HENDERSON’S POPULATION 13,873 twenty-sixth year U. S. FLATLY REFUSES TO MOVE WAR CRAFT Queen Return dome Amid Rousing Welcome Os People Survey Route of East-West Planes Pittsburgh, l'a., June 22.—(AP) Pennsylvania Central Air Line officials will make a survey flight Monday over their proposed route lm; worn Norfolk, Va.. and Knox \ilb\ Trim. An application to op erate the service has been filed with the Civil Aeronautics Au thority. The survey will he made to in spect facilities for the air line. Slops w ill be made at Elizabeth City, lloeky Mount. Raleigh, Greensboro and Asheville. kail Permit OnA.&N.C. Applied For H. P. Edwards, of San ford., Asks State and I. C. C. To Let Him Lease Goldsboro - Morehead Line from State RMeigh, Juno 22.—(AP)—H. P. !>' itds, of Sanford, acting for his Atlantic & East Carolina Railroad C lapany, asked the State Utilities C'" 'imission today to permit him to lea » and operate the State-controll ed Atlantic & North Carolina Rail road. Utilities Commissioner Stanley Winborne, said he was “very favir able" to the petition, and that its ap proval here would be little more than a formality. Edwards advised the commission er that he also was filing formal re request with the Interstate Com ' i ((' Commission to take over the I 1! -mile line between Goldsboro and Morehead City. I he railroad has been operated in recent years by the corporation in which the State owns control. 8 Counties Have Perfect Road Record 319 Deaths and 2,472 Injuries First Five Months in State; Guil ford Leads With 18; Henderson Has One Death, Two Injuries Daily DispatcTt Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, June 22.—Eight North C; rolina counties have perfect high way safety records for the first five months of 1939, according to a com pilation of figures obtained from the oilier- of Ronald Hocutt, director of the Highway Safety Division. in these eight counties—Alexan der, Alleghany, Cherokee, Pamlico, bulk, Swain, Tyrrell and Yancey— there have been no highway fatal ities and no injuries through May, according to the records available in the division. In fifteen other counties there have been no fatalities, but from one to 22 injuries, reported so far in 1939 Three of them miss perfection by a single injury (Camden, Jones and Transylvania). The other dozen, with the number of injuries reported in the five months arc: Pasquotank, Haywood and Gates, 2 each; Hertford and Hyde, 3 each; Chowan 4; Jack on. Pender and Person, 6 each; Wa tauga 10; and Granville 22. At the other end of the scale, Guil ford county leads all in number of highway fatalities so for this year, but holds only the slimmest of mar gins over Mecklenburg, 18 to 17. k . (Continued on Page Six) Mtnhttstnx HatUi Hiamitirb WIRE SERVICE nw iHE associated press p Two Little Princesses Meet George And Elizabeth at Sea; Queen Mother Goes Aboard When Ship Docks; Crowds Nearly Go Wild Southampton, England, June 22. (AP) —King George and Queen Elizabeth returned to British shores today from their glittering North American tour amid the cheers of thousands of proud subiects. Their liner, the Empress of Britain, tied up at her pier at 2:39 p. m. (8:39 a. m., eastern standard time). Beneath a drab and misty sky, the king and queen gazed from the bridge of the Empress on a brilliant panorama of color beneath— waving flags and the nennant’ of smaller craft in the harbor, and flower-be decked welcoming arches. Their two children, 13-year-old Princess Elizabeth, and eight-year old Margaret Rose, who had joined their parents at sea, were at their side, tugging with excitement at their father’s arms. Cheers and sirens made a terrific din as the king and queen waved again and again. Queen Mother Mary, walking ap parently without any stiffness from her automobile accident of May 23', while her son and his queen were away, led the royal party aboard the Empress for a private half hour of greeting before the king and queen came down the gangplank. The king wpre the uniform of an admiral of the fleet, and the queen was in powder blue. Southampton, with a normal pop ulation of 180,000 had an estimat ed 300,000 people in the streets and at the dockside for the welcome, despite a heavy mist, which sprink led rain at times. Five More Os UCC Workers Prostrated Raleigh, June 22. —(AP) — more employees of the Unemploy ment Compensation Commission suf