11 fill i>4*y Raleigh N C The Daily In dependent sss: - 1908 COMBINED WITH THir ivnpnE.v^r.v-r a a J-L. JJ. 1 JL northwest Thursday night, and over AH THE INDEPENDENT. A WEEKU ESTABLISHED BY W. 0 SAUNDFRS IN IQns* iQt? cast with occaslonal rain Thursday. ?jfTv. -? 1936 == 1 E'-'2ABETH C1TY- N- C- THURSDAY. .MARCH 25. 19.37 .? a. c., snir, r m wonj Clw matter. ollMljLL COPY 5 CENTS 1(7/rysler And Lewis Reach Truce In Labor War German Shock Troops Replace The Italians ?Stem Tide of Loyalist ? Drive In the Span I ish Civil War I Moors Help Also ? Kn :n li !>;s?a.'ii?i?> Credited I With important Part in I (ioM-riiiin'iit - \ ietorv ? anco - Spanish | I German i I the Mad- I I . e Italian units B treat angered | B ihssimo. Francis B : tonight ?tesxtec a Loyalist drive I 7. d. according to j I replaced the I ? - practically the entire | I lalajara front I ::: C:: Ma ezodo. 54 I (icrman Air Forces I V,.:: ... .need that its : I : Julio Alvarez I jeen infomed that : I .wrland. I -..route across the I in Spain. I rder police and agents I utrality .r..T.: " >a;d they had no news B ilists car- , ? ':h.e air today j ? ns. most B r.i'.iv.anr-.r. v.-?:-. killed and ? ' of 40 in m plc:i> -???? over the : Guaaala;ara. 37 miles J I * Via rind r. \>> Arazon road. | I A u ; nnr. ir.ique said I whirlwind, I "ones of the last i I ?. we been i Ifulslcad And lluiilic- l;ound Bus\ Session \r|ioii and Litllo Friction < Juiraeterizod (.rneral Vvcinbly I ? v >;qi: of the General with its a minimum of friction . according ' ' s ?or- W. I. Hal : S ,? m..;> and J. J City. - i a harsh word -;on." said Senator - who was attending his st .-.or., and I was told by - v.at there was less de ar. a* r.y session that they distinguished T- bv oitter-end stand in k board of education .i.r out for the nomi o- members who had P-it r. m nomination by the ' it ounty. The opposi r the conference which the senator itinueG on Page Six) Hope For Duchess of Bedford -day. March 25.? T-.v pieces of wreckage be ll ' >? from the plane of the Duchess of Bedford n the North sea near ram today, adding ? theory that she was ?kb in n crash at sea. ? icf was sent to Nor ? : e identification. It naf an unidentified no flying eastward missing near Nor Monday afternoon. uat she still might be nd vesterday after IOC ? Mr Force planes and 2.00C : ? rs failed to find a ? duchess, who took ? - -'-M flight three days ago Killed In the War Against Society A GANG recently attempted a S30.000 fur robbery in the fur dis trict of New York City. But before they couid escape with their loot, police were after them. Two thieves were shot to death and four were captured. The bodies of Joseph Epstein, foreground, and Julius Rich man. leaders of the gang, are shown lying in the street. European Nations Form Rival Camps Mussolini's Defiance Causes Line-up of Reds vs. Fascists London. March 24.?? The nations of Europe, confronted by a crisis more foreboding than any in post-war times, suddenly spiit into Communist and Fascist camps tonight during an angry ression of the international committee for non-intervention in Spain. The long-fermenting enmity be tween Communist and Fascist powers on the continent? fanned 1 by Premier Benito Mussolini's de I fiant speech Tuesday to 250.000 Biackshirts in Rome?burst with out warning on the neutrality committee. Russian Note | Ivan MaLkv. Russian ambassa ; dor. appeared before a plenary j session of the committee and pre sented an official note from Mos ! cow asking that investigators be sent to the battlegrounds ot Spain to learn how many Italians are fighting with the rebel armies. It was time, he said, that the committee checked up on the whole ituation in Spain. I The Russian note was a sharp ! answer to Mussolini, who sent his 1 ambassador to London. Dino Grandi. before the committee yes 'Continued on Page Three) * I f \ Farley's Peace Proves Short-Lived Microscope Discloses Lee's Rank Is Redneed __ J Washington. March 24. ?? I Postmaster General James A. Far- | ley found himself in the hottest | Philatelic hot water of his career i tonight?with a postage stamp the experts claimed insulted Gen eral Robert E. Lee. Stamp collectors, southerners in particular, besieged the post of ; fice department with demand.- for ; explanations of why the new j stamp shows Lee in the uniform j of an ordinary lieutenant colonel. | instead of in a general's. Teh, tch, j tech! The post office department said I somebody must have made a mis i take at the bureau of engraving. "Mistake, indeed!" retorted En ; graving Director Alvin W. Hall, j "We made that stamp from a pho I tograph of Gen. Lee, as furnished 1 by the post office department. (Continued on Page Three) r ? ??? >. Chemist Turns Detective To Solve Green Hair Case \ New York. March 24. ?