Henry LONG PRAISED THIS AT THE CAROLINA THEATRE AS MODEL Of High PAUL REVERE … · 2018. 6....

1
Henry and Me' Scan the Situation ••\Yhe! : thinking b done politically in this country, the Ke- jblicai do *t," declares YviLiam Alien h:te. famed iimpoi'.a, Kar.. : a°d here White, left, ard Henry Allen, another n >tc I Kar ar:. I' rt>ritly were doing some of it. a.; the pair, linked in ft! I he Martial Adventures of Henry and >Ie," conferred ; jtanv' meeting in Washington. Discussing candidates, Whit.'' a. r wiU remain impossible or become inevitable." KED SOX HOLD LEAD BY GAME Hubbeil Hurls Giants to Second Win of Season Over Phillies SEW YORK. April 23. (UP). Eov. n? ra a-rinir Red Sox last night ?till surveyed the rest of the American league from the height? of a f; -t same lead, main- ed a? thev made it three in a row over Va-iington and five wins in six starts. Wej Ferrell '• hed the victory, his second of the season, by a 4 to 2 store and ;;! I owed only e:ght hit? solnir into the ninth. *when fee wi- relieved bv YValberg. who threatened uprising. I M aiH> joined in the six i I \lit attack racking out a trite, i double and two singles off liter:-.';! a:1'! Ruseil as the! Bosttnthb ntinued at the hat-' test oiee «? the season in either, lea&ie. Oeveiarr. clung to second: p/ace bv tshiiz :ti on a 12-hit at'ick Bi and Sullivan, while trn::; : was hurling three-hit ha!! for a 5 to 0 shut- ou* a?a;fjsr the Detroit Tigers. Thf Indians ook the series by two ?ar- « •> one with a batting J soree .Von./a- that included a homer by \ with Hyatt and Had!;n on a e and three hiis, ;n- tlw&K a triple bv Troskv in foor attempts. Hati Bonuia smashed out two wer<. one with two on and the RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit 0, Cleveland 5. St Uuis Chicago 5. m Ftoston 4. Osiy sanies scheduled national league Philadelphia 1, Xew York 8. Onlv sames scheduled. SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION New Orleans G. Atlanta 1. Wi'uhaai 3, Knoxville 4. SCHEDULE AMERICAN LEAGUE at Chicago. «• louL- at Cleveland, a-hinetop. at Philadelphia. York at i^tston. NATIONAL LEAGUE rhifaso at St. Louis. Pittsburgh at Cim:nnati. &Kon at New York. Pfciadelphia at Brooklyn. SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION i Atlanta at New Orleans. Chattanooga at Little Rock. Knoxville at Birmingham. Jfchville at Memphis. ; other with one mate aboard, to account for all of the Chicago (While Sox runs as they lost to the St. Louis Browns G to 5. with jali the scorintr of the trame com-1 ling: in the first three inniivr-. i Beau Hell's single and Oscar |Melil'o'< double in the third gave the iirowns the margin. In the onlv irame in the Na- ticna! league, completing a four- game slate for the day. Carl Hub- bell held the Phiiiies to four hits and scored his second win of the season, 8 to 1. Ott aided him with a homer and | Kartell, the ex-Phillv. made four hits, including a triple in a 15- hit sttnek. while Camnlli depriv- ed Hubbell of a shutout by smashing his fifth homer in the [fourth with the sacks empty. STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE Teams W L Pet Boston 5 1 .8331 Cleveland 3 1 .750 Chicago 3 3 .500 New York 3 3 .500 St. Loots 2 2 .5001 Washington 2 3 .4001 Detroit 2 4 .3331 Philadelphia 1 4 .200 NATIONAL LEAGUE Teams W L Pet Cincinnati 4 2 .667 ( Brooklyn 4 2 .6671 St. Louis 3 2 .600 New York 2 2 .500 Philadelphia 2 3 .400 Boston 2 3 .4001 I Chicago 2 3 .400 I Pittsburgh 2 4 .333 SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Teams W L Pet Memphis 5 1 .833 Chattanooga 5 1 .833 Birmingham 4 2 .667' Atlanta 4 3 .5711 Knoxville __ 3 4 .429: Nashville 2 4 .333 New Orleans 3 4 .333! Little Rock 0 6 .000 j U. S. Breaks Up Jewel Theft Ring I WASHINGTON, Apr. 23. (UP) —Raids throughout the country | have resulted in breaking up of a I far-flung jewel-robbing ring which , j has been fleecing the public of | millions of dollars, Bureau of In-1 ! vestigation Director J. Edgar Hoo- ver revealed yesterday. Hoover said the ring had spe- cialized in a ransom racket, steal- I ing jewels and then returning them to their rightful owners in return for large rewards. "It's a bigger case than ttte Dil- linger case," Hoover said. "Some of the biggest racketeers in New York are involved, and further ar- rests are being made every few | hours." He said the ring had operated 1 all through the eastern part of the j country from Maine to Florida LONG PRAISED AS lffi MODEL PAUL REVERE "Personally, I like Senator Long," Talmadge said yesterday, "but his ideas of government and mine are as far apait as the North Pole from the South Pole. His doctrine of 'share-the-wealth' is out-Roosevelting Roosevelt. 1 "I think that Senator Long has probably waked up the American public move than anyone else by ! making them think of what is go- ! ing on at present in Washington." And the present goings-on at Washington are what make the Georgia governor feel "it would be the greatest calamity to re- elect Roosevelt and approve the I record he is now making." Savs His Government Ideas All Wrong tion. I "As long as the administration keeps up the present program of trying to establish a falseN pros- perity from scarcity, I will con- tinue the fight until we whip them,'' Talmadge declared. To his way of thinking, the "next president" should "run on a principle of not violating the Constitution of the United States on a flimsy excuse that an emerg- ency exists. "The present administration has taken 'emergency' as a license to plunder, for all kinds of extrava- gant wastefulness and silly proj- ects, and all kinds of exhorbitant taxes put 01. by the heads of dif- ferent departments. "We are going to have to pay this money back we are spending. The only way to pav it back with- out stifling the life-blood of this country in taxes is to cut down nine-tenths of ou>- federal activi- ties eliminate boards and bu- leaus, such as the NRA, AAA. PWA and all of the other