PAGE TWO
La Crosse, Va. And Henderson Tourists Meet ounday
Manager Powell Hopes
To Bolster Tourists
Next Week’s Sched
ule Shows Busy One
Coghill Looks Good
Afield
' While seeking their first victory in
the Central State League under the
Tfra.nfl.g-p.ment of Ed Powell in Oxford
Ukis afternoon, the Henderson Tour
ists cast their eyes toward their sche
dule for the next week in hopes of
■winning a large per centage of their
tilts. .
Their next appearance on the home
ball lot is Sunday afternoon at 3:30
o’clock when they tangle with La
Crosse. Va. They go to La Crosse
for a return game Tuesday, play L^ 1 -
ham. here Wednesday and Townsville
here Thursday, winding up the week
at Hillsboro Saturday. Negotiations
are underway for a game here Sun
day week.
/ Manager “Maude” has been dick
ering around during the past few
days for some baseball talent to bol
ater his faltering club, and is ex
pected to present a fast lineup
morrow afternoon.
Fletcher Langley has notified the
manager tht he would not be aval -
able for regular play but would fill
jji from time to time. Coghill, a new
confter to the club, showed up nicely
last Wednesday 'against Townsville
and impressed the Skipper a great
<Jj<Bll. The youngster socked the ball
on the nose and may occupy a regu
lar outfield berth if he continues his
stellar play.
Powell has asked for the support
of the fans in this section, saying the
better support he has, the better his
ball club will play. Fans are expect
ed to back the new man to the ut
most.
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Club W. L. Pet.
Wilmington 20 8 .714
Richmond 20 10 .667
Portsmouth 17 13 .567
Asheville 9 16 .360
Norfolk 10 19 .345
Charlotte 9 19 .321
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Club: W. L. Pet.
Detroit 59 37 .615
Detroit 59 37 .615
Chicago 51 39 .567
Boston 49 45 .521
Cleveland 46 45 .505
i*hiladelphia 39 47 .453
Washington 40 56 .417
St. Louis 31 62 .333
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Club.’ W. L. Pet
New York 61 33 .649
Chicago 62 38 .620
!t. Louis 56 39 .589
’ittsburgh 55 44 .556
irooklyn 43 52 .453
Cincinnati 43 54 .443
Philadelphia : 40 54 .426
Boston 25 71 .260
Tbdayf(Sm'es'
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Portsmouth at Wilmington.
aL.gharjlotte. ■-
■ f : -:. ...ry-,- .. • ;
■ AMERICAN LEAGUE --ww
New York at Washington.
; St. Louis at Chicago.
Cleveland at Detroit.
Philadelphia at Boston.
- '?
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Brooklyn at Philadelphia.
Chicago at Cincinnati.
Boston at New York.
Pittsburgh at St. Louis.
PIEDMONT LEAGUE
Charlotte 1; Richmond 0.
Norfolk 10; Asheville 5.
Wilmington 5; Portsmouth 3.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York 9, Washington 4.
St. Louis 10; Chicago 8.
No other games played.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York 4; Boston 1.
Brooklyn 8; Philadelphia 3
Cincinnati 8; Chicago 0
Only games played.
_ Stanley Baldwin, Britain’s Prime’
Minister, born 68 years ago
notice.
State of North Carolina:
County of Vance:
Having qualified as Administrator
of the Estate of S. Hayes, deceased
late of Vance County, North Caro
lina, this is to notify all persons hav
ing claims against the Estate of said
deceased to exhibit them to the un
dersigned, or his Attorneys, at Hen
derson, N. C., on or before the 29th
day of June, 1936, or this notice will
be pleaded in bar of their recovery
All persons indebted to said estate
will please make immediate payment
This the 29th day of June, 1935.
SOL HAYES,
Admr. of S. Hayes, Deceased.
Gholson and Gholson, Attorneys
fcf Admr., Henderson, N. C.
OAK GROVE, WEEPING
WILLOWS WINNERS
Oak Grove whipped the Lucky
Strike team, 4-3 and the Weeping Wil
lows chased the Jr. Sluggers, 9-2 in
the South Henderson playground base
ball league yesterday afternoon.
