The Alamance Gleaner Vol. LXIV ; GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1938 No. 25 Vcir# Review of Current Events CHARGES FILM MONOPOLY Government Sues Big Movie Producing Companies and Officers to Break Control Vincent Meyer, farmer of Johnson county, Kansas, received the first crop insurance policy issued by the Federal Crop Insurance corporation. Left to right in the picture above are: Donald Meyer, Mrs. Meyer, Rita, James, Joseph and Vincent Meyer, Roy M. Green of the Washington bureau of the corporation, and Roy Turner, Johnson county bureau super intendent. W. PuikAJul SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'S WEEK C Western Newspaper Union. Film Companies Sued T TNDERTAKING to break up what the government alleges is a great moving picture monopoly. At torney General Cummings started a civil anti-trust suit against 8 major mo tion picture produc ing companies, 25 subsidiary or associ ated companies and 132 officers or direc tors, in an effort to divorce production, distribution and ex hibition phases of the cinema industry. The suit was filed in the federal dis trict court for the Atty. Gen. Cummings southern district of New York. Fed eral Judge Henry W. Goddard signed an order for the service of subpoenas on all the defendants, di recting that each appear before the court in Neyr York within 20 days after being served. The government is seeking an equity decree, Thurman W. Arnold, assistant attorney general, an nounced, requiring the companies to divest themselves of ownership of theaters or of production and dis tribution facilities. The suit named Paramount Pic tures, Inc., Loew's Inc., Irving Trust company, New York, as trustee in bankruptcy for Radio-Keith-Orphe um corporation; Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., Twentieth Century Fox Film corporation; Columbia Pictures corporation; Universal cor poration; and United Artists corpo ration. Mr. Arnold said that allegedly mo nopolistic power exerted by the de fendants has a "tendency to drive independent theaters out of busi ness or to compel them to sell to the producer-owned theater chains on the latter's terms." 3k 7n First 'Death Clause' Case A CTING under the utility holding company act, the federal secu rities commission began its first ac tion to simplify a major utility hold ing company system. Chairman William O. Douglas an nounced that a hearing would be held in Washington August 8 to de termine what steps the $300,000,000 Utilities Power & Light corporation should take to limit operations "to a single integrated public utility sys tem." Douglas said the commission's ac tion was being taken under section 11B of the holding company act ? the so-called "death sentence" sec tion. Russia vs. Japan COVIET Russia and Japan, quar reling over a disputed territory at the junction of Manchukuo, Si beria and Korea, were openly threat ening each other. Maxim Litvinov, Soviet foreign commissar, in confer ence with Japanese Ambassador Shigemitzu in Moscow, told the lat ter that Russian troops would not be withdrawn from the area in question, that the territory was a part of Si beria, and that Japan would be held responsible for the consequences i 1 the present "calm" there is dis turbed. The two statesmen used violent language and the situation was considered decidedly delicate. Pick-a-back Flies Sea \/f ERCURY, the top part of the i novel British pick-a-back sea plane, separated from Maia, the lower and heavier part, about a thousand feet above Foynes, Ireland, and then sped across the North At lantic, making the crossing at mod erate speed and without mishap. Passing over Botwood, Newfound land, the pilot flew on 850 miles fur ther to Montreal, alighting on the St. Lawrence. After refueling the plane completed its flight at New York. The flying time from Foynes to Montreal was 20 hours and 20 min utes. Madden Is Accused T WARREN MADDEN, chairman of the national labor relations board, was charged with secretly conferring in Washington last De cember with C. I. O. officials con cerning the Weirton Steel company hearing at Steubenville, Ohio. The charges almost broke up a hearing of the board. The three members of the board were considering the appeal of Clyde A. Armstrong, chief counsel for the steel company, who was barred from the Weirton hearing by Examiner Edward