The Rocky Mount Herald VOLUME 4, NO. 11 ' ROCKY MOUNT MAN IS KILLED CAR WRECK William C. Lucas, Jr., Killed When Thrown Through Car's Wind shield William Cf. Lucas, Jr., young gales man for a local jewelry company, wag almogt instantly killed when the car in which he was riding glane ed off a parked car and collided with a early Sunday morning on a highway just north of here. Nathan Dawson, local young man with whom Lucag was riding, and two of the four occupantg of the parked car were injured, but not seriously. Dawson received cuts about the face and ches k . bruises but wag released at a local hospital after treatment. J. A. Fii.rh and Mrs. Russell Anderson, were among those in the parked car, re ceived slight injurieg. f Russell Andergon and Miss Troy Byrum, also in the parked car, re ceived no appreciable injurieg. E. A. Beach of Hawthorne, Fla., driver of the truck which was involved in the accident, also was not injured. As Dawson was driving toward the city of the Battleboro highway, i State Highway Patrolman C. B. Cavenaugh said, his ear struck the rear corner of a car parked on the i highway just beyond the city air port in the path of Dawson's car. The 'collision threw Dawson's car across the highway, Patrolman Cav anaugh reported, in front of a truck going north. The truck, driv en by Beaok, struck the left rear section of Dawson's car. The shock of the collision threw * Lucas through the windshield of the car and resulted in cuts and other injuries which were almost instantly fatal to Lucas. All the occupants of the parked car, which was stopped out of gas, but had its lights on, had been drink ing to various degrees, Patrolman Cavanaugh said. A small amount of liquor was found in the car. None of the other persons involved in the accident had been drinking, accord ing to investigating officers. SALVATION ARMY FUND IS GROWING Local Organization Still Lacks $6OO , Por New Buildings Needed Slightly over $lOO in cash besides k a quantity of building materials has Pjbeen received in the local Salvation army's drive to complete a building fund for a new Salvation army headquarters, the Army advisory board announced in a meeting yes terday. A balance of $6OO needed to com plete the $3,500 building fund will be raiged in the city by voluntary contributions during the next two or three weekg, Major C. L. Frazier an nounced that he bag hopes. The cash and material contribu tions already received were given local citizens, business houses and Sundav school groups. Jasper L. Cummings at the Plan ters Bank will act as treasurer of the fund and will receive contribu tions, which may be made also to I Salvation Army officials. The building fund is to finance a new headquarterg building at 511 S. 1 Franklin street, which wi'l house an auditorium, recreation room and officers quarters, and also a transient home already constructed at the site. Toward the fund the Charlotte Salvation Army headquarters has se cured a $2,000 loan and local contri butions have raised the remainder except for $6OO, Major Frazier re ported. t NASHFARM BUREAU PICKS ! NEW OFFICERS Nashville, March 9.—The officers who were elected when Nash coun ty's Farm Bureau was organized hist year were reflected by acclamation last night at a meeting here of the L county board of Farm Bureau di rectors. W. F. Woodruff of the Taylor's Store section was reelected presi de- v, '* the Nash Farm Bureau for i t&N. Henry Vaughan will con- I tinue to serve as vice president, C. I J. Matthews as secretary and I treasurer, and C. E. Bell' and J. |. W. Bobbins as members of the " icounty executive committee. Mr. Woodruff, an active gponsor of the Nash Farm Bureau when it wag organized last year, served as temporary chairman until organiza tion of the Bureau was completed and then as president during the first year of the Nash Bureau's ex istence. He is also vice president of the state Farm Bureau Federa tion. Mr. Vaughan, a prominent Nash farmer and cotton ginner, is also | a member of the Nash tobacco ad visory commission. The Nash Farm Bureau directors passed resolutions last night com mending the state Farm Bureau Federation for its stand in favor of President Roosevelt's plan to reor ganize the supreme court, and cen soring Senator Josiah W. Bailey's opposition t; the plan. Facts Concerning PUBLIC BEING LED TO BELIEVE REMOVAL OF THE KAILROAD WILL COST THEM NOTHING On the important question of the removal of the rail road, we have felt it our duty aa a newspaper enjoying the mailing privilege of the press, to give the public facts relative to this catter which so vitally concerns the public. By reason of misinformation or propaganda which has been issued in this matter many of the public have been led to believe that it is not going to cost the taxpayers anything. This