Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Aug. 26, 1946, edition 1 / Page 1
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Hgttftgrgmi 'BalBx&patth THIRTY-THIRD YEAR 1''ini r' ass.* ? i'av,V.',':LV.k HMNMRBSnN M n mnMMA v ? ct-l-i.kinnk. axz-ilmn. ?.7"T.7T ?? -? - President In Bermuda, Breaks Precedent 1 'Greetings' In Mails Again \ As Draft Holiday Is Ended Washington, Aug. 26. ? </P> ? Those prcsidntial " greetings" are in the mails again. Shut down for two nicrths, the draft machinery is -hugging bach into action. Hcception center lines will begin to form next week. And by tin i end of next monlh selective servicej i.> icnsnably confident it will meel | the army's quota of 25,1)0(1 men in the 151-29 age group. in .fline, while the whole future I of t)ie draft was up in the air. only 6.400 men were indueled. There were no teen alters among them, Congress finally eompromised on thai is u< by exempting 18-year-olds but speci fying 11 lose 19 were In he drafted. During the .liily-Augrst holiday when the War Department asked n > inductii ? s local boards have been registering and classifying men l>c tween IB and 44 under instructii lis from Maj. Gen. D. B. Ifershey. iui tional draft chief, to limit defer ments to individuals in activities "in dispensible to the national exist ence." Four new categories have just hen added to the list of those entitled to "most serious consideration" for occupational deferments. They are college and university teachers, home Construction workers, critical pro duction and transportation workers. Previously local boards" were author ized to ci i sidcr deferments only for students in medicine, dentistry and osteopathy, and for certain teachers and research workers in physical sciences and engineering. Fathers, certn'r categories of vet erans and essential farrrt workers arc deferred by law. IDLENESS BAD FOR CHICKENS Haleigh, Aug. 26. ? Veterinary health Authorities at the annual ron< vcntlon of the American Veterinary Medical Association recently he'd a Boston, Mass., have listed idiotic^ as fee of the causes of "cannibal' ism" in chivkens, Or. William Moore Veterinary Chief for the Departmen of Agriculture, reports. Chickens, like children, the re lease states, should be kept too bus; to get into mischief and thus lessoi the chances of getting into the perni clous habit of picking each other' combs, toes, feathers and bodie.. Much Leaf Sold At Price Below Its Loan Value! College Stain i. K.nt .-'.h. Aug. "?!. ?Director 1. t). Scliaul> of State College says lie has hecn advised that a considerable quantity uf u> I a? c<> i. now hung :nld ori the mar Let at .1 |irire below it.-- loan value. lie has. therefore, notified tin I connty agents of the Ksleusion Serv ice lo tolly advise growers regard ing the ohjeelives and operating |.i:i of the new Flue-Cured Tobacco Co operative Sliihili/.ation Corporation. The objective of the Stabilization Corporation i.- to assist in making government loans available to grow ers on niv tobacco for which llie pi i e I il by private buyers in auc tion market- is less than llio govern ment loan rate. /- I ? I TV 1 Mud cuts At L\\L, Between 17 And 25 Can Enter NROTC Chapel Hill. A lip. 20.?Physically /nullified male studu ts who meet age rerpiircmcnls arc eligible to en roll in the Naval Reserve Officers' Training Corps, under new rcguln lions pertaining In enrollment in the NROTC anno; feed this week by Capt. I). W. Lnomis, USN. professor of Naval Science at the University of North Carolina. Under the new plan, students will be trained under two different sot ' tips, one < f whieh will train e ? traet students who make no <?