The Oak Grove-Luckies game was
a tight affair, the winners getting
three hits and the losers two. The
Luckies made an error.
The Sluggers could muster only two
hits while the winners were getting
eight in their tilt with the Weeping
Willows.
TODAY’S GREAT
EST NEED
* ~~ ■ ;
(Continued from Page One.)
perous nation in the world. Yet,
since the Pilgrims landed at Ply
mouth in 1620 our standard of char
acter has utterly failed to match the
progress of our standard ui living.
We have lost those sterling qualities
which enabled our forefathers to
build America.
I have just returned from Glouces
ter, Massachusetts —my birthplace.
There I had a beautiful view of the
landing place where the settlers first
set foot on Gloucester soil over three
centuries ago. As I listen today to
the town’s people talk of the hund
reds living “on the city” I wondered
if there would be any United States
of America now if our ancestors had
had no more guts than many of those
on relief rolls. If it were possible
to graft into the millions who are
accepting public aid today the same
backbones of iron and wills of steel
of their forefathers, we would have
accomplished more than all the al
phabet agencies rolled into one!
Balking at “Hot-House” Reform
Naturally, readjustments and re
forms in all governments are always
needed. The President’s goal to
bring about more equal opportunities
for all is basically sound and good.
Such a goal is in the interest of every
one’s children and grandchildren. To
make complete and sweeping reforms
such as the administration is now
trying to do, however, is a serious
blunder. Changes should be gradual
so that gains may be consolidated be
fore new crusades are started. The
recent sharp criticism of the Pres
ident’s program is due to his use of
“hot-house” reform methods. He has
tried to build too big a structure on
too weak a foundation!
There are three powerful laws that
not even Congress, the New Deal, nor
the Supreme Court can change.
These are (1) The law of survival of
the fittest; (2) the law of supply and
demand; and (3) the law of action
and reaction. We cannot break these
laws—we can only break ourselves
against them. Those New Deal ex
periments which violate natural laws
are doomed to failure. The Presi
dent can make far greater progress
toward his goal by taking advantage
of these great truths than bv trving
to circumvent them. In fact, iaws
cannot be made, they can only be
discovered; and character cannot be
legislated, it can only be developed.
Only Safeguard To Democracy
The solution of the world’s long
term problems will come only
through the development of charac
ter and intelligence. More equal op
portunities for all will be brought
about through self-control of individ
uals—not through the State-control
of income. As a matter of fact, we
can do our character grayq
injury by the repudiation of public*
contracts, by unfair and discrimina T
by. unwarranted fede
'rai extravagance, and by government
molly-coddling of the indolent. Re
forming the bankers and industrial
ists is a step forward; but it will not
make democracy safe unless supple
mented by an effectual movement to
reform also the politicians, the labor
leaders, and the voters themselves.
Surely our present methods of com
bating war, crime, graft, class con
flicts and business dishonesty have
made little progress in the past three
decades. How much better the re
sults would have been if the moneys
annually spent trying to cure these
national cancers had been used to
build up the nation’s character re
sistance against such plagues. How
much better off we would be today if
this money had been used to influence
the desires of people for things more
worthwhile. Raising the standard of
the wants and desires of anv people
automatically boosts their standard
of character.
Birth Vs Gold Standard
Vital statistics show that demo
cracy will ultimately collapse unless
nations give genetics and eugenics
Pnmary consideration.. Today parents
with strong characters and alert
ITnd he h n aVe T ly 006 ° r two childr en
hence do not reproduce them
selves, while parents with weak char
from S fh nd ? nbalanced minds have
rom three to eight children. Just
f h S . SUre as tw ° d two make four
this system spells inevitable disaster
3Hy P CV ith ‘ h ! S ««*•» of here
mic’nm
Our b?r?h ♦ ,S . meie twiddl e-twaddle.
oortaS rt * standard far more im
-Old r/anSo a° Ur Wag<? sta ndard, our
The t° r ° Ur Hvin S standard!
wiTh vou gh i Which 1 Want to l« a ve
io Dp!i that no army nor navy,
«ve on? T BPIC cam paign, can
iXT T™ T herita^s “
inalvflic y d liberty. I n the last
jpon our n f national futl ”’e depends
wer th« atlonal character. What
-se, there ? w Deal ’ s “must” bills may
fmust” tn reality but °ne real
’Ourcea~fl«° d6 u el ° P ° ur huma « rq
’hanical r haVe perfecte d our me
anical resources. Today’s greatest
* • 1 i* -: i* v ■ i » l «i 7 * «*• 4 , ; I
" '•' * 11 i •, • £ - * - . *•< §' w (u
' ns&ssads, th.'cj imilt
Forgotten Athlete Gets Home At U. N. C.