is absolutely untrue. The whole cost of the removal of the railroad will be placed on the backs of the taxpayers of the city of Rocky Mount and the con sumera of public utilities. Removing the railroad has been reliably estimated by railroad construction engineers to cost $1,304,750 besides eight miles of right of way and the datfnages and cost incident to the acquiring of the right of way. The estimate of the increased operating cost and maintenance on the railroad is $1,975,000 and the value of the land to be submitted to the city by the In terstate Commerce Commission for $380,000. Then there is another additional cost, when the railroad* is placed on the eastern side of the town, a mile and a half away; the city will have to secure another right of way which will pass over many streets and through a populous sec tion of the town to connect with the wholesale and manu facturing plants of the city and it will create more haz ards than we have at preaent. All of this must be done at the expenae of the taxpayers, barring such moneys as it might acquire from relief sources, which in the end will practically amount to nothing in comparison to the above mentioned enormous outlay. Where Is The Money Coming From There has only been $50,000,000 set aside for the elim inating of railroad hazards in the United States by the Fed eral Bureau for grade crossing elimination and only $l,- 000,000 has been alloted to North Carolina. Then out of that just $1,000,000, how much could Rocky Mount rea sonably expect to get? It would appear to us that $50,000 would probably be a most reasonable allowance, when you take into the equation of the distribution of the rights of the whole of North Carolina in a million-dollar fund. This amount would not be a drop in the bucket of the total sum necessary to eliminate all grade crossings in Rocky Mount and remove the tracks from Main street and belt the city. $7,500.00 Expert Employed At a meeting of the Board of Aldermen on the fourth of March, the question of the removal of the railroad was again up for discussion by the Board and by the so-called Citizen's Committee and by members from the public. A letter was read from Honorable George Elliott, President of the Atlantic Coast Line Roalroad Company to the May or of Rocky Mount. He stated that a conservative estimate of the engineer ing department of the railroad placed the cost of removal of the railroad at the following figures: Net cost of New Construction—sl,3o4,7so Increased operating and maintenence cost with numer ous credits allowed, per annum, $79,000, capitalized at 4 per cent per annum—sl,97s,ooo Value of land to be surrendered to city, valued by In terstate Commerce Commission—s3Bo,ooo T0ta1—53,659,750. He further stated that the matter was so stupendous, even if the city furnished all of this, that he could not rec ommend it to his board as a business proposition. In the face of this letter, there was a resolution offered from the Board to employ a railroad expert, now supposed to be lo cated in the city of Norfolk, at the cost of $7,500 for ninety days work, to be paid $l,OOO every ten days. The whole of the balance of the payment to be paid two weeks before the expiration of the ninety days and before his report is to be submitted. This clearly shows tha the ex pert is more interested in receiving his pay than he is in ] the report. In this report the expert is to give a recom mendation on where, and how, the railroad should be removed and also he is to give an estimate on the loss of time occasioned by the citizens passing from the east to the west side by reason of the delay in the passage of trains. After much discussion and opposition among the eleven members of the Board present, six voted in favor of the employment of the so-called expert, to wit: Thur man, Williamson, Williams, Mimms, Wilkinson, Hinson. Those who opposed: Aldermen, Brake, Cutchin, Ivey, John son and Robinson. It would appear that the city is about to embark, in fact has already done so, on a very indefinite and vague under- 1 taking that will use up taxpayers money. The sums below' have already been spent or obligated: • $500.00 for securing contractors release from Jordan! St. underpass. $3900.00 Expenses of Highway Commission on same proj- j ect. $7500.00 for expert advice. $1190.00 total. and in addition to this loss an underpass worth $200,- 000.00 that was to cost the city nothing except land for right of way. Underpass In Danger Of Being Lost The $200,000.00 which is being held in suspense on ac count of holding up Jordan St. underpass will not be held longer than July 1, we are informed. Note the $200,-! 