To|7 OaDni IMA WATH4MAN BooslersForA 1 flJL ^AKv/LilNA VI Al l^illVlrAll Greater Salisbury A NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE UPBUILDING OF ROWAN COUNTY __ FOUNDED 1832—104TH YEAR SALISBURY, FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 27, 1935. VOL. 104 NO. 22. PRICE 2 CENTS. WASHINGTON There’s a new "Third Party” movement looming up to compli cate the politcal situation in the Presidential election year of 1936. It is big enough, and has enough votes behind it, distributed all over the United States, to make the sea soned politicians of both major par ties sit up and take notice. This is the "Townsend Plan” Party. Washington regards the an nouncement by Dr. Townsend that he will put a third party ticket in the field, unless the Democrats or the Republicans satisfy him and his followers, as the biggest political news since the death of Huey Long and the consequent collapse of the Louisiana Senator’s third party threat. It is big news, and some thing to be taken seriously, for two major reasons. 1. Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans can satisfy Dr. Townsend and his followers. 2. As every fresh arrival in Washington testifies, if he has kept his ear to the ground while back home, The Townsend Old Age Pen sion plan has enrolled literally mil lions of voters in its thousands of Townsend Clubs, all pledged to work and vote for $200 a month pensions for every man and woman over 60 years old. POWER OF THE GROUP Politicians know the power of organization. Those with long memories recall the way in which the Anti-Saloon League put over Prohibition, by organizing the church people in every community and using the "pressure group” method to defeat "wet’ candidates and elect "dry” ones. They were laughed at as fanatics—but they got Prohibition. The Townsendites are looked upon by the politicians on Capitol Hill as equally fanatical— but they are beginning to feel the pressure. It is believed here that there are more potential votes behind the Townsend movement than there ever were behind Prohibition. To most folks, -the Prohibition move-1 ment was somewhat abstract, based5 upon moral principles. The Town- ; send movement is decidedly con crete, and is based upon the funda mental human itch to get something for nothing. CONGRESS ACTION PREDICTED One inevitable effect of the Townsend threat, observers here believe, will be a desperate effort to put through at the coming ses sion of Congress some amendment to the Social Security Act, to make the Old-Age Benefits provided for by that measure payable imme diately and in full to every quali fied person, instead of at some time in the distant future. Also, to "raise the ante” from the present sliding scale, which runs from $10 to $85 a month, to come nearer to meeting the demands of the Town sendites. There is little belief, however, that such a program can be put over. It is fairly certain that President Roosevelt would veto it if it were passed. The Social Securi ty Act only received his approval after the parts which would have required direct appropriations by the Federal Government were stricken out, and the plan put on an actuarial self-perpetuating basis. The political implications of the Townsend threat as it may affect the choice of the Republican candi date, and the election next Novem ber, are being carefully appraised. It is a quite general understanding (Continued on page two) f;an Expects further Grant 4 _ Possibility of Additional $1,300,000 Develops Af ter Conference Raleigh—George W. Coan, Jr., State works progress administrator for North Carolina, said Monday indications were North Carolina would receive an additional grant of $1,3 00,000 for the WPA pro gram. Coan has just returned from a regional conference in New Orleans. A recent boost of $1,000,000 in Federal funds for the WPA gave the State $8,400,000 in all to spend for obs. The additional allotment would raise this total to $9,700,000. In addition to announcing the possibility of an additional allot ment, as suggested in conference with Regional Field Representative Malcom J. Miller, Coan asserted the majority of the states in the South ern region had been ordered to re duce administrative expenses. Coan said North Carolina would be expected to make consolidations as well as transfers of administra tive personnel to the project opera tions. District WPA directors in North Carolina already have been given instructions to proceed with the consolidation pragrom. Coan stated his intention to “as sign all available qualified relief labor, except those now working t on WPA projects carrying No. ,1 ' priority” to the ‘Feut?f 1-aid lligii-1 way program which has been ham pered