SSaE^I$ gf*o$?ty O ' ?T^*i WrT T * j 1 tie W eek m ^Ya:sbiiigtoii A KKSlTr.JE OF GO VEItNM EN MENTAL HAPPENINGS IN THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Wa5.hir.gton, Sept. 2.--With congress cut of the way as the focus of public attention, for the time being. Washington is relaxing by paying r.icre attention to the doings and personalities of men and women whose functions arc r.ot primarily political. i Somebody raised the question ?* , around the luole at the National Press Club, as to who is the hardest working member of the President's cabinet. After a very brief discussion there was unanimous agreement tha: that honor goes to Iiaroltl W. Ickes, secretary of the interior. CSeriamiy no other cabinet minnbc-rs has so many jobs. He gets appointed to committees and commis U. ;o Wtvuuoi. lie nao jnuvvu Jlllliaci: j such a tireless worker ami a first- , rate executive. lie gets things done. Duties of Mr. Ickes The work of the secretary of the | interior covers a fairly wide range : O: interests^ which most of Mr. Tckbs* prede'cSssprs have found enough to' attend to. But in addition to the duties involved in administering the i public land office, the rcclanjation : service, the bureau of Indian af- i fairs, the patent office, and a few j other brandies of the interior dc- J pa^tment; Mr. Ickes is the head of the public works administration, in | (Continued on page eight) Auction Land Sale ( Draws Wide Interest ' S. C. Eggers. local realtor, says that the sale Saturday of the Hamby subdivision has aroused more interest i in the public mind than any such event he has promoted in his entire ; career, and that a record-breaking I aggregation of bidders is expected to j be on hand. The property, which is being sold i to settle the estate of the late P. L. j Hamby is located two miles east of | Boone- on the North, Wilkesboro high- j way, and has been divided into 41 !1 -choice residential lots and 23 baby!' farms. The properLy. which is just j off the highway, is profusely studded < with large spreading oaks, and offers the home-builder some of the most. beautiful sites thus far offered in j this locality. A concrete reservoir has been so situated that each lot or tract may be supplied with a sufficient gravity supply of pure spring water, which has been approved by > H. S. Webster, sanitary inspector) with >ae local health department. ! Chas. Swaim of Greensboro, will' be the auctioneer, there will be concerts by a brass band, and there will be liberal prizes given. The sale wiil start promptly at 10 a. m. Saturday Brown to Address Ashe Co. Democrats! Wade K. Brown, Boone attorney, j wii! oe me principal speaker before i a county-wide meeting of the Young" 1 Democrats or' Ashe county, which i will be held at the courthouse in Jef- ! ^ fersor. Friday evening at S o'clock. ^ Mr. G. B. Gambili, county chairman of the organization, stated that new county officers will be elected j and that a slate of delegates would be chosen to attend the stute convention in Winston-Salem September 10-11. Officer Is Injured In Effecting Arrest i Monroe Greene, costable of Stony Fork township, received cuts about the left hand and arm Monday evening, allegedly inflicted b y , Dean Yates, whom the officer is drunkenness. Yates, it is averred, submitted to arrest, but brought the knife into play as he and the officen walked away. Yates was tried by Justice of the Peace Eugene Russell and in default of a 51,000 bond was committed to jail, ar.d will be tried at the Sep-! tcmber term of superior court. Blowing Rock School r..:u:? d. d ! UUUUUlg IU LIC JLJCgUll A ten-room addition to the Blowing; Rock high school building is to get under way shortly, it is an- j W nounced by T. D. Heffncr. area VVPA engineer of North Wilkesboro, who states that work on the construction will be pushed to completion before cold weather. The addition, which will be of brick construction, is to be built by "VVPA ar.d the county 3chool board at a cost of about $27,000, and will give that town a splendid type of building, adequate to the needs of I Ihe school. New York?More than $4,000,000 to combat infantile paralysis has been raised during the past four years by the President's Birthday 1 balls, under the direction of Col. H. L. DoHerty, national chairman of the philanthropy. WAl An 1] VOL. XLIX, NO. 8 BERN HODGES j ENDS OWN LIFE Kern Hodges, one of the most j ipstanding .voting men of the Ad- i nms neighhohnwl. was found fatally shot oil a porch to his homo . Wednesday morning about eleven o'clock, and while there was no message to indicate the cause of ' the suicide, it Is believed that poor tw-tlfh M (iu r..<..nnvil,l,. XI physical condition had gcen greatly impaired since his jtpfviwT-iir i**c y World War. Mr. Hodges. i( is said, had made a trip to Boone to visit a physician and on his return greeted his ; mother, and went into the house, filter he called to his mother, and , in a matter of seconds a gunshot I was heard. Mr. Hodges had step- | ped onto a porch and fired a hu.llrt j front it .22 cnlhlrc rifle into his head behind the ??:ir. Death resulted in about 30 minutes, without the injured man having regained consciousness. As The Democrat goes to pre**--, Funeral details had not been ar- i raiiRrd. Immediate survivors arc the widow and a year-ohl baby. STATE SEED LAW ! TO BE EXPLAINED Representatives of Department j of Agriculture Will Meet With Farmers on 11th Farmers of Watauga county have been invited to meet at the courthouse in Boone September 11 to hoar representatives of the N. C. department of agriculture and the N. C. j Crop Improvement association ex- ] pium uie oeneuts or me new siaie seed law. "The Value of Using Seed of j Known Origin" will be the theme of \ the meeting and plans are to show j a motion picture