1-2 Commercial ... 13 5-8 Continental Oil Co . 15 DuPont 160 5-8 Electric Pow & Light 21 General Electric 55 5-8 General Motors .« 56 7-8 Montgomery Ward & Co ...... 62 1-8 Reynolds Tob B 61 Standard Oil N J 66 5-8 U S Steel 115 7-8 Border Counties Opposing Liquor (Continued from Page One.) Vance and Warren, on the Virginia line. Both Virginia and South Carolina have liquor stores, state-owned find operated in the Old Dominion, op erated by private licenses. It is a noticeable fact that every county in the State which has voted against stores either borders a wet state or adjoins a Tar Heel county in which thebe are legal stores. In addition to the dry counties of the Virginia and South Carolina lines, Wayne, Alamance, and Jones have turned their backs on the control sys tem. Each of them touches one or more store-operating counties. Reasons for these facts will prob ably be disputed, drys claiming that the . counties they won have learned not to emulate the evils of their neigh bors; wets deewring that the in fluence of bootleggers, whose business is more profitable the nearer their source of supply, had much to do with the results. As in every other phase of the liquor question totally different conclusions will be drawn from the very same undisputed facts. Rain is nature’s danger-signal, her salutary reminder that her laws have been infringed. Mind can become diseased by the possession of excessive power just as well as from any other cause. v Jf Wm, Hopper—Btrton Churchill and Jane Wyman—in “Public Wedding”—Stevenson Sunday Only. -■ - / (■I " ix iMm sHI bi WMm %Jp* A-.. Charlie Ruggles—Frances Farmer and Fred McMurray—in “Exclusive”—Stevenson Monday and Tuesday 1 :1 1".. % _. . V Walter Connolly and Lionel Standen —m “Ijeague of Frightened Men” Stevenson Wednesday-. j j^r Virginia Bruce—Franchot Tone—Maureeri O’Sullivan—in “Between Two Women” —Stevenson Thursday and Friday STATE THEATRE Cool Conuortable '. io and 25c TODAY ONLY John Mack Brown—in “Boothill Brigade” Serial—Novelty . . | SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Tom Tjder —in Rosalind Keith, Rip Roaring Buckaroo Eddie Quillan—ijl News— Novelty “Criminals of the i£ir” “Payoff” Monday $ 15.00 jUggE William Frawley—The part of the leader of ‘Christy’s Minstrels’ famous troupe of the period, is played by this accomplished comedian in Mascot’s “Harmony Lane.’’ At the Vance( Theatre Sunday night at 8:45 also Monday and Tuesday. Today^imes PIEDMONT LEAGUE Rocky Mount at Asheville. Norfolk at Winston-Salem. Richmond at Portsmouth. Durham at Charlotte. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia at New York. Washington at Boston. Cleveland at Chicago. Detroit at St. Louis. NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis at Pittsburgh. Boston at Brooklyn. New York at Philadelphia. Chicago at Cincinnati. Pe^itsl PIEDMONT LEAGUE Durham 12; Charlotte 9. Portsmouth 6; Richmond 3. Norfolk 8-7; Winston 2-2. Asheville 6-7; Rocky Mount 3-2. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 3; Boston 1. Cleveland 7; Chicago 6. St. Louis 11; Detroit 6. >. New York 8; Philadelphia 7. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 7; St. Louis 4,. Boston 6; Brooklyn 5. New York 13; Philadelphia 6. Chicago 4; Cincinnati 6. DEMON DEACONS TO FACE TOUGH CARD Wake Forest, Aug. 21 —With a sche dule ahead that most any college STEVMSON^ luem News of the Day ~ WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY LionerSTANDER '.■ - Eduardo CiANNELU 'Wk~ "fM' li ' ’ in IRENE ur»wcv Walk | Next Saturday—Dick Form. “EMPTY HOLSTERS’ would dread to face and with 1 loss of material from the mV he *vy Coach D. C. “Peahead- Walk Sq H Forest’s newly elected and his assistants, Mm ! ni -'itor and Ellis Fysal, are i n fn f ' leas °n assignment when they ' un !., a Hh build the 1937 edition or lh ’ akfi to The schedule include -'■ ac %. Tennessee, George \v., 44 ,' n <J|(ler : kino, North Carolina. N.,,, o’’ Ers ' State, Clemson, Duke, w, ar(,1 ‘na Davidson. " 1 l,r, f and Sta^cfn^s PIEDMONT LKAGfJP Team w \ Asheville 7c . r 1 Norfolk -i*, Portsmouth .7., Richmond V“ - I ' l Durham r,o r!q Charlotte . ,77 , ;i Rocky Mount ,77 r , Winston Salem • s ,L •AMERICAN LEAGUE Team \y j New York 75 ' 33* 1 Detroit ( i 2 15 Chicago g;i 49 "’!? Boston bo " r , Cleveland 57 rj Washington 50 57 St. Louis 35 7-» 5 Philadelphia 33 70 3 j‘ NATIONAL LEAGUE Team W. L. M Chicago 67 13 6( J New York 64 41 ' St. Louis 59 4 S ’J* Pittsburgh 59 49 '546 Bos ton 54 57 Cincinnati 45 f,l 4% Philadelphia 44 67 Brooklyn 42 05 PHOTOPLAYS “AIR CONDITIONED” STEVENSON SUNDAY ON FA Matinee 2:30 Night 8:45 'r\ f : \ \ ■ I STRANGE THINGS '' <J HAPPEN WHEN MV* : d 1 A STUNT GOES HAYWIRE'! ; Public mP' Wedding MiP wm, J fi'p i m jane Wyman P WILLIAM HOPPER V’| DICK PURCELL ft \lf 4 'it, I BERTON CHURCHILL l.\ 1 \. f m i W«mei Bros*- Ist National Pictvue {• ~, \ X ijif IK jSubjects
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Aug. 21, 1937, edition 1
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