Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / Oct. 11, 1934, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO ISctmITED ON MURDER C0UN1 IN JERSEY C0UR1 Bruno Hniipimum* Is Identified B (Lionel Charles Lindbergh as Rt ceSwr of Ruiisom for His Dead Soi Extradition from New York Wi Be Sought Soop. German Alien 1 Also Facing Charge of Kidnaping E*t?mij5gtoxj', X. J. Bruno Richar M;v.: ; was indicted for : )ck nap-murder of baby Chariot A Line iy a II'iritcrdon County strait jury MonVJay. Swii'ty, with C-:ik-nci I.ltvibcrg antuajg trie witnesses, tbe State c ,"\r jenny law down the evident ( harming up to the stolid, tight-lippe Gorman alien the most seiisatioiu crime in modem annals The indiclineilt was voted but icv minutes after the last v -nes was hearvi: Jin aii. the grand jury set sion .listed cn!y four hours atui forty two minutes. Atiottiey Genera.: lor. id T VViler.i saiii xira.litfon of HaujitAvmr; t New Jersey will be determined -or shortly. Identified In Lindbergh C' l. H. Norman Schwarzkopf. he:., of the \>v Jersey St do Police, dis closed at Trenton that Colonel fund bergb bad "'positively identifieHauptmaan's voice as that which !> heard in the ransom negotiation.; il a LSror.x cemetery." The Slate Police sonerintenden made the statement in response t. questions ivgaixjing i.'.enUiieatio.n o Hauptinanr hut declined to divuigi whether CViorio) Lindberghs test! mony before the grand jury was oi this point. "The grand ir.quesi. for the Stab of New Jersey ;n a:i.! '" the bony ? the County ef Hunterdon, upon the! respective oaths prOsent,' that Brum Haup'.manu: on the first lay o KVsrrh iri !h.i v. tfyrosaRBpwjifr: !ii'm ;vo<5 arjri ri\ir<y-iv.*w-t.b force- and -.ir:ris: at I ho -..nvrhsriij of East Amwo'-i in th->~ C^uu'.y ol Hunterdim uXor$s&?(! Aivi willim t!; | hhjuriaSictioii of Ihw court;, i\-\ \yil^uii;j ^lonioiisly a.?id >f. o- maAiyc afore h;:tho'i:il.U. kill and murder Lindbergh Jr. ? ".tt.i'v to the few of the statutpo ;; sl.rh r.i1 jjfijjl'dt an provided! atni a.utiusi the yie-veo this State, the ..ovei r.oient ,: hi >'r dignity af the same. '{Signed) Anthony M Haaek -It prosecutor of the pleas/' Hardly had lite three a omen ui 20 men on the ..raa 1 jury convent their deliberation than across t! Hudson. Hauptroarm's attorney. Ja M. Faweett. was denied permission i Bronx County court to examine tl records of the indictment returned New York charging Hauptuiann wii extortion of $50,000 ransom. APPALACHIAN GINGER BKE.U Add 2 beaten eggs to 3-4 cup i brown sugar 3-4 cup molasses ar 3-4 cup melted shortening. To til add 2'.. cuivs of flour sifted with teaspoons soda. 2 teaspoons gitigc 1VS teaspoons cinnamon, and 1 - te spoon eacli of cloves, nutmeg at bnking powder. Next stir in 1 cup boiling water. Bake in a modera oven about 30 minutes. Serve wf whipped cream or hard sauce. -?HJL' VV liN IN _-V L/1UA1 L. 1 . Boone, N. C. Do You Ever Gamble? Nowhere except from a life insurance company can you get $10,000 for .$300. if you do not l.ve twelve months. FRANK M. PAYNE Gonerul Agent SECURITY LIKE AND TRUST COMPANY Winston-Salem, North Carolina These foil Bell Telep It is truthfully said of the Be Telephone System that it owned by the public it serve Of the more than 800.01 holders of Bell System secui ties. 381,000 arc women, 210,01 of whom are housewives:90,0< are clerks and sales peopl 30,000 are manual laborer: 115,000 are telephone worker There are other thousands i doctors, lawyers, farmers ai merchants. In fact, people evevv walk of life, many i whom are doubtless your neig i bors and friends. Most of these folks a small investors. Eighty per cc: own twenty-five or less shar of stock, while forty per ee Southern Bell Telep Big Two of Nev 1 ? ?? ? a* -vasiib ; WASHIKQTON . . . The appoii Roosevelt, to the board of five rvhic Recovery Board, is being acclnimo0 Sidney UiUm&o, President of ihe y (right) i Clay Williams, former ] Both rate high in intelligent and v.-iU take over General .Johnson'a j Re-Employ m Problem oftI Williams Nc _! Washington, D. C. The big worry .. : t it": Administration is still the mat?ter ot" unemployment How are Work r; going to be put fcaek to Work? j Four:fifrhs. of oi! the activities o! the , Government are now being focuasetf on that question. H lies at lhc hotftorn of the reorganization ot the * XRA. It v.-us the keyhole ni :he V'rosi1 l.Uent-s; radio talk to the nation tea othei" filghi. And nobody has conn . !' -r\K w'.rn :r: ai\-\vcv which ftatikfm foia everybi >dy. l'? ? }-. .'?r ;.he innv MBA organise.; tu>n \v-j;?-;. w. .i k .