Bible Ciass
Meet Here
April 19-21
State Convention To
Be Held in Henderson
in Spring; Full-Time
Secretary Planned;
Mrs. MilJs Presides in
Durham.
I);ite I'm the ;innu;il comcutnm
(if thv North Carolina M.uaca I'liil
ii t li < ·;ι Γιιίι. η were it ;i Sundav
through Tuesday, April 18-21, ΙΦ4Ι,
in Iltiidii .ii. by tin' executive com
mittee n! tin· m ganization ; ι · ;i meet
ing in Durham Saturday. it wa
I'earned today.
Mr-. .J. I·' r ι ilk 1 i ii Mill . ol Hender
son. is State 11 ! ι i I ; 1111 < ■ ; ■ pi e-iden*.
serving liei Piintli consecutive veai
in that capacity, and presided ovei
l tlie mtvting m Durham Saturday.
ά Ιιit-li wa held .it Kdgeiuont Bapti ·!
I cliureli.
One ni' (Jie principal actions of the
meeting w.is the decision to employ
a 111 11 -1 m ,e. paid secretary for tli
StalV a οι 11 ion on a temporal",
basis, einitingi lit upon approval o:
individual Bible classes over !h
State that are membt i s. Λ poll of tin
elapses i to he made by Miss Glady
Kivett. ol High l'oint. State secre
tary. The convention here in Apia
will decide whether or not the oil ici
shall be made permanent on a full
time ba-i-. The finance commit tei
will be authorized to . et up the woi i
on a temporary basis, in it ; discré
tion.
After the busii.'ss meeting in tin
alternoon Saturday, the Durham cit.
and county union were joint hosb
to the executive coeaiuttee and othci
.visitors a! a dinner at the church
hnnoi in;; Ι'., V. Iledriek. of Sail.
buiy. worldwit..' Baraca 1'hilathe;
Union president. He and Mis. Iled
•liek both spoke, and Mi's. Mills re
spondi d lo th( toast in their honor.
Lawrence .1. Pace, o! Ashevillc
was the chiel p'eaker at the ban
quet, ! 11 uhjeel being "Baraca
Hlnlathea at Work."
'the1 executive committee decided
to undertake arrangements for a
seiies of ι,alio bioadcasts on the
work ol tin· State organization.
A do/en or more local members at
tended tin· Durham meeting. Baraca
I 'h ι la 11 a units are scattered ill many
< ol the leading church denomination,
in the State.
Ι AAA Meeting
I October 29
'M·.
PThr cnur.lv committee wliich wil
superv operation ot the 1!)42 agri
culli.ral c· >i ϊ: 11 i > >ri program in
Ε Vance county will be named Octobei
a at the county convention whicl
Β will be attended by delegatus elected
I during the past week in ballotim
f in each o| the eight AAA commun;
t · tie- in the county.
Member- 'ot the pr· sent county
committee are Κ. H Spain, li. Β
Ί.lor and G. \V. Macon.
The série.- ol eight community
elect.on w.k concluded Saturday
with elections in llenrl· rson and
Town .\ille. Results of these elec
! tiihis were:
liendei on community—T. T.
ΚΙι ϋ ai", chairman: Τ H. Hope, via
ι chairmen; R. Π. Ruchan, mcymber
(1. IJadgei Hani . first alternate: Γ
Η. Γ. ι.<k · ·11, second alternate: Mr.
Flemim;. delegate to county conven
tion. and Mr Raskett, alternate dcle
■ gate.
Town.-ville community—II. L
Tucker, chairman: ·' O. Moody, vicr
chairman. Holey Λ. Norwood, mem
lier; Robert I,. Morgan, first alter
nate; Μ. Κ. Ν rwood, second alter
nat : ('. II Howell, delegate to conn
ty c inven!ion: H. L. Tucker, alter
j nate delegate.
ί BIG BREAK OFFERED
ON TOBACCO MARKET
Between 700.000 anil 730.000
pounds (if tobacco were on Hen
derson warehouse floors this
morning. anil prices paid on first
«airs indicated a continuation of
the h is h prices of last week, it
was reported by Sales Super
visor Smith H. Young.
Yanks Win'
The Series
(Continued From Page One)
lyn one.
Harnuni mastered the Dodgers al1
the way. allowing just four hits am
one run.
Whitlow W'yatt pitched tire rout —
for the Dodgers. gi\ mg up six hit· t
one of them a home run to Tom ·
my Henrich in the fifth inning.