000.00 is not funds from city or the Railroad but was an \ outright grant from the Federal Bureau of Roads, through j Highway Commission. These experts hired by the city, according to their egreement, will not complete the sur vey and make recommendations until June Ist or a few weeks thereafter. No one believes, if they will stop and, think a moment, that a project costing many hundreds of thousands of dollars, maybe a million or more, can be handled with railroad and financial arrangements consum ated in a definite way within three or four weeks (time survey will be completed until July Ist,) at which time the $200,000.00 ear marked money will no longer be held for the city. Rocky Mount paid $15,000 for two years work-to a man by the name of Otis who came in town on a used car and left on the same vehicle and his departure, but for having been in the newspaper would never have been known. It strikes us that this employment of the new expert is some thing along the same line. This man agreed to begin work within three days. It is most remarkable that a ROCKY MOUNT, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1937 Railroad Removal The Pie-Eating Judge of Vermont m ■ Njf: - W Pie for breakfast, long a good old New England custom, is hesitat ingly admitted to by New Englanders these days. Not so by Judge Charles S. Dana of New Haven, Vt., however, former speaker of the house of representaUves and undisputed pie-eating champion of Vermont. He says he eats pie for breakfast, for dinner and for supper (which is the way meals run in rural Vermont), or even between meals if the spirit moves him, and he can name more than 100 different kinds of pie which he has consumed. Judge Dana is seventy-four years of age and his claim is that he has eaten pie at least once a day every day of bis life since he was a boy, Mrs. Dana is the expert behind the scene. She makes them 100 different ways, and the judge eats them. As a result of her skill, his reputation as a fancier of pies has spread throughout Ver mont and even to Washington, from which city Representative Charles A. Plumley of Vermont wrote him recently, that certain Washingtoni ans, interested in pie-eating as a fine art, were thinking of inviting him to the capital to explain how he became Vermont's expert. _L„ LOCAL MAN TO GET POSITION A. L. Dozier, Jr., Is Representative Of Unemployment Commission A. L, Dozier, Jr., of this city was included among 10 field jrepresenta tives'of Che state Unemployment compensation commission appointed today, according to information re ceived here. Raleigh, March 8. —Charles G. Pow ell, chairman of the North Carolina unemployment compensation commis sion, announced appointment today of ten field representatives to check on employers of the state and see that they "have compiled with the new law. Powell said 3,991 einployerg had paid $2,687,713.55 to the state and $298,634.84 to the federal govern ment on 1936 payrolls. The field representatives are: John P. Cooper, of Raleigh; Sterling G. Manning, of Raleigh and Charlotte; A. L. Dozier, Jr., of Rocky Mount; L. L. Umstead, of Greensboro; Hen ry A. Hickman, of Gastonia; Mal colm M. Young, of Durham; James L. Blum, of Winston-Salem; Charles A. Taylor, of Asheville; Menton II Dixon of Elizabeth City and D. D. S. Cameron of Southern Pines. HAROLD BACKS FDR Representative Harold D. Cooley, popular congressman from the fourth district ha s recently expressed whole hearted endorsement of the proposal to reorganize the Supreme Court as proposed by the president. Mr. Coo ley made a strong speech in the lower house this week that left no one in doubt as to his position and the reasons thereafter. man with such unusual talent could be procured within three days time. Generally, a man who claims to know so much, is engaged months and months and even years ahead. Alderman Brake, in addressing the Board, stated that he was opposed to spending the public's money for the employment of this expert to make a report about something that the city would never use as it was not in such finan cial shape to put over an enormous proposition. What Prompis The Removal Of The Tracks It is rumored tha the procedure is gotten up with the view of killing the underpass which had been unanimously agreed on by the Board of Aldermen and also Mr. Woodall Rose who was a member of the Board of Aldermen and the leading spirit in the so-called Citizen's Committee which is now opposing it. Former Mayor Thorne was present at the meeting and stated that he had failed to find any sentiment for the re moval of the railroad and that the estimated cost of the removal was so great that he did not see how the city could afford to place this purden on the taxpayers. Fur ther, that any estimate presented by Mr. Elliott, President of the Coast Line Railroad, knowing the high character and ability of the gentlemen, could be relied upon. He felt that if it is undertaken, it