HENDERSON gateway TO CENTRAL CAROLINA Twenty-fourth year SUPREME COURT SUSTAINS JUSTICE BLACK BATTLE IS RESUMED ON SHANGHAI FRONT DISTANCE 25 MILES Huge Wharf and Warehouse Property Destroyed By Jap Warships, Loss $2,000,000 SHARP advance by JAPANESE CLAIMED Exodus from Capital of Shantung Increases With Renewal of Japanese Threats to Province; Chi nese Governor of Shantung Backs Nanking War Shanghai, Oct. 11 (AP)--Chinese and Japanese troops crowled out of ♦heir muddy burrows along the 25-mile front to the northwest and resumed the almost two-months-old battle of Shanghai. _ . The smouldering ruins of the China Merchants Navigation Company’s low er wharf and warehouses were the on lv results of the Japanese warships’ bombardment of the rich industrial area. A Japanese naval spokesman an nounced the Chinese peppered the Japanese warships with machine guns from the wharf and the Japanese re taliated with their big guns. The property loss was estimates' at $2,000,000. including considerable Ame rican and other foreign cargo. The bombardment of Pootung began in a heavy rain during the final hours of Sunday, upsetting an otherwise gen eral quiet day. Today the Japanese struggled through the muck for a mile advance straightening out their salient be tween the stubbornly Chinese-shelled Kiwangwan race course and Woosung creek, north of the international set tlement. The exodus from Tsianfu, the capi tal of Shantung, increased today as the Japanese threats to the province continued. General Chang Fu-Chu, governor of Shantung, which the Japanese claim ed to have won over, came out flatly today for the Nanking government. He issued a proclamation urging all government employees to vow resist ance to the death against Japan. ItHlfON HOD AND T. B. Drastic Reductions Made in Death Rates, But Total Still Too High Dnlly Dispatch Bnrena, the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Oct. 11. —Despite drastic, almost incredible, reductions in North Carolina’s death rate from typhoid and tuberculosis, health department officials are still unsatisfied with re sults and are planning even a stern on battle than ever on these scourges. There were only 2.1 deaths per 100,- m f ‘om typhoid in 1936, but health officials declare there should not be an V from this disease, which is prac- Continued on Page Two.) Expect FDR Will Reveal Extra Call Low Cotton Prices Gig Factor in Plan for Congress To Enact Crop Control Washington, Oct. 11.—(AP)—‘Fresi “f 11 ,^ oosf; velt may disclose in his er lr , s^e ®hat” tomorrow night wheth- Co ■!'. Will call a s P ec i a l session of mgr ess to enact farm control and - an( f hour legislation, ost observers have predicted such Pi' f • S f 10n ’ n m id-November, but the f-SKlent has withheld a decision until git bleting a canvass of the farm Th 10n Secret - ar y Wallace, he principal doubt that Mr. Roose- Sp -ould ask Congress to re-as -1 ' before January disappeared Wa -v/ iday ’ * n the opinion of many -is lngtonians, when the Federal ,, p P le P°rt estimated the second big b's Cot ton harvest in the nation’s his- '.Continued on Page Four.), Hcttiicrsmt Uailit Dispatch! LEASED WIRE SERVICE nw THE ASSOCIATED PRess! F Potato Growers Approve Control Washington, Oct. 11. (AI») Farm Administration officials an nounced today that commercial po tato growers have approved limita tion of acreage next year under the present farm benefit program. Preliminary results from a na tionwide referendum showed 24,- 195 votes in favor of a stabilization program, and 5,425 against. As a result, the AM will split up a national acreage limit, or goal, of between 3,100,000 and 3,300,000 acres among the states, counties and individual farmers. The aver age potato harvest from 1928 to 1937 was 3,346,000 acres. Farmers who stay within these goals will receive a benefit. The votes on the potato control program included North Carolina, 2,676 for and 40 against. WAGE-HOUR ACT IS BOLDLY DENOUNCED AT AFL CONVENTION Never Again Will Labor Submit To Such Bureau cratic Designs, Mat thew Woll Says LEWIS CUTS TIES WITH CIO ELEMENT Radical Organization Con vention In Atlantic City Hears Leader’s Assertion That It Hasn’t Even Tech nical Connection With Parent Body Denver, Col., .Oct. 11. —(AP) —Mat- thew Woll, vice-president of the Am erican Federation of Labor, denounc ed the Roosevelt wage-hour bill at the A. F. of