W-— ; The Largest Paid-Up Circulation of Any Newspaper Published in Randolph County “Over 10,000 People Welcome You to Asheboro, the Center of North Carolina” ILUMELXI ASHEBORO, N. C., THURSDAY, DEC. 23,1937 NUMBER 176 where the Hoover Went Aground CHINA President Hoover sails frohi Kobe, Japan to Manila. P. I. FOOCHOW Takes unusual route to avoid war perils in Shanghai area. TSHfcfiW* (FORMOSA) AMOV Midnight Dec. 10 strikes reef off Hoishoto Island. Dawn, Dec. 11, passengers safely set ashore Dec. 13—all passengers taken aboard rescue ship. Dec 20—Hoover breaks up. LUZON SOUTH CHINA SEA Dec. 15, President McKinley arrives at Manila with shipwrecked passengers. MANILA This 'map tells graphically the story of the luxury liner President Hoover’, lost voyage, when she sailed a strange course and went aground off Hoisho’o—an island so little known that few chart show it. Taking off 435 passenger*,- the -crew stayed with tlv vessel until her keel was broken by the pounding waves. 1‘Santa” Jumps From Plane ■With Toy Bag; Feared Lost B. F. Spivey Dies Last Night In Randolph Hospital Benjamin Spivey, 40 year old engineer of Home Building, Inc., su ccumbed last night in the Ran lolph hospital to pneumonia fol lowing a week’s illness. Mr. Spivey, the son of the late Mi. .'iid Mrs. J. M. Spivey, has be< :i residing in Asheboro for the pa.-.i eight or nine years. Surviving are his wife, the for mer Miss Alice Hancock, and the following: one son, Wayne; three daughters, Dorothy, Ruth, and Rer.a. all of the home; six brothers, El* of Steeds, Temple and Henry of Star, 3. W. and E. M. of Ashe bo.o and Jonah of Pleasant Gar den; three sisters, Mrs. J. W. Lewis of Candor, Mrs. Jesse Har relsnn of Asheboro and Mrs. James Ou'rfield of Mount Pleasant. The funeral will be conducted at the Dover Baptist church in Moore county Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock, Rev. William Garner of Rundleman officiating. The body will remain in, Farlow’s funeral home in Asheboro until 1 o’clock Friday at which time it will be removed to the' burial place. In terment will follow the service in the church cemetery. Memorial Today For Bingham At Westminster London, Dec. 23.—(.U—Strains of the Star Spangled Danner soft ly echoed today in Westminister Abbey’s recesses as Great Britain’s cabinet members and foreign dip lomats and others attended the memorial service for United States Ambassador Robert W. Bingham. Foreign minister Anthony Eden, friend of the late ambassador, was pb s'cially moved. House Caucus Planned For Budget Prohe Washington, Dec. 2.'1.—(/P)—Rep resentative’ Dies (D.-Tex.) told 1‘rpsident Roosevelt in a letter to day, that a house group would call a caucus, or conference, “to agree upon a definite program to balance the budget immediately after con gress reassembles." He said an attempt would be made to place organized house sup port benind the executive’s budget balancing program. Moscow, Dec. 23.—(/P)—Soviet f authorities last night announced plans to take four polar campers from a drifting ice floe as soon as they get far enough south so by ice they can be approacl fceakev* Boston, Mass. Dec. 23.—<.!'> —Army planes and police boats searched Boston harbor today for U. 8. Army corporal Harold J. Krawer, 35, of Win throp. Mass., whose parachute descent as a “flyins Santa Claus” turned to death last night. Boston, £>cc. 23.—

—High over Boston airport, a brightly-costum ed Santa Claus last night stepped front a circling plane and, suspend ed by a wind-caught parachute, dropped and disappeared in dusk blanketed Boston harbor as a Christmas party of children look on horrified. Several hours later, two army pilots reported they had seen the body of the parachute jumper, 35 year-old Harold Kraner half in a sandbar, half in the water. They said Kraner still wore the para chute; Coastguard, army, navy, and harbor police craft converged on the general locality. Darkness and a falling tide impeded the search. Soon after the search started, an army plane, taxing to a landing, and a police automobile, rushing underwater searchlights to the scene, crashed, sending Sergeant Edward J. Seiboldt, Boston police ballistics’ expert, to a hospital crit ically injured. Less seriously hurt was hts assistant, Patrolman John Ciorin Almost simultaneously, a small boat in which two