will even cost more than in estimated. Greensboro has not recovered from such an undertak ing several years back. The estimated cost of the removal of the railroad from Greensboro and building a depot and three underpasses was $900,000. When the work was final ly completed they had spent $2,900,000 which hurt the city's credit and was a burden upon its financial institu tions. The proposition cost two million more than was es timated. The Edgecombe side of Rocky Mount is burdened with a bond issue of about three hundred thousand dollars for the building of thirteen miles of road towards Pinetopa which was conceived and born under the same kind of in spiration but with more foundation than this present rail road proposition. The taxpayer has become the goat of the whole matter, and the taxpayer ia now becoming the goat of this present proposition. MINISTER TO SPEAK MIND Kinston, March 10.—The Rev. Dr. Bartholomew Fuller Huskc may turn farmer, Clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal church who was chaplain at the Naval Academy, Annapolis, before he came to St. Mary's church here some years ago, he said today he is ready to retire to a Cumberland County farm if his congregation doesn't like "some things I am going to tell it Sunday evening." Dr. Huske said he would explain the Ministerial Association's request that candidates for municipal offices tell the public how they stand on law enforcement. The ministers would have three vice districts ill and around the city closed. Dr. Huske will defend the association's request and excoriate, he indicat ed, candidates who fail to state| how they stand. "I own a hundred acres of land in Cumberland County, and if there is objection to my remarks I will go there, build a shack and live," lie said. STUDENTS STRIKE Students at Asheville Normal and Teachers College began a "sitdown" strike last Thursday in protest against a decision depriving them of any spring vacation this year. Spokesmen for students who refus ed to budge from the chapel said practically all of the 400 members of the student body wore partici pating. The strike was settled ami eally when a three-day leave was granted, and calm was restored to the campus. CAMPOREE TO BE STAGED AT ROCKY MOUNT 500 Boy Scouts From All Over Eastern Carolina Expected Here April 30-May 1 Around 500 Boy Scouts from 21 Eastern Carolina counties are ex pected to take part in the second annual patrol Camporee to be held here on April 30-May 1, Scout of ficials have announced. The site for the camporee will be historic Battle park by the Tar river falls. John J. Wells, chairman of th» Camporee committee, who investi gated site, said that the scores of tents to be brought by the visiting Scouts, together with those of lo cal Scouts, would be pitched on "J'anther Island," the largest of the group in the Falls area, while ano ther island would be used for the campfire circle. During their two-day encamp ment, the Scouts, who will repre sent 107 troops in the Eastern Caro -1 Una council, will test their skill in cooking, fire-building, map-making, stalking, signalling, nature study, compass drills, knot tying, whitt ling, judging, and miniature bridge building. The boys will camp in units of eight, John J. Sigwald, Scout exe cutive, has announced, and stream ers will be awarded to the groups winning the highest number of points. Blue streamers will be awarded to units scoring over 450 out of a possible 500 points; red streamers will go to patrols scoring between 350 and 499 points; and yellow streamers will go to patrols scoring between 250 and 349 pointg. The firgt annual Camporee was held successfully last year at Green ville. ROOSEVELT HIGHLIGHTS Washington, March 4. —Headlights of President Roosevelt's Victory Day Dinner speech: "My . . . ambition ... is ... a ' nation clear in its knowledge of what powers it lias to serve its own citizens, a nation that is iu a position to use those powers to the full in order to move forward steadily in order to meet the mod ern needs of humanity . . ." My great ambition on Jan. 20 19- 41 is to turn over ... to my suc cessor ... a nation intact, a nation at peace, a nation prosperous . . . After the W>orld War there arose insistent demands . . . that human needs be met. The unthinking, or those who dwell in the past, have tried to block them. I cannot tell you with complete cundor that . . . democracy has fully succeeded . . . For as yet there is no definite assurance that the three-horse team of the Ameri can system of government (execu tive, judicial and legislative) will pull together. If one horse lies • down in the traces . . . the field will not be ploughed. I defy one to read the majority opinion invalidating the AAA and tell us what we can do for agri culture in this session of