fered heat prostrations today, making ten since yesterday’s opening hour. Alfonso Lloyd, city prosecutor, told newsmen he planned to confer with Harry McMullan, attorney general, to see if UCC officials could be criminally prosecuted in connection with the heat prostrations. Governor Hoey said plans had not been completed in which employees engaged in federal-state work would go to their jobs earlier in the morn ing and quit before the hottest part of the day. The commission is hous ed in a downtown building pending completion of its own office build ing this fall. The Transatlantic is Officially Named f;. ~ . . ' I . jp u -- ’ k ' » The Transatlantic, the American Export Airlines* first flying boat for surveying a commercial airway over steamship lanes to Europe, is christened off the Battery in New York by Mrs. John H. Towers, wife of the Chief of the Navy Bureau of Aeronautics. After two months of trials, seiri-weekly round trips for mail and air freight service between New York and Marseilles will be begun, according to com - • - uaay spokesmen. .... ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION Manton Gets Two Years 'i hjyjjJL f .jj |Sr.- . / -, . I 4 Former Federal Judge Martin T. Manton is pictured as he entered Federal Court in New York City, where he was sentenced to two years in prison and fined SIO,OOO for sell ing his decisions on the bench. Man ton’s lengthy plea, made to Judge Calvin W. Chesnut, asking that the conviction be voided, was in vain. France And Turkey Will Sign Accord Paris, June 22.—(AP) France and Turkey are ready to sign a de claration tomorrow announcing their determination to unite in maintaining peace in the Balkans and the eastern Mediterranean area. Informed sour ces said today that the French-Tuf kish understanding would signal great hope in finally getting Soviet Russian adherence to the British- French front as a counterweight to the Rome-Berlin axis. Turkey is a close friend of Russia. By the agreement with Turkey, France will sychronize further her diplomatic efforts with those of Great Britain, which already has a mutual assistance understanding (Continued on Page Five) RURAL ELECTRICITY PROGRAM APPROVED Raleigh, June 22.—(AP) — The State Rural Electrification Authority approved plans today of the Joncs- Onslow Electric Membership Cor poration to build about 250 miles of rural power lines if it can borrow $250,000 from the Federal Rural Elec trification Administration. The cor poration has 785 prospective custom ers signed up for service. The lines would be mainly in Jones and On slow, but also in Duplin and Lenior counties. HENDERSON, N. C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 22, 1939 $3,860,000,000 Lending Fund Is Latest Roosevelt Project Business” Through Proposal Brought For ward as “Stimulant to Self- Liquidating Work; More Money Sought for Little Busi ness Washington, June 22. (AP) —President Roosevelt proposed to Congress today a $3,860,000,- 000 program for stimulating business through self-liquidat ing projects and low-cost hous ing developments. The President estimated that at least $870,000,000 would be dispersed in federal loans dur ing the year starting July 1. The remainder of the program, split into six heights of self liquidating projects, would con tinue for from two to seven years. The President said that in the long run the program would not cost the tax-payers a cent, so far as self-li quidating projects were concerned. He outlined his proposals in a letter to Chairman Byrnes, Democrat, South Carolina, chairman of Ihe Sen ate unemployment committee, and sent copies to other Senate and House leaders. Mr. Roosevelt explained that there would be a limit on the sell-liquidat ing projects of $3,060,000,000 over the two to seven year period which their construction would embrace, and as money came in from loans it would be put out again as needed to stimulate employment and busi ness. Another $800,000,000 would be ad ded to the borrowing capacity of the U. S. Housing Authority under .the President’s plan. Mr. Roosevelt said he could not state how much of this would be used during the next fiscal year, but that the money would be applied to providing low-cost homes for persons with incomes in the sl,- 250 to $2,000 class. These are not covered b£ either the present slum clearance program or the FHA op erations, Mr. Roosevelt