J-ESUE PCFiRy ij-f Hpttfrprsrm Hatly Utspatrff THIRTY-THIRD YEAR v'ii?gs?>F HENDERSON, N. C., MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 8, 1946 "ruBL,s,,E^BF^\X,D\KTTEKNOON FIVE CENTS COPY ? THE WINNER ALWAYS COLLECTS WITH A CASUAtNESS that a Hollywood leading man would envy, Hiland Moore, Jr., I8-months-old, collects a kiss from a losing competitor, Don aileen Winter, 17-months-old, after the former had been declared win ner in a baby parade held in Brentwood, near Pittsburgh. (International) 'Something Sinister' Involved In Attacks, Rep. A. J. May Says Investigator Says He Was Given $500 To Give Up Probe Washington, July II?i/T'i?Rep. Andrew .i. May (D) of Ken hick;. told the House today "there is some thing sinister in these attacks on hi; connection with the Senate's investi gation of war profits. May took the House floor after Chairman Mead (I)) of New York termed "wholly inadequate" the Kentuckian's testimony to the Sen ale War Investigating Commitlei June I concerning his relations with an Illinois munitions combine. Declaring ho had never used "one peney of anybody's money ex cept my own," May told his colleag ue:,: "I can not help but believe there is something sinister in these attach on me." Investigator Given S">00 The Senate War Investigating Committee heard Thomas O'Connell. one of its investigators, testify to day he was handed $500 in a Chi cago hotel with the understanding that he would resign and withdraw Irom the investigation. O'Connell said five $$00 bills were given him by Joe I,. Martinez, a former Mead committee investiga tor as "expense money" preliminary to O'Connell's accepting a political campaign job in New Mexico. O'Con nell said he gave the money back next day. In his statement to the committee, Chairman Mead said: "May was not under oath. He left the impression with the committee that he made several disinterested telephone calls that were more or less incidental. Testimony has since revealed that he made many calls that were repetitious and trouble some." The committee has received testi mony from army ordanee officers that May many times importuned them to eive valuable war contracts to the Illinois combine. The inter locked companies received over $78, 000.00(1 and their officers were paid salaries which Mead called "war profiteering at its worst." Russians Order Foreigners From Austrian Sector Vienna, July 8.?(/T'l?Some 50. 000 native Germans and other for eigners were ordered by Hussion au thorities to leave the Soviet occupa tion zoic of Austria by 8 a. m. to day. A reliable source said they are to be sent to the French /.one in Germany. Russian army trucks of the Aus trian Communist party were sta tioned outside the homes of for eigners affected by the order, which permitted them to take only 30 pounds of belongings. The Austrian govea men! was re ported to have advised foreigner? in the zone that only persons who came to Austria after the Anchluss of March 13. 1938. and those not Austrian citizens, were obliged to comply with the order. State Has Ten Deaths i Over Fourth; National Total Set At 495 Accidental Deaths In Holiday . ! i B.v The Associated Press. At least ten prison:: Hied violently 1 in North Carolina during the long Fourth of July week-end. Leading the fatalities were seven traffic deaths. The nalim rounled up 221 dead in traffic accidents, hut this toll was far less' than had hceti exported and even considerably below that j for ordinary four-day week-end pe riods. The National Safety Cottnei said : 400 persons normally die in traffic 1 mishaps dm i g an ordinary four days whirli include a Saturday and Sun day. The council had forecast 1.3110 persons would die violently but only 495 deaths were reported, in.hiding the traffic fatalities, 159 drownings rout 112 deaths from miscellaneous violent causes. Gunman's Victim HEADof a nationwide racing infor mation service, James M. Itagcn, Sr., (above) Chicago, 111., was seri ously wounded by gunman who ?hot at him froiji a small delivery truck with rifle , and machine gun fire. Itagen's bodyguards, following him, were caught completely off .their guard. (International) WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Partly rloudy and continued rather hot tonight and Tuesday. Meattered afternoon and early evening showers over extreme north portion. Reds Block Sending Out Pnrley Bids Molotov Demands Conference Rules Be Passed First I Paris, July 8?