Grandison Smith. Attorney E. F. Reed, acting for Armstrong, made these charges: That C. I. O. Organizer Kenneth Coe, active in the Weirton hearing, went to Washington last December, conferred secretly with Madden, and then returned for another confer ence with Lee Pressman, chief coun sel of the C. I. O. That another C. I. O. follower, an armed constable, served subpoenas for the labor board, while requests by Weirton lawyers for subpoenas were ignored for weeks. That Donald Wakefield Smith, jun ior member of the labor board, at tended the Weirton hearing last No vember 18 and made disparaging re marks about Counsel Armstrong during the taking of evidence. L Strike Brings Martial Law P OVERNOR KRASCHEL of Iowa declared martial law in New ton, home of the Maytag Washing Machine company, whose plant was kept closed by C. I. O. pickets de spite efTorts of nearly half the em ployees to return to work. National Guardsmen with armored cars and machine guns occupied the area but before they got there the two labor factions had a bloody street battle. In North Chicago pickets of the Steel Workers' organizing commit tee, affiliated with C. I. O., who had been keeping employees from re turning to a hardware plant in de fiance of court orders, were routed by deputy sheriffs with tear gas. Charles P. Howard Dies pHARLES P. HOWARD, president ^ of the International Typograph ical union and secretary of the C. I. O., died in his sleep at Colorado Springs, Colo. He was fifty-eight years old. Howard was defeated for re-election in a referendum last May by C. M. Baker of San Francisco and would have gone out of office September 1. Owen Wister, author of "The Vir ginian" and other novels, died at his summer home in North Kingston, R. I., at the age of seventy-eight British Monarch* in Paris IflNG GEORGE VI and Queen ^ Elizabeth of England went to Paris for a state visit of four days, and this was regarded as a vitally important event politically. Appar ently it was undertaken to let the dictator countries know that Great Britain and France would continue to stand firmly as allies. Britain's foreign secretary, Via count Halifax; the French premier, Edouard Oaladier, and Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet held po litical talks to discuss the world situation during the visit. To demonstrate the strength France can lend the common cause with Great Britain, the French pa raded 50,000 men and their latest war machines before George and President Lebrun. This military display outdid that put on in Rome for Hitler, and it was significant that places in the reviewing stand were reserved for the German and Ital ian military attaches. After the re view the royal visitors were sump tuously entertained at the Palace of Versailles. ? * ? C.I.O. Proposes a Purge \/f ORE than 40 members of con gress are marked for C. I. O. opposition in the fall elections by a blacklist formulated by John L. Lewis and given out by E. L. Oliver, ex ecutive vice presi dent of Labor's Non partisan league, the political agency of the Committee for Industrial Organiza tion. Oliver said the opposition to those named was based chiefly on their stand on the wage hour bill. He indi John L. Lewis cated it merely was a coincidence that almost without exception those marked for defeat also fought Mr. Roosevelt's government reorganiza tion and Supreme court packing bills. Included in the Lewis blacklist are Senators Tydings of Maryland, Adams of Colorado and Lonergan of Connecticut. ? * ? Wheat Allotment U R. TOLLEY, AAA adminlatra tor, announced a national wheat allotment for fall and spring planting of not more than 59,000,000 acres ? the mini mum allowable un der the act. The action, which came as the result of the 967,000,000 bushel yield forecast for this year on a seeded acreage of 80,000,000, came in the form of an order signed by M. L. Wilson, acting secretary of agricul ture. B. R. Toller State allotments for 1939 com pared with 1938 and 1928-'37 average acreage of wheat land in the major grain producing states include: Pennsylvania, 772,659 acres, com pared with 1,093,000 in 1928 and 1,039,076 for the 1928-'37 period; Ok lahoma, 3,783,954 ; 5,959,000 and 5,088,684; Texas, 3,684,863 ; 5,315,000 and 4,955,426. Illinois, 1,789,192 ; 2,074,000, and 2,406,116; Indiana, 1,481,810; 2,029, 000 and 1,992,747; Iowa, 