Sabotage Charged At Farner Fire ORDERS ARE OUT TO "CRACK DOWN ON ALL SPEEDING Highway Patrol is ToJd To Nab all Offenders High and Low Alike ? ? j Stae Highway patrolmen Smith ' and Lindscy have reeived letters from Governor Broughton ordering thorn to crack down on ail automo bile speeding. Identical letters have ; been sent to every Highway patrol- j in the SUie, in a determined effort to cut down the number r>f traffic deaths. Last year the traffic toll in North Carolina was nearly 1,300. and Gov Broughton said that January figures indicated that unless prompt step.; are taken. 1942 will be just as bad, or worse. Under the new system, the -state speed limit of SO miles per hour will bo allowed only on those long con gested stretches of highway that are entirely free from dangerous curves, or intersections. There are practic- 1 ally none of these in this immediate section. Speed limits will vary, according to road conditions, and will be rig idly enforced. Signs will be placed along all highways warning of curves or crossings ahead, and stating the maximum speed at which that stretch may be tmvelM. Time speed limits will be fixed by the Highway Commission, who will send experts throughout the State to study every road. Drivers who ignore the signs are to be arrested, Gov. Broughton says, regardless of whether the offenders be "citizens or officials, rich or poor, high or low. The letter sent to the Highway pa trolmen follows: "Nearly thirteen hundred people lost their liyes in automobile acci dents on the highways of North Car olina in 1941. Fatalities during the present month of January, 1942 give Indication that this will be an equal ly bloody year, unless something drastic is done. "This is a record that is shocking to every North Carolinian; and some thing must be done about it. I am calling on you to do well your part. "Speed is undoubtedly the major factor in fatal accidents. It is possi ble that the speed limit in this State is too high, but even the speed limit we have is violated almost with im punity in every section. This must CoBttamed en back Pace Dumping Ground Given To Town Free By TVA; Plan To Buy Dropped niwr amvrUMng thrii weeks to buy a place for dumping refuse, the Town, on Wednesday, acquired two acres "free-far-nothing" as a gift from the TVA. Tlie gift was made through Forestry service. T)>r r""*' dumping ground lies in a ravine to tlie left of the Negro school house In Texana. Town Clerk Eph Christopher describes it as ideally ?suited for its purpose. "It is way off from everybody" he ! said "You can't even ?ee it unless I you go hunting it and walk right up 1 on it. It wont bother a soul, and it Is , far enough from the river to remove all riftncur of rr.nhnm