i - • ft *»>•' A CiO NLRB t, i ; s I'. STKWART "ros> Columnist • - Chat on i. .. v! that C\«n . i u'ud tho itil)i>r . !.-*i;nv t-» • i»\' Jabot* IIV tv^pi .1 My <>t deciding ;< nr ion is • th in reaching erne ii '■ & be - ri* wot ker> and Ai.iii ihe law -i i r 11rod by Sen Uol»ert F. of New v. Voi U) was :ed. wtil> one • ! unions i'\ \u the Ainor 1 >i>r group, un - presidency. In \ au'i-ns." unat av-ther. Those yding t.. A. -V not uttoe i . II C ' - mvu and . : tiali i.H' us' \ 't-w to keep >' . -tips out ot !. >r Relations «.• that bargains ■A sure-enough \vs \\ ore made exclusion ot . s." The A. . ,i- > that idea. \ trie iO'.v developed llit' F. oi L. and •. r.ar.ittoe on n. >:niv become • i! Organina - no aggregation • unions." It's as •le as the A. F. oi the NLKB ielt a:si- v.inate be [.. and the C. I. O. t.'"! i:i M>iae par t- :i the emp! >y • . t.. workers on • l I. O. workers ~.d r '.e employers But as to ia ich? Was the A. F. !ai- r bargaining r? ii'ienSon ;:>> TONIGHT Jonathan Swift'» Amazir.g Fantasy Comes to Life ou he Screen'" 'i ^fPopula^ %*rm Science * : Orchestra element? Or the C. I. O.? A Hard Problem. The NLRB never expected to have ! to solve this problem. The law didn't, contemplate that it would have to do i so. Nevertheless. it tackled the situa tion. Chaos followed. Every time the board has decided for tile A. F. of L.. the C. I. O. has been outraged. F.very time the de cision has been on the C. I. O.'s side the A. F. of L. has torn its hair. Apparently, the board's rulings have been C. I. O.-ish. Therefore, the A. F. of L. has done most of the yowling. The C. I. O. lias been fairly contented. But it's a mean mix-up. Within themselves the board's numbers have fought al.-o. Their rul a:;s haven't been unanimous. 1 hey've been on a majority-versus .:-niiiiority basis. They not only have disagreed. They've been mutually abusive. AH this has been conspicuously brought out in testimony before Re piesentative Howard W. Smith's con gressional committee on investigation of the NLRB situation. Did Not Foresee 1. O. The whole nub of it is: Senator Wagner didn't foresee that two rival labor groups would spring | into being. He recognized a clash of interest- between employers and em ployes. but didn't prevision a cla.^h between employes and employes. Dean Lloyd K. Garrison of the University of Wisconsin law school! offers, as a witness before the Smith j ar. i gating committee, what he be-' l. Vvv: should be a simple solution of: •he puzzle. Wnat he recommends is: "Let the rival labor groups scrap it out between themselves. It's their funeral. Then let them put their unified verdict up to NLRB." Chairman J. Warren Madden o! the NLRB. exhausted by the con troversy. acquiesces that Dean Gar-J r;son's M'.ggestion "deserves careful j study." Maybe when De\m Garrison calls! this a "simple solution," he exag-1 gerates. It's a gut>ss at one, though. Cotton Prices Again Lower Xew York. Feb. 15.—CAP)—Cot ton futures opened 2 to 6 lower. At the end of the first hour the list he^ld steady at net declines of 3 to 5 points. Around the end of the second hour prices held 1 higher to 4 lower, i -larch (olei) 11.02, May (old) 10.75,: December 9.60. Stock Market I Remains Slow ; New Yolk. Feb. 13.—(AP)—Buy ers got behind a handful of low- • priced issues in today's stock market and generally neglected the so called leaders. The !i<t got off to a fairly active j start but soon rvvrvtr-d to sluggish-; ness. Near the fourth hour tractions! | > i>v -nvconiinated. Traders came back from their [ lengthlv holiday without strong1 jpcculalive opinion. j American Radiator 9 5-8 I American Telephone 172 American Tobacco B 90 3-8 | Anaconda *.. 27 1-2 Atlantic Coast Line 20 | Atlantic Refining 23 Dendix Aviation 31 1-4 i Bethlehem Steel 77 1-4 j Chrysler 86 1-4 ! Columbia Gas & Elec Co .. 6 1-4 • Commercial Solvents 14 1-4 • Consolidated Oil Co 7 !-4 1 Curtiss Wright 10 1-2 DuPont 184 3-8 Electric Power Light C 1-2 j General Electric 3D 1-2 i General Motors 54 1-2 ! Liggett & Myers B 107 7-8 Montgomery Ward & Co .... 54 ; Reynolds Tobacco B 41 | Southern Railway 18 , Standard Oil Co N J 44 5-5 : IT S Steel 59 3-8 We have now reached that time of years when the average .nan ' can't even recall what his New Year';- resolutions were. I ~izet! Pails 1*3C Each i A Customer White Coated vauce Pan Sets *¥ic Set Kx.m Mop Heads 13C Each Gray Dish Pan Each Aluminum Sauce Pan 1 1-2 Quarts 9c Each Aluminum Percolator 1 1-2 Quarts Each 2 Quarts Each vO** LOW CASH PRICES itkins Hardware Co. 'one 46 Henderson, N. C, f! a Hero For Daddy Joseph Dooley Ten-year-old Joseph Dooley is pic tured on the witness stand in Mine ola, L. I., court, where, his father, Patrolman Alvin J. Dooley, is on trial for the fatal shooting of Mayor Louis F. Edwards of Long Beach. Joe, who got his black eye defend ing his dad's name, said his father had been kind to him but changed after he lost re-election in police organization. (Central Press) U. S. Navy High Com mand Fears General European War (Continued lvrom F-.«ee One) i'or $954.'