Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / April 3, 1940, edition 1 / Page 7
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:**10 % I a U.J. v.cellation of Treat . . »eiween China and Countries Hits Sl\«:i.r< »\ STK'.VAKT I p r- IVhmmist .i! o. — Wan<; t'l-up si»»vi'rmnt'ui v 'M it';> ' nrle S;i>n Ian- with a vorv 11 tin* i«iluT side W h t- ti W a n s» «>! his gov i r.iiit-Mt «> 1' "CVn iral China" he or course. "Kasiern china" he •utai is Nanking. a;;ite near the Pa *-■ i i: seaboard. Hacked i>v Japan, he undoubtedly is !i control of the coastal strip as far • • f"• a< Nanking. .i- ;v i t1 a< an mcte i\. I hing-Wel oate area west ' i city. iU\vond that is -v realm. Between i i i >ntested region i- ''y is "Central China." a ease of civil war Wang's eastern belt and i - u . ;i interior, because ii y hasn't much strength . • Japan's Chinese pup- I actually it continues to be -.■se-Chinese conflict, not a -c civil war. i ewith Japanese support.; i->. r a fact, dominate the , only by way of the | • American trade can get I Cancels Treaties has announced he is can- j v . >us treaties between i .md other countries. This America. among others.1 yd from traffic through zone into the interior, ex-i - conditions. It' Wang i ■nest-to-goodness rulei ; : be >■1 bad. But every-1 - ti at Japan will do the | . A. erican traders have im-' •y rights in China, and •> :ek's government, bot ,K. is committed to re-! . • I - going to stand pat on ' u.- recognized by China's j government, or permit • eh eked into the discard : panese counterfeit of a Chi-j ■ timer.*, nominally under i _ L'hiang-Wei? Uncle Samuel to make ;und and pretty soon. too. - Situation Can't Wait i situation that can be ag's Japanese dominated "Cen Lemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly • •; i!'i'er from rheumatic, ar-i . • >>uritis uain. try this simple; -n.-ive home recine that thous-. u-:nuf. Get a package of; • :x»und today. ?Jix it with! • ■ water, add the iuice of 4! It's e.-'sv. Xo trouble at all! • isant. You need only 2 table-j ! two times a day. Often j • J hours—sometimes over-, » ndid results are obtained as d< not ciuickly leave and. . do not feel better. Ru-Ex will! . : "thins to try as 't is sold druggi.-t under an absolute! - ci: uuarantoe. Ru-Ex Com-i for -ale and recommended! • IJr ig Store and good ■ ■< ■: t- everywhere.—Adv. Candidate Visits Here MA.!. EDWARD F. GRIFFIN Maj. Edward F. Griffin of Louis i ur*;. candidate for Congress from the i-'< urth. I) strict. was in Hender son yrsu'roay :ti the interest of his: campaign. cI• ?ix was a member of the U»33 and :»S". State Semites, being aj '.lumber of the powerful finance j cittoe ii>. li'33 ami chairman of I tli' public welfare committee in; in addition to other committees, j tic has been a member of the North i Carolina National Guard for the past It? year.- and now commands j the First Llatallion of the 113th Field j Artillery. I: the congressional race he op-1 pises the incumbent. Harold Coolev. j iral Chinese" government already; n • !'>«•!•: The treaties already j are abrogated. it' ti tore.-ting to note, according' to dispatches from Shanghai, that' tiie C r.inese loyalists are taking up a popular subscription, as low as one dollar-"luex." to have Wang assas sinated. This may appear desirable, but Uncle Sam can't very well con tribute to it. He may wish the cam- ; paign well, but a treasury appropri ation .'or the purpose certainly would be an informality. The plan might not work, either. Wang prob- ' ably is doing his best to counteract I The truth is that Japan, taking ad vantage of the rest of 'he voile's preoccupation in Europe, has been hustling mutters in the Far East in its own interest. There are authorities who contend! that Washington itself has been neg- : lectful of Oriental prospects. Yet j it's- hard to say what we could have; done about it. What's Wang's Real Plan? Wang Ching-Wei is a difficult, customer to estimate. He's placed in an invidious posi-; tion—apparently selling out his na-j rive China to Japan. Nevertheless, there are some who j refer »o l.im it.