Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / June 7, 1940, edition 1 / Page 2
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Weekly rann Market Report Haleigh. .Tune 7. Feod-tulT mar kets made lurther is.up decline during the past week with demand thickening as pasiiin i>ivame imiiv j plentiful. the 1'. S. 'til \oi r|i i! una departnunts ag; ;tnv re- i vealeil ii ili«' v i-t'kly market lu-w^' JCt'VlCe ICYUW. Wheat feeds tit »-Trnt»«» as much a 1.50 per ton at some marki ' 1:1 oilseed cakes am) i eah hv v ii 1 110 to (ill per ton with tra gri . weakness in s<>vl.r;in nuai. t feeds «cif uncha> ^eti I *.i» ton lower. The im!. \ «•: v li"ii feed^tult prices (ii-i mi 4 points t»> ! In !) i>t ! ! ■ 1 . Iiili' >u 11 i> ■ »t •.mi previous week responding v>e< aid ' i •: •k last »i The hi; rue i ie\ t-. m i Carolina l»>r Virginia lvjliiv.'Mv's stock peanuts i- about toady !•> slightly weaker when o mpared with the previous perind. IK'i!i;iiu1 for the linislleo product :> Vai ;::■!« but It 1 evident liiat >tocks .n iMti.- ing a li ters are light. This week be-t jum bos commanded ir«»i:: 4 t-f i > f 1-2 cents per pound »:<■; \< e<i ami iu-ll bunch from to Mot shell-j ing stock stood .it ivnt , . i \o :!i l' irolina i>es am! >i i-Jiap-beans -'n n;. e bage and iiif«.ti p>•. - hold about steady on the rio> ;f Wholesale pric n.l Mjua^ii wcimeiuu. .... .-t ... . . I 1-ab compared with last wet .. Xorth i*ar-j olitui ol'tVrings we < also irrogufar I With supplies ; ■ »T;■ * i <. >nap t t '.e 'uri';:sc and j muche beans and sir, « beets, eabbagi ami .:•••.• < .. • .-n i •• wane. At tin cIo.m- in Wv. York IPO I pound sack-o 1 S ' 4 di Irish cobbler potatoes n ; •' ! to 2.5U: :> peek t. beets from 1.00 t> Italian type >t{iia>h Bushel liani| t : > brought troni !.7."> : peu> troni M.~> cent in Baltic <>re. I I ot pointed type <. cents to t;r> u-nt> round type .,t 7."> < < . 1.7.V iiean • best later pl't > :it 30 I tarm prue> *.»• i-u.-.w. ....... hens >agged i'tlt i ! r i'i i' inc. .i • a little ::t the II;.U _;ii . > . ti.it:tsu the past week. At the i'l.ist' price wee down fn>m I !-2 to 2 cents [X'f I, pound at IM I-J ?.» cent.- t<■ r »«»!• >r- j ed fryers and down 1-2 cent tit 12 1-2 . to 13 1-2 cents I'icolored hens. Hen-J nery white t advanced 2 ivnts per dozen and *.• i«<i * :•'! t>> I;» «t tirs. Practically ;<II i -vers. >v:u i heifers. hogs and bs lost price' J ground at (.'air - «iu nu • eok., Increased marketings were probably I, most influential •>. v.' .in.u .-tcers' • and heifers. i"u- *•» lower ; levels. Sheep and ... r -;» supplies were I j hunted, but prices dropped. never- , the less. Must fed ste< rs. h« fers and! i yearlings lo.-t 2.i tv.rs v, th Mime, ( grades 35 u» 40 cents off. Fl« gs clos&j j generally 2u to :!:> a:."> !• v.v.. ,-pringj . iambs declined *i> .">•) cent,- with i shorn Iambs 2"> to |i» rents oil. Prime ( steers topped at '.L'.LTv wh:!»* little , sold above ll.nti. 11<- l.eid 'v.e 5.?(> • ' peak until Thu >iay" u<-. ':ne drop-! ped the extreme top to lowest j Miice early April, native spring lamosl i sold up to ! I C ■ -pring- •' ers 11.25. with best old crop shorn . labs 9.2a. : i lies an rights. COOL TODAY Lee Powell— Herman IJrix— Tonto—in The original full lotij^th «»t" th< 1• Lone Rangi-i-— "Hi Vo Silver" -Also- L "Drums ot In M;im-!it!" _Stevendon LAST TIMKS TODAY TOMORROW ONLY Admission ... K>c ;swl 20c SPCLLS'NDING! UNBELIEVABLE! Tfco World a I ' &cwn of Ti.'net Comedy And Chapter So. 5 "Kit Carson" with Wild Hill Ilickok insects Threat To Leaf Crop rnllogo Station. HiiJuno (I.— I. i >. Hi'U t'll. of tin* IV. i\ Stair Collojjo K\lousi»in Sorviiv, warned lannors today to iim' ado vji.:<!«.' control moa.suivs in protecting this \varV tobaoco i*tt>p against iiordos ot insert i uoiuios. Our oi (ho most prrMstrnt attark iis <>! tin- (Tup. tin* I li'a btvtlr. may bo rontrollrd with a inixturo • »l pari.; sjivrn and arsrnato <> 1 load. Ono piitind i>1 !>:iiart i-ti In I'ivr pounds ai'M'iialt- "'I li-ad is 11u> rerom mruded proportion. " t lillllts. I'lM .-mm. three pounds of this mixture will tnat an MTf. Ktii" half grown ■ u- lar ger plants. i'niir I" six pounds will !