The Carolina Watchman jgggf , FOUNDED 1832—101ST YEAR SALISBURY, FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 2, 1934. . yOL 1Q1 NQ 31 PRICE 2 CENTS. I "" ' ' " """ " ' " .. ». I — . \ Larohnas Get Soil Projects TO AID MILLIONS BY* BELIEF PLAN , Federal Aid To Reclaim Many Acres Deep River and Brown Creek Val leys to Get Improvements. ' H. POINT HEADQUARTERS ' Texas Man To Direct Erosion Work, Three Counties Are Affected. Selection of 137,000 acres on the upper watershed of Deep River, in North Carolina, and 5 8,000 acres on the watershed of Brown creek in North Carolina and South Carolina, as companion acres for a federal soil erosion project has been announced by the interior de partment’s soil erosion service me raeep river area lies in the counties of Guilford, Randolph and Forsyth. Most of the Brown creek project lies in Anson and Union counties, North Car/ina, with the area extending about three miles across the South Caro lina line into Chesterfield county. Dr. James FI. Stallings of Texas, soil and southern agriculture spe cialist, was appointed regional di rector of the project by ^Director H. H. Bennett, of the soil erosion service. Dr. Stallings will make his headquarters in High. Point, N. C. This project (will be one of 20 major undertakings scatered ' throughout the United States as the initial working points in a na tional program of soil erosion spon sored by the soil erosion service. These projects are being located within regions where the problem of erosion is known to be serious, regions that differ from one an other in some aspect or soil, top ography, intensity of rainfall or type of agriculture. The service hopes to carry through these pro grams with such success that they will lead to work on all areas need ing control. Fine Meeting Of P. O.S. of A. Is Held In Salisbury National officers, state officers and delegates from various camps of the Patriotic Order Sons of Am erica gathered here Saturday night, enjoyed a banquet at the Empire hotel and held an enthusiastic • "pep”* meeting. The purpose of | the meeting was to sponsor the : progress of the order in the state. Hugh G. Mitchell, of Statesville, | national vice president, was toast ; master. George Uzzell, president . of Washington camp, 24, here, - made the address of welcome, ; which was responded to by H. H. ; Koontz, of Lexington, past na 1 tional president. Dr. James W. ! Davis, of Statesville, outlined the - P. O. S. of A. health program, j which the order is sponsoring. Poli - cies of the funeral benefit associa s tion were outlined by J. C. Ros ier, state treasurer, and Fred O. Sink, Lexington, state secretary. - Membership expansion was discuss > ed by J. T. Graham, of Cleveland, , state president. L x nt luttLui^ vv (ix a. xi xvxx t tn - joyable affair with 165 officers, a delegates and visitors present, e Music was furnished by the Salis 1 bury high school band and several vocal numbers were rendered by a members of the Catawba College e glee club. J CAT’S SCRATCH FATAL A small scratch near the cornei - of his mouth from a cat which h( s was holding in his arms proved fa e tal to Joseph G. Matheny, seven year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ear e Matheny, of Forest City, deatf e claiming the lad at the Rutherforc hospital. # NEWS BRIEFS INJURIES FATAL TO WOMAN Mrs. Etta Roberts, 61, of Greens boro, received1 injuries' on Satur day when hit by a car, which caused her death Sunday night. H. W. Meade, also of Greensboro, is held under charges of man slaughter. U. N. C. STUDENTS HURT An automobile crash near Lynch burg Saturday caused bad injuries to two students of the University of North Carolina. Harley Shu ford, 21, of Hickory, may lose an ear; the other youth received a broken nose. JOHN McGRAW PASSES John McGraw, famed leader of the New York Giants for many years and who led his team to vie tory through ten National' League contests, died in a New York hos pital Sunday following an illness of ten days. JHe ,was buried in Baltimore Wednesday. COLLEGE STUDENTS KILLED BY GAS Nine students at Dartmouth col lege were fourfd dead Sunday in a fraternity house, victims of car bon monoxide poisoning, says a Hanover, N. H. dispatch. The collie dog belonging to one of the boys was also dead. Escaping gas from the furnace is supposed to have caused the disaster. MARRIED MAN ASSAULTS GIRL. 11 Will Lawson, 22, is being held in Forsyth county jail charged with nreault- unrtn an 1 1 old white girl, and Leona Mace more, young white woman, is be ing held as accessory before the fact. The little girl was pro nounced badly injured by the phy sician making examination. CRAZED YET MURDERED HIS FAMILY John Cane, crazed ex-soldier and patient in a psychopathic hos pital at Oklahoma City, confessed that he killed' his 2 5 -year-old wife and their four little children last June, and that he buried