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THE TIMES-NEWS i \ • ! i Hendersonville News Established in 1894 Hendersonville Times Established in 1881 Published every afternoon except Sunday at 22' North Main street, Hendersonville, N. C., by Thi Times-News Co., Inc., Owner and Publisher. J. T. FAIN Editoi C. M. OGLE Managing Editoi HENRY ATKIN City Editoj TELEPHONE 87 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Times-News Carrier, in Hendersonville, or else where, per week 12c Due to high postage rates, the subscription price of The Times-News in zones above No. 2 will be based on the cost of postage. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Hendersonville, N. C. MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1938 BIBLE THOUGHT 4. "NO ROOM FOR THEM in the inn" (Matt. 2:7) * . * \ f ; There is little room for Christ in too many of our SCHOOLS today. In several states the reading v>f the Bible is strictly forbidden in public schools. In the colleges the matter is even worse. Many boys and girls from good Christian homes are hav ing their. faith taken away by agnostic teachers. Even in sorue of the great theological seminaries ..there is more of ethics than of religion.—Albert Linn Lawson. (To be continued) A * ' ALFRED M. LANDON, A DEMOCRATIC SYMBOL (By BRUCE C ATT ON) The composition of the United States Relegation at the Lima conference bears eloquent testimony to the difference be tween democracy and dictatorship — and the lesson cannot be missed by delegates from the other New World nations. For if the head of the American delega tion is Cordell Hull, the Number Two man ;is Alfred M. Landon of Kansas. Mr. Lan don's presence on the delegation, and the •active p#rt he has taken in furthering the United'States program, are immensely sig nificant/ If one of the dictatorships were sending a full-dress delegation to an important in ternational conference, it is a certainty that the leader of the opposition (if any) would not have a place in it. Even the most active imagination can not, for instance, picture Soviet Russia sending out a delegation which included • Leon Trotsky, or Germany selecting a mis sion graced by the presence of—let. us say —Herr Schuschnigg of Austria. Trotsky is «*n exile and Schuschnigg is a prisoner, and both are rather lucky to be alive at all. So that the fundamental difference be tween a dictatorship and a democracy is .effectively underlined by Landon's pres ence at Lima. And it means a great deal more than a mere difference between the personal magnanimity of an American .President and a European dictator. It means that inefficient and wasteful de mocracy is somehow smart enough to use the brains and energy of people who hap pen to disagree with the party in power, while dictatorship is not. A dictatorship can use only those people who are 100 per cent in agreement with the boss. They may be gifted people—brilliatit, devoted, deeply patriotic, immensely industrious— vbut if they don't see things precisely as the head man sees them, or if they have ever % opposed him on any important policy, then ..they are completely useless. And when you stop to think about it, this epitomizes the gravest of all the many .objections to the totalitarian state. The progress that' human society has made to date has been a progress of co-op eration. Men have differed violently, down through the generations, but somehow .they have managed to pool their efforts •and harmonize their varying contributions *$o as to climb slowly but surely up the lad der o: civilizadjn. It is the only possible way in which that difficult ascent ever can be made. The idea of dictatorship is a denial of that fundamental element in progress. It would cut mankind off from the principal source of its strength. In order to mass force effectively for a momentary objec: -live, it sacrifices the only channel through which the race's vast fund of intelligence, brawn and good will can be utilized effi ciently. The presence at Lima of Mr. Landor * symbolizes one of the great reasons whj the free, democratic way of life is the hope .of the world. '• W V Four fellows arrested in Cleveland with '400 pair of loaded dice may be expectec ]to shoot their way out of jati. •' We could almost feel the charm ray* clear over here when those two personality fyoys Eden and Roosevelt got together. The pink glow on the new Jeffersoi nickel may be caused by the blushing o: the patriot in whose name so much ha: -been recently done. NEWSPAPERS' OPINIONS COURT CONTROL The recent effort of the Washington administra f tion to prain. control of the United States supreme 5 court has suggested to some thinking men there the desirability .