Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / March 23, 1939, edition 1 / Page 3
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Entries For Amateur Night Are Invited Amateur entertaining talent desir ing a place on the program of the Henderson Exposition next month was invited today to register imme diately with Sam Alford, chairman of the committee of the Henderson Lions Club, which is sponsoring the exposition. The amateur contest will be on Tuesday night of exposition week,' which is April 10 to 15, in clusive. It was explained that it will be necessary for all those entering the contest to file their names and ad dresses and the type of their enter tainment at the exposition headquar ters next to the Charles store on Garnett street, or with Mr. Alford, and all must be on file on or before April 1, it was stated. Decorators are now at work on the High Price Warehouse, where the ex position will be held, and ceiling ef fects are being placed. The color scheme is blue and white, and it is stated that the decorations will pres ent one of the most attractive and glamorous arrangements yet staged in the city. It was also stated today that many business concerns have already reserved display spaces, cov ering lines from automobiles to household and personal effects, to gether with farm machinery and equipment for the curing of tobacco. The musical extravaganza will be an outstanding feature, and a ten piece musical organization has been engaged for the week, with enter tainment every night of the exposi tion. Members of the Lions committee today expressed their thanks and ap preciation to business concerns who have already assured their coopera tion, and extended an invitation to the public to visit the warehouse during the day to see the progress of the decorations now being placed. POLICE INVESTIGATE TUESDAY ROBBERY Police are investigating a robbery of a sum of money from Miss Helen' Kimball’s room at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Morris on Chestnut street sometime Tuesday atternoon. Miss Kimball reported to police that about S3O was missing from! her room, and that her personal es- I sects showed signs of having been gone through. Police had a Negro man and wo man at the police station today for questioning, later liberating them. YOUNG DEMOCRATS WILL HEAR COOLEY Raleigh, March 23.—With the de finite assurance that Congressman Harold D. Cooley will be on hand to' “put on the rousements”, plans for the fourth district Young Demo cratic Jeffersonian Rally are being completed. Staged at Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh on the night of Friday, March 31, the fourth district meet ing will be an informal barbecue rather than a formal banquet. The date for this occasion was fixed a little earlier than the real rally period in order to catch the legisla ture in session. Jeffersonian Rallies planned by State President Gordon Gray and General Chairman Tommy Gresham are scheduled for every congres sional district in the State during the two first weeks in April. Dates have been fixed so far for the sec ond, fourth and fifth district rallies and others will be announced in a few days. CASCADE M ip! si-95 I I 90 PROOF Geo. A. Dlckel Distilling Co., Inc., Lexington, Kentucky. James Abbott 111 Only One Week; Funeral at New Bethel Friday James Arthur Abbott, nine-year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lennie Ab bott, of the Townsville road, died at Maria Parham hospital at 7:15 a. m. today after an illness of one week. He was born in this county Decem ber 29, 1929. He was a student at Central school in the city. The lad was a member of Sandy Creek Baptist church. Sui’viving besides the parents are three brothel's, John, Clinton and Arwell Abbott, and two sisters, Eliza beth and Shirley Jean Abbott, and two grandmothers, Mrs. Mattie Ab bott and Mrs. Maggie Stevenson, both of this county. Funeral services will be held at 4 o’clock Friday at New Bethel Baptist church at Epsom, with interment following in the church cemetery. Rev. Mr. Barnett, pastor of Sandy Creek Baptist church, will beb in charge of the services. Counties Flee Funeral Body Restrictions In the Sir Walter Hotel. Daily Dispatch Bureau, BY HENRY AVER ILL. Raleigh, March 23. —Approximate- ly a dozen counties sought, and won, exemption from a “funeral directors commission” bill yesterday after Haywood’s Senator Chester Cogburn made one of the bitterest and most vigorous of his many attacks on “monopolistic commissions”. During his assault the Haywood man charged that practically all the commissions set up to regulate this, that and the other industry, trade and profession in North Carolina are nothing more or less than “rackets” of the most vicious type. “The only difference between these ! monopolistic boards down here and the rackets up