(U.R)? Meyer Shulman's green hair. ! which for a while had some of the | best scientific minds in s dither ' and the hair dressing business in ! a cold sweat, tonight proved to be j just an old French Canadian cus | torn. Meyer, a stumpy little man of I 51 who is extremely serious about the color of his hair, appeared in J a magistrate's court la-st February, pointed to the top of his head and ; said: I "Look." [ There was no question about it. It was green. Meyer said his hair got that way after he plastered on i it some sticky substance from a ) dime bottle of hair polish to make J (j it straight. i j He said it made his hair stiaight j ; I all right; but it also made it I . green. Meyer thought it should be; 1 worth about $1,000 to have green hair. iJw:.. *" Judge Edwara A. Wynne said the figure certainly sounded rea sonable .and Meyer might have got more if he had asked for it ? providing he could prove the hair polish was the cause of his trou bles. The hair polish company said it would like to have its own ex pert examine Meyer's hair, so he bent over amiably while Dr. Jud son C. Fisher went over his scalp with a microscope. "It's green, all right." Dr. Fish er admitted. "Clear down to the roots." "You bet," said Meyer. He said it had been that way since last September when he bought the hair polish. I (Continued cu Page Three) Head Of Grange Is A W i tness Taber and Princeton President Oppose Court Change Four Requests Thinks Administration Aid ed Farmer But This INo Answer to Problem Washington. March 24.?(U.R)? Tweedy, pipe-smoking president H. W. Dodci-s of Princeton Univer sity and bull-voiced Louis J. Ta ber. Master of the National Grange, denied today that there is any national emergency requir ing enlargement of the supreme court membership such as Presi dent Roosevelt proposes. If any dangers exist in the pre sent situation. Dodd maintained, it is the danger that passage of the president's bill under which six new justices could be appoint ed. would mark "the first step in a trend" toward dictatorship such as European nations have seen. Helped Agriculture Taber. praising the Roosevelt administration for having done "more for agriculture" than any other in 25 years, nevertheless op posed supreme court enlargement on the ground that it raised the "danger of making the court poli tical and after all it is no solution of the farmers' problems." Dodds was the morning wit ness before the senate judiciary committee as opponents of Presi dent Rcsevelt's bill continued their attack. He concluded his testi mony just before 1 p. m., and Ta ber was called and asked to state his name. -Louis J. Taber. Master of the National Grange. Columbus. Ohio." he announced in a boom ing voice. "I've got a statement to read but it's now one o'clock and farmers eat at one." Chairman Henry F. Ashurst, D., Ariz., took the hint. He recessed for luncheon and Taber began reading his statement at the after noon session. Taber said his organization sprang from the "graes roots. He (Continued on Page Three) [. In Hot Spot NEW and nitherto un jublished picture of President Albert Lsbrun of F.-ance. M. Lebrun stands in the center of vast unrest, as Fasc ists and Communists clash repeat edly in his country. Resume Work On Weeksville RoadSoonNow May Slart In Tivo Weeks; Six Are Required to Finish Job After a lay-off of a little over three months, work will probably be resumed on the Weeksville road in from 10 days to two weeks, it was reported to this newspaper last night. Once work is resumed on the J project, it can be completed in approximately six weeks, which will mean that the road will not be finished before May 15. When work was suspended in December i it was stated that it would prob- 1 ably be resumed in March or j April and that the road would be . completed around May 1. Approximately 5.5 miles of sand asphalt had been laid on the road prior to tfie time work was sus pended in mid-December due to adverse weather conditions. There ! are le.s than two miles of paving yet to be laid. The unpaved por- j tion of the road consists of half j a dozen stretches varying in length j from a few hundred feet to a I thousand feet or more. Plank de- ! tours have taken motorists around (Continued on Page Three) I Dieckhoff New AmbassadorOf Germany Here i Will Succeed Dr. Lullicr In Washington; Not Mem ber of Nazi Party Berlin, Berch 24. ?(U.R>? Dr. Haa~. Heinrich Dieckhoff, chub by-cheeked state secretary of the foreign office and one of a few high government officials who are not members of the Nazi party, announced tonight that he will arrive in the United States early I in May as Adolf Hitler's new am j bassador. The 52-year-old Dieckhoff. who I was counselor of the German em bassy in Washington from 1922 to 1927. will succeed Dr. Hans Luther who reportedly complained that he is "fed up" with bearing the i brunt of recent anti-Nazi inci dents in the United States. The U. S. government cabled that Dr. Dieckhoff would be ac ceptable and official announce ment of the appointment proba bly will be made as soon as Hit ler returns from an Easter vaca (Continued on Page Three) Nineteen Diej As Bus Burns Alter Crashing Only Five of Rollrr-Skat- j ing Drrby Train Sur vive Disaster Salem. 111.. March 24.?