The Rocky Mount Herald VOLUME 4, NO. 46 WATSON ON STATE TEAM Expert Student Team. From State College' Off On Swing Through Mid-West College Station, Raleigh, Nov. 18 — Van Watson, Jr. of Rocky Mount, member of tho crack N. C. State Col ? 'lege crops judging team, left hers ' Tuesday for a swing through tho Mid- West where ho and his team-mates will compete in two major intercol legiate judging contests. First stop for the State College team, representing an institution hav ing a higher record in crop judging [ * work than any other , will be in Kan sas City, Mo. There at the American Royal Livestock Show, being held Friday , they will compete against other teams in seed judging, taxo nomy, and market grading. This show is an annual event sponsored by the Kansas City Board of Trade.. The big event of the trip will be the International Livestock Expo sition in Chicago Friday and Satur day November 26 and 27. At this i t show the boys from North Carolina will compete against crop judging teams from leading land grant Am erican colleges and universities. State College teams have always niade enviable records in these con tests, bringing home many first hon ors and much recognition for the school Dr. J. B. Cotner of State College, * the team's coach, accompanied the ** judgers on the trip. The team other than Watson is composed Qf J. F. Giles, Arch dale; J. C. Frink Bladeu boro; and B. P. Jenkins, Jr. Shelby. LEGION POST M HOLDS FETE "Parade Of Progress" Dinner Spon sored By Spring Hope Post Dur ing Week-End Spring Hope, Nov. 15. —Contraiy to the usual custom of khaki-clad parados to martial music, Spring Hope's Vester-Wheless American Le gion Post 91 took cognizance of the Armistice season with a week-end dinner in the Baptist church annex. The Legion's extensive guest list in cluded representatives from all the V main enterprise* of tftjvn and com munity, tho after-dinner remarks of 0 ihe various visitors presenting a par ade of civic progress and a bird's eye view of the future possibilities -./■ of this town. Grouped around three largo tables in the Annex hall the assembly open -1 ed with the singing of America led by T. H. LeCroy. Dr. J. R. Vann returned thanks. The delicious bar becue dinner with slaw, bread and coffee was gift of the Post Com mander C. S. Bunn of Stanhope. Near the close of dinner Miss Cor inne Pridgen sang "My Buddie'' k accompanied at the piano by Mrs. R. L. Pitts. Motion was made by L T. Valeatine and instantly pass ed that Miss Pridgen be made "Sweetheart" of the Legion. Toastmaater C. S. Bunn briefly ex plained the purpose of the Legion saying it "stands for the finest things in America ... in the fu \ ture, men will be proud to be mem * bers" and called attention to the youth movement emphasized in all Armistice speeches. Other specially invited guests, many of whom mado remarks, included: Mayor John J. Proctor; the town commissioners; if Mrs. L. W. Davis, U. D. C. presi dent; John J. Pitts, Lions Club president; Mrs. J. P. Pierce, P. T. A. President; Misses Ada E. Valen- V tine and Annio M. Cherry, faculty members; T. H. LeCroy, vocational agriculture instructor; Hobart Brant ley, past commander of this post and now Commander of this dis trict; Earl Mallison, representative of the local Fire Department; I. T. ' Valentine of Nashville, former com mander of this post and still an ac tive member; Mrs. I. T. Valentine; and Miss Constance Matthews, Edi tor of the Nash County News. * Funeral Rites For - Pneumonia Victim Funeral services for Minnie Pau line Weaver, three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Weaver of Rocky Mount route one were held at y three o'clock from the home with Elder A. B. Denson, Primitive Bap [ tist minister, officiating. Interment * followed in the family burying grounds. Little Minnie died at a local hos pital after having been ill with pneumonia for five days. Besides the parents she is survived by her ■'* grandmothers, Mrs. Minnie Weaver and Mrs. Mary Ann Pridgen. i J. F. Barringer of Gold Hill, Ca barrus County, secured 1.7 ton an acre of cured Kobe lespedeza hay from four acres and sold the hay for $lB a ton. He says this is bet- Iter than growing cotton and his land is more fertile as a result. Applications of nitrate of soda I used as a top-dressing about the corn crop, increased the yield on the farm of Joe Etheridge in Pas quotank County from about 50 bushels an acre to 71.4 bushels an acre. IN WASHINGTON IS TAKING PLACE BY UNITED STATES SENATOR Although this is being written in advance of th e convening of Con gress, it is already evident that the special session will have a very de finite bearing on the trends in busi ness, industry and agriculture dur ing the months ahead. In fact, whether the present lull will con tinue into 1938, or pick-up with heavy holiday activity, may largely rest on what the Congress does or does not do. Tho result is that members of Congress are returning to Washing ton with a new determination