L. convention here today, predicting that the federation: Will never again voluntarily submit itself or the workers in general to the whims of a bureaucratic decision and findings of any Federal board. “The people have recourse to Con gress, but practically none to a board or bureau,” he said. Emphasizing that “we do not ques tion the intentions of the administra tion to build toward a better social ,-jrder, Woll said of the wage-hour bill, “we have found through bitter experi ence that social and labor progress do«s not result from placing power in the .hands of appointive boards. Con gress? can hear but it can not be sub terranean.” LEWIS BURNS BRIDGES IN SIPLIT WITH PARENT BODY Atlantic City, Oct. 11.—(AP)—John L. Lewis, removed virtually all chances of a reunion between his Committee for Industrial Organization and the American Federation of Labor today as he started discussion of CIO ex pansion with leaders of his 32 af filiated unions. The federation’s annual convention in Danver, at the same time, moved toward a final settlement of the es trangement which hereto years ago, but Lewis said the CIO does not have even a technical connection with its rival.” Describing the federations suspen sion of the original ten unions which formed the committee as a frantic, cowardly, contemptible act, ’ Lewis said “our attitude is one of complete (Continued on Page Three.) DECLINES CONTINUE IN COTTON TRADING Market Is Steady and With Some Slight Gains at Outset of the Day’s Session Ne«w York, Oct. 11.—(AP)—Cotton futures opened steady, two lower to two -higher, with steady Liverpool rabies partly offset by favorable weath er southern selling. Decembe Ls? from 7.90 to 7.82 and shortly the first half hour, and was 7 85 with prices generaUy eleven Plater 1 , 7- movements narrow and the undertone oiorv.it qtpaidy. December was selling *t 785 ear)y in the afternoon, with the general'list 2to 7 points net lower. ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA Four Raleigh Persons Killed In Collision In Spring Hope In Morning Mr. and Mrs. J. R. King, Former a Bakery Salesman, and Miss Gladys Carroll Lose Lives When Car and Tobacco Truck Collide; Two Others Are Hurt Spring Hope, Oct. 11 (AP) —A truck automobile collision here this morn ing killed four Raleigh people and painfully injured a fifth. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. King and Miss Gladys Carroll, all of Raleigh, died in stantly. Mrs. Bertie Walker, also of Raleigh, died early this afternoon in a Raleigh hospital. Miss Kathleen Branham was re ported to be doing fairly well at the hospital. She suffered painful injur ies about the head. State Highway Patrolman T. R. Burdette, who investigated, said the truck was driven by Charles Smith, of Apex, and that it was meeting the Madrid Is Shelled By Insurgents Madrid, Oct. 11. —(AP) —One of the heaviest artillery battles heard on the Madrid front in months turned into a shelling of Madrid itself today. Shells dropped all over the central section of the city, several hitting a block from the building in which the foreign correspondents work. The ar tillery battle began about midnight, with the government’s extension of insurgent gun positions south of the city. The heaviest engagement appeared almost directly south of Madrid, where the roar of exploding shells and bombs was continued throughout the night and early morning. Yesterday there was heavy fighting northwest of the capital, where an insurgent offensive against Madrid last March was turn (Continued on Page Three.) WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Generally fair to partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday; not quite so cool in extreme northwest por tion and near the southeast coast tonight. HENDERSON, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 11, 1937 Vei-t0..... .. President Roosevelt j | r —: —p — ————: President Roosevelt will call a special session of r congress between Nov. 8 and 16, it now is be- I lieved. It is expected that these measures will I ome up: hours and wages, government J Raleigh car, driven by King, on the curve near the intersection of the Wake Forest road on Highway No. 64, west of Spring Hope, when the crash occurred. The truck and trailer attached were loaded with tobacco. Patrolman Burdette quoted Smith, who was reported only slightly injur ed, as saying he dimmed his lights when his truck and trailer approach ed the Raleigh car. King was said to have tried to dim his own lights, but Smith said they went out just before the two vehicles met. Mrs. Walker was the wife of the manager of the Williamston fair, it was reported here. MtaxratT ROOSEVELT’S AIM Overhauling of Federal Tax Structure Means That, Not Increase By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Columnist Washington, Get. 11.