WEATHER N„r,.h C arolina: Probable occa innai 5now in west and rain or ,10W jn east tonight and Thure ,:l>, ..ughtly warmer tonight. The Elkvelland SEND 10 Pages TODAY Member of Associated Press VOL XLII, No. 13 SHELBY, N. CL WEDNESD’Y, JAN. 29, 1936 Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons. Ir U II par f*t (In Mtuni _ mi Carrier, par rear, (la advanmi _ h.h SENATE COMMITTEE APPROVES REVISED FARM BILL Distinct Need Is Seen Here For WP A Certification Cases Are Cited Which Need Help r.oed Appointment Of As sociate In Welfare Work At Early Date. A distinct need for some method of continuing certifi cation of persons who wish to work under the WPA was ex pressed here today, when it was learned that scores of workers who are in dire need 0f work and money cannot be employed. The last certification ctone was by the ERA in November which was discontinued in December. Even then they could not be certified to work unless they had been on relief last May. Ab the situation now stands there ere approximately 350 persons work ing m the county under the W1»A, and the projects under way coifid absorb several others. Director John Hudson has sent out calls to those listed on his rolls numbers of times, but they are either working or have private employment. Many Calls Yet he receives calls and the U. S. employment office receives calls by persons who need work and can't get it. Appointment is pending of an as sistant who will be associated with Mrs., L. H. Ledford, county welfare worker, whose special duty will be j i Continued on page ten.) Grass Rooters Unite Against F. D. R. Policies MACON, Ga., Jan. 29.—<£>)—In surgent, southern Democrats, rallied by the cry of ‘'states rights,” organ ized at a grass roots meeting here today for a drive against the nom ination of President Roosevelt for a second term. Resolutions bitterly condemning the administration’s record were presented and the Roosevelt policies assailed in speech es by Governor Eugene Talmadge, himself a tentative candidate for president, and J. H. Kirby, of Hou% lon Texas, wealthy head of the southern committee to upheld the constitution. , Governor Talmadge said "There K nothing to becloud the issues of sovereignty "of local self govern ment, If the president’s program is continued for four more years the lines between the states will be only a shadow on paper and government of separate states will be subser vient to the will of the will of the central power in Washington.” Talmadge and Kirby, called Jeff ersonian Democrats o' 17 cotton belt and border states to the session. The thing President Roosevelt is providing for us,” Kirby told the as sembly. "is some fashion of slavish, contemptible, all-oppressing bureau cracy. The security it may give will be no better than that found behind be walls of the Atlanta peniten tiary. Morning Cotton LETTER NEW YORK, Jan. 29.—In the ab vc.ice of definite news from Wash Cluring the d&y on new agri cmim- program or on pool and loan won market appeared aimless and victualed within narrow limits. Opera hon largely of a trade charac final prices showed small inr from previ0Ufi clo8e_ Worth ; ;<]« again very limited and M mere*y to immediate re .•7/.*?* Th* spofc tnwkets in the : f Towed very small trans A s '-<** for a trading mar "’porarlly. E. A. Pierce & Co. c THE MARKETS SS 2*. n% to Vt%c Totton a' Waf0n’ ton- IM.Ofl car lot, ton .... $34.00 cotton at 2:30: Jan. 10 ee 1113’ JuJy -’Ct 10 43, Dec. 10.3®. to k*t”* 4 Happy Birthday!! More than three years of pilot ing the ship of state through troubled political waters have not noticeably dimmed the Koosevelt smile, as shown in the above comparison. The top picture was taken shortly before his 61st birthday in 1933, the lower photo shortly before his 54th birthday, Jan. 30, 1936. Recreational Gasses Begun In Gty Today Beginning of actual work on the county’s part in the statewide rec reation project was begun today, ac cording tb Mrs. Pansy Fetzer, sup ervisor in charge. Two instructors in a class to be started Thursday at the South Shelby school building were named as Mildred Laughridge and Margar et Smith. Thtfse are the first of ten who will be selected from time to time throughout the county, and who will hold regular classes and give in structions in recreational and leisure work for the next several months. Instructors are taken from lists certified under the late ERA, but the classes will be for everyone who wishes to attend. Music, drama, indoor and out door games, clay modeling, arts, crafts, and a score of other educa tional and recreational features will be planned. “Bring your fathers and mothers and sweethearts and friends,” said Mrs. Fetzer. “We w4nt to make this project one of the best in the state and want to meet the need here so well that the county will adopt It permanently in some form.” The work will be carried on in both white and colored races, and