.
* *■. ‘ 4 jlau A
_ ' _____ v ■ ......a —> .
Here is a good camera view of the
new athletic field which will greet
students at the University of North
Carolina when they return to the
campus next month from their vaca
tions.
Made possible by federal grants and
relief labor, supplemented by funds
from the University Athletic Associa
tion, the field is dedicated to the
“forgotten athletes”, the chap who
wants to play but is not good enough
need is to instill in hour children
those same qualities which made it
possible for our ancestors to blaze the
trail of American civilization from
ocean to ocean!
Business, as registered by the Bab
sonchart, now stands at 21 per cent
below normal, but is 3 per cent above
a year ago.
Agriculture Now
Scaring Wall Street
(Continued from Page One.)
New Deal as socialistic, fascistic,
communistic and unconstitutional all
the way down the line —except in one
instance, processing taxes. But some
how or other nobody thought of that
fflaamgyaMW
i T " ■,-. i187 . i „.. mjj r irr ......T ~4 tl ... W x. jun
LiEL. r vv:.s j-
L?.zv;svVr.3 a r Cj. a
czr:.%,ar.icn, vzstiy Jcksl Lord finds
hszzslf in c &&, c.d hc%39 with a
r/rs ochlezs servant named ifita, a
fiendish dej that answers to a vnys
te.'i: -3 lordstie, and an elderly mis
tress, Miss Bolssvain, ioJio wears a
live chameleon around her neck and
admits she is peculiar. *On the way
to the biy house Janet met Blair Rod
man who came with her in a truck
from the village to retrieve his car,
mired in the ditch near the Boise
vain house during a terrific storm
the night before. Refused shelter
there and chased from the house' by
the dog after hi 3 accident, Blair de
lays his trip west to investigate the
mysterious house and satisfy his
curiosity. After one night in the
house Janet tries to leave but her
employer declares the dog will not
let her go. During a walk about the
grounds Janet sees the face of a girl
in one of the high towers of the
house. Although beginning to like
bliss Boisevain, everything about her
arid the great house mystifies Janet.
< iy,. ';BaCk in t her .room, is I)arre,n
■; y : .'ex6£pt ion q|csi .JiwH jpjpeirs
• a note ft as 'B’ans'iTntt^.,
to tier in a napkin. ■Janet thinks she
sees Blair’s car from her window and
i 3 convinced of it when the headlights
go on and off as if to signal her.
In the late hours of the evening, she
hears someone playing the piano in
the living room, music played furi
ously like a maniac, followed by loud
sobbing.
(TSOW GO ON WITH THE STORY)
CHAPTER 23
AGAIN, AS THE morning before,
the window was open and the blind
half way up when Janet awakened.
Someone had been in her room dur
ing the night! She ran to the door.
The key was still In the lock and
turned!
Hastily dressing. Janet hurried
downstairs and into the living room.
Miss Boisevain was sitting by the
fire, her head bent over her chest.
she looked up at the girl's “good
pibrnirig” and Janet saw* that her
ayes’ vfrjere red and inflamed. She
had beanvweepihg.! Miss Boisevain
Wfcs .Jfee 'person she had heard sob
blnfe tfi‘6 night before* y after the
nitislc had stopped!
‘ With ai;quick; .glance. Janet eyed
-YheM talk.
*?Mjsa3 Boisevain leaned back in her
chair and closed her eyes.
"'./“YOU were dreaming.” sh 6 lUT '
mured In a tired weak voice. “You
were dreaming."
“I know I heard music. Were you
playlhg?” .
