PAGE TWO Jaloiig And Henderson Play Wednesday At 4:30 P. M, Norman Smith Is Lost To Tourists For The Season Fletcher Langlevfat Camp for 2 W eeks; Oxford Comes Here Saturdax. Otto Pahiman will Pad his Header son Tourists against Jalong here Wed nesday afternoon at 4 30 o'o'.ook in a scheduled gam of the Central State League With the appearar.ee of Jalong comes Woody Woodruff former oen terfielder of the Tout sts He has been playing consistent ball ""tn that club, and will be watched in his ap pearance against the locals. Smith Lost for Season Big Norman Smith, heavy hitting right fielder for the Tourists is lost for the remainder of the season. Skip per Pahiman announced *oday Smith has been bothered with an ail ment. and is acting upon orders rrom his doctor. He will be sorely miss ed, his long clouts meaning games in the won column. Langley will be missing from the lineup for the next two weeks as he City, with Company "C" local infan has gone to Camp Glenn. Morehead try unit. Woodall will fill in at left field in the place of Langley and Archie Boyd general handy man. will cavort in right field for the time being. Pahiman expects his team to land far up in the running of the league title in the second half, and he s whip ping his boys at a fast pace to get them in the best shape possible. Oxford Saturday Oxford will come here Saturday for a. league encounter with the locals. Pahlman’s crew whipped them twice July 4 as part of a big celebration for the* day. Previously. Oxford had ■whipped Henderson on the Oxford diamond in league play by a close score. + Toda^Glmes PIEDMONT LEAGUE Asheville at Wilmington. Portsmouth at Charlotte. Norfolk at Richmond. AMERICAN LEAGUE No games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE No games scheduled. Results! PIEDMONT LEAGUE Norfolk 7; Richmond 1. Portsmouth 4; Charlotte 8. No other games played. AMERICAN LEAGUE No Games Scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE No games scheduled. GIRL BALL TEAMS WILL PLAY FRIDAY Baird Barnes, baseball promoter, stated today that two girl teams will play at League Park Friday afternoon at 4 o’clock, one team representing South Henderson and the other the city. The team known as "‘Florida Specials”.-will represent South Hender scrilb jand thg ‘Midnight Specials” will j-4i>releht ; The U ___ PHOTOPLAYS 75he Stevenson LAST TIMES TODAY GEO. RAFT l BEN BERNIE —in— “STOLEN HARMONY” Comedy—Pathe News TOMORROW Lew Ayres— z Claire Trevor— —in— ‘‘SPßlNG TONIC” THURSDAY FRIDAY Warner Baxter —in— “UNDER THE PAMPAS MOON” Tomorrow’s Guests: Mrs.. W. S. Strange, Mrs. T. T. Ciopton. THE COOL Moon Theatre TODAY - Randolph Scott, Kay Johnson—in “THE VILLAGE TALE” Added comedy Admission 11-16 c All Times AMERICAN LEAGUE j TBPS NATIONAL, 4-1 Gomez and Jimmy Foxx Are Big Stars in Third Win of Junior Circuit Cleveland, July 9 vAFG —Baseballs ! dream game is still the same haunt ling nightmare—for the National lea gue. For the third successive time j the shooting stars of the baseball firmament gathered to outshine each I other before a huge assemblage to close to 70.000 spectators yesterday ‘and again the brilliants of the Ameri jean league eclipsed those of the Na tional The score was 4to 1. one run j better than the winning margins pro duced by the younger circuit in the first two dream games. A towering man from the American league’s second division Jimmy Foxx of the Philadelphia Athletics, and Ver non "Lefty” Gomez, one of the bell wethers of the New York Yankee pit ching corps, were the two who sent the Nationals reeling and helpless into defeat. iStafcSfes PIEDMONT LEAGUE Club W. L. Pet. Wilmington 4 1 1.000 Richmond 4 2 .667 Portsmouth 4 2 667 Norfolk 2 4 '.333 Asheville 1 4 .200 Charlotte 1 4 .200 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet, New York 45 26 :634 Detroit 46 29 ,613 Chicago 33 29 .567 Cleveland 38 33 .535 Boston 38 35 .535 Philadelphia 29 39 .426 Washington 30 42 .417 St. Louis 19 50 .275 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club? W. I. Pet, New York 48 21 .696 St. Louis 42 29 .592 Chicago 40 32 .556 Pittsburgh 41 34 .547 Brooklyn 33 37 .471 Philadelphia 31 40 437 Cincinnati 31 42 .425 Boston 21 52 ,288 railroadlnqOTry IS HERCULEAN JOB Some of Water in Their Stocks Was Pumped in . by Men Long Dead By CHARLES P- STEWART Central Press Staff Writer Washington, July 9.