389,177 ; 686, 000 and 523,367; Michigan, 669,954; 917,000 and 900,958; Minnesota, 1, 418,702; 2,582,000 and 1,907,878; Mis souri, 1,705,277; 2,717,000 and 2,293, 266; Nebraska, 3,049,982 ; 5,041,000 and 4,101,634; Ohio, 1,654,847 ; 2,415, 000 and 2,225,448; South Dakota, 2, 943,821; 4,277,000 and 3,958,867; Wis consin, 90,203; 128,000 and 121,306. California, 626,306 ; 815,000 and 842,260; Colorado, 1,314,022; 1,846, 000 and 1,767,104; Idaho, 895,549; 1, 253,000 and 1,204,340; Kansas, 11, 067,349; 17,453,000 and 14,883,436; Montana, 3,414,642 ; 4,918,000 and 4, 592,030; North Dakota, 8,300,488; 10, 634,000 and 11,162,545; Oregon, 768, 303; 1,013,000 and 1,033,218; Wash ington, 1,681,159 ; 2,295,000 and 2,260, 832. 'Sneak' Flight Over Ocean ]~)OUGLAS P. CORRIGAN, a young airplane motor expert from California, couldn't get per mission from the air commerce bu reau to fly across the Atlantic, so he started off secretly from Floyd Bennett field, New York, and land ed at Baldonnel, Ireland, 28 hour* and 13 minutes later. The remarkable feature of the flight was that it was made in a rickety old single-motored Curtisi Robin plane that was not equipped with navigation instruments, radio or the ordinary safety devices. Cor rigan did not even carry a para chute. Having neither flight penrdt, land ing papers nor passport, Corrigan laughingly declared in Dublin that he had intended to fly back to Cali fornia but set his magnetic compass wrong and flew in the opposite di rection. His was the sixth west-east solo flight across the Atlantic. What's Your HOBBY? Everybody's Doing lit The Banker Has a Toy Railroad, the Botcher is a Camera Fan, and the Baker Collects Stamps I By JOSEPH W. LaBINE How do you spend your spare time? Or do you waste it? There's a difference, you see. It's easy to stand on a street corner and watch the world go by, but you're apt to crawl into bed that night feeling like a fifth wheel on the buggy that makes this world go 'round. How to utilize spare time is a problem that vexed mankind long before bored monarchs snapped their pudgy fingers to make the pipers play. Today, in a world of shorter working hours and increased social consciousness, intelligent use of our "loafing" hours is a serious matter. But don t take< it seriously; instead, why not find a hobby? In every walk of life these, days you're apt to meet stapip collectors, candid cam era fans and miniature rail road builders. The garage mechanic who tunes up your motor ^probably tinkers with , short-wave radio between the evening meal and bedtime. A United States Supreme court justice may surreptitiously read detective stories when no body's looking, and your doctor might collect rare old books. ance. It'* a hobby that demand* use of the jigaaw and a lot a* pa tience. In the end he develop* a unique skill that may serve him in good stead should the electrical engineering profession fail him. That, incidentally, is an important feature of hobbies. More than one amateur tinkerer has turned his avo cation into a money-making busi ness. In Massachusetts a woman who grew up with a liking for tink ering over old, broken-down bicy cles has now made that her busi ness. And a good many years ago the Wright brothers spent their spare time playing with gliders in a deserted spot called Kitty Hawk, N. C. Look what happened to them! "Cream on Your Porridge." It's reached a stage where the curious thing to look for is not peo ple who have hobbies, but those who don't. Someone has called it a way to "put cream on your porridge," which means that a not-too-serious hobby will add zest to the most humdrum life. Nor need your work a-day job be humdrum; Henry Ford, one of America's busiest industrial magnates, devotes his spare time to building the famous Greenfield village at Dearborn, ,*fich. . Albert Einstein, the scientist, relaxes by sawing away at his violin. Aiidre Kostelanetz, the orchestra leader, is an expert wood carver. Pick up the paper almost any day and you'll find an item about your next door neighbor's hobby. In Chi cago one evening last year, M. J. Smit, a retired gas company super intendent, was visiting a friend's home. The friend remarked that he was going to build a model of the Italian liner, Rex. That set Mr. Smit to thinking and a few days later he started building his own steamship, a three-foot