*>f making the. judicial departments ; the government still further independent of the _ j executive. Under the present law, the supreme court is to a certain extent dependent upon the executive for ; the funds necessary to carry on. All federal courts must submit their budgets to the Department of Justice, where they are passed upon by the attorney general, a cabinet officer ap pointed by thev President. This may not give fhe executive any actual con , trol over the court, but at least it is a club. The ! court can appeal to congress for more funds only with the President's consent. The proposition now comes out of Washington— and it may get before congress in the coming ses sion—to make the federal courts financially inde pendent of the executive branch, and accountable | only to congress, by authorizing the chief justice to present the annual budget of all federal courts directly to congress. The theory under which the three arms of the i American government is set up is that the legisla tive, executive and judicial departments are dis tinct, independent and equal in authority in their separate provinces. The recent bitter battle in Washington, io keep the supreme court out from under the thumb of the chief executive, suggests that it may some time become essential to still further protect that court ; from any possible financial restriction from that source.—Rock Hill (S. C.) Herald. . j A CHANGE IN SENTIMENT j Farmers of North Carolina last Saturday dis played a change of sentiment with respect to crop 1 control. So far as the voters of this, state were concerned, they failed to cast a two-thirds vote in favor of con trol of either cotton or tobacco. And yet, ten: months ago, both of these proposals carried by an o erwhelming majority. We don't know what effect the abandonment of tobacco control is going to have upon prices. Nev-J tretheless, we are glad that Saturday's vote turned out as it did. You've heard the old saying about selling one's birthright for a mess of pottage. You've also heard that it does not profit a man if he gains the entire world and, in the process of doing so, loses his own soul. We feel that it is exactly the same with respect to this business of crop control. An American citi zen's individual rights should come first, last and all the time. Regardless of what he may gain finan cially, he is bound to be the loser every time he surrenders one of these rights. We are glad to see that the farmers are begin ning to realize this fact, and we attribute to this (realization the change in sentiment that was mani I fested in last Saturday's voting.—State Magazine. PULLING THE WOOL OVER OUR OWN EYES | One reason it is increasingly difficult everywhere ' to keep taxes down is tfecause taxes are hidden. The people who pay them have the wool pulled over their eyes. i They pay, and don't suspect it. But they do pay! If alt taxes had to be paid directly, and there was no such thing as indirect tax, the government I of this country would not,be costing anything like the billions now being spent for public services. And for the reason that the enormity of the tax bill would produce a general objection to waste and to the extension of political power into so many fields where the individual formerly functioed on an individual basis and under his own power. But so long as the case is as it is now, and the taxes which most of us pay for provernmental up keep are hidden from us, we simply keep on fool ishly taing it for granted that a few who pay the , income taxes, the inheritance taxes, the business taxes, are footing the whole political bill. What a fallacy and delusion! Actually whether he earns $1,000 or $100,000 a' year, he pays the same taxes on a package of ciga-1 rettes 6r a gallon of gas, to take only two common-' place examples. We are all consumers and in the final analysis, i all consumers pay taxes. According to the National Consumers' Tax Com mission, 63 per cent of the 14 billion dollars paid in taxes last year were indirect taxes—hidden taxes —hidden from the consumers who paid them.— I Charlotte Observer. BETTER SHOULDERS A North Carolinian writing to The Winston-Sa lem Journal praises South Carolina's plan of mak tu- highway? safer by building three-foot surface treated shoulders-on each side. Describing a trip in a hard rain here, he said: ''In South Carolina some fool driver could have pushed mo off the pavement and I stili would have , been safe, but in North Carolina my wife would ! have been a widow, as in most cases there was a i six-inch drop into red mud." The surface-treated shoulders, comparatively in expensive, have proved a good investment in con venience as well as in the matter of prime impor tance, safety, and we hope the highway department , will continue to build them until every state road j shall be so equipped.