always abreast with THE CHANGING TIME IN RANDOLPH COUNTY THE COURIER LEADS \ THE COURIER AND ASHEBORO MARCH IN STEP—AHEAD BOTH ARE LEADERS TRI-WEEKLY* VOLUME LXI_ Est. As The Regulator February a,. 1876 Oldeat Paper Published In Randolph County PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN ASHEBORO, N. C„ TUESDAY7MARCH 30, 1~937. Changed To The Courier September 13. 1879 PUBLISHED TUESDAY, THURSDAY AN $2.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE DAY NUMBER 25 Angus D. MacLean Is Favorite For N.C. Supreme Court Job Governor Has Made No An nouncement As To When He Plans Appointment Many Qualifications Legislative Experience That Will Fit Him For Position Of Dignity And Honor While Governor Hoey is not yet ready to even discuss his plana concerning the increase of the state Supreme court from five to seven justices, when he gets ready, friends of AngU3 D. MacLean are prepared to present his name. Many friends of this man who hails from Washington, N. C. are stand ing ready to press the cause of their favorite when the time is ripe. MacLean, who moved to Raleigh about a year ago to take the senior position in the law firm of Pou, 1’ou and Emanuel, now occupies in that organization the place of the late James H. Pou, for 40 years one of the state's most eminent barristers. Prior to leaving Wash ington, N. C., MacLean had been as-sociatcd with the late Judge Stephen C. Bragaw and other pro minent attorneys of the east. In the national capital he became soon known as the best assistant solicit or general and later the best as sistant attorney general in that city. He resigned to come back to North Carolina. He has had legislative exper ience in both branches, first in the lower house which he led into ac cepting the MacLean act that gave the state an eight months school term without ad valorem taxa tion, and second in the senate of 19.33. The legislative reports have much of his work in them. He supported Governor Hoey with great ability and backed President Roosevelt nobly in his leadership. He is a perfect fit politically and professionally. MacLean will reach 60 this year, but at that he will be in years the youngest man on the bench, Chief ""JtSfice Stacy excepted. The Ra leigh lawyer’s uncle, the late Justice George H. Brown, served on the supreme court bench from 1903 to 1921, two full terms of eight years each, then as an emergency judge after retirement until his death. Governor A. W. MacLean was a first cousin of A. D. Mac Lean. Distinguished Men For Summer Term K. B. House, dean of administra tion of the University of North Carolina, has announced the addi tion of several outstanding visiting professors to the department of education for the summer term. Dr. William A. Sutton, superin tendent of Atlanta city schools, will be major instructor in the special course for school superin tendents. He will be assisted by six city and county superintendents of North Carolina. Professor Arthur Clevenger of the University of Illinois, will be the leader of the secondary work during the first sessions. During the second ses sion, Dr. L. R. Johnston, principal of Hawthorne high school, Haw thorne, N. J., will be in charge of secondary work. Professor Harold V. Baker, prin cipal of Daniel Webster school in New Rochelle, N. Y„ will be :n charge of elementary education for both summer sessions. Dr. Stuart Noble of Tulane university, will lead the discussion of the history of public education. LIBERTY GIRL ONE OF BAPTIST OFFICERS Miss Maxine Gamer of Libeity is listed among the officers of the Baptist student union council at Woman’s College of the University of North Carolina for the coming year. Miss Gamer’s title is Forest Avenue Sunday school president. An animal may have several common names in one locality, but it ha3 but one scientific name throughout the entire world. Small Boy Injured In Unusual Manner Easter Monday P. M. An unusual accident which re sulted in a rather serious injury to Joe Trogdon, four-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Erman Trogdon, occurred Monday afternoon. The little boy had been playing at a neighbor’s house and, as his father was preparing to leave, told the child to go home. Mr. Trogdon then backed his truck out of ths driveway, and started home be fore he knew what had happened. no one actually saw tho is thought that the Raleigh Victory Dinner Again Topic Discussion Dry Now Turns Against Unions * — -rranniimiM.iii Edward Page