to participate in making the session run as smoothly as possible and devote to the purposes for which it has been called. This opinion is shared by many of my Senatorial colleagues. If there is one thing that stands out in the pre-session discussions, it is that the big job before Con gress is to give business and indus try new assurance through relief from taxes that are proving bur densome and at the same time find vhe necessary funds to give need ed assistance to agriculture. The word assistance is preferable to re lief. With hearings completed in all parts of the county, it is not un likely that the members of the Sen ate Committee and Houso Commit tee on Agriculture will report to the Congress very early in the ses sion, perhaps during the first week. Considerable thought is being given to finding an effective compromise between those who favor compulsory crop control and those who favor voluntary control. How to accom plish either with legislation that will be branded as constitutional is, of course a major problem. But the farmers have -more reason for hope than they have had in re cent years. Their views have been given to Congressional committees direct. There will be no delay in the character of shunting farm leg islation aside for less important things. Whether tax revision will be thrown into tho special session is problematic. The decision on wheth er to tackle the tax problem now or at the regular session convening in January, may depend a great deal on the progress in drafting a farm program that is workable. If that moves along swiftly, tho high ly controversial and important tax question may came up. There is much evidence that those engaged in activity working on a tax program realize that business and industry, and in turn agri culture, are greatly affected by a national hesitancy. It is hesitancy of business and industry to expand and create more jobs. Thus assur ance that the capital gains and un distributed profits taxes will be modified would undoubtedly have a stimulating effect on the whole country. How soon it can be given is the question of the hour. On the whole, there is reason to believe that every effort will be made to unify the thought on im portant subjects to the end that the White House and the Congress will finally work together with a : great deal of harmony. While busi ness, industry and agriculture look first to Congress to give the nation al reassurance needed, the Presi dent will undoubtedly atempt to make recommendations that will find sympathetic attention in the | Congress. This would assure speed ier action on all legislation. ! At this early date it looks as if special session will assume great importance from the very first and attempt to end what is well describ |ed as "national hesitancy" in the march to improve our whole economic structure. U. D. C. To Send Annual Box To Confederates Mombers of the Bethel Heroes chapter of tho United Daughters of the Confederacy will send their an nual Thanksgiving box to the Home for Confederate Women in Fayette ville during the week, and members are asked to send contributions to the home of Mrs. S. Robbins, on Tarboro Street, not later than Wed nesday. Tho Thanksgiving box is filled each year with canned fruits and other edibles, as well as gifts of toilet articles and other things to be used by widows of veterans of the War between the States. Armando A. Callejo of Cuba spent several days during late Oc tober in Chowan County studying the production of peanuts on farms of the county. ROCKY MOUNT, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1937 STROKE IS FATAL TO DR. BRASWELL gg-y* is l)r. Mark Kussell Brasweli, for many years regarded as an outstand ing and influential citizen of this community, died early Monday in a Richmond, Va., hospital following a cerebral hemorrhage suffered last week. He was in his 73rd year. Funeral services were conducted at his home here at 11 o'clock Tues day morning ljy the . Rev. F. H. Craighill, rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd, assisted by the Rev. R. Dwiglit Ware, pastor of tho First Methodist church. Burial fol lowed in Pine View Cemetery. Dr. Brasweli, who was connected with numerous business and farming enterprises in Nash and Edgeeombe counties and Rocky Mount, suffer ed a stroke last week while en route to Richmond from Rocky Mount. He -was taken to a hospital there and his condition was described as criti cal from the first. Survivors include two children, Mrs. Ilyman L. Battle of this city and Mrs. William D. Perry of Chap el Hill. A brother, J. C. Brasweli, president of the Planters National Bank and Trust coznpany of this city, also survives. f)r. Brasweli, son of tho late Thomas P. and Emily Brasweli, was born near Battleboro. H e attended school at Bingham Military Academy near Mebane, and completed his academic education at the University of North Carolina. His medical training was received at the Univer sity of Maryland