(U.R)? I Nineteen contestants in a roller skating derby, onroute from St. j Louis to Cincinnati, burned to I death late today when the bus in which they were riding overturn ed and caught fire. Five others were seriously in- [ jured, three so gravely that phy sicians at the Salem Community hospital feared they would not re cover. The accident occurred three miles west of here when the bus blew a front tire while crossing a concrete bridge over a small creek running through a valley. The machine turned over on its side j and burst into flames, trapping most of the occupants. No one witnessed the accident but nearby motorists soon observ ed the flames and notified au thorities here who rushed all available fire fighting and ambu lance equipment to the scene. The location of the bus in the bridge, which permitted an ap proach from only two directions, handicapped fire fighters. Richard Thomas of Chicago, driver of the bus. was hurled through the windshield. Four others apparently seated in the front near the driver, was rescued. Survivors told authorities that the bus "seemed to explode." The motor was torn from the framework and hurled clear of the wreckage. The fire obviously en veloped the entire bus instantly. Four bodies, near the door, were soon recovered. It was hours be < Continued on Fage Three* TODAY'S LOCAL CALENDAR 7:00 Sunrise service First Methodist 8:30 Mens Christian Federation P. M. 7:00 Local institute class at First Christian 7:30 Red Men: Club Pack scouts: Eastern Star; Special services at City Road 8:00 Special services at First Christian, "Forgiveness." | Library Hours: 10-12. 2-6 i i C. I. O. Head Agrees To Evacuation Of Plants Life In Army Not AIwaysBed o'Roses * 1 Especially If the Bed Is Shared by In compatibles Ft. Bragg Scandal Two Army Officers' Wives Entertain Judge Meekins and Spectators With Sen sational and Vitrolic Tes timony. An Army scandal was aired here yesterday afternoon when Col. Richard C. Burleson, post execut ive of the Fort Bragg military post, was arraigned before U. S. Dis trict Judge I. M. Meekins on a charge of assau'.ting his wife, Mrs. Mae Eurlescn, and striking her, beating her, slapping her and lit erally kicking her out of his quar ters on the Fort Bragg reserva tion on January 4, 1937. Judge Meekins, who heard the case in the capacity of a commit ting magistrate, reserved decision until the testimony could be trans cribed so that he could study it. He can decide only as to probable cause, and should he find prob able cause the case will bound over to the U. S. District Court at Fay etteville, for trial by jury, Mrs. Burleson, a large, high strung woman of more than usual (Continued on Page Three) Pope Pius To Send Mexico Encyclical Vatican City, March 24.?(U.R)? Pope Pius XI. in his third vigor ous encyclical in ten days, will denounce the situation in Mexico as the third of three major prob lems confronting the Roman Ca tholic Church, it was learned to night. The encyclical will be dated Easter day and will follow those attacking Communism, defending labor's right to a living wage and criticizing Germany for violating the Vatican concordat of 1933. Despite President Lazaro Car denas' statement last Sunday that there was no national religious problem in Mexico, the papal en cyclical reportedly will oppose his stand. Reckless Fool Caught Alter Hot Man Hunt Captured by Officers After Hair-Raising Ride In Stolen Auto A reckles; young daredevil who stole an automobile here yester day afternoon and wrecked it just outside of town on the Newland road after striking several auto mobiles while careening madly out North Road street was captured near the Knobbs Creek dam short ly after 6:00 p. m.. after an ex citing man hunt. The captive is one Lister White, former resident of this city, who has been living for the past sev eral years in Norfolk and Phoebus, Va., where he reputedly has been engaged in the illicit liquor busi ness. White, who is around 25 year sof age, is a brother of Mar garet Elizabeth White who gave the local police considerable trou ble a few years ago. Stole a Ford White stole a 1936 Ford sedan owned by Joe Winslow of 518 West Main St., around 4:45 o'clock yes terday afternoon, a few minutes later he drove up to the Main and Road streets intersection at a rap id rate of speed and skidded the Ford completely around. Straight ening up. he headed out North Road street. Motorcycle Officer Walter Spcnce, who \Vas getting a haircut at the New Southern Hotel barber shop, saw him drive past and jumped out of the bar ber's chair, mounted his motorcy cle, which was in front of the barber shop, and gave chase. Meanwhile, the Ford was car eening back and forth at a dizzy rate of speed. In front of the high school it sideswiped a parked car belonging to Moody Haskett of Nixonton. In front of the Black well Memorial Baptist church, the Ford sideswiped another car be longing to W. S. Chesson of Aga wam Street and again -kidded completely around. Just after (Continued on Page Three) Graham And Few Appeal For A Dry Environment * University and Duke Presi dents Want Orange and Durham to Ban Liquor Stores. 