will not necessarily be centered in Shelby. Children Killed COLGATE, Okla., Jan. (/P)—A school bos driver and three children were killed near Tulepo early today when the bus overturned on an icy highway. Plans Are Made To Hasten Work For Vet Money Application Blanks Already Here Local Officials Seek To Execate Papers Free Of Any Charge. Arrangements are being made by which all veterans of Cleveland county, bo^h white and colored, may get and have executed necessary papers to secure their Adjusted Compensation bonds, provided for by Congress without any cost, It was stated today by Everett Hous er, commander of the Warren F. Hoyle post of the American Legion. About 50 application blanks were received today and others are ex pected within the next few days. Veterans who wish to make out ap plications can secure blanks by see ing Mr. Houser, who, as command er of the local post, is authorised to witness signature to applications. It will be necessary for veterans who have borrowed on their certifi cates to bring with them their pink slips issued at the time they borrow ed money. Those Who did not bor row will have to bring their adjust ed service certificate. Mr. Houser also ask that every veteran have ready his Army. Navy or Marine serial number, date of enlistment date of discharge and rank and or ganization at date of discharge. Without all this information it will be Impossible to fill our prop erly one of the applications. Those who have lost this information will have first of all to make applica tion for duplicate information. Legion officials, locally as well ai nationally, are joining in urging veterans to cash their bond* Ml] for necessary expenditures. The] point out that one ef the chief ar guments of those opposing payment was that veterans would squandei their'money on foolish things. This • belief is not held by officials of vat jerans organizations who know the 'average age of veterans and theiJ I disposition as to money matters. ! It is expected that Issuance ol the bonds will stimulate business ta | necessities, such as clothing, furni ture, etc. It is not believed that, ex cept for an extremely small per centage, there will be any local squandering of the delayed payment to World War veterans. Rural Teachers Meet Saturday For Conference Nearly 300 teachers in the sural school system of Cleveland county will hold the first county wide tea chers meeting and conference here Saturday. The meeting will begin at 10 I o’clock and will be in charge of Supt. J. H. Grtgg. There will be a general session and small group con ference as well. The meeting will be ons of five expected to be held during the year all mainly of an administrative na ture. Problems and business and angles of professional study will al so be considered. Mr. Grigg said today that ha is expecting Miss Juanita McDougal, of the State Department at Raleigh to be present. It is possible, too, that Miss Frances Mauney, a native of Cleveland county and now a spe cialist in Home Economics in Ra leigh, will also be present. The main theme of discussion Saturday will be on the new cours es of study, with particular refer ence to elementary work. Scout Leaders Of Piedmont Meet To Decide New Policy Formulation of nefr policies for the 13 counties in the Piedmont council was carried out by some 50 men, who are leaders in their re spective districts, in a meeting and Luncheon held in the city last night. Judge Bismark Capps, of Gastonia, president was in charge, and re ports from all the vice-presidents were heard. M. A. Spangfer, presi dent of the Shelby district made the report for Cleveland county. Among local men named on im portant posts were J. A. Propst, to lead rural scouting. He succeeds R. W. Shoffner. H. N. McDiarmid was named a member at large of the ex-. ecuttve committee. As a council commissioner, Captain B. L. Smith is also a member of the committee. Adoption of the policy of using A board of review far actual test work among scouts was something new in this district. From now cm the Court of honor meeting will be far recagr nition. Plans were made far observation of National Scout Week, February 7 to 14 to be followed by the annual financial canvass. Announcement was made of the organisation at a Scoutmasters club headed* by Sam Smith of the Shelby mill troop. David White is vice president. Plan Induction Of Royal Blood In Livestock Ranks Fair Association, 4H And Extension Leaders To Purchase Guilts Bred To National Champion Sires introduction of a type n which is expected in the next the etate on the national map show stock was announced ear J. 8. Wilkins and John L. Rettzel, county agent with C. C. Falls of Belwood, R. W. Wilson of Fallston. and 8. 