North is that up there | they enforce their demands with ma chine guns and stink bombs, while down here we make them legal and force the people to submit to paying tribute by enacting a law to make them do so,” he said. Debate on the measure—it was all technically on a Cogburn amend ment to exempt Haywood, Transyl vania, Jackson, Cabarrus, Watauga, Alleghany, Ashe and perhaps a few others —was pointed and vigorous. Wake’s Senator Lyn Ballentine, who sponsored the bill and led the fight for its adoption without amend ment interrupted Cogburn time after time to engage in repartee which grew rather warm at times. Ballentine at one point declared he is ready, for his part, to “give Hay wood to Tennessee”; to®which Cog burn replied that so far as he is con cerned he w?uld be willing to “give! Wake back to the Indians if the dis tinguished senator wants it that way.” The Cogburn amendments carried by a heavy margin, but the bill it self won on a roll call vote, 35 to 8. New Fuel On Fight Over Agriculture (Continued From Page One) so written that he couldn’t get on. The bill of yesterday is Senate Bill 376, the previous bill was 328, the numbers being given in order to make further reference to them in this stoi’y easier and shorter. The Department of Agriculture is backing 328, which is also said to have the endorsement of President Frank Graham, of the Greater Uni versity of North Carolina, and of Dean of Administration W. J. Harrel son, of State College. Without citing him as unimpeach able authority, a high official of the Department of Agriculture said of 328: “It suits everybody I know of except Dean Schaub.” Unbiased observers predict, how ever, that there is sufficient anti department strength in the House to prevent passage of 328, though it could likely get a favorable vote in the House to prevent passage of 328, though it could likely get a favor able vote in the Senate. It sets up an 11-member commission to co ordinate activities of the depart ment and college, the commission to be composed as follows. President of the board of trustees of the University (the governor), president of the University (Frank Graham), dean of administration at State College (Colonel Harrelson), commissioner of agriculture (Kerr Scott), assistant commissioner of agriculture (W. S. Coltrane), three members of the board of agriculture to be chosen by the commissioner, and three members of the board of trustees of the University, to be se lected by the governor. On the contrary, the “advisory” board set up by 376 would consist of the governor, ex officio; the com- TO THE CREDITORS OF THE CHILDREN’S SHOP, HEN DERSON, N. C. Notice is hereby given that The Children’s Shop of Henderson, N. C. has made an assignment to the un designed trustee, and all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said company are hereby notified to present said claims properly itemized and verified to Hon. E. O. Falkner, Clerk Superior Court of Vance County within one (1) year from this date or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said company will make immediate pay ment to the undersigned. This the 23rd day of March, A. D. 1939. JASPER B. HICKS, Trustee. 23-30-6-13 HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 193? ~3| missioner of agriculture, the direc tor of the North Carolina ment Station (Schaub) and the com missioner of agriculture. This measure goes much beyond setting up a board, top. It would change the tax on fertilizer inspec tion from 20 cents a ton as at pres ent to 30 cents a ton, the increased revenue to be allocated for the use of the North Carolina Experiment Station and test farms. Going still further, the bill would reallocate to “hog cholera, Bang’s disease and other regulatorv work,” under the N. C. E. S. $4,500 now allocated to seed improvement, $26,- 350 for miscellaneous use and $72,- 000 for expenses of the test farms. All in all, however, it just about suffices to say of the two bills that the Department of Agriculture wants 328, Dean Schaub wants 376 and will have the backing of the North Carolina Farm Bureau. At the time of introduction of 376 yesterday, 328 had already been favorably reported by the agricul ture committee and was on the Sen ate calnedar, but on motion of George Wai'd, of Duplin, it was sent back to the committee because of the introduction of 376. Hines Given 4 to 8 Years In Lottery (Continued From Page One) at least $30,000 annually to protect this vicious racket, and in all pre vious cases of this type that have come before me, I have been much more stringent.” Hines was pale and nervous as sentence was passed. He adjusted and readjusted his glasses. His lawyer, Lloyd Stryker, blanched, too, as sen tence was passed. Stryker made two routine motions to dismiss. Both were denied. He told the court Hines had cooperated with