The Transylvania Times FASTEST GROWING WEEKLY NEWSPAPER IN NORTH CAROLINA BREVARD, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1932 SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: $1.00 PER YpAR ) OFFICES TO STAY HERE, BELIEF North Carolina State College Sponsors WIDE SEARCH PRESSED FOR FAMOUS BABY Lindberghs Deeply Affect ed as $50,000 Ransom Is Demanded Push Passage Of Sales Tax Bill In House ALL OFFERS OF REWARD ARE OFF TRENTON, N. J., March 2, — All rewards offered for the capture of the kidnapers of the Lindbergh son were cancelled today on account of Col. Lindbergh’s fear they would endanger the life of his child. TREiyrON, N. J., Ma he slate legislature tod ch 2.- oluti aptur reward of $25,000 of the kidnapers of Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr. This increased the $10,000 state reward prebiously announced by Gov. Harry Moore. Billion Dollar Levy In crease May Be in Ef fect by April 1 Above are shown four attractive young ladies who have been chosen as sponsors at North Carolina State College. Their pictures will appear in the beauty section of the 1932 Agromeck, State College yearbook. They are (1) Miss Katherine Morgan of Salisbury, sponsor for the varsity track team; (2) Miss Sara Molder, of Columbus, Ga., sponsor for the Agromeck; (3) Miss Emily Storv, of Raleigh, sponsor for the junior class and, (4) Miss Marguerite LePort, of Greensboro, sponsor for the student body. KEEP WELFARE OFFICE OPEN 1 DAY A WEEK Monday To Be Active Day; Work Simplified; Food, Clothes Needed A change in the hours at which the County Welfare associatioix supply room is to be kept open in future w'as announced this week. Heretofore, th«x supply room has been open daily, beginning at 1 p. m., with Miss Kern present each afternoon in the week. Beginning next week, the supply room will remain open only on Mondays, but will be open all day, with the ex ception of the noon hour for luncheon. Two factors have contributed to the^ change in the plans for operating the supply room. Oik' of t.bps#^ 1C? T.f/M.i- L.... L...... M. E. LADIES OF DISTRICT IN MEETING HERE TODAY Zone No. 1 of the Asheville dis trict of the Woman’s Missionary society of the Methodist Episco pal church, South, will hold its first meeting of 1932 in the Bre vard Methodist church, Thursday, March 3. beginning at 10 o’clock. Zone No. 1 is composed of all the auxiliaries of the Methodist church in the three counties, Polk, Henderson and Transylvania, with Mrs. Oliver Orr of the Brevard Auxiliary as zone leader. The program for the day reads as, follows: 10 o’clock—Devotional by Mr?. J. W. Payne and Miss Bessie Al len, of Hendersonville. Welcome by Mrs. Hume Harris. Response by Mills River auxiliary. Roll call and discussion of plans for year of all auxiliaries. Roll call and discussion of plans (Continued on page 4) RALEIGH GETS GATHERING OF DEMOCRATS June 16 Is Date Selected; Bailey Sees Hoover Defeat of these Is that the work has been simplified and the organization has now learned what is to be ex. pected of it in the way of assist ance. Another is that with the opening of the Pisgah Cotton Mills in town, work has been provided many who will not now need as sistance. This work was first can led on through the office of Superintend ent of Schools J. B. Jones for a period of two ' months before it was taken over by Miss Kern. Mr. Jones found that the work called for more time than he could devote to it and as a re- ^It he personally engaged Miss Kern, and paid her for her ser vices to operate the supply room, so that none of the money that has been contributed or donated to the cause has been devoted to ana ^f^'K^yation of the agency, snnnr P®*'' 'i'l'ectly for supplies for the needy the cause without any remunera Long Illness Ends In Death of Mrs. H. Cunningham I'Dntinuefi on page 41 Mrs. Harry Cunningham died Sunday at her home on French Broad street following a lingering illness of the past year or more. Funeral services were held Mon day afternoon at Oak Grove church, with Rev. Paul Hartsell, pastor of the Brevard Baptist church, conducting the service. In terment was in the Oak Grove cemetery. Active pall bearers were: W. P. Fulbright, B. H. Freeman, D. P. Kilpatrick, C. 0. Robinson, Ira D. Galloway. Clyde Ashworth. Included in the honorary pall bearers were: D. L. English, R. P. Kilpatrick. .T. S. Bromfield. T. G. ^yard, J. K. Mills, J. M. Kilpat rick. Joe McCrary, T. S. Wood, S. M. Macfie, Thomas Smith, John Ashworth, S. F. Allison, W. M. Henry, _T. G. Miller. Surviving are her husband anr! 10-' •-old RALEIGH. N. C., March 2.