-- a strong, patriotic! Chinaman. He's been premier of his country. They say he was a capable administrator. He's men tioned as a "realist"—whatever that may mean at the present juncture. Chiang Kai-Shek is an "idealist," so he alleges—and impractical. Perhaps Wang is playing off Uncle Sam versus the .Mikado—figuring on a Chinese \ ietory between the two. ; If so. tie's gumming up the cards , to America's prejudice as well as to ( Nippon's. - But what does he care? Perhaps he's trying to boost ex clusively for China—and let the| ••foreign devil-" "stew in their own juice." Presumably, in the last analysis, he include- the Japanese among the "foreign de\ ils." Ju: t Chinese - trategy! Citizens Realty &. Loan Company COMPLETE IXSCRANCK SERVICE Real Estate — Property Management JOEL T. CHEATHAM. President ALL EXPENSE World's Fair and Vacation New York, New England and Canada Plan your tour with TAR HEEL TOURS livery Tuesday, May 14th to October 8th $-30.85 ECONOMY iOUii inciuucs 5 ii<. ys in New York, round trip rail fare, 2 admissions to lair, Kariio City Ob ervatioi Tower, performance Music Hall, sight-see ing New York City. 4 nights Piccadilly Hotel. DELUXE TO UK i^ves y.>u the above features with exception one admission to fair but we give you in C ^ A/a addition a wonder! ul boat trip to West Point with v »0«l/U two !'o> ;• sightseeing tour there and one evening's en tertainment in one of New York's better night clubs, tour NBC Studio, : ight-seeing within fair grounds. I.«t tell yot! ; bout other tours we have to New England and Canadian resort places. For further information and reservations Write TAR HEEL TOURS !- Xorth McDowell Street, Rulciqh. North Carolina—rr C. G. Ward, D. P. A., 505 Odd Fellows Bldg. Raleigh, N. C. Seaboard Railway Capital Gossip I By 1IKNRY AVERILL. Raleigh, April 3.—The News and Views of Jacksonville, in Onslow where they have such fine country hams, last week ran a picture of Willis Smith on its front page, with this under it: "Willis Smith, Raleigh attorney who everybody thought would want to run for governor, decided not to run and in so doing the people of the Stale lost thu.privilege of voting for an able man. "Mr. Smith is well known in On slow. He has a camp at Swatiboro and occasionally conies dowftt for a short stay here. "We succeeded in gelling a mat so that we can see what a man who isn't u candidate looks like." So far as known none of the ac tive candidates for nomination as governor of North Carolina holds membership in any traveling men's organization, but any of them coulu qualify, points out Lynn Nisbel, press chief for A. J. Maxwell, in a release to week lis giving the Maxwell itinerary for a week. Probably first of the gubernatorial candidate sto take to the air in a literal sense. .!. M. Broughton flew from Winston-Salem to Rocky Mount on his way to Elizabeth City where he spoke last night. The fact that he couldn't make the rest of the trip by plane was likely responsible for his vigorous advo cacy of granting a fran,-!ise for an air line from Norfolk. Virginia, to Knoxvilie. Tenn.. a iine which would remedy "the sluggish mail service across the length of North Carolina',. Broughton said. Note on Military Etiquette: Some thirty ambulances and trucks of Ihe 16th Medical Regiment passed thro ugh Raleigh en route to For' Bragg Tuesday. As they rolled by the Capitol and turned into FaveHeville street, two very good looking young ladies stood on the sidewalk and] watched the motor parade go by From at least ihree-fourths of 11 •« j vehicles soldiers shouted greetings to! the young ladies Courteous to strangers, those pill v» 'I lers Found' The prototype ««» I'mat'ore'* character with "cousins whom he reckons by the dozens." He's a political worker in Gran ville county. T. G. Sten . .Tr Gran ville manager for Maxwell, savs his county will go for the Commissioner of Revenue very largely because of this chap's activities. "He has 63 first cousins and every one of them is for Maxwell", said Stem. Stem, incidentally, says that Wil lis Smith could and would have car ried Granville had he not decided to stay out oi the Governor's race this year. Getting back to traveling and the Governor's race, Broughton says he has already driven 30.000 miles by automobile in this campaign. Gasoline tax collections ought to pick up remarkably as a result of the canvassing for votes, if all the other candidates come anywhere nearj keeping up with the Raleigh lawyer's pace. Broughton and Horton iolks in : Swain county will have to use first lame or initials to distinguish their :-ounty managers. Broughton's is ' Frank Hyatt, Horton's is Z. J. Hyatt. Horton Stand On Liquor Fails To Create Interest Daily Dispatch Hureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, April 3.