BUY AND SELL IN ROCKY MOUNT, TRADE CENTER OF EASTERN CAROLINA VOLUME 1, NO. 11 Local Masons Sponsor Singing The Queen City and Corinthian Masonic Lodges of this city will sponsor the Oxford Orphanage Singing class concert to be he'd hert Friday night, April 6, at 8:00 P. M., at the First Baptist Church Sunday School auditorium. This concert is an annual affair, taking place here every April. Many who have formerly attended these concerts in the past are looking forward to the one this year. Mr. G. T.. Matthews, Chairman of the joint committee of the two lodges, has announced that the tickets will go on sale in the near future. The Masons will sell the tickets in advance of the concert and they may also be secured at entrance of the church on April 6. Present New Head Of Campbell College President of Campbell Board Makes Announcement at Chapel Services Buies Creek, March 27.—Leslie H. Campbell, new president of Campbell College, succeeding his father, the late Dr. J. A. Camp bell, was formally presented to the student body at the chapel hour today. Prof. B. P. Marshbanks, the vice-president, introduced B. F. McLeod, the chairman of the board of trustees, who, he said, had an announcement to 'make. Mr. Mc- Leod, in turn, rose and said simp ly: "I wish to introduce to you your new president, Mr. L. H. Campbell." Then Mr. McLeod spoke of an emergency which made it seem best to the trustees to elect a president at once to succeed the late Dr. James A. Campbell. Mr. Campbell said that he wish ed he had more power, more abil ity, more spirituality to bring to his office. "I pray that this insti tution may maintain the spirit of its founder. Buie's Creek must live for Christ and for its founder. I wish you to pledge with me this morning as we sing our alma mater that you will give your lives in carrying on for our beloved leader," said the new president. Dr. B. W. Spilman, of Kinston, who is giving a series of talks this week in the chapel, told of know ing the new president since the letter's childhood, and said that though it was necessary at this time to elect a president, the inauguration would not be for 3ome time. Dr. Spilman continued his talks on Revelation, one of which he gives each day. MASONS TO ATTEND SERVICES IN WILSON The local Commanders of the Masonic lodge will attend the Masonic Services to be held next Sunday at 11 A. M"., at the Epis copal Church in Wilson, according to the announcement of Mr. G. T. Matthews, chairman of the Atten dance Committee. Formerly these services were held in Rocky Mount, but was changed this time because Mr. Wil liam Peeps, the Grand Commander from Charlotte, will attend the Wilson meeting. WIRE SENT TO BAILEY Scotland Neck, N. C., March 27th, 1934. Hon. Josiah W. Bailey, U. S. Senate, Washington, D. C. People in this section unable to understand your violent attack on Bankhead Bill and strongly con demn your attitude. S. A. DUNN. C. of C. to Give Entertain ment 30th The Rocky Mount Chamber of Commerce will give a free enter tainment at the South Edgecombe high school building, Friday night April 13th. The Rocky Mount Herald Local Bank Has 36th Birthday The Planters National Bank and Trust Company had its 36th birth day last Tuesday. It was organ ized on March 27, 1898 under the name Planters Bank, with Mr. J. C. Braswell as president. It was at first a State Bank but in a few years became National Bank. Five years ago it received its charter for the Trust Department, with Mr. Millard F.j Jones as trust officer. Mr. J. C. Braswell is still presi dent of the bank, having served faithfully and efficiently for the past 36 years. He is assisted in this work by M. R. Braswell, vice president; Millard F. Jones, vice president, cashier and trust offi cer; Robert D. Gorham, vice president; A. H. fWoodlief, assis tant cashier; Wiley W. Meares, assistant cashier and assistant trust officer; R. R. Braswell, assistant trust officer; C. W. Par ker, Auditor; Norman Y. Chamb liss, manager Public Relations De partment. Under this management and with the assistance of an able Board of Directors, the deposits have increased from March 5, 1933 to March 5, 1934, $1,925,- 046.35. It now shows deposits of $3,490,444.70. The Bank has prov en itself worthy of the trust and faith of the people, and they are responding to it as is shown by the deposit increase as shown above. Two Men Scheduled To Die April 6th Duplin Burglar, Durham Murderer Next Slated to Be Executed North Carolina's electric chair, in use for the past two Fridays, will stand idle next Friday but is scheduled to begin its work again April 6. Two Negroes, Theodore Cooper, hired killer from Durham, and Jas. Dallas Hamlet, alias James Dallas Teachey, Duplin county burglar, are-scheduled to die April 6. Hamlet did not appeal to the Supreme Court. Considerable furroe has been aroused in the Cooper case. He was hired