THE GLEANER GRAHAM, N. C., SEPT. 3o. 1937 ISSUED EVERY TQLHHDAY I J. D. KERNODLE, Editor $1.00 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE J?nt-red at the Poatofflce at Graba N. C., as second-class u alter. American Bar Association Pays Respects to President The American Bar Associa tion, in convention in Kansas City, Mo., took a tilt at Presi- ' dent Roosevelt at its session ' Monday. Frederick H. Stiuch- 1 field of Minneapolis, president of < the association, told the 5,000 delegates that President Roose velt frequently has expressed 1 what "amounts to a hatred of ! the legal profession." He said: "One must believe this seem ing hatred arises out of the fact that the lawyers aro the ones whom he finds greatest difficul- ' ty in controlling." In reply to the President's description of the constitution a as "Layman's document, not a lawyer's contract," Stinchtield, told the convention's opening session: "Of 55 men who participated in framing the constitution, 32 were lawyers. - - ? If the con stitution of the United States is a layman's document we may bow in respect to the 23 tuen of the constitution convention who were not lawyers." James A. Reed, former Demo cratic Senator from Missouri, in a welcoming address castigated those who swear to uphold the Constitution while making mental reservations to evade it. He declared the framers of the constitution "knew that a n 1 honest fanatic, whether o f church or state, is the most 1 dangerous beast ever turned loose to curse the earth ? all the more dangerous if his cruel pur poses are masked by gentle smiles and friendly protestations calculated to lull the intended victims into security. "Reason cannot appeal to nor compassion mitigate the fury of a fanatic. - ? - The degree of fanaticism is often the measure of sanity." A thought and a query: Sup pose Big Business is trimmed to the point where it cannot make a surplus and pay dividends, where will the money come from to pay government expens es, to finance the innumerable commission and other adminis tration set-ups, to pay bonuses, to support relief organizations, to take care of the unemployed, and so on and so on? Will it not finally reach the point wher Big Business will vanish? Then what will become of the em ployees of Big Business, whence will the money come to take care of the jobless millions, and will they (the jobless) be able to raise thefbillions for government prod igal waste and spending and pay interest on government securi ties? When that comes to pass, what will government bonds be worth? What will money be worth ? if it comes to fiat money? Other questions, plenty of them, oome to mind. Tou answer some of them. Mussolini has just paid a visit to Hitler in Berlin. It was a sort of love feast. Sure, of the same feather, and of course congenial. ?m Western Union telegraph mes senger boys in Raleigh staged a strike Monday. Only off duty eight boors. Those of long ser vice records are to get a raise in Daniel Doherty Head ?o( American Legion I On last Thursday at its an | nual convention in New York1 City the American legion elect ed Daniel Doherty, of Woburn, Mats , as its national command er after recommending v i-t in creases in the United States military establishment whicf' would give the nation the larg- , est navy in the worl 1 and bring the standing army to l*o,0?M?. j The 19th legion convention, j too, hit obliquely at violence in | labor disputes and sharply mi- 1 Jerlined its reaffirmation of the rights of personal liberty and private property. Upon other issues it took an unexpected stand, denouncing communism, fascism and naz ism, and urging national legi-. lation "that will punish Amei'i can citizens who advocate the overthrow of our government by force, fraud or violence, and deport all aliens who so advo cate such overthrow." Hugo L. Black, recently ap pointed a Justice of the Su preme Court landed at Norfolk Wednesday, returning from a European tour. So far every effort to extract an expression from him as to his intentions on account of his connection with the Ku Klux Klan has failedl He has kept his own counsel. There has been a clamor for his resignation or removal on ac count thereof. The President appointed and the Senate con firmed the appointment. What action the Supreme Court will take is yet an open matter, if perchance it can do anything at all. He was a member of the Senate from Alabama and a strenous supporter of adminis tration policies, but had no out standing reputation as a learn ed lawyer. His appointment was as much a surprise to him as it was to the rest of the coun try at large. He may step down and out, which is doubted ? folks don't often turn down $20,000-a-year jobs. Postmaster General Jim Far ley may resign to become the head of the Pearce- Arrow Motor Car Company. In the event of his resignation, mentioned most probable as his succcessor are Edward J. Flynn, of New York; Frank C. Walker, now of New York but originally from Mon tana, and William W. Howes, the first assistant postmaster general, a South Dakota. But as to the Democratic na tional committor chairmanship Farley might retail) that. It appears