(/P)?The foreign ministers council recessed after a morning meeting today, still dead locked on the question of sending out invitations for a 21 -nation peace conference July 29. Arguments that have marked Rus sian foreign Minister V. M. Molo tov's opposition to sending invita tions for the conference unless they were accompanied by a strict code of rules for its procedure were pro scent again today in the face of please by Secretary of State James Byrnes and British Foreign Secre tary Ernest Dcbin to have the invi tations go out immediately. Only As Suggestions The American and British secre taries said they were willing to dis cuss procedure rules as suggestions, but would not attempt to foist them on the other nations. The ministers were to resume their session late today. Sources close to the council said that failure to reach an immediate solution to the procedural problem upon which the foreign ministers have been deadlocked since Friday might result in indefinite postpone ment of the proposed peace confer ence. Tass Charges Secret Talk The Russian news agency Tass( meanwhile, injccctcd a new note of disscntion into the proceeding by asserting that the British. American and French representatives had be gun "secret talks" concerning Ger many from which Russia was bar red. Tass said there was speculation n Pai"is that the reported talks "con >ther questions." Whether there was any founda tion for the Tass report could not >c immediately ascertained. There lave been private meetings here out ide the foreign ministers council and government officials fiom Bel gium and Czechoslovakia?countries that might have claims against Ger many?have conferred privately with the ministers, including Molotovv. There has been no official indication, however, of the nature of these talks. HUGERATANGERED BY HIS BAD LUCK Philadelphia. July 8.?i/Pi?A huge rat. evidently angry at being caught '?o a mouse Iran, was waiting for Louise Summershne and his family ? ?nay when they returned from a week-end out of town. The rat. with the trap -.tinging to one leg. chased Summershoc, his wife, and their two small sons onto tables and chairs. Summershoc finally managed to elude the rat hug enough to tele phone police. Officer Joe Kelly ar rived in a riot ear and dispatched th crat with his riot stick. A I,KM AN LEADING. Mexico City. July 8.?i/l'i?First official returns, including 25 of the Federal District's 194 precincts, to day gave Miguel Alemr.n. administra tion candidate, a lead of 1.945 over Foreign Minister Kzquicl Padilla in yesterday's presidential elections. Vets Picket House 8fit-rnp| 00B DO*# 1 0'0Atff?l 1 GOES UP ' 8 MXZmmi w, - ?? | A COUPLE of rncmbors of the Amer ican Veterans Committee in Dallas, Tex., picket the apartment house owned by Mike O'Daniel, son of Sen. W. Leo O'Daniel (D.-Tcx), They were protesting young O'Dan icl's action in serving an eviction notice on cx-Gl Weslot Orient, shortly after the OPA had expired. Senator O'Daniel made headline* with his filibuster against contjnua U9U of the (M?rwU(on?ii Truman Approval Of OPA Bill Hinted Barkley hopeful Senate To Pass Acceptable Bill Washington, July 8.?(fl'i?Demo cratic Deader Barkley of Kentucky told President Truman today he hopes the Senate will pass m OPA renewal bill that will meet the Chiet Executive's approval. Be talked to reporters at the White House after he and other leg islative leaders had conferred with Mr. Truman, shortly before tne Sen ate was scheduled to open debate or. price control legislation. "I told the President that I hope the Senate will get a bill he could approve." Barkley said. Done Best Possible. Asked whether Mr. Truman mon th red any specific objections to the compromise measure now before the Senate, Barkley said that the Presi dent though price control advocates had done "the best they could." With the nation entering its sec ond week since the death of the war born agoicy. a Capitol Hill advisoi to President Truman let it be known he "had no doubts" that the Chief Executive will sign the pending* measure if leaders can bludgeon it through Congress in its present form. This official, who declined use ot his name, emphasized to a reporter that h# was rot attempting to fore