by W. H. Hessee, a white man, J. H. Lasater. Hessee was sentenced to life imprisonment, that being the most severe punish ment allowed under existing North Carolina law. A delegation from Durham, headed by prominent white and Negro citizens, came to Raleigh some weeks ago to plead for Cooper's life. The Supreme Court already has affirmed the lower court judgment sentencing Cooper to death. His attorney at first asked for writ of error on which to take the case to the United States Supreme Court but later announced he would withdraw his petition. The petition has never been for mally withdrawn and exact status of the case never determined. Warden H. H. Honeycutt who is charged with the duty of exacting the death penalty, is expected to ask the attorney general for a rul- Death row now houses 21 men. NAVAL APPOINTMENTS ANNOUNCED BY POU Washington, March 27.—Repre sentative Edward W. Pou has an nounced the appointment of one principal and three alternates to the Naval Academy. The principal is O. B. Moss, Jr., of Spring Hope and the alternates, in order of their rank, are: James Keever, Asheboro; Paul B. Brown, Jr., Raleigh and James Hugh Ellis of Nashville. The entrance examina tion will be held on April 9. VISITS IN CHICAGO J. W. Dowdy, local Oleomar garine salesman, will leave the first of the week to attend a salesman meeting in Chicago as a guest of his company. ROCKY MOUNT, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1934 Former Gould Yacht Is Burned ..v I '-^- jk. ~c * The JTO-foot yacht Niagara shown nt Its Philadelphia pier after It had been swept by flames and foundered with n heavy list. The yacht, formerly owned l».v Helen Gould of New Tork. was turned over to the government at the outbreak of the war and used as a submarine chaser! ROCKY MOUNT'S LOSS When the Edgemont property was being developed by the Daughtry heirs, Mrs. Susan Daughtry Williams, some six years ago offered to donate to the City of Rocky Mount about six acres of land starting at Eastern avenue along the Parker drain and running out to the Tarboro Highway at Duke's Lunch Room, which is about five blocks from the business section of the city, said land to be used for park purposes. The first offer asked for some reduction in taxes which the Board refused, we are told. The Board stated that they declined the offer because they coulc .ot release the taxes. She then authorized Mr. R. T. Fountain to go before the Board and offer it straight out to the City without cost. Mr. Fountain made the offer in her name and had a legal option properly signed by she and her husband and offered to turn it over to the City with one condition—that the park was to be called the Susan Daughtry Park. The Board then, after some delay, announced that they would not receive the land as they did not like the name. When this statement was made it was understood that Mr. Fountain stated to the Board that this offer to the children of Rocky Mount was too great for the Board to refuse and that as to the Daughtry name, he thought it was just as appropriate as other parks named in Rocky Mount, and that he did not feel that he could go and ask Mrs. Williams to give in fur ther in this matter. With this refusal of the city aldermen to receive a gracious gift, the children of this generation and of the future will be denied this place to play in. The Edgecombe side has no park space, except a small triangle called the Kite, and it looks somewhat like a kite. Now, we hear that the Board of Aldermen is proposing to put the new stand pipe for the new city water works in this park. Rocky Mount has spent beyond SIOO,OOO, a portion of which was spent to dig a large hole by Tar River, and of course an Air Field is being built, which will cost in the neighborhood of SIOO,OOO, and will probably benefit but few people. Of course, we are in accord with Mr. Roosevelt in trying to relieve distress and give work, but we do wish that some of this money and labor could have been spent for something that would have been of use for the average person in days to come. But we will have the hole and the airport, but most of us will never get in an airship. WHICH IS THE HEALTHIEST CONDITION FOR THE STATE—FEW OR MANY PAYING INCOME TAXES? Collections on State income taxes for the period of this fiscal year on March 24th, 1934, were $5,171,699.00. Collec tions for the same period last year amounted to $5,463,394.00, which makes the receipts $282,694 less than the same period for last year, but probably the figures may shift in a few days and the figures of this year may be greatly in excess of those of last year. The fine and hopeful thing in this report is that there are more people paying income taxes this year than last. It was reported a few days ago that the great tobacco companies were paying less money into the State Treasury this year than they did last