>•' necessary. I Hit* t«i tiif dense growth of tobacco and tilt' necessity ni applying the poison to the under sidt* of thf leaf, tiif mixture is most effective when diistfd. This will coii-i trol horn worms also. Another t'oinninn enemy ol Ihf to- ; bacco crop is the bud worm. The in > t known control. Howell said, is poisoned corn meal bait. For large amounts, one pound of arsenate ol' it ail -iioiild l»e mixed with ad pounds • I coi n meal. Kor smaller amounts. -;x (leaping tablcspoonl ills ol the: )oisoi i to one pec!\ of meal is roc«»m ueuileil. Application:. which should he iKide ntng when the lo >acco buds are open, are made every .vtt'k until the tobacco is topped. (Hie >eck or 111 pounds of the poisoned >ait is sul iicient lor one application >e!" acre. A all pinch o! the bait - dropped in each bud. I*or cut worms, the foi\wing bait given good results: wheat bran, .a pounds: pans green, one pound: .mi enough water to moisten the .i xture. t. if him and It ad arsenate ail to ui\ «.• -;>»ni re.-ults in control 1 ng cut worms and should not be iM'd. The bait simuid be broadcast n the I:i•!ii :i the late /Iternoon at tie rate >-l I"> to 2n pounds to the icrc. C'l:ifkfii< <houltl be kept out ■ t poisoned fields. "Lost Colonv" Pians For 1940 MmiUk>. June 7. Plans arc under vay i •! Hulking the Waterside Tliea i*.' ;.i I-■ it Raleigh a iiwhv perma K'.'.t -tincture lor tlu' annual siun ner presentation of Paul Givni's The Lost Colony." which opens its ourth >eason here Saturday evening, utie L'inh. according to an announce nent made today by D. Bradford 'earing, producer of the historical Irama in connection with Roaiu>kc stand's 353rd anniversary celebra-, ions. I Pilings which support the stage ver Roanoke Sound are being re loved and replaced by more perma lent lumber and materials. The tockade. cabins and most of the eats which were made of pine are, >eing rapidly replaced by cedar and ither stronger wood. When the heatre was first boilt. >t was plan ed only for a single .-uiniiier season. Though most of the production taff of "The Lost Colony" will re gain intact. Director Samuel Sclden nnoiinced today that Harry Davis,! .ho was associate director of last timmer's production, will be the lew stage manager. Eugene Lang ton. who held this post for the past j hree years, will remain with the {a I let Theatre of New York City. Capital Gossip By HENRY AVERILL. Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, June !!.—There is nothing articularly unusual about a news aper falling into error. It happens > all of them much more often urn they wish, vet much less often nan many people seem to believe. On the other hand it is rather un Camp Balance Rock Open Daily including Sundays to the public for Picnics, Weiner Roasts, Steak Frys Lake in excellent con dition. Pure spring water for drinking* and showers. Ezekiel Tea< hes Responsibility ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON ——— Scripture—Ezeki?f 33:1-20.' 11 r By Alfred J Ru^schfr A pood watchman, when he sees danger threatening his people, will blow the trumpet and warn, them, says Ezekiel. But if the watchman blows' not his trumpet, and the people are destroyed, their blood will be on his head. "Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will yc die, O house of Israel?" Ezekiel pleads. "If tlie wicneu turn irom nis v.i>... and do that which Is rijjht, he Khali h (GOLDEN TEXT-Horn. M Chalk Likely To Be Erased From Job, Averill States \ Daily Dispatch Bureau, In tin* Sir \v>lter Hotel. Ualeijdi, Juno 7. -Chalk is <111iFt* likely to be erased as the result of llii' it tint Kuhe rnatorial primary taken in connection anil eiinjunction with other events whieli liappened ^foretimes. The t'halk in question is John 1).. (-(•minis.-inner «»l" tfamo and inland li>heiii>. and the erasing spoken of is from the state pay roll. Naturally, there's nothing official i.r ret tain about this it's just one nl tht- logical and possible aftermaths .ir the balloting. Tlu fact or at least the reliable reports lhat Mr. Chalk did not sup port .1 \!. llroughton. successful can ditlate for governor, would not neces sarily Ik- fatal. Many 1,/lieials, par ticularly subordinate ones, have been able to hold their jobs alter guess ing wi'otiii politically; but there is a lut ol evidence thai Chalk has for a usual I'm- a pape^- to go wrung on a simple I'act ami then continue in the same error long after it has been exposed. Not so long ago the Raleigh News and Observer told its readers that the North Carolina for Iioosevelt headquarters