—Max Lowen thal, recently named by Chairman Burton K. Wheeler of the Senate’s In terstate Commerce Committee as chief investigator in the committee’s probe of railroad finances, starts on a task compared with which-HehcUles’ job of sprucing up the Aegean stables was a trifling undertaking. The difficulty confronting an in quisitor into the exploitation of the public by a few big bankers and spe culators, by means of the national transportation system, is not so much that the figures ran high into the billions; it began so long ago that the origin#] operators are dead, their children are dead, many of their grandchildren are dead, their estates have been liquidated for a generation or two—and what’s to be done about it? Charles Kelly of the staff of Labor the railroad brotherhoods’ organ, and a deep student of transportation his tory, mentions records indicating that rolling stock used in moving troops at the time of the Mexican war, is not yet paid for; it was bought with borrowed money, and these debts, merged with many oth. ers, simply have been carried along to the present, through successive bond issues. bonds cause worry Railroad bonds are a graver worry than railroad stocks to the Senate in vestigators. It generally is recognized that there are not many railroads in which the holders of their stocks have any con siderable equity above the value of the lines’ various indebtedness. If the stockholders lose, painful as it may be, only they will be the suf ferers. The bonds, however, are held by savings banks and insurance and trust companies throughout the na tion; a default upon any considerable proportion of them would be a die astexof immeasurable ramifications water still in Railroad executives contend that much of the water in railroad securi ties was squeezed out during the de pression of the 1890’s. But the 1890’s are 40 years ago. The Wheeler committee suspects, from superficial inquiry, that a deal of water has been pumped in since then, not to mention a vast quantity that escaped being squeezed out in that era. mIwSBS'ON. TN. CJ DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, iuLY'9, mS- CHAPTER 60 VALi STOOD uncertainly for a moment as Brad threatened to thrash Cordray. He had to find Lia but he hated deserting Brad. He stared a( Cordray, stili pressed against the table, his color gone, his eyes worried. Say. what If chap ware bigger and heavier' add more expert than Brad ? He was already, licked. And Brad rated the satisfac tion of handing him the beating he deserved. With no further word Val turned toward the door. WlS4»n he ap proached it he saw that the Japan ese was trying the knob and he called through the panel, “Mr. Cord ray does not wish to be disturbed for a while, Taki,” then swung across and made his exit through the French doors that led down the long flight of steps to the sunken gar dens. He could take this way to the side entrance out of the grounds. As he closed the door behind him he heard Cordray grunt when Brad’s first blow smashed home. It had cost him something just now to let Brad settle the score with Cordray. He felt the nervous re action sweep through him. He stopped at the head of the long flight to light a clgaret with fingers that shook. As he stood there it suddenly came to him that Jan Edding had sus pected, If she had not definitely known, about all this. Perhaps she had seen wliat had happened to Sue and what threatened Lia. This, then, was why she—sweet, loyal kid that she was—had insisted Lia needed her husband’s protection and care" And Jan was right. Tonight, as he had listened to Garenne’s story, the sudden Insistent feeling had grown tn Jilm that his wife needed help as she never had before. The night was hot and breathless Blackness had fallen on the garden fcut the street lights were on. One ©f them made a faint pool of light sm the grass at the foot of the steps and. glancing down at It, Val was suddenly Jerked Into the present to see a little huddle of clothes lying at the edge of the circle For an Instant, powerless to move, be stood staring down at the small crimson bundle. An Icy dread gripped his hearts He sprang down the flight. Just before he reached the bottom, be saw the figure stir and then half raise itself on one elbow. “Lia!” he c&tied. “What has happened?” She had dropped back on the grass again. ‘Tin all right. -Just don’t touch me for a minute, VaL Please," CHAPTER X A PEAL OF thunder heralded the storm; thunder that echoed and re echoed in the mountains until it anally died away, grumbling like an angry old man, A flash of lightning, and Blair Rodman heard a tree fall somewhere behind him; fall and crash among other trees, tearing their giant limbs until they seemed to scream and moan with pain. Then rain—not a soft gentle mist, but a drenching, driving rain that splashed against his face without warning. The man at the wheel of the big roadster glanced at the night sky, thinking perhaps this was but a shower that would pass quickly. But not a star was visible and a sickly young moon was scurrying behind a aloud, black as bubbling tar. A moment ago . - . but it mqst have been an hour, for he had no ticed nothing for a long time on this forsaken road . . . the night, although rather cold for mid-summer, had held not a hint of rain. Indeed, had he dreamed it was going to rain he would have stopped miles back for the night as he had removed the top from his car a month