said. Meanwhile, at the Capitol, Senator Mead, Democrat, New York, said he had support of Secretaries Morgen (Continued on Page Five) Walt Mason, Famed Humorist, Dead At California Home San Diego, Cal., June 22. AP) Walt Mason, 77, humorist and poet, died today in his home at suburban La Jolla after an illness of several weeks. Mason became ill a few days before his birthday, May 4. He was a native of Columbus, Ontario, and had come to the United States in 1880. That same he was launched on his newspaper career when bo got a job on a job press in St. Louis. The poet’s newspaper experience include.J jobs on the Atchison, Kans., Globe; the Lincoln, Neb., State Jour nal; and Emporia, Kans., Gazette. OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. German Troops On the Move lATfTTfI / V,LN f/ I Q T \ ] ? \ OSE ? •Warsaw/ i . ALiP °L|A N D /#a y\ » RUMANIA Arrows locate, approximately, various shifts of German troops toward Polish border. Extensive movements of the Nazi soldiers, estimated at more than 1,500,000, brought rumor that Hitler was preparing for hit long-expected move on Danzig, Leche’s Retirement As Governor Stuns Louisiana Leaders Baton Rouge, La., June 22. —(AP) —An unheralded change in Louisiana governorship will elevate Lieutenant Governor Early K. Long, brother of the late “Kingfish” Huey Long, put the State in a political whirl today. Governor Richard Leche announc ed last night he would resign next week with nearly eleven months of his term unexpired. As lieutenant governor, Long will succeed auto matically. Although Leche gave ill health— two severe arthritis attacks—as his immediate reasons, observers noted the announcement followed days of almost continuous conferences and paralleled a federal investigation of WPA activities in the State. The Political Homesickness Congressmen’sßig Ailment By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Columnist Washington, June 22.—Dr. George W. Calver specializes on congress ional medicine. He’s physician in attendance on the H national 1e g i sla makers’ building. commander in Un tablishment. How ever, quite a long time ago the legis- Dr. George lators felt the-need Calver of a competent disciple of Aesculapius everlastingly on the job to nip all their ailments in their very incipiency, and Calver got the assignment. Today he’s as much an institution on Capitol Hill as the dome’s statute of liberty. In fact, more so. The statue could be replaced if it were struck by lightn ing or something, but there’s only one “Doc” Calver. Os course he can’t be immortal, but it will be a con gressional calamity when he does pass. It will take years to train an other candidate up to succeed him— anyone with his 100 per centedness of efficiency. Perhaps somebody fails to realize that congressional medicine is a specialty. Political Anxiety. Well, who but a specialist would know in advance that a bit of delay tO&aJJwi FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Partly cloudy tonight and Fri day; scattered thundershowers Friday afternoon and in interior this afternoon. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. fiery, quick-tempered 43-year-old lieutenant governor, whose career has included staunch support and bitter denunciation of the late Sen ator Huey Long, immediately rush ed to New Orleans for political con ferences. He issued a statement he would carry on “the fine work done in the past ten years under my brother, Governor O. K. Allen and Governor Richard W. Leche.” The unexpected development threw several ambitious former lieutenants of Huey Long and sup porters of his still-injact political machine into dismay, since they were preparing to run for governor next January. As incumbent Long would hold a distinct advantage. in the lawmakers’ adjournment date inevitably must be accompanied by a marked increase in sickishness a mong his customers? “Doc” Calver knows it. He knows by experience that senators and representatives want to get home in good season to ‘tend to their political fences, and (Continued on Page Five) Dr. Highsmith, Fayetteville, Dies Suddenly Fayetteville, June 22.