cast Mr. Truman's reaction ? if any ? if a new series of restricting amendments are written into the measure during its precarious course through the Senate and a House-Sen ate conference committee. Truman Satisfied. .The word that Mr. Truman ap parently is satisfied with what Democratic Leader Barkley was able to bring out of the Banking Commit tee was passed down through the ranks on an obvious attempt to off set the criticism voiced against the compromise by OPA Chief Paul Por ter. Porter said last night he sup ported Barkley's substitute for a pre viously approved profit provision by Senator Taft ?The Nn timal Lawyers Guild is resolved to seek the removal of Attorney Gen eral Tom C. Clark unless he reverses his policies of the Department of Justice. Irked by a speech Clark made recently in Chicago, the guild so de cided in a resoluttinn adopted at the final session of the organiza- j lion's tenth annual ernventtion here! yesterday. Speaking before the bar ussocla- I lion in Chicago June 21. Clark soldi one of the greatest dangers to "civil j liberties of our fellow citizens and' one which should be taken literally j by all the members of our profes sion, is the method of communism! and fascism to shackle democracy by indirection." , _ i Nation Is Born THIS RADIOPHOTO, which was Just received in the U. S, shows the American flag being lowered dur ing July 4th Independence Day ceremonies in Manila and the na tional flag ol the new republic being raised. Former High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt, who raised the flag, automatically became the U. S. Am bassador. {International) Referendum Endorsed By Gov. Cherry Executive Seeking Overwhelming Vote Favoring Quotas Raleigh, .July R?i/l'i?Governor R. Gregg Cherry said today he was "convinced that it is to the decided advantage" of the State and the the citizens of the flue-cured tobac co counties to have an overwhelm ing vote favoring quotas for three years. ?'If we do not record such a vote this commodity will not be available" 'I he referendum will be nelci Fri day. r-euiting out that North Carolina produces about two-thirds of all the blight leaf tobacco grown in the 'J. S.. Cherry said the state "has found that growing tobacco under the quota system has proved a sound system for producing this important crop."' "As governor of a state wherein the tobacco crop has a dollar value more than four times that of its nearest competitor. 1 wish to take this occasion to emphasize the im portance of this forthcoming elec tion." 1946 Delilah Warwick, England. July R?|/P>?? Mrs. Monica Appleby. 2(>. has ad mitted cutting her husband's throat while kissing him. She was sentenc ed l<> nine months imprisonment. Justice Croom Johnson told her: Without any motive, after you had asked him a most affectionate way to shut his eyes so that he might re ceive a surprise from you. you cut his throat with a razor." Mrs. Appleby, pleading guilty to a ehaige of mallicious wounding, said she could not explain her action. Her convalescent husband, a for mer Congregational minister, said he bad forgiven her. Enough T obacco T o Replenish Foreign Shortage Is Forecast College Station. Raleigh. July B. ?The 11)40 crop of flue-cured t<> bncco .should supply enough tobacco to equal world vonsumption and to replenish a substantial part ol the present lorcipi shortage, according to G. Tom Scott, State director of the Production and Marketing Ad ministration. with headquarters at State College. "In view of the supply and de mand situation, the Department of Agriculture was most conservative in arriving at the 1047 national mar keting quota of 1.141.000 avyes." Seott said. In most cases Ihc announced quota will not cause more than n 14 per ecru increase in any acreage allotment. 'lire national quota may not be decreased except by an Act of Congress, but the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to inrrease the quota at any time up to March t, 1947, by an amount not to exceed 20 per cent. An increase will be made if subsequent information on the supply and demand situation warrants an Increase. To give every grower an oppor tunity to vote in the referendum on marketing quotas to be held Fri day. July 12. Scott said that polling centers in the local communities will open at 7 a. m- and remain open All day. -t