enlisted army men. Richard Miller and Earl Jor dan, were searching for the para chute jumper, capsized. Coast guards pulled the men, half-drown ed, from the frigid water. They too, went to the hospital. The accidents came at the climax of a party for children of members of an army air corps detachment at the East Boston airport. Jumping up and down with glee, the children awaited the descent of Kris Kringlc from the air when: “Private Kramer stepped out of the plane”, reported Captain Rich ard E. Cobb, commanding officer of the fetachmcnt and pilot of the ship. "His ’chute opened. We were about 1,500 feet above the airport. There was a 40-mile-an-hour wind blowing. “The wind caught the parachute. Kmmer landed in the water about 150 to 200 feet from the airport. He struggled to free him self flora the parachute.” CIO Warned In Jersey City Jersey City, N. J., Dec. 23.—CM —Corporation counsel, Janies A. Hamill, warned CIO and labor’s non-partisan league leaders today that if their members hold a “pub lic parade or public assembly” without a permit, or distribute cir culars in any public place, they would be “dealt with and punished according to law.” Raleigh, Dec. 23.—CPI—Dr. B. J. Lawrence, Raleigh physician, has accepted the post of surgeon con sultant -t the Central prison here Fred L. Dunlap, state highway and public commission chairman, said today. ■ J Unemployment Probe, January 4 London Perfects Technical Plan For Battleship Area In China London, Dec. 2‘i.—(.'!’)—(ircut Britain took .steps today to insure quick action on part of her Medi terranean fleet to the Orient in any emergency. A decision was understood to have been reached, however, against ifn mediate naval reinforcements for the Far East. Authorative sources said the cabinet at yesterday’s and last night s session considered admin istration of a technical plan for naval reinforcement but left fur ther decision to prime minister Neville Chamberlain and foreign secretary Anthony Eden over the ChWstmas holidays. The cabinet was understood to have decided large fleet move-1 merits, now, might be considered by Japan as unduly provocative. It was believed a decision would be with held until Tokyo replies to the recent Brist protest against attacks on British shipping in the Yangtze. The reply was expected soon. Plan To Let People Vote On War Referendum l oqui vji .» vote ,of. t?ic people Before a declaration of Washington, Dec. 23.—Thei natu nal movement to amend the people war has been accelerated with the formation of the national commit tee for a war referendum, headed by Major Gen. William C. Rivers of Pulaski, Tenn. General Rivers, retired army of ficer, is chairman of the newly foinicd national committee which includes prominent army officers such as General Smedley I). But ler, former marine commander; well-known educators, including Dr. Frank P. Graham, president of the University of North Carolina, and leading editors and publishers such as William Allen White, edi tor of The Emporia, Kans., Gaz ette. Opposed By Hull This movement is bitterly op posed by Secretary of State Hull of Tennessee, on the ground that it is sm encroachment upon the pre rogative of the executive depart ment of government as well as the legislative. Secretary Hull is back ed in his position by former Secre tary of State Henry L. Stimson, who declared, “the proposal, if adopted, would not only revolu tionize and destroy our existing plans for national defense, but would make any system of nation al defense much less effective.” For three years, Representative Louis Ludlow, Democrat of Indiana has sponsored a resolution in Con gress proposing an amendment to the Federal Constitution to have a referendum on war except in the case of actual invasion. Already a sufficient number of House mem bers have signed a petition to call the lesolution from the rules com mittee, where it has been buried, and it will be one of the first matters to conic before the new session of Congress, commencing January 3. Twelve Die In Gas Chamber; 22 Waiting Raleign, Dec. 23-—(M—Twelve men died in lethel executions at state prison this year and 22 others sat on “death row” today wonder ing what the year 1938 would mean to them. This year was tinusual insofar as executions at state prison went and this morning Governor Hoey issued | a statement telling of his actions on I death cases, asserting the matter of race or color should not be a de termining factor in the adminis tration of justice. The governor commuted death sentences of 10 persons, three white and 7 negro men. New York, Dec. 23.