>yfc u fornuiio thai ? Kv'ih the *. i-;ek. Washington is nve ? ;' at .hi f?V:ld '>n ire th-'ory which is be .j nfjvr ceai in .severs* -'tjviarters. am if J Which .ii'-.'i!.- he gaining ground '.nit-' ;t: the beat of time* there arts al Iv-ay.i tinee than out of mail c!i any given date. The principal trou with lui the discussion of utictn ,,-5 of -v; iion!. is :li:u nobv'dy really know a hew' many abie-bridled, willing work L -trs art out of work, now, or at on; ;; time i.ti the past, There never ha ,n been- perhaps there never can hi ;0 an accurate separation of the uu in j employed into two or throe eias.se jiM.io- which they natiiroily faJ). Classifying Hie Workers There are the skilled, corapeten workers, wh>. g-ive a day's work fo a day's pay; the sensorial worker Hi who prefer to 'oaf in off-seasons, ani !3 the unemployable?, who often ma nag olio gel on payrolls in the flushast o ,r i flush times but work tiniy when no a! I cessity drives. .j There is coining to be a genera 0f agreement in Administration circle t_e that a high proportion?some put 1 th at ik) per cent ?of alt the presen unemployment is in the so-called 'dt rable goods" industries. The n-.aj,i industry in this category is buildin; and that does not tnear. homes atom but fttctorig-'M "Hnr.-v" g hnonitoie ?o;' I roads. ships and every sort of worl (which produces things which arc 111 j immediately eaten up or wont out bti ! are useful to ea:r. money for the! j o wners. ! Financing durable goods industrie j rcouires long-time capital invest jments. And it is precisely there tha the difficulty begins of inducing pri I vate capita! to invest. Banks can' i lend?ought not to lend money o: I deposits subject to call, on long-terr i mortgage loans or bond issues. Th j amended Securities Act makes i _ j somewhat easier to float bond issue cs own the hone System ?11 of the total own five shares or is less No one owns as much as :s. one-fifth of one per cent of the 50 outstanding stock of the Bell System. 30 It is this vast army of small DO investor* whose savings have e; financed the telephone business. '1 Their savings have aeen ats tractcd to the telephone indusof try because of their faith in the id integrity of the management, in and their confidence in the willaf ingness of the Dublic to pay a h- price for the service that will allow earnings sufficient to asre sure the best possible service at at all times and to insure the en continued financial stability of nt the business. hone and Telegraph Co. ? ro ? r?a * ? d > WATAUGA XXEM.OCRAT?EVER v NRA Chieftains ltment. of these two men by President jh m \ke up the New National Industry d with treat favor. They nre: (left). Amalgamated Clothing Workers, and president of the Reynolds Tobacco Co. progressive business ranks. The board administrative duties, October 15. ent of Idle Is he Bine Eagle; imed to Board for such purpo.se*. . j The I* reside^ and Congress The President wits reassuring in ! < r;- mo out pretty the "driving power of ituUvidiia.i initiative and the incen. tivr- u :*: if private profit." There . ; persists a fear. however, that the ine:;: Co.-.-r< s* may not see eye to eye President or with pri there will bo more :ess than in prevailing1 belief M them will be labelled Repuhhr in h\ u)l probability; but - j-party twbe'hsmoinnothing to business Vjmen when their money is at stake . the tern1, i the new Congrcsr $Xrated, which wil some time after it. con vor.bs in -Jauuory there may be no ma ' Mortal oicivnse the willingness o: private capita! t finance many proj ; ects . The progress made under the Fed cral Mousing Act is regarded as high ^ I ly encouraging, it is bringing mon I ey out for "modernization" of honua ; at the rate of hundreds of millions " j and if the reports which reach Jin " ! Moffett's headquarters are to be re ! tied on, some time next month will (start a big movement of new home 1! construction. This may run to a bilr 1 lion dollars or more of investment s ' with a corresponding increase :n em 1 ploymcnt in the building trades. Itichberg and Williams f Aa tu the reorganized KRA. cer - j tain facts and personalities stand out Personalities first. Two men will rur II , the whole show They are Donald R s Kichborg and S. Ciay Williams. Thu\ 't j are the only fuil-timc executives pro - , vided for. Mr. Richberg was for yean coimso! for the railroad brotherhoods a' He does not believe sironp-iv m o-J, i ? a^' * ! erumen1 dictation to business, bu1 Vhc doesn't think business can organ - ize effectively and stick together un t- ; less the