alpha- bttical agencies. "The remaining functions of [government should be reduced in Dersonnel and the salaries cut in half, beginning with the president. "Get the government out of business and let the people mind theirs. Government in business pampers weaklings and crooks. It is a discrimination against honest, hard-working people who want to j work for their living, and expect nothing from their government I but a fair deal." I and its activities had victimized i many of the country's wealthiest families. At the same time the govern- ment took action against another racket liquor smuggling, when j Secretary of Treasury Henry Mor- ! genthau, Jr., announced an agree- j ment between the United States and France which was expected to ! cut down materially the amount of ! liquor smuggled into this country. JUNIOR "RACKETEER" j WASHINGTON, April 23. (UP) White House police broke up an- other "racket" yesterday when j they apprehended two 9-year-old I youngsters with an eye to busi- j ness making; repeated entrances j to the egg rolling contest, cach time accompanied by different i "parents." The rule is that adults must be accompanied by chil- dren, and the two boys had rent- i ed themselves for a quarter to 'grown-ups anxious to see the 1 president. FIRE THAT LEFT NEW YORKERS GASPING "*st> emj that <5B"&ltar Vorkow to gasp at this billowing cloud of acrid smoke »*> a 1 fire \n a Brooklyn warehouse. The heavy pall of smoke settled over th° (• "tl,at>nK station and fumes were forced into the tunnels through which thousands nK*rs were overcome miles from the fire, hundreds fleeing from their trains at the 1 »"». Nearly 200 cough-wracked victim* sought fire aid at score, of points ?n the city! Official Estimate Of Japanese Dead In Quakes Is High But Unofficial Figure for Past 30 Years Over 250,000 TOKYO. April 23.— (UP). | Sunday's disastrous earthquake in i Formosa brought to more than 111,001) the number of deaths of- ficially listed as caused by earth- ciuakes in Japan in the last 30 years. Lnofficial estimates, which may be more accurate than the gov- ernment figures, place the num- ber at more than a duartdr of u nillion. Tidal wr.vcs, accompanyinp, J many of the earthquakes, killed ideational thousands. Off;cial records show that earthquake shave devastated these ; slands for more than 1500 years, j Cno of the earliest recorded was I n the reign df Emperor Inkyo I in 416 A.D. In 1498, the Tokaido reign was visited b.v a severe earthquake in which 2^.000 (lied. Principal quakes of the past 30 years, officially tabulated for time, place and number of deaths, follows: 1006, March 17, Kogi, Form- osa, 1258. 1900, August 14, Omi, 41. 1914, March 15, Akita, 90. 1923 September 1, Sagami P»ay (Epicenter) Tokyo, Yokohama and Outlying districts. 99,331. ! 1914, January 15, Sagami, 14. j 1925, May 23, northern partj of Izu, 260. 1931, September 21, western, part of Saitama, 16. 1933, March 3, Sanriku district (with tidal v;ive)- 3010. 1935, April 21, Formosa, un-l official estimates, 2495. PIRATE GOLD. GEMS SOUGHT Nationally Known Men Sponsor Project Off the Coast of Florida Copyright, 1935, bv U. P- SARASOTA, Fla., April 23.— (UP).—A 15-year contest with shifting sands and a changing coast line for a $12,000,000 treasure of pirate gold and dia- monds is believed here to be nearing a climax on Siesta Key, off the coast here. A syndicate composed of men described as a "national reputa- tion" has undertaken to finance a project pushed by Captain Clar- ence Roberts of Sarasota, since early 1921. Preliminary con-, struction on the island will be i completed this week. A 300-foot wooden dock has been built from the island at the place where the treasure is be- lieved buried. It extends over shallow waters of a cove just south of Point of Rocks, one of the outstanding promontories on ithe Gulf coast between Sarasota and Venice. Tool houses have been erected and Thomas Hendricks of Lake- land, at the head of a construc- tion gang, expected to begin i moving heavy machinery for drerVinj? within a few days. "The treasure itself." Captain Roberts states, "is made up of a chest of gold ingots and money and a smaller consignment of diamonds. The treasure came from Peru and was consigned to the King of Spain. It was cap- tured by pirates and brought to the Point of Rocks and buried. "I will not say how I first se- cured my information as to the location of the chest, but if I knew then what I know now about it we would have been able to get it up easily in 1021. "At that time it as buried only under about seven feet of sand THIS WEEK'S ATTRACTIONS AT THE CAROLINA THEATRE Below j BEN BLUE, star of Taxi Boy and Vitaphone comedies, coming in person Friday with RAY TEAL and his band. 'THE WINNING 'TICKET," with Leo Carillo and LouSse Fazenda is the screen at- j traction. I Above CLARK GABLE and CON- STANCE BENNETT in "AFTER OFFICE HOURS," showing fo/ the last times today. Above .IEAN' MTJIR in "THE WHITE COCKATOO," the Clue Club mys- tery playing Saturday. o Below BARBARA STANWYCK in "THE WOMAN IN RED," with GENE RAYM ONI), W e d n esdav. Above JAMES DUNN and ALICE FAYE featured with Ned Sparks, Lyda Roberti, Cliff Edwards, A dine Judge and Eleanor Powell, ;n George White's "1H3!