HENDERSON'S POPULATION 13,873 TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR JAPS TIGHIUING BLOCKADE OF TIENTSIN Where 3 Died in R. I. Apartment House Fire Cranston” Wf °°° ** !T Pt the swank * Williams Manor Apartment escapcs and said'b Jf nf fh?iin f® PG f S °- nS twenty-five. There were no outside fire escapes, ana police said half of the 110 tenants jumped from windows. Mrs. Mary Pulsifer. 40 suffered a died after If n( ? , e ? pected to live - Eddia Healy, 44, former vaudeville star, d after similar plunge from flames. Ladder at left was raised too late to save Mr. and Mrs. William A. oootfc, both 80, whose charred bodies were found, hands clasped together. French Munitions Factory Ablaze Angoulem, France, June 20. (AP)—Fire started this afternoon in the Angoulem military powder works. Most available troops from regi ments garrisoned in the city and extra reserves of police and fire men were sent to the factory. The fire was discovered at 3:15 p. m. in a warehouse where were stored bales of cotton used in munitions manufacture. Angoulem is a city of about 40.000 in western France. Its gleaming white stone buildings stand on an isolated hill 200 feet above a river. Marriage Law Cut Weddings By One-Half * Statistics from Five Counties, Including Vance, Show Decrease of About Half License Usually Issued Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the -Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, June 20.—North Caro lina’s new marriage Jaw appears to have reduced *je issuance of mar riage licenses more than fifty per cent in the first two months of its operation, if statistics from five counties in various sections are real ly representative of its effect through out the State. In these five counties during April and May of 1938, 244 marriage li censes were issued, while in the same five counties in the same months this year there were 114. On the face of the figures it would seem they are representative as the rate of reduction was pretty well uniform in all of them. Nor it seem to make any material cuuer ence whether or not the counties were located on or near the line se parating North Carolina from anoth er state The five counties were New Han over, close to the South Carolina line, but not on it; Brunswick, on the South Carolina line; Wayne, quite a distance from any other state, Vance, on the Virginia line; and Catawba, reasonably far in the North Carolina interior. In these counties marriage licenses for April and May of 1938 and 1939 compared like this: 1939 1938 New Hanover 36 74 Wayne (May only) ..11 30 Vance 21 47 Catawba ».... 41 80 Brunswick 5 13 In every county except Catawba the decline in licenses amounted to w . (Continued on Page Two). iimtitersmt Satin SHstratrii ERASED WIRE SERVICE nu THIO ASSOCIATED press? Band Not To Return Here Until Wednesday Night How 4 Women Escaped Jail Deep Mystery Maryville, Ohio, June 20. —(AP) — A deepening mystery revolving about a couple of keys confounded authorities today as they sought to learn how Mrs. Velma West, hus band slayer of the flapper era, and three other inmates escaped from the State reformatory for women for “one little adventure.” “They had to get keys to get out, but no keys are missing,” explained Mrs. Marguerite Reilley, superin tendent of the institution, shortly after she sent three women to cor ruption cells “until they tell me what they know.” Mrs. Reilley said the three placed in corruption cells, whom she refus ed to identify, slept in a corridor through which Mis. West, 33, Pay nesville, Ohio, slipped to freedom with the other inmates early yester day. “They insist they know nothing about it,” the superintendent said, “but I think they do.” To make their escape, Mrs. West and her companions had to unlock doors to their cells and a door lead ing from the cell blocks in which they were confined. The reformatory yard was open. Combs Trial On Narcotics Is Underway Elizabeth City, June 20.—(AP) — Counsel for Dr. Howard Combs today admitted that the physician wrote thousand ; of prescriptions for mor phine, offered by District Attorney J. H. Manning as evidence against the doctor. The indictment charged Dr. Combs with disposing of 61,000 half grain tablets of morphine over a three-year period. Wilson Atkinson, agent for the Bureau of Narcotics, gave a lengthy recital of patients for whom he said Dr. Combs admitted prescribing mor phine, the total amount prescribed over a period of three years, and the residence of each patient. Atkinson said Combs told item many of the patients were “tran sients”. District Attorney Manning planned to offer this afternoon the expert testimony of Dr. J. W. Ashby, super intendent of State Hospial of North (Continued on Page Three). ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER Thomas A. Morgan Gives Group SIOO To Defray Expenses; Some of Accompany ing Group Comes Wednesday Morning ■ World’s Fair, New York, June 20. (Special) Henderson’s band , struck oil oil today and those in charge decided to give the high school boys and girls another day in New York at the afir. Instead of leaving for home to night, they leave at 11 o’clock Wed nesday morning, and arrive hmne at 9 o’clock in the evening. Good luck came in a gift of SIOO to the hand by Thomas A. Morgan, native of Vance county, and a home town boy who has made good. Mor gan is president of the Sperry Cor poration, makers of airplane and steam boat safety appliances, and is also chairman of the World’s Fair Aviation section. He asked to be in troduced to Mrs. Millard Wester, in charge of the hand, and inquired what had been done for their enter tainment. He said he wanted to do something for the hoys and girts, and gave a SIOO bill. Few in the Henderson party will return home tonight, except some not in immediate band circle. Most of them leave Wednesday morning, arriving in the evening. Nearly everyone returned to the fair today, and the band had no concert, leaving them free with their chaperones to see the sights. Like Monday, skies were overcast today, and weather pleasant. A heavy, misting rain was exasperating late Monday, but did not dampen enthusiasm. Everyone in the party is in the best of health and having the time of their lives. Some forty or fifty took out time the first thing today to inspect the great liner “Queen Mary,” tied up at her docks in the Hudson river, and marvelled at her beauty and massiveness. The biggest thing about the fair is its bigness; one can spend a month here and not see half of it. DISPATCH REPORTER TELLS OF TRAIN TRIP AND TOUR New York, June 19.—(Delayed)— More than 130 members of the Hen derson high school band, and parents and other children and guests saw the sights and marvels of the great city of New York yesterday and then today turned to the Flushing Meadows to take part in the ob servance of North Carolina Day at the World’s Fair. Aboard two special cars, the band and the remainder of the party came to New York on the same train with Governor Clyde Hoey, whose grac iousness was manifest on this trip as always elsewhere. Since he left Raleigh and arrived in New York, he has properly been the center of the show everywhere he has been on (Ctm.ir.ued on Page Three) PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA HENDERSON, N. C., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 20, 1939 U.S. Protests Jap Bombing Os Property Roosevelt Is “V e r y Pleased” With Clean- U p Os Pendergast Ring; Employers Find It Hard to Discipline Workers Washington, June 20. (AP) — Secretary Hull said today the Ame rican charge d’affaires at Tokyo has protested Japanese continued bomb ing of America’s properly in China. Eugene Doornail called on the Japanese foreign minister on instruc tions from the State Department, Hull said, and in addition to mak ing representations against the bomb ings also sought to obtain permis sion to publish the recent exchange of notes between the United States and Japan on this subject The Secretary of State explained it was customary to obtain the as sent of a foreign government for publication of one of its documents. The Japanese assent has not been obtained Other developments: Governor Lloyd Stark, of Mis souri, said after a White House call President Roosevelt was “very much pleased” with the “clean up” in Kan sas City and the smashing of the T. J. Pendergast political machine. Stark told reporters that he and Mr. Roosevelt had discussed some matters on which he could not com ment. John Gall, counsel for the Na tional Association of Manufacturers, testified the National Relations Board had made it impossible for in dustrial cyiployers to discipline union employees. “It doesn’t matter what the man (Continued on Page Two) A.&N.C.Road v Charter; Given Raleigh, June 20.