HENDERSON gateway to CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR ASK CONGRESS TO LIMIT TOBACCO IMPORTS TwoPersons Believed Dead In Forest Fires lit Western North Carolina 200,000 ACRES IN BURNED TERRITORY IN IWO COUNTIES Thirteen Homes Known To Have Been Destroyed in Section Swept By The Flames WILKES, ALLEGHANY COUNTIES HARD HIT Mother of Three Children and Unidentified Fire Fighter Thought To Have Perished in ulaze; Flames Sweep on Despite Efforts of Volunteers Houghton, May 4. —(AP) —De- spile tlu* efforts of hundreds of organized fire fighters, four major forest fires are continuing un eheeked over a wide front in the Hlue Kidge section this morning, and residents of this section feel a it rung breeze will extend the blaze into new territory. Fears for two missing persons believed to have perished in the fire at Mitchell’s River were end ed today when both were found safe. Doughton. May 4.—(AP) —Two pet sons ate believed dead and 15 homes are known to have been destroyed in one of several disastrous fires sweep ing the mountains of northwest North Carolina. , More than 200,000 acres, it is esti mated. have been tburned over, and the flames are still raging today in Wilkes and Alleghany counties. Reports reaching here said that Mrs. Alice Calloway, mother of three chil dren. and a fire fighter whose name was not learned, had perished in the fire at the Mitchell River community, at the foot of Roaring Gap. They were missing when citiens of their commun ity evacuated their homes and aban doned their property to the invading flames. Another fire, thought to be even larger, is raging over Stone Mountain, on the edge of Wilkes county. Al though the flames advanced within two miles of Roaring Gap, exclusive summer resort, it is not believe the village is in danger from that source. However, the fire in the Mitchell com munity might endanger the resort, un less brought under control. Thirteen homes were fed to the flames at this place and several homes were said to (Continued on Page Three.) HiiSTSWON'I ELECT ANY BISHOPS General Conference Refuses, However, To Limit Terms of Bishops Jackson, Miss., May 4 (AP) The 22nd quadrennial General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, today defeated proposals to limit the terms of bishops, decided n ot to elect any new bishops at this conference, and amended the discip line to permit the retirement of bl shops for ‘‘unacceptability and ineffi ciency.’* ; Hard To'Find Where State Can Cut Its Expenditures Looking Around For Something To Do Without Gets Little Result; Representative Garibaldi, of Mecklen burg, Wants Costs Cut, B ut Doesn’t Say Where Unity in«|trif<-h narrua, In thr Sir W.-iltrr Hotrl. Ralc i ' J • f nASKKUVII.Ii Nmti .^ ay ‘The thing for co 1 aroli,la to do is to reduce the wh,. f ' ,a g° ver nment to the point s»iJ. V can get along without t«e o- aXi ,J ncle Joe” Caribaldi, of th* te ’ ,ier y foe of the sales tax in ,wo aessi ons of the General ann .. 1 y ' is lelli ng merchants in the ed h v a tax me eting beeing arrang salc * ° hn Paul eonar d and the antf bawi x 2 rsaniza tion he heads. Gari husine'ss the ° Wner of a lar &e jewelry w m r t do in government what had to do in our homes —do MeiiniV* 1 11* 1 * 3 ’” Garibaldi told a ~ ' f "merchants in Albemarle itettitersmt Urnln Mi&uutch New Strikes Are Offset By Strike Settlements In Parts Os United States Primary Victor Hlk Mile* B. Allgood Chances of former Senator J. Thomas Heflin of staging a political comeback, suffered a severe setback as a result of his defeat in Alabama primary for the Democratic nomi nation for U. S. Representative by Miles B. Allgood. (Central Press) GEORGE P. DOWLING DIES OFJN JURIES Man Hurt In Auto Crash Near Here Feb. 15 Dies In Philadelphia WIFE, DAUGHTER HURT Two Staten Island Ladies Were Kill ed in the Wreck; Injured Were Is Hospital Here For Week Philadelphia, May 4.—(AP)—Mayor George P. Dowling, of Audubon, N. J., died today from injuries received in an automobile accident which took tne lives of two women near Henderson, N. C., last February. Dowling, his wife and their daugh ter were hurt in the collision and spent several weeks in a Henderson hospital. All three were brought home on stretchers and, complications setting in, the mayor was brought to a hospital in Philadelphia. Three iblood transfusions failed to save him. Dowling had been mayor of Audu bon for fivey ears. MAYOR AND HIS FAMILY WELL REMEMBERED HERE Mayor George P. Dowling of Audu bon, N. J., who died in a Philadelphia hospital today of injuries he sustain ed in an automobile wreck near here on last February 15, is pleasantly re membered by many acquaintances he made during the weeks he and his (OnntlniiMl on Page TTiree.' the other night. But