by a scarcity of labor in the areas where road-building is con templated. Regulations of the Fed eral Bureau of Roads require that 80 per cent of relief labor be used on the road projects. It has been calculated that the j, $9,500,000 allocated to North Car jolina for highway work should •/ (give employment to 12,000 heads of J families in the State. So far, the State WPA has given employment to approximately 40, 000 persons, said Coan. Ten of the 12 states in the Southern region exceeded theif Quotas before the end of November, the State ad ministrator-reported. ■ «--• s Scorns Change For $1,000 Bill ——— New York—The American Air lines finally got rid of $900 in spare change when the owner to whom they had originally offered it de cided it belonged to him after alL A Detroit lawyer, leaving on the morning plane for his home town, gave the ticket agent a Dili ana received change for $100. The ticket agent later discovered a bonafide $1,000 bill but no $100 note. The lawyer said the money was not his. No other passenger would claim it. Later the Detroit man radioed the airline offices here that the money was his after all and he would be delighted if they would send it on to him. The Milky Way or Galaxy is a tremendous group of stars con taining probably 500 million suns. Girl Breaks Off Talk, Gets Gun And Kills Self North Wilkesboro—Jennie Ka nutt, 16-year-old high school girl shot and killed herself at the home of her parents near here Sunday night. According to reports she was in the home with a friend and they were conversing when she excused • herself, went into another part of ■ the home, procured a .32 calibre i pistol and'shot herself in the fore head. She died a short time later. No reason was attributed for the act and no inquest has been held. She was a daughter of Russel and Blanche Miller Kanutt, who recent ly moved into the Fair Plains com munity from Catawba county. In addition to'her parents, she leaves the following(brothers and sisters: Margaret, Rfobert, Richard, Edward, Jack and Billie Kanutt. Funeral and burial services were a held Tuesday afternoon at Hickory. ^ President Refuses To Restore Relief i ___. _ Chief Holds Local Units Responsible Administration Will Stay Within 3,500,000 WPA Limit BUDGET DISCUSSED Washington—Full responsibility for caring for all needy unemploy ed beyond the 3,5 00,000 on Federal work-relief was placed squarely up on local governments and private charity Monday by President Roosevelt. The $4,000,000,000 work-relief fund, the President said at his press conference, was calculated to take care of only 3,500,000 persons. He said he had to stick to that limi tation, and that any other needy persons, either employable or un employable, must be cared for locally. His statement followed by a few days a report from Harry L. Hop kins, WPA chief, that the relief situation had been affected "ad versely” by winter conditions, andj attributing the small decrease in big-city relief rolls to the fact that many now were seeking aid for the first time. Responsibility for the unemplov-! ables already has been handed back to the States. The Chief Executive further expressed confidence that the 3,5 00,000 estimate of the na tion’s needy and jobless employables was an accurate one. Asked about estimates that there! were 11,000,000 unemployed in the nation, the President answered by asking for a definition of "unem ployed.” He asserted a census of the-job less was impossible because of the difficulty in finding such a defini tion. Out of SO housing projects, the President said in discussing this last point, 48 were under contract on the mid-December deadline date and 88 per cent of the funds for other public works had been placed under contract excluding those projects held up by litigation or other outside circumstances. A question aboift how nearly WPA came to taking care of the 3,S00,000 employables on relief started the President’s discussion of the problem. He pointed to the last report showing the works-relief drive was only 20,000 short of its goal. Asked whether the public was justified in believing the Federal government was committed to tak ing care of all employables, Mr. Roosevelt replied that it was a pre sumption to say the public had any thought on the subject because he (Continued on page two) Girl Who Killed Father Not Sorry He Is Dead Anadarko, Okla.