Gaston, above, was a crusading dry before prohibition repeal, but now, he has revealed, is national commander of the “Patriot Guard of America.” The guards, he said, are being organiz ed in Washington, and will launch an immediate drive against “law less labor unions." He hopes to recruit polo players, yachtsmen and other society leaders. Hoey Denounces Sit-Down Strikes North Carolina Governor Gives Radio Address Over State Hookup Saturday Strikes Unlawful Urges Tar Heel People To Respect Rights Of Others And To Obey The Law Speaking over a state-wide radio hooa-up irom Kaleigh Saturday night, Governor Hoey denounced sit-down strikes as unlawful and called on all the people of North Carolina to obey the law and re spect the rights oi others. Though no major strike troubles have occurred in North Carolina m several months, the Committee for Industrial Organization recent ly announced it planned to organize textile workers in the state. The governor discussed sit down strikes after praising the new child labor and maximum hours in industries laws. "While discussing this matter,” he said, “I wish to express the hppe that any differences between the employers and employes in this state will be peacefully adjusted and that any serious disruption of business conditions or of the rela tionship existing between all of our people will be averted. “It might not be amiss to re state the rights and obligations of all classes of our citizenship. Un der the law, labor has a right to bargain collectively, to petition, to strike if it so elects, to picket peacefully. Labor likewise has the right to bargain individually, the right to work and the right not to be interfered with in that right to work. “The right to quit work and the right to work are both sacred and every citizen has the right to exer cise his choice without fear, with out molestation, and without inti midation. “Sit down strikes are unlawful and cannot be tolerated in North Carolina. We are a people believ ing in law and order, and no man or set of men has the right to take charge of the property of others and hold it adversely against the will of the owner. Men would have no more right to sit down in a mill and refuse to vacate than (Please turn to Page 6) child, instead of going home as he was told to do, tried to climb on the back of the truck and fell as it was backed out of the drive way, One wheel passed over the leg and hip, breaking the pelvis bone. He was taken to the Ran dolph hospital where he passed a very comfortable night and day. While the injuries wiH require considerable time to heal, it is j not thought that the child is in a critical condition nor that he will I sustain permanent injury. I Senator C. Glass . Attacks Speaker Does Not Call Secretary Ickes By Name, But His Mean ing Is Quite Clear Bitter Reference * In Bitter Speech Virginia Senator Discusses Supreme Court Issue When He Attacks Sec. Ickes The widely discussed Victory Dinners—the first and second— have been the topic for discussion by politicians in the state and at the national capital as well. Senat or Carter Glass, of Virginia, took his text on the speech of Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes at the second Victory Dinner in Raleigh on March 12th. This re ference is said to have been the bitterest passages of a very bitter SDcech made by Senator Glass on the Supreme court on Monday evening. Senator Glass did not mention Mr. Ickes by name, but there was little room for doubt left from the Senator’s descriptive powers. The portion of the Glass speech dealing with Secretary Ickes with-1 out mentioning him by name fol lows: “There has been some talk about ‘organized propaganda’ against this unabashed proposition to pack the Supreme Court for a specified pur pose! Propaganda was first organ ized in behalf of the scheme right here in Washington and has pro ceeded with unabated fury from the White House fireside to nearly every rostrum in the country. Po litical janizaries, paid by the fed eral treasury to perform services here and charged with no official responsibility for determining questions affecting the nation’s judiciary, are parading the states in a desperate eKs&Jto&taemi. the public against the Supreme Court of the United States. One of these visionary incendiaries spoke recently in a Southern state and exceeded all bounds of rational criticism in his vituperation of the eminent men who have served with great distinction on the