— The State Democratic executive committee, meeting here last night, decided to hold the state convention here on June 16. Precinct meetings were set for 3 p, m. on Saturday, June 4, the day of the state primary, or at any other time on that day con venient to the precinct chairman. Raleigh won the convention over Charlotte and Sanford, the vote being 91 for Raleigh, 17 for Charlotte, and two for Sanford. Prior to the selection of the place and date for the convention, the committee heard an address by Senator Josiah W. Bailey, of Raleigh, in which he predicted the defeat of President Hoover in No vember, and called for the most unified Democracy the state and nation has seen in two decades. COMMISSIONERS TO GATHER ON MONDAY The March meeting of the coun ty commissioners will be held at the courthouse on Monday, March 7. Nothing special at this time is scheduled to come before th? county commissioners, so far as was indicated this w'^eek in court house circles. HOPEWELL, N. J., March 2.— Charles A. Lindbergh, Jr., 20- months - old baby of Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh, was seized from his crib where he lay ill' with a severe cold last night and' taken away by kidnappers, of I whom no trace had been found: today. It w,as announced the kidnaper.? I left a note demanding $50,000 ransom. A search throughout the , east was organized at once. Col onel Lindbergh, grave and deeply affected, left his estate here w'ith two state troopers and two trap pers familiar wdth tlie country side at 8 a. m., and it w’as said Lindbergh would fly over the rug ged Neshaminy valley in search of the kidnapers. The child, wrapped only in night clothing, was taken evidently, by a man who appeared to have climbed into a bedroom window by means of a ladder sometime between 7:30 p. m .and 10 p. m. Mrs. Lindbergh, formerly Anne Mon’ow, daughter of the late United States Senator Dwight W. Morrow, broken-heartedly said: “The poor child has had a cold and will suffer. We have been doc toring him for several days.” Lindbergh,' quietly but suffer ing . terrific strain, said he sus pected no one, and observed: “They must have -got through that window,” pointing to a screened window which would not close because it was warped. Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow, moth er of Mrs. Lindbergh, arrived to console her daughter early today from her home at Englewood, N. J. It was stated authoritatively that “If the means and occasion for doing so are made known to Lindbergh, he would pay the kid napers for the return of the baby.” The kidnaping created a world wide sensation, with the London Press streamering story and play ing it far more prominently than the war, while the federal depart ment of justice offered its com plete cooperation in the search. The theory was advanced by trained detectives that dope ad dicts were responsible. The police knew only that the intruder had used a ladder, put up in sections; had scaled into the nursery; and there left a note — presumably a ransom demand, though they would not say—then had scrambled down the ladder, making his way to a point- down “Featherbed lane” toward the main highway. On this path, according to foot prints, the kidnaper was joined by a woman accomplice. The spot where the kidnaping occuiTed is remote, situated up a rocky roadway off a main thor oughfare. A stolen auto, found abndoned near Hillside, N. J., furnished po lice a possible clue. The car, a blue Nash sedan, resembled one in which two men early last even ing inquired at Princeton the way to the secluded Lindbergh estate. False scents w’ere followed, but up to early forenoon the police work ed up blind alleys, IJndbergh, keeping the poise which marked him since, the day he leaped to fame 'by his Paris ocean flight, aided police. His wife, daughter of the late Sena tor Dwight Morrow and compan ion of the colonel on a venture some flight to the orient last year, pulled herself together remarkably after her first prostration and also helped police. Col. Lindbergh with two state troopers and two two trappers fa miliar with the countryside left the estate in a fast car before 8 a. m., without revealing where (■Continiiod on page six) John H. Small, native of Wash ington, N. C., and for 22 years representative from the first con gressional district of this state will speak here Tliursday night, March 3, in the courthouse against the 18th amendment, Mr. Small was in congress • from March, 1899 to 1921, and was one of the few southerners in congress to vote against the reso lution for the adoption of the 18th amendment. Although he retains his' legal residence at his old home in this state, he uow has offices as an attorney in the national capital. He is appearing under the aus pices Of the association