—Nothing in the present gubernatorial campaign bet ter illustrates its complete lack of heat and fervor than the fact that Lieutenant Governor Wilkins P. Hor ton last week made his first cam paign statement about liquor—he said he is against "legalized liquor in any form"—and nobody seems to be stirred even a little thereby. Which brings up the question whether Tar Heels this year arc men or mice, politically speaking. The day has been, and not so long ago either, when such a statement as the Horton condemnation of the demon rum would have rated big heads on every •"ront page: and after it had been sd disseminated through the length and breadth ol" the State, drys would have gone into ecstaeies of delight while wets would have ground their teeth with fury and threatened dire vengeance at the polls. Last week the Horton statement— made in Dunn — rated a very, very •wall head in the Greensboro Daily News; was not carried in any other paper so far as your Raleigh report er is aware: and has since drawn absolutely no comment whatsoever, either pro or con. All of which is completely in line with the gradual unfolding of this practically unique Tar Heel guber natorial scramble. On ils merits the Horton state ment wasn't worth much news "play"' perhaps, as the Lieutenant Governor's retold as a political dry has long since been written and duly noted by ail concerned. It was he who put the clincher un defeat of the statewide referendum "Hill bili" in 1935—a bill which the drys then fought and killed but which they -lave wished a thousand times they uid supported, in view of what fol lowed. But the point is that North Caro lina politics has reached the state where a man can say something about liquor and nobody gives a d , pardon me, nobody cares a rap. Before either the Republicans or the Democrats nominate a dark horse, suggests the man at the next Jesk, they should be careful he isn't so dark the voters cannot see him. .. r~ —s Finnish Envoy and Bride I » Till.: is the official wedding picture of Hjalmar J. Procope. Finnish min ister to the United States, and his bride, the former .Mar/rarut Shaw, w.igland. They were married at (he home of R. Wahon Moore, coun c 7 '£ th-j American state department, in Fairfax, Va. (Central Press) Farmers Aided By FSA Pay Back Two-Thirds Of Loans I Daily Dispatch Bureau. In the Sir Waiter Hotel. Raleigh, April 3.- North Carolina farmers who have receivi cl Federal loans from ihe Farm Securi' • Ad ministration have repaid i proxi mately I'.vo-thirds of what !!>"•• •■•we tho gn■•eminent. according t > at: aii nivfM^ try progress summary", just given out by Vance E. Swift, state FSA director, comparing their pr< - sent status with iheir condition be fore coming into the program. Roughly speaking. S4.0G0.O00 has been repaid out of a total ol SG.(»«IO.— 000 loaned to Tar l-Ieei beneficiaries 01 the program: *hi< despile the fact (hot li.tii h «'f the money will not bo due foi 11 'Li< or five years. Th«' Swift report also indicated that these FSA borrowers last year boosted their incomes about 30 per cen i Annual purchasing power of the 11.677 North Carolina standard re habilitation borrowers who got loans last year was increased bv nearly $2,000,000. The summary shows that the same families have increased their net worth—ever and above what they owe—nearly S3,000,000. "These figures represent a very favorable extension in purchasing power", Mr. Swift pointed out. The FSA program, designed to tie convention credit to l->- i* range planning and practiuil '..cation .