year, but with thi3 same report there was also another side to this question which some of the press failed to carry, which is that there are a large number of income tax payers this year paying taxes into the State treasury who were too poor to pay any last year. Now, which is the healthiest condition for the State, to have our citizenship prosperous so that a great mass of them can pay income tax, or allow the Anti trust laws to be over ridden so that a few Corporations control the income to the producer, the wages of the laborer and the price to the Con sumer, so as to give themselves the major profit, during Mr. Hoover's reign? Under the new deal Mr. Roosevelt has given recognition to the producer. He has given recognition to the laborer who manufactures the raw product and he has given due consideration to Capital, recognizing that all three have rights. Now, which is the best way, Mr. Roosevelt's way or Mr. Hoover's way? STATE SAVING MONEY A news report was given out by State Treasurer Johnson's office a few days back, that the State had been able to float it's running debt at an interest rate of 4 1-2 per cent where it had formerly been paying 6 per cent, and showing the large savings to the people. A few days later there was a press report stating that the Treasury had reduced interest on deposit belonging to the State in the Banks from 3 per cent to 1 1-2 per cent. Now, if these reports be true, where is the savings? If the treasury reduced interest on notes from 6 per cent to 4 1-2 per cent and then immediately reduced the deposits L (Please turn to page Cotton Growers Association Meets Nashville, March 27. Nash county members of the North Carolina Cotton Growers Coopera tive Association met fere this af ternoon and elected tlfe following seven farmers as delegates to the district convention: R. L. May, J. K. Beal, J. W. Moore, J. T. Coley, George C. Bunn, and W. D. Borden, of Rocky Mount and B. S. Rice, of Spring Hope. M. G. Mann, of Raleigh, secre tary-treasurer of the cooperative, was principal speaker, B. S. Rice was chairman and Miss Annie Brantley, of Spring Hope, was secretary. Jones Dress Shop Opened Thursday Mr. W. F. Jones opened yester day his ladies ready-to-wear store, under the name Jones' Dress Shop, in the store formerly operated by the late J. H. Daniels and known as the T. L. Conyers Store build ing, on Tarboro Street. Mr. Jones has just returned from New York with a full and complete line of up-to-date dresses •%«id ladies' ready-to-wear. He is an experienced merchant and well known to the citizenship of Rocky Mount, and will welcome his friends, not only from Rocky Mount, but throughout the sur rounding country. BAILEY OPPOSED TO DIFFERENTIAL IN TAX Durham, March 27.—Frank Pier son, secretary of the local cham ber of commerce, has been notified by Senator Josiah Bailey that he is opposed to the proposed 30-cent differential in the federal tax on 10-cent cigarettes, and favors a flat reduction in tax on all cigarettes. Congressman William B. Um stead, of the sixth North Carolina district, in answer to the local chamber's letter urging that he oppose the tax reduction, declined to say anything definite. "You may be assured that it will have my serious consideration," he said. Tobacco concerns, large growers and the chamber of commerce here have assailed the proposed tax cut for manufacturers of 10-cent cigar ettes on grounds that it would re sult in a war with the higher brands. STATE'S CROP VALUE RISES 85 PER CENT While the value of the crops of the nation as a whole was increas ed 55 per cent in 1933, the value of crops produced in North Caro lina increased 84 per cent, as com pared with 1932. The value in the State rose from $104,000,000 to $192,000,000. Feed grains increased from $17,000,000 to $31,000,000, truck from eight to 11 millions, fruits from three to six millions, and miscellaneous cash crops—including tobacco and cotton—from $59,000,000 to $122,- 000,000. Value of the State's crops rank ed fourth in the nation. o FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST Subject for Sunday, April Ist, "Reality" Sunday morning service, 11:00 A. M. Sunday School, 10:00 A. M. Wednesday Evening Service, 7:45 P. M. « The Reading Room in the church is open daily, except Sundays and legal holidays, from three to five P. M. BIG FLIGHT IN CHACO Buenos Aires.