RED CROSS RELIEF GIVEN TO VICTIMS IN 103 DISASTERS Tornadoes, Fires, Hurricanes, Floods, Epidemics, Make Record of Year - # A history of the disasters in the United States in any year is written annually by the American Red Cross, according to Chairman John Barton Payne, commenting on the report for the year ending June 30. 1934, which has just been issued in Washington. “Because of the charter provision which places upon the Red Cross the responsibility for disaster relief, our chapter and staff workers are notified of all calamities of storm and fire and flood,” he continued. "The emergency period may prove to be brief, in cases where the victims have their own re sources to draw on. While It lasts. However, whether tt brings the imme diate need of food, clothing and shelter for the homeless, or entails a program of investigation and rehabilitation, the Red Cross is the official director of all relief.” A great variation in type, and a wide geographical distribution, char acterize the 103 disasters reported last year. Tornadoes, hurricanes, hail storms and other storms made up al most one half of the total. Especially numerous were the tropical storms which swept In from the sea to the Atlantic and Gulf Coast region. There wore 21 storms of this type, establish inK a new record for frequency. Next In number to storms were dis asters of fire, the report shows. Red Cross aid was given following 25 fires in the United States and insular pos sessions. The most spectacular was the Chicago stockyards fire, where Red Cross workers arrived shortly after the flro started, administering relief until the emergency period passed, giving first aid to about 1,000 persons. Floods caused serious damage in some sections. 17 calling for Red Cross relief. Three explosions were reported, and three epidemics of malaria and typhoid fever. A school bus wreck was one ot the year's tragedies for which Red Cross funds were needed for re lief and rehabilitation. recnniqm* acqiinvu Cross in those disasters and the hun dreds of others we have handled is at the service of the public.” Chairman Payne said. "To make this possible the disaster relief service has issued a manual containing Instructions for chapters Interested in advance prepa rations for emergencies. Disaster in stimes were held last year in 2S ■ trateglc locations, to enable Red Cross and civic workers to formulate plans for possible disaster emergencies in their communities.” Support of the disaster relief activi ties of the Rod Cross comes from the annual roll call held each year from Armistice Day to Thanksgiving Day. Trained to Save Lives First aid certificates were issued by I he Red Cross last year to 130.972 per sons who finished the course of instruc tion put on by the chapters. Included In this list were more titan 70.000 fore men. time clerks nnd other key em ploy, s on Federal C ivil Works projects. Further evidence of the government’s endorsement of the first aid program is found in projects now under way where Red Cimss chapters, at the re quest of tin War Department, are glv ng first aid instruction in CCC camps. Where i' has been requested by Army . nglnecrs the same Instruction is also nude available to key men working ..it federal water conservancy and flood control projects. War Veterans’ Problems Increase Last year Aim tiain Rod Cross chap iors dealt with the problems of nearly 100,000 veterans and their families, 1'he workers find that as the years go n their responsibility increases rather ilian decreases. Changes in legislation, iho increasing age of veterans and the consequent Increase in physical ills, firing new needs for sympathetic treat ment by trained Red Cross workers. In ildltion to tlii.i service to veterans the i;ed Cross at rwd as the official medium .■tween the people and the men In niili .ry and naval service, giving aid hroitgh this service last year to fi.979 non In the army, navy and marine rorpBi Fires on Morro Castle and at Nonv', Alaska, Received Help of Red Cross Workers A number of tragic and uuusuaI *dlsnstors have recently called for Red Cross relief. Included In them have been a fl0,y' in Vsnteokv following a series of cloudbursts in August; epi demics of disease which threatened several sections, including some caused by drought eov Htlons. Red Ci >ss workers found much to do for the survivors of tfio Morro Castle fir.' ur.d for th ■ n engaged lii rescue work; I M C'’e-s re lief w:int by ahp'u.o to Alaska when tlm fam i- old gold esmp, Mot e’, bu” *-d In A ptembor. • HEGUliTiON OF " lonomi i - ! President Will Ask New Legis lation of Forthcoming Congress. WASHINUTONl—The forthcoming session of Congress will be asked by President Roosevelt to enact new leg islation for regulation of all forms of transportation. In the case of the railway* they are already so complete ly regulated that little more could be j suggested without wholly usurping the functions of management. With respect to interstate commerce mov ing on the highways and waterways, however, there Is a wide Held for the exercise of Congressional activity. Joseph B. Eastman, Federal Co-or dinator of Transportation, has pre sented his views to the President, both at the summer White House In Hyde Park, N. Y., and since the return of the President to Washington, but thus far Mr. Eastman has properly declined to disclose details, although it may be safely assumed that many of the pro visions written by the Oo-ordinator into the bills presented by Senator 'Jill in the last session will be em bodied in the proposals now offered for the President's approval. May Be New Cabinet Office. Notwithstanding Mr. Eastman's sl lence and the lack of information from White House