> SCAN- DALS,'' showing Thursday. and rock. Today it is much] deeper. Twice since we started | excavating for it I have seen the chest as we brought it up to the surface only to have it slip from the cables and drop, back into the gulf. Only recently we located it definitely and we have drilled a hole through it and. the | auger showed definite trace of the gold the chest ^contained j when we brought the auger to j the surface." The present undertaking: to re- j trieve treasure has been operat- j ing duietly for over a year. Dur- ing the last summer small vessels 1 whieh were then assumed to be | fishing schooners frequently were : seen in the cove. It has just been disclosed that these men were en- J gaged in sinking a steel coffer,' dam which they believe sur- rounds the gre^t chest. (' "I think we have all details in reference to the chest now at our command," said Captain; Roberts, "and while I will not even attempt to say when we will \ recover it I am confident we will j haul it out at the end of this' campaign. We have protected! ourselves legally in the matter j and have not only leased the grounds from which we are op- j eratinjr but have secured federal consent permitting us to work on the project. "The chest is banded in three places by large straps of brass, We have already secured the! shackle of the chest which indi- j cates, I think, that we are well ] grounded in our belief that we know exactly where it is. We are in no sense engaged in a pipe dream but in hard headed business enterprise." So secretly had the work of construction of the long dock and installation of the initial con- signment of pumping machinery nroceeded in the secluded cove that the fact work'was being un- dertaken was not discovered un- til holiday fisfiers uncovered the develonment. It has lone: been known hat the Sarasota Hay region from Longboat Key south through Siesta Key, midnight pass and 1 Treasure island were the haunts SISTER MARY'S MENU BY MAKY E. DAGUfi NJb'A Service Staff Writer, THE first food flavor I can re- member aa making a distinct and lasting impression on my in- fant palate is parsley. Pungent and green, it opened the world of taste to me. Lately the chemists have said some very nice things about this flavorsome herb, It has a higher percentage of iron than spinach, they say. and recommend its use as a food as well as an attractive garnish. The iron content makes pars- ley an important addition to a child's diet. Parsley butter is a zestful sand- wich filling that can be accom- panied by almost any kind of sal- ad you may serve these warm spring noons. Parsley Butter Wash parsley and pat dry be- tween towels. Mince finely or put through the fine knife of the food chopper. Combine one-half cup minced parsley with four table- spoons creamed butter. Add a few grains of salt and a little lem- on juice if extra piquancy is need- ed. Spread on thin slices of whole wheat bread or white bread and garnish each sandwich with a tiny sprig of crisped parsley. A plain white sauce made with half milk and half veal or fish stock, as the case may be, be- comes parsley sauce when two or more tablespoons of minced pars- ley are added just before serving. If the parsley is allowed to stand long or boil in the sauce, It Io*es its bright green color. There is a straight parsley that is used as greens. The branches should be stripped from the main stalk because this is tough, and requires longer cooking. Wash thoroughly and add a few table* spoous water to the kettle tn Tomorrow's Menu BREAKFAST: Sliced bana- nas and oranges, cereal, cream, scrambled eggs, re- heated rolls, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON: Shrimp and celery salad, parsley sand- wiches. old-fashioned rice pudding, milk, tea. DII^NER: Swiss steak, mashed potatoes, baked lima beahs and tomatoes, endive with French dressing, straw- berry batter pudding, milk, coffee. which it is cooked. Cook uncov- ered and serve well seasoned witb butter and lemon juice. This va- riety of parsley is less pungent than the tightly curled varieties and makes an inviting dish. Good for Very Young Even little children may have it finely minced with their baked potato or sprinkled over theii soup. When it is used simply a? a garnish, be sure it is well wash- ed and crisped and encourage children to eat it. Omelets and scrambled eggs, deviled eggs, shirred eggs and baked eggs are made more inter- esting if generously seasoned with minced parsley. Of course, parsley is available the year round in city markets, but I usually have a pot of it growing in my kitchen window along with a pot of chives, then I'm never completely out of it. I have a bed of it in one corner of rty perennial border, and it comes up year after year. There's one precaution about picking it— don't take the center stalk or branch. Pick the outside sprays only and the plant will live in- definitely. of the Pirate Gasparilla,' who operated in the last decade of the 18th century, and of the less notorious hut exceedingly suc- cessful Hilly Bowlegs,'who is list- ed officially as the last of the im-. portant euif buccaneers. FEDERAL TAX REVOLT THREATENED BY LONG (Continued from page one) j eral months ago. Majority Leader i Joe T. Robinson glanced up as I Long shouted his defiance and im- | mediately ordered a transcript of | the Louisiana senator's remarks. Long warned several days ago that he would take the floor to "pin Ickes* ears back" in retalia- tion for Ickes' statement that Long has "halitosis of the intel- » ltct." He devoted most of his j speech, however, to conditions ex- I isting in Louisiana before he be- j came governor. Accepting that his speech was j limited to 40 minutes, Long wast- , ed no time. He hit first at his i arch enemy. Postmaster General James A. Farley, whom he de- I scribed as the "Nabob of New ! York." Ickes ho called the "chinch I bug of Chicago"; General Hugh S. | Johnson, the "lamented Sitting Bull," and Secretary of Agricul- ture Henry A. Wallace "the igno- ramus of Iowa." Briefly he described how he and his state administration had res- cued the state from "rottenness, corruptness and debauchery" and then charged that New Dealers, »n refusing to let the state agencies set up bv Long handle relief and public works funds, had turned over millions to the "gang of brigands we chased out of office." He charged that federal relief cash would be spent in his state in Girl Links Schultz With Big Rackets [The subterfuges by which Dutch Schultz, bootleg beer baron and one-time king of the $500,000,- 000-a-year* policy game racket, evaded direct linking with his vast enterprises were pictured by Mar- guerite Scholl (above), govern- ment witness in