Supreme bench. He i3 said to have been ap plauded by the audience of his partisans, which caused me to won der if they could have known the type of person to whose unrestrain ed abuse of the Supreme court and the great justices who constitute its membership they approvingly listened. Did they know that he re cently reproached the south for providing separate public schools for the races; that he urged repeal of every statute and ordinance of segregation; that he practically committed the administration at Washington to a new force bill for the south, declaring that not since Lincoln’s day has it better been realized than now the necessity of laws to strictly enforce the three post-Civil War amendments to the Constitution which kept the south in agony for years and retarded it3 progress for well nigh half a cen tury? This infuriated propagandist for degrading the Supreme Court practically proposes another tragic era of reconstruction for the south. Should men of his mind have part in picking thq six proposed judi cial sycophants very likely they would be glad to see reversed those decisions of the court that saved the civilization of the south and in spite of the menace of passion ate partisanship, with their violent threats to ‘reorganize’ the court, prohibited the seizure and confis cation, without pay of the estates of private citizens. It was the Su preme court of the United States that validated the suffrage laws of the south which saved the section from anarchy and ruin in a period the unspeakable outrages of which nearly ail the nation recalls with shame.” Coins Protected By Milling Edges The practice of milling the edges of coins was begun in England in the latter part of the 17th cen tury, when coin-clipping became so commonplace that the entire Eng lish financial system had to be re vised. Nearly all the good coinage in circulation was in gold, the coins having smooth edges. Clippers Would take a sharp file to these coins, filing off only a few grains of gold dust from each coin, tak ing so little that the change in weight could be detected only with a delicate balance, but their profits were enormous. As a result, Charles Montagu, the new treasurer, adopted, the idea of milled ridges which now appear around the edges of prac tically all coins. sffiaSSt Superior Court Opened Criminal Docket Tuesday Court House Crowded With ^Spectators And Interested Parties For Opening Judge Pless Presides Grand Jury Selection Made Quickly; Hasty Murder Cass Probably For Trial The court house was crowded this morning as the week’s term of criminal court was opened. J. W. Pless, Jr., is the presiding judge at this term, the opening of which had been scheduled for March 20, but which had been postponed be cause of Easter Monday. The selection of a grand jury, usually a lengthy process, was ac complishf d more expeditiously than usual. Judge Pless then, in an im pressive manner, charged the jury, bidding them to be mindful of the importance of their position and the care which they must exercise in their decisions. The first cases to come before the court were those involving the payment of costs. Next in line for consideration were trials for, per sons now in jail. Far outshadowing all other cases in the interest of people of the county and especially of Asheboro is that of Arthur Hasty, charged with the shooting and killing of Babe Yow March 18. Being a jail case this should come up eafjy. in the term. Another killing case in which interest has been shown is that of Will Cottingham, Asheboro colored man, who is charged with the murder of another negro in a brawl last autumn. For the rest the calendar contains the customary assortment of offenses against the law. Accurate Census Of Jobless Aske<| North Carolina Congressman Supports Commerce Dept’s North Carolina’s Representative Kerr is among the backers of a proposed census of the country’s unemployed which the U. S. com merce department is advocating. The census would cost about $15, 000,000 and would provide mush needed figures for measuring relief needs. “It is now anybody’s guess as to how many unemployed there are, and the value of a census would be inestimable, particularly if con tinuing checks were made to det ermine how the number fluctuat ed,” said Representative Kerr. Under the commerce department plan, the census would be kept up to date by “sample” counts in vari ous segments of industry after the canvass had been made. Officials said the