Government lends a hand >t Clay Williams, as was pointed ou it in this correspondence some week: - ago. is held in high esteem by Indus trial leaders, who have been "pro s meting" him for General Johnson': - job fci some months". He is a tobacc. t manufacturer of Winston-Salem, N - ; C. A third personality of important t is Sidney Hill man. Mr. Hillman 5: " a lawyer and is the dominating spiri n of t:ie Amalgamated Clothing Work e ers. the largest labor organizatioi t i outside of the A. F. of L. s With Richberg's Brotherhood af _ i filiations and 'Killman's connectioi with the Amalgamated, it looks as i the Federation's strength in labor af fairs was on the decline. Both Rich berg and Hillman favor "vertical" un ions, as opposed to the Federation' , "craft" unions. The New NRA Set-up The new set-up consists of the In dustrial Emergency Committee, t : sharve nolir-i^c ? --: ?* A _ c ,, ..?i?wLu;g ui secretin ies Ickes and Perkins. Administra tor Davis of AAA and Relief Admif istrator Hopkins, together with Riot berg and Williams. Administratio j will be by a new alphabetical bureau ! NIR.B?National Industrial Recover j Board?headed by Clay Williams an i including Sidney Hillman, Leon t Marshall, Walton H. Hamilton an Arthur D. Whiteside. Policies of the new Recovery Ac ministration will lean, it is believo strongly away from price-fixin; strongly toward more competition i business. Codes will be simplified an made more workable WHOOPING COUGH 11KHK11V Slice one lemon thin, one-half pit of flaxseed meal, 2 ounces of hone; one quart of water, place in a vej se! and cook for four hours, but c not boil. Strain and if less than or pint, acid hot water to make one pir of fluid. Dose: One taplespoonful b< fore meals ar.d at bedtime, and or I after each fit of coughing. This is I simple remedy and a safe and sui remedy. Y THURSDAY?BOONS. N. C. M = ?===== Announ ?^^ NEW RiVER Light and Powe nounce to its customers th be rendered for ? NOV. Is and hereafter, charges for Eh rates that have been recently olina Public Utilities Commis I UNDER THESE NEW F Reduction of O IN THE CHARGES FOR E BEEN MADE! A compariss is listed so that our custom new electric schedule I NEW RATE (NO. A) RE (This rate applies to all commercial and i First I 0 Kilowatt Honrs at I ( Next 25 Kilowatt Hours at 6 '| Next 65 Kilowatt Hours at 6 ij (All Above at 5c p> j OLD RATE?UFSID! First 10 KILOWATT HOURS at 1 Next 25 KIIjOWATT HOURS at 1 (All Above at NEW RATE (NQTB; First 1 5 Kilowatt Hours at 1 ( Next 35 Kilowatt Hours at 5< ' (All Above at 4 1 -2c ' OLD RATE ON R First 10 KILOWATT HOURS at Next 25 KILOWATT HOURS at 1 (All Above at WCW/ I? A TP / Ktr I LJ Per Kilowatt Hour, straight (Minimum C " 1 OLD RATE 0 Firsi 100 KILOWATT HOURS at I NEW RATE (N< sll (THIS RATE APPLIES TO ALL MOTO First 1 50 Kilowatt Hours at ( Next 300 Kilowatt Hours at 1 Next 1 50 Kilowatt Hours at 'f 1 (All Above at 3c p - ! I OLD RATES - 11 First 250 KILOWATT HOURS at -11 Next 250 KILOWATT HOURS at s;l Next 1,500 KILOWATT HOURS (All Above at ojl All bills payable by 20th oi will be added if not paid b; Statements will be render 'n I made at new office undei y I A complete line of Electrical ?! and Refrigerators, Radio djl small Household Appl i j| We invite you to visi INew Riv and P01 OFFICE UNDER WAT^ OCTOBER ii, ^ | r..._ ~ > ?~~j| H 3 cement I :tion 1 Rntpct ' IlUIVOt I $ mBmsanamaBmsKawsasrammusaaii 1 r Company is pleased to anat effective with bills to Electric Service t, 1934 ;ctric Service will be at new approved by the North Carision, fcATE SCHEDULES A ^peFEIT 1LECTRIC ENERGY HAS an of the old and new rates ers may see just how the compares to the old: SIDENCE APPLIANCES residential li(;hlli'K ami appliance users) )c (minimum charge) $1.00 ' ic 2.00 I ?c 3.90 er Kilowatt Hour) iNCB AITLIANCKS .2 Vic si H- 51.25 Oc 2.50 6c per hour) > REFRIGERATION )c (min. charge) $1.30 : 1.75 per Kilowatt Hour) EFRIC.ERATION l2'-jc. SI.25 & 10c 2.50 B 6c per hour) X C) COOKING harge $2.00) iN' COOKING 4c (ALL ABOVE AT 3c) X D. D) MOTORS I RS OF 2 HORSEPOWER AN'I) OVER) d- r\ f\n H 4> *.uu 1 5c 15.00 8 4c . 6.00 er Kilowatt Hour) 1 ox motors s 6c S15.00 ' 5c 12.50 at lc 60.00 1 4c per hour) I ) F month; 5 per cent penalty y 10th of following month, ed by mail, and payments Watauga County Bank. Equipment, including Stoves s, Lighting Fixtures and iances, will be carried, t our store Nov. 1 st. er Light wer Co. VUGA COUNTY BANK I
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 11, 1934, edition 1
2
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