—Once again the armies of Paraguay and Bolivia are about to clash in the most decisive battle since last Decem ber. The victorious Paraguaysans who have advanced 300 miles west of their home base at Concepcion, PWA Contract For Waterworl Loan To Be Presented To Boa Rotarians To Help Cripples Tarboro, March 23. At the meeting of the Rotary Club last night in Hotel Farrar the club re ceived an invitation from the Zebulon club to attend an inter city meeting in that place on April 6th and it was decided this club will be represented on that occa sion. It was decided to hold the next meeting of the club at the community house at 7:45 and there will be no supper. Rotarian Ches ter Alexander of the special com mittee to consider community pro jects of interest to the club, sug gested that the funds for one meal each month be used in furtherance of community projects. He spoke of using this fund to aid crippled children at the orthoepedic clinic and the club endorsed the sugges tion. A motion prevailed that the club appropriate $lO each month for one year for the use of crip pled children. Rotarian Reginald Fountain spoke on insurance. He said that during the three years of depres sion the insurance companies made a good record and that they stood the storm of panic. Fertilizer Company Enlarges Plant Planters Cotton Oil apd Ferti lizer Co., which has been one of Rocky Mount's leading manufac turing establishments for many years has recently enlarged its plant and installed a large amount of new and modern machinery which gives the plant a capacity of double the amount of which it has formerly been able to produce. This plant has manufactured fer tilizer for more than thirty years which has been used regularly in this community and has always given good results. The Planters Cotton Oil and Fer tilizer Company has studied the soil conditions of this part of the state and has had specialists to prepare special formulas suitable to the needs of our soil and the results have been in the past, most gratifying here. With the enlarged plant, there will be a much larger number of employees, thus giving employ ment to many of the citizens of Rocky Mount. PARK VIEW HOSPITAL GETS X-RAY MACHINE The Park View Hospital has re cently acquired a modern, all metal, motor driven X-ray ma chine. Only one man is required to operate it, yet it can photo graph a patient in any position. It is reported to be a decided im provement in the hospital equip ment. ABOUT THE POST OFFICE Miss Francis Exum, Registry and C. O. D. Clerk was unable to work Wednesday because of illness. A. C. Davis, the truckman for the Parcel Post has returned to his work after being out several days on account of sickness. NOTICE Those desiring to subscribe to The Rocky Moon Herald may do so by sending SI.OO with name an address to The Rocky Mount Herald, Rocky Moun N. C. i Name SI.OO PER The Public Works Adminia tion's contract for the loan grant of $310,000 for the tion of a municipal water R and storage tank, which is no* the hands of the city mana Aycock, will be submitted to board of aldermen at its mee on April 5. The Board is expe to take action on it at this tl If accepted unchanged by board, the city will be under ligation to pay the federal govi ment $9,000 each year from 1 to 1944 and SIO,OOO each year f 1945 to 1959. The interest : is 4 per cent. The city will have repaid government $240,000 and inte at the end of that time. Of $310,000 appropriated, $70.00 an outright grant of the fed government and will not be rep The city will issue bonds $240,000 for the loan. The payments, according to terms set forth in the cqnti are graded down so that the eai yearly payments will not be cessive. If payments were tc made strictly on a fractional 1 and interest basis the first ye payment would be more diffi to meet while the last year's w be small. Consequently, arrai ments are provided for mal the annual payments nearly form. I. T. Valentine Wi Not Enter The Ri With this expression of my found thanks and endless grati to the voters of Nash County their political support their moral co-operation corded me in my effort to charge my duties as prosecq attorney of the Recorder's C« I reluctantly announce to friends throughout the county I will not be a candidate foi election to this office. The loy co-operation and the support my friends will be cherished as of the brighest memories of life and I am wholly unabl convey to them the gratitude w is in my heart. I feel that time, in the course of my pn sion, when I should adapt m; to the general practice, both c inal and civil. I have greatly joyed the contacts and the fri made in the discharge of my d and my private and professi life has been broadened by this portunity. My association the officers of the court and people of the county in this pacity has confirmed my convii that the average man recogi and appreciates justice and thi officer need fear the consequ of a fair and impartial disch of his duty. JUNIOR ORDER MEE The local Junior Order American Mechanics held regular meeting on Tuesday i in the Junior Order Hall in Masonic Temple. About 90 r bers attended this meeting, members received class initis and the regular routine of ness followed. On April 10, an open me will be held. Several noted si ers are to be present. A bi cue supper will follow the sj ing. Announcement of the gram will be made later.