that the result of the President's Western tour will have a bearing on what might happen. It is the general be lief that the President is feeling out the public pulse oq a third term. Farley is leaujng that way, it seems, and his move ments will be shaped accord ingly, it is 8urmissed. Col. Chas. A. Lindbergh, ac cording to news reports, will probably seek citizenship in Great Britain. A year or two ago the Lindberghs became re sidents of Great Britain. At the time there was nothing given out aa to their intentions, except that another kidnaping was dreaded. It is a sore re flection that good citigens teel they have to go elsewhere to es. cape the gangster bands. Other good American citizens have become English citizens and won distinction and honor. At present former American citi zens are members of Parliament and political leaden. :a.. .. . ? ' m Mtaniaiii i in Out in Idaho, in the capital ' city, Boise, the President fell in ' with the two Senators, Borah (Kep. ) and Pope (Denj.), the former opposed to his court re organization program and the i latter a new dealer. They rode ' with the President over the city in an hour's parade. That Sena tor Borah and the President , were so cordial caused som? surprise. The President was a j guest of bis state and he was j only being polite and playing the part of an agreeable host, | and did not mean that he had ! changed one iota. State College Answers Timely Farm Questions Q i) potion; How ran peanut* be slacked in prevent spoilage? Answer: Tb? slacks should be -uilt so I hat tin) nuts are not ex pim-d to the weather and finished in suCh a way that water will not i mi down the eeuler. Canvas hay caps are recommended for use on top of the stack. Nail two cross nrnis on the center pole 12 inches from the top to keep the vines off the ground. Loose soil in the slack.will also cause damage to the pods and nuts aud for this reason the ground should be fairly 3ry when the peanuts are dug. Question: May skim milk or buttermilk be substituted for the dried milk recommended in the poultry laying mash? Auswc?: Yes. Where milk is produced on the farm this sub stitution can be made witli a big saving in feed cost for the aver age farm flock. When only the dried milk is removed from the mash, one gallon of skioi milk ot buttermilk should be fed daily to 100 hens. When skim milk or buttermilk is fed at the rate of three gallons a day for the 100 birds, it may be substituted for all of the dried milk products, one half of the fish meal aud oue balf of the meat meal recom mended. Question: How can I coulrjl cattle lice on my calves? Answer: The following reme dies have proven effective in con trolling this insect. A four per cent solutiou of creoliue applied with a spray pump or orush; cot ton seed oil and kerosene, equal pafts, aud ground sabadilla seed and flowers of sulphur, equal parts, applied in poader form. A dip of liquid remedy should be applied in au eveu layer over the entire body of tiie animal. Oils, however, should not be used ou very hot or cold days. When powder is used the httir should be clipped from the affected pans of the body and the powder applied only ou the clipped places. A second treatment should be given within fifteen days to kill lice which hatch after the first treat ment. Notice of Sales of Town Property, Elon College/ For Delinquent Taxea The Board of Commissioners of (be Town of l$lon College baying o^lered that real and persona! property for delinquent taxes of 1930 be sold according to law, 1 will oa Monday, the 25th day of October, 1937, at 12 o'colck, noon, ?t tbe east entrance of tbe oounty Cowhouse, Qrahatq, N- C., offer to tbe publio to tbe highest bid der, for cash, the hereinafter list ed property, or as much thereof as may be necessary to pay such taxes for the said year, 1936, to wjtj RfiAL ESTATB Andrews, T. 11., one lot on East College aveuue I 1.03 Chandler, T. W., two houses on W. College Ave 51.30 Dawson, T. B-, QM bouse, LeUanqn avenue; m 2 83 lloolc, A. L., one house, O'Kelly street 70. C5 Humble, J. C.. oue house, Williams avenue 19.24 James, P. A., 1 house, Wil liams avenue 1_ 30.63 Johnson, O. W., one bouse, Trollinger avenue" 26.46 Lambeth, U. O., one house, Lebanon avenue 99.73 I Lambeth, J. ?)., H. L)., oue house, East College ave. , 90.33 May, T. A., one house, Williams avenue 23.15 iioCauley, W. M., one bouse, East College avenue 17.32 , Pritohette, Mrs. H. J., one | bouoe, Lebanon avonuo, 34.P7 I Try Roasting a RSb TIhs Way 3 IP YOO have tried the modern method of roasting meats In a constant temperature ol 350 degrees Fahrenheit to achieve tenderness and avoid shrinkage, then add 'an other trick to yoar list! Use the broiler rack and pan in the oven of your up-to-date gas range and place the meat on it fat side up as pic tured. This permits the circulating heat to surround the meat evenly, and the dripping fat drains into the re ceiving tray ? about one-half cupful trom a five to six pound standing rib roast. Once placed in the preheated oven, the meat needs no further at tention until the roasting period Is ended, for the oven heat-control manages everything properly. Should