4 Greensboro. March 24.?(U.R)?A joint statement was issued today by the presidents of Duke Univer sity and the University of North Carolina asking Durham and Orange counties to remain dry to guard students from the influence of whiskey. Durham votes on the liquor is sue April 27. Voting time has not been set in Orange. President Frank P. Graham of the University of North Carolina and Dr. W. P. Few. head of Duke University, issued the statement at the request of the Rev. Dr. M. T. Plyler of Durham, co-editor and manager of the North Carolina Christian Advocate. The statement said, in part: "We strongly hope the people of Durham and Orange counties will realize their double responsibility for both universities and will not add official liquor stores to the in fluences which damage the phy sical. intellectual and spiritual de velopment of the young people I who come with high hopes to j Duke University and the Universi ty of North Carolina." The presidents pointed out that ' several thousands of students at j tend full and summer session. I while athletic contests draw many j thousands more. (Continued on Page Three) i Mother-Daughter I Banquet Enjoyed At Central High Approximately KM) Pres ent; Rev. While Main Speaker of Evening One of the finest and most en joyable such affairs ever held in this county was the Mother Daughter Banquet at Central high school last night, or at lea.C tuch was the opinion of some who at tended. Principal speaker of the evening was Dr. J. L. White, pastor of Blackwell Memorial Baptist church, who spoke to both the mothers and the potential moth ers present on the .subject of (Continued on Page Three) Musick Blazes The New Zealand Trail\ Alameda Airport, Almcda, Cal? March 24. ?'U.R)? Pan-American Airways extended its commercial aviation service across the equa- i tor tonight when its trail-blazing Clipper landed at Pago Pago in American Samoa. The landing completed the third leg of Capt. Edward C. Musick's exploratory flight over a new Honolulu-New Zealand air line 1 route. ; Continue Conference As Soon As Strik ers Leave A Return Pledge Company Will Not Remove Any Machinery Pend ing a Settlement Detroit, March 24. ? (U.R)? Strike captains in nine Chrysler plants issued calls for caucuses to sit-downers tonight in pre paration for a vote to decide whether to ratify or reject the truce made at Lansing. Lansing. Mich., March 24.?(U.R) John L. Lewis and Walter P. Chrysler reached a truce tonight in a 17-day strike that had closed nine Chrysler Corp.. plants and thrown 60,000 persons out of work. Face to face in Gov. Frank Mur phy's office, the chairman of the committee for industrial organiza tion and the head of the automo bile concern agreed to continue their ? conferences provided sit down strikers were out of all Chrysler plants by 10 a. m. to morrow. Lewis said he would ask the 6,000 sit-downers to disperse. Return Agreement In return, Chryalir agreed that no attempt would be made to re sume the production of automo biles in the nine plants and that no tools, dies or machinery would be removed from them. ? The truce came after eight and and half hours of negotiations around the same table at which Gov, Murphy was able to bring about a settlement in the General Motors strike. Lewis came out of the confer ence with his hair rumpled and a tired expression on his face, but he apparently was pleased with the truce. "Our representatives," he said, "will at once ask the men in the plants to comply with this ar frvmt.inupd on Page Three) Believe Stolen Auto Intended To Haul Liquor Police Think Car Wan to Pinch-Hit for LaSalle That the V-8 Ford stolen late yesterday afternoon by one Joshua White alias Lassiter, was stolen for the purpose of hauling a load of illicit liquor into Virginia was the theory advanced in police cir cles here last night. Local officers yesterday morn ing stopped an old LaSalle with Virginia license plates to test its brakes. In the rear of the car they spotted nine five-gallon tin containers such as are generally used in hauling moonshine liquor. They took the car and containers to headquarters. The driver of the car was one Billy Hicks, formerly a resident of Camden county but lately of Phoebus. Va. With him was White, who told police his name was Lassiter. Last night when Hicks called at (Continued on Page Five) Dust Storm Sweeps Southwest States Kansas City, Mo.. March 24. ? (U.R)?Blinding dust churned in the western dust bowl tonight and spilled out over the greening fields of neighboring states in tawny clouds. Tons of silt and sand tore at adjacent sections of Texas. Okla homa. Kansas and Colorado on a 50-mile an hour wind which cut into fields like a giant abrasive. This year's dust bowl includes the three Oklahoma counties mak ing up that state's "panhandle", four adjacent northwestern Okla homa counties. 22 counties of the Texas panhandle, three north western New Mexico counties, four southeastern Colorado units and those Kansas counties in the western part of the state lying south cf the Arkansas rher.