The Yankee·; scored two runs i' I
the second inning, enough to win th
boll game.
Brooklyn's lone score came in the
t! ird inning.
The Dodgers lost a heart breake· 1
to the Yankees Sunday afternoon.
" ι 4, after having a lead of 4 tc
'ter two were out in the ninth.
Henrich struck out. but Catchei
Mickey Owen dropped the ball, an·
the Yankees started a parade the
ended when four t dlies had crossis
the plate.
"*■' '*■ ■-· whhbmmv '
Score Iiv inning-'; R 11 1'
New York 0211 01(1 000—3 Γι ι
Brooklyn ... 001 000 000- 1 4 1[
Baruum and Dickey; Wyatt and
Owen.
No 1942
Election?
Stewart Says Report
That FDR Might Can
cel Elections Next
Year is incredible.
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Columnist
W · li'itt!··!!. Oct. (5. That Presi
dent H MiMA'elt might permit him.-ell
to be drafti'd for η fourth term
doesn't seem tike
such ;m ; 11 ) s c 11111 ο
impossibility. but
I'll be darned if
I believe the st<iry
that In-'·. thinkm,i
up a scheme to eail
off 1 Dili's congres
sional 'election.
Ν c ν e rtheless,
both these yarns
are in circulation.
The fourth nom
ination idea is de
scribed by Wash
inglon gossips as having the backing
ol a regularly organized national
!»r< nip headed by one Dr. ( ). O. Car-j
Ut of Indianapolis. It's said to plan
,i campaign tor -igners to a petition ι
.dvoeating I·'. I). K.'s conscription in j
1944, to run tor four more years in
in· White House.
The argument appears to be thai ;
it'll be "lit ol the question loi1 the j
coumry to change clnel executives,!
Alien thi' time comes, if the war'.;
till going on, and especially if we're;
.11 it. Or. if the war's over, it'.- assert- |
. ά that we nevertheless will be in
the midst of a lot of economic, so
lal and political complications that'll
be about as ticklish as war itself i.·..
ind that F. I). K.'ll be the only tried
and-proven helmsman competent to
,-trer us through 'em.
Accounts that this movement is be
ing incubated aren't very definitely
Verifiable, but they're rather circuni
tantial. They may be true, too;
Lhere's nothing inherently impos ible
ill 'em. Of course, it doesn't follow
that I·'. I). R.'.s giving the crusade, n
111 y. the slightest encouragement. He
nust know, though, that i!': being
talked about, for the conversation
las leaked into print a bit. and he's
middling well posted on what the
press says.
The 1942 congressional surmise
nas seen print also.
loo Kuliculous.
Originally, I heard the prediction
made, in a kind of a casual way, by
in altogether irresponsible observer
if the administration' emergency ac
ivities, that, somehow or other i·'.
). K.'d lind an excuse for getting
hat year's election omitted.
It struck me as so ridiculous a no
ion that I didn't consider it worth
• .assing along to newspaper readers,
• nd 1 got scooped in consequence.
Somebody slipped the same hint to
Washington Correspondent Arthur
\rock of the New York Times and
lamed if he didn't remark on it in
lis daily column. The result is that
,l's quite generally discussed in cap
tai circles.
Some say, as I thought, that then·
sn't the ghost of a chance of such a
.evelopimmt. Others contend, how
ver, that F. D. IÏ. may try it. on th«
jound that this is no suitable junc
,:re at which to distract our national
; tuition, from home defense ana
iiding-tiie-democracies, with a con
cessional '.'lection.
Most critics pooh-pooh the thcor\
that the White House tenant has an
anti-election program in mind, but
■nough of 'cm guess attirmatively to
ittraft attention. 1 still suspect tin,;
t-irolher Krock shot his story, not b'e
ause he had any faith in it, but in
iider to give an impression that K.
). R. is distatorially inclined ana
; us to make the public afraid ol
. i m.
All the same, the next time I'm
çjiven a que'er hunch of that kind.
^11 broadcast it. to avoid being beat
•h to it by another journalist·
F. D. Κ.. up to date, hasn't said
in thing.
The difference between being con
cripted for a fourth tvrm and sup
jressing an election is obvious.
A lourth term would be unprece
dented. certainly, but so was a third
ne. The third nomination wasn't
md a fourth wouldn't be viofative ol
,ur governmental principle, anywtiv.
Kxecutively choking oil a legislative
action manifestly would be.
ι ^constitutional.