Congress with any reasonable certainty that what we do will not be nullified as unconstitutional. The Ohio River and the dust bowl are not conversant with the habits of the interstate commerce clause . . . We cannot afford . . . to postpone or run away from that fight on advice of defeatist lawyers. Let tlieni try that advice on sweating men piling sandbags on the levees at Cairo. In this fight, as the lawyers them selves say, time is the essence. In three elections . . • great majorit ies have approved what we are try ing to do . . . Those majorities mean that the people themselves realize the increasing urgency that we meet their needs now. If we do not have the courage to lead the American people where they want to go someone else will. If we would keep faith with those who had faith in us, if we would make democracy succeed, I say we must act—now. I propose to follow my custom of speaking frankly to the nation con cerning our common problems. NOTICE Those desiring to subscribe to The Rocky Mount Herald may do so by sending $l.OO with name and address to The Rooky Mount Herald, Rocky Mount, N. C. Town State Route No $l.OO PER YEA* REGULATION OFTOBACCO SALE PROPOSED Fenner Introduces Bill In House To Establish Fair Trade Regula tions A bill to reestablish the fair trade | regulation of NBA code days /or the tobacco warehouse industry, under supervision of a State com mission, was introduced in the House of Representatives on Tuesday by .Representative W. E. Fennur of Nash, leading warehouseman of Rocky Mount and major operator on the Georgia markets. Bruce Suggs of Greenville, pres ident of the Eastern Carolina Ware house Association, has called a meeting of warehousemen in Farm ville tonight at 8 o'clock to consid er the measure, Fenner said. Sev eral members of the House from tobacco counties jointed the Nash representatives in sponsoring the bill. The measure would provide for appointment by the Governor of a Tobacco Commission of Fair Compe tition, consisting of live warehouse men, one from each of the five belts in the State to license aad regulate warehouses. Paid $lO a day and travel ex penses for each meeting, the com missioners would employ a secre tary and establish an office in Ra leigh to be sponsored from a ware house registration fee of $5O and from a tax of 5 cents per 1,000 pounds on tobacco sold by ware houses in excess of 1,000,000. Authority would be given the commission to revoko the license of a warehouse violating fair competi tion provision of the bill, which include section prohibiting: 1. Soliciting tobacco for sale while in transit from farm to mar ket designation. 2. Soliciting tobacco in one town for sale in another, after the sea son opens. 3. Employing any person to solic it tobacco for sale on any ware house floor. 4. Employing an unreasonable working force to solicit tobacco. 5. Reserving any particular floor space for a tobacco producer or consignor. 0. Making any resale for less than full charges. 7. Permitting private sale, until after the tobacco has been offered at auction. 8. Mpving tobacco before ten minutes has expired after sale. 9. Discrimination against any pro ducer. 10. Giving rebates on warehouse charges as inducements. 11. Paying anything for delivery of tobacco to any warehouse. 12. Extending special privileges to any customer. 13. Furnishing transportation for tobacco. 14. Financing purchase of trucks for tobacco producers. 15 .Giving rebates or prizes to reduce warehouse charges. 16. Guaranteeing minimum prices for tobacco. Fines up to $250 and imprison ment up to six months would be provided for violations. i The State act would not preclude local regulations. Doctors Find Strange Collection In Man's Body Wilson, March B.—Doctors at a lo cal hospital removed an open safo ty pin and a diamond ring; from the intestines of Percy Walston, 30 year old local man, in a curious operation late Friday afternoon an they sought to save the man from death after he had attempted sui cide ir. the local jail by placing the pin, ring and a nail in some bread here and ate it. The physi cians did not remove the nail. The man's condition was dtscrib ed as "fine" by doctors at the hos pital and they predicted he would live Saturday. Walston had been arrested on a capias ordered by Judge J. Paul Frizzell, of Snow Hill, after he had failed to make his appearance at the last term of superior court here on charges of meat stealing, H.> was in jail without bond when he attempted suicide. Dr. W. H. Anderson, county health officer, ordered the operation per formed after consulting surgeons and examination of X-rays. It was necessary to use amplifiert at the Cleveland County courthouse recently when farmers gathered t« hear the 1937 farm program explain ed could not all get into the audi torium.