and the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Balti more. For many years following his • graduation, Dr. Brasweli engaged in tho general practice of medicine at Rocky Mount. He retired from the active practice of medicine 25 years ago, thereafter devoting himself to his business and farming interests which were extensive both in Nash and Edgecombe counties. He was vice-president of the Planters Na tional Bank and Trust Co., vice president of Rocky Mount Mills and was interested in many other busi ness enterprises. Dr. Brasweli married Miss Mamie Hackney, who died a number of years ago. A son, Thomas Hackney Brasweli, died in 1907 at the ago of 12 and as a memorial Dr. Brasweli erected and donated to the City of Rocky Mount the Thomas Hackney Brasweli Memorial Library, which through his benefience is now under going extensive enlargement and im provement. This library constitutes tho largest private philanthropy ever given to this community. Pioneer in Parks Succumbs at 77 John J. Blair, High Point Educa tor And Civic Leader, Dies Of Long Illness High Point, Nov. 13.—John J. Blair, 77, educator, religious and civic ' loader and one of High Point's most beloved citizens, died at the Charlotto saniiorium this morning at 5.29 o'clock. Ho had been in declining health for some time, Mr. Blair, along with his brothers and sisters, gave High Point its im petus for its public park system, now regarded as one of the finest in the South. The land for Blair park was the gift of this family to this city. Mr. Blair was a momber of a pio neer Quaker family in this section. He was born at the Blair homeplace here, a son of Solomon and Abi gail Hunt Blair. He had been active in educational circles over the state, having served at one time as super intendent of the Winston-Salem schools and later as superintendent at Wilmington. After resigning at Wilmington Mr. Blair directed con si ruction of school buildings for the state, retiring five years ago because of his health. Surviving aro two brothers, David H. Blair of Washington, D. C., and High Point and Colonel W. A. Blair of Winston-Salem, and four sisters, Misses Martha, Ada, Emma, and El va Blair, all of High Point. Funer al will be conducted here Sunday at 3 P. M. IHhH &. ■ ij-'mr n w ' ■ ■■ * ■ Sergeant Knox scores a hit in a determined manner while partici pating in the dummy thrusting contest eliminations at the Bedford bar racks at Edinburgh, Scotland, in preparation for the tournament to be held in London. Senator Bailey Still Pulling Backward In the news columns of this issue of the Herald is a press report out of Washington clipped from the News and Observer, Thursday morning, an account of Senator Bai- This speech would indicate that the Senator was not This speech would indicate tha the Senator was not himself, and yet when we look back to his record in the Senate, his first term, it is the same speech from the same Bailey. In the last Democratic primary campaign Hon. R. T. Fountain candidate for the Senate vs. Bailey, who re ceived 188,000 votes made the statement in all of his speeches that if Senator Bailey or the Senators friends could show a single instance where Bailey had voted tor a single piece of constructive legislation offered by the democratic party leadership during the Roosevelt admin istration he would immediately bring his candidacy to a close and go home. This challenge was never met by Bai ley or anyone of his friends. His record so far this term is and the same. Bailey has an opportunity to help our state but he pulls backward instead of pushing. The administration has to carry his weight and action when he could be pushing. Such a contrast between Doughton and Bailey. Over in the House we find Representative R. L. Dough ton the strong right arm of the President, working hand and glove with the President assuming his responsibili ties of leadership in conjunction with our great President. The administration has necessarily passed new legislation, most of which has been constructive and good. Doughton and his Co. laborers in Congress from North Carolina, who have helped in releiving us of the dire of depression can look back upon their work with pride and a degree of satisfaction which can not come to the man who received his talent and went and buried it in the ground for fear he would do something wrong as Senator Bailey has used his talent; in pulling backward. This note represents 1-96 of th e Nation in the Senate, and one ninety-six was pulling backward. O that he had pulled forward as Doughton BOARD BUYS TWO PARK SITES AND ASKS FOR 3RD The Board of Aldermen initiated the New Municipal Ad ministration Building by having its first meeting in it last Thursday night and the Board took one of the most needed and important steps taken by the Board of Alder men of Rocky Mount in many a day when it inaugurated its Parks and Playground Program by buying a plot of ground on the West side of th e city on Western