Presumably our present congres*
simply would hold ovvr: I take t
nc·'. Congress wouldn't literally bi
. ibolished.
Yet. if the executive branch of the
overnment has a legislative branch
Kit suits the executive branch and
.nie.· the voters a chance to makt
ay changes in the legislative aggre
ation. it surely verges upon uncon
■ itutionnlity. The next step might bt
ι call off the 1944 executive and
•gislative election likewise.
But. as I've previously remarked,
don't believe the story.
I think it was piped up as a jab a!
ι esident Roosevelt. It's Washington
.... iip, though. I'd have relented tc
sooner if I'd imagined anyone wat
oing to take it seriously.
99 Degrees
At 4 P. M.
Henderson sweltered under a
temperature of Hi· degrees, ac
cording to the official weather
bureau reading at the Carolina
Tower and Light Company sub
station at 4 o'clock this aller
noon.
The 99-degree mark is believ
ed to be a record for this vection
of the country for this season of
the year.
President
Hoosevolt.
A Ride So Paper Boar 1%,
V^MARIE BLIZARD -
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE ι
MOTHER PASSED AWAY IN
SLEEP LAST NIGHT KUNKRAL ,
THURSDAY THINK BEST FOR
YOU TO REMAIN OX COAST,
LOVE v DADDY j
Eighteen printed words stared at
Hallie. Eighteen stark words that '
told her the reconciliation she had |
dreamed of could never be. Her
mother, lovely, fragile, aristoeial ic I
Ann Singleton, had passed auav in !
her sleep. Ann, who would not for
give her for doing what she herself
would have done. It was too lato 1
now to ever make her understand. \
It was too late to do anything.
She couldn't have gone to tile fu
neral if Daddy had wanted her to. ι
There wasn't any money to use for I
fare.
It was Eric who pawned the
wristwatch Win had given him on
his twenty-first birthday and wired
flowers for the funeral, who then
took the news to Nick and came
back with word that she was to
take a few days off to get over the
shock.
Tearless, Hallie thanked Eric.
She didn't cry. There was a tight
band around her heart, a dam to
keep back the flow of memories.
She knew, wisely, that she had to
cany on and, looking back into the
light-hearted, carefree past, would
shake the structure of courage she
had carefully builded to see her
through the present.
Ann Singleton's death was in
late November. Another Christmas
was approaching and with it came
Hallic's deep concern over her fa
ther. His loneliness reached all the
way across the continent to her.
"If there were only some way I
could get to him," she said in an
unguarded moment to Eric.
"Maybe Sue could lend you a
couplo of hundred."
She shook her head. "I couldn't
borrow it. darling. I wouldn't know
when I could pay it back. I suppose
Daddy could get it together"—she
had long since told Eric about her
father's losses—"but I don't want
him to know how hard up we are.
It isn't for fun that I've been writ
ing letters back home about our
happy, successful life out here."
After all her concern, Dr. Single
ton wrote a few days before
Christmas, sending a check for $50
and word that he was going to
Maryland to spend the holiday with
his brother. "Something I've al
ways wanted to do," he said.
Hallie took the check down town
and spent it on Christmas presents.
Sox and shirts and ties for Eric; a
snug, flannel robe for her father;
a handsome set of after dinner cof
fee cups for Toby and Louise; a
book for Sue—and a biography of
Spinoza for Win
It was expensive, proving one's
success; on the way home, Hallie
left her best shoos at the repair
shop for new soles.
Louise wrote lier:
"Frankly, we're delighted that
you aren't coming back this year,
but that's only becatise of the
apartment, «lthoii'-V. I ftri *j if
you'll ! ■ ·:·. · · f' ■ ι ! < : s. \\Υ
so love the apartment, that If h is
become h miic tu v. W« ! ' ·;. in
live in it forever. Ilr.t ν .1 ρ >
whenever you come back. In th>
meantime, you may be rate we are '
taking very good care of your
things. I suppose by now you've!
Rot so useil to your now home th.it
you pei-f. it to tiles.· tiling =.
"Your letters are ah·.ays so gay
ami interesting that Tol-v : . I
read them over and ov. r, trying to
picture you whisking nil over 11"!
lywond. entertaining and be ing en
tertained. Some day we mav p> t
out there. Toby has be< η pivi η t - .
other hig shows to j.:■■·.!i:. η: 1
one of them may tai: · him to (>·,.
coast :-ome time. What wonderful
times wo will have together, you ,
and I : '
Hallie prayed that Louise and
Toby would stay nicely settled in
New York, although she wrote
again, saying that, of course, she
was looking forward to seeing
them in Hollywood.
