State Agency On Apprentices Will Organize Itself iij- J. C, niMkfrrillf, Daily l)|Miiattrh nurcmi. In the Sir Walter Hotel, Raleigh/ Sept, 20.—A permanent State agency on apprentice training tha will have as its objective the •working out of a definite program for the training of apprentices in all the principal industries and occupa tions. will be se up here Saturday, September 22, when the committee on organization will meet to form the permanttn organization, it was an nounced here today by Commissioner of Labor A. L. Fletcher, chairman of the commitee. Commissioner Fletcher has jus returned from a regional con ference on apprentice training held in Atlanta at which the plans for the formation of State agencies in all the southeastern states were outlined by representatives of the U. S. Depart ment of Labor. This program for bet ter standardization of the training of upprentices is being sponsored by the U. S. Department of Labor and Presi ihnt Roosevelt and has the approval of organized labor generally. Commis sioner Fletcher said. The organization committee is com posed of Commissioner Fletcher, chairman; George W. Coggin, direc tor of vocational training in North Carolina; Capus M. Waynick, director of the National Re-Emplyoment Serv ice in North Carolina, and F. H. Shu tord, NRA labor compliance direeor in the State. The permanent State agency will include one representative from each of these agencies represent ed on the organization committee, as well as two representatives each from labor and industry. While no Federal funds are provided to promote this agency, it is hoping to be able to , educate both industry and labor to ] work togeher to secure better stand ardization and the adoption of def- , ir.ite programs for the training of ap- ' prentices, Commissioner Lletcher said. PHOTOFLAYB “PERFECT SOUND” Stevenson Admissiopt: Matinee 10-16 c Night 16c to all TOMORROW Walter Huston Frances Dee “Keep ’Em Rolling” With the whole 16th U. S. A. Field Artilery LAST TIMES TODAY “HERE COMES THE NAVY” James Cagney— Gloria Stuart— Pat O’Brien Admission for this attraction .. 10-25e plus tax NOTICE!” All children attending matinee Saturday to see “The Lost Jungle” Featuring CLYDE BEATTY Will be given a “Yo-Bell”—Free All children must have tickets MIDNIGHT SHOW Saturday Night September 22nd. Starting at 11:15 REX LEES Musical Revue Featuring Mary Layne Ripley’s “Believe it or not Girl” Singers Dancers Novelty Acts This stage performance Midnight Show Only Admission 25c plus tax to all STEVENSON THEATRE Henderson, N. C. Triple Program Today Only Moon Theatre Actual Pictures of , “DILLINGER” —Also— The “Baer-Carnera” Heavy weight bout, Mow by blow. —And— Jack Holt —in ““Defense Rest” Added: “Wolf Dog" Serial Admission 11 of time ° nly 433 P er cent tries pr^. ad ° Pted by indus for the trni ! any deflnlte standards ■ The Jlu nS ° f a PP ren tices. ‘ Brnnno P el i m ‘nary program suggested and ? a m minimum of 2,000 hours fn* a “ laximum s o 10,000 hours train h n, i re ntices before they can ed workers 6 ' 1 “ j ° Urneymen skill- Court Ruling Bars Vote On Constitution (Continued from Page One.) But since he had been overruled by i majority of the members of the couri and the reapel election pointed ou that he hence could do nothing more than concur with the other member, of the court on the present question Friends Rejoicing. There is much more rejoicing a mong the friends of the nwe con stitution over the fact that it canno now be voted upon in the electioi this fall than among its opponents For its opponents wanted it to b( voted upon and defeated, confident that if it should be defeated, such ac tion would tend to discourage anj further efforts to change the presen constitution for a good many years t come. The advocates of the new docu ment also sensed this and were anxi ous to save it from the oblivion int which it would be dropped if it ha gone to a vote and been defeated thi fall. Both sides agreed that if i should be defeated this fall, the chances for securing a new constitv tion any time soon would have bee as dead as an Egyptian mummy. Now that the proposed new cor stitution is not going to be voted ur on in th& election this fall, an oppo; tunity will be presented to male changes in it when the 1935 Genera Assembly meets in January. Its advc cates are hopeful that the legislatur will make a number of changes t make it more satisfactory and ac oeptable to its crijtcs and opponen* and that P will then approve it an' order it submitted to a vote of th people in “the general election” i November of 1936. It is hoped that b the time the legislature meets i’ January and that by the fall of 193 the New Deal” will have progresse far enough along to see in what d ; rection it is going. At least that, an that the present wave of nerVousner over what many see as radical ten dencies in various parts of the cour try will have blown over. Was Too Liberal, For the one thing that tended t< make it appear that the new constitu tion would be defeated if allowed tc come to a vote, more than anythinj else, was the feeling in many yuarter; that the new constitution was too li beral and might make it possibh those of radical tendencies to get cor trol of the General Assembly an< hence of the State government an< tpset the conservative policies whicl have prevailed for so long. “The new constitution not onb took off the brakes but threw ther away so that if things ever got start ed in the wrong direction there woul be no way to stop,” one observer sai here today. He had particular references to thf removal of the six per cent restric tion on the income tax and pointe out that a radical legislature, or one in which the socialistic element might be in control, might raise the State income tax to 15 per cent, as has already been done in Wisconsin or even higher, and thus tend to tax business and industry in the state ou 1 of existence. Those who know what has really been going on behind the scenes in the State with regard to the new cor stitution, t.gree that business indus try, together with large wealth brightened at the prospect of having ’he six per cent limit o nthe income tax removed, have had more to dr with bringing about the change ir sentiment with regard to the new con ditution than anything else. For while Attorney General Brummitt, fo mer Lieutenant Governor R. T, fountain and their followers were Fountain were taking pot shots at t with air rifles, big business was [uietly