probation offi cers to the fullest. Stryker said: “Mr. Hines has noth ing to say.” J. Richard Davis, lawyer for the Dutch Schultz mob and “Big Harry” Schoenbaus, pay-off man, named as fellow conspirators of Hines, were sentenced yesterday. Davis was given a year and Shoenhaus was given a suspended sentence, with two years probation. Italy’s King Says France Knows Claim (Continued From Page One) the questions which the two countries in this moment in an of ficial note of last December 17.” While the king was speaking, Pope Pius XII again expressed his desire for “peace based on justice and mutual cooperation,” a Vatican news service announced. This came in an audience for 700 Hungarian pilgrims. The pope also received ten young TOP QUALITY TO THE TOP LEAF/ ■rn'i.ii-n-njn,, pnuwh of J.Q.S on my tobacco i "*™ — says: "1 gave my tobacco a side* field* says: "My tobacco fertil* HM||flHttMbjMM^HH^^ dresserr containing 60 poundsrf I™!:?!™ t ,f. l^o t n!a l t yields avela9e Wo ° 10 U» pounds and I have had returns Tobacco warehouses have / I use 500 pounds of 3-8-8 per ac.e as high as $420.00 per acre. I commented on the uniform L on cotton. 1938 was a bad cotton top-dress cotton with 10-0-10 at ■»quality of our tobacco and the jHj year but 3-8-8 produced a bale 200 pounds per acre. This pre- fine leaves of excellent color. Ju9l per acre. There was no rust and ~ vents rust and bolls are larger Potash makes a great differ bolls were larger and better ma- and easier to pick. I use 6 ence in < l ualit y- / 1 *: impressed with the better yields " 400 to 500 pounds I JASPER HILL. Deep Run. says: Vjj of uniform high-quality lint." per acre on peanuts!' 'I "For the last 20 years I have Mi 4 This tobacco, which received ex- I used plenty of potash. I use '< , tra potash, was topped 26 leaves I 1.200 pounds per acre of to- I _________ ____.. . viivivm * a vv >| - vilI h improved the quality of the crop, I to 8% POTASH. We averaged EXTRA YIELDS mid EXTRA QUALITY |||H but added to its weight by caus- I $300.00 to acre^on NV POTASH is the quality-producing element better texture. Extra potash also I ac r e^'«^ °* to * >acoo f in tobacco fertilizer. Center leaves, lugs and tips all have better qual- jffß helped the plant to maintain Us I |||||p ity when you use plenty of NV POTASH in your fertilizer and as a HlfH normal functions and fill out the I 'lflll side-dresser. One reason why extra NV POTASH pays such big t|§S sips *° k® tter advantage. I L. J. SUGGS, JR., R. D. 2, Snow extra profits is the extra quality that it adds to the upper half of the K§|9 I ™* sayß: fo “ nd out a^ out |SSHH| tobacco plant. Fanners report that top leaves are like center leaves improving the quality of the The Tobacco Research Committee recommends top-dressing I s<x ' top-dresser containing 20% mm tobacco with extra potash equal to 100 to 200 pounds of NV SUL- I I potash. This gave me PHATE OF POTASH per acre, in addition to fertilizer containing at I P t 0 least 6% POTASH at 800 to 1.200 pounds per acre at planting. The L ... " 11 extra NV SULPHATE OF POTASH should be applied within 20 days vl g r D I zb j Use more N V POTASH this year! It adds extra yields and extra pXsh. °vte w used fertib quality to your entire crop. Your Fertilizer Man can supply you with V izers containing 8% POTASH .ilO , ¥ 3-8-8 made with N V POTASH to use at planting and for side-dressing for several years, at the rate he has NV SULPHATE OF POTASH. POTASH PAYS! l® f§ N. V. POTASH EXPORT MY., Inc., Royster Bldg* NORFOLK that shows no disease." IHli!. 8% a pOTASH FERTILIZER I Sp\iy NV SULPHATE OF POTASH I U mm jiß American priests with their relatives. His Holiness spoke to them briefly in English and blessed them and their dioceses. The ten were ordain ed' last Sunday by Bishop Ralph Hayes, rector of the North American College. Vittorio Emanuele acknowledged that events in eastern Europe had brought uneasy times. “Europe has not yet and will not have times which can be called easy, and the recent collapse of some of the artificial political structures born after the World War demonstrated it,” he said. “But it is difficult times which reveal the character of peo ples, and it is for this reason that no doubt clouds my mind with re gal'd to the future of the Italian peo ple, a future guaranteed by the arms and by the ever more united national consciousness, tempered by the hard tests of war and the no less arduous duties of peace.” Memel Talk Viewed As Assurances (Continued From Page One) German Reich, so, too, we here want to give expression to our faith and our confidence in the word ‘Sieg Heil’.” The fuehrer finished speaking at 2:39 p. m. (8:39 a. m. eastern stand ard time). Enthusiastic singing of the Reich’s national anthem followed. While warning the world that no nation on earth could tear the unified German nation asunder, Hitler