There was one bright spot in that
winter.
A patron of Nick's, who always
sat at Hallie's table, opened a tea
room and engaged Hallie to bo
hostess.
No longer did she wear a ridicu
lous uniform; she wore a neat blaek
dress. No longer did she work until
ail hours of the night. Her hours
were from ten until six-thirty, and
she had a regular sa'ary of §'_>5 a
week.
Life became more normal for the
Adamses when they moved into a
tiny two-room furnished apart-j
ment where the rent was only
a month.
They'd picked up friends, slightly
shabbier editions of the young peo
ple they'd known in New York; boys
and girls who had minor jobs in
the picture industry. They had
had Sunday picnics, and played
bridge, and went to the movies.
The days of luxurious parties,
smart little dinners and casual
cocktail invitations seemed almost '
as remote as life in Worlmrn had
seemed a year earlier.
It became more and more ditli- !
cult to keep up the letters east
Imagination failed Hallie. Shi
wasn't unhappy. She wasn't happy. !
although she would have told you
she was and believed it. until she
thought of the dullness of thfir life.
Eric still had his job nt the gas
station. He joined an athletic ciub.
Occasionally he talked about a now
agent he'd heard about. It was the
same old story and it ended the
same way—the new agent drifted
off into the space from which his
name had come.
Sometimes Hallie wished that !
Eric would lose his job, thinking
that an upheaval might be good for
'.hem, get them out of the rut that
made their life meaningless.
Eric lost his job and Hallie 1
wished she had never hoped for
such a thing. Twenty-five dollars '
didn't reach very far after tin
apartment rent was paid.
Eric was splendid about 't I!< .
kept t' :ι·-« shopped as shrew ' ! y u
a Kn n>'i v, nmn, had dinners
"'ι.' i" i >r llallie when she got
heme iit right, and even tented his
lu <; to doing the tawidry. nut
Κι.·· · .n't get another job.
\v;· ·· r ! summer, they wore
both : ' ν fîallie. S<>n.«or..s made
up of V; that began ami ended
ith a h·;·- ride to and from Ye
V· '.'·>· <' ::dli> Tea Shoppe. Nights,
ιί> 7.!ng · rr r the evening paper, or
playing endless bridge with people
as bre·;· as they were.
Hal! l ino fox jacket was the
only ; d thing in her wardrobe.
Tile "dever little black dresses"
v. i re lv r workday costume.·; and
'hi y " ere shabby and worn fi.ua
cleansing. But liallie had lost all
interest in clothes, and when Eric
raised his eyebrows when she
dressed in something she would
have discarded could she have got
along without it, she found herself
answering tartly, "What would we
use for rent money if I bought an
other ?"
There wasn't even money to have
lier hair done. Nightly, she brushed
and carefully did her hair up on
curlers. She kept herself neat, but
she was not. the dashing, beauti
fully groomed girl she had been in
New York.
They'd come to Hollywood In
June, more than a year and a half
before that day when Hallie went
into a department store to buy new
linens for the tearoom. It was al
most a year since word of her
mother's death had come. Almost
a year since she had felt anything
but fatigue.
She didn't know that she could
feel the blood run out of her heart,
turning her limbs to liquid, until
she came face to face with Louise
Fennell.
She thought she was dreaming.
The girl in the mink coat couldn't
be Louise! But it was she! And she
had her arms tight about Hallie
and was saying, "Hallie, darling!
I've been trying to find-you for
three days! We went to the address
where I sent your letters." Hallie
had had lier mail s:nt to a hotel
who: · picture people used the mail
servi e. "And they said you weren't
regis red there. I wanted to sur
prise ■ il—Toby is out here to ar
range some radio contracts for
some of the stars—and you sur
prised me!"
Hallie felt words rush impulsive
ly to her lips. "Yes, I'm going to
surprise you more, Louise. We're
ashamed of our address, so we use
the hotel. I work in a tearoom. I'm
hostess tl ere. I've been working
there for a year."
"And Erie?" Louise tried to look
not at all surprised.
"Eric hasn't had a job for near
ly a year. Before that, he worked
it a gas station. You can see why
you're coming Is ... is a sur
prise."