“Wo. I tell you you were dream
ing, i This house is cursed. . .
Wisely Janet said no more, -he
was positive she had heard the mu
sic, as positive as she was of sitting
•jqfdfe the fire, at Miss Boisevain s
ikie. . And Miss Boisevain. she de
cided, had been the one who ha i
wept so hysterically.
Presently Nita came in with a
breakfast tray for Janet. s^ e se * ft
down on the table, and wen o xr
mistress to tuck a small p '
hind her .back, and pull a footstool
up for her feet. With a tender hand,
she brushed the hair from her fore
head. Miss Boisevain’s eyes thanked
her silently, and a kindly expression
passed over hex features.
*sSr£in which had seemed yellow
to make the varsity squad.
Rivaling Kenan Stadium in the na
tural beauty of its setting, the field
provides not only the finest track
layout in this section of the country,
but also six football fields and six
softball diamonds for intramural con
tests among the various fraternity
and dormitory teams and a new prac
tice field cor the varsity football
squad. Its stadium will accommodate
6800 spectators.
until too late.
Now the farmers are fighting mad.
There may be 30,000 Communists in
the United States, as the Communists
claim, but there are approximately 33
million farmers and dependents.
And now see what Texas farmers
have started —a suit to test the con
stitutionality of protective tariffs for
industry! Five other states have pro
mised aid.
Yes, the radical states are not the
industrial states, but the farm states
—the 100 ~ser cent American states.
REVOLT SPREADS
Financial New York, in fact, sees
the spreading of revolt. It is not so
happy as rising security prices would
indicate.
Rumors are seeping in from Vir
ginia that New Deal Democrats are
T 5 3nsst was gray today. Gull gray
i as if the woman were ill or fright
; fully fatigued.
i “Is there anything I can do for
i you?” she asked. “You seem to be
ixL”
“I ant, ciiiM. I’m not myself."
• She sat »p in a listening attitude,
[ and watched the swinging door,
t through wljich Nita had just passed.
The servant, appeared again for an
; instant in the doorway, and Janet
thought she saw a nod pass from
. maid to mistress.
Miss Boisevain leaned toward
• Janet. "Did you burn my note?” ehe
r whispered.
“Immediately after I had read it”
: Janet could feel her heart beat wiid
; iy-
Miss Boisevain nodded and leaned
back again.
There was a little silence before
she spoke.
“You must go tonight, if I can
manage it I will try to think of 4
plan.”
“If you would only telj me . .
Janet pleaded, but her emplpyer iq
terrupte t d her iinpeHoda fiteifc
;' |tilV« of’"her'baud. - 1
v ”Ybd are 'no questions,
do as you are told. It is- for the
best. That is all I can say now."
“There is one thing I must know.
Miss Boisevain. I locked the door of
my room last night. Nita had locked
the windows. This morning they
were open. Someone must have
been in my room last night How
could anyone get in?"
“Don’t worry your head about it”
“But I must know that.”
“I can’t tell you. child.” The wom
an closed her eyes wearily. She
seemed older to Janet, much older.
And broken. There was something
worn about her; beaten. She was
different than she had been the pre
vious day. She must have played
her heart out, last night the girl
thought Yet, she denied she had
played. . . .
When Janet took the breakfast
tray out to Nita, she avoided the
piano, deliberately, did not. glance at
it nor pass near It The beautiful
ibatrunient she had longed to touch
had assumed frightful proportions.
It was a monster. ... - 'r'
When she came back into the liVjL
ing room, she offered to read to Miss
Bpiseyaln. but the woman bade 1 her
SdiitTut and take a walk.
to conceal her pleasure,
Janet hurried out. thinking perhaps
she could get' down to the road to
the place where she had seen the
lights of the car before Rajah dis
covered her. However, as soon as
she had stepped out onto the porch,
the dog came forward, his sleek hair
shining in the sun, and his eyes like
fire. > ;
She made her way through the
field, to the trees, and , came to ..a
brook rippling merrily over a bed of
stones. Sitting down, she looked
around. The bridge to the rood wag
at her right, an old bridge fashioned
of heavy worn logs. It must have
stood there a long time, she Imagined.