their bodies by the iwayside in a lonely lane. Officials found the bodies as mute evidence of the tragedy. Cane is being held on charges of murder. SI UWIS i yiJV£, HMV I 1 Winter tornadoes swept through three southern states Sunday night leaving a trail of wreckage in Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia. Many homes were demolished and scores of people lost their lives. At Meridian, Miss., a family of six was wiped out. The tornado took practically the same course as that of 1932, when 300 lost their lives in Alabama. SHOOTS DOWN SHELBY WOMAN Florence Jones was alleged to have been shot by Louis Sentell, 40-year-old Byrum hosiery mill I worker at Shelby, Saturday. Tht young woman was said to have come to Shelby to secure work, and used her maiden name. She died in the hospital following the shooting, and was identified b): her husband William Drake. Mrs Drake had declined a few days be fore to accept a ride in a truc!< driven by Sentcll, and this is sup posed to have led to the act. CONGRESSMAN DIES Representative Joseph I. Hooper Republican of Michigan, droppec dead of a heart attack in his of fice, in the house office building He had just returned from the floo: of the house, where he made a Ion; speech on the air mail contrac situation. Hooper |whs 57. Hi: home was in Battle Creek, Mich. Directing Army Flying of the Mail _| WASHINGTON, » ■» Above are the flight officers making up the General Staff in command of the Army’s job of carrying the air mail under the order of Postmaster General Farley. They took over the job on Feb. 19th. No. 1, Brig-Gen. Oscar Westover, in charge of Army Corps mail operations with headquarters here; No. 2, Maj. Byron Q. Jones, Eastern division, Newark, N. J.; No. 3, Col. Horace M. Hickman, Central division, Chicago; No. 4, Lieut.-Col. Henry M. Arnold, Pacific division, Salt Lake City. Insert; Army plane taking on mail at Newark. Novel lown To Be By-Product Of Tenn. Dam Washington—Over the Cum berland foothill?, four miles from the site of the Norris Dam, a uni que experiment in town building is being undertaken. With funds already allocated by the Federal Emergency Relief Ad ministration, the community of Norris, Tenn.—named for the famed liberal Senator—will be es tablished for persons whose jobs demand that they live near the dam. The Tennessee Valley authority will be the builder and the land lord. Conceived as an experiment to determine what co-ordinated1 planning can accomplish, neither depressions nor congestion will be able to hurt Norris. Unlike real estate operators’ sub divisions, no lanu win ue suiu. 111-1 stead, the property and biuldings will be rented only by those who use them. The first unit of 5 0 homes has already been started and will be ready next summer. Eventually enough homes for five or six thous and persons will be built The houses will average four rooms and each renter will have a four-acre farm to be tilled by the individual or pooled for co-opera tive farming. Every building will be heated by electricity—power from the dam will be cheap—and an electric range, refrigerator and water heat er will be installed. Most "model towns” have stero typed architecture, but homes in Norris will not be standardized; neither will thete be a building line, the houses will be "staggered” and on the topography of each plot will depend the location of each house. The TVA will build and operate its own school and in the center of the town will be a large park and open-air meeting place, at one end of the common will be an ad ministration building, a hotel, a restaurant, a drug store, a general A Spring Coiffure NEW YORK . . . An inspiring Spring season ahead, bringing with it many new bonnets which includes' those off-the-face models, causes feminine thoughts to turn to attract ive coiffures. The beautiful Eliza beth Allen, screen favorite, is now sponsoring this entrancing wind blown wave. store, a barber shop, beauty parlor and postoffice. Just as it will be landlord for the homes, the TVA will build and operate each of these. So that undesirable developments cannot come too near to the town, it will be surroupded by an open section of land which will be de veloped in the nature of a park. RATS GANG ON CATS Midville, Ga.