TEACHER PENSION PLAN ‘ASSURED Broughton Says He Will Back Recommendations Of Committee -RALEIGH, Dec. 14.—(S’1—Pen sions for North Carolina public school teachers and all other s employes seemed assured tonight, after Governor-elect Broughton an nounced that he would support the pension recommendations of a spe cial legislative commission which has been studying the feasibility of establishing a retirement system., The first indication of Broughton s support came at a meeting this after noon of educational leaders repre senting most of the major school organizations in the state. The gov ei-nor-elect, speaking briefly at the meeting, said he expected, the 1941 general assembly to approve pen sions for all state employes. Later, Broughton told newsmen they might interpret that remark as meaning that he favored the recom mendations of the special legislative commission. The commission recent ly made public a plan under which the state would pay about $1,500,000 a year to establish the retirement fund. Since no opposition has been voiced to the commission’s proposal, it appeared certain that the legis lature would pass a Broughton-sup ported bill embodying the recommen dations. 6 MILLION MORE JOBS BY 1942 (Continued From Page One) simpler elements, which can be performed by workers with only a few months’ training ” This process of dilution “strikes at the basis of the trade union by disintegrating the trade itself,” the research staff contended. “Dilution is a one-way road, and it will not be possible after the crisis to restore to the skilled trades the work which has been lost to them in the meantime. “Naturally, therefore, the unions want to delay the process until it is absolutely necessary. They seem willing to compromise, however, provided the new semi-skilled workers are paid the rate previ ously earned by journeymen on the same work.” The report stressed the desirabil ity of having both labor and em ployers represented on all agen cies working out questions of train ing and dilution. 1 rtL/V IjIV 1 I kJXJXYAXX Lemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If you suffer from rheumatic, ar thritis or neuritis pain, try this sim ple inexpensive home recipe that thousands are using. Get a package of Ru-Ex Compound, a two-week supply, today. Mix it with a quart of water, add the juice of 4 lemons. It’s easy. No trouble at all .and pleasant. You need only 2 table spoonsful two times a day. Often within 48 hours—sometimes over night—splendid results are obtained. If the pains do not quickly leave and if you do not feel better, return the empty package and Ru-Ex will cost you nothing to try as it is sold by your druggist under an absolute money-back guarantee. Ru-Ex Com • pound is for sale and recommended by Saunders Drug Store and drug • stores every where. She’ll Reign In Rose Bowl Envy of many a girl who sees this picture is comely Sally Stanton, above. She was elected Rose Bowl Queen and will reign over the an nual New Year’s Bay Tournament of Roses at Pasadena, Cal._ WORK BEGUN ON HI LY RIDGE BASE (Continued From Page One) r.eers ran surveys over a wide area, apparently plotting streets and arrangement of offices. All sorts of skilled and unskilled labor continued to drift in and through Holly Ridge, seeking work or lodging until they could secure work. 5 CHARLOTTE S CAMP CHARLOTTE, Dec. 14.—t.P>—Con struction of the $1,235,000 Army air corps base at Charlotte will provide an average employment of about 2,SCO men for three months. Con struction will lie started January 1 and will be completed about April 1. Lieut. Col. Reading Wilkinson of Charleston, S- C-, Army engineer corps district engineer, will be corps supervisor of the Charlotte project, the contract for which will be let to a private contractor within a few days. Wilkinson, releasing the informa tion by telephone to the Charlotte News, said he would be succeeded as Army district engineer by Col. W. P. Ladue, Army engineer corps, retired, who has been recalled tc active duty. The Charlotte water department and the WPA Monday will start building a $39,000 pipe line for the base, for which a limited water sup ply now is available. About 2,000 officers and men will be stationed at the base. FEET WORRY LALANNE CHAPEL HILL, N. C.—Jim La lanne, North Carolina back, says he’d like to play professional foot ball, but doesn’t know whether his flat feet would stand the hard grind over a period of years. 