Avenue and a plot of ground on the East side of the city on Mari gold Street for two additional parks and instructed the Play Ground Committee to consider the buying of the plot of land on Cokey Road opposite the Lutheran church for a third Park. This to our mind is one of the most necessary purchases that the city has ever made, and we want to commend the mayor and the Board of Aldermen for this forward step. This was one of the mayors main objectives in outlining his program in his inaugural address. MRS. MARY SPEED JONES MERCER In our last issue we carried press notice of the death of Mrs. Mary Speed Jones Mercer, wife of the late Dr. W. P. Mercer, of Edgecombe county. Mrs. Mercer was a woman of unusual charm, culture and talent, possessed with much natural ability, well educated in the finer arts though reared after the War Between the States when schools were few and education received at a price largely the efforts of the individual. Mrs. Mercer was a native of Warren county daughter of Duke Jones, a large planter, coming to Edgecombe county as a young bride of a great and good country doctor, the late Dr. W. P. Mercer. The doctor and his wife were more than just a physician, the Mercers were an institution in the South, West Edge combe. Their Country Estate "Temperance Hall" was fam ed far and wide for its generous hospitality and it could be well said as of "Buncombe Hall" "Welcome All." The doctor enjoyed a large practice, requiring many hours per day to make his calls. A large part of his prac tice was personal visits by people in buggies, carts, and wagons, and sometimes in fact often times these patients were compelled to wait hours for the return of the doctor and pending this waiting who was the emergency doctor and lightener of heart burdens, but the good doctors wife, her words of council, encouragement, and general administra tion often times produced greater results than the drugs from a hundred bottles. She was head of a great family and might well be classed as one of the "Mothers of Israel." She leaves besides her children and grandchildren, one brother, Hon. Howard Jones of Warrenton and Washington, nok Secretary to Congressman J. H. Kerr. BAILEY DEMANDS REVERSAL OF ROOSEVELTIAN POLICIES SHERIFF OF WILSON LEADS VICE RAIDS Parents Of High School Youths Complain Of Situation At Tour ist Camps Wilson, Nov. 12.—Complaints by Wilson county parents that the tour ist camps in tho section were en dangering tho morals of their chil dren spurred Sheriff J. C. Fulghum to conduct the series of vice raids on several of the camps over last week and to arrest over a score of persons in them, the sheriff testi fied yesterday at th G trial of several of those arrested. Asked who had given him informa tion that caused him to raid the places, mostly on the Rocky Mount Wilson highway, Sheriff Fulghum said that parents of children of high school ago had complained that the places endangered their children. He mentioned no names of his inform ants. In discussing one of the raids last weekend Sheriff Fulghum declared that in one small building he had found it crowded with young men of around high school age. Two men and four women were convicted of running and aiding in the running of immortal places in the county in Recorder's Court here yesterday. J. I. Dilla, operator of tho Pine Grove Inn near here, was fined SSO and costs and given six months on tho roads while Vera Andrews and Peggy Walters, girls who were ar rested at the place in the raids were fined $25 and costs and given 90 days. Recorder Charles B. McLean said that he would not invoke the jail sentences if the girls get out of the town in 8 hours. In another case Marjorie King, operator of a place on the Rocky Mount highway at "The Rabbit Box'' was fined SSO and costs and given 6 months, while a girl arrested in the raids at the place, Christine Creech and a young boy, Preston Joyner, were each fined $25 and eosts and given 90 days.- The awA Bryy girls were ordered to get out ofWn town within 48 hours or have their jail sentences invoked. All appealed to Superior Court and were placed under bond. High Court Called Super Legislature Professor Corwin, Speaking At Wil son, Says Constitution Is A 'For mal Point Of Reference Chamberburg, Pa., Nov. 13.