his trial at Syra- cuse, N. Y., on charges of evading income tax. Stenographer for two Bronx "finance" men wha kept books for the gftng, she identified Schultz as an attempt to defeat him when he seeks re-election to the senate next year. PATMAN OPENS HIS SENATE BONUS FIGHT (Continued from Dace one) President Roosevelt would veto his bill and asked why he wanted the senate to approve it under those conditions, Patman replied: "To be frank, the soldiers won't jjet much under the Harrison bill. I don't favor that bill but I ap- preciate the «tep in the right di- rection which it takes." He said lie still hoped to persuade Presi- dent Roosevelt his bill would be a <rood thing for the country. Under the Patman bill the bo- nus would be paid immediately with more than $2,000,000,000 newly printed currency. Under the Harrison proposal veterans in need of cash could obtain nego- ' tiable bonds for their adjusted service certificates. They could sell the bonds for cash. Patman denied that his bill was inflationary. "Every dollar issued would be backed by more than 140 per cent metallic reserves in the treasury,-' he said. _ j He was supported by James hi. Van Zundt, commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, who said the organization is "standing j pat with Patman." Donald A. Hobart. national com- 1 mandor of the American Veterans ! Association, opposed the entire j idea of paying the bonus in ad- vance of the 1945 maturity date, i He suggested that congress "take the profits out of patriotism." Meanwhile Sen. Carter Glass, D., Va., critic of New Deal bank- ing plans and of Marriner S. Ec- cles, Utah banker chosen by the President to govern the Federal Reserve board, lost his fight in the senate banking sub-committee to prevent confirmation of Eccles' nomination. Try naming one actual benefit derived from the airplane by any- body except undertakers. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE ; Having cjualified as administra-1 tor of the estate of James Arn-I ette, Sr., deceased, this is to no-' tify all persons having claims i against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before April 2, 193(i, or this no- tice will be plear^d in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will make settle- ment with the undersigned. This April 2, 1035. KENNETH ARNpTTE, Admr. 4-2-Tues.-(jtp 1 NOTICE OF SALE f Pursuant to a judgment in a civil action entitled "The Federal I.and Hank of Columbia vs. H. E. Torrence and wife, Annie Lee Torrence et al" entered in the superior court of Henderson coun- I ty, N. C.. by the clerk on the 8th ! day of April, 1935, I will on the j 13th day of May, 1935, at 12 I o'clock, noon, at the county court- i house in said county, in the City i of Hendersonville, sell at public auction to the highest bidder therefor the following described lands, situated in said county and state in Hendersonville township, i comprising 58.47 acres, more or [ less and bounded and described as follows: I All that certain piece, parcel lor tract of land lying and being i on the Upward road about ons I mile from the town of Hender- I sonville and having such shape, ; metes, courses and distances a.s j will more fully appear by refer- j ence to a plat thereof made by G. W. Justice 13th of October, i 1922, which plat is now on file I with the abstract of lands, and (bounded as follows: on the north i by the lands of W. N. Cornwell land G. T. Myers, on the east by I J.lands of Uaxter Frisby and P. F.J I Patton, on the south by Hats I Fork and Kings creek and the lands of F. F. Patton, and on the west by Kings and Pats Fork creeks. This being the same tract of land heretofore conveyed to the said H. E. Torrence and wife, Annie Pee Torrence by G. H. Val- entine trustee, by deed dated the 20th day of March, 1020, and re- corded in the office of the reg- ister of deeds for Henderson county, N. C\, in book 108, page 31. Above described plat being on file with the Federal Pand Pank of Columbia. The terms of sale are as fol- lows: One-fourth of the accepted bid to be paid in cash into court, and the balance on credit, payable in five equal annual installments, with interest thereon from date of sale at the rate of six per centum per annum. The credit of sale at the rate of 6 per centum per annum. The credit portion of the accepted bid, due plaintiff rhall be evidenced by a bond or note of the purchaser, payable to the commissioner secured by a first mortgage over the premises, and the remaining balance of the i credit portion of the accepted bid, if any shall be evidenced bjfr ja bond or note of the purchaser I oayable to the commisioner and | secured by a second mortgage ! over the premises; or, the pur- chaser shall have the right to pay 1 in cash the whole or any part of J the credit portion of the accepted bid. All bids will be received sub- ject to rejection or confirmation by the clerk of said superior court and no bid will be accepted or reported unless its maker shall deposit with said clerk at the I close of the bidding the sum of j two hundred dollars as a forfeit [and guaranty of compliance with his bid, the same to be credited on his bid when accepted. Notice I is now given that said lands will be resold at the same place and upon the same terms at 2 o'clock p.m. of the same day unless said deposit is sooner made. Every de- I posit not forfeited or accepted j will be promptly returned to the I maker. This tile 0th day of April, 1035. F. R. JONES, Commissioner. 4-0:Tues.-4tp. The story of a woman whose sealed lip? Healed a man's doom ... who let him tfo on trial for his life .. rather than go on trial for her own honor! Her Amazing Story Is A. Thrilling Screen Urania! A First National Picture with Gene Raymond Genevieve Tobin John Eldredge Phillip Reed "VACATION DAZt" Comedy Going Place» With Lowell Thomas "ALONG FLIRTATION WALK" Merrie Melodie Cartoon WEDNESDAY Carolina LAST PAY .. CLARK GAJBlfE »• mi ■. in "AFTER OFFICE HOURS"

