I BOOSTERS FOR A GREATER CITY AND COUNTY - Rowan County Herald Successors to the Carolina Watchman ^ —— | _____ u FOUNDED 1332— I05TH YEAR_SALISBURY, N. C. FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1937 ' VOL. UhNO. 36 PRICE 5 TS N.C.Counties Balk At Liquor Elections Few Units Set Time For Vote On Rum Issue Boards of Commissioners Are Slow to Act in Most Cases. Raleigh. — Although North Carolina’s General Assembly, which adjourned last week, au thorized each county to speak for itself on the question of le galized liquor, few county boards of commissioners have called for special elections to end prohibi tion. Among the units in which elections have been called are Haywood, Mecklenburg, Colum bus, Dare, and Durham. The local option law provides that votes shall be held either on the written request of a county’s board of commissioners or upon a petition to the county board of elections signed by at least 15 per cent of the register * ed voters in a county who parti cipated in the last gubernatorial election. To date, no elections have been called by petitions. Since the law specifies that no county may vote on the liquor question oftener than once every three years, no elections may be held until 1938 in any of the 18 counties which voted under Pas quotank and New Hanover acts, in 1935. No election may be held in Moore county until 1940. Probably before the first coun ty election is held, Governor Hoey will appoint the State Board of Alcoholic Control, to be composed of a chairman, who will receive a salary of $6,000 a year, and two associate mem bers to receive $25 per day for time actually engaged in official duties. Itacn county voting wet win set up a three-man county alco hol board, to be selected at a joint meeting of the county board of commissioners, board of health and board of education. Fach member present will have but one vote, even if he is a member of more than one board. State to Spend $201,369 Per Day, That is Record Raleigh.—The 1937 General Assembly appropriated funds for 1937-39 to be spent at the rate of about $201,369 a day or $1, 423,461 a week. The general fund, highway, agriculture and permanent im provements outlays authorized aggregated close to $147,000,000, To report the 180-day state maintained school term approxi mately $50,000,000 or $138,885 per day was set aside. It took the House only 3 1-2 minutes to pass the record ap propriations bill, but the Senate debated it at full length. Liquor Breaths On Tots Laid to New Toothpaste Burbank, Calif.—Mothers oi this town reported Tuesday thal they detected alcoholic breath; on their small children. Investigators from the count} health department looked into th( matter and reported the caus< was a new cocktail toothpaste samples of which had been dis tributed to the children. There will be no more samples Hedrick, Withers, Hardin Enter Race For City Council -, Lrop Measure Wins Passage Senate Approves Adminis tration’s Insurance Propo sal and Sends It To House Washington — The Senate passed Tuesday, and sent to the House the administration’s crop insurance bill, setting up a $100, 000,000 Federal corporation to protect wheat growers against weather, insects, and other na tural hazards. Supported by both Republican and Democratic members, the bill went through with virtually no opposition and in substanti ally the same form as reported out by the Senate agriculture committee. There was no record vote. I The bill would create a $100, 300,000 corporation in the De partment of Agriculture to in sure wheat crops starting in 19 38. Participation would be vo luntary. Premiums and maximum coverage would vary by localities depending on average produc tion over a base period. The only major amendment adopted by the Senate was pro vision by Senator Vandenburg, (Republican, Michigan). It wou ld require the corporation to re place from operating revenues any portion of its capital expen ded in payment of losses. If the plan works successfully with wheat, the administration may seek to extend it to other major crops later. Fall Is Fatal To Child Spencer Infant Tumbles Into Cess Pool At Home Falling into a cess pool at the rear of his home at Spencer, Donald X'esbit, 17-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. \Y. O. Xes bit, died in Spencer Tuesday. He was found about an hour later, but could not be revived at a hospital. Beside the parents, one young brother survives. Injuries Are Fatal To Salisbury Man Hoke Harrison, 63, died Sun day at a Salisbury hospital from injuries he received when struck by a car on North Main street last Saturday night. Wilbur R. Barrier, of route one, Linwood, driver of the car, was held under bond. Ground Burns 22 Weeks Ashtabula, O. — Seventy-five acres of waste ground and ruin ed timberland lie in the wake of a mysterious underground fire which burned near here 22 weeks before it was extinguished by rain and snow. Residents be lieve the ground was a mine of rich peat. Gardenia Dancer mnriMliwiiiiii miibiiiiim . .. WINTER HAVEN, Fla_Gail Armour, famous danseuse, re hearses for her Gardenia Dance at Florida Cypress^ Gardens where thousands of the fragrant waxy j blossoms are now in full bloom. CRASHED PLANE IS FOUND j Highlands, Calif.