—(AP)—Atlan tic and Eastern Carolina Railway Co., of New Bern, organized to oper ate the State controled Atlantic and North Carolina railroad, got a char ter today from Thad Eure, Secre tary of State. H. P. Edwards, of Sanford, who is working on details involved in the lease, along with May C. Edwards, W. M. Edwards, E. R. Buchan, Pet tie C. Buchan, and Nannie E. Huck ans, all of Sanford, subscribed 825 shares of the 1000 shares of no-par value of authorized capital. The directors and stock-holders of the Atlantic and North Carolina voted recently upon recommendation of Governor Hoey to lease the rail road to Edwards. Commander Sub Before Naval Board Lieut. Naquin Begins His Official Account of Squalus Sinking, Which Claimed 26 Lives Portsmouth, N. H., Juno 20. —(AP) —-Lieut. O. S. Naquin, commander md last survivor to leave the sub marine Squalus, still the undersea tomb of 26 of his shipmates, began his official account of the disaster before a naval board of inquiry to day by waiving his rights as a de fendant. “I do not desire counsel,” Naquin told the board after swearing with his left hand on Bible to tell all the truth. Nevertheless, he read a statement declaring he reserved the right to challenge anything that might be said, to question witnesses and to decline questions that he thought (Continued on Page Three) iO&aihsLh FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Generally fair today and Wed nesdav; not much change in tem gerature. Note From Grave i: Vfr \ Charles Crawley, Jr. Seven-year-old Charles Crawley, Jr., wrote a loving Father’s Day note to his dad, a WPA worker, a few minutes later was killed by an automobile as he crossed a busy Pittsburgh street. He had planned to give his father a picture of him self and the letter, which ended: “I hope you have a happy Father’s Day. God bless you.” McDonald Is Speaker For Merchants Former Legislator Hits at Tax Increases and Trends of Tax Policies of State Durham, June 20. (AP) —Dr. Ralph McDonald, former legislator, told the North Carolina Merchants Association that there had been “an amazing increase in the total of local and State taxes” in recent years ac companied by a “neglect of the pub lic schools”. McDonald, who barely failed in his hid for the Democratic guberna torial nomination in 1936, aiscussed recent trends in taxation in North Carolina. He noted that both “favorable and unfavorable trends have characteriz ed tne tax policies of the State”, then discussed each side. “The most destructive develop ments with the past decade,” he said, • nave been the movement to shift the burden of taxation from weaith lo need through consumer taxes, and the tragic neglect of public education which declined in total expenditure from $39,000,000 in 1929-30 to about .p.Jd,iZu,ouo m 1937-38, despite a startling increase of local and State taxation, from a peak of $120,131,265 in the balmy days of 1929-30 to an unbelievable total of $111,260,328 in (Continued on Page Two) FALL FROM TRUCK FATAL TO FARMER Clinton, N. C., June 20.—(AP) — J. A. Daughtry, a farmer, died to day of injuries received when he fell from a truck and a trailer, loaded with beans, passed over his head. Manton Given i erm and r me New York, June 20.—(AP) —Mar- tin T. Manton, former judge of the United States Circuit Court of Ap peals, was sentenced today to two yeais in a federal prison and fined SIO,OOO. It was the maximum sen tence possible under his conviction lot conspiracy to sell judicial favors. Manton was sentenced by Federal Judge W. Calvin Ci.esnut after mak ing a sometime fervent but dispas sionate plea to have the jury’s ver dict set aside. Speaking of himself in the third person except when he spoke of the “chagrin and humiliation” he had suffered, Manton summoned a long array of legal arguments against the conclusion the jury reached on June 3. He cited federal cases to support his contention that he had been in nocent of wrong doing and had any part in a conspiracy. He spoke well over an hour before Judge Chesnut rejected the plea and passed sentence. <£ Even while Manton was making what was perhaps one of the most important pleas in his career, the court where he formerly sat was re instating for re-argqment one of the major cases which figured on the charges ot bribery and conspiracy. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Chinese Employees Quit Work As Japs Threaten Relatives Sees Anglo-Jap War jgm rank Admiral Roger Keyes Admiral of the Fleet Roger Keyes in a speech at Hornsey, England, declared the Japanese blockade of the British Concession at Tientsin, China, is tantamount to a declara tion of war by Japan, Germany and Italy. “It is a challenge which must be met,” he asserted. Plants Ready To Make Up U. S. Munitions New York, June 20. (AP) —There are 10,000 industrial plants in the United States pi’epared to start the manufacture of munitions immediate ly, Louis Johnson, assistant secretary of war, told the convention of the Advertising Federation of America today. Johnson’s prepared address was broadcast and dealt with “industrial preparedness for security.” He said the War Department sur veyed the capacity of industry to produce munitions of war, represent atives of the department visiting more than 20,000 plants. “We found facilities to manufac ture practically all of our military needs, as a result of these surveys