—The worm has turned—rats are killing cats. Thomas Drew, ice factory manager here, informed CWA workers en gaged in rat eradication that the army of rodents are putting their old enemy to rout. Drew exhib ited a large dead cat. He said rats did it and he knew of four other cats having met the same fate. The distribution of cotton option checks in Bertie County recently boosted the signing of cotton re duction contracts. Ninety percent of the growers having options on government cotton secured the loan of four cents a pound. GOOD MORNING HAS BILLY GOAT’S STOMACH Yerxa: "How is it that Old Man Fisheye, who never used to be able to eat anything tougher than breakfast food or canned soup :an now gobble down anything that comes along, including corn lusks, old rubbers, tin cans, and ;ven fiction magazines—and keep gaining weight?” Sowerbutts: “Why, hayen’t /ou heard? He was operated on 5y one of those up-to-date doctors vho took out his old stomach and ■eplaced it with a new one taken :rom a Mexican billy goat.” LO AND BEHOLD "Your girl looked beautiful in hat religious gown she was weai ng last night, Joe.” "What do you mean, 'religious jown’?” "Oh. you know; sort of lo and )eho!d.” \yjw o inn, 1 nvic "Could you give us a song?” the :hairman asked the amateur tenor it the banquet. "With pleasure—but is this the :ime for it?” "Yes; we want the room cleared iO that it can be got ready for iancing.” MORTAR BOARD "What is the mortar board I rear mentioned so often?” asked :he little girl. "I’ll try to explain,” said Miss Cayenne, "although it is a slightly implicated matter. A mortar ward carried by a builder often las cement on top and worn by a illege professor often has concrete mdcr it.” JUT SHE COMES There were muffled sounds of a truggle in the other room, and i girl’s voice squealed, "Stop—” No response. "Oh, please don’t. Mother ;aia— "Oh, wait just a minute, please.” No response. "Let me go this minute.” "One more yank and I’ll have it out”, said the dentist. CORRECT Professor: "State the number of tons of coal shipped out of the United States any given fear.” Freshman: "In 1492—none.” WHAT WAS LACKING? Wife: "That was a very beau tiful picture of> Mrs. Gabber, but there was something about it that was not natural. I wonder what it was?” Huby: "She has her mouth shut.” IN TIGHT PLACE Postoffice Cerk:" "We can’t pay you this $20 money order un less you bring somebody to iden tify you.’ Stranger: "That’s hard luck! There’s only one man in this town who can identify me and I owe him $20.” DOWN AND OUT Maggs: "And can you tell me of anyone who wants to be dowr and out?” Miss: "Yes, a nervous mar having his first aeroplane trip.’’ HAW RIVER BANK ROBBEDi Strewing money in their wake 1 1 •. 1 \ 1 1 1 I UdUUll.3 IrtSL WtVft. WUJLftVU HIV UUH. and inner combiriations of the vaul in the Bank of Haw River, am stole $400 in silver and currency They passed up $6,000 of payrol money, stacked up in plain view apparently in their hurry to ge out. [, -..I 5e Both Farmers And Jobless To Be Given-Help Roosevelt Announces Long-Rymge Relief Program. SUBSISTENCE COMES FIRST Projects to Be Drawn to Meet Situa tion Created By Demobiliza tion of CWA. A Kmarllv Aroxxrn nl-in t-/-v moae X - the immediate emergencies of un employment relief, was laid down, by President Roosevelt in a state ment regarded as providing a pat tern by which a permanent change in one portion of the nation’s eco nomic life might be effected. The President said tjhe relief plans were drawn to meet the sit uation arising from demobilizing the Civil Works administration and to reshape the present formu la in accordance with the results of nine months of relief experi mentation, which had shown that "the unemployment problem must be faced on more than one front.” The broadly-drawn plan, yet to be worked out in detail, calls for aid to distressed families in rural areas, aid to the "standard popu I--)- l---J | moved' away or died, and aid to the [cities’ unemployed. Mass treat ment of all types of relief is to be abandoned for specialized treat ment in each field. Back to this move is an admin istration theory for creating a niche in the economic wall suf ficient to shelter something like ten million persons whose unem ployment some officials say prom ises to become permanent under the existing industrial system. The administration holds that the long-range problem of these ten million is part of the immediate relief question and should be so considered. In speaking of the need for fur nishing a means of self-support to the needy of rural areas, Mr. Roosevelt observel that “in many _. j- _ _.u_ r_ pai k.i] ui. iv. wuiibi ^ mu veinj j.vc a change from commercial farm ing and depedence upon a single cash crop to the raising of the va rious commodities needed to main ,tain the families.” Harry Taylor Named Doughton’s Secretary Congressman Robert L. Dough ton, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee has announced the appointment of Harry Miller, of Stony Point, as his secretary. Mr. Miller is chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Alexander county. Mr. Miller is a successful busi ness man and has varied business interests in the wetern part of the State. He has been connected with his father in the hardware business at Stony Print. Mr. Miller has long been one of the leading Democrats of Alexan der county and his appointment and acceptance of the post as sec retary to Congressman Doughton, is considered a political move of more than usual significance. 