planting the dynamite bombs hat would have blown it up if the supreme court had not rescured it. Push Exemption Fight! "The fight for a SI,OOO tax exemp tion on homes wil go right on.” Sc ieclared Editor Clarence Poe, of tin Progressive Farmer, who has been championing thta especial feature of the revised constitution, when in formed of the Supreme Court de cision. “So far as I have been able •o hear, that is one section of the re vised constitution which meets with die approval of both those who have r avored and those who have opposed he revised constitution as a whole, 1 ’hink the same thing is true of the oroposal that we should adopt taxa tion polici seto encourage the con servation of soils, forests and other natural resources. “I hope the legislature will havi both these amendments voted on sep arately next time so they will not be ~ome mixed up in’ squabbles over oth er features of the Constitution. Per sonally I have been hoping for months tha twe could work out sonv such plan as the farm orgnaization very wisely suggested-—that is to say agree on amendments specifically re issuring the people about the election rs local officers by the people, the >oll and property tax rates and mini mum exemption on incomes—am 1 then unite al forces behind such con structive features as the SI,OOO tax •xemption on homes, the provision? limiting the debt-making power o state, counties and town, the provis lons encouraging the conservation of natural resources and many other that all admit are wise. I think th*- amendment looking to a SI,OOO to' exemption on homes should providt that this should be extended t needy widows, disabled or unemploy ed persons, and persons over 60 year: of age, and then xtended to otho classes as quickly as possible— firs perhaps $250, then SSOO, then SI,OO to each home-owner. Idea Spraeding. “Ever since the campaign for th adoption of the revised constitution HENDERSON. (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBE R 20, 1934. 1 got under way in North Carolina, with our especial emphasis on the sl,- 000 tax exemption on homes, the ided has been spreading not only in North Carolina but in other states as well The South Carolina Grange now de mands the same plan for htat State. Alabama farmers at their annual State convention demanded it for Alabama. And Virginia papers have already started the campaign in the Old Dominion.” Sterilization Os Six More Inmates Passed By Board Daßy- Dispatch flureau. In the Sir Walter Hotel, Raleigh, Sept. 20.—The state Eu genics Board has just approved appli cations for six more sterilization op erations. it was announced today by R. Eugene Brown, secretary of the board, following its meeting here yes terday. All six of the applicaions are for women, two of them inmates of the State Hospital here, two of hem at Samarcand, the State’s school for delinquent girls, and two of them yvelfeje cases in counties. The board has 15 additional appli cations for sterilization operations be fore it. which will be acted upon at its meeting Ocober 19. It is expected that most of these will be approved. So far a total of 89 sterilization op erations have been performed in North Carolina, of which 40i were under the law enacted by the 1933 General Assembly. The total' will be brought to 95 when the six operations just authorized by the board have been performed. The superintendents of the various tospitals for the insane and for mental defectives and moral delin quents are finding sterilization more and more helpful, according to Mr. Brown, and making it possible to dis charge many of the cases sterilized wheih otherwise would have to be re tained in institutions. The chief ef fect of sterilization upon either male or female cases is to render them in capable of hoving children, although in some cases their general mental condition is often benefitted. “We are receiving more and more applications for' sterilization opera tions each month both from institu tional heads and from couny welfare offices,” Mr. Brown said. “As a re sult, indications rae that more sterili zation opertaions will be authorized and performed during (this coming yeaer than have been performed dur ing the past several years”. It was also pointed out by Mr. Brown that under the new 1933 law, the procedure incident to the appro val of applications for sterilization is much simpler than under the old law. 1 Rejjeskhig / 8 ■ "11 From the choicest Turkish and Domestic _ #•! A tobaccos —only the clean center leaves are /•WJf used in Luckies—these are the mildest “It’s toasted” leaves—they cost more—they taste better. \/Y OU rtk nat »r 9 t K tion-H<^tinituuo,-minsnmh Walter Huston in “Keep ’Em Rolling” at the Stevenson Friday Orders Out Troops ♦ | Lieut. Gov. Roy C. Wilcox is under fire in Connecticut for having or dered out National Guardsmen at Danielson in absence of Gov. Wilbur Cross. Wilcox is Republican: Cross a Democrat. REMEMBER, if you do not have a POLICY with us that we are SAVING many leading merchants money on their INSURANCE costs. THE MUTUAL WAY spells DIVIDENDS to the POLICYHOLDER and not to. the stockholder. Our service is as near as your telephone. W. C. Cates, Agent for Pennsylvania Lumbermen fc Mutual Fire Insurance Company, Northwestern Mutual Fire Association, Lumbermen s Mutual Insurance Company National Retailers Mutual Insurance Company Lumbermen s Mutual Casualty Company Shelby Mutual Plate Glass and Casualty Company PAGE THREE MALARIA Speedy Relief of Chill • and Fever Don’t let Malaria tear you apart with its racking chills and burning fever. Trust to no home-made or mere makeshift remedies. Take the medicine prepared especially for Ma laria —Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic gives real relief from Malaria because its a scientific combination of tasteless quinine and tonic iron. The quinine kills the Malarial infection in the blood. The iron builds up the system and helps fortify against further At tack. At the first sign of any attack of Malaria take Glove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. Better still take it regularly during the Malaria season to ward off the disease. Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic is absolutely harmless and tastes good. Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic now comes in two sizes, 50c and sl. The $1 size contains 2 1-2 times as much as the 50c size and gives you 25 per cent more for your money. Get a bot tle today at any store. I!