—Army fly- j ers located the wreckage of a I plane that crashed in a storm) near here Saturday night, carry ing Lieut. Robert C. Love and! Private Emory J. Parsons to their deaths. The plane crashed into a tree on the snow line of the San Bernardino mountains, near the City Greek CCC camp. I Nine Candidates I Have Tossed Hats i |In Council Races | _ Primary Will Be Held April 26 to Choose Five j Nominees. | _ Three additional candidates for places on the City Council made announcements during the week, as follows: B. V. Hedrick, former mayor, at present a member of the city council, outstanding business man and civic leader of city; Hamilton E. Withers, railroad man, who ran sixth high in the race two years ago, and a mem-, ber of the legislative board of the Brotherhood of Railway Train men ; VV. H. Hardin, member of thei city council, legionnaire, civic leader, and a popular young bu siness man of the city. Others who had previously an nounced are: Henry Davis U. Ray Miller D. C. Dungan C. F. Raney R. Reid Goodson Clarence Summers. The primary will be held April 26 when five nominees will be selected. Labor Board Handles Many Cases 2,072 Disputes j Get Attention of NLR Board Reports 101 Threatened Strikes Were Averted Through Its Efforts. Washington. — The National Labor Relations board created Junder the Wagner act in 1935 reported it had handled 2,072 'cases of industrial disputes in-j ivolving 745,702 workers during a 17 month period ending March 1st. j Suits challenging constitution ality of the Wagner act are pend ing in the Supreme Court. The board said it had handled 378 strike cases involving 67, |932 workers and settled 249 j strikes affecting 35,805 workers, jin addition, the board reported, it had settled 101 threatened strikes, effected the reinstate ment of 1,733 workers who al leged they were discharged for union activities, and conducted 81 collective bargaining repre sentation elections. Out of the 2,072 cases handled .'the summary showed 1,579 had , been closed, leaving 493 pending ’ on March 1. Agreements be tween employes and management ' were reached in 737 cases in volving 97,919 workers. There I were 230 cases dismissed by the board and 470 withdrawn by the petitioners. The board said that in 7541 cases employers were charged with discriminating against work ers because of their union acti vities, and in 636 employers were alleged to have refused to bar gain collectively. AUTO LICENSE SALES LARGER THAN IN 1936 Raleigh.—Officials of the mo tor vehicle division said today 457,911 sets of automobile li cense plates had been sold to date this year, compared with1 the 411,523 sold through March 25, one year ago. The 550,055 sets of plates soldi during all of last year establish- j ed a new state record. Starting April 1, plates will! go on sale at three-fourths price here and in 46 branch offices throughout the state. The regu lar price is 40 cents per 100 pounds of car weight, with an $8 minimum charge. Next year, under the new mo tor vehicle law passed by the genera! assembly, the regular price will be cut to 35 cents per hundredweight and the minimum will be reduced to $7. REPORT TAPS KILLED IN CLASH Hsinking, jManchoukuo.—An army communique announced to day 19 Japanese soldiers and one officer had been killed in a clash with 500 bandits at an uniden tified posLin north Manchuria. i February State Vital Statistics North Carolina’s death rate in February ran only 9.9 for the thousand population, the bureau of vital statistics reported the past week, as compared with 12 deaths a thousand population a year ago. Deaths from influenza last month were only 143, compared with 270 in February, 1936, and from pneumonia only 347 as com pared with 555. The birth rate dropped too, from 22.2 per thousand popula tion to 21.2. There were 2,865 deaths last month from all causes, compar ed with 3,444 in February, 1936, and 6,159 births compared with 6,361. Violent deaths jumped from 151 in February, 1936, to 186 last month, with suicides in creasing by five to 28 and homi cides by 10 to 37. Automobile accidents claimed 73 lives last month compared with 56 a year ago, and burns killed 31, four more than a year ago. There was only one death from airplane accidents listed in the report but the bureau said it was trying to get death certifi cates for three other persons killed in Franklin county, when a plane fell February 7. Treasury to Build Silver Strong Box Washington. — The treasury lepartment seeking greater pro tection for its silver hoard, dis closed it intends to construct a spat steel and concrete deposi tory near the West Point, N. Y., military academy. With more than $1,000,000, 000,000 of gold already deposit ed near the Fort Knox, Ky., military reservation officials said bids on the $600,000 strong box for silver probably will be asked in the next few weeks. Although a specific site at West Point has not been finally selected, officials said this pro bably will be done shortly. Un der present plans, the flat-roof ed depository will be situated in the center of a four-acre tract, surrounded by a high steel fence.] It will hold 2,000,000,000 ounces of silver or about 70 tons. This is about $900,000,000 worth at current prices and is approxi mately double the treasury’s pre sent holdings. SENTENCED IN COED DEATH Oklahoma City.