•■ good farm and ho" uanagenu u was started in April li.e ago. The summary further s.i.-iv. that FSA borrowers in the si' : • ' oy fol lowing supervision ir. improved farming practices" are getting away from one-crop farming and making a better living. They produced $4,452,557 worth of goods for home consumption last year, as compared with only S3.413, 421 before they came into the FSA program. Lice-at-home production this past year included 2,227,733 quarts of fruit and vegetables; 5, 32G.931 gallons of milk; 34,914 tons of forage; and a great quantity of other food and feed supplies. The sum of SI 02.045 in back taxes has been paid to counties and other political .<ubdivi>ions in the state as a result of the friendly adjustment ol debts lor i.vm debts and farm . red itors Some of 7.fi2ti tenants and share croppers in the .state have improved their tenure, or i< using arrangements —5.70!) have obtained written leases in place of verba! agreements—1,741 sharecroppers have advanced to | tenant status. Under the FSA's gradually-ex-1 anding program 378 tenants have ! tight farms of ihtir own. The fig ures do not include farm purchase| loans for the present year, but if was pointed out that money is avail able for 45ft In 500 such loans this year. Grants in the state, made to only a few families in extreme need and to supplement loans to needy fam ilies to tide them over until a sound farm plan could be worked out foi them, averaged only :jl!j per family, and tii is figure covers a four-year period, it was pointed out. Oxford Woman Is Sent To Prison Greensboro, April 3.—Miss Mattie B. Burchett, Oxford woman who operates jewelry shops in Burlington, Graham, Mebane and Sanlord, has been sentenced by Judge Johnson J. Hayes to lu months in pri.'-on on charges of taking false oaths as to the amount of assets involved in a bankruptcy action, the United Slates district attorney's office said yester day. She is being held in the Stanly county jail at Albermarle, said Bryce It. Holt, assistant district attorney, awaiting transportation to tiie fed eral prison for women at Alderson, W. Va. There were two counts in the bill of indictment, he added, one charging false oath and the other concealment of assets. HREE (feathers! ^ THIS THREE FEATHERS IS AIL WHISKEY $100 I FULL I PINT $195 I FULL I QUART - * W& 1 I Blend of Straight Whiskies — SO Proof-The straight *hiskies in this product are 4 years old or more. Marriage And Family Council Organized At Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, April 3.—Dr. Ernest It. Groves, who is accredited with being the l'irst person to introduce marriage courses to the college cur riculum, announced officially here today the formation of Marriage and Family Council, Inc. established by the state lav of North Carolina. Explaining the organization, Dr. Groves said that for the last two years his consultations with non coilege people, not only in Chapel Hill and Durham but from Greens boro. Raleigh and other surrounding cities and towns, have been so great that he lias been unable to devote as much time to his students, both at Carolina and Duke, as he felt necessary. The establishment of a Council, lie said, would relieve him to the ex tent that he could give all his spare moments to college ooys and girls whom he teaches or with whom he comes in contact. Members of the council, which has its headquarters at the Groves home here in Chapel Hill, mcltuu: Dr. Groves, president: Dr. Donald Klaiss, <>i' the University Sociology Depart ment, viee-presiuent; Mrs. Elizaoetii Klaiss. secretary-treasurer. and Air.;. Groves. executive secretary. Mrs. Groves, w.io has already had I much experience in taking Dr. |Groves' cases, and Dr. Klaiss will I hold most the consultations on court jship. marriage, and family iclation |ships. There will be no counselling, i Dr. Groves said, on legal, medical or I mental hygiene problems, and those ;who colli'.' for advice on such matters will be referred to lawyers, dotlois of psychiatrists. Dr. Groves said as far as he !;mnv.; this is the first council of its lypt to be organized in the South. "There are only a lew in litis country, but they are on the increase," he said. "The nearest one to this .section is ! in Philadelphia." dialler No. 13030 Ki'mtvp District No. 5 Report Of Condition of The First National Bank in Henderson, of Henderson Jn the Stak1 of North Caroliu.