—Greenville Piedmont. Tory. Any man who has made a lot of money and lesents any effort to take it away from him. ■ • ' ) ■ -» ' Why do teacher: fail? Well, you never can train a dog till you express your ideas in terms that a dog s mind can understand. Five thousand years of civilization, and we 'still despise the man who seems to possess none of the tough qualities of a wild beast. 'I — Yes, you mu.*t love your neighbor. .But the only ' neighbor of the three tested was the decent Sama itan who was' easy to love. 11 — It may sound cranky, but at times we can't help wishing the little girlie, would bring back that ye!- j low "basket. , ' ' Free people must have freedom of speech. But one who tries to overthrow the government by1 * force is a criminal, and words are as criminal is any other weapon if equally effective. J White House Mail, . > ^ * <r " ^ r# X v ~hat nekt we CA,M-r H°LOs eur eH^L w^AT TH6 HetS ^1 I LIFE DAY BY DAY . Bv WICKES WAMROLDT ARBITRATION One morning- a wholesale gro cer, Deacon So-and-Sq, telephon ed me that a carload uf cornmeal I had sold him had arrived but there was ten Wamboldt i.V dollars d e m u r iage on it which he would not pay. Demurrage, as you know, is th* charge rail loads make when freight cars are detained beyond a reas o n a b 1 e time for loading or unloading. If there were no demurrage char ges there would be congestion in every raiSroad yard and a short age ui LOJ|/iiva uu tvciy iiuc. The deacon declared that he had been needing: that meal for two weeks; that he had been won dering where it was; and that of course he never, never would have let it lie in the yards and draw demurrage; and a lot more claptrap familiar to cthe person who sells in car lots and is used to hearing arguments for getting out of paying demurrage. I called the freight agent of the road that had brought in the dea con's car. The agent turned to his records and informed me that not only had the deacon been ad vised the very day the car had ar rived but that he had signed for it. The railroads had had so much trouble with consignees as serting when demurrage was charged that they had not known the shipment was in, that the roads had adopted the rule of re I quiring each consignee to sign an | acknowledgment of the notice of ' arrival of each shipment. At my i request the agent took his notifi cation book to the deacon and let him see his signature. But the deacon insisted there was some monkey business some where, and declared that before he would pay that ten dollars de murrage he would refuse to ac cept the carload of meal. Then 1 suggested that we sub-1 mit the question to arbitration. The deacon agreed. He chose a man; I chose a man. Those two | chose a third man. This commit tee after hearing the evidence agreed unanimously that the dea con should pay the demurrage. But the deacon after hearing the verdict vowed that he would not pay the demurrage, no matter what the arbitration committee said. In other words, the deacon didn't care about the right or the wrong of the matter; what he wanted was to get out of paying the ten dollars. I was reminded of the forego ing episode when I learned that recently France and Germany had signed an agreement to respect each other's rights; to settle dif ferences by consultation; and never, never to go to war. Unless all parties to such an agreement are honorable, the agreement is not worth a hoot. That makes me think of a land lord who refused to sign a lease with a certain tenant. "It would bind me, but it wouldn't bind I him," said the landlord. "I would not put him out during the life of the lease, but he would move out on me whenever he felt like | • JOHN T. FLYNN BY JOHN T. FLYNN ft'EA Service Stalt CorreHi»ondent THE years 1925 to 1929 are gen erally regarded as years of amazing and rising prosperity. The years 1933 to 1938 are usually looked upon as years of great de ^IrTspite of this the following singular fact is worth recording. From 1925 to 1929 inclusive bank deposits in the United States in creased from 20 billion to 55 bil lion That was an increase of 35 billion dollars. From 1933 to 193£ bank deposits increased from 37 billion to 53 bil lion. That was an increase of 16 billion. Both