your modern gas range have a special type of broiler such as a circular rack fitting Into a chrome-plated pan, the pan Itself may be placed under an oven rack on which the roast reposes. Or you may put the meat in a shallow roast ing pan ? but never, never use a cover!, Illinois Fence for New York Fair NEW YORK ( Special) . ? Illinois-made fencing is being shipped to the New York's World Fair for enclosure of the 389.8 acres comprising the central ex hibit area. This was learned when Grover Whalen, President of the Fair Corporation, announced the award of a first fencing contract to the Cyclone Fence Company, whose New York of fices are at 370 Lexington Avenue. Officials of the manufacturing firm announced that its Waukegan plant was shipping the fencing and that installa tion would start as soon a^ the first steel reached the 121 6% -acre exposition site on Flushing Meadow. The contract price of the nine -foot steel fence installed, complete with gates and concrete footings at ten-foot centres, as derived from figures submitted by pre-qualified bidders, is $32,812. About three miles of fence are required to en close the central exhibit area along three sides and down to the Flushing river. Immediate enclosure of the tract was made necessary, Mr. Whalen said, by the great and varied construction work that is already taking place on the site two years in advance of the Fair's opening date. The Illinois-made fence will in close all of the Transportation Zone of the exposition and the area that will be dominated by the two Theme Centre wonders, the Perisphere and Trylon. Prevost, W. II., oue house, East College aveuue 1 52 Pilot Life Insurance Co., 1 house, Haggard avenue,. *4.39 Moore, Lucian, oue lot 7 18 Miller, G. G., one house, Williams avenue 28 S6 WagoDer, Mrs. G. T., oue house, Haggard aveuue.. 14 85 Sptuce Clapp Motor Co., 1 house, Williams aveuue, 19 24 Smith, Mrs. L. E, 1 house, O'Kelly avenuq SI 30 Pritchette, Mrs. J. D., house, Trolliuger aveuue 42 50 Wilkius, J. D., one lot, East College avenue .68 White, Dr. J. E., oue store, Williams avenue 8 63 Watson, Dr. S. G. Est. ^ Que house, | Jr-i 2.69 Rouse, BrinsoD, ... 5 38 Ritche, A. L., 1.15 Webster, S. G., ~ 1 00 Wagoner, W. H., 1.81 E. W. VICKERS, Sept. 37> 1937. Tax Collector. Strawberry growers of Colum bus county are being urged to set 12,000 to 15,000 plants per acre during September in order to as sure them of a profitable crop next seasou. After using a trench silo for three years, Walter Pennington of | Ashe County has built a new metal silo. J, T. Home, route 3, Wadesboro , Anson county, recently plan ted some of the best land on his farm to pasture tor his herd of | thi-ty Jeraeya, New York Fair Hall to Feature Radio and Television NEW YORK (Special) ?Radio, tele vision, movies, telephone, telegraph, pho tography, news and magazine print ? all those factors as they relate to communi cations in American life ? will have their own pavilion and ten-acre exhibit zone at the New York World's Fair of 1939, ac cording to an announcement by Grover Whalen, President of the Fair Corpora tion. The Hall of Communications will be bliilt this year on the 1216% -acre exposi tion site within a few minutes ride from mid-town Manhattan. Its location is ad jacent to that of the unique Theme Centre structures, which with their "thousand wonders" will dominate the Fair grounds, \bout the Hall will be grouped ten acres of buildings to be erected by private exhibitors in the com munications industry, said Mr. Whalen. Before the building will be two ultra marine pylons, 160 feet high and faced with continuous glass lighting fixtures. Features of the structure are a great hall, in which will be placed th? focal exhibit summing up the role of com munications in the World of Tomorrow, and a glass-walled restaurant opening onto a dining terrace and garden. The total length of the Hall of Communica tions will be over 400 feet. Its cost is estimated at $400,000. Numerous other Fair structures are emerging from stages of design. Construction of the ex position, however, will not reach its peaX until early next year. SOUTHERN PINE GOES TO NEW YORK FAIR tiSW YORK (Special). ? Southern y-tilow pine from the Eastern Shore, Maryland, and from points in Delaware, Virginia and North Carolina is already going into foundations in the central area of the New York World's Fair of 1939. Grover Whale n. President of the Fair Corporation, has just announced the pur chase of 430 sticks of pine piling, in loagths up to 80 feet, from Nichola Brothers, of 90 West Street, Manhattan, and Norfolk, Virginia. Shipments of this lot are originating at Frankfort, Dela ware, Preston, Maryland, and M?lfa and Cheriton, Virginia. An order for piling of almilar size is being filled at points in North Carolina. The pine stick* are being driven into the ash-mea the nee south' 87 1-2 east 3 chs, 2 links to an Iron bolt John Bradshaw's line; thence with line of said John Bradshaw south 73 links to the beginning contai ?l og Twen - ty-two one hundredths (25-100) of an acre, more or less. This 23rd day of September, 1917. Paul Strickland, >? Commissioner V '* . ?