sources, there la pur poseful talk In Washington to the ef fect that the new transportation leg islation may include the creation of a cabinet officer to be known as Secre tary of Transportation. Obviously, such a move would represent quite a drastic change from present Oovem ment policies, but the suggestion is not new, having been proposed for the consideration ef Congress when the Transportation Act of 1920 was being discussed. The objections to a secretary or Transportation are as potent today as when originally put forward. Perma nence of Administration Is Imperative and is not achieved by the changes that periodically take place In cabinet appointments, but Washington author | Hies do agree that If regulation of all | forms of interstate transportation Is | to be entrusted to the Interstate Com merce Commission, there may be sound l logic In the creation of a separate I federal agency to assume some of the administrative functions that will de velop In thus extending the Held of regulation, leaving to the I. O. C. the quasi Judicial functions which It Is so well qualified to perform. There are two definite schools of thought In Washington dealing with a new national transportation policy. One hopes that the trend within the Administration to assume larger con trol over all forms of private enter prise may lead to Government owner ship of the railways, or at least some of them, and the other holds that i ownership may still he left In private | hands but regulation and control should be strengthened not alone with 1 respect to the railways but with every other form of transportation perform ing Interstate service. Public Ownership Not FaveitA If public sentiment is to be the Judge between these schools, the gov- I eminent ownership group could not i win, for public experience with gov ernment operation of the railways during the war is still an unpleasant memory. More than ibis, however, the : public is becoming more and more sen-1 sitlve on the subject of taxation and] will. It Is believed, frown upon adding 1 billions to the public debt to acquire I the railways and then be further taxed to pay the deficits Inevitably arising from Government operation. It would be most heartening and ! helpful if the l’resldeut would declare himself ns still supporting the prlnd ! plus of private ownership, and It ; would greatly simplify the problem of i Congress In dealing with the tntnspor- j j Ution question next winter. whatever piTaorats may no nm proved by the President and whatever th# reasons behind them muy l>e. It 1* certain now that the Cougress which meets in January will have to face the necessity for establishing n govern ment transportation policy. Leaders in the House and Senate are authority for the information that such legisla tion will be placed rather near the t .p of the list of proposals upon which the President will ask Congress to act, and today It looks like a strong ■ leaning toward the regulation o'f rail, I highway, waterway and inlorcoastal ! transportation agencies which carry j interstate commerce. • While the elections may have changed ■ tie Congressional picture to some ox j lent, the next Congress Is expected to i,c practically as subservient to the President as the last two sessions. The logical conclusions thereto' * are that transportation legislation. If sub ■ nit tied by the Pres'denl, will he pit | acted lu very much the same form ar | it is presented. To Teach Water Safety Life saving services offering train ing la Crst aid methods for swimmer* have been carried on by the Red Cross ir two decades. In 20 years, life saving i 'filth ales have been awarded to more j -an a half million people who are in j i rested in water sport*. Last year [ -.piers Irsucd 72,503 life saving cer : teats*. | The Red Cross errol’ed 3,802,384 ! ■ -mi its in last year’s roll call. Join ! • i • r " call—Armlstico Day to I_ J Boy Scouts Take Trip To Tennessee Twenty-six Brevard Boy Scouts, Scoutmaster J. E. Rufty, Frank Os borne of the East View Dairy, and W. A. Robertson of the Transyl vania Times returned to Brevard Sunday night from a two-day trip into Tennessee and the Smoky mountains. The trip was made in a large truck and began at 6 A. M. Saturday morning. The trip into Tennessee was made by way of Asheville and Newport, Tenn., arrival in Knoxville being made at 12:00 noon, Brevard time. Tickets to the Duke-Tennessee foot ball game had been reserved by the scouts and Scoutmaster Rufty se cured these tickets at the business office of the University of Tennessee athletic department. Twelve of the scouts attended the game while the remainder attended a show downtown Knoxville. Following the game the party drove to Norris, Tenn., where camp I for the night was made. TVA po licemen assisted the scouts in locat ing a suitable camping place. Drone of the rock crushers on Norris dam was audible to the campers and the brilliantly lighted dam site was seemingly just below the mountain top camp. All they could eat for twenty-five cents was breakfast program for the members of the party in the TVA cafeteria at Norris Sunday morning. The scouts had a wide choice of cereal, grapefruit, eggs, toast, bis cuit, butter, ham, syrup and milk or coffee for the breakfast. “Seconds” turned into thirds and fourths and one scout drank seven glasses of' sweet milk. After registering at the entrance to the dam workings, inspection of: the construction going on occupied I the better part of two hours. With I exception of trucks and two small! gasoline locomotives hauling mixed concrete to the electric shovels, every thing on the job is done electrically. Heating arid cooking at the cafeteria and domitories is also by