WEATHER --| wlminctom AND vicinity: cioudy MB B m Served By Leased Wires termitten t” tSday and^nfghf c^rl' II M B KB B K BKB ol the inU°THdayAND SOUTH CAROLINA. 1 U |i F III F ASSOCIATED PRESS Rain today cloudy B B B B eK BKB B| HK ^BBB an<* 1110 continued cool and windy, followed by B B B B B ^B ^B ~ B UNITED PRESS tCinuSingCOTrWMond"yW€St P°rti°n' Con' " ^ ____ .--- _ _ | ^ |bBI W W With Complete Coverage of _ '_htwe e»@i3t 8 Maximum 63. Minimum 48. Mean 5a. Normai 61. HUMIDITY 0 am 58, 7:30 am 87, 1:30 pm 64, pm 85 ,, PRECIPITATION L, ,orJ*'ei horns ending 7:30 pm! r)—Hoover Taft, president of the North Carolina Young Dem ocrats club, told the club’s execu tive committee tonight that “it is up to us to organize” and see that the wishes of the people are regarded. “The people do not want re publican reaction,” Taft declared. “They want Democratic action. We need to get the spirit of or ganization. Our party has slipped from the leadership which it should have in this country.” Edward Parler of Lancaster, a ranking member of the South Carolina Young Democrats, was a guest speaker. He advocated backing the Tru man policy and the Marshall plan to aid starving Europe. “Our nation escaped the hor: rors of war,” Parler said, “and is now enjoying the most pros perous period in its history. We should therefore not hesitate in helping our allied friends if we wish to establish a permanent peace.” Taft announced that W. A. Le land McKeighan of Pinehurst had been appointed a director of the Democrat club. Fred Campbell of Waynesville was named organizer for the Young Democrats club in Western North Carolina. NEW STORM DEATH MIAMI, Fla, Nov. 1—(TP)— Moseph Evans, 49, who suffered a fractured spine when he fell from a tree during the Sept. 17 hurri cane, died today in a Miami haspital making the toll 23. Artist Robbed $31,000 Jewels PEBBLE BEACH, Calif., Nov 1— (U.R) —Surrealist Galvadore Dali drew color pictures for the cops today, not to hang on the police station wall but to aid them in solving the burglary of his cabin where thieves list night stole $31,200 worth of jewelry and furs. The sneak thieves who pried open a side window of the ec centric painter’s cabin on the grounds of Del Monte Lodge got away wtith serpent and lizard bracelets, brooches shaped like cats, grapes, flies, and bees, his wife’s fur coats — everything but a limp watch. The excitable Dali, “devas tated at this loss”, stayed up most of the night sketching the jewelry designs from memory so the police could identify them if and when they show up through some “fence”. Lt. ‘Gene Trenner of the sheriff’s office said that the drawings would help a lot be cause the jewelry, most of it unique pieces, would be easy to identify. Dali itemized the stolen arti cles today, fixing their total value at $31,200. He said they included a $4,000 serpent brace let, a $1,000 lapel pin shaped like a cat and with a large diamond, a $400 lizard bracelet, an $800 brooch with three grapes in a cluster, a $400 collection of jeweled insects, 10 lapel pins shaped like various bugs and valued' at $5,000, an $800 gold bracelet, a $5,000 brooch with diamonds and rubies, a $3,000 spray of gold flowers, a $3,000 | Chinese solid gold basket. RHODES SUES FOR $100,000 Asheville, Hendersonville Accused In Son’s Death The cities of Asheville andj Hendersonville and Henderson county today were named de fendants in a $100,000 suit brought by N. C. Rhodes, Wilmington, father and administrator of the estate of his college student son fatally shot at the Asheville-Hen dersonville airport Aug. 7. A complaint filed with the clerk of Henderson Superior court al leged that N. Cecil Rhodes, 16, the son, a Mars Hill cellege sum mer student, was shot to death by J. R. Calton, a night watchman at the airport. Calton is under grand jury in dictment for murder. The crimi nal case against him is scheduled for the March term. The complaint described Cal ton as an agent for the defen dants, and alleged the shooting was “wrongful, unnecessary and felonious.” The defendants were described in the complaint as owning the airport and operating it through an airport board that employed Calton. The watchman told a coroner’s jury he shot when Rhodes did not heed his order to keep away from a plane. Balloting was lor J,/do council seats—one third of each borough council—in 392 cities and towns, not including London. Returns from 376 of these lo calities showed: Conservatives gained 623 seats, lost 17; Labor gained 42, lost 675, Liberals gained 46, lost 46; Communists gained none, lost nine; Independents gained 170, lost 134. Labor’s setbacks were reflect ed in such labor strongholds as servatives gained eight seats to wipe out Labor’s majority on the municipal council. The new strength is Labor, 68, Conserva tives 65, Independents three. Labor also lost control of the Manchester city council, although in industrial Sheffield the gov ernment party gained four seats from “Progressives” and strength ened its topheavy majority. While the conservatives failed to win control of many large industrial cities, Labor’s vote was cut to such an extent that the Attlee party lost previous ma jorities in Rugby, Lincoln, Read ing, Rochester and the London suburb of Wemley. Less than an hour after mid night, Conservative party head quarters issued a statement which said: me results so xai a»