< mmitment: j regarding active duty in the Naval service, and the other schedule train ing regular students who are itp | pointed midshipmen in the Naval I Reserve n il who agree to accept a minimum of 24 months duty upon . graduation and commissioning. Uni . hams fc.r both contract and regular f NROTC students will be furnished I by the Navy, and will be rcijuircd ? foi wear only wh ? the student! ere engaged in Naval activities. Qualifications f< r aflilintion with { the NROTC are that students be unmarried eili/ens of Ihe United \ Slates and agree In remain unmnr - lied until commissioned or dim - v rolled, that they lie over I" yean n old hy September 1 but net 2t yenrt - ild before July I. thai they hnv< s completed less than two semester. ior the jntivtueni j. college work First U. S. President to visit Bermuda while in office. President Harry S. Trur.ian comes ashore frt.m his yacht Williamsburg at Hamilton. He is accompanied (left) by British Atlnt. Sir Halph Leat hain. governor of Bermuda. A pleasant ride (top) in the gov ernor's carriage ends as Mr. Tru man and members of his party arrive at Government House. U. N. In N. C.? By I.VNN NISBET (Baity Div.putheh Bureau) Raleigh. Ana. 20.?It !? learned from vvltal is believed reliable but us official sources that rcp ivsc ttivrs of the Failed Nations have lieu doing preliminary in vcstlgetlmi and survey in llie ?"ii(lhills or Moore county with the view ot probable location of headqtiu: ters there. Relatively cheap acreage readily accessible bv train, automobile and air to \Va-hisirtrn. ami the far-famed climate of the Caroliaa sand hills arc given as the items that attracted interest to the area around I'inohurd. It is accepted as rcrtirin that the proposed world eapitoi v. ill be lorated somewhere along eastern edge of the American ronthienl. and those familiar with the advantages of the sandhills feel sure it would make an almost ideal site. Jewish Town Is Searched 13y Soldiers ? Haifa. Ah;'. 2I>.?i/P??More than .(.(Htl) Hrili-h "Pliers today swooped |il? ?vn on tin little Jewish villi";*1 of Si'ilnl Viim. ? llio "Id Roman sea i ?>rt sit" "I (Va.-area. iiinl began ;m 'iit'li by iiicli search lor munitions. I saboteurs. iiiul illegal immigrants. Machine gun ri'iiliimni'iiL1! dotted jllii1 rocky hillsides overlooking ttic ?village its hoops iiiitil*1 ;i p rc-da wn I move iiij effort. it militiiry an nouncement said. to apprehend the person who blasted Hie llritisii ship. Kmpirc Rival. in Haifa harbor a week ago. Drig. I! It.. Anderson. ommandintj lb" second brigade of the 1st In fantry Division It Id t ewsmen thai "there was no doubt" the \ illngc was a pivotal |xi:nt in toe sueeess i fill landVg in litll illegal immigrants 1 last week. The village's 200 residents wort taken from their homes and herded j into a temporary enclosure nearby for qucsti" ing while troops made f I house to house search. Approxi 1 matety 40 persons were detained fot j questioning. States, Schools Now Eligible For Surplus Property Washington. Aug. 211. ? i/TT ? The Justice Department in an opitb ion today iipproved the gift of sur pins property by the War Asset Administration t<> non-profit edu rational institutions. The ruling was prepared by Act ing Attorney General J. Howard Mr i Giath following a request by Rober i M. Iatllejohn. WAA chief. McGrath alio said that newt ? firmed non-profit in titutions wcr I eligible to receive gifts of surplu I properly under the surplus propert i! a< t. Weather i FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Considerable lioiiillnoss tonight ; | anil Tuesday. especially during i j morning hours. Few scattered ? j showers this evening anil again - Tuesday afternoon. Continued 11 rather cuol. v;., wvni'Ai /\r i tiiutuu Vote System In Georgia Ruled Legal Three-Man Federal Court Hears Case; Suits Is Dismissed Atlanta, Ain;. L'fi. <?('! \ thro, iiiilpi' ii'.n'ial mint upheld today ?cor.'ia's county unit vim' system ? I ilccid.n'. Democratic primary 'loot <? ii mi 1 rot .l o t 1.1 tnv;iliil;il. In? uoiiiiiialicii nl r.ugcii ? lalmudgv ii I.mi In term sis i;?i\ oi in?r. 