he failed to specify just what he would have cut out from the State government. Does he favor eliminating the State appropriation of $16,000,000 for the support of the schools and place the task of paying teachers and keeping schools open back upon the property owners in the form of property tftX6S ? Does he favor abolishing the judicial branch of the State government and abolish the Supreme Court, all_ the superior court judges and solicitors. If he favors doing without courts, the State can save $318,000 a year. Or if he favors abolishing the office (Continued On Page Four.) ONLY DAILY L THE BD iS B SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VHftUNIA. HENDERSON, N. C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 4, 1934 ' 2,000 Soup Company Work ers at Camden, N. J., Ac cept Wage Raise and Bargain Plan LEATHER WORKERS DECIDE TO RETURN Strike of Longshoremen At Gulf Ports Spreads, How ever, as Workers Demand More Pay; Dock Workers Strike at Norfolk; Oil Workers Also Out Birmingham, Ala., May 4.—(AP) —Demanding higher wages, short er hours and union recognition, be tween 6,000 and 8,000 iron ore min ers in the Birmingham district walked out on strike this morning. (By The Associated Press) New strikes were virtually balanced by settlement today in the nation’s in dustrial seesaw. An end was written to the strike of 2,020 employees of the Campbell Soup Company at Camden, N. J. They vot ed last night to accept a seven per cent increase in wages and the company a collective tbargaining plan. The general strike of 7,000 leather workers 'in northeastern Massachu setts was halted, the employees voting to return as the manufacturers decid ed to resume negotiations with tne National Leather Workers Union. On the down side, shipping was paralyed in gulf ports as a spreading strike of some 4,000 longshoremen seeking higher wages remained in ef fect. Several hundred dock workers at Norfolk, aV., walked out, and 600 waterfront workers at ancouver, B. C., decided to take a strike vote on May 12. A peaceful strike also was on in the Seminole, Okla., oil area, affecting 800 union employees of the Sinclair- Prairie organization. Members of the Pateerson, N. J., Typographical Union No. 195 called a strike last night on the Paterson Morning Call and the aPterson Eve ning News, asking a wage increase. . 19 HORSES ENTERED IN KENTUCKY DERBY Louisville, Ky., May 4 (AP) — Nineteen thoroughbred three year-olds were entered today for the 60th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs tomorrow. The weather man today saw oc casional showers in prospect for derby day. Japan Will Refuse All Peace Talk Forever Hereafter Western Powers Will Not Be Consulted on Far East Tokyo, May 4. (AP) Foreign Minister Koki Hirota voiced a vigor ous expression of Japan’s new ‘hands off China” policy today and imprred that apan proposes never again to dis cuss the question of peeace m the Far East with western powers. Addressing the annual conference of prefectural governors, the foreign minister declared that Japan refuses to submit to repetition of what hap pened at Geneva in 1932, "when un fortunately Japan’s opinions concern ing the maintenance of peace in east ern Asia were rejected, compelling us to secede from the League of Nations . Although Hirota mentioned oniy Geneva in this, his first public expres sion on the Tokyo government s re cently enunciated policy toward China, there was a strong implication that Japan inteneds never again to debaw* Oriental questions on equal terms with the Occident as she did at Washing ton in 1922, when the nine-power treaty was framed. Quits G. O. P. Job I wjHjgv .>BBBBB6 1 . JgUmj Everett Sliders, of Indiana, for mer congressman £rom that State, last night resigned as chairman of the Republican National Committee after a growing and persistent demand for his retirement. He directed the un successful campaign of President Hoover for re-election in 1932. TELEPHONE RATES SLAMLEDFOR Winbome Cites Southern Bell To Show Why Charges in* Raleigh Should Not Drop ACTION BASED UPON INVENTORY FIGURES Other Orders To Follow In Succession as Inventories Are Filed by Utilities Serv ing Various Localities; Old Commission Refused To Act Dally Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, May 4—r-When Utilities Commissioner Stanley Winborne think telephone rates are too high, he says so. But he does not stop merely with saying what he thinks. He does some thing about it. Accordingly, when Commissioner. Winborne said yesterday that in his opinion, and after careful investiga tion and examination of the inven tory it submitted, the rates being charged by the Southern Bell Tele phone Company in North Carolina are excessive, he did not stop there. He issude an