—Dr. J. W. Eisiminger, Oklahoma City os teopath, pleaded guilty to the 1932 abortion death of Virginia Lee Wyckoff, former University of Oklahoma coed, and was sen tenced to life imprisonment. Dr. Eisiminger was charged with I murder. * Morning Herald Chosen As Name Of Publication Will Be Published By B. V. Hedrick And E. W. G. Huff' man And Large Number Of Interested Citizens OVER 200 SUBSCRIBE FOR SHARES OF STOCK Announcement of the establishment in the near future of a daily morning newspaper for Salisbury. Rowan and adjoining counties, was made this week by B. V. Hedrick, E. W. G. Huffman, Rowan County Herald-Watchman, and a number of other interested citizens of the city and county. The new publication will be known as the Salisbury Morn ing Herald. A charter for the new corporation was granted this week by Secretary of State Eure. The corporation, Salisbury Herald Publishing Company, has an authorized capital stock of $50,000.00, divided into 5000 shares of $10 a share, with a paid in capital of $30,000.00. The parties interested in this enterprise feel that the pub lication of a morning daily newspaper is in response to a long standing demand for such an institution and solicit the support and cooperation of the people of Salisbury, Rowan and adjoin ing counties. It is announced that the Salisbury Herald Publishing Com pany will offer a small amount of stock to the public, not to exceed ten shares of ten dollars each to any one party. B. V. Hedrick announces in connection with the sale of stock, that he will repurchase any stock any time before the expiration of two years should any stockholder desire to dispose of his interest in this corporation, reimbursing the stockholder for the original amount of his investment upon return of stock certificates. Over 200 citizens of Salisbury and Rowan county have al ready subscribed for stock in the new morning daily newspaper. « 11 11 .• *111 1 11* il. ____ £ Y blULMIUlUCiS UltClUlg Win Ut UtlU 111 Lilt- vv,ij u'-aj for the purpose of electing officers and disposing of any other business that may properly come before the meeting. The stock subscription books are now open and any one wishing to subscribe for stock can do so by seeing B. V. Hedrick or his secretary at 120 North Church Street. A considerable amount of equipment has already been pur chased. Hedrick and Huffman will go to New York within a few days to purchase additional equipment necessary for the, publication of a modern daily newspaper. Arrangements have been made for the new morning paper to occupy the entire second floor of the Hedrick Auto Building on North Church Street, containing 9000 square feet of floor space and directly opposite the post office. Mr. Hedrick announces that he will erect immediately a skeleton steel structure building with a granite front on the lot adjoining the Hedrick Auto Company. The new building will contain 12,600 square feet of floor space which he announces will enable him to take care of his increased automobile business. A contract was awarded Tuesday to Midway Machine Com pany for furnishing and erection of the steel structure, the con tract calling for completion within 30 days. BOMBINGS CURB EGG OUTPUT Madrid—Capt. Frank W. Can-1 naday, retired American army! officer from East Bradford,; Va., reported his bomb-shocked hens lost 25 per cent of their laying capacity after an air raid. Capt. Cannaday is a voluntary attache at the U. S. embassy. REPORT THIRTY EXECUTED Tangier, International Zone, Morocco.—Thirty officers and men at the Spanish insurgent a viation base at Tetuan, Spanish Morocco, were reported to have been executed for plotting a gainst the regime of General Francisco Franco. WOULD OVERRULE COURT ACTS Washington.—Senator Theo dore G. Bilbo Mississippi, De mocrat, proposed a constitution al amendment to permit Congress to override Supreme Court rul ings of unconstitutionality by two-thirds vote. The Senator said the bill was not a substitute for the President’s court program he is supporting. PROPOSE COTTON RESEARCH_ Washington. —Representative Hampton P. Fulmer, of Orange burg, S. C., proposed a $250,000 appropriation for research into the feasibility of utilizing whole cotton in the manufacture of cellulose.