'Ilio tribunal iliMin :: ?! a suit or an ?'iiui.y i iiivoi: hv pmfe?.sor and an Atlanta woman oi\ ir loader wliioli sought to have the unit system de olarod void and the iioiiiiiiatiini til I'ahuadgr oanoolleil. "I he .indues said it was their nn aniinoiis opinion that "an iiilcr-lnru tory iiijiinition should lie denied." 'I'he o|iinitm said ' these unit \otes also appear in the oleeloral college ? it oho. uiu a President, so that there have been |iresiden's who <lid mil re ooive a majority oi the popular vole." TahinulKc Trailed by It,000. hi llie July 17 Democratic pri nary, Talr.uulgo won the immin i ion tauter ine im.t vote system, tit hough lit? trailed James V. Car nicliael, hacked by Ciov. Ellis Ar in 11, by about 14.000 votes in th tatc-wide popular vote total. Under the unit vote system, each ?ouRty is allocated a designated lumber if unit voles--front two h ix. 'I lie candidates receiving the nost popular voles in the count \ eeeives its unit voles. There are 4 K init votes in the state and 200 are equired to nominate. In the suit. Dr. C. B. Gossnell of imory and Mrs. Robert l.ee Tm nan. former president of the Al anta League of Women Voters, eon ended that the system violated th equal rights provision of the 14tl Amendment to the Li. S. Coiistilu ion. '1 hey said ;; vole in a small eonn 'y allotted two unit voles would rave perhaps as uracil as III!) times lie value as the vote ill Fulton ?ounty (Atlanta) which has six umt votes. More Nazi POW's Flee In England London. Auk. _'ti?I/Pi- Increasing numbers of the hiti.OiHl German pri soners of war >n Britain are c-cap iiiK and try nr.'. to net back to Ger many by underground eliannels. Seventy three escapes luive been loported in three weeks. Fifteen fugitive. are still at large. Army official: say the escaped men are helped in some cases by sympathetic British influenced by a "send the P( ?U" home" campaign. \ petition signed by J!7.r? church men, members of Parliament an I others urged Prime Minister C'le meiit Atllee In speed the prisoners' release. Most spectacular of the escapes was that of hnmcr Panzer Grenad iei Alexander Tortt. raptured alter la- reached the French coast in a yacht which his Bullish companion attractive, Mrs. Boris Blake, is ac cused of stealing. IN, ftUOUftl Zl>, l;M(j Shot by Infant AS SHE LEANED over the crib of her lour-inonths-old baby, Mrs. Rox aiuic Smith (above), 21, Lansing, Mich., was accidentally shot and killed by her two-year-old son. The gun was the one her husband used ? on his job as a local policeman, and which lie had hung on a peg on the door supposedly out of the small child's reach, (International) 8 hreeBodies ArcSoughtlii \ ugoslavia Rescue Parties Cemb Mountains For U. S. Airmen Hoi grade. Aim. l!ii.? i V> ? Hosoue ?.arties I'limlii'd llic .Lilian Alps to ri ay in a rti owed search lor two ; missing United States airmen while I ?i ii s were completed to accord ! highest military lionors to three of their comrades killed Aug. It), when 1 in ir plane was siioi (town by Yugo slav lighters. Tin* Yugoslav Fourth Array, in ! whose euiiimaud area the plane crash- j i'<| in Homes, stood !>y en orders front the government to accompany' the bodies of the trio from the vil lage of Koprj vnik to Ilelgrado. Top ranking officers of the Fourth Army will accompany the flag draped funeral vehicle today from Kop rivnik where the airmen were buried in a comm< n grave to Hie airport at Ljubljana. The procession will pass through Hied, where Marshal Tito has been vacationing. A guard of hd or will remain with the bodies at a mortuary in Ljubljana iinlil tltcy are placed board Hie private plane ef U. S. Am bassador Kichard Patterson for the ilight, possibly tomorrow, to LSel? grade. ,A Yugoslav fighter stpiadrnn will cir. I ? Ljubljana and escort the am buss idor's plane to the Yugoslav capital. (It