Transcript of Henry LONG PRAISED THIS AT THE CAROLINA THEATRE AS MODEL Of High PAUL REVERE … · 2018. 6....

Page 1: Henry LONG PRAISED THIS AT THE CAROLINA THEATRE AS MODEL Of High PAUL REVERE … · 2018. 6. 30. · Henry and Me' Scan the Situation ••\Yhe! : thinking b done politically in

Henry and Me' Scan the Situation

••\Yhe! : thinking b done politically in this country, the Ke-

jblicai do *t," declares YviLiam Alien v» h:te. famed iimpoi'.a, Kar.. : a°d here White, left, ard Henry Allen, another n >tc I

Kar ar:. I' rt>ritly were doing some of it. a.; the pair, linked in

ft! I he Martial Adventures of Henry and >Ie," conferred ;

jtanv' meeting in Washington. Discussing candidates, Whit.''

a. ■ r wiU remain impossible or become inevitable."

KED SOX HOLD LEAD BY GAME Hubbeil Hurls Giants to

Second Win of Season Over Phillies

SEW YORK. April 23. (UP). Eov. n? ra a-rinir Red Sox last

night ?till surveyed the rest of

the American league from the

height? of a f; -t same lead, main- ed a? thev made it three in a

row over Va-iington and five wins in six starts.

Wej Ferrell '• hed the victory, his second of the season, by a 4 to 2 store and ;;! I owed only e:ght hit? solnir into the ninth. *when fee wi- relieved bv YValberg. who

• threatened uprising. I M aiH> joined in the six i I \lit attack racking out a

trite, i double and two singles off liter:-.';! a:1'! Ruseil as the! Bosttnthb ntinued at the hat-' test oiee «? the season in either,

lea&ie. Oeveiarr. clung to second:

p/ace bv tshiiz :ti on a 12-hit at'ick Bi and Sullivan, while trn::; : was hurling three-hit ha!! for a 5 to 0 shut- ou* a?a;fjsr the Detroit Tigers.

Thf Indians ook the series by two ?ar- « •> one with a batting J soree .Von./a- that included a homer by \ with Hyatt and Had!;n on a e and three hiis, ;n- tlw&K a triple bv Troskv in foor attempts.

Hati Bonuia smashed out two wer<. one with two on and the

RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE

Detroit 0, Cleveland 5. St Uuis Chicago 5.

m Ftoston 4. Osiy sanies scheduled

national league Philadelphia 1, Xew York 8. Onlv sames scheduled.

SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION New Orleans G. Atlanta 1. Wi'uhaai 3, Knoxville 4.

SCHEDULE AMERICAN LEAGUE

at Chicago. «• louL- at Cleveland,

a-hinetop. at Philadelphia. York at i^tston.

NATIONAL LEAGUE rhifaso at St. Louis. Pittsburgh at Cim:nnati. &Kon at New York. Pfciadelphia at Brooklyn. SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION

i Atlanta at New Orleans. Chattanooga at Little Rock. Knoxville at Birmingham. Jfchville at Memphis.

; other with one mate aboard, to account for all of the Chicago

(While Sox runs as they lost to the St. Louis Browns G to 5. with

jali the scorintr of the trame com-1

ling: in the first three inniivr-. i Beau Hell's single and Oscar |Melil'o'< double in the third gave the iirowns the margin.

In the onlv irame in the Na- ticna! league, completing a four- game slate for the day. Carl Hub- bell held the Phiiiies to four hits and scored his second win of the season, 8 to 1.

Ott aided him with a homer and | Kartell, the ex-Phillv. made four hits, including a triple in a 15- hit sttnek. while Camnlli depriv- ed Hubbell of a shutout by smashing his fifth homer in the

[fourth with the sacks empty.

STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE

Teams W L Pet Boston 5 1 .8331 Cleveland 3 1 .750 Chicago 3 3 .500 New York 3 3 .500 St. Loots 2 2 .5001 Washington 2 3 .4001 Detroit 2 4 .3331 Philadelphia 1 4 .200

NATIONAL LEAGUE Teams W L Pet Cincinnati 4 2 .667 ( Brooklyn 4 2 .6671 St. Louis 3 2 .600 New York 2 2 .500 Philadelphia 2 3 .400 Boston 2 3 .4001

I Chicago 2 3 .400 I Pittsburgh 2 4 .333

SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION Teams W L Pet Memphis 5 1 .833 Chattanooga 5 1 .833 Birmingham 4 2 .667' Atlanta 4 3 .5711 Knoxville __ 3 4 .429: Nashville 2 4 .333 New Orleans 3 4 .333! Little Rock 0 6 .000 j

U. S. Breaks Up Jewel Theft Ring I WASHINGTON, Apr. 23. (UP)

—Raids throughout the country | have resulted in breaking up of a

I far-flung jewel-robbing ring which ,

j has been fleecing the public of | millions of dollars, Bureau of In-1

! vestigation Director J. Edgar Hoo- ver revealed yesterday.

Hoover said the ring had spe- cialized in a ransom racket, steal-

I ing jewels and then returning them to their rightful owners in return for large rewards.

"It's a bigger case than ttte Dil-

linger case," Hoover said. "Some of the biggest racketeers in New York are involved, and further ar-

rests are being made every few |

hours." He said the ring had operated 1

all through the eastern part of the j country from Maine to Florida

LONG PRAISED AS lffi MODEL PAUL REVERE

"Personally, I like Senator Long," Talmadge said yesterday, "but his ideas of government and mine are as far apait as the North Pole from the South Pole. His doctrine of 'share-the-wealth' is out-Roosevelting Roosevelt.

1 "I think that Senator Long has probably waked up the American public move than anyone else by ! making them think of what is go- ! ing on at present in Washington."

And the present goings-on at Washington are what make the Georgia governor feel "it would be the greatest calamity to re- elect Roosevelt and approve the

I record he is now making."

Savs His Government Ideas All Wrong

tion.

I "As long as the administration keeps up the present program of trying to establish a falseN pros- perity from scarcity, I will con-

tinue the fight until we whip them,'' Talmadge declared.

To his way of thinking, the "next president" should "run on

a principle of not violating the Constitution of the United States on a flimsy excuse that an emerg- ency exists.