electricity. Leaving Norris, the party returned to Brevard by way of the Smoky i Mountain park, through New Found I Gap and Cherokee Indian school. Boys on the trip were as follows: Richard Hamlin, T. C. Galloway, Vance Jackson, Hale Siniard, Rich ard Enloe, Billy Huggins, Bobby Huggins, Allen Smith, Robert Tins ley, Mack Aiken, Chas. Pickelsimer, Richard Norton, Oliver Orr, Lucien Deaver, Billy Nicholson. Max Ash worth, John Walker, A. B. Galloway, Panama Canal Tolls The first Panama toll act was passed In 1912 to provide for the payment of tolls for the passage of ships through the Panama canal. It exempted coast wise American ships from payment. On prolonged protest from Orest Brit tain, declaring the exemption was a violation of treaty rights, the act, as It reluled to the exemption, was re pealed in 19U. River Poison Tree Feared The river poison tree, of southern Asia Is greatly feared by wood cut ters because if the tree Is chopped the sap Is likely to squirt Into the eyes of the cutter and cause perma nent blindness. ~~ ' L. E. Bagwell, Lewis Sims, Lewis Hamlin, C. K. Osborne, Henry Miller, James Curry and Junior Poole. TAXES One of the many interesting matters pertaining to politics, is the question of taxation and all taxpayers should investigate the question of taxes very carefully and then vote for the political party which has been able to reduce taxes. There are certain political candidates who refer to taxes and talk about taxes and think the voters should rely solely on what they say, but there is one sure way to find out about the tax situation and that is for the taxpayer to compare the amounts he has had to pay and to inspect the tax books and see the tax valuation and the rate of taxation which has been as sessed and levied and neither Democrat nor Republi can can then truthfully contradict what the tax books show. There is no use for a Democrat to say that the tax rate is lower than is shown on the books, nor for a Republican to say that the tax rate is higher than it shows on the books and of course the valuation as shown on the books is also a legal record and the truth about what the taxpayer’ property is valued at and on what amount he is going to have to pay taxes. The taxpayers are therefore requested by the Democrats to compare the tax records of Transylvania County for the last six years, the first two of which years, the Republicans were in control of the County, and the last four, the Democrats have been in control. During the four years that the Democrats have been in control there has been the worst depression that this State and this Union has ever experienced. During the last two years of Republican Administration in this County, the Board of Commissioners added approxi mately Three Hundred and Eighty Five Thousand Dol lars to the indebtedness of the County by selling bonds and by giving notes and this money was not spent in paying the County’s indebtedness, but was deposited by' the Republican Commissioners in the Brevard Banking Company when the County already had over Two Hundred Thousand Dollars on deposit in said bank. And when that bank closed a short time alter Election there were Six Hundred Thousand Dollars and more of the County’s monev on deposit and which the Democratic Administration was unable to get out of the bank. The Republicans did not turn over anv cash to the Democrats, but only gave them drafts or checks on the bank which said checks and drafts the bank could not pay. With this Three Hundred and Eighty Five Thousand Dollars added indebtedness and the Six Hundred Thousand Dollars lost in the bank, which said Six Hundred Thousand Dollars was put in the bank hv the Republicans, the Democrats had nearlv a million dollars added to the County s burden and with all that added indebtedness, and with the Countv’s creditors calling on every side for money the Democrats went on and by economical administration were able to reduce the tax rate every year and las vear thev cut the tax valuation of even- piece ot property*in the County fifty per cent, which of course, would have cut the tax rate in half with nothing else being done, but in addition to cutting the valuation fifty per cent the tax rate was reduced so that actually the taxpayer of Transylvania County is now paying t" per ccnHes, than he or she paid under the Republican Administration and this 50 per rent cut.in tax» alue. was done bv th- Commissioners m one of then regulai meetings, whereby the taxpayers were saved hi several thousand dollars it would nave cost if there had been an assessment on every piece of the County. In addition to that reduction of taxcNdu ing the last two years the present Boaid of Commis or ha, been able to pay oft and sc tie acme forty seven odd thousand dollar, of Comity bond, and has naid around seventeen thousand dollars of 1 i°fT1", indebtedness, a large part of which float.ng indebted ness was left over from the Republican Administration when the Democrats took charge four years ago. T1 mav interest the taxpayers to Know mai *>> 15130 when the Republicans went out of office on the first Monday in December in that year and during the Inst week in November, that the Republican Commis sioners saw fit to give checks on their deposit in the Brevard Banking Company for the amount of WP™*)’ mutely Nine Thousand Dollars which they paid to then County Attorney, in addition to the allowance of many hundreds of dollars made to said attorney as credit, on the taxes he had collected as County Attorney dur ing hi'-' term ot oifice, and a laige part of t - Kim P»M «U attorney »roSe from the cost ot •tv foreclosure actions brought by the Republican Commissioners and-on which they allowed