to which we gave definite sche dules of production If tomorrow were ‘M-Day’ (mobilization day) we could turn to these plants, give them an or der, and they would begin at once to manufacture munitions.” Johnson said the department had undertaken a program of “educa tional orders to prepare industry in time of peace for its war time duties.” “We have placed a number of such orders already and expect to multiply them during the course of the next year,” he said. “With the aid of such a policy we arc confident that in dustry will be able to go into pro duction on a preponderant number of our needs within six months after (Continued on page two) Power Dam On Yadkin Would Hit Good Land Yadkinville, June 20.—(AP) — A former Yadkin county commissioner testified today in the counter suit to prevent construction of the $6,500,000 High Point hydro-electric plant on the Yadkin river that land to be flooded by the lake was worth twice as much per acre as land in the coun ty as a whole. E. B. Vestal, the former commis sioner who was tax supervisor from 1935-36, was the witness, the second in the hearing that opened Monday before Judge Hoyle Sink. Construction of the WPA-financea project would result in flooding 65 percent of the county’s bottom land, Vestai testified On close examination, he said that in his job as tax supervisor he had had no part in valuing property and that some of the lands were not ap praised at their true value, in his opinion. J. T. Reece, Yadkin county .school superintendent, the first witness, testified school bus routes would be flooded in 5 places by the power development. 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY High Voltage Wires Isolate British and F rench Concessions; Threatening Letters Received by Workers Tientsin, June 20.—(AP) —Chinese employees of vital British conces sion services began quitting their jobs today under threats of death to. their families in a tightening of the Japanese blockade amid warnings against third power participation in any British reprisals. Chinese, who work for concession water, electric, police, and other de velopments, received letters saying their relatives would be killed un less they resigned. Those who live outside the concession in a Japanese controlled area were resigning. British authorities expressed qpin ion that the services could be main tained by Chinese whose families live inside the British and French settlements which Japanese yester day isolated from the rest of the city by high voltage wires in rein forcement of the blockade. The source of threatening letters was not disclosed officially, but Chi nese and foreigners alike were cer tain they were dispatched by the Japanese military after a census of tamilies of Chinese employees of the concession who were living out side its boundaries. State Sells Bonds, Notes Raleigh, June 20.—(AP) —The lo cal government commission sold $28,000 worth of bonds and $37,000 worth of notes today for local gov ernment units. A Nash county $36,000 school bond issue went to Seasongood and Mayer of Cincinnati at a premium of $28.85 with interest to be at 2 1-4 percent. Two Green county issues went to Scott, Horner, and Mason, Inc., oD Lynchburg, Va. The firm bid a premium of $499.99 for $200,000 road and bridge refunding bonds, where the first $90,000 of maturities to bear 3 per cent interest and the re mainder at 3 1-4 percent. It paid $59.49 premium for $25,000 school refunding bonds to bear 3 percent interest. Notes sold included: Sampson counly, $30,000 reVnue anticipation to Wachovia Bank & Trust Co., in Winston-Salem, at a premium of $1.56 with 1 percent interest. „ L v / Japs Study A New US Note On Blockade U. S. Official Protests Against Jap Naval Blockade of Bulangsu; Talks of Tientsin Crisis, Also Tokyo, June 20.—(AP)—The Jap anese government today studied new representations of the United States against Japanese military action in foreign areas of China. Eugene Dooman, United States charge d’affairs, in a call upon S. Yoshizawa, head of the American section of the foreign office, yester day specifically protested against the Japanese naval blockade of Kul angsu, the international settlement at Amoy, an authorative informant disclosed. Dooman also discussed the Tient sin situation. (A Japanese naval party entered Kulangsu, an island, May 12. British, French, and Ameri can patrols landed there May 17 to protect the interest of their na tionals. Japanese demands for con trol of the Kulangsu municipal council were rejected. The matter has been settled and June 15 Japa nese warships began blockading Kul angsu.) Japanese military and diplomatic officials meanwhile laid reports of the crisis at Tientsin before the em peror.