22 STUDENTS SUSPENDED Twenty-two Lenoir-Rhyne stud ents, Hickory, members of the sophomore, junior and senior classes, were suspended from col lege, -after an investigation by • President H. B Schaeffer ant! ' members of the faculty of hazing : charges, covering a period of the I last^even Weeks. I Ninety-eight per cent of the , burley tobacco growers of Hay : wood County have signed the ad justment contract. Do You Know The Answer? Continued on page eight__ 1. What is the common law? 2. What river marks the Min nesota-Wisconsin boundary line? 3. Who was William Tyndale? 4. What island is separated ; from the mainland of Africa by : the Mozambigue channel? i J. What name is commonly ap plied to all sorts oi small fish? 1 6. Where is county Tyrone? 7. Where did Chow dogs origi aate? 8. In what country is the river Dise? 9. Where was the first mint es tablished in the United States? 10. What is another way to spell th ward tsar? J-'N r WA$Hmm Letting Down the Bars Navy Party Proposed Cleveland and Bryan Looking to Mid-West Washington—As the year 192 wears on toward the leral elec tion next Novembei r*. t whici every member of tl S’ louse o Representatives must j ?fore th voters again, and one- * 1 of th Senators find themsel Q ’ facin, the same urgent necess »* politic in its more practical a. ts be comes more and more ei ;sing. The Administration is a}, ling ; helping hand to its D^rnocratii supporters in the Lower House Naturally, Mr. Roosevelt doesn'’ want to have any of his legislatioi defeated in the House. But like wise he does not want to throw' an) stumbling blocks in the way o: loyal Democratic1 members' whc feel that to vote with the Admin istration might endanger thei: chances of re-election in their homi districts. So the word has beer passed out that all members ari free to vote as they please on an) measure, so long as they see to ii that not enough of them vote ii opposition to put the President ir a hole. "Vote the way that will do yoi the most good with your constitu tion next Fall,” is the message the) have all received. This is expectec to result in an apparently strom sentiment among Representative: for more favorable action in regarc to the soldiers’ bonus, for example > k_i_* r i i i j lium uijuiv-io w licit cm veterans’ vote is well organizec will feel free to vote for more lib eral treatment of the ex-service men, first cautiously making cer tain that there are enough vote: that will be cast on the other side so that their apparent defection will not result in anything the President doesn’t like being done. That is merely one phase of practical politics, as it is played, in Washington. It doesn’t mean a thing except that the gentlemen in Congress want to stay in Cong ress, and if they can get re-elected by making every class of voters in their respective districts think they have their interests at heart, they will go the limit to put that idea over. To be sure, there are other con siderations that actuate a high pro portion of members of Congress and the inference should not uc drawn that they are working foi their own pockets all the time, any considerable percentage of them. On the other side of the politic! fence there are beginning to bs heard more rumblings of an ap proaching storm which may' pul the old Republican party complete ly out of the picture and lay th< foundation for a new line-up. v^n< of the most astute of Washington’: political observers, has come out boldly for the formation of a ness narrv which he would call "Con titutional Democrats”, as opposec to the present Democratic pat which he terms Socialist Demo crats. Probably neither the name no: the scheme will get very far, anc nobody thinks that Mr. Lawreno expects his plan to be accepted But the attention that is being paic to the idea itself, of trying to lin up those wbo still believe in th rights, of the individual as superio to the rights of the state, in som form of effective oppositoin to th tendency to regulate and contro all human activities by a paterna government, indicates the possibil ity that a new "bloc” if not a net party may be built around a nucle us of forward-looking Republican and conservative Democrats.. Those with long political memo ries are recalling what happened t the Democratic partv in 1896 when it was hopelessly split ove Free Silver and other Populist is sues; so completely spile that powerful faction, headed by non other President Cleveland, refuse to follow the party’s candidati Mr. Bryan, and put their ow "Gold Democrat” candidate in tb field to contest for the Presidency That marked the end of the ol party control, and a high pcrceni age of those who had called then selves Democrats became adhereni of the Republican party in tb course of the next few years. Now, these old-timers say, tl Republican party is in the san (Please turn to page two)