ago. Queer, he had seen no sign posts. Yet in Montrose where he had din ner about seven o'clock, a garage man had told him to keep to the right and he would come out on a good gravel road. He looked at the clock on the dashboard . . . eleven and no gravel road yeti Not a gas station for miles. At the next one he would have to stop and refill his tank. Foolishly he had not thought of gas when he stopped for dinner. Must be getting pretty low. Well, the next town. .. . Up one hill and down another the powerful car sped. The road was getting narrower and on curves the wheel had to be turned sharply. Blair watched the headlights searching through the curtain of rain into the deep woods on each side of the road gilding the fir trees for a moment, then seeking out others to brighten. Big fellows, these trees, with trunks, gigantic and tall. He forded a small stream, one of those stiearns that net the Western Cana dian Rockies. There was not a light ahead . . . nothing that would teii him a house, a town was near. It was raining harder now, a steady downpour that beat like a lash on his face. Beyond the head hunts the rain was a broad golden, twinkling ribbon. His chamois driv ing gloves were sopping wet, and his clothes felt damp and clammy. Lord! He had never seen such a rain! Not a rift in the sky. not a sign that the storm would stop. . . . What a fool he had been to take the top off his car! But he liked the summer wind in his face when he drove, the feel of it in his hair, the sting of it on his cheeks. . . . There was a blanket in the back . . . he stopped short, scrambled out of the car and, cursing softly to himself as he opened the back com partment. drew out a heavy robe. The water dripped down his back as f*STORMY LOVBt A yo romance mans (fjfD y belie burnsgromer What a fool he had been to take the top off his carl he stooped ever. In the car again, he put the robe over his shoulders. The road led down, now, gently. The car wheels made a slushing, noisy sound as they plodded tnrough the mud. For perhaps half an hour Blair drove through the storm, hoping at every turn he would see a friendly light ahead . . . something, a house, a barn, where he could stop for the night and get out of this ghastly rain. The road was getting muddier as he went, and now and then he had to put his car in second to plow through it. A sharp turn to the right . . . but the car instead of responding to the wheel, skidded in the slimy mud, and before he knew it, was off the road in a ditch. Muttering savagely, Blair put on all his power, but the car would not budge. Again and again, he tried to move It ahead. It would not go. Finally, he got out. Hope less, more than hopeless, Impossible. The wheels were buried in the mud to the hub caps. Nothing to do but sit still, and wait for somebody to come and haul him out. It was then that Blair realized sud denly that no car had passed him for hours. He had been alone on the road. He wondered grimly what he would have done had he seen another car approaching. Certainly there would not have been room to pass . . . his car barely cleared the nar row road. Surely in tlae morning, trucks Her voice sounded strangely weak and high. He knelt beside her. “Are you sure you’re not hart?” he demanded anxiously. She had evidently had a bad fall. Only her face lay in the light and it looked small and blanched to a golden pallor. : She shook her head. “I didn't fall veJy far. I fainted. I think. But nb bones. L shall be bet ter than 'evah— presently. Only I just want to rest here on the grass for a moment •" “It will soon rain. Better let me carry you home ” She made a slight protesting ges ture with one hand. “It is so hot In the house. Stay just a minute more,” she pleaded in a low voice. “Smoke one eigaret with me. When It is finished—you may take me home.” Why was she putting him off like this? Did she fear to return to the house where Garenne waited? Some thing urged him to insist they leave here. But he knew she had been through a terrible experience just now and to humor her he lighted the eigarets as she asked. “L»o you—hate me, Val?” she whispered. He stared away from her pallid face. “Why did you come here to Cordray?” be asked harshly. “I thought he would help me.” “I told you I would do that.” “Not the way I wanted you to. Val.” She closed her eyes for a mo ment and he saw two tears slip from under her heavy lids. “You see, I thought he was In love with me. I mean the —real me. I be lieved he would be the one person who would not think of what had happened to me as —ugly and horri ble. But, when I told him that the little Manchu princess was really wjiat we had pretended that I had —Chinese blood—Ob Val, he looked at me as if I were —unclean. Her voice sounded completely weary and played, out. “He didn’t mean any of the things he told me, I reckon. 