model of the gigantic Normandie. Mr. Smit, who is sixty-eight years old, suddenly discovered a new meaning in life. "I found I'd been missing something," he says. "It's great fun making model steamships and I'm going to keep doing it that rest of my life." Ace in the Hole. A few blocks away Arthur Laed erach, an electrical engineer, goes down to his whitewashed basement each evening and works at the hob by of years' standing? marquetry. This is the science of making land scapes, still life pictures and ab stract designs with veneer woods, inlaid to give the proper appear More than one stamp collector has had similar good fortune, turning hlj hobby into a professional stamp business that netted a living income. And in California the newest avo cation is "hobby mining," in which amateur prospectors take to the hills each week-end in search of gold. This has resulted in a rush for claims, reminiscent of last century's gold stampede. These modern pros pectors aren't finding much gold, but they have hopes and meanwhile it's a lot of fun. Some of them will probably strike it rich. Career Hobbies. Then there's also the hobby which can be joined with your professional career. An example is Mildred Dil ling, internationally known harpist who began her rise to fame with a second-hand harp. When she re tires from the concert stage, many years hence, she'll have something more tangible than memories, be cause she spends her spare time collecting old, rare, curious and his toric harps. Some hobbies can make you feel like a kid again, which isn't a bad idea. Several years ago some youth ful minded father bought his young ster an electric toy train for Christ mas and had so much fun with it himself that he bought another. That hobby, model railroading, has grown overnight until now many a hard-headed business man spends his evenings playing with a minia ture train. It isn't child's play, however. The serious model railroader builds his own "rolling stock" to exact scale size and has from 200 to 1,000 feet of track on which to run it. Today you can buy disassembled minia ture railroad parts and build your own system, consisting of engines, Pullmans, coaches and innumerable types of freight cars. Train hobby ists prefer freights because of the variety they offer. Or, You Might Try? There's a humorous side to hob bying, too. Out in Halfway, Ore., Walter W. Evans collects ? of all things ? official positions! Evans is vice president and cashier of the First National bank, city treasurer, high school clerk, secretary-treasur er of the telephone company, key banker for his county banking asso ciation, public education committee man for the same organization, and president of the Northwest Oregon Bankers association. Recently he decided to run for Justice of the peace. Then, in Akron, Ohio, we find Wal ter Thompson, a gasoline station at tendant who in the past two years has dissuaded 10 persons from sui cide. That, says Thompson, is his hobby. His station is located at the end of a bridge. At nearby Cleve land a strange fellow who Jumped through the trees at Brookside park, clad in a tiger skin breech clout, turned out to be nothing more than a Tarzan hobbyist. But police warned him to practice elsewhere. Maybe the suicide stopper and the amateur Tarzan aren't true hobby ists, but to discover how important this business has become, you need only look at one of the exhibitions staged by people who have found a happy pastime and are willing to tell the world about it. Famous People, Quaint Hobbies. Famous people sometimes have unique hobbies. Jane Pickens, the songstress, weaves rugs and makes bobbin lace because it gives her time to think. Chester Morris, the movie star, is an amateur magi cian and Dr. Frank Black, musical director for a broadcasting network, plays with chemistry during his spare time. Right now he is experi menting with liquid rubber to use in making sculpture molds. Perhaps you already have a hob by. If not, take a little sage ad vice from the experts before de veloping one. The best way, they say, is to fall into something you really enjoy. Don't deliberately look for a hobby; simply drift into a stimulating avo cation that brings you real enjoy ment. Another thing, don't be too strict about your hobby, because if you tie yourself up with a lot of restrictions the whole thing