illustrating the ne- s cessity of using pure seed. "Simi- j lar meetings will be held in 39 coun- j ties between now and September 11, j and growers interested in better' farming practices will find these! meetings of vital importance" Coun- j ty Agent VV. B. Collins states. Speakers on the program to be j held at Boone will be J. VV. Woodside | and T. A. Holcomb, botli of the State i department of agriculture. In addition to explaining the new j law and brief talks on the prevention ; of seed dumping1 in North Carolina, j the services offered the farmers by: the department of agriculture's seed j laboratory free of charge will be out-| lined. Under the present law, any farmer j may send seed to the department at; Raleigh and obtain correct inforrha- j tion as to purity and germination j without cost. "The program for the department of agriculture calls for the elimination of impure seed in North Carolina, insofar as possible and the individual complaints of the seed purchasers and seed growers will De aired at the meeting and the cooperation of all farmers will be asked, looking toward the betterment of agriculture in North Carolina," D. S. Coltrane, assistant to Comfmissioner of Agriculture W. Kerr Scott, said. HARTZOG REUNION There will be a reunion of the Hartzog family at the home of Mr. Charlie Hartzog at Obids, Ashe county, on Sunday, September 5th. All connections of the family are invited to attend and enjoy the day. ASSOCIATION TO | GO TO OAK GROVE I Baptist Body Names New Officers; Church Near Boone to Entertain Next Year At the ninety-eighth annual session of the Three Forks Baptist Association held at Howard's Creek church iast Tuesday and Wednesday, it was decided that the next gathering would be at the Oak Grove church, one mile west of Boone, on Tuesday and Wednesday after the fourth Sunday in August. 193S. The gathering last week was attended by a large throng of people throughout its sessions and there was intense interest in the meeting. Following is the slate of new of| ficers elected: Rev. R. C. Eggers, j moderator; C. R. Greene, clerk and I treasurer; A. J. Greene, historian; G. ! F. Hagan-.an, chairman executive ; committee; N. M. Greene, chairman promotion committee; S. C. Eggers, Sunday School director; A. D. Wilson, hospital director; Rev. Philip Fletcher. BTU director; R. D. Hodges, orphanage director. Aua independent Weekly News BOONE, WATAUGA COUNT EFFORT MADE TO EXTEND SEASON AT BLOWING ROCK May view VViH Remain Open j Until October 15 so Tourists! May Be Entertained During | Colorful Autumn; Entertain-' mcnt of State Tour Tn an effort to prolong: the tour-I 1st" seasoii at Blowing- rcock, so that visitors may enjoy the glories of the j autumn foliage in the mountains, the j management of May view Manor, agreed the last of the week to re- ! main open until October 15. Reports | coming from the popular mountaintop hostelry indicate that there are a j record number of tourists anxious to ! remain in Blowing Rock during Sep- \ lembcr at least. Information is that the Blowing Rock hotel and probably I other hotels will remain open during I September and the first part of Oc- | ber. Old North State Tour" Another reason for the extension j of the hotel season is for the enter-1 tainment of the "Old North State i Tour" of the directors from travel bureaus and automobile clubs of the nation. This tour will be made ihrough the state October 10-20. Vai ious places on the route will entertain litem, and they have been invited to spend the night of Wednesday, October 13, as guests of the town of Blowing Rock. The town, with the business houses and hotels and inns, is co-operating with Mayview Manor. Influential Group Elnlertaining the tour membership | will, according to Chamber of Com- i mcrce officials, give Blowing Rock and the surrounding country an op-1 portunity to get before a group that' has the greatest influence in directing travel of any group in the nation. O. \V. Stone, secretary of the Blowing Rock Chamber of Commerce, said, "It behooves not only Blowing Rock but all of western North Carolina to combine resources and entertain these people in a big and different way. It will take close co-operation And hard work" but if everybody will do his part ,ahd if every interest that will derive benefit will contribute its part, the burden will be light on all, and no estimate can be placed nn thr> fiitnra vnliio r?f a fflvnrnhlp impression." COUNTY SINGING IS ON FIRST SUNDAY OCTOBER The regular county singing will be held at the courthouse in Boone on the ffrst Sunday in October, according to a joint announcement made Monday by N. L. Harrison, president, and 7. T. Greene, secretary of the singing- association. This will be the | choir singing by all the classes and all churches are asked to be re pry! sented on the program. The solo, duet aiul quartette singing which was held here last Sunday was well attended and an enjoyable occasion. S A M BROOKSfflRE STABBED BY NEGRO t ?> j uu\.ai man is ucvuvcuiig i' i uin Injuries Inflicted by Negro in West Virginia Sam Brookshirc, son of Mr. and Mrs. June Brookshire of Boone, and for some time night shipper for Wilson & Co.. Northfork, W. Va.. received severe injuries about the arir ar.d leg, when he was stabbed mori than a week ago by Rastus Harris colored, of Xorthfork. Brookshire, it is said, was standing in front of the Northfork hote when Harris approached and inquire., as to the whereabouts of a friend ol his. The negro apparently disbelieved Brookshire's answer, became en raged and drew a knife on him Brookshire in an attempt to disarn the negro, was stabbed a number o: times in the leg and arm. Harris was taken to jail and is be ing held there until the grand jun meets. Brookshire received treat I mem tor nts injuries, an