census would require 20,000 to 25,000 workers and could be completed in two to three months. They expressed opposition to any plan for using relief workers to make the count, asserting the detailed study could best be made by persons chosen especially for the work by the Census Bureau. Plans for the census, officials said, envision the use of forms which would supply new informa tion on the prevalence of unem ployment by age groups, sexes, re gions and industries. In addition, it was said, the type of work the now jobless could best do would be determined and the number of “unemployables” de finitely fixed. Sit-Down Strike Banned In Canada As the sit-down strike continues to be a constant menace to in dustry in the .United States, our sister nation, Canada, has taken a decisive against it. Ernest La pointe, Canadian Justice Minister, has declared that all powers and rights of the Dominion will be used to prevent the sit-down strike from gaining foothold in Canada. He said that legitimate means of redressing grievances already existed in Canada and the sit down strike would not be permitt ed to obtain a foothold. The sit-down strike, said the minister, was where employees, having legally entered a factory or other premises for the purpose of working, remained there illegally and forcefully, in definace of the owners. It was calculated to bring about contempt for authority and tended to cause riots and disorder. Honest Counterfeiters In 1890 a gang of Mexican count erfeiters flooded the southwestern states with home-made American silver dollars. They were speedily caught by reason of the fact that their bogus .yaioney contained more silver than the real thing. MODEL STRANGLED IN TRIPLE SLAYING MayorBunchAndTownBoard ToFormally Open Golf Course Mayor Walter A. Bunch will formally open the Asheboro Municipal Golf Course promptly at 2 o’clock Thursday afternoon by driving the first ball of No. 1 tee, Frank McCrary, secretary of the golf commission, announc ed this morning. ' The remainder of the town board — W. J. Armfield, Jr., Frank Redding, John Neely, Dr. snell, , and Francis in driving from the first tee. The six members of the town Summary Accomplishments Of State’s 1937 Legislature ■ i State-Wide Drive | Against Syphilis Legislature Has Appropriated $25,000 For Stamping Out This Disease Begins July 1 Persons Arrested For Crimes, Delinquents, To Be Thoroughly Examined Dr. Carl V. Reynolds, stare health officer, is organizing all the data he can. on cases of syphilis in preparation for a state-wide anti syphilis drive this summer. The legislature has appropriated for this purpose $25,000, which will be available for use on July 1. “We will try to get the hearty cooperation .of the public, make them realize the necessity of the campaign. If we can make those with the disease report it early, we can cure them,” he emphasized. The legislature has earmarked $10,000 yearly for the administra tion of drugs and $15,000 to set up clinics throughout the state. Cer tain federal social security funds are expected to swell these sums, but are so far an “unknown quantity,” Dr. Reynolds said. Strenuous efforts will be made “to get to the sources,” he said. All information secured from patients will be held “strictly inviolate.” Another phase will be rigid pro secution of delinquents. Under a state law it is mandatory on patients, doctors and others involv ed to report cases. Persons arrested for various crimes throughout the state will Undergo examinations, Dr. Rey nolds added. This will prove a tre mendous asset in expediting the drive, he said. As high as 66 per cent of persons examined in cer- j tain state courts have been found infected. “Some 9,000 prisoners go through prison yearly and these i will all be checked,” Dr. Reynolds said. “Senator Pittman’s bill making it mandatory on all domestic ser- j vants to take physical examina tions will also be a great aid,” Dr. j Reynolds added. “North Carolina is one of the first states to institute this bill” board, or a foursome composed of these city commissioners, will be the first group to play the course. The golf commission is anxious to have a large crowd attend the opening ceremonies, as they will be colorful and interesting to the general public as well as to golfers. The attractive new course will be open to inspection by everyone, and there will be —ample opportunity for golfers to try out the course. (Please turn to Page 5) Of The 16 Recommendations