—CAP) —Dr. Jacob Franklin Highsmith, founder and head of the Fayetteville hospital bearing his name, died unexpectedly today at his farm home in Sampson county. He would have been 71 his next birthday September 1. Dr. Highsmith, one of the State’s outstanding surgeons, and well known throughout the South, had been in failing health, for several months. The specific cause of death was not announced. He was a past president of the North Carolina State Medical Society the Cumberland County Medical So ciety, the North Carolina and South Carolina College of Surgeons, and for a number of years was a mem ber of the State Board of Medical Examiners. His funeral will be held tomor row afternoon at his home here. Sur viving are three sons who are phy sicians on the staff of the Highsmith hospital, and five other children. Dr. Highsmith was a native of Sampson county. He was graduated from Wake Forest College and Jef ferson Medical College at Philadel phia. 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY Additional Vessel Sent Into Swatow Two American, Two British Destroyers Standing by Despite Jap Warning; Counter Measures by Britain Certain in China Washington, June 22. (AP) (The United States govern ment has bluntly informed Ja pan that, instead of clearing out of Chinese harbors, its war ships will stay in these ports “as long as American citizens are in need of protection or assist ance.” Told by the Japanese to take the destroyer Pillsbury out of Stoatow, Admiral Harry Yarnell, chief of the Asiatic fleet, flatly refused. He went even farther, the Navy Department disclosed today, and brought in an other destroyer, the Pope. The gun boat Asheville will follow from Hong Kong. Some 40 Americans are at Swatow rich south China port, which had trans-shipped millions dollars worth of war materials to Chinese forces before the Japanese occupied it yes terday. Yarnell said that American war ships would try to avoid interfer ence with Japanese operations, so far as was consistent with the duty of looking after United States interests. TWO U. S., TWO BRITISH DESTROYERS STANDING BY Shanghai, June 22.—(AP) — Two American and two British destroyers stood by in Swatow harbor later to day despite a Japanese order or sug gestion that foreign warships and nationals withdraw from their new ly-captured south China port. Foreign naval sources were dou bled during the day, and, except for the departure of 20 British women and children, the American and Brit ish communities stood pat. Japanese and Occidental accounts differed as to the nature of the Japa nese communications. British naval quarters said foreign ships had been “ordered” to leave Swatow harbor by 1 p. m. (midnight Wednesday, eastern standard time). A Japanese spokesman in Shanghai said only tne usual warning” had been given to foreigners to leave the zone of possible hostilities.. JAP GET OUT QUICKLY ON ARRIVAL OF BRITISH Tientsin, China, June 22.—(AP)— The sudden appearance of British bluejackets today halted Japanese examination of cargo being discharg ed by British lighters while block aded British further were heartened by a message of sympathy and hope lrom the London government and the ending of the milk shortage. These developments occurred on the ninth day of the Japanese block ade of the British and French con cessions: A Japanese military patrol with drew at the sight of the bluejackets after the soldiers had begun inspect ing the cargo being discharged at the British Bund. The message from London, from Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax to Consul General Jamieson, expressed the government’s sympathy to the blockaded British “for the difficul ties and indignities they are being made to suffer.” Lord Halifax pledged that the gov ernment would make “every effort to protect their interests and terminate the present crisis as soon as pos (Continued on Page Four) Won’t Be 6 Executions On Same Day Raleigh, June 22.—(AP)—Gover nor Hoey said today that the State would not execute six men for mur der July 7, the date now fixed for carrying out six sentences. The State has never executed more than three men in single day. “There will not be sufficient time to make a thorough study of each case by July 7,” said Governor Hoey. T have not studied any of them yet, but there will not be six executions that day. There will be developments in a few days.” The men facing death July 7 and counties in which they were convict ed are: Alfred Capers and Bricey Hammonds, both from Robeson; James Cureton, Forsyth; James God win, Guilford ;J ames Henderson, New Hanover; and Glenn Maxwell, Alleghany.