Perhaps in the days of Miss Boise
vain’s father. The water was cool to
her fingers, and when she cupped her
hand to bring it to her .mouth, sweet
to her taste. o •
If only the house weren’t bo
strange. If only Miss Boisevain
weren’t so queer . . . she would, like
this place. The quiet, the restfulness
of the outdoors. . -■• ' i
Again she thought d Mai? Ifarrl
These facilities, together with those
offered in Kenan Stadium which is
used chiefly for varsity football and
outdoor exercises; in the Tin Can,
where the indoor sports will continue
to find a home, and on Emerson Field
which will continue to be use d for
baseball and football practice, as well
as the 42 available tennis courts, will
enable the University to carry out ef
fectively its slogan of “healthful exer
cise for every student.’’
umtiting there jto break; the Glass-
Byrd rule.
And in Maryland, where support
was strong in the “Stop Roosevelt”
movement, Representative Golds
borough has been applauded for a
strong speech in Congress, in which
he uttered these defiant phrases:
“Only this morning it came to my
notice that a systematic effort has
begun on the part of the great bank
ers of New York to coerce the House
in turn to coerce its conferees into
accepting the Senate omnibus bank
ing bill.
“All the pressure that Wall Street;
can bring to bear upon the House
indirectly through the banking asso,
ciation and the banks is going to be
brought.
“Under the Senate bill, control of
man anG wondered whether he had
man ana wondered whether he had
left Boisevain; whether he would
come back today, or tonight. Miss
Boisevain said she must be gone by
tonight.
Rising, she walked toward the
bridge, and was about to set foot on
it when Rajah growled. Evidently,
she decided, he had orders to keep
her on this side! Well, she didn’t
relish having the.beast spring at her.
So 04 this side she must stay.
Up the slight hill again, and on te
the tall weedq. She kept her eyes on
the east tower window where she had
aeeu the. face the morning before.
But now, there was nothing, only the
glint the sun made as it touched the
glass. Not a sign of a face, or the
waving arm that had beckoned her.
She found a little path into the neg
lected garden and started around the
back of the house.
She would not mind the loneliness,
if only she could be by herself; if
only Rajah would not trail her jvery
place she went! If she could wan
der wilh she would be so much
more: co^teaj,.
i house—that
fflffghr But when* she
(started’toward it. there was Rajah,.
snarling -ffgafrr. ’Another place she
could not go. What was there? The
place was .enticing * ith its low roof
that she could just glimpse through
the shrubs. *
Turning to the back of the house,
she noticed a pile of wood against
the table, freshly cut. Was that
Nita’s job, too? Poor Nita! An ax
lay on the ground. These logs must
have been trees, huge trees not a«
long ago. Pitch, yellow as taffy, waa
dripping on the cobblestones.
Surely Nita could not saw those
trees! . Perhaps'’ the man who
brought the supplies once a month
cut the lofcs for Miss Boisevain. A
man’s jot?, backing down :rees. Be
sides. Nita had enough to do, with
the kitchen garden, the cooking, and
the care of her mistress. ...
The sun was making her sleepy.
The drone of the bees in the flower
ing shrubs was music in her ears. . . .
Walking to the stable, she tried to
pull the door open. It was locked.
A whistle close at hand. The
’Whistle she knew. Yes, Rajah was
rnnnihg'away! s?
•' ergs the third time she had
heard -lt-, i,.: the third time V * . and
each tlrhe Rajah bad le£L . . .
It bad sounded very near, and the
shrillness of it was still ringing in the
air.
She could pot have dreamed it
this ume, and the whistle could Dot
possibly have come from a bird, la
Miss Boisevain had suggested the
first time she had heard it in tk%
living room. . . .
Rajah obeyed it. Instantly.
Janet ran to the back door, and
entered the kitchen, where Nita was
already starting the dinner. • ,
“\ybo was It that whistled sot
Rajah, Nita?” she whispered, pant
ing. She was out of breath. “That
is the third time I have heard thgs
same whistle.”
The servant looked at hf:r sot
moment, then went back to her cook
ing. 0' a
Janet repeated her question, .but
Nita shook her bead slowly.