3e didp’t want me. He —sent me away Val’s tone wae hard. All right. Then that’s ended. I'm not asking you any “questions. But now that you’re thrdugli with that biid well go ahead with my way of living our lives ” “I’m through with him and with everything else. Val.” she murmured. “I’m not the fitting sort, you . know. I couldn’t face all that has happened here ” „ ; “Don't-- talk like that” he said j shortly, “Come. Id carry you l would be going by . . . early rising farmers going to market. . . . A sheer cliff at the right, he cpuld not tell how high. At the left a forest of firs. The rain seemed to come down move fiercely as he sat impatiently, wondering what he should do. Snap ping out the lights, he reached in his pocket for a cigaret and, lighting it with his lighter shielded it from the storm under the corner of the wet blanket. Even then, it soon wa* out. He threw it away in disgust. What was that ahead In the trees? He peered out. A dim light. . . . With a leap he was out of the car, wading through the mud, whistling. A light meant a house, where ha could get shelter, or perhaps a car to haul him out of the mud. He pre ferred the shelter, he decided, as bs hurried along. Not finding a path, he made his way through the trees, losing the light and stopping still until he had located it again. He stumbled through a stream before he knew it, groped his way up the bank, felt his trousers wet, and clinging to his legs. A low branch tore his cap off his head, but he did not stop to look for it. He had left the forest behind, and was plodding through what seemed to be a field, the tail wet grasses up to his hips. But the light wa3 not far away. HO BE CONTINUED* home now. I’ll be very careful.” The fringed shawl lay across her but he saw then that one of her arms was turned under her. When he reached out to straighten it she begged, “Please! Just until I finish my clgaret.” Her voice sounded drowsy. She seemed to Le makia* an effort to stay awake. Her fao» was ashen against the crimson robs. “I’ve been hurt so much today,” she whispered, “that this doesn’t matter at all. And I’m glad that —that this is the last time I’ll make you un happy, Val. You’ve been awfully deah to me. I just—wasn’t your girl, that’s all. You should have married someone like Jan. Perhaps you will —now ” An unknown fear took hold of his throat. “What makes you say things like that, Lia?” he demanded harshly. Her voice was the merest whisper when she answered, “You always hated the —Venetian bracelets, Val, but —they’ve done both of us a good turn. I wouldn’t have dared to do it myself. See—my Chinese blood —is almost gone ” Into the circle of pale light she moved the arm that had been con cealed in the shadows and beneath her crimson robe. Val’s heart leaped violently against his ribs; his eyes widened with horror and he cried out. Great guns! Two of the six glass bracelets still remained intact. The others had splintered where she had fallen! From a deep and jagged wound in her wrist little, diminishing spurts of red gushed out from the severed artery to soak into the thick grass The man's frenzied fingers knotted a handkerchief above her elbow and drew it taut. Then he swung in his arms and ran through the gar den. His breath came in . panting gasps from bis tight, threat. He knew that he fled before a dread, pursuing force—-- Just ahead lay the Navy Yard and suddenly it seemed a sanctuary, g harbor of refuge. There lay security! If he could reach the entrance be*- fore the ghastly pursuer, Lia would be safe A chill gust of wind touched hie check. He felt the small head sag against his shoulder and stopped short to gaze fearfully down Into his wife’s shadowed face. A cruel, iron hand seemod suddenly to close about his heart. His breath came in broken sobs and he began to run again. But even as he passed through the gate and into bis haven, he knew that for Lta fcs had reached it toe iate warn maaj Doing Their Best to Comply With Acreage Allotments, Officials Says College Station, Raleigh, July 9. — North Carolina farmers participating in the crop adjustment programs are seeking to comply accurately with their contracts. H. M Ellis, State compliance su pervisor at State College, reported to day that most G s the growers tried to plant only the acreage allotted them by their contracts. In cases where growers accidentally planted more than their allotments, he added, the majority of them have been glad to remove the excess when notified of their overplanting. The work of measuring «creage for compliance with contracts is going ahead rapidly over the State_ Ellis continued. In the northeastern counties the cotton and tobacco measurements will probably be completed this week, he pointed out, and in the southeastern counties it should be finished within about three weeks. In v/estern North Carolina the measurement of hurley tobacco acre age is well under way and should be completed shortly. The corn acreage of