the County Attorney twenty dollars in each and every case which I; scs were not completed, and from the several bun , * vffM 1-'* *-b ^ * t*o>,ncv you can readily see how thaTcdlt rmuV-In addition to this cost of the tax foreclosure sales under the Republican Administration, was that cost of advertising which as the records show, amounted to over two thousand dollars. There has been some talk in regard to the preMint tax foreclosuie actions™! instead of the County Attorney being allowed twenty dollars for each case. wi» say that tl» , nMro cost to the taxpayer cannot < xceud six dollars, whi-'h six dollars covers attorneys Res, ne^paper ad '•erfWi* and court costs, so that unoer tne Democratic Administration the same kind of law suit, as was con ducted by the Republican Administration, costs the taxpayer fourteen dollars less, than the taxpayer had to pay the County Attorney under the Republican Commissioners and when the taxpayer pays his six dol lars cost, then the attorneys fees, advertising fees and the court cost are all settled, w hile under the Republi can Administration when you add the attorney’s fee3, the advertising cost and the court costs, the taxpayer had to pay over thirty five dollars to get his past due taxes settled. Some talk has been going around that the delinquent taxpayer would be moved off his property at once, this is not so for the defendants in these tax suits have six months or more to settle up or fight the case. , The County Commissioners were forced by law to start these tax suits before October 1, 1934, as the last session of the Legislature passed a state-wide Act re quiring ail the counties and towns to start the suits. In Buncombe County there are ten thousand, four hundred similar suits, 57 extra deputy sheriffs were employed to a?3ist the regular force of deputies in serving the papers. Henderson County has four thousand and so on down the list of Counties. We know the taxpayers of the County want to be *air and honest and so do the Democratic Commission ers and therefore the Commissioners kindly invite the taxpayers to come to the Court House and examine the records and then vote for the party which has given the best and most economical government. In addition to what the County has done, the Democratic Party in the Nation through President Roosevelt and the Democratic Congress, has been able to spend millions of dollars in feeding and clothing the needy, in giving work to millions of people who had no job, has also guaranteed the deposit of money in the banks, up to five thousand dollars and those five thousand dollars guarantee will take care of the little man because it protects the man with ten dollars in (he bank just as much as it does the man with five thousands dollars in the bank and this $5,000.00 guar antee protects 08 ppr cent of all bank deposits. This is but another e vidence of the fact that the Democratic Pit;ty takes care of the little man, while the Republi can Parly ha- adopteil the policy of taking care of the big man and that policy brought our Nation to the orin’- of ruin. In our State, the Democratic Administration has been able to maintain the schools when it looked for one time, as if it would be impossible to do so. They have paid the payments due on the State indebtedness and instead of having a deficit in the State Treasury, they now have a surplus and will be able to meet the State’s obligations as they become due. So in the County. State and Nation, the Democratic Party has proved its ability to lighten the burden of the taxpayer and to make its" large corporations, which are able to pay taxes; and who have been counting their profits by the millions of dollars each year, pay their propor tionate part of the expenses of the Government, and the laboring man and the small merchant and manu facturers have been greatly relieved. The farmer has neon taken care of and the cattle man has been pro tected and in less than two years President Roosevelt with the aid of Congress, has been able to start this Nation on its road to peace and prosperity. It took the Republican Party twelve years to bring on the great depression that overtook us and nearly overcame us and the Democratic Party, able and willing as it is to do everything to help rebuild our country, cannot com plete this work in two years, but now that the people see what they have done, we feel that the great Ameri can people have sense enough and gratitude enough to keep the Party in power which has saved them. Mr. Hoover promised a “chicken in every pot and an automobile in every garage,” instead of that, the people had to sell their pot to buy dry bread and hart to cut up their garage for stove wood to keep fiom freezing. President Roosevelt did not promise all these chickens or all those automobiles, but be gave the people clothes to cover their nakedness, he gave them meat and other food to keep from starving and m addi tion to that, gave them cash to buy their fuel and other necessities. The republican leaders are men of “great prom ises,” but man cannot live by promises alone I he Democratic Party is a Party of performances They do not spend their time promising what they will do but gb ahead and do it and then trust to wuse citizenship to *av which form of government they like best, the Democratic or the Republican. ^gain we as!c the taxpayers of the county to come in and look at the records in the Court House, especially to see as to the taxes, and also especially to see where the last Board of Republican Commissioners in this County added three hundred and eighty five thousand dollars to the County s indebtedness. imOTMrvTtt Respectfully, Democratic Executive Committee ___I