Seeing she could get 1 no informa
tion from Niia, the girl went into the
living room where Miss Boisevain.
he? eyes still red, was leaning weak
ly baqk m hex chair.
_ is* as wwrorom
The new field is south of the cam
pus and just off the Raleigh road. It
is constructed on two levels. On the
upper terrace are the intramural
fields, and on the lower level are a
quarter.mile track 30 feet wide en
circling a football practice field, per
manent concrete stands, and a small
field house. A good turf has already
been developed on the practice gird
iron, and grass has been sown on the
intramural fields.
the people’s money is to be in th*»
hands certain members of
which must be bankers, whose inter
est it is to have the people’s money
as scarce as possible and cost as
much as possible.
“You can reach your own conclu
sion as to the influences which sur
rounded the Senate committee (under
Senator Glass) in writing a provision
of that kind into a bill.”
Hoey and Graham
Both Making Gain
(Continued from Page One.),
only holding that strength he has
had but is gaining ground.
Most political observers here are
inclined to concede, that at the pre
sent time Hoey has the edge on
Graham because of his conceded
greater support in the more populous
Piedmont counties and because the
prevailing opinion is that most of
these counties are still predominantly
for Statewide prohibition and a per
petuation of the bootlegging system
of dispensing liquor than for State
liquor control and its legal sale in
liquor stores. The bootleggers, who
are faced with the loss of their bus
iness and unemployment in the event
a State Liquor store and control plan
should be adopted, are already joining
forces with the drys to keep the Pied
mont and western counties at least
politically dry, according to reports
leaching her^.
Soviet Plane Now Headed on
Toward Pole and America
(Continued from Page One.)
from new until they reach the Amei
ican continent will be Franz Josef Is
land, unless they discover new ter
ritory in the unexplored Arctic Sea.
The planew as reported humming
perfectly and the fliers apparently
were in good spirits.
THREE SOVIET AVIATORS
CLIMBING ROOF OF WORLD
Moscow, Aug. 3 (AP)Climbing the*
roof of the world, three Soviet air
men purred over the icy Arctic Ocean
today in tha first projected non-stop
flight across the North Pole from
Moscow to America.
The radio sputtered frequent as
surances that all was well as Pilot
Sigmund Leveanesfsky and his two
comrades sped over the trackless Ba
rents Sea.
They left continental Europe behind
at 2:25 p. m., 7:25 a. m. eastern
standard time, as they cleared the
Kola peninsula and headed out
across 2,391 miles of polar ice and wa
ter* —the most hazardous stage of
their projected 6 S OOO-mile flight to
San Francisco.
If all goes well and they maintain
their speed—so far an average of 108
miles or better—they will reach the
North Pole by the equivalent of 9
o’clock tonight, eastern standard
time.
Waynick Silent
On Road Program
(.Continued from Page One.)
badly needed and the commission is
going to try to build some of the ones
that are most neded,” Chairman Way
nick said. “But it would require five
times as much money as we have
available to build all the new roads
or surface all the old ones that have
been requested. As a result, we
must first consider the amount of
money which is available and then
make our highway construction plans
fit the amount of money we can
spend. We also have to take into con
sideration the need and urgency, since
with the money now available we will
be able to build only the most needed
projects.”
Pointing out that no action would
be taken with regard to any of the
many proposed highway and bridge
projects inspected in the course of ,
this trip until they had all been .dis
cussed and considered by the entire
highway commission, Waynick de
clined to comment on any particular
projects. He said that he gndhhit
party had gone over numerous pro
posed projects in Wayne, Duplin,
\
l
Pender. Lenoir, Craven, r ai
Pamlico, Beaufort, Washington Vvi
rell, Hyde and Dare counties, as v/ei
as some others and that as a resul
they had gained an excellent firsI'’ 1 '’
hand knowledge of conditions and of
what was desired.
■He and four other members of the
commission also inspected the
posed sites for the two new bri<w
requested to link Tyrrell and Bar»
counties, one across the Alligator •-
er and one across Croatan Sound
from the Dare county mainland
Roanoke Island. But Waynick d*
dined to say what he thought vrl
chances were for getting either
or both of these bridges.