—Many folk evidently see inconsistency between President Roosevelt’s recent sugges tion that higher taxes are not on his program for the early future and his earlier announcement that he had asked the Treasury Department to make a study preparatory to an over hauling of the entire Federal tax structure. It does not seem to me that such an inconsistency is necessarily im plied. Those who believe that they discern it evidently take it for granted that a tax readjustment can be for no pur pose other than an increase in rates. Perhaps this conclusion is unjust ified. A taxation system may be bad, and need to be overhauled, for other rea sons than it doesn’t produce sufficient funds to support the government. In Pioneer Dayts. Long, long hgo, when I was a lad, (Continued on Page Three.), zation and establishment of eight regional plan ning boards similar to the Tennessee Valley Au thority. It is also possible approach will, be made to the federal judiciary reorganization issue agair OGDEN L. MILLS, 53, FORMER TREASURY SECRETARY, PASSES Had Suffered Several Slight Illnesses During Summer and Sought Long Rests WAS ARDENT ENEMY OF THE NEW DEAL Rose to His Highest Prom inence in Public, Life When Hoover Named Him Treas ury Chief in 1932 To Suc ceed Andrew Mellon; Led An Active Life New York, Oct. 11 (AP)—Agden L. Mills, former secretary of the Treas ury, died at his home here today after an illness of two waeks. He was 53 years old. Mills had suffered several slight ill nesses in the course of the summer. He took a long cruise in 'the hot weath er on his yacht from his hom<£ club, the Cold Spring Harbor Beach Club, ending at the New York Yacht Club station at Newport. Because of these recurring illnesses, Mills had given up much of his acti vities in the Republican party. At the time of his death, Mills’ acti vities were manifold. He was a di rector of several large companies. Mills rose to his highest promin ence in the nation’s affairs under President Hoover, who made nim sec retary of the treasury in 1932, when Andrew W. Mellon, whom he had serv ed as under secretary of the treasury retired. Mills left public office when Presi dent Roosevelt entered the White House and always was a leading foe of the New Deal. 14 ARE IMPRISONED IN LONDON RIOTING Leftists and Fascists Clash On Sun day and Youth Injures Lead er With Rock Liverpool, England, Oct. 11 (AP) George Melander, 19, accused as the rock thrower who struck Sir Oswald Mosley, British Fascist leader, with a jagged stone, was remanded for a week today on a charge of felonious wounding. , , . The Fascist leader was dangerously but not critically wounded by the stone thrown in a clash between the leftists and Fascists yesterday. Eleven men besides Melander and two wo men were charged with lesser offen ses in connection with the disturbance. PUBLI&HBD EVERY AFTJBRNQOM EXCEPT SUNDAY. LEAVITT’S PETITION AGAINST SELECTION DENIED IN RULING Important Man Dr. Stanley K. Horn beck One of the most important men in America today is Dr. Stanley K. Hornbeck, the U. S. state de partment’s ace Far Eastern ex pert and right-hand man to Sec retary of State Cordell Hull Dr. Hornbeck, who served as * Far Eastern technical adviser to the American Jeace commission in 1918, is helping Secretary Hull and President Roosevelt to guide the U. S. course in the Sino-Jap anese conflict. Hull has named him “political adviser” during the international crisis. He has been chief of the state department’s Far Eastern division. —Central Pres* DoughtonTo State Plans Shortly Now Will Soon Clear Up Situation as to Op position to Re y - nolds in 1938 Washington, Oct. .11. —(AP) —Repre- sentative Robert L. Doughton, of Laurel Springs, N. C., said today there probably will be an announcement soon whether he will oppose Senator Robert R. Reynolds, of North Caro lina, in the State’s Democratic pri mary next June. Doughton said he is not yet prepared to make any an nouncement as to his political future, but added: “I think there will be some an nouncement soon as to who is going to run and who is not going to run for the Senate.” Doughton said he came to Wash ington for a series of conferences on legislative and routine matters. One of his first callers was former Governor O. Max Gardner, of North Carolina, who came to Washington on the same train with Doughton, Gard ner, now a practicing attorney, said the two did not meet on the train. He described his visit with Doughton as of a personal nature. Japanese Clamp On Importsßan, Which WillA idAmericans Tokyo, Oct. 11.