—’ - 1 Capitol Believes Investigation May Develop A Major Situation Washington, Dec. 23.—(.!’)—Of ficials arranging for the senate uneuiployinent investigation be ing planned for January 4, today indicated it would develop into a broad analysis of the extent of the 1 usiness recession. Governmental and industrial leaders will be called, they said, to testify on the present indus trial activity and prospects for the next few months. Some informed persons forecast that the inquiry, under direction of Senator Byrnes (D-S. C.) would be one of the most important events of the 1938 congressional session. It probably will provide the background, they said, for the dominant issues of the session— governmental expenditures and budget balancing. Roosevelt Plans Rough-Tumble Fight Next Year Washington, Dec. 2d.—

—Evi dence accumulated today that Pres ident Roosevelt forewarned, by his experience at the special session of congress, was preparing for a rough and tumble battle with ad ministration foes in the fprthcom ’tog-glgcticin -year -session. - Developments in the house, which sidetracked ' the administration wage and hours bill has convinced many observers the chief executive will abandon the “hands off atti tude” he assumed during the re cent session and will take aggres sive leadership of the legislative program. One bit of evidence they cited was Mr. Roosevelt’s letter yester day to the chairman of the house roads committee, reiterating his demands for curtailment of federal appropriations. Another was an appeal by Secre tary Wallace for farmer support of the wage and hours legislation ir. return for labor support for the farm bill. The labor measure, he said, was needed to “create a more construc tive balance” between labor and agriculture. But, most convincing, to some political observers was the White House conference with sen ate libera! leaders Monday night, that the chief executive would fight for his legislative recommenda tions, rather than compromise. I Mexico City Hit By ’Quake; Many Pray In Streets Mexico City, Dec. 23.—i.P)—A heavy earthquake shook Mexico Cay early today, killing at least two persons and crushing adobe homes at the outskirts of the city. Communication with cities in the interior were disrupted and I led to the possibility they may have suffered heavily. One report was that Toluch Park, in the southern part, was damaged. One aged woman was fatally in jured here when the roof of her home fell in and a man was elec trocuted by a broken high tension wire. A number of adobe huts at the edge of the city collapsed. The people were calm, however, and occasional Indians, praying in the middle of the city, were the only signs of alarm. Yeager Captured Raleigh, Dec. 23.—'Charles Yea ger, 23-year-old safeblower, who was one of the seven men figuring in the sensational kidnap escape from Caledonia prison farm Feo ruary 15 under the leadership of Bill Payne, has been caught in An derson, lnd. Emporium, Penn. Dec. 23. f.P> |—An east, bound express of the | Penn, railroad ran through an ' open switch and crashed, head-on early today with a freight on a siding. The railroad reported 131 pas sengers, two firemen apd an ex press messenger had been hurt but none seriously. Wives Of U. S. Workers Leave New China Governme ___ She Won’t Be Sold as Bride Fourteen - year - old Margaret Gozmanian. above, has returned from France to the home of her father, an unemployed laborer, in Newark N. alter figuring in a puzzling incident, .certain she had escaped from being “sold” into marriage with a 40 year-old man.who tiad offered $350 tu« her uncle for her hand. --n— I Merchants Will Observe Xmas; Offices Close Virtually every business- in Aslie boro will be silent, Saturday, Christmas day. Merchants, with the possible ex ception of drug stores, some to re- j main open to accommodate per sons seeking medicines and other necessities, plan to close their stor es Fridav night, and remain closed until Monday morning. Both 'or.nks will observe the ho!