'It's going to be a god-send to
you, Hallie Singleton! You ought
to be ashamed of yourself! Come
'.η—we've got to have some ac
"jt"
(To lie Continued)
Food, Fuel And Clothing
Scarce In Unoccupied France
Chapel Hill, Oct. t>. the Food
fuel ami clothing itti.il:.tn in Un
occupied France :s l'e.iily (|iiite sei
iotis, report.- Dr. Allen Bonnell ot
the Uni ver ity οΓ Χ ■. : 11 C'a rolin
School of Commerce, who has .in.;
returned from Europe.
Dr. Bunnell .-.pent a year in the
unoccupied area and was in charge
of the business section of relief for
the American Friend- Service Com
mittee. Me is regarded as an au
thority on foreign trade. Dr. Bunnell
was accompanied by Mrs. Bonnell
who was also eng god in relief work.
As evidence of Vue rood shortage,
Dr. Bonnell says he lost 3D pound
during his stay in France and has
gained most ot it back.
The average person in the unoc
cupied area is allowed only enough
food to equal 121)0 calories a day
whereas in norm d times LÎ500 calorie
would be consumed in one meal.
Clothing is also strictly rationed,
and it is almost impossible to buy
such items as shirts or socks.
Dr. Bonnell gave an account .if
his year in France in an inter, sting
address this week before the Chapel
Mill Rotary club. He was introduced
by Prof. F. F. Peacock of the school
of Commerce.
To make the situation even worse,
there his been very serums inflation
which apparently has not yet reach
ed the limit, Dr. Bonnell said.
Prices of fresh vegetables have
increased 1,000 per cent. The gov
ernment has fixed a cejling for prices
of certain items, but things are still
very high, he said.
For those who can pay the price,
however, almost anything in any
quantity is obt inable, he said. "The
bootlegging goes on at what is called
the "Black Market". And when one
considers that it takes .*>()() to 400
francs now to equal a dollar, the
high prices are understandable.
"I never was so cold in my life
.is last winter because of 1 ck ot
fuel," Dr. Bonnell said.
"The English blockade is tight but
they let us get through vitamins for
listribution to the children
"It is difficult to say exactly how
much of this scarcity should be blam
ed on the Germans. Of course they
exercise the right of conquerors and
there has been some confiscation
but nobody seems to know how
much.
"The bitterness toward Germany
that held from World War I hasn't
diminished, . nd f.oth in the Kngl;.-h
lias revived."
Dr. ISonnell said the Freneh don't
have murh I'aitli ,n the Vichy ;4ιιν
i π ; : ι : ι :. I i. 11 \ ι : .ι 1" ι ; ι i.ind
■icked.
I H·.-; >'·(« t!ic : ! 11 π '. : ! depress in!) and
friist rat inn. thrn· can be nci serious
revolt in France, he said.
With η 'he n< \' month, North
Carol ·η ι gn ι v. - !11 et d the r
small grain for the lit!'.! harvest, .-ay
,. . h. ! .h. ...;! i.noniis! f the
oxpel'il ill* .vtat.··!! at N. C\ Stat ·
college.
Urges Wage Control
Robert Γ. Patterson
Undersecretary of War Robert P.
Patterson appears before the House
banking and currency committee
and urjees Congress to set up wape
control as part of the federal price
lixinp program, lie declared "only
through price controls can we be
assured of timely and adequate pro
duction to meet military needs."
Selling Halts
Stock Rally
New Υ ι irk. Oct. li. -(APt \Y.. '
new.- bol uddlod 11 r · -tuck market lu j
d;iy b\ m.-piring em>ugh .-oiling ι·· '
chock early îallies in rail.- and spi
ciait ics.
The list exhibited a fairly confid
ent time at the opening. allhough top
nains were limited to fraction-; m
η > ea e-. Some of the carnei
-Mowed fair re.-istancc. hut other de
pal iment.- were well dow n from best
prices near the lourth hour. Λ feu
blue chip industrials were off a point
, : wilh the general list mixed,
i · il.: : 'hone remained low.
Quotation- at p. m :
A mil lean I iadnlnr 5 3-4
Ai ieric.. telephone 154 l-!i
\irerc.i' Tobacco !', 71 1-2
Aii.u'o:ula . . Lîlî
Atlantic C'oa^t Line . 2 à
\tk.ntic iîcl iiiii.·; . 24
Iîendix Aviation 38 1-1
licthlelu·' bleol (i(i
I'm > · lei a8 7-8
l t. a . ι la ( ι. ι l'.lec ( 2 3-e
t ' ι > 11:1111 · r ι · i ;. 1 Solvent- in 1--1
( m .'hdatcd Oil Co (i .'i-i.