oppo.sml to the amendment. WASHINGTON. I). C.. Mar. 2. Completion of tlu- l)i-parti.son $1,000,000.000 tax increase bill, announced yesterday by Acting (.’hairman Charles R. Ci-isp of the ways and m cans committee, brought predictions today that the bill and its provisions for a gen eral two per cent sales tax on manufactured articles, may be in Cifect before the end of the month. Crisp said he would sulnnit the bill for his committee’s approval today, introduce it formally in the liouse probably Saturday, and move' to take it u{) in the liouse probably Tuesday. Delsate will not be restricted and the bill will be ojien to amend ments. according to Soealcer Jolin Garner, who commented that this is considerably different from the tactics of his Republican predeces-, sors. Passage is expected before the end of the week. The bill then will go to the senate w’here some opposition to the $()2r),()00,000 sales tax is expected. luit not then TEACHERS TD REPAID SOON Six Months of Term Gone; School Office Gets $700 for Bus Costs One half of the school teachers’ salaries for the city anj county is expecte-d to be psiid by Monday of next week, and the remainder will be available in about three weeks, or as soon as the state department of education can check up on the situation in the county. With the beginning of March, marking the end of the six months term in the county, all of the schools entered the extended term and this is operative county-wdde for the final two months of school so that all the children of school age in Transylvania county,, w'^hether in the city or county, have equal privileges of an eight- months term. Operation of the closing two- months term of school is liased on a payment of one-third of the ex penses by the state and two-thirds by the county. The county’s por tion of this expense is around $10,000, and of this amount $3,- 000 is already in hand. Superin tendent J. B. Jones, with the last payment of salaries to each teach er in the county, delivered a mem orandum to each asking them to conserve funds a.s, according’ t> present indications, schools may close w’ith salaries not paid up in full. But the anxoimt of back sal ary due with the closing of school will not exceed a month, and may not be that much, all depending, of course, on the way in 'v.’hich taxes are received by the county. The state only meets its portion of the extended term costs as the county meets its, so that })art of the finances will be cared for just as soon as the county is ready to take care of its pa.vments. With regard to the payment of half of the Fobruar.y teacher.?’ sal aries, it was explained that since February is the final month in the six-months term of school a com plete check-up is made on Feb ruary salaries so that the pay ments out of Raleigh 'will be pre cisely what is due. If there is an error in the previous months in the term, this is corrected in tho following pay day, but the state does not mix the funds of the. six- months and of the two-months ex tended term. Superintendent Jones w’as ’n receipt Wednesday morning of $700 additional funds from the state for gas and oil for school bus costs. enough to endanger it, to President Hoover for his .sig nature. Most of the pi'ovisions have been drafted by special sulicom- mittees in pre])aration for the full committee’s approval. Imposition of special excise tax es in addition to tlie general sales tax has been found necessary, Crisp said. He declineil to say what articles would Ije levied up on, but committee members have been considering electricity, gas oline, imported oil. industrial al cohol, and natural and illuminat ing gas as subjects for these im posts. Increases in income and inherit ance taxes, and a new gift tax, will increase revenue about $250,- 000,000. The sales tax is counted on for $625,000,000 in its present form, which exempts only food and farm jiroduction necessities, and this leaves $125,000,000 to be raised by new special excises. In addition, the committee counts upon various plugging-up of “loopholes” in the present ta law to increase revenue by about $100,000,000 more. FIRE VISITS JONES HOME Damage, Around $500 Is Covered by Insur ance Policy REQUESTS NOT TO MOVE SITE COUNTY WIDE Kiwanis, Chamber of Com merce, County Co-op erate for Retention DISTRICT ENGINEER TO RESIDE HERE So far as the district road of fice force here knows, state high way office for district No. 4, lo cated here since last July 1 when, the state tuok over the adminbs- tration of all roads in the com monwealth. is going to stay right in Brevard, despite the semi-of ficial announcement given out iti Hendersonville last week bv T. L. Durham, chairman of the Hender- .son