-J iday as will the municipal and county offices. The Daily Courier, following its policy of giving its employes a full day of rest on Christmas day will not publish its Sunday morning edi tion, as such publication would de prive the employes of the greater part of Saturday. The post office will be closed al though patrons will have entry to their mail boxes. Chief Clarence Rush again today cautioned residents of the city to take extreme precaution against fires over the holiday. Christmas’ trees, lighted with burning candles or placed too near an open fire, he pointed out, are a menace to safe ty. Public officials also advised ex treme caution in the use of fire works. Wage And Hours Legislation To Be Revived Washington, Dec. 23.—(.P)—A new administration bid for enact ment of wage and hour legislation came vesterdav from Secretary Wallace. The agriculture department chief expressed hope that representativ es from farm areas would support the sidetracked labor standards bill at the regular session of Congress beginning in January. He toid reporters that the bill was necessary to promote a “more constructive balance” between la bor and agriculture. Saying that representatives from farming areas had helped send the measure back to a house commit tee for revision, Wallace added: “Many city representatives sup ported the administration farm bill when its fate was in doubt. Rep resentatives of agricultural consti tuencies were not quite' as con siderate of labor as representatives of labor constituencies have been of agriculture. He declared the bill to fix min imum wages and maximum work ing hours would help the farmer rather than hurt him. i Hangkow, Dec. 23.—(.1*)—Three hundred American and other foreigners fled a feared attack on this temporary seat of China’s gov eminent tonight. They were aboard an interna tional “Christmas express” evacua tion train. The flag drapped train nf which both Chinese and Japanese had been informed in advance, was expect ed ix reach Hongkong on Christ mas or the day after. Of the 300 refugees, 97 were Americans, mostly wives and fam ilies of missionaries at Hankow, Wucnang and Hangkow. All Amer icans and other foreigners have been urged to evacute the Yangtze vailey. Another international train will leave here next week with several, hundreds of additional refugees, including a number of Americans for Jiuling. .Shanghai, Dec. 23.—(/P)—Japan ese officials today announced the foimation of a new autonomous government at Nanking, presumb ly icplacing the Chinese regime of General Chaing who fled from the former capitol a month ago. The Japanese army announced the capture of Nanking December 13 rnd the. Japanese army and navy commanders in this section maac a triumphant entry four days later. Recent Japanese military oper ations on uii arc, west and north of Nanking, has been described as designed to prevent any Chinese counter attacks which would upset the Japanese plan for a new pro visional government at-Nankingr' • - * Ten days ago, “a provisional gov ernment of China” was proclaimed under Japanese auspices at Peip in<", renamed Teking. It aspired to be the government of all China and raised the flags of the Teking re gime, which ruled China before the nationals revolution of 11)26-28. Hov the Teking and Nanking rc gemts are to be reconciled has not been made clear. From Nanking, various depart ments of the Chinese government fled late in November. A Japanese army spokesman pre dicted the early capture of Hang chow historic capitol of Chekiang, southwest of Shanghai and Japan ese authorities warned foreigners to evacuate the city. It was feared evacuation of Americans anil other foreigners from Hhangchow would be diffi cult. Dismal Picture Painted By PWA In Employment Washington, Dec. 23.—L-P)—A PWA official estimated today that 2,000,000 persons had become un employed since September 1 and that 1,000.000 more might be cut of jobs by the. end of February. These estimates were made by Leon Henderson, consulting econo mist, while preparations were made for the senate unemployment in vestigation, beginning January 4. CHRISTMAS SUPERSTITIONS I-- II X X \ I Babies born on Christmas Eve possess a ready tongue, while those bom Christmas Day do not have such a "gilt of gab” but better logic, according to a superstition in the Vosgea Mountain region of' Germany. I Shopping 'Till I ■ ' _ •* a m&M.’