—The dreary prospect of spending Christmas in Jail was faced by Emma Willis, 18 year-old farm girl who killed her father because he would not let her have a date with a farm boy neigh bor. "I’m sorry about it if I am a murderer, but I’m not sorry that he’s dead,” the brunette high school sophomore frankly told visitors. She drew some comfort from the support given her by her mother, two brothers, and two sisters. "I just don’t see how any man could have been as mean as he was,” Emma told Haskell Pugh, as sistant Caddo county attorney. Pugh filed a murder charge against the girl after she confessed she took a shotgun at the Willis farm home near Eakly and killed her father, I. H. Willis, 52, while he was asleep. "I started lots of times to run away from home and then mother would cry and I would hate to leave,” she said. "Mother never did talk back to him when he abused her, but just took it quietly.” Emma asserted she reached the end of her patience when her fath er refused to permit the “date” or let the family spend Christmas with relatives at Hugo, Okla. * MARTIAL TANGLE * * PUZZLES COURT * * _ * * Chicago—A strange story * * of how Norbert U. Kolb’s * * first wife allegedly posed as * * his sister while he courted a * new prospective bride for * * himself and shopped around * * for a new husband for Mrs. * * Kolb presented Circuit Judge * * Harry M. Fisher with a tang- * * led martial problem. Kolb of- * * fered the story as his * * defense in a $75,000 aliena- * * tion of affection suit brought * * by his former wife, Mrs. Ella * * Kolb, against his second * * spouse, Mrs. Gertrude Kolb. * Serious Fire At Faith Sun. Fire Destroys Three Resi dents; Damaging Fourth A fire which broke out about 3 o’clock Sunday morning destroyed three homes and damaged a fourth before local and Granite Quarry citizens and the chemical truck from this city were able to check the flames. It is thought that the flames, which originated in the home of Dick Jones, were caused by a short :ircuit in the wiring of the lights )n a Christmas tree. However, this was not definitely known. The three homes burned were those of Mr. Jones, Mrs. Bob Wil liams and J. C. Barger. H. D. Brown’s home was damaged. Only one living room suite was recovered from the Jones home, and about half of the Williams furni ture was saved while practically all of Barger’s furniture was re moved to a place of safety. The damage, which was practi cally covered by insurance, was es timated at about $6,000.00. Henry L. Barger, 63 year old citizen dropped dead while fight ing the fire. It is believed that over exhaustion, excitement and congestion from smoke caused a heart attack which resulted in his sudden death. Mr. Barger had lived in Faith 40 years and had been in the best of health apparently. Funeral services were held last Monday, the Rev. J. L. Morgan conducting the services. Interment was in Faith Lutheran church cemetery. He is survived by his widow and three children, and several sisters and brothers. Heiress Seeks To Divorce Nobleman Fort Worth, Texas—Princess Marion Snowden Rospigliosi, twen ty-three, New York heiress, left here by plane for Mexico City, where she expects to get a divorce from the Italian Prince Girolomo Rospigliosi. She said there is noth ing definite yet regarding reports she would marry Louis F. Reed, Jr., of Orange, N. J. Bandits Rob Bank $17,000 Old Bills Fort Leo, N. J.—Four bandits armed with revolvers and machine guns, held up the First National Bank and escaped with $17,000. The money was mutilated bills which had been locked up in a vault preparatory to being sent to the United States Treasury to be exchanged for new currency, Joseph Cook, treasurer, said. Three out of every four race horses never earn their keep. Candy-House Postoffice Shrine at Santa Claus rm\ ? ' V q, : SANTA CLAUS, Ind. . . . The fame this small town has attained, aa thousands upon thousands of pieces of mail are sent here during the holi days for re-mailing each year, is to be perpetuated by a new post office building, dedicated as a shine to the children of America. Above is an artist’s drawing of the “Candy-House” postoffice which the Santa Claus Chamber of Commerce has approved. Below is the present postoffice which has carried on through the years . . . to.fame. — ' ■ " ■ ■ -q-“------ - Pilot Drops 2,000 Feet In Ripped Chute-Unhurt Bell Buckle, Tenn.—Out of gas 8,000 feet above the mountains, Pilot Joe Greer bailed out of his: airplane, saw his parachute rip af ter a 2,000 foot drop while he fumbled for his rip cord and still got to earth safely. Greer went up to the 18,000-foot level as a substitute observation pilot for the U. S. weather bureau at Sky Harbor, 20 miles from here. The weather closed in on him. | The 34-year-old flyer explained that his radio went out while he was reaching the 18,000-foot alti tude. "I started down,” he said, "hop ing to get a break in the weather and find a landing place. I stayed up five hours and 15 minutes—un til I ran out of gas.” Then at 8,000 feet, he declared, he decided "it was a case of riding a dead plane down into those moun tains or bailing out.” He said the jump was the nearest he had come to death in 14 years of flying. Reveals Son’s Hideout On Promise Of Photo I Columbia, S- C.