Curtι Wright il 3-8
! nil '"lit I ali 1
douerai Klcctrie ,'11 l-_'
I icnei al Mol' a 41 1 -i'.
l,i';get: .V M:· 1 ■ 81!
Alon'c"iiH i'i \V. 11 \ ι 38 â-i.
1 ley IK ild Τ. ί act I '< 81
Sotithi m l;.,. ι λ 17 3-4
Siandaι d ι Ml ι ' \ ■ ' 4 ' 7-8
l S Stool a.)
Cotton Prices
Are Higher
New York. Oct (> (AI1)- Cotton
liituiV's opened fi t»· Î* higher.
Λ11 (1 - ( I ; » y \. 11 ι were Γ) tu 12
point - higher: t >et·" « 1V.21Î; Decem
ber 17-46; .1 uiy Γ,MM»
RECORDER CLEMENTS
HEARS TWO CASES
Hccorder R. K. Clement- had two
ehargis in county cunt tr.da\
William Han·.-. Negro \\ a ·ί a ι. ty
of careless and rookies; driving, ml
driving without an operator's boons ·
Prayer for judgment was continued
upon payment of the costs.
Joe Clark, guilty of being drunk
and disorderly, and ol ass. ult, was
given six months on the roads.
State's Inland Fish Re sources
Studied As Basis For Program
Dally Dlspateli Bureau.
In (lie Sir Walter lintel.
B\ III NKV «VKKII.I.
Rale.gh, < >ct ' |)ι Willi Kinr*.
MipCI \ i o] ul list I < OlMCC 111 tin·
I >i · j ». 111 j ι. * ■ 111 ni t "i'!i civntioo and i)
\ c|i ·ρι (Πι. I ι ι III l| ill II (I 'III III 1
"I a ' Ί II ■>! I i'.-lfl tudie ni III··
streams ol North Carolina from
which (lam will Ijt· liiaiii available
upon which lu lia '· a cieiiiilic pi u
gtam ill hehall ul the iη 1..riri fisli ι -
"Ul II of tin· ; * : 11 c . ι: I.;. I,eel, all
notim d by Η in ton J ami's, cwnmi -
mm ι ul the diV: ion m i.tim· a :. ι )
inland lisherit
Field work on the project v.: ι .γ
ι I'd ι Hit mi tin . a l< ι ncd · il· ·
New, Watauga, Cant* and Toe rivOrs
m Alk'ghanv, Ashe. Watauga, Avery,
Yaiiccv and Λ ! - * · · " i iy a
η an liinio^i I . .·, iii VV ill ;
g( I.··, ul the (Icparl i: icnt ul zou|og\
- »l 11 m l'n ι \ c ι - : ν ·1 .\i irt 11 C * ;. ι <. 11. ι. ι
a- leader, and Dvan Otwvb, also oi
tile mi ll 1 y ,|ι ipli Κ inn. !- r.»l
ate -Indent ill /'mingy at the Γι,
ι ι -y ul C aicimiali; and William
I Ian :· ctt. ,r graduate ηΓ N. (*. Stale
nlle^i in Wildlife management.
"\u une familiar with the water
κ -.iiire··: ι·! North ('arulina". . .. 1
Dr. King in explaining the purpose
■ I tin· Mirvey. "will que-linn 1 h.
great vai ici ν and ρ·· i I > i 1 i î ic.- pre
ented by it? Ircsh Water stream.·
. 11 id Ink· . yet relati\ely little ml··:
natiuii has heen accurately obser
\ ed m ι. -ci u'd"fi ι in tin· pu - ent ta tu
ul th· game fish species. "i tin· en
'. ι π in η icii t m whicl ι I hey live.
"In ' ·. c 11 τ to manag" tin \ a I ' ι.ίοΙι
re -ί that H.·.· 11 · a ·-..'· ι u ι hen
• ■: 11 ■ :· ! it iie available tu 111 >m who
love t:. fish, and in order to preserve
' 11" ; · lilc which make- tin no
:.·.:" . ? · ; ι n i ii of reeri'at ion ρι ι- -11 ilc.
• : ■ · - a l'y to 0bta m ha. ic ml'· -
η atioii.
• I the big problem.- taeed by
' ·■ :. i ; has been the pr^pei di.-tri
bution of fish from state hatcheries.