Martial Law De
clared At Pelzer, S. C.
(Continued from Page One.*
in a “state of insurrection” today ;
acted to create a military zone to K
caiize labor disputes there.
In issuing a formal proclamation
required by law to give 24_houi no
tice of a state of martial law th
governor said sheriffs and citizens /
Anderson and Greenville counties had
requested the action to preserve ol
der.
Approximately 100 National Guards
men have been on duty in the mill
town since a strike at the Pelzer
Manufacturing Company began J U jy
15, and ti was indicated they would
be reinforced during the week-end
if necessary to broaden military au
thority.
Some Georgia Averages
Over 25 Cents for Week
(Continued from Page One)
Valdosta advised the Valdosta Times
that opening week sales there were
1,364,034 pounds at an average of $20.-
31 per hundred.
The Moultrie Observer reported
sales for the same period of 1.109.004
pounds for a general average of $2183
Growers were reported generally
satisfied with prices. Last year the
average for the season for the State
as a whole was $18.73 per hundred
pounds.
Mrs. Bauer Is To
Face Zenge Soon
(Continued from Page One.)
jilted to marry Dr. Walter J. Bauer,
in an effort to solve the pen-kite
mutilation and slaying of the young
bridegroom.
Zenge was in custory here, still
cheerful but silent after 24 houia
questioning. Mrs. Bauer was in Cleve
land for her husband’s funeral today.
Her brother-in-law. William Bauei,
said she had been notified of Daugh
tery’s request, and indicated that, al
though “she shudders at the thought"
she probably would return here to
face Zenge.
Through a solid day of questioning
Zenge. arrested early yesterday, was
said by Daughtery to be willing ;0
discuss anything but the killing, io
all questions on that subject, Daugh
tery said he replied with a demand
for an attorney and a terse, “I don't
know.”
$7,590,000 Jobs
Os Y/PA Approved
(Continued from Page One.)
ministration there, Coan announce!
{iere today. It is expected that most
of these projects will be appioved
within a few days, certainly’ within &
week, so that actual work on a ma
jority of them can be started within
the next week or ten days. A reason
able amount of time must be allowed
after a project is appioved for its
return to the district director, for the
/assembling of the necessary labor and
for arranging the other details nec
essary Vto its inception. State Admin
istrator Coan is confident, however,
that a goodly number of projects can
actually be gotten under way withui
the next two weeks or so.
Os this $7,590,000 worth of projects
already approved, twelve projects ag
gregating $4,624,000 were appmve
prior to this week .while 27 proje ls
aggregating $2,970,000— a laige num
ber of these sanitary privy construc
tion projects—were approved this pasi.
week. In spite of the fun that has
been poked at the old Cwa P 1 ")
building projects and the miles an
miles of new privies already built, Ad
ministrator Coan pointed cut T
there wag, stilln eed for
miles of privies from a sanitation aim
public health standpoint, in addition,
he said that privy building supphe-i
more work of a nature that can rjJ
performed by relief labor than almost
any other type of project, smci. n
most any one who can jearn to use A
hammer and a saw can learn to bin 3
privies. There is no doubt that < oan
is decidedly in favor of the privy pi o
jects, though he does not think that,
all the WPA money should go i» 10
these projects.
Included in the other projects ap
proved arq, several mala tie conttoi
and swamp drainage projects as wen
as several other types of piojects I **
principal trouble now is trimming
down the projects whiati have bee.i
proposed to fit the relief loads in tue
various counties, cities and towns.
NOTICE.
Having qualified as AdministiaToi
of the fistate of Harry G. StaunVn
deceased, late of Vance County. Noil*
Carolina, this is to notify all P els;
having claims against the Lstait m
said deceased to exhibit them to
undersigned, or to his attorney a*
Henderson, N. C., on or befoie t'"
20th day of July, 1936, or this
will be pleaded in bar of then
covery. All persons indebted to ■*_*•’
estate will please made
payment.
Thig the 20th day of July. l»w-
P. B. FINCH, Admin-9t raL< ' r
Gholson. and Gholson,
Attorneys for Administrator.