Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Sept. 7, 1937, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO President Seeks Happy Fishing Grounds '~ ||| ' : ‘:''‘:’''‘‘- : ':' ::: ' :::::: - ::: > ::^^g-:-:*:*%:->:<; wf: ; W?i:$;:iS>:->>x--SS : :>->-:->:-:*:>->: : :-:-:-:->: s : J| .% .1. fs..- &|l|& lii * l* ' 11 ' j ' Its *;J. | -j|j^^ v. s ~ ~ • ■/ •• <**r jJjuM <;;• T * / s • • n•, ,-fr n n ri*n I - •; I <•' * * „.„ „e. ( ( t the White House yacht, Potomac, off Block island m president Roosevelt and his party are sho\. * tQok time out from piscatorial pursuits to outline his ■earch of an abundant fishing grounds. The P res * de T ff to ris .ht are Harry Hopkins, Basil O’Connor, Or. position on labor disputes in his Labor Left tong are (fart ,Ve,„ Slain Officers, Bandit Seized in Ohio Gun Battle Ipg *Bpv cl®p Bandit Harry W. Chapman, wounded, surrenders Edward Furry, top, Randolph, below In a furious gun battle at Crystal Lake, near Springfield, 0., a city policeman, a deputy sheriff and a bandit were shot and killed and another officer and bandit wounded. Tho officers had trapped four bandits in a cabin at the resort after the men had held up a restaurant proprietor and robbed him cf $1,300. Deputy Sheriif Edward Furry, 45, and Policeman Martin Randolph, 38, were killed. The dead bandit was Robert Cornetti, of Portsmouth, O. Harry Chapman, listed as from Chicago, was wounded and surrendered to officers as pictured above. > J’ 4 ‘ • Shanghai Populace Rees Bombs Looking down on the Garden Bridge in Shanghai, some of the 1,000,000 refugees from the native quarters of the stricken city are shown seeking the comparative safety of the International Settlement. Aerial bombs from jioth Chinese and Japanese planes have exacted a heavy toll in human lives and property damage. (Central Press ) HENDERSON <N. C.) TtATT.V DISPATCH, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7,1937 Son Spirited Away George Abell, whose son Tyler, 8* was recovered by his ex-wife, Mrs. Drew Pearson, from Abell’s home in the lonely Isle of Sark, England, is shown above. When they were di vorced Abell was allowed custody of the child six weeks a year. Mrs. Pearson, now wife of the famous newsman, charges he “kidnaped the child. The Pearsons aftd the lad are in America* -; Traffc Officer Blown 20 Feet Into Air In Shanghai Bombing X X ti* 1 w Traffic officers body hanging from tower 'll Hope in Infantile Battle. :#••. • . •• ;••, .*• .*. "•’ *** • • ■••>*£❖•••••:• -.j XybXy... .•.*.• .•.•.•••.♦.•Xy. XyXw. .*.*. •-•.-.• , >>. % >>AX , !*X |S ' B? jf • ••. fy-JMII * . '' . v ' p |ij|' jg||Mp Iv. J / j/Oy&rM § ..Jh fgffiji Mm \ I ■ ■■■''* >*•• - } Whether or not science has at last found an effective preventive against infantile paralysis in the zinc sulphate nasal spray, will be known when the results of the first large scale test of the spray are tabulated at Preston Springs, Ontario, Canada. Dr. John Hauch of the Hagmeier Clinic is shown administering a dose to one of the 5,000 children who were treated in an effort to stem the mounting outbreak of the dread disease in the province. (Central Press) .|Mft f™&> •: i .-•- 4 ' *J$ ; : lj| ||i| ' Paul Miiiti starring in the “Woman I Love” Stevenson —Thursday and Friday , I%OM NUMSKUU. DEAR NOAHi=IF A MAN OPENED A BANK ACCOUNT FOE HIS NE.W 30R.N SON, WOULDN'T IT BE A FEESH HE IE FUND 7 * ELUADEAN UE.K. AONROE, NC. DEAfe. NOAH **WHEN THE ICE CEEAAAS, DOES THE SNOW-BALL? JACX feOOK&g.- PUEASAMTVW-l.g, P>A. deae noah= should A LI BEAKY BE SAD because rrs books AEE I Now Numskull* Sfe«; jpfe. DEAE NOAH* IF AUTOMOBIL.ES TIEE OF LONS STANDING SHOULD that cause a strike IN THE FAN BELT 7 El love.-union err*, mich. DEAE NOAH* WAS THE FALL. IN EDEN CAUSED BY AN APPLE, OE A VERY CPAIR> •> /wRi. a' P. ) w ASHLAND CITY, TCNN. i DeAjC NOAH * WHEN A CAEPET LIES DOWN, { DOES IT HAVE A NAP 7 FMttHP WELLS - DENVER COLO. PTBLKS \ MAIL. YOUH. IpftAfc. Released prisoner has his uniform removed These are latest pictures from the Chinese war zbne. One shows the body of a traffic policeman ’ift- Shanghai, blown 20 feet into the air, hanging over the edge of his traffic tower. He was merely one of hundreds of victims of aerial bombs that fell into the chief shopping center of Shanghai. The other shows a prisoner, one of 7,000 released frbm the huge Ward road jail, having his uniform removed by members of the Shanghai volunteer corps. The pris oners were released when the prison became a shambles in crossfire. COLUMNIST’S WIFE RECOVERS SON I %.:> -Jr®?®? . y j|^ ;: J I •;» I- ViM ~iiimm ... i.Jg. ' ■ !-■— ■■■■i s . ■■■■—■■ *““'" *"■ ‘ ■— Mrs. Drew Pearson with son and attorney Mrs. Drew Pearson, wife of the well-known Washington columnist, is pictured with'her son, Tyler Abel, 5, and her attorney in London following recovery of the boy from her former husband, George Abel, on the Isle of Sark. Abel, who has custody of the boy for six weeks a year only, had taken the. lad to England. The Pearsons obtained an injunction restraining Abel from annoying or molesting Mrs. Pearson until she bailed. —Central Pres• Billiard Winner gaaflfflggffKv- x qgapSMaißfiS f Jftuß jsHnl Wanda Natalie, 15-year-old Galves ton, Texas, schoolgirl, is shown right up behind the eight-ball. Wanda took the male pocket-bil liardists into camp in the city’s Class-B championships. She has fre quently made straight runs of 25. ’ l ; (Central Press) Air Race Winner S. J. Wittman Among speed pilots winning out standing events at the Natio Air Races, in Cleveland, was *>• • Wittman, of Oshkosh, Wis., 1 won the 50-mile event for I )la with engines of 397-cubic inch , placement or less. Wittman vv ■ the James J. Davis trophy, wm« he is holding.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Sept. 7, 1937, edition 1
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