?4 An Independent Weekly Newspaper ? Established in the Year 1 888. BOONE, WATAUGA COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1946 VOL. LVII, ? NO. 41 COOK RE-ELECTED COUNTY CHAIRMAN ?. 0. P. COMMITTEE Clyde R. Greene Renamed Sec retary at Republican County Convention; Many Local Par tisans Attend State Convent ion in Winston-Salem Today. A large number of Watauga coun ty Republicans gathered in conven tion at the courthouse Saturday at which time, an executive committee was named and Earl D. Cook, of Boone, was re-elected chairman of the committee for the third time. Clyde R. Greene, likewise was re elected Secretary of the committee. Watt H. Gragg presided over the convention which was opened by Chairman Cook, and Paul Coffey acted as Secretary in the absence of Mr. Greene. Aside from the naming of the committee and its officers, the only business transacted was that of nam ing delegates to the State convention in Winston-Salem today. Under the plan adopted each township was to name its own delegates. It is likely that a large number of local Republicans will attend the State convention and hear the ad dress by former Governor Harold 2. Stassen, of Minnesota, who is frequently mentioned as a possible candidate for the Presidency on the Republican ticket in 1948. Mr. Stas sen managed the Wilkie campaign for the nomination in 1940, and is highly regarded, particularly in the liberal element of his party. Boone convention delegates are: John W. Hodges, D. L. Wilcox, R. D. Hodges, Jr., Kenneth B. Linney, W. H. Gragg, G. K. Moose, Paul A. Cof fey, H. S. Storie, Clint Cannon, Jack Storie. J. V. Caudill, Jr. Antonakos President Dramatic Association New officers of the Carolina Dra matic association were elected at a business session held in connection with the 23rd annual state drama festival which came to a close at the University of North Carolina here ta&fcht They are A. Antanakos, dramatic | director of Appalachian State Tea ctess college, president; Miss Jennie Martin. ' drama director, Hamlet high achocd, vice-president; and the ftBing members of the executive oatnmittee: Miss Alice Lee Harris, fields boro high; Mrs Pearl Setzer Deal, Lenoir-Rhync college; Miss Bonnie Wengert, Mars Hill College; Mks. F. L. Padgett, Venable High Scbobl. W^st Asheville; and Miss Jo MMhine Wible, Winston-Salem high. JgUM Lynette Warren of Chapel KUl is executive secretary. "Prof. Samuel Selden. director of 1fee Carolina Playmakers, addressing business session, revealed that approximately $10,000 has been raised so far in the Koch memorial fund campaign, $3,000 of which was contributed by Chapel Hillians. GOVERNMENT MAY STEP INTO SOFT COAL STRIKE | First indications o t possible gov ernment intervention in the soft coal dispute were heard Monday as a top labor official who asked not to be named, said be beleived "the government will do something this week." , Previous White House pronounce- 1 merits indicated a hands-off policy | in the walkout of 400,000 AFL Unit ed Mine Workers which John L.| Lewis called April 1, following a| breakdown of contract negotiations. Meanwhile the first picketing in the coal strike was reported yester day at a mine in Pageton, W. Va. Union officials said the picketing, ?which halted mine repair opera tions, followed the company's alleg ed refusal to sign a retroactive pay agreement in return for the union's permission to allow repair crews to work. Lewis said when the national walk I out begun ther? would be no pick-| sting. $460,000,000 BEING SPENT TO MAKE ATOMIC BOMBS The United States is spending $400,000,000 a year to manufacture and improve atomic bombs and to explore new military and civilian tan for this new comic force, a re liable source revealed today. Practically all o< this program, it was said, is being financed out of the president's special war funds, which are in effect a blank treas ury check to be drawn on as Mr. Truman sees fit. It was the first authentic diaclos urr of the scale on which the United States is continuing its atomic pro ject, after a secret war-time outlay MB f more than two billion dollars to develop the first super bombs that Masted Japan into surrender. OUTSTANDING aft ? m Y-. . ' wij&v ?.