de clared: “We Germans have no intention of doing harm to the rest of the world. The damage which that other world did to Germany, however, had to be repaired again. I believe that now, in the main, we have arrived at an end to this unique process of repara tions.” This was interpreted as an effort to appease a nervous world, and es pecially Poland. European Strife Makes Orphans of Ambassadors (Continued From Page One) less where he came from, an alien here, and alone. He may be flat broke, too. Russia’s Queer Case. When czarism in Russia was over thrown, it was replaced by the com paratively moderate Kerensky re gime, which we recognized. It sent to us Boirs Bakhmeteff, an ambas sador. He set up housekeeping in a very nobby embassy, inherited from the czar, originally bought and paid for—there wasn’t any dispute about that. But presently Kerensky-ism ex ploded. We didn’t recognize the Soviets. It no longer was Bakhmeteff’s prop erty. He had to move out. The last I knew about it he was practicing law in New York. But the embassy real estate? For years it did nothing but stand there, on Sixteenth Street, with no body but a caretaker in charge. Os the ambassadorial staff nobody was left but Serge Ughet, who had been financial attache. Yet he no longer spoke with any authority. He lived in Manhattan. The embassy was an orphan. The caretaker himself wouldn’t come to the door. Russia did, indeed, maintain a commercial office in Washington under Boris Skvirsky, but it was independent of the former embassy; the quarters weren’t his. I tried again and again to discover to whom that embassy belonged; it’s worth about $1,000,000. All I could learn from the State Department was that it was like an estate, left by a dead government, with n® heir. Finally, however, we recognized the Soviets, and Ambassador Alex ander A. Troyanovsky came into possession. So that’s settled. Troy anovsky is in Russia on extended leave, but Charge d’Affaires Con stantine A. Oumasky occupies the premises. The place seems to belong to Russia all right. Austria, Spain, China? Not long ago, as we’re aware, Herr Hitler gobbled Austria, which put Austrian Minister Edgar L. G. Proeh nilk out on the end of a limb. Dr. Prochnilk found a position as a lec turer in a big American education al institution, taking care of him. But r “ for smoking pleasure at its best_Camels who inherits the Austrian legation building on Massachusetts avenue? Republican Spain also has gone flooey. Ambassador Fernado de los Rios likewise has gone in for Amer ican education. But we haven’t a successor to him yet—or recognized new Spain. Who acquires that em bassy? Chinese Ambassador Hu Shih is hanging on only by his eye teeth. He’s likely to have an embassy to put on the market shortly. Now, Minister Hurban of Czecho slovakia has an offering. The diplomatic industry in Wash ington, in short, is being consoli dated at a rate that endangers its prosperity. It’s getting to be a trust. The anti-monopoly committee ought to get into action. Slovaks In Protest To Hungarians (Continued From Page One) it was possible that a “local discus sion” had arisen between Hungarian and Slovak troops. The minister said: “There can be no question of military operations.” Hungarian troops moved into Slo vakia at several points along the Slovakia-Carpatho-Ukraine frontier, said reliable reports from that re gion, and diplomatic quarters- heard Hungary was occupying Slovakia on PAGE THREE Germany’s invitation. The reports supported belief among foreign diplomats that Hit ler had adopted a policy of encour aging Hungarian expansion to build up a powerful ally; in central Eu rope. Hungarian troops had "been in Carpatho-Ukraine since the occu pation last week of that section. British hotels seek dishes which guests won’t steail for souvenirs. They might try Having them made of this new invisible glass. NOTICE OF SALE OF STOCK OF GOODS. By virtue of an assignment made by The Children’s Shop of Hender son, N. C. and as directed therein and as provided by law I will on Monday April 3rd at 12 o’clock noon at the store room of The Children’s Shop on William Stx-eet in Hender son, N. C. offef for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash by pub lic auction aIY! that stock of mer chandise, fixtures and equipment used in the operation of said busi ness. This stock is new and clean. It is made up of suits, coats, and other children’s clothing. Sale is sub ject to confirmation without notice, successful bidder must immediately deposit 10% | of his bid to be held pending confirmation. This the 22nd day of March A. D. 1939. JASI jSR B. HICKS, Trustee. 23-25-1 ;
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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March 23, 1939, edition 1
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