was not clear whether the three '.could be looted in ltc|oi.idc oi tLo ll. S. A I'.clgradr dispatch Sn Hi I' ll, y aid I hey would ho buried in the I'. S military cemetery <?: the outskirts of till- Yugoslav city. However a I'aris liispaleli aid 11. S Si 'rotary ol Slate .lames Ityrncsl hud asked the army to bring the bodies to the United States for bur ial.) SEES HER TOYS FOR THE FIRST TIME BORN BLIND, little Iva Mae ' Beanie" Fit/water, 4, Cfiarlcstown, tV. Va., is too thrilled for words as she fondles the toys and picture books that she had fell but never seen befot ?. The tot, victim of cataracts o. both eyes, was operated on by doctors at St. Francis Hospital. She nov has a good chanco of gaining normal vision. 'Jnlcrnattw.*. Sowndphoto) ,xm,,'"ArK[T:^i;\vni'lN,,w FIVE CENTS COPY 18 More Words In Italian Treaty Win Conference's Okeh 153 Worc s Thus Far Have Been Accepted And 55,0C0 Remain Pari:;. Aug. !!(>.?oPi?Eighteen iwjjv words of the preamble >'f the prupescil It ??linn |>e;r e treaty were iieeeptect today h.v the Italian pnliti eal titnl territorial enititnissioii c.I the Paris peace conference. thus bring ing the total number of words ac cepted to 153 in four weeks of de liberate its. More than 5a,lit ill words .u five treaties remain to be c< n.-.idered. No progress has been made on any ' of the four treaties. The It! words, contained the fourth Paragraph were dnpled liv a itiiani nious vote, with Yugoslavia abstain ing. I'olli wing hour-long debate 011 a Netherlands amendment which would have had the effect nf giving Italy additional recognition for aid to the Attics after the overthrow of Mussolini. The amendment, as finally ap proved. read that "whereas afler the :;.id armistice the I tali; < armed forces, both of the government and of the resistance movement, took an active part in tiro war against Ger many." Russia Supports Move. It was supported by Russia, as well as all other members of the commission c.v cot Yugoslavia. The Hi itch agreed to withdraw the foil: wing words, which were contained ? the original draft as the amendment: "And Italy declared wai on Germany as from Oct. 13. ltlt.'t and i n Japan as from July 15. 1945 and thereby became a co-belligercni against Germ: > y and Japan." A concerted campaign h.v Rus-i: and her satellites again:', countries separating the Soviet bloc from the Mediterranean seemed in ovinion o' nmc observers here to be takiii; shape. '? dicntions of such n campaici were noted in these recent develop ments: 1. An announcement that the So \ ct Ukraine war asking the t'liitec Nations Security Council to i ves ligate Greece as a threat to poaci in the ISalkans. 3. Repeated demands by Yuyo ? lavia for Italian territory in the disputed Vcne/ia Giuliti area. 3. A Russian note to Turkey ask ing for a voice in the c ntrol of the Dardanelles. ; Six Bodies Located In N.C. Wreck Hclhavcii. Aug. ? i/Vi ? Six bother were recovered here today (n>in an automobile that plunged thioiigh a i.oanl rail on Wilkcrsoi. I" reek bridge. Only two laxlie: li.nl been |? si tively identilied. the .sheriff's nffirt ami highway patrol said. Tliev were those ol I'hilii) I). Mboncy and llat tie S. Carter or Durham. Anothei man. identified as I'loyd Hi ley. also o! Durham, was believed to have keen in the ear. The unificiitii.cn hi.dies were those ol two men. a woman and a young girl, the state highway patrol said. A erane reached the scene shortly before midnight and began the work of raising the ear. Nebraska GOP'crs Adopt Platform; Mississippi N otes Washington, Aug. 2(5.?i/Pi?Po litical leaders who may figure in (lie 1948 and 1!).