county commission, to the ef fect that it would be moved to Hendersonville in the near fu ture. Immediately the announcement was made public that the of.fices were to be moved to Henderson ville, the Transylvania county commissione''s in a called meet ing held on Friday, offered a .suitable location for the construc tion of any buildings that may be needed and free office space if the state hi.ghway eom,mission would retain its headquarters here. The Kiwanis club and the Chamber of Commerce also back ed the movement to have the state retain the highway office in this city and citizen's meetin.g Friday 'night voted to send a telegram urging the commission to reconsider the decision which would take administration of the road affairs in the counties of Transylvania, Polk, Henderson and parts of Jackson and Macon counties from Brevard. Transylvania countians are urg ing that a hearing be held in the matter, before the offices are moved. At the local office yesterday, however, no intimation was made of any knowledge that the trans fer is still contemplated. W. B. Ferguson, district engineer, who is to be in charge of the office, according to, the original an nouncement, and w'ho comes here from the highway' office at Ashe ville is in the city and stated yesterday that he is planning to ' cupy a home here at an early date. Variety Store To Be Opened Here In Few Weeks Fii discovered in the residence of Superintendent and Mrs. J. B. Jones on West Main street, about .7 o’clock Monday morning caused considerable damage to the house and furniture. The loss, estimat ed at around $500. is said to be entirely covered by insurance. The fire, oi-iginating in the liv ing room and confined alto.gether to that room, is thoug'ht to have been due to hot coals and ashes from the fire])lace burning their way through the sills underneath the floor, . and to have been .smouldering all night. It was not discovered, however, until Mr. Jones went into the room Monday morning to start the fire. Quite a little of the flooring in the living room had to be toi-n away, and considerable damage to the furniture and furnishings was caused by smoke and soot, the fire itself having gotten hut little headway before discovery was made. .Promjjt response on the i)art of the fire department spared what might have been a disastrous confla.gration. The de partment has been widely com mended for the cai-eful and effi cient manner in which they han dled the fire-fighting apparatus and foi’ the .slight damage caused by W'ater. The house is that formerly owned by Nathan Morris, and is now in the hands of the Judson McCi’ai'y real estate firm. The United 'Variety Stores will open a stove in Brevard in March. It has been thought for some time that a store of this kind would locate in Brevard, but only in the past few days has it become a reality. L. M. Hinshaw, owner of the chain of stores, was in town Monday making final ar rangements. The- United Variety Stores carry a complete line of notions and other products within the price range of $1. This chain lias seven other stores, all of which are located in North Caro lina. The headcfiiartei’s for tho firm are in Taylorsville, N. C. Tile local store will be located in the McMinn building, in the room formerly occupied bv the Chamber of Commerce. Work men have already begun the re modeling of the store roomi F. G. Feimster will be manager of the Brevard stove. The stock of chandise will be of $10,000 value. A store of this kind has long been needed in Transylvania county, according to a number or citizens, and it is believed the imblic will heartily welcome the new establishment. An an nouncement of the opening will be published in this paper within the next two weeks. AIKEN SEEKS PLACE ON OEMS' TICKET H. C. H. GLAZENER AT BOONE ^ ROSMAN, March 2. — C. H. Giazener, section foreman of the highway in this community, left, last week for Boone, N. C., to take a short course in patching hard surface highways. Several demonstration.? will be given at Boone this week. Mr. Giazener is expected to I'etufn to his home here the latter part of the weelc. Aiken today added hiu. name to the list of candidates who will be before the Transylvania county Democratic primary to be held in June, seeking party prefer ment for the nomination as sher iff. Mr. Aiken is well known and popular and has been an active worker in hi.s party for' many years. He has been in the service of the Hendersonville-Brevard rail way for 19 years. Three years ago, Mr. Aiken entered the }>ri- niary anj was highest in the race for the nomination for county treasurer. He retired from tho race, h.owever, it is recalled, for the .sake of party harmony.