I'm. . ii. these were distributed ai
atei ai lilted to them tin ugh lacr.
ul kin ··.·. ledge, or by demands <>l
mup an \ ii ills tu develop !. h iug
I a ci tain tvpc without π ua <1 to
habita', available or the ο <11 ι'ι -
lient- .«ι 11:.' 11 -11.
Brook trout have been stocked in
V .it, where thev once th n\ ed b1 It
• .be π· now poorly-planned agricul
tint·. Μίί-ιοη find nbn ·.» hnve m >di
11' d lin ·. M" «1 11 **iiiι - ο tn.it
l.i "I. trout < a ι τ ». longei ! ι ν and
. t ι». · !"< i»' »,· : · ρ·! lu « ν. η îr< .t
havt · it et π. . win. η
l>< . . î .·· ■ ' ' it. οι .h olh* i v. "
un ui « d trout v. it'll ι« · improve
ι * : 11. ; . i ι« 11 « » 111 « ' ι |A l'iO
» ι. · «; r 11 ! a « burn tifti With L'iCaUr
. Ι|Γ( t'
"'l'hv primary object i\e * »! ou**
:-tr< aa Λ'· Ί'ί; I i i ι been !·· < « » I -
Ιιet data W in· i Would ι nablc cl« -
I ■ ( ■ ρ
t ; ci] « » 1 1. :< V1. ' ι ; .et I Λ kl! .·.'■< i.-.t·
• ! «\\i ' fηGC I)jί· 1 «»i- · .·I and pby cal
condition- ι bein# gained b\ a « : » rt»
tul livid study. V 11 i Κ* technical in
<·' ..!.}'·.(·!. Il·'· worl; h : 4 - had a ver *
, ; < · - .1 .ι;.,,!/
»! M."» ι « 111 ' < : i and 1 ο 7
• . ' ' . i i,· dI ι ne dala j'aiii
• · "i ■ ' <\\ it κ ! · jî i« <1 I ht· roi ι .γ
1 · 1 î f i' ..hi. ten <per a t ure. Mon. ii .
c ι « ! '· 1 « "I jk ec oud. fi'^l i .· of ill
» ι ·,. . · rngth, depth and Γι e
•ι «η' y of the j )· κ .I presence < ·ι ab
( <Ί · » .;· :ri♦ rovi ; prc<enc<
11 ci ty};( ;.oi...t l< « \i»< 'tat i« »n, hi*»
choi < ; i ci. ι * ι 11 ui . ! i ι. j linity ' >i
ganisms occurι in g on sample* area
·.·, < 11 ■ ·< . . ■ · ii . ·. ■ volume. ( «»unt
ed and id( nt ; ι i( d .ι î« ■ ί:inri.
( )ther data ι ( i· 'ii! included fon
dit i « »n "I 'he .mi f.iii in re^.u (i 1 * »
I < »n ■ - tat if ί ι . ' ci i. ! ι ( i ι1 - t . el l'ect ··:
forest fires, erosion and flood dam
age A «-ι rfi' ■«·' ι··' ot <·μΐ '■ .-cntat iv ·
saii)|)les ni i h aa,, ί » " 111 u each wat -
. ι · hed \va 'aia'ii win re\rr prac
tical.
Iieloie final πηι,ι : : lertda t ion.s are
mad·.' and a p:«»."ia:n ι·Γ management
worked out. 1 ί : ι (lata roliected h y
I he I it·Id pa rt ν \ .11 ix - i l ied thor
oughly and 11. : i : ' d ill detail.
( );. ι ! tin ! . h r can · ol poor
land m· i:i North Carol nu is de fee
* a. c iand-loi ci-lt nant rel a η . -av
! ) : ■. ( iiorac i I.. : 'ton. rural :.o
<·,. .Ί it; : - { of N. ( ' Sat- col lege.
CALL
3 6 6
LOrCHI.IN CITY
taxi
24 Hour Scrvicf
Plumbing - Heating - Electrical Contractors j
Oil-O-Matir Oil Birners — Iron Fi-omon Coal Burners !
WILSON ELECTRIC CO.
Phone 738 William Strpet
Ill I'OKT OF < OMHTION ΟΙ
CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY
of Henderson in the State of North Carolina at the close of business on
September -■». 19-11.