Made By Hoey, 13 Won, 2 Lost And A Draw A summing up of the accom plishments of the 1937 legislature reveals that Governor Hoey was successful in having put through the majority of the items on his legislative program. Of a total of 16 recommendations, the governor won 13 points, lost 2, and drew one. The general assembly went con trary to his desires in refusing to reapportion its membership, and in turning down the state-wide liquor referendum in favor of county option. The draw came in the matter of fairs—the assembly balked on the idea of a North Caro lina World’s Fair, but authorized participation, without state aid, in the New York Fair and the Golden Gate Exposition of 1939. Following is a detailed account of the action taken on each of the governor’s recommendations: 1. A state-wide referendum an liquor. The house refused to listen and Voted, instead, for local option. The governor had said “You will never build a great state or a great county upon profits derived from the sale of liquor.” 2. Immediate compliance with all phases of the Federal Social Security Act. A $12,000,000 social security pro gram-assistance to needy aged and dependent children, and the blind—was passed. The Governor said: “Adoption of the whole social security program . . . the most for ward and advanced step this gen eration shall take and the most hu mane enactment of any legislative body in all the history of the na tion.” 3. Passage of a tobacco compact bill. Hardly had the session started, when such a measure was rushed through (to quote the Governor’s inaugural speech) “so that North Carolina may lead the way in to bacco compacts. . . early enough to limit the spring plantings.” But hope for control collapsed when Georgia and South Carolina failed to enact such legislation, 4. Free textbooks for all elemen tary pvblic schools. Heartily in favor of such recom mendations, the assembly enacted the measure into law, recalling as it did that “the consummate task confronting the people of North Carolina is proper education of all (Please turn to Page 5) Her body lying under the' bed on which her beautiful daughter, Veronica, lay dead, Mrs. Mary Gedeon was found murdered in a triple killing at their New York apartment. Frank Byrns, a roomer, was the third victim. A triple slaying confronted New York police with the discovery of the nude bodies of beautiful, blond Veronica Gedeon, left, 20-year-old professional model, and the clothed bodies of her mother, Mrs. .Mary Gedeon, and Frank Byrns, a room er, in their .midtown .apartment. Miss Gedeon and her mother ap parently had been strangled. Byrns’ brain had been punctured by a sharp instrument inserted through the ear. t Varied News Items From Franklinville Miss Lois Groce Wins Third Place In Sword Drill At Regional Meeting Juniors Entertained Many Easter Visitors; Miss Rachel Burrow Gives Party Saturday Evening Franklinville, March 29.—Misses Maxine Frazier, Mittie McLeod, Mwy ■'■Evelyn Jordan and- Lois Grose were representatives at the B. T. U. regional meeting at Burlington March 19 and 20. Miss Grose represented the Randolph association in the sword drill con test and was accorded third place. These young ladies represented the intermediate union of the Frank linville B. T. U. Roy Parham has moved from the comer of Depot and Main street into an apartment at the home of Tom Nance in west Frank linville. T. L. Ross has moved from the H. C. Cox farm to the J. O. Henson home place, and has accepted a position in Randolph Mill No. 2. Mrs. Lottie Husband entertained the junior class of Franklinville high school at her home Friday evening. Several games and con tests were played. Miss Maxine York and Worth Coward winning prizes. Ice cream and cakes were served to the following guests: Misses Aileen Brown, Jean McCorquodale, Mary Cox, Maxine York, Frances Pruett and Fay Mitchell, Joe Moon, Orland Trogdon, Worth Coward, David Jordan, Clinton Burrougli, Odell Kinney, Bill Grime3 and Fart Thomas. Easter baskets were given as favors. Miss Rachel Burroughs gave a party at lu-r home Saturday even ing. Those enjoying this occasion ' t*e: Missis Margaret Trogdon, V?.v:an Wrenn, Geneva Benner, Pith IngjI i, Frances Phillips, Fvelyn Carter, Irene Ragsdale, L»ab Burrovghs and Gean Ash t-nrn, HaroV Parrish, Si Pell, vT;,!ter P.ai’-.am, Clinton Bur rough and Fred Wilson. Ernest J. Heinly, inspector o' textiles, froit. Philadelphia, Pa. •aill be hir: tor a few weeks with the