will suddenly be come very irksome. If you're not careful, your hobby is apt to take too much time at first. You may get so enthusiastic that life becomes one continual mental tussle between your hobby and your better self. But eventually you'll emerge from this stage with a bal anced viewpoint, having learned to live with this new companion. You'll discover that moderation in all things is an excellent idea, but what's more important, you'll not be alone with a pair of twiddling thumbs the next rainy afternoon! C Weatern Newspaper Union. Old BIO Morris rf tbc BIm Ridge montali district in North Carolina tends this ancient frontier Ore as hla hobby. The flame was started by his ancestors 148 years >[t and has been kept alive ever since. Storm Wrecks Home; Blow* Deed SO Miles MARBLE HILL, MO. ? A storm wrecked the farm home of G. C. Key, in Hahn, Mo., carrying away a deed to the property. Two weeks later Key got the deed back through the mail. A farm er of Brazeau had found it. Brazeau is SO miles from Hahn. SON THOUGHT DEAD TURNS UP AT HOME * Greets Mother, 'Hello, Mas,' She Moans and Faints. MASONTOWN, PA The identity of a youth buried in a little ceme tery near here became a mystery with the return of fifteen-year-old Donald Fiore from a two-year hitch hiking trip. For Donald's parents buried then a year ago the body of a lad they believed was their son, missing since February, 1936. The body was that of a boy shot accidentally whils playing postofSce ? a kissing gams ? in a- darkened room of an CHhre Hill, Ky., home. On a little steel marker above the grave, tended carefully and cov ered with flowers by a grieving mother, was a card inscribed, "Doo ald Fiore, died April 26. 1337.** "I Buried Ton a Tear Ago." ? When Donald, a tall, handsome lad with a friendly smile, came home, he completed the last IT miles of the Journey home afoot, and he stopped first to visit Father Francis Kolb. As he walked into the home the priest looked up Iron his desk, incredulous. "Why, I buried you a year ago, didn't I?" he exclaimed. Then Donald heard for the first time of his supposed death. Donald's stepfather, Raymond Fiore, operates a tailoring shop. As Donald walked into the store, the father hurried to the front, expecting a customer. He stared unbelievingly at the husky youth. "Hello, pop," Donald smiled. The father called Mrs. Fiore. "Hello, mom," Donald greeted her. She moaned and fainted. Now that her son is home, Mrs. Fiore will not forget the grave with its flowers. She said a tombstone already ordered, will bear the name "Donald." Injured Dog Wander* OIF; Found in Plane Search! DES MOINES. ? An automobil* accident which befell Butch, a kind ly faced Springer spaniel, resulted in an airplane search, a plane ambulance ride, and hospitalization ' for the dog the other day. Butch, owned by Robert Sim an, flight instructor of the Des Moines flying service, took off for parts un known after being hit by a car. After a futile search by car. Si man took off in a plane. Flying at 500 feet he finally spotted the dog ia a ravine west of Fort Des Moinea army post. Siman landed in a field nearby, picked up the injured dog, returned to the airport with Butch in the plane, and took the dog to a veter inarian by automobile. The dog suffered only minor in ternal injuries. Snake Turns Hitchhiker For Trip to Lot Angeles LOS ANGELES? A hitchhiking gopher snake climbed aboard an automobile in a suburban canyon and let his tail hang down only after the car was parked at Third and Broadway in downtown Los An geles. Five hundred persons thronged the sidewalk and blocked the street watching Frank Pittman rip up the floorboards of his car and pull out the snake. A spectator took tha snake home. Bird Set* Roof Afire With Lighted Cigarette NEWARK N. J.? A sparrow that fluttered about with a lighted cigar ette in its beak was blamed by Pa trolman Martin Heisele for a fir* that damaged a roof. The officer reported the Are as "apparently caused by a bird carry ing a lighted cigarette to its nest under the eaves." The Silver Didn't Rot LOOMIS, NEB. ? Eight years ago Charles E. Ericson lost his billfold while cultivating corn. Recently Earl Thorell, present occupant of the same farm, found the billfold in the same field while burning weeds. The paper money in it had rotted, but two silver dollars re i mained.