—The Supreme Court of the United States is a '"super-legislature," Professor Edward S. Corwin, McCormick Pro fessor of Jurisprudence and head of the Department of Politics at Prince ton University, declared tonight in an address at Wilson College. The Constitution itself "is hardly mor e than a formal point of refer ence" when the court is passing upon questions involving constitutionality of laws, Professor Corwin asserted. His address was the climax of Wil son's celebration of tho sesquicen tennial of the framing of the con stitutional document. "For most of the court's excur sions in the constitutional sphere, the constitutional document is lit tle more than a taking-off ground," lie said. "The journey out and back occurs iir a far different medium of selected precedents, speculative views concerning the nature of the Consti tution and the purposes designed to be served by it, and unstated judi cial preferences. "All of which signifies that in the constitutional field the court is a legislature, and to the extent that I the doctrine of the finality of its interpretations of the Constitution actually prevails it is a super-legis lature." In sustaining the Wagner Labor Relations Act the court, according to Professor Corwin, presented the nation with a "constitutional revo lution," the result of which has been to "throw down the barriers of dual federalism of State and Nation al Governments which have hereto fore excluded Congress from the regulation of productive industry." Lincoln County farmers sold 5,- 431 pounds of live poultry coopera tively for $917.50 cash last week. Turkeys comprised the bulk of tho sales. NOTICE Those desiring to subscribe to The Rocky Mount Herald may do so by sending SI.OO with name and address to The Rocky Mount Herald, Rocky Mount, N. C. Naata Town State Route No SI.OO PER YEA! Tells Senate About Regal Shirt. Johnston County And Other Cases Washington, Nov. 17. —Declaring; for a reversal of most of the poli cies of the Roosevelt administra tion towards business, Senator Jo siah W. Bailey today devoted a large part of a speech in the Sen ate on the pending motion to take up the anti-lynching bill to inveigh ing against specific acts of the New Deal. Tho specific acts to which ho de voted considerable attention, and to -acli of which he objected vigorous ly, were: The order of the National Labor Board against the Regal Shirt Com pany of Morelicad City; tho action of the Federal Power Commission in requiring the Aluminum Com pany of America to secure a Feder al license for a project at Tucker town on tho Yadkin river; the ob jections Rural Electrical Authority to power company construction of rural power lines in Johnston Coun ty paralleling thoso which a co-ope rative had proposed to construct; tho alleged action of the TV A in hold ing up another power project of tho Aluminum company in Western North Carolina; and tho recent speech of Assistant Attorney Gener al Robert H. Jackson at the Univer sity of North Carolina on the court and the Constitution. The Senator used all of thoso in stances ag illustrations of government policies which prevented private in vestment of capital. He also de nounced at length the sit-down, strikes of last winter and urged im mediate repeal of tfic undistributed profits tax. Denies Filibuster Speaking of the anti-lynching bill itself, Senator Bailey denied any at tention to filibuster on the bills. Uncle Natchel Back In New Radio Series Natural Chilean Nitrate Folks An nounce Resumption Of Broadcast Program return to the air next week of Un tie Natch el and Sonny, the two stars of the Natural Chilean Nitrate of Soda program. Natural Chi lean folks have "formed us that these two favorites are resuming broadcasts, beginning Saturday, No vember 20th and November 21st on important Southern stations. The role of Uncle Natchel, wine old colored philosopher and loading character in the series of broadcasts will be played by Frank Wilson who is well known as a radio enter tainer and as a stage film star. He gained considerable renown for his performance as Mose g in the stage and film version of Green Pastures. Wilson's characterization of Uncle Natchel in a series of fifty-two broadcasts for the Chilean folks last season, added to his laurels. Sonny Miller, the young white charge of kindly old Uncle Natchel in the program will be played by Eddie Ryan, Jr., a talen'ed twelve year-old actor from Virginia who has made t> number of stage appear ances in New York and is now play ing in ''French Without Tears" on Broadway. He has appeared with Katlterine Cornell, Helen Hayes and other stars, and has been a part of the "Easy Aces," "Dreams of Long Ago" and other coast-to-coast radio programs. With the two featured players on the Uncle Natchel program will be a group of Southern singers whose numbers will consist largely of old songs of the South collected and ar ranged by Ethel Park Richardson, the author of the sketches. An or ehestra of eleven pieces will provide the instrumental features of the pro gram. Artells Dixon, a native of Greenwood, La., who has been iden tified with such radio successes as the "Brer Rabbie Stories of Joel Chandler Harris," the "Rudy Val lee" program, "Show Boat," "Roses and Drums" and many others, have been engaged by the Natural Nitrate folks to be the announcer. o D. L. Culberson of Richmond County has 40 acres of lespedeza sericca from which he has harvested a seed supply to be certified by the North Carolina Crop Improvement Association. Eight pigs fed by Carey Dudley, Kinston, route 4, netted him a la bor profit of $67.71 in a 4-H proj ect. Carey fed the pigs a balanced ration for 124 days.