represent enormous increases. The question is, how did bank deposits rise so mightP- in these depression years? And ...iy were we prosperous under one great deposit rise and continuously in depression under another? The answer is that as bank de posits rose in the banks of Amer ica in 1925 to 1929 the accumula tions of depositors were promptly poured into business -through new investments. But from 1933 to 1938, as deposits rose, very little of these new deposits made their way into new investments. In the first group of years the deposits of banks rose under the influence of private borrowing at the banks. Private borrowing at the banks has slpwly diminished. But government borrowing in creased And deposits in the sec ond group of years increased un der the influence of government borrowing. The bald truth revealed by these facts is that the failure of in vestment is not due to the failure of funds. Funds have steadily risen. The first theory behind government borrowing was that as government credit was used to | crcate deposits at the banks, these deposits would begin to flow out ' into business. The first proponents of this theory believed that a few hundred million dollars would do the job. That was called priming the pump. Since then not a few hundred millions, but a staggering number of billions have been poured into the banks through government loans. But they have failed to flow out. Why? The pipe line along which sav ings flow from the savings reser voir of the country into new in dustry i.« called investment. What has happened to that pipe line? Why do savings refuse to flow through it into industry? What force along the way is causing the trouble? I have one suggestion. The old pipe line, the financial system once used, was a bad one. It needed repairing. Too much of the savings sent through it never reached new industry, but leaked off into the hands of promoters and other parasites along the way. It was necessary to rebuild that pipe line. But it was of the most imperious importance that it should be rebuilt quickly. Instead the rebuilding of it has been going on since 1933. It has been cluttered up with the work men, the machinery used for re building it. The job has been dragged out. . A wise administrator would have seen the need for tackling this job first thing in 1933 and getting it done within a year or two and then throwing the pipe line open for public traffic. That pipe line is a public highway. You cannot expect traffic to flow along a pub lic highway which is perpetually under repair. That is one of the reasons for the lack of traffic along that line. fConyrJj?ht_ 108B. NRA Sarvica. Inc.) YOUR LATEST COLD CURE Among the difficult things is to make your friends realize how good that new cold cure is. Wait a Minute By NOAH HOLLOWELL HIS FIRST CASE: Coroner J. | F. Brooks acted yesterday in his) first case since his inanguratfon. \ He investigated the death of Gay | Banks. Mr. Brooks had formerly j held this office and was familiar i with the technique of the inves tigation. DAVID MASHBURN: It is whispered around by grapevine telegraph that David Mashburn has resigned church work at Mt. Airy to become associated with Dr. Herschel Ford again. Mr. Mashburn was a resident of Andrews, where he was a mem ber of Mr. Ford's church. They were separated a few years. He later became director of the young people's activities while Mr. Ford was pastor of the First church of Hendersonville. Mr.. Ford went to Knoxville and Mr. i Mashburn to Mt. Aairy. It is un-1 derstood, though not officially,! that Mr. Mashburn is to be asso-1 ciated with Dr. Ford at Broadway, in Knoxville. THUMBS DOWN: Western ; Carolina farmers turned thumbs down on tobacco marketing quo tas in the referendum Saturday. Ten mountain counties were for marketing control and 10 against but the total vote was more than two to one against. Madison had the largest number of voters but about two to one against govern mental control. Avery county was totally against quotas. vThey virtually say to- your Uncle Sam: •'Hands off; let us grow all we want and we'll take pot luck on ihe markets." Henderson farra rs were indifferent. Ninety-one ; were eligible to vote. Only 49 : voted, 17 being for control and j 32 against. THE END SEATS: Nothing gets a church usher's goat quick er than the person who prefers to j hug the bench's end seat and let others trample over the feet. Not j the best church etiquette! JEFF DAVIS TELLS OF ITINERACY CODE LOS ANGELES, Dec. 19. (UP) ! To give Chief of Police James E. i Davis adequate technical informa tion to