growers who have signed corn-hog contracts is be ing checked. Ellis stated, but the a mount of corn under contract is much smaller than the amount of cotton and tobacco. The acreage of cotton growers who did net sign contracts, but who have made application for tax.exemption certificates under the Bankhead act, is also being measured. When the measurements are com pleted and all figures tabulated, the state 1 compliance office will be able to report accurately on the size of the cotton crop this year, Ellis added. AAA Amendments Will Be Costly (Continued from Page One.) self there, would work a ha/aship on the tobacco farmers. “The agricultural adjustment act, on the basis of its original plan or a processing tax to be used to guar antee at least parity prices for the part of the products consumed in this country, seems to me to be both bene, ficial and reasonably sound,” Wil liams said. “The farmers have drawn great benefits from it nad can con tinue to be protected by it- But un der the leadership of economists like Dr. Forster, who lack only a Senate vote (expected within a few days) of having their proposal written into law, this beneficial status is about to be destroyed in favor of a new and quite doubtful plan under which the farmers or producers may easily pay two or three dollars for every dollar of additional benefit they may get under the new plan. “The argument used is that except for the new plan control would be Is Your Name On Our Books If you are not already enrolled with us as a depositor, we should like to open an account in your name, because: 1. You are entitled to his posi tion among the successful, prosperous people of the com munity. 2. In this sound and carefully managed bank your money will be completely safeguard ed. 3. Building an account in our bank is certain to be of lasting benefit to you. A modest first deposit will put your name on our books and also on a pass book that will be your personal record of your rising fortune. First National Bank In Henderson Henderson, N. C. . - J | lost. Even AAA officials adnvir % this is not necessarily true. Thev quoted as having said that they vY a pian for control fully worked , before this new plan was breugh. f 0l ‘ ward. Others working- with ir.e si; ■ ■ tion have a number of other jilarYY '*; maintaining price control, as lonV';', j the farmer wants it, without rnakY ! him pay two or three prices s o s r I But the AAA tries t 0 cover up ; fact of multiplied cost to the faring by telling him that these proposed new processing taxes on the new tas < gives him the same protection an; benefits that industry gets out 0 f tariff. “That is another joke —or jok-i Tariffs that protect industry a ,.j j levied against the other fellow s p IC/ _ duct, while this so-called tariff 0 n to bacco is to be levied against the to bacco farmer’s own product. But non* of the economists have called chat little difference to the farmer's at tehtion. To a farmer there just car. be anything in that proposit/un, aft#: parity prices are attained, except that he is again being invited to indulge in an attempt to lift himself by his own bootstraps.” The statement by Dr. Forster to the effect that the 1933 marketing aaree ment was forced on the tobacco com panies by the government is eri /. ous, Williams points out. since it is generally known that this agreement was entered into voluntarily by the domestic manufacturers of tobacco It is true that the government did uy to get the domestic manufacturers to sign an agreement which the manu facturers did not think was to the best interests cf the growers, news paper publishers and other owners of advertising mediums, but that they refused to sign, Williams said. Again in the fall of 1934, the AAa officials wanted the manufacturers to sign a marketing agreement under which a minimum average price of about 20 cents a pound would have been fixed. “But again feeling sure that if the psychology of the market should not be destryode by such an official de claration, tobacco would seY: at prices substantially above 20 cents, I again, with the full support of the industry, advised the AAA that we would not enter into such a contract.” Williams said. “Growers now know how the prices they got for their 1934 tobacco crop compares with the price the gov ernment wculd have made us estab lish if it had had the power to fores us to do and which Dr Forster has now assumed for it.” Mr. Williams cites still other argu ments to show that the new plan pro. posed by the AAA and advocated by Dr. Forster would make it almost im possible for tobacco farmers to get mere than the parity price fixed by the government. ■Vi-7—!■ i hlmi ■! hihiilllm B. H. Mixon I Contractor and Builder I “Builds Better Buildings’ f All kinds of Building 1 Wall Papering Painting—l } Roofing and Interior I Decorating. ; PMONFS* ° ffice 7 I g * iIUJ IsL >J • R, es i(j e nce 476-J |