— Martha Greer land her boy, Booker Washington, 1 are going to have their pictures in I the paper. Sheriff T Alex Heise of Richland county told the Eastover negro so, and she believed him. So much so, that she told him where 33year-old Booker was hiding to avoid a charge of murder. Heise said she revealed the hide out upon condition that her photo graph and that of her son be pub lished in the newspapers. When officers acceded to the mother’s novel request, the son was found and gave himself up without resistance. The mother accompanied the ar resting officers to the Richland jail, where she and her son were photo graphed by the sheriff in several poses. "She even had me take a picture of her praying for her son,” Heise said. The son was held to answer charges of killing John W. Jones with a table leg in an argument December 5. The Columbia Record announced it would publish the pictures. - SAYS JAPS PLAN INVASION Moscow—Soviet news agency re ports that Japanese army head quarters in Manchoukuo is studying a plan for the invasion of outer Mongolia were displayed promin ently by Moscow newspapers, but without comment. Cotton Ginnings Near 10 Millions Cotton of this year’s crop, gin ned prior to December 13, was re ported this week by the census bu reau at Washington to total 9,757, 680 running bale?, counting 23 8, 547 round bales as half bales and including 13,557 American Egyp tian. Ginnings to that date a year ago totalled 9,173,295, including 174, 5 69 round bales and 11,079 Am erican Egyptian. South Carolina registered 720, 5 36 bales and North Carolina 555, 176, Woman Admits Robbery of Bank Albert Lea, Minn.—A prisonei authorities described as Minnesota’s first woman bank robber was ir jail here. She identified herself as Mary Lyon of South Bend, Ind County Attorney Elmer R. Peter son said she confessed she held u{ the Twin Lakes State Bank neat here, taking $700. A posse cap tured her. Matter is either organic or in organic. Organic matter is eithe: alive or once formed a part of i living thing. * STRANGE CULT * * OBSERVES YULE * * ON JANUARY 6 * _ * * Kinston—A small group * * near here will "ast as on any * * other "day” on December 25. * * They insist January 6 is the * * birthday of Christ. The Old * * Testament, they say, proves * * it. Here and there in eastern * * North Carolina are groups or * * individuals who keep "old * * Christmas,” but the group * * near here carry their observ- * * ance to the point of getting * * out of bed at midnight to see * * cows and other animals "kneel * * and face the east.” This hap- * •"'■pens, they insist. Members * * of the group claim to have * * seen the sun rise twice on more * * than one January 6. It "comes * * up,’ retires and rises again af- * * ter about an hour, they assert. * Income Taxes Continue Rise Final Analysis of 1933 Payments Show Gains In Virtually Every Category Washington—Gains in virtually every income tax category over the previous year were disclosed by the Treasury in its final analysis of re turns on 1933 incomes. The gains were continued dur ing 1934, preliminary reports of the department made public earlier this month indicated. The final report on 193 3 activi ties disclosed 3,723,558 persons sub mitted returns of which 1,747,740 were taxable. The aggregate in come for the year was $11,008,754, the taxable income was $7,372, 660,3 52 and the tax liability $374, 120,469. In the previous year 3,877,430 returns were submitted of which 1, 936,095 were taxable.The aggregate income was $11,655,757,000 and the tax liability $329,962,0 0. rreliminary statements tor Lyi*t incomes, based on reports received through August 31, showed 3,988, 269 returns of which 1,750,843 were taxable. The aggregate in come for the year was $12,452, 262,491, while the tax liability was $506,481,123. A total of 50 persons reported 'incomes of more than $1,000,000 during 1933, which was 30 in ex cess of the number reported dur ing the previous year. This sum, jhowever, dropped to 32 in 1934, the ! preliminary report showed. | The report for 1933 showed 14.13 iper cent of the population of the District of Columbia filed income tax returns for 1933 to lead all other geographical sections by a wide margin. On the other ex treme was Mississippi which show ed only .53 per cent of its popula tion filed returns. On November 1 the sun passes the meridian about 16 minutes be fore the clock shows 12; in Feeb ruary it passes the meridian 14 or 15 minutes after 12.