enable him to perform his duties properly, Jeff Davis, self- 1 styled emperor of the hoboes of the world, has written him speci fying that a hobo will work, that a tramp won't and that a bum can't. He explained that the hoboes are warring to keep the bums and tramps out of California and wanted to be sure that the chief knew the propdr distinction. TO REOPEN CHURCHES MEXICO CITY, Dec. 19. (UP). \ Catholic worship, barred in Ta-1 basco and Ciapas for several years, will soon be resumed to those two i southeastern Mexican states, it j was indicated last night. Migratory birds of North Amer-' ica follow four main airways. NO FLOWERS FROM "" P" GERMANY BUT THEY MAY BE SENT THERE BSRLIN, Dec. 19. (UP).— Americans attempting to tela graph orders for flowers to the United States for Christmas were told yesterday that such gifts were impossible, because Germany would lose in foreign exchange. However, it was explained that flowers might be telegraphed from the United States to Germany be cause Germany would gain for eign exchange benefits. INDIANA G.O.P. TO HIRE INVESTIGATORS ON VANNUY'S VOTE INDIANAPOLIS,. Ind., Dec. 19. (UP).—Indiana Republicans an nounce they will hire spe | cial investigators "from the East" to gather evidence for a possible U. S. senate contest of the victory of Sen. Frederick Van Nuys, D., Ind., over Raymond E. Willi?, Re publican nominee, in the Novem i ber election. Arch N. Bobbitt, Republican state chairman, announced the de cision after state party leaders conferred lengthily with Col. Ed win P. Thayer, Greenfield, Ind., former secretary of the U. S. sen-' ate and authority on senatorial contest:-. Thayer served as re-, I count commissioner in the contest which unseated Senator Smith W.! Brookhart, Iowa Independent Re-; ! publican. Van Nuys defeated Willis by | less than 5,000 votes after a bit ter contest. The state supreme court Tuesday blocked Repub licans from obtaining a recount of i votes in seven Indiana counties. MUSICA'S SISTER FOB YEARS RESIDED A MORGEHTHAU ESTa\ new YORK, Ik*. 19 J One of Ph . , ^ [1 Mrs. RoIk i • <: 1 Saturday to be the wif< dener employed : \ at the Fishkill, X. \ \ Henry Moi gei .. i , I of the treasury. *1 A housekeeper at the M.J thau honn ' \.jl that Mis. '■ '1 employed th< 1 with hev h T years. ^ 1 Shi- said Mi 1 ,.[ house but " ■ -1 interviewed. 1 BRUSSELS IS SCENE 1 OF NEAR INCIDtj LONDON. Ikv. l-.i. ill.,, News Chronic.>• Brussels ternationul inc-'U-: t' hud ' narrowly avi i u iii cor.r. with a vaiie' ■ t:.-- J s.els Foreign P I The dispat •. • ...M correspondent ■ withdra:: i. tiuxj a Germ an-J e^ m German. The Germsm au;bas>ador ( said to have a'^ • • 'I tin The e«"»mmiu< • chare*-. ^ News Chionicl« ■ • :1 the sititt'-r ■ » 1 '.air. ;I using Get man. 1 ' 1 he >isl Rumanian, l* i• • • .<t liu. hali»j| . EgK vendors |. £n,rL in* their wares „„ lhe' paint the price on t0p 0fl hats so thai Imu- . ,u. it from their window THIS CURIOUS WORLD ONE i MANSSOVE TRee, *T>iraOLk3H ITSSrSTEV OF AERIAL ROOTS,' CAN SROW iNTO AN f e/stt/ke: rOf^EST/ , MUSTARD C3AS WAS DISCOVERED BEFORE THE V/*ORjL.O WAR.. 4 IS DECEMBER TWEWr. 'SECOND ALWAYS THE q ■ SHORTEST DAY; ANSWER: Dc-c. 22 is the shortest day of the voai cxaotcri fepp years, when Dec. 21 is shorter. j LEGENDARY MARKSMAN HORIZONTAL 1 Expert archer pictured here 10 Vegetables. 11 Hawaiian bird. 12 To obtain. 13 Oriental guitar. 16 Wand. 17 Revokes. 19 And. 20 Makes lace. 21 Tree. 22 To sink. 23 Insect. 25 Artist's frame JO Indians. J2 Ire. 14 To peel. >5 Capable of being cut. 17 Percolating. )9 Half an em. 10 Wrath. 11 Chum 12 South Africa. 13 Scythe h^idle. 15 Bruised spots. (Answer to Previous Puzzle) ■ ■ ■ . . . i ■ . . ' I ' - "1 K 1 N UI Ifl; A A < rv C-/tl_N O'PJ^T^sajDE KlhG E HAAKON LOuBMCiYM ^r— ZIP'SMSOZ OJLSSTOiSlL LlFS^T iE L '^ENTjBSP 51 i IuR'AL olO Wi _ NA 1 nr-e's 'fSresTsrtsTTE^D i Sh FAST hi sSbl£:CJI |OM A. l]SL E 47 Haze. 48 Wild ducks. 50 Anything steeped. 52 Over. 53 Lumbering tools. 55 To steal. 5" He was a by birth 58 This in a n resented his country's foreign ruler vertical/ 1 Grief .'2 Mass. of cast metal. 3 Falsified. 4 Building site 5 Within. G Valuable property. 7 To carry. 8 Learnings 9 Behold 14 Crazy. 15 Glass marbles 16 He to salute his ruler. 17 Tatter. 18 Pronoun. i i l - 20 Tryinj k \ flavor 22 Hry. 21 No good 2G He hod t" S^OO 2G -"I oil his SCOT nead (P^-l 27 Capuchin monkey 23 Ea^l'-5 29 Lavful 31 X. 32 Arch nicnl 33 One thai rcpoitf 30 God of*| '8 Lug. 43 Fern 44 rx;c. Long 4(1 To daw 4: Not fl® .J i) ii;.V*3 31 Hawaiian food. 52 Bone r,;i postscript . • lusled 36 Before ChriS