were being closed. They were not: but the N. and O.'s error wasn't any worse than a lot of others. But the same N. and O. comes along a day or so ago with a story that there are no lotfger any nolit.» eal headquarters open in the Sir Walter, and repeats the statement that the North Carolina for Roose velt headquarters closed immediate ly after the state convention. As a matter of fact—as the N. and O.'s bright young men ought to have known by now at least—the North Carolina for Roosevelt headquarters are still open daily in the Sir Walter Probably the N. and O., with customary complacence, Ngures that if it says something lias been done, the mere saying of it -by the N. and (). makes it so. regardless. A good formula for finding out which gubernatorial candidate will finish third in any given primary is to take the one Ronald Wilson backs and select him for the number three finish. Pi Mir Ronald had Maxwell (3rd) in 1H32. Sandy Graham (3rd) in l!>3(i. and Maxwell again (and again 3rd) this year. Approximately 25.000 separate figures (mathematical and not phy sical) were made by half a dozen young ladies working for -T. M. Broughton in copying the statewide gubernatorial returns, precinct by precinct. Figure it out. There arc 1,913 pdc cinct in the State. There were seven jiiibern;florial candidates. The aver age precinct vote would run some . tinny like two and a half numerals 'per candidate. Multiply this mil ;ind it conies to 23,000. plus. What with totals for counties .mil for the stale, the 25,000 estimate doesn't appear e\ eessive. h was a day and a half job for the gals. Commissioner of Insurance Dan ; Honey won his race over \V. 1. Oliver I hands flown and with plenty to spare. but ho .still worries about losing Johnston county. He thinks this was due td the fact that "Doe" Oliver, a Johnston county notable, has a son with Ihe same initials as Dan's jKuquay Springs (Wake) opponent. St;ite employee*; like the month of June not bemuse it is the traditional | time lor ruses and weddings, but I for the wholly prosaic reason that jthey gel their checks live days earlier 1 [than usual. The stipend papers are lout on the 20th rather than the 2:1th because June is end of the fiscal year and it is desired to yet them jcashed and back through the banks i as soon as possible. The fourth floor of the Depart ' rnent of Agriculture building has been vacated by the Parole setup, (leaving a suite of empty (for the moment) rooms close to the Labor I )epartmeni. Asked if Commissioner ShufordY. force will expand into some of lite lvacant offices, a secretary replied: j "We're hoping and wishing, but I'm !afraid that's about all." Benares, on the banks of the . acred I Ganges River in India, has Ghats or j flights of stone steps leading from the most famous buildings in the icitv down to the river's banks. | Inn# lime been in disfavor with the I)eparlmen1 hi L'unsei vatioii and De j velopment head, I>iih• t«»r It. ISruee Kthend^e. Chalk, it is said, was in danger ill losing Ins official head as nuirii ;is t\\'ii veins a.u«'- and since then there has iiccnrreiI nothing in ikii-. row die breach with his superior. On the contrary their allegiM dif ferences have !>«.•<-ii widened by nu merous events. Chalk is pictured as desirous of becoming !ii*;id ul .1 jyiinc and fish division c'liiipletely independent of the hepartment ol Conservation and l>L'vi*lopiiH*nt. Klhcridge, naturally, doesn't like thai. Chalk i.> charged with pircipitnting Die State's losing I legal battle with Federal autho 1 ~itics over control of name on national j forest land:. Here again he is said . to havi* acted eonliary to the ideas j ol his boss. j In short, die Chalk position is ' looked on as <|uile preearious. Officers of State College Band Cont^ancf'no^ t ^ °flicers elected 1" head State College's lamui.* . ground' Lnft ! yem* 316 sh°Wn herc' with tho band's drum in the back W. 