— (AP)—The Japan ese government promulgated “ordin ance 23” today, officially starting its import restrictions program. The emergency law will close the doors of Japan to nearly 700 import ed articles and place the nation on a basis of stern Spartan frugality. Starting immediately, Japan will be a “nation without luxuries.” This maneuver, which is one of the most drastic in modern economic his tory, is designed to cut to the bone Japan’s enormous annual international bills, in order to provide maximums strength for the purchase of the 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY Kelly’s Challenge Also Turn ed Down on Same Grounds as That of Former Judge FIGHT WILLGO ON, LEAVITT DECLARES Chief Justice Hughes An nounces Conclusion of Black’s Associates on High Bench; Constitutionality of Appointment Was Ques tioned in Petition Washington, Oct. 11.—(AP)— The Supreme Court refused today to per mit Albert Leavitt, former Federal judge in the Virgin Islands, and Pat rick Henry Kelly, Boston attorney, to contest Justice Hugo.L. Black’s right to a seat on the bench. This action gave Black a clear title to his judicial post, so far as present challenges are concerned. Leavitt has indicated, however, that he might start other proceedings. “This fight will not tfce over if my petition is denied,” he asserted. The court refused to permit Leavitt to file his petition, which contended Black was constitutionally ineligible for the position. Leavitt claimed Black was barred because he was a mem ber of the Senate which voted to in crease the “emoluments” of justices by permitting tnem to retire at full pay after reaching 70, and serving ten years. He added that the retirement of Justice Van Devanter did not create a vacancy on the court and hence there was no place for Black to fill. He contended that Van Devanter still technically is a member of the tri bunal. Service by Black, the petition said, “will interfere with and prevent the due, proper and lawful administration of justice in the Susjeme Court of the United States.” The action of Justice Black’s col leagues was announced to a packed court room by Chief Justice Hughes, who said Leavitt did not have suf ficient interest in the litigation to justify him in proceeding with it. The Kelly motion was denied on the basis of the action on Leavitt’s pe tition. Neither mentioned Ku Klux Klan membership. iekMeigh RATHERQUIET ONE School Bus Row, Gardner’s Labor Citation and Fair Get Attention Daily Dl*|»atch Bureau, In The Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Oct. 11—Forecasting the Duke-Tennessee result and .panning the Giants occupied Raleigh last week almtst to the exclusion of real poli tical or business activities, though the football game in Durham Satur day loaded the capital city’s hotels from Friday over the week-end. So far as current of governmental affairs were concerned, there was hardly a ripple except on the school commission front, where a loud war over where Garysburg children should go to school was climaxed by a school commission meeting Friday at which rival delegations took turns at saying (Continued on Page Three.) sinews of war. Unofficially, it has been estimated that the warfare in China is costing $5,000,000 a day. Japan’s trade ledger for 1937 shows $217,000,000 in red ink. However, Japan remains one of the United States’ best customers, con tinuing heavy purchases of American cotton, oil, steel and machinery, all of which, as - urgent materials, are ex empted from the present prohibition. Actually, while the trade of others with Japan will suffer, American trade will be facilitated and stimulated. Tho law furnishes more money for wa' materials, which are the bulk of Jap anese imports from America.