"The present administration has taken 'emergency' as a license to

plunder, for all kinds of extrava- gant wastefulness and silly proj- ects, and all kinds of exhorbitant taxes put 01. by the heads of dif- ferent departments.

"We are going to have to pay this money back we are spending. The only way to pav it back with- out stifling the life-blood of this country in taxes is to cut down nine-tenths of ou>- federal activi- ties — eliminate boards and bu- leaus, such as the NRA, AAA. PWA and all of the other alpha- bttical agencies.

"The remaining functions of [government should be reduced in

Dersonnel and the salaries cut in half, beginning with the president.

"Get the government out of business and let the people mind theirs. Government in business pampers weaklings and crooks. It is a discrimination against honest, hard-working people who want to

j work for their living, and expect nothing from their government

I but a fair deal."

I and its activities had victimized i many of the country's wealthiest families.

At the same time the govern- ment took action against another racket — liquor smuggling, when

j Secretary of Treasury Henry Mor- ! genthau, Jr., announced an agree-

j ment between the United States and France which was expected to

! cut down materially the amount of

! liquor smuggled into this country.

JUNIOR "RACKETEER"

j WASHINGTON, April 23. (UP) White House police broke up an-

other "racket" yesterday when

j they apprehended two 9-year-old I youngsters with an eye to busi-

j ness making; repeated entrances

j to the egg rolling contest, cach time accompanied by different

i "parents." The rule is that adults must be accompanied by chil-

dren, and the two boys had rent-

i ed themselves for a quarter to

'grown-ups anxious to see the 1 president.

FIRE THAT LEFT NEW YORKERS GASPING

"*st> emj that <5B"&ltar Vorkow to gasp at this billowing cloud of acrid smoke

»*> a 1 fire \n a Brooklyn warehouse. The heavy pall of smoke settled over th°

(• "tl,at>nK station and fumes were forced into the tunnels through which thousands

nK*rs were overcome miles from the fire, hundreds fleeing from their trains at the

1 »"». Nearly 200 cough-wracked victim* sought fire aid at score, of points ?n the city!

Official Estimate Of Japanese Dead In Quakes Is High But Unofficial Figure for

Past 30 Years Over 250,000

TOKYO. April 23.— (UP). — | Sunday's disastrous earthquake in i

Formosa brought to more than 111,001) the number of deaths of- ficially listed as caused by earth- ciuakes in Japan in the last 30 years.

Lnofficial estimates, which may be more accurate than the gov- ernment figures, place the num-

ber at more than a duartdr of u nillion.

Tidal wr.vcs, accompanyinp, J many of the earthquakes, killed ideational thousands.

Off;cial records show that earthquake shave devastated these ; slands for more than 1500 years, j Cno of the earliest recorded was I n the reign df Emperor Inkyo I

in 416 A.D. In 1498, the Tokaido reign was

visited b.v a severe earthquake in which 2^.000 (lied.

Principal quakes of the past 30 years, officially tabulated for time, place and number of deaths, follows:

1006, March 17, Kogi, Form- osa, 1258.

1900, August 14, Omi, 41. 1914, March 15, Akita, 90. 1923 September 1, Sagami P»ay

(Epicenter) Tokyo, Yokohama and Outlying districts. 99,331. !

1914, January 15, Sagami, 14. j 1925, May 23, northern partj

of Izu, 260. 1931, September 21, western,

part of Saitama, 16. 1933, March 3, Sanriku district

(with tidal v;ive)- 3010. 1935, April 21, Formosa, un-l

official estimates, 2495.

PIRATE GOLD. GEMS SOUGHT

Nationally Known Men Sponsor Project Off the

Coast of Florida

Copyright, 1935, bv U. P-

SARASOTA, Fla., April 23.— (UP).—A 15-year contest with shifting sands and a changing coast line for a $12,000,000 treasure of pirate gold and dia- monds is believed here to be nearing a climax on Siesta Key, off the coast here.

A syndicate composed of men

described as a "national reputa- tion" has undertaken to finance a project pushed by Captain Clar- ence Roberts of Sarasota, since early 1921. Preliminary con-, struction on the island will be i completed this week.

A 300-foot wooden dock has been built from the island at the place where the treasure is be- lieved buried. It extends over

shallow waters of a cove just south of Point of Rocks, one of the outstanding promontories on

ithe Gulf coast between Sarasota and Venice.

Tool houses have been erected and Thomas Hendricks of Lake- land, at the head of a construc- tion gang, expected to begin i

moving heavy machinery for drerVinj? within a few days.

"The treasure itself." Captain Roberts states, "is made up of a

chest of gold ingots and money and a smaller consignment of diamonds. The treasure came

from Peru and was consigned to the King of Spain. It was cap- tured by pirates and brought to the Point of Rocks and buried.

"I will not say how I first se-

cured my information as to the location of the chest, but if I knew then what I know now

about it we would have been able to get it up easily in 1021.

"At that time it as buried only under about seven feet of sand

THIS WEEK'S ATTRACTIONS AT THE CAROLINA THEATRE Below

j BEN BLUE, star of Taxi Boy and Vitaphone comedies, coming in person Friday with RAY TEAL and his band. 'THE WINNING

'TICKET," with Leo Carillo and LouSse Fazenda is the screen at-

j traction.

I

Above CLARK GABLE and CON-

STANCE BENNETT in "AFTER OFFICE HOURS," showing fo/ the last times today.

Above

.IEAN' MTJIR in "THE WHITE COCKATOO," the Clue Club mys- tery playing Saturday.

o

Below BARBARA STANWYCK in "THE WOMAN IN RED," with GENE RAYM ONI), W e d n esdav.