'rtJ „ nght> Char,es S" Sullivan of Asheville. vice president; E. Noi-liiv. • . «"Ce' Jl-' °' Rilleigh' President; and W. Roy Hayes, Jr.. of net ai'y'lleasurer- Price plays the clarinet. Haves t""ts a trum 1 ci and Sullivan pounds the bass drum. EzekielTeaches Personal Responsibility "BRASS TACKS'- ON THE .SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Che ©olden (Text A-^ar ■ ■Ksq Watchman on the Ramparts "'So then each orw> of us shall give account of himself to Oiod.1 Rom. 14:12. Bv NEW MAN l Ainrnr.i.i, (The International Uniform Lesson on the above topic for June 9 is E/.ekiel 33:1-20, the Golden Text be in# Horn. 14:12, "So then each one of us shall give amount of himself to God.") Ezekiel .the prophet, and his peo ple were in exile during the time he gave to them the message which is the subject of today's lesson. It was at Tel-abib. at the river Chebar, on a canal on the Euphrates river, near Nippur, in Babylon, in the year 58(5 B. C. UI it 11IL' WllJlfl UIU^L- wiiw Wt# wiwiift II J to shift (in everyone except them- j selves? Father, Mother, friend, is to blame. Never themselves. Soon after this, in the twelfth year of their captivity, a messenger es-| Ezekiel was mari'ieci anu imu .i house of his own. His wife died very suddenly, and the Lord told him he must not shed tears, and he must not eat the bread of man, but must speak to Ihe people and warn them of what was coming—conquest and exile. In our lesson he tries to impress upon his people in exile that they individually suffer for their own sins: that theirs is the responsibility lor their actions, and ff they repent and leave their evil ways, their sins will be forgiven and forgotten by God. As a prophet he is a watchman ap pointed by the Lord Jehovah for his people, w;-.ruing them of the dangers that arc approaching. If the watch man on the ramparts sees an army approaching to destroy the city, he should sound his trumpet so that the people may be warned and lice or prepare to light. If, however, the watchman sees the danger and does not blow his trumpet, and the enemy comes and takes the city, then the blood of the people is on the head of the watchman. If Watchman Is Faithless. "So thou, O son of man (mean ing himself). I have set thee a watch man unto the house of Israel; there fore thou shall hear the word from My mouth, and warn them from Me." If Ezekiel, like the faithless watch man on the ramparts, had failed to warn Israel of her sins, then he was responsible ii the wicked "die in iniquity." If such warning has been given, however, and ihe people re fuse to listen to the prophet, it is their itwn fault that they repent not. God has no pleasure in the death of the wicked. He would rather we turn away from sin and live. "Turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, O house of Israel?" Ezekiel pleads. He makes it clear that hypocrisy will not help. If a man profess right eousness and still -commits sin he will not be saved, but die. Only if he "turn from his sin, and do that which is lawful and right." II the wicked restore t ie pledge, give again that he had robbed, walk in the statutes of life, without com mitting iniquity; he shall surely live." The Israelites were not at all in ch tied to listen to Ezekiel at this time, ihey thought the Lord was not fair a™Prom>sed them without reason. Yet ye say, The way of the Lord is not equal," Ezekiel told them. "O ye house of Israel, I will judge you every one after his ways." Doesn't inis accusation remind you of the capect inun .i» i. that their mktiiI . stroycd. Thru I mouth \va? <pjK in M dumb." From then on In minister to 1, j . their moral Ii:• listen to him. lit Jerusalem would and they \v« m i< i i ai Whose |;l'o|>iiei ,i HENDERSO One Night Only TUESDAY .CHAS. COLLIER, ■PRESENTS FUNNY COMEDIANS1 BEAUTIFUL GIRLS The Show You All Kium Never So Good As Now riUCKS: Children Adults A COLD GLASS OF PINE STATE MILK ? Is just ' | tiling w i I li your I 'I n c li tlicyc w a r in days. It. jrivi-s von the cii< lyy and pep )>(•<'< i t<ii* ill'' dav< w«.rk. Southern Ice Cream io. Phone 122. TG VOU^ GROCERS ADVICE ... it's his business to know food • Sure it's his business to know about food. That's why 60 many grocers sug gest Bamby Pullman Bread when asked for the outstand ing loaf on their shelves. They know ~that Bamby / Pullman Bread is skillfully baked of finest ingredients ,.. giving it the Three Quali< ties every woman demands _ in bread-Uniformity, Fresh- ^ ness, Flavor. Next time, ask your grocer for Bamby Pull, man Bread ... let him real. iee that you, too, know what's good in foodl * ROYAL BAKING CO., BAMBY BAKERS, RALEIGH N. G
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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June 7, 1940, edition 1
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