order for the Southern Bell Telephone company to appear before him the morning of May 17, in Ra leigh, to show cause why the present rates should not be reduced to figures which he considers fair. More than a year ago, the old Cor poration Commission, composed of three men, announced that it was making an investigation of telephone rates and would seek to bring about some reduction by means of voluntary agreements with the telephone com panies. It had the authority to issuq an order such as Winborne has al ready issued and to compel the tele phone companies to show cause why rates should not be reduced. But the other two mmebers of the old com mission, W. T. Lee and George P. Pell, were not in favor of taking direct ac tion, with the result that no reduction in the base rates was ever forth coming, though some reduction in in stallation charges and in the rental of hand sets was made. But as soon as Winborne took of fice as Utilities Commissioner on, January 1 of this year and commis sion then became composed of one man instead of three, one of his first acts was to issue an order to all uti lities companies to prepare and file a complete inventory of all their phy sical properties, giving present values rather than replacement values. This information, he indicated, would he (Continued on Page 81*.' WEATHER FOB NORTH CAROLINA Fair tonight and Saturday. for Henderson For 24 hour period ending at noon p. m. today; highest tempera ture, 81; lowest, 58; rainfall, .42 of an inch; southwest wind; hazy. U. S. Chamber Criticizes Varied Aspects Os Laws Os This Administration Business Men Ask Modifica tion of Stock Market Con trol Bill Passed by the House LEADER SNELL SAYS IT IS GOING TO FAR Chamber Also Asks Loosen, ing of Securities Act, Re peal of Wheat Processing and More Power for NRA Code Authorities; Silver Issue Still Talked Washington, May 4.—(AP) —Wthile the Roosevelt program progressed to day in Congress, various aspects of past administration-fathered enact ments were cr)iticJ|Uy appraised in resolutions by the Chamber of Com merce of the United States. “The new deal” as a wnole was not a subject of any of the 23 resolutions. Henry I. Harriman sympathetic to the administration in general, was re elected president of the chamber. At the Capitol the Honse did its ia«* work on the stock market regulation bill before sending it to the Senate. Republican Leader Snell opposed it as “going too far.” Modification of this regulatory pro posed was asked by the assembled business men, and whether the re quest will be heeded by the Seenate is awaited. The Chamber also asked a loosening 1 of the securities act, repeal of tfce wheat processing tax and more power for NRA code authorities. International negotiations on behalf of silver were favored, but unemploy ment insurance was opposed. President Roosevelt, meanwhile, re ceived! the report from the Darrow (Continued on Three.) Roosevelt Wants Mace of Ontario Returned There Washington, May 4. —(AP) —Presi- dent Roosevelt today asked Congress to return the mace of the Parliament of Ontario, Canada, captured during the W|ar of 1812, and now held at the Annapolis Naval Academy. In a special message Mr. Roosevelt called attention that on July 4 a me morial tablet to the United States forces killed in action will be unveiled in Toronto. "The suggestion has been made,” he said, "that it would ibe a gracious act for the United States to return this •historic mace to Canada at the time of the unveiling of the tablet.” 110 Planes Are To Cost $7,500,000 Bids To Be Asked By War Department In Few Days for New Air Equipment Washington, May 4. —(AP)—Bids for 110 airplanesto cost 87,500,000 will be asked within a few days by the W)ar Department as a part of a three year aviation developmentp rogram. The money has been made available by the Public Works Administration. Bids will be asked for 80 bombing planes and 30 attack planes. Objections raised by the army judge advocates general to terms of a pre vious advertisement for bids have been met in the new specifications the War Department said. All (bids for the planes were held up when a District of Columbia grane jury and a Congressional committee began an investigation recently into alleged influence by "lawyer lobbyists” War Departmentp urchases and con tr&cts* Before July 1, the chief of the air corps will ask for bids on planes to be purchased during 1935, with funds recently appropriated by Congress, and for planes o he purchased during 1936. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Jap Peace-Maker ' |||i IBsl Mitsuru Toyama Fearing that resentment aroused by supposed U. S. opposition to a “Jap anese Monroe Doctrine” for Asia, might result in anti-American riots in Tokyo, Mitsuru Toyama, veteran Japanese patriot, appealed to his countrymen to remain calm and counseled against any demonstra tions. (Cent**, Press} WILLIAM H. WOODIN DIES INNEW YORK Was Forced from Office of Secretary of Treasury by 111 Health HAD THROAT TROUBLE Was Intimate Friend of Roosevelt and Music Composer as Well as Poli tician; Burial to Be In Pennsylvania New York, May 4 (AP)—William H. Woodin, the frail little secretary of the treasury who helped pilot the na tion through the 19331 banking crisis, is dead. He succumbed last night to compli cations which followed a throat infec tion. He would have been 66 years old may 27. The throat trouble developed last summer and forced him to leave the Treasury post in November. When told of Mr. Wood in’s death, President Roosevelt 3aid at Washing ton : “I’m deeply shocked and distressed by the passing of my dear friend.” An industrialist at the expense of a boyhood ambition to he a doctor, Woodin turned to music after his 60th birthday, and achieved note as a composer. I ’ * He talked affectionately of the Pres ident shortly before the end. Burial probably will be at Berwick, Penn., the Woodin Family home. Growing Highway Surplus ' Brewing Assembly Battle Will Be Around $7,500,000 at End of Fiscal Year June 30 After Paying General F und Its $1,000,000; Will Be At Least $10,000,000 July 1, 1935 Dally Dlapatok Bnrrni, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKERVIIiIi. Raleigh, May 4. —While it has been known for months that the surplus in the highway fund, derived entirely from the gasoline tax, the automobile license tax and the sale of titles, has amounted to several millions of dol lars, exact figures as to its present size and its estimated size at the end of this fiscal year on une 30, the offi cial estimates as to what the highway surplus would be June 30 were not learned until today. The amount on hand in the highway fund as of April 1 was $9,936,238. The amount on hand at the end of fchisf iscal year after all bills are paid 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY AGUIURE HEAD to mm QUOTAS Proposal Laid Before House Committee Considering the Kerr Crop Con. trol Measure ACTION EXPECTED EARLY NEXT WEEK Lessening of Flow of For eign Stocks Into United States Is Sought; Licensing of Warehouses and Buyers Discussed as Provided In Flannagan Bill Washington, May 4 (AP) —An amendment to the Kerr tobacco pro duction control bill to authorize the secretary of agriculture to prescribe import quotas was presented today; to the House Agriculture Committee. The amendment, along with the rest of the bill, is expected to be acted upon by the full committee at a meet ing early next week. The commit tee was in session today, but deferred action. ' J The quota amendment, prepared by the department, embodied* a sugges tion by Representative Koppleman, Democrat, Connecticut, who urged its inclusion in the hill for the purpose of lessening the flow of foreign stocks into the United States. J*.BL Hutson, tobacco chief of the Farm Administration, and his assist ant J. C. Lanier, who brought the quota amendment to the Capitol, also discussed with Representative Flan nagan, of Virginia, his bill for licens ing of warehouses buyffrs. nn K. C. Cook, 38, Held in Dal. las, Texas With Winston- Salem Divorcee Dallas, Texas, May 4 (AJF) —Ken- neth C. Cooke, 38, former tax collec tor and chief of police at Pilot Moun tain, N. C., was being held here today; following his arrest for North Caro lina authorities on a charge of em bezzling public funds. AUDIT SHOWS SHORTAGE OF SI,BOO FOR ACCOUNTS Pilot Mountain, May 4 (AP) —Ken- neth Cooke, held by Texas rangers for local authorities on a charge of mis appropriation of tax funds, has waiv ed extradition and an officer left here today fqt Dallas to return him here. When arrested, Cooke was accompan ied by Mrs. Alice Hester, divorcee of Winston-Salem. ( Cooke disappeared from Pilot Moun tain Sunday, April 22, telling his wife' he would “never come back.” An audit of his accounts revealed short ages of more than $2,800, according to town officials, and he was charged with misappropriation of tax funds, The loss was covered by his bond. and after $1,000,000 has been diverted to-the general fund, is estimated at $7,500,000. It is estimated that the lhalance will amount to $8,500,000 by December 31, 1834 on the eve of the meeting of the 1135 General Assembly in anuary, and that the balance on han'd, after all ap» proprlations are made and another SL -000,000 diverted to the general fund, will be at least $10,000,000 by June 30, 1635. While not obtained direct from the Budget Bureau, these estimates were obtained from a source close to the Budget Bureau and are undertsood to (Continued on Page Four.) _