.)09.(KH) for tho noxt l'isea your represented a!! possible econ omies. Stark continued: "It would in my opinion jeopar dize the national security to reduce i-ie number of vessel.-: and aireral'1 recommended lor active service, t( tail to man tiie fleet effectively, t< curtail its training or to curtail 01 delay the building prog am foi ships, aircraft, and shore facilities.* Averili Compares Plat forms Of The Candidates In Gubernatorial Race (Continued From Page One) cept oi' tiie sales tax. GRAlJY: No quotable short state ment but throughout his volumi nous statement there are expressions indicating a" belief that taxes must be drastically reduced and economy strictly practiced. GRAVELY: He favored "the in jection into the business of govern ing North Carolina the same methods of business efficiency and economy that characterize every successful business enterprise." HORTON: "Serious consideration should be given to, and positive ac tion taken on, the question of re ducing taxe: now imposed upon those least able to pay them." MAXWELL: "In the scope and ates of our taxes we have reached the maximum that can be maintain ed without regressive effects upon both progress and revenue. Avoid ance of waste and extravagance h an essential part of a sound pro gram of progress." SALES TAX BROUGIITON: "Even if it should for the present bo deemed a neces sity, there i.; the very general hope that it may ultimately be eliminated from our tax system." COOPER: "I have always opposed the saies tax—but I doubt the wis dom of taking it off ;:ll at once a:: a whole and I favor taking off one half of one percent each biennium." GRADY: "It is the most successful tax on poverty ever devised, and I oppose it for the burdens which it levies on those least able to bear them." He promised a later exposi tion of how to abolish the tax with out upsetting ihe state's financial structure. GRAVELY: "I am opposed to the sales tax and want to see it abolish ed. —f believe that a more rigid j collection of tax-s, a limitation of |the right of one man 'f> compromise taxes, and the natural economics re sulting from a businesslike adminis tration will result in increased rev enues which will probably enable us to reduce the ?nles tax at the present time to two percent." HORTON: No ment'on of the tax iv name. ' MAXWEI L: "Wh«n the time comes that the state can—modify it^ Wife Preservers I j irei c <?» cw-v 2..& The smell and taste of cod liver oil is j said to vanish more rapidly if the spoon is dipped in milk before it is filled with oil. TODAY 10c—15c KEN MAYNARD in "TOMB3TON K CANYON'' ALSO "Dick Tracv's G-Men" TOMORROW FRKD MtMURRAY JOAN BENNETT '•.US-HOURS BY AIR' tax structure anywhese, there should oe general agreement that the last jchedule adopted—tne sales tax— should oe ..'ie first to be reduced." EDI'CATION. TEAC HER SALARIES AND RETIREMENT BROt'GMTON: "I believe that normal increase in revenue, together with certain economies, will enable the next General Assembly to in crease teachers' salaries as well as to set up a just and adequate teach er retirement system." COOPER: "I think the school i teachers arc- underpaid—they should ihave a living' wage. 1 also think they hould have reasonable sick leave with pay. i think they should have a reasonable retirement or pension fund: and if 1 am elected governor they are going to receive it or 1 will resign." GJtADY: "We have two serious weaknesses in our educational sys tem. First: In that our public schools are standardized—and are not suf ficiently flexible to meet the needs of those who are not average. Second: Our course* are arranged to meet the (needs and requirements of those boys land girls who plan to go on from high school to colleges". He said nothing directly about salaries or re tirement of teachers, but promised a later discussion of the subjects. GRAVELY: "Teacher salaries should be increased as the revenues 'of the state will permit and our system of free books should be con tinued. The Stale of North Carolina has every industry within its border J to set up a system of pensions for i its employees and it i.; sheer hy Ipocrisy for the Slate to do less for those whom it employs." HORTON: 'I say that an under paid teaching profession is poor economy. Our teachers are still un derpaid. and a continued increase in the salary schedule should be main tained as rapidly as our resources will permit. I believe in the princi ples of a retirement system for school teachers in North Carolina. There must be a reawakening of local con sciousness as to obligations for a [broader participation in the support and operation of local schools." MAXWELL: "The peculiar system we have developed of State support should not be permitted to gravitate too far in the direction of centeraliz ed control. Teachers salaries should be increased as revenue permits. Some reasonable system of age re Jtirement should be provided for [teachers, and in all public services, iChildren who cannot go beyond high I school should be given practical training in the direction