1 The average increase in the sale of electric light bulbs in the United States is 10 per cent a year. F. D. R. ON WAY TO WARM SPRINGS (Continued From Page One) lish plane and naval bases in Brit ish territory and thereby forge a chain of outlying defenses for the continent and the Panama Canal. Mr. Roosevelt found the sites at the islands of Jamaica, St. Lucia, and Antigua in the Caribbean met the qualifications of supplying anchorage for essential maintenance and supply ships and areas for sea and land plane operators. But at Mayaguana island in the Bahamas, where a special board had recommended that a plane base be located at shallow, reef-smeltered Abrahamas Bay, he said anchorages were poor and that efforts would be made to find something better. That was one of the matters he discussed yesterday when the cruise was climaxed by his first meeting since 1919 with the Duke of Windsor. WEIGHTY PROBLEMS WASHINGTON, Dec. 14. —UP)— Many weighty problems and a desk piled high with work await Presi dent Roosevelt when he returns to the White House Monday from his Caribbean cruise. Within the next three weeks, the chief executive must prepare twTo important documents for presenta tion to the new congress meeting in January. The first is the budget for the fiscal year beginning June 1, and the other is his annual mes sage on “the state of the union." Executive departments already have sent data to the White House for Mr. Roosevelt's use in preparing these messages. The President also will find on his desk the W'alter-Logan bill, a measure highly distasteful to some administration aides. He must act upon it by Wednesday, or allow it to become law- without his signature, and Washington, generally, expects a veto. The bill would broaden the jurisdiction of the courts over the decisions and procedure of such governmental agencies as the labor board and the communications com missions. Foremost among policy matters which appear pressing for decisions are tire questions of financial aid for Great Britain and energizing the defense program. Defense efforts admittedly are lag ging. William S. Knudsen, defense commissioner in charge of produc tion, disclosed last night that air plane production was SO per cent behind estimates made last July. NEW YORK OPENS 6TH AYE. SUBWAY (Continued From Page One) litics, particularly in the form of that old political football, the nickel fare. Survivor of long and loud debates over the years, the 5-cent fare is still here. And the board of trans portation says it’s likely to be around awhile, judged by the results of transit unification, consummated last June when the city took over the privately owned I. R. T. and B. M. T. lines. Construction of the system began in 1900 on the I. R. T. and has been going on ever since. Early American colonists mixed fruits with their potatoes and then cooked the mixture with sugar for variety. ~~ ticcd 4-^°°r ■ 1941 Price Reductions of $70 to $159 Put ■ Sensational Nash Ambassadors in Price ■ Brackets Never Before Reached by Such ■ Big, Powerful, Value-Packed Cars I X Even a quick glance at the chart above tells you something’s happened in the 1941 IK Automobile World . . . and it has! The ^B Nash Ambassador Six (compared above) iH is typical of the amazing values Nash offers X America this year. Reason? $7,000,000 lip spent for new and more modern methods X of construction enables Nash to reduce |B prices while the rest of the industry raises ;• prices. These great cars enter new lower PJ price fields—and you get more Car, more IS: luxury, more size and features for your H money! Let these figures whet your appe jpP tite—then come in and drive it. A com ■ plete comparison is even more amazing. 4 X NASH BUILDS BETTER "6"s AND "8 "s IN THE THREE MAJOR PRICE-FIELDS I The chart above shows only the middle series of Nash cars for 1941. In each major price-field there is a Nash value just as unusual! \ Ambassador "600". America’s newest car in the "All 3’* field... the first big car that delivers 2 5 to 30 miles on a gallon of gas. New < /v * 1941 prices, including Federal Taxes 2(01 || and standard equipment, as low as . . Q I II Ambassador Six. The amazing competitive value shown in the score chart above. New low * prices, including Federal Taxes and $ 1 AO A standard equipment, as low as . . . * I II /II Ambassador light. Fine car luxury at a new 1 ow price. ! Straight eight, valve-in-head 115 horse- * power Twin Ignition engine. Yet a big t *1 1 A ^ 4-door sedan, including Federal Taxes * I I LL / and standard equipment, is only . * * * I ‘DELIVERED IN THIS CITY LONG MOTOR CO. 114 North 2nd St. Phone 3211 World Bulletins (Continued From Page One) ter of Mrs. Elizabeth Deegan, who was released by German au thorities in France today after being held a week, was so de lighted when she received the news that she could hardly speak. S. 0. S. NEW YORK, Dec. 14.——Mrs. Agnes Borg, 35 year old farm wife whose two chil dren were found shot to death in their home last Sunday, was adjudged insane in the Bureau county court today. "HEIL HITLER” MEXICO CITY, Dec. 14.—(/P) —Roving bands shouting “Heil Hitler” interrupted the showing of the film “The Man I Mar ried” tonight in eight motion picture theaters and fIed_before police could be called. PLANT BURNS HOBOKEN, N. J., Dec. 14.— (/P)—Fire of undetermined origin today wrecked the plant of the Condenser Service and Engi neering corporation plant, which has received U. S. Army con tracts for about $20,000 in con densers and steel mooring buoys. FORD CONTRACT WASHINGTON, Dec. 14.—