8. Mauney, county farm chairman left this morning for Prai rie City and Canton. Illinois where they are expecting to purchase as many as half dozen year old guilts or young sows, bred to one of three boars whic hhave won National Grand Champion titles since 1083. Mr. Wilkins said the 3,000 mile >yalty into Cleveland county two years to put this part of with hijgrh bred Poland China ly today. trek In Ice end snow is to attend the sales of two of the foremost livestock farms in the midwest and make inspection of several others. Tor Fairs. Purchase of two guilts will be made for the Cleveland County Fair Association and the others will be for the 4H Clubs of the county whose members will exhibit them at (Continued on page ten.) Highway 18 I* Left Out In Cherokee Road Program Keen disappointment, was voiced here today when it was lebmed that. the $361,000 PWA application for a paved road program in Cherokee county does not include surfacing the remaining link in highway No. 18 from the state Una to Gaffney. It was learned that the loans and grants will allow for surfacing eight miles of highway on the Gaffney Boiling Springs road, which project was not expected. Telegrams received In Gaffney Tuesday indicated that $140,000 of the sum will be in the form of a loan and that $117,000 will be a thought the whole project might go through. Following is the program adopted and the 56 miles due to be surfaced In the neighbor oounty: From Gaff ney to Irene bridge over Broad river by way of WUklnsvUle. 15 miles; from Gaffney to Pacolet, 10 miles; from Gaffney te Bolling Springe, N. C., by way of Grassy Pond, S miles; from highway No. 39 to Cherokee Falls; from Blacksburg to the York county line by way of Hopewell 5 1-3 miles; from Pondfield to Me Knowns Mountain, 4 miles; from the Spartanburg oounty line to Cow ipens battleground monument, l milfs; and from Gaffney to th« Cherek* county hdkie eg Midway, I mdec. Violet Thomas, Educator and Pageant Producer Is Dead ELECTRIFICATION PLANS DISCUSSED Mot* than M persons who are vitally Interested hi the construc tion of rural! electric light lines were in a meeting here yesterday afternoon to hear D. J. Jones of the Rural Electrification Sendee at Ha 1 eight explain some of the details of what most he dime to actually have lines built and power connected. The body was composed of spokes men and other Interested represen tatives from 10 or more communi ties or groups where electrical sur veys and estimates were made sev eral weeks aga Surveys and requests representing 30.0 miles in ths the 10 different groups in all parts of Cleveland were presented. Mr. Jones said the federal gov ernment was willing to loan money to build the lines at three percent Interest, provided there was as much as 30 miles of line in a com pact group. At present the Cleveland projects are too scattered to get that much together. The longest single one is about eight miles and the shortest about a mile. The leaders of the groups will take the matter up more definitely with County Agent Wil kins, possibly building some with private capital. Some TOO to 800 per sons would be benefltted. Bale Per Acre Or Nearly So b Lint Record Hearty a bale per acre of pot to* tar an entire county is an' actuality in Cleveland when an nouncement was made today that to date 46.3M bales have bden ginned in the county, with Compared with Met,year’s fif th of 43,389, thd County made more than DA 1034, and at it is believed to be the leader in the state, other coun ty reports will be made soon, according to oountv statistician T. C. Beam of Waco. Approximately all the figures for the past year are saig to be in. One more cotton report is due in February. Violet Thomas, negro eduoatoc and producer of the “Heaven Bound’1 pageant which gave over 3,000 per formance* in eight or ten states, died in a Charlotte h capital y ester day and funeral service* will be held in Shelby at the colored Methodist churoh Thursday afternoon a* 1:30 o'clock. “Swing Low Sweet Chariot" Violet was held in high esteem by both white and colored. She came to Cleveland county as super visor of colored schools under the Jeanes Fund and worked for sev eral years among the rural colored schools. After this work was discon tinued, the department suggested that supervisors develop some proj ect, so VtOIet produced the well known “Heaven Bound," which met with marked success. Her part in the pageant was to climax the story of pilgrims along life’s Journey to the gates to Saint Peter and dressed as a negro mam my of the old south she sang “Swing Low Swbet Chariot” In a way that thrilled the hearts of thousands. Double Tragedy In Cast Singularly. R. M. Potter, another colored educator who toe* the part of “Hie Tempter” in the original cast, was killed tn an automobile accident between 8helby and MooresviUe on October 19 last year when he was en route to a football game at Davidson college. Violet was 39 years old and was bom in Athens, Qa. She was grad uated from Atlanta University in 1914 and took up work in Cleveland county eleven years ago. At the time of