Randolph Mills in regard to a U. S Govi.rum.ent order for goods. Mrs. Mattie Buie and children, Miss Katherine and Mack and Mrs. Fannie Russell spent the (Please turn to Page 6) Methodist Protestant Women Of Eighth District Meet Sat. The eighth district meeting of women’s work of the Methodist Protestant church will be held at the Asheboro church on Saturday afternoon, April 3rd, at 2:00 o’clock. Mrs. Ray McCain, district chairman, has issued invitations to the women of all churches in the eighth district whether there are organizations or not. Outstanding on the afternoon program will be a round-table dis cussion led by Mrs. C. T. Luck of the Flag Springs church. This period will deal especially with problems in rural churches. Other discussions will include organiza tion, the program of the church Highway Deaths Total Sixteen; Others Succumb Easter Holidays Prove Bad Time For Mortality Along The State’s Highways In Western Carolina Lexington School Girl Killed Stepping From School Bus; Auto-Truck Crash Highway deaths over the Easter week-end mounted to a total of 16 according to count made Monday night from headquarters in Raleigh. Six persons died yesterday as a result of automobile accidents, with 15 persons suffering injuries varying in degree of seriousness. All the deaths reported yesterday as a result of highway accidents were listed in western North Caro lina. In Morganton, Bayne Baker, 20, and Lou Ellen Ward, 17, were the second and third victims of an automobile-truck crash Erid^' which already had taken the life of Pansy Grady, 17. Near Lexington, Joan Brinkley, seven-year-old Welcome school girl alighted from a school bus and was killed by a speeding car which dragged her 141 feet before dropping her mangled body. The car continued on another 100 feet before its driver, John Pulliam of Walkertown, could bring it to a stop. Raymond Brucham died during the day in a Winston-Salem hos pital of injuries he received in the early morning when his automobile overturned near the city. His com panion, Woodrow Caudle, was among the three persons hurt yes terday. In another accident caused by a car overturning, Hoke Harrison was fatally injured near Salisbury and a third accident involving an overturned car caused serious in juries to Dr. and Mrs. L. H. Frad kin of New Jersey, whose car turn ed turtle near Washington. _ Former Resident Dies From Si Mrs. Nathan Wilson Walker, widow of the late acting dean of the school of education at the Uni versity of North Carolina, died in a Durham hospital Monday night, a few hours after she had suffered a paralytic stroke. Mrs. Walker had gone shopping in the afternoon with a neighbor when she was stricken. She was given first aid by a local physician and was then rushed to Durham, where she failed to rally. Mrs. Walker was bofer her mar riage Miss Eva Pritchard of Scot land Neck, a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Pritchard. Since 1905, when her husband join ed the University faculty, she had lived in Chapel Hill. Surviving Mrs. Walker are two sons, Thomas H. Walker of the staff of The News and Observer in Raleigh and John Walker, a student at the University in Raleigh, and two daughters, Mrs. David Stowe of Raleigh and Mrs. L. M. John* son, Jr., of Greensboro. Mrs. Walker came to Asheboro some thirty years ago, as a bride with her husband who was head of the local school at that time. She, therefore, has some friends in the town and county who will learn of her death with regret. Rotarians Meet In Siler City Several members of the Ashe boro Rotary club attended an in ter-city meeting in Siler City Mon day evening. Cleveland Thayer pre sided at the meeting and the invo cation was delivered by Dr. C. G. Smith. Tom Sykes, of the High Point club, made the principal address. The session was a joint one of the Liberty, Sanford, Siler City, and Asheboro clubs, and there was also a small delegation from High Point present. I and the exchange of ideas. Among those who will speak are Mrs. J. T. Pugh, secretary of Lit erature; Miss Esther Ross, secre tary of education; Mrs. Win. C. Hammer, state president, whb will bring latest news from the home and foreign mission fields. ..yj While all Methodist Protestant. women in the district are urged to.-; attend the meeting, visitors will toe 1 welcome. The program will quite informal and has been de signed especially with a view tow. exchanging ideas for furthering^ the work of the women in . thfgj