>, at the close ol' busiu* Published in response to call mark' by Comptrollc inulot* Section 5211. U. S. lievi-i (I Statist ..n March 2(1. HMO The Currency, ASSISTS Loans and discounts United States Govt, obligations, direct and guarantied ... Obligations of States and political subdivisions Other bonds, notes, and debentures Corporate stocks, including stock of Federal Hcservo bank . Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve balance, and cash items in process of tjillOction Bank premises owned $40,000, furniture and fixtures $3,000 Real estate owned other than bank premi: os .... TOTAL ASSKTS LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnership.-, and corporations Time deposits of individuals, partnership.-, and corpi.ations Deposits <»!' United States Go-.'crnmciil (including i-o. ial avinti: ) Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions Deposits of banks Other deposits (certified and cashier's elu'cks, etc ) TOTAL DEPOSITS SI. Other liabilities TOTAL LIABILITIES 473.310.75 438.108.00 8,(100.00 471,013.45 3,345.53 3,433.43 1,0G3.I5 S! 405,003.31 CAPITAL AC <Oi NTS Capital Stock: (c) Common stock, total p; r $150,000.00 Surplus Undivided profits Reserves (and retirement' account lor preferred slick) TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 150.000.00 34,500.00 8,822.79 15,000.00 208.322.70 TOTAL LIABILITIES and CAPITAL ACCOUNTS SI.013,."20.10 MEMORANDA Pledged assets (and securities loaned) (book value): (a) United States Government obligations, direct and guar anteed, pledged to secure deno il: and otiier liabilitie: 370.033!)!) (b) Other assets pledged to secure deposit and oilier liabilities (including notes and bills rediscoiinled and -eeurilies sold under repurchase «green ion!) (e) TOTAL 210.550.18 S 587.4K4.08 Secured liabilities: (a) Depo.-its secured Ijv pledged assets pur.-, nan l to requirements of law (d) TOTAL State of North Carolina, County of Vance, ss: 485.043.45 $485,043.45 I, F. B. Rohards, cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly .-wear t!i;il the above vlateimtit is t>ue to the Ixwt of my knowledge :ind belief. F. ii. ROBARDS, Cashier. Correct— Attest: A. A. BUNN, 11. CJ. S. DAVIS, Director::. JASPER ii. HICKS, Sworn to und subscribed before me this 2nd d.^y of April, 1910. ELIZABE'l H T. VVOHT1IAM, Notary Pubilc. Report of An Affiliate of a National Bank Published ill accordance with Section 5211. !'. K. Revised Statutes Report as of March 26th, 19,0 of First National Company In Henderson, Hender-on, N. C., which is affiliated with First National Bank in Henderson, Henderson, N. C. Charter No. 13636 Reserve District No. 5 Kind ol business: Local insurance agency, writing fire, casualty and bonds. Manner in which above-named organization i: affiliated with national bank, and degree of control: Affiliate operated for the benefit of bank, stock held by three employees. financial relations with bank" Stock of affiliated bank owned Loans to affiliated bank Borrowings from affiliated bank Stock of affiliate registered in nan.e of bank or known to be to be owned by bank dl'ectly or indirectly, indirectly, stock held by 3 employees fui benefit of bank. Other obligations to, or known to be held by, affiliated bank 3tiier information necessary to di: clo-e fully relation witli bank: I, Elizabeth T. Wortham, Secretary and Treasurer of First National Company in Henderson, do solemnly swear that the above state ment is rue, to the best of my knowledge and belief. ELIZABETH T. WORTHAM. sworn to and subscribed before me this 2nd day of April, 1940. Nettie Clopton Allen, Notary Public. My commission expires 9-11-41. None None None None
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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April 3, 1940, edition 1
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