her death she was teaching at Patterson Springs school. Suffering with a thyroid gland trouble for the past six months, she Had an operation for removal of ton ells last fall. Another operation on thyroid glands was necessary and this was done in the Good Samari tan Hospital, Charlotte. Her remains will be taken after the funeral here Thursday to Ath ens, Ga for interment. POSTAL OFFICIALS RE-EMPHASIZE HOURS Postal officials today re-ampha stoed the opening and closing hours of certain windows under the new arrangement begun last week. Windows for money order, regis try, postal savings, and C. O. D. will hours will be from 9 until 1 o’clock. Saturday hours will be from 9 until 1 o’clock. Cleveland Gains White And Loses Negroes On Farm Neighbor Counties Compared Cento Report For Put Five Yearn Indicates White Owner ship. Cleveland wan numbered today among the 57 counties of the state which showed a gain in percentage of farms tilled by whites and a loss in farms tilled by negroes in the past five years. Some striking figures about the counties as a whole have been tak en from the recently completed farm census and white farmers have In creased 14.2 percent and that color ed farmers have deceased 0.8 per cent. Rutherford Report Rutherford Is the only neighbor ing county which shows a gain In colored farmers, as Cleveland, Oas ton, Lincolnton and Burke register an exodus of negroes. Of the 6,368 farms In the county this year, 4,038 are operated by whites, a gain of 6.3 per cent over 1080. There an now 1^40 negro farms, a decrease of 10.7 persent since 1030. Ruhterford had an Inc rease of 14.7 In white farms and of 80 persent of negro operated farm. The fifty-seven counties that show a loss in the number of negro farm ers are almost without exception the cash-crop counties, that is, the cot ten pod tobacco couQtipe of the state. The largest losses were in the eastern bright-leaf tobacco belt, not ably Nash, Wilson. Edgecombe, Greens, Pitt, Lenoir. Halifax, North AOnaoco county af any Importance loet negro farmers. The next larg toe cotton counties 6f the southern piedmont area, all toe way from Robeson to Ruther ford, a solid group of nineteen coun ties Looses wars also suffered by toe northern piedmont tobacco coun ties. In other words, practically every cotton or tobatoo county lost negro farmers, the largest numerical and percent losses being In the combination tobacoo-eotton counties, with emphasis on tobacco. For sev eral yean prior to 1938, these same counties led the entire south in In crease of negro farmers. Fisher Unfair Says DePriest In Complaint "I wish to say that Lieutenant Fisher gave me an unfair deal." (Signed) A. B. C. DePriest. Above is a statement presented this morning in the form of a com plaint against Lieutenant Fisher of the State Highway Patrol who war In the city several days ago ant* made a statement that most of the complaints for alleged "irregulari ties” in regard to false returns for arrests to the county had been com ing from the office of Justice De Priest. Lieutenant Fisher gave patrolmen In his district orders to have their *»aee tried in the offices of othr magistrates. Mr. DePriest said the above state ment was all the comment he wish ed to make, that he harbored no ill will against any of the other Jus tices In the city or county, but felt he was discriminated against by the i Patrol lieutenant. He did not Indi cate however that he would carry the matter further than a public statement. Scores On A1 i JOSEPH T. ROBINSON Say* AT Smith It “Turncoat” And A Traitor WASHINGTON, Jan. >0.—(A*)— The new deal officially portrayed Alfred E. Smith last night aa a turncoat “warring against his own people and against the men and women wifh whom he fought should er to shoulder In the past.” The spokesman, in reply to the Satfirday speech impugning the Americanism and integrity of Roose velt policies, waa Smith's running mate in the 102* campaign for the pUMUency—Senator Joseph T. Rob inson, Of Arkansas.' " He said “the hour long nagangur before the miscalled Liberty League was barren and sterile, without a Engle constructive suggestion." “Governor Smith," he concluded “I’ve read you the record. Said He Approved Pel idea “You approved of NRA. you ap proved farm relief, you urged federal spending for public works,you urged congress to cut red tape, you urged autocratic power for the president, and you exposed with merciless logic the false cry of communism and socialism. "The new deal was the'platform of the ‘Happy Warrior.’ “The policies of the Liberty lea gue have become the platform of the ‘unhappy warrior'.” Whether the rejoinder would Im pel further moves by Smith became an immediate topic of speculation. Since his speech, capitol leaders were still uncertain whether or how he would seek to “stop Roosevelt.” He Indicted In New York he might an swer Robinson. Dolph L Hoyle, Age 69 Dies bi No. 5 Township Adolphus L. Hoyle, prominent fanner of No. 5 township, died Tues day afternoon at S o'clock at his home between St. Paul and Pros pect churches, following a protract ed illness. Mr. Hoyle was a iaithful member of Pleasant Grove Baptist church and there his funeral will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock by Rev. D. G. Washburn, pastor. Mr. Hoyle was married lo Mar garet Anthony who survives. There are no children and no brothers or sisters. Bottled In Bond Captured; Jury Day Sees Convictions Bottled In bond, government dis tilled. high-priced concoctions of liquor seemed to be the catch of several county deputies this week. Deputies Jolley and Hamrick of No. 1 copped nearly a case from an Ellenboro car early this week after the car had collided with another at a croes-road in their township Three men who said they were from Elenboro were nabbed with nearl* a case of varied brands of the booze They were released on bond and will appear here for trial Saturday Bob Kendrick also found part of a case of bottled in bond spirits in No. 7 township yesterday, but thus far has made no arrests, but ex pects to soon. Jury day was held by Recorder s Court yesterday, with a number of convictions. Charlie Fortenbury on a larceny charge was ordered to pay the costs and continue 12 months in good be havior. In a previous session of Recorder'? court L. O. Lowery, of Valdese, was charged with violation of the pro hibltion statutes and was fined $100 with an appraisal fee of $50 goinr to Officer W. K. Harden who help (Continued on page ten.) Believe Measure* Constitutional; Vote Was 15-2 To Make Grants For Farm Lands Few Changes Made In Pre vious Drafting; Speedy Vote Seen. (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON. Jan. 29.— The Senate agriculture com mittee today approved the re vised administration soil con servation farm bill by a 14 to 2 vote. Senators, leaving the cloned meet ing, reported the vote and satd very few raw changes were made In the measure which was Introduced by Senator Bankhead, Democrat, Ala bama. after a White House confer ence. Although Secretary Wallace and Solicitor General Bead had ex pressed the belief the bill la consti tutional, several committee men still considered it outside the bounds of the supreme oourt decision in validating AAA. Bread Powers The bill vests broad powers in the secretary of agriculture to make grants to farmers for economic use of their lands. The Mil la a tem porary two year measure, designed to serve as a stop-gap until the fed eral program may be enacted, based on federal grants to Mates. Today's action WW attributed by some senators to demands from the farm belt for a speed vote. The search for an AAA replace ment formula^was punctuated with a caustic assertion bar Secretary Wallace that the high tribunal's de cision refunding $300,000,000 to pro (Continued on page ten) “ThriirKilier" Slain By Mate With Own Razor JOLIET. Ill, Jan. ed S3 times with * raaoSclnthe hands of an enraged fellow oonvict, Richard Loeb, 30. co-perpetrator of the “thrill slaying” ef Bobby Wanks in 1924, was killed y—tertay in Statevllle penitentiary. James Day, 38, serving a term for larceny, confessed the killing of Loeb, State's Attorney WiU McCabe of Will county said, and blamed it to Loeb's persistence in pursuing him over a long period with improp er advances. Sullen at first, Day refined to discuss the case except to tell War den Joseph Ragen it waa 'Just a fight.” Day Gives Full Statement Bift later, to Edward O. Powers. Investigator for the state’s attorney’s office, he gave a full statement of the furious fight he said ne and Loeb engaged in, and the incidents, which he said, led to it. He denied he had stolen the rasor with whic hhe "cut to pieces" the partner of Nathan Leopold in Chi jcago’s most revolting crime of [nearly a dozen years ago. I The razor, he claimed, he wrested | from Loeb’s hand when Loeb threat ened him with it.» Hounded By Loeb “Ever since I have been a prison er here,” said Day’s statement to Powers, "Loeb has been hounding me, trying to get me to submit to him. I always refused. “I had words with him Triday. This morning I was passing Loeb's and Leopold's cell. I stopped and spoke to Loeb. I wanted to settle with him. | "Loeb told me that he was going to his private bathroom after din ner this noon and would see me there. Loeb and Leopold eat in their j cell. "I went to the room and waited five minutes. Loeb came tn and [undressed and then told me to un dress. He had a razor. As I was go ing into the shower I hit him rath er roughly and knocked him down. I fell on top of him and the razor fell out of his hand. "While we were wrestling. Loeb got the razor and took a couple of swipes at me. I managed to get the razor away from him and cut him several times. He hit me on the left cheek. Then I cut him some more. 'Then I finished him."