Above —

JAMES DUNN and ALICE FAYE featured with Ned Sparks, Lyda Roberti, Cliff Edwards, A dine

Judge and Eleanor Powell, ;n

George White's "1H3!> SCAN- DALS,'' showing Thursday.

and rock. Today it is much] deeper. Twice since we started | excavating for it I have seen

the chest as we brought it up to the surface only to have it slip from the cables and drop, back into the gulf. Only recently we

located it definitely and we have drilled a hole through it and. the | auger showed definite trace of the gold the chest ^contained j when we brought the auger to j the surface."

The present undertaking: to re- j trieve treasure has been operat- j ing duietly for over a year. Dur- ing the last summer small vessels 1

whieh were then assumed to be | fishing schooners frequently were :

seen in the cove. It has just been disclosed that these men were en- J gaged in sinking a steel coffer,' dam which they believe sur-

rounds the gre^t chest. (' "I think we have all details in reference to the chest now at our command," said Captain; Roberts, "and while I will not even attempt to say when we will \ recover it I am confident we will j haul it out at the end of this' campaign. We have protected! ourselves legally in the matter j and have not only leased the grounds from which we are op- j eratinjr but have secured federal consent permitting us to work on

the project. "The chest is banded in three

places by large straps of brass, We have already secured the! shackle of the chest which indi- j cates, I think, that we are well ] grounded in our belief that we

know exactly where it is. We are in no sense engaged in a

pipe dream but in hard headed business enterprise."

So secretly had the work of construction of the long dock and installation of the initial con-

signment of pumping machinery nroceeded in the secluded cove

that the fact work'was being un-

dertaken was not discovered un-

til holiday fisfiers uncovered the develonment.

It has lone: been known hat the Sarasota Hay region from Longboat Key south through Siesta Key, midnight pass and

1 Treasure island were the haunts

SISTER MARY'S MENU BY MAKY E. DAGUfi

NJb'A Service Staff Writer,

THE first food flavor I can re-

member aa making a distinct and lasting impression on my in- fant palate is parsley. Pungent and green, it opened the world of taste to me.

Lately the chemists have said some very nice things about this flavorsome herb, It has a higher percentage of iron than spinach, they say. and recommend its use

as a food as well as an attractive garnish.

The iron content makes pars- ley an important addition to a

child's diet. Parsley butter is a zestful sand-

wich filling that can be accom-

panied by almost any kind of sal-

ad you may serve these warm

spring noons. Parsley Butter

Wash parsley and pat dry be-

tween towels. Mince finely or put through the fine knife of the food chopper. Combine one-half cup minced parsley with four table- spoons creamed butter. Add a

few grains of salt and a little lem- on juice if extra piquancy is need- ed. Spread on thin slices of whole wheat bread or white bread and garnish each sandwich with a tiny sprig of crisped parsley.

A plain white sauce made with half milk and half veal or fish stock, as the case may be, be-

comes parsley sauce when two or

more tablespoons of minced pars-

ley are added just before serving. If the parsley is allowed to stand

long or boil in the sauce, It Io*es its bright green color.

There is a straight parsley that

is used as greens. The branches

should be stripped from the main stalk because this is tough, and requires longer cooking. Wash thoroughly and add a few table* spoous water to the kettle tn

Tomorrow's Menu BREAKFAST: Sliced bana-

nas and oranges, cereal, cream, scrambled eggs, re-

heated rolls, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON: Shrimp and

celery salad, parsley sand-

wiches. old-fashioned rice

pudding, milk, tea.

DII^NER: Swiss steak, mashed potatoes, baked lima

beahs and tomatoes, endive with French dressing, straw-

berry batter pudding, milk, coffee.

which it is cooked. Cook uncov- ered and serve well seasoned witb butter and lemon juice. This va-

riety of parsley is less pungent than the tightly curled varieties and makes an inviting dish.

Good for Very Young Even little children may have

it finely minced with their baked potato or sprinkled over theii soup. When it is used simply a?

a garnish, be sure it is well wash- ed and crisped and encourage children to eat it.

Omelets and scrambled eggs, deviled eggs, shirred eggs and baked eggs are made more inter- esting if generously seasoned with minced parsley.

Of course, parsley is available the year round in city markets, but I usually have a pot of it growing in my kitchen window along with a pot of chives, then I'm never completely out of it. I have a bed of it in one corner of rty perennial border, and it comes

up year after year. There's one

precaution about picking it— don't take the center stalk or

branch. Pick the outside sprays only and the plant will live in-

definitely.

of the Pirate Gasparilla,' who operated in the last decade of the 18th century, and of the less notorious hut exceedingly suc-

cessful Hilly Bowlegs,'who is list- ed officially as the last of the im-. portant euif buccaneers.

FEDERAL TAX REVOLT THREATENED BY LONG

(Continued from page one) j eral months ago. Majority Leader i

Joe T. Robinson glanced up as I Long shouted his defiance and im- | mediately ordered a transcript of | the Louisiana senator's remarks.

Long warned several days ago that he would take the floor to

"pin Ickes* ears back" in retalia- tion for Ickes' statement that Long has "halitosis of the intel- »

ltct." He devoted most of his j

speech, however, to conditions ex- I isting in Louisiana before he be- j came governor.

Accepting that his speech was j limited to 40 minutes, Long wast- ,

ed no time. He hit first at his i

arch enemy. Postmaster General ■

James A. Farley, whom he de- I scribed as the "Nabob of New ! York." Ickes ho called the "chinch I bug of Chicago"; General Hugh S. | Johnson, the "lamented Sitting Bull," and Secretary of Agricul- ture Henry A. Wallace "the igno- ramus of Iowa."

Briefly he described how he and his state administration had res-

cued the state from "rottenness, corruptness and debauchery" and then charged that New Dealers, »n

refusing to let the state agencies set up bv Long handle relief and

public works funds, had turned

over millions to the "gang of brigands we chased out of office."