~.2 presidential races are cast in leading roles for September's wind-tip of major primaries and party conventions. A Republican party meeting to adopt a state platform in Nebraska I today and a C on tress race run off I f?i the Democratic nomination in the 7th Mvsissippi district Tuesday ! are the only political events litis week. In the Mississippi race. Hep. Dan It. McGeliee is contesting with John Bell Williams, a one armed war vet eran. Nebraska Republicans heard a key note speech this afternoon by Senator Chapman Hevereomb (It) of West Virginia, who is mentioned a a potential vice presidential candi date two years from now. Last week's political bill closed with Texas Democrats picking Beatiford Jester an the state's next governor in a run-off primary with Homer T. Itaincy. former president of lite University of Texas. Next month. New York, and ('nn nccticut convention snare interest 1 with Maine's customary advance date general election in the last (whirlwind of party preparations foi the final showdown November 5. Faces Imprisonment BUSINESSMAN Charles Saulio, 59. Brooklyn, N. Y., has been arrested by the FBI on charges of using $10,710.50 worth of government man hours to renovate his' Jiome while working on war contracts. Saulia, president of the Maritime Maintenance Corp., faces a maxi mum of $10,000 in lines and 10 years imprisonment if found guilty of the FBI charges. (International) U.N. Council Will Speed Greek Case Ukraine Asserts Athens Government Threat To Peace i\i'w i "i ?, /rug. -o.?uci?/\n ?arly hearing by the United Nations security Council of the charge by lie Soviet Ukraine that the Greek government is a threat to the peace >f the Balkans appeared assured to day. Acting swiftly in answer to the jkraine's recpiest for speed, the U. V secretariat and Dr. Oscar Lange, ? f Poland. Council president, put he new ca.-e on the council's agenda for Wednesday, immediately after onsidc'ration ot application by nine nations for admission to the United Mat ions. Because of the lengthy discussion if new members expected in the nuni'i! when n meets for the first line at its new Bake Success, N. Y., lcadquarters. it was believed in U. \'. circle that the Greek case would oc heard late in the week. The case materialized Saturday i when Dmitri Maimilsky, foreign minister "I the Ukraine, sent from Paris where Ire is attending the ncace conference. to Trygve Lie. U. ! M. dietary general, a complaint ' hareing tlic Greek government with: I .Nnoieron border incidents on the CJi cek-Albanian frontier, which .re hcorg "provoked by Greek arm ?d units with the connivance and ?ncnuragcmcnl of the Greek author ities;" ^ Per; cent imi of national minor ities in Macedonia, Thrace, and Kpu u . Leal' Slocks Show Jump . Ualcigh. Ana. 26. ? Flue-cured stocks of tobr. fi> ii hand in the na tion total 1.147.000.000 pounds ? an increase of 21.600,000 pounds over n year age. according to W. P. Hed rick. tobacco marketing specialist ! Willi the N. C. Department of Agri I culture. He p -inlet out. however, that | stocks of flue-cured tobacco ear marked for export arc at least 70, (100.000 pounds less than at this time Un 19(5. and consequently holdVgs available for home consumption in dicate a gain of much more than the 21.000.000 pounds increase shown by total slocks. Having his statement on the latest ? formation emptied by the Produc tion and Marketing Administration, he said that exports of flue-cured between .Inly 1 last year and this past .lulv I are exported to be at about the same level as during the corresponding period a year earlier, when the same level as during the correspi nd ? i: period a year earlier, when exports amounted to approxi mately 431.000.000 pounds on a farm sales-weight basis. Stocks of fluc-eured decreased 340.000.000 pounds from April 1 to July 1 this year. Declaring that this 1 decrease was much larger than usual, Hedrirk attributed it to large exports and the continued high domestic con? ,sUi.ip'ion of cigarette*.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Aug. 26, 1946, edition 1
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