of useful |and gainful employment." HIGHWAYS BROUGHTON: "Tney must bo adequately maintained and extended. Increasing emphasis must be placed l>u tarm-to-market roads." COOPER: No specific highway plank in ins verbai platform. GRADY: "Farmers—have paid this tax (gasoline) willingly and have without complaint permitted the State to build first iis primary sys tem. Now they are looking to the State to go into these areas and take them out oi the mud and bring them by sale and comfortable roads into a connection with our primary system or hard surface roads." GRAVELY: "Our highway system should be improved and expanded as rapidly as it can be done efficiently. The fundamental basis of such im provement and expansion "must necessarily be the farm t<J market roads." 110RT0N: "An adequate system of public highways is indispensable to the economic welfare of North Caro lina. Under our plan of school con solidation it is essential for the safe ly and well-being of thousands of school children that our secondary roads be adequately maintained, and our entire system of highways be improved and expanded as rapidly as revenues will permit." MAXWELL: Only candidate to go into details of highway improvement he headed the paragraph on this subject "A Fifty Million Program for Highways and By-Ways." Of it he said "I have also made sufficient study of this problem to know that such expenditure is desperately needed and is vital to our continuing growth and progress, as well as to a reduction of our .shameful record oi deaths and injuries on our danger ously narrow roafls, bridges and curves." He advocates a detailed four-point change in present methods of financing highway construction. (NOTE: Comparison of plat forms, beginning with the planks on diversion of highway funds, will be published tomorrow.) Mourned by Canada Lord Tweedsmuir •„ Governor General of Canada ani noted author under the name of John Buchan, Lord Tweedsmuir died in a Montreal hospital of a brain concussion, caused by a fall in his home. He wa6 64 years old. Three emergency operations had been performed. Unwilling Hosts of Hitler Sister Innoccneia (left) and Sister Bogumila, of the Franciscan Order, with headquarters at Lodi, N. J., return to New York, after serviee in Poland. The Sisters (old how the American-built convent to which they were assigned, sixteen miles from Warsaw, was used as headquarters 1>.\ the German general staff during the siege of the Polish capital, Hitler, himself, they declared, watched the military advance from there. (Central I'rens) Love is blind says the proverb, and jerhaps never so blinri as when the ibject of love is one's own country :nd nation. As 1 ho world grow? older it- \»*nrs become more terrible. That's under standable—a man can hit hardtr lhan a boy. Scholarship Open To Local Seniors Seniors in the Henderson high .-chool may enter the 1940 competi tion tor John McMuilen regional chobivhinj in engineering, offered by the College of Engineering of Cornell University it is stated by Principal W. D. Payne. The scholar ship- c-M.y $400 a year throughout the collei.'e coi;r:;e. These scholarships, open to quali I'ied seonndarv school seniors are awarded on the basis of scholastic I'hrvement. character, and general •'viity. Applications must be filed l.i'i'iu" A-v*i! 1. on official blanks which may b;« obtained from the principal. Local -t* iclcut^ will compete in a no includim? North Carolina. South C:«rolinn. Georgia. Florida, Alabama, ?Ti-: issippi :»nd Louisiana. Finns C! aim Red Attacks Repulsed (Continued From Pa2e Ono) : i\ o was hi its 13th day today, the !-"nr. yo- ; yrday "mode several suc fi:I counter ;;tlacks" the army communique :"iid. T.;o l!:s>i: n attacks "continued i ur.alu'.ted" throughout yesterday, the 1 ~ir.":- said. : (/ Red army communique issued I in AToseow s;iifl that 32 "defensive fortifications" lias been wrested J >n».n the Finns on Monday and that [ mudi war material had been cap •'rccl.) (>n ; ,iv.e island.' northeast of Lake | Ladoga the Finns said t.hey "de I '.troyod'' a Russian column of 100 I'd? .'iiid tluy reported capturing -:v. a! Russian machine gun nests in iho Kuiimo region. A1 Raate the Finns said they dvov • Russian detachment "back i:ryond th.c frontier". ANN MILLER, star of Stage and screen, now appearing in George White's Scandals, is definitely the outstanding dance discovery of our time . . . ond a discovery more and more smokers are making everyday is that CHESTERFIELDS are COOLER, BETTER-TASTING and DEFINITELY MILDER. Chesterfields Jjefmife/iy M/Met AND BETTER-TASTING You'll always find these two qualities at their best, plus a far cooler smoke, in Chesterfield's Right Combination of the world's best cigarette tobaccos. Make your next pack Chesterfield and see for yourself why one smoker tells another They Satisfy. You can'tbuy a better cigarette; MMfroo /* r: i i "v^hesterheld The Cooler, Better-Tasting, DEFINITELY MILDER Cigarette Copyright iy40, LiCCETT & My£RS ToBACCO Co,

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