He charged that federal relief

cash would be spent in his state in

Girl Links Schultz With Big Rackets

[The subterfuges by which Dutch Schultz, bootleg beer baron and one-time king of the $500,000,- 000-a-year* policy game racket, evaded direct linking with his vast

enterprises were pictured by Mar- guerite Scholl (above), govern- ment witness in his trial at Syra- cuse, N. Y., on charges of evading income tax. Stenographer for two

Bronx "finance" men wha kept books for the gftng, she identified Schultz as

an attempt to defeat him when he seeks re-election to the senate

next year.

PATMAN OPENS HIS SENATE BONUS FIGHT (Continued from Dace one)

President Roosevelt would veto

his bill and asked why he wanted the senate to approve it under those conditions, Patman replied:

"To be frank, the soldiers won't jjet much under the Harrison bill. I don't favor that bill but I ap- preciate the «tep in the right di- rection which it takes." He said lie still hoped to persuade Presi- dent Roosevelt his bill would be a <rood thing for the country.

Under the Patman bill the bo- nus would be paid immediately with more than $2,000,000,000 newly printed currency. Under the Harrison proposal veterans in need of cash could obtain nego-

'

tiable bonds for their adjusted service certificates. They could sell the bonds for cash.

Patman denied that his bill was

inflationary. "Every dollar issued would be

backed by more than 140 per cent

metallic reserves in the treasury,-' he said. _

j He was supported by James hi.

Van Zundt, commander of the

Veterans of Foreign Wars, who

said the organization is "standing j pat with Patman."

Donald A. Hobart. national com- 1

mandor of the American Veterans !

Association, opposed the entire j idea of paying the bonus in ad-

vance of the 1945 maturity date, i

He suggested that congress "take the profits out of patriotism."

Meanwhile Sen. Carter Glass, D., Va., critic of New Deal bank-

ing plans and of Marriner S. Ec-

cles, Utah banker chosen by the President to govern the Federal Reserve board, lost his fight in the

senate banking sub-committee to

prevent confirmation of Eccles' nomination.

Try naming one actual benefit derived from the airplane by any-

body except undertakers.

ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE ;

Having cjualified as administra-1 tor of the estate of James Arn-I ette, Sr., deceased, this is to no-' tify all persons having claims i

against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or

before April 2, 193(i, or this no-

tice will be plear^d in bar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will make settle- ment with the undersigned.

This April 2, 1035. KENNETH ARNpTTE, Admr.

4-2-Tues.-(jtp 1

NOTICE OF SALE

f Pursuant to a judgment in a

civil action entitled "The Federal I.and Hank of Columbia vs. H. E. Torrence and wife, Annie Lee Torrence et al" entered in the superior court of Henderson coun-

I ty, N. C.. by the clerk on the 8th ! day of April, 1935, I will on the

j 13th day of May, 1935, at 12 I o'clock, noon, at the county court- i house in said county, in the City i of Hendersonville, sell at public auction to the highest bidder therefor the following described lands, situated in said county and state in Hendersonville township,

i comprising 58.47 acres, more or

[ less and bounded and described as follows: I

All that certain piece, parcel lor tract of land lying and being i on the Upward road about ons

I mile from the town of Hender- I sonville and having such shape, ; metes, courses and distances a.s

j will more fully appear by refer-

j ence to a plat thereof made by G. W. Justice 13th of October,

i 1922, which plat is now on file I with the abstract of lands, and

(bounded as follows: on the north i by the lands of W. N. Cornwell land G. T. Myers, on the east by I J.lands of Uaxter Frisby and P. F.J

I Patton, on the south by Hats I Fork and Kings creek and the lands of F. F. Patton, and on

the west by Kings and Pats Fork creeks. This being the same tract of land heretofore conveyed to

the said H. E. Torrence and wife, Annie Pee Torrence by G. H. Val- entine trustee, by deed dated the 20th day of March, 1020, and re-

corded in the office of the reg- ister of deeds for Henderson county, N. C\, in book 108, page 31. Above described plat being on file with the Federal Pand Pank of Columbia.

The terms of sale are as fol- lows:

One-fourth of the accepted bid to be paid in cash into court, and the balance on credit, payable in five equal annual installments, with interest thereon from date of sale at the rate of six per centum per annum. The credit of sale at the rate of 6 per centum per annum. The credit portion of the accepted bid, due plaintiff rhall be evidenced by a bond or

note of the purchaser, payable to the commissioner secured by a first mortgage over the premises, and the remaining balance of the

i credit portion of the accepted bid, if any shall be evidenced bjfr

ja bond or note of the purchaser I oayable to the commisioner and | secured by a second mortgage ! over the premises; or, the pur- chaser shall have the right to pay

1 in cash the whole or any part of J the credit portion of the accepted bid.

All bids will be received sub- ject to rejection or confirmation by the clerk of said superior court and no bid will be accepted or reported unless its maker shall deposit with said clerk at the

I close of the bidding the sum of

j two hundred dollars as a forfeit [and guaranty of compliance with his bid, the same to be credited on his bid when accepted. Notice

I is now given that said lands will be resold at the same place and upon the same terms at 2 o'clock p.m. of the same day unless said

deposit is sooner made. Every de- I posit not forfeited or accepted j will be promptly returned to the I maker.

This tile 0th day of April, 1035. F. R. JONES, Commissioner.

4-0:Tues.-4tp.

The story of a woman whose sealed lip? Healed a man's doom ... who let him tfo on trial for his life .. rather than go on trial for her own honor!

Her

Amazing

Story Is

A. Thrilling Screen

Urania!

A First National Picture with

Gene Raymond Genevieve Tobin John Eldredge Phillip Reed

"VACATION DAZt" Comedy

Going Place» With Lowell Thomas

"ALONG FLIRTATION WALK" Merrie Melodie Cartoon

WEDNESDAY

Carolina LAST PAY

.. CLARK GAJBlfE »• mi ■. in

"AFTER OFFICE HOURS"