ASSETS
I onns and discounts ...... $1,675,233.06
1'mtd Stale C ί < >vern ι nent uni i.uat n m . du'ii'. and ι ran teed 235,400.(1 I
( Jbligation ··: S t : 11 <.- and pi. I ileal -111 ; i. . i.. 2Ui.310.59
Other b nds. noies and dehent. .v- 76,775.33
Corp rate shirks . . . 4,505 00
Cash, balance- wCh other hanks, η el alms reserve Dai.iiices,
and cash ilea, π piuei"·.· "I ·'■ · -1 - î. · -ri 1.797.443.05
liank premises owned . . $26,600.00
fiirnih!!··· and t .Mares S 8,320.33 34,920.33
Real estate owned otlnτ than bank pivniisis 60,69"..09
Other a - set s 123,378 21
ΤΟΤΛΙ, ASSETS . . S4.224.663 69
1.1 \lillJTIF.S
I) nanrl deposits of individuals, partner· hips and corporation S2.23d.962 14
'Γ · iiit (I. p.. Is of individual:-, partiir:· hp and corporation 1.23K.754.27
lip.. ' . I C η 111'd SI a te- f Ji ivern ment ( in ι ■ i id ! ; ■: p. ' ■ la 1 . \ ! ι u > 1.649.09
Depo-i: "I States and political siibdiv i-. ns 289.511 70
Dipo it s f i inks 110 35
otlio! (iep··· .* (ivrlilit d and officer.' check-, rte t 4.024.72
TOTAL DEPOSITS <.3.76:. (112.27
Othtr liahil.t'.e- 30.965.02
TOTAL LIABILITIES ( ι·>. >t including subordinated obliga
tion- -ί: -ν ί · - ·.· ) $3.79"> 977.29
( Λ PITA I. \( < <>l NTS
Capital5 . . . S 175.000.0 1
Surplus 137.50(1.0 1
Undivided ρηΊ : ;l 1.920 99
H'.-seiVi ι a 'id t·· ι. * ,**«· -ant : ρ · ·,< : ed ι ) 25.26"vl!
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 428.686.4')
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
'This bank'- capi :, i, . 1 ; ι - ' 11 : η > ιί·
iib total
par value oi Si.ia.iHi,ι.
commun stock w : 1 !
total r : : \ ;. ; ■ π ·. S1(l.tW!i On: and
.,1 il:·!' value 1' Sl:'r>.0ll:>.OH.
><! \I()H \M> \
1'ledncd assets (and ii'iinti. .·. luaiK d > ii . · \ a Lie):
(a Ι Γ s c; \· L· 11 i ι, <1 lit ·. ; .. ' : ι ; · el . ! .a .... :, :· ed,
pl. dyed t.. secure ,i, ρ . ■ . ι,.Ι ''a·, r ι < . S 175,000.OJ
'(I)) Othel assets pledged to sci ι ic d r .1 and nlhi i.a.M1..
1 .· .- ι including not»·.- ami Lili red:. ι «· η a il a a. I ■· e .:·■: : as
sold under rcpurcha « ,i,.;:e» n,. 178,000.0)
(c) TOTAL
$ 353,000.00
.cured and preferred liabilities:
(a) Deposits securtd ι y pledged as ets pursuant to recptiro
ments ol law $ 289..>11 7·»
(d) Uepi it- pi eleri'i d iimii : ρι λ ision.- I law but not
si .-η ι (1,1 y pledge ni a set 5,67.'5 81
(<m TOTAL S 295.185 Πt
ta On date o! report the lequred I· η··Ι >'<' rrve at;ain· 1 de
pas il.s of til;.- bark was
(b) Assets reported above which wen- eligible as legal
reser\e ..nio m led to
43(5,195 07
1,797.4 Π.115
I, H y ι) Kodwell, Ν'μόΙΊι- : ι I Ca-hiei. I tile above-u: bank.
do solemnly · w< ,u· thai the at .·ν< - *.·11 · ■ ηt i- true, and that it full·/
ind corn etly 11| η . nt.- the trie - tat·, ol ι h- ·. vei al nii.iler her. in contain :d
Uld et foul til. Ιο llie In 1 ol η > l-:nmdi i'i·.·· anil belief.
R( >Y ( ι Kt iDWFLL.
C ι irrect Attest :
K. F. ΓΛΗ11ΛΜ,
It II I'KKKY. Director;.
.1 W. I I'NK INS
Stale of North Carolina, County of Vance, ss;
Sworn to and subscribed before nie this 4th day of October, 1811,
and 1 hereby certify that 1 am not an officer , r director of Ibis bank
MARIA F JOHNSON,
My commission expires June 18, 1942, Notary Public.