WEATHER Pair and •lightly colder tonight; fair Thursday. CLlti1 Suites GOOD AFISMOOH r M i > ^ * ' \ One rwoi Hm athacMf day* are melancholy ii that w aaajr awfal poet* iuiil en writing about them« I1 VOL. 53—No. 213 SINGLE COPIES, FIVE CENTS Courts Block Long's Dictatorship f- .? "h REGISTRATION tampering is BEING BANNED Action Comes as Result of Court Suit Alleging ' Conspiracy STATE POLICE BARRED from NEW ORLEANS NEW ORLEANS. La., Sept. 5. ,^-pi—Federal court intervened ! jpinst Senator Huey P. Long's dictatorship last night. State laws •o hav«? become effective Thurs day n:,*M would have given him Vroad executive powers. An injunction was clamped on 'he registrar of voters' office, which Huey has barricaded with '5.000 "illegal" voters have been scratched since he got pos sesion of the rolls. The suit was obviously inspired hr Mayor T. S. Walmsley's city forces. who_are opposing Huev. fitv at*»>rney& conferred with Judee Borah earlier in the eve ning and later went to Gregory's office and informed him that the ;uemo cratic gubernatorial nominee °t i <.alifomia, left a two-hour tea 1? conference with Presiden Roosevelt last night convinced that the new Heal and his epic p an are one and the same. The silver-Haired author and °rmer Socialist, turned Demo fy*t. nervously fipgered his passes as he talked with Wash :n«ton newspapermen, praising tne chief executive but acrupu louslv refraining from even in rerrine what he and Mr. Roose T hours, 26 minutes, 41 seconds. He was awarded the Bendix trophy and $4,500 in cash. Davis was killed instantly Monday evening when his plane hit the ground after one of the sharp turns required at the py lons. RIGHT—Sharing the spotlight with aces of the sky in the Na tional Air races, Mary Pickford is shown after she had awarded the Bendix trophy to Douglas Davis. She refused to discuss her rumored reconciliation with Doug las Fairbanks. THREE BANDITS ROB BANK AT LAKE CITY, S. C., OF $100,000 President Hoyt Carter and Cashier Stalvey Abducted and Are Released 35 Miles Away LAKE CITY, S. C., Sept. 5. I (UP).—Three bandits robbed the Palmetto State bank of $100,000, abducting President J. Hoyt Carter and Cashier Fred Stalvey, releasing them at Lamar, 35 miles away. The bandits were traveling in two automobiles, one of which > was stolen. The two bandits entered the Carter home, threatening the less they obeyed. .Their corn entire family with murder un« mands were obeyed. Carter was driven to the bankj while the third bandit accompanied Stal vey, who was forced to open the safe. U. S. DEFICIT NEARLY DOUBLES FIGURE FOR LIKE PERIOD IN '33 With Two Months of the Fiscal Year Gone Total Treas ury Deficit Is Placed at $475,518,585 WASHINGTON, Sept. 5. (UP). A sharp increase in government expenditures during August placed the treasury's deficTt for the first two months of the new fiscal year at $475,518,585, almost double the amount for the same period last year, it was disclosed yester Hn v The deficit on Sept. 1, 1933, was $229,685,450. August expenditures totalled $513,699,696 compared with $466,273,908 for July, the treas ury's- monthly statement said. It was the first increase since a steady decline began last January. Receipts however, rose to $285, 266,217, a monthly increase of $68,076,414. The nation's public debt stood at $27,079,860,564 at the end of August, the statement showed, as compared with $27,189,245,812 the previous month. Treasury officials pointed out that this drop in the public debt was due not to any change in pol- j icy but rather to use of general cash funds instead of resorting- to J new borrowings. Total expenditures for the first two months of the new fiscal year which began July 1, were $979, 973,605. the statement said, al most djuble the corresponding to tal of $580,687,515 for last year. This increase was attributed to in creased spending by emergency agencies. It was pointed out that the two months total for this year was ap proximately equivalent to the peace time peak established last January when $980,000,000 was spent by the government in a sin gle month. YEAR'S BEST CALF "The best calf killed here this year" was reported today by Bob Hancock of the Sanitary market, who said be bought the animal from Zeb Kirkpatrick of East Flat Rock and that it weighed 177 1-2 pounds, net. It was ten weeks old and was half Guernsey and half Jersey. Th* calf was marketed last Saturday. 'NEW DEALERS' SCORE BOWER Say He's Spokesman for the Rich Who Exploit Poor People WASHINGTON, Sept. 5. (UP). New Dealers yesterday answered former President Hoover's charge that the Roosevelt administration is a challenge to human liberty with sharp complaint that Mr. Hoover in fact is a spokesman of rich men who exploit the poor. Mr. Hoover's first public utter ance in 18 months since leaving the White House was not regard ed here as a bid for nomination in 1936. Friends of the former presi dent believe he does seek, how ever, to help shape the platform upon which the Republican party will oppose the New Deal. Mr. Hoover was informed some months after the inauguration in 1933 that his staunchest supporters in Washington did not believe he again could lead the party. Writing in the Saturday Eve New Deal policies under the head ning Post, Mr. Hoover attacked line: "The Challenge to Liberty." His unexpected assault came with in a fortnight of the formation of the Bi-Partisan American Liberty League pledged to defend the con stitution. oppose radicalism—and evidently to battle the New Deal. Mr. Hoover charged New Dealers were permitting "usurpation of the primary liberties of man by government." He wrote of regi mentation." Secretary of Interior Harold P. Ickes answered for the adminis tration : "Mr. Hoover does not seem to be concerned," he said, "with the liberty of the average man and woman to have decent living- con ditions and jobs at fair wages. The liberty he talks about, it seems, is the liberty of the ex ploiter. "Mr. Hoover seems to be de fending- the liberty of privilege. (Continued on page 3.), LAUREL PARK CITIZENS CALL FORM DEAL' Abandonment, New Form Charter, Tax Cuts Are All Proposed COUNCILMEfTREADY TO CO-OPERATE, SAID Possibility of a change in the form of Laurel Park's municipal government and of a changed ;et-up in the financial arrange ments, especially as affecting the councilmen, who may be replaced by commissioners, and the reduc tion of the salary paid to the tax collector loomed following a meeting of members of the Lau rel ark Civic club held Tuesday night at the city hall. The meeting had been called is a mass meeting, but, although t is intimated that the bulk of the people who are interested in i change in the affairs of Laurel Park are the sununer residents ;here, but few of these appeared. Tuesday night's meeting fol owed one by the city council of ^aurel Park, held at the home of Mayor A. C. Hewitt, Monday light. At that time, on motion >f Dr. J. L. Weddington, Mayor Hewitt named a committee on vhich are A. S. Browning, Jr., chairman, J. A. Singleterry, M. VI. Redden, J. S. Sargent, Sr., ind Oliver Fuller. This grouj> ivas asked to act as a contact committee with people who it is said'would like a change in con iitions in Laurel Park, artner. Mrs. Jennie Walters, his house- / peeper. Harry Menzie. An unidentified man believed j tamed Webb. Jane Lamb hospital authorities aid Joe Collier, aged farm helper, robably would die of shotgun , rounds' _ |