Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Aug. 12, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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«\ v , t ° central ca rqUNA. H YEAR ROOSEVELT MAY I jfflil 10 RULE ON I GOVERNOR’S POWER 1 10 REMOVE MAYOR I Writ of Prohibition De manded in Bronx Must ■ Be Determined Before Executive Acts *EW YORK ELECTION VO it IS AT STAKE Custer of Walker Might Alienate Tammany and I toie State for Roosevelt; *ome Say, However, It Tull Make More Votes In Tie South And West Chamber. Albany. IS Y.. I Ai C AR' Possibility that Gov- H R decision on the ous-| I■( -s* icainst Mavor James J. | 1 x,.»: ' Yoik City may be 4e- i I fir) ir • ’ tfier next Novembers t I , 1 today when Roote-1 H icr cl h«* would withhold his* ■ , - if’-r rhe question of his ««! p went to the courts. ■ . lf'-'r ’he morning session of h-aring. now in its scc- H -. -a h" governor stated he would ■ :a s tipor. th<* mayor’s case until I vipren.-' Court had had an op- I ’•> d«*’ miine the legality of I • v:’ of p' demanded by • I G- 'f* IVnriFy. ?ecretary of the I I »—x Chamber of Commerce. 1 the Supreme Court does not meet' ■ r- . Auras*. 10 I IV>nnaliV. r®t«ii'fed in three courts. 1 I -d»v nb’i iei ':->m Justice Harold I ' H!rrr»r of »h' appelate division of I t* Sur~>n:.» G-ur* an order instruet ■ if Wi R to explain his juris ■ v ’uc ■ Tie rw-rnor ditec'M Attorney Gen- I i John .1 Rennert Jr. to prepare [ iT3i»r' on ’he legality of the action. 1 ■ Y- P»nne’* leaving Governor. I 5 'Ckp af’er a five-minute '■•'«’*'.ce -)ld T* £ error ent for me Imme ’* ir-1 '.lid me to notify Justice! ’ha* he w'Mild show no dls-; tr.* *- •. *he court, and would J I T ' kl '' * hi- decision until the court iron hn authority." • .e dispute over Mr. Roose t ■' ’ j remove Mr. Walker. -« \e-v York court machinery ev*. .. „f delayed final ac ■ " H ' ‘h>- Tammany influence H " ' Should the removal •” of the mayor go over *h • November election, the ’ md against the Demo i‘ r’Ml nominee that de-j ■ii-ter action would be; I ' ■- - i" lv believed that ra- t ~ ■ ,f Y.’iiker would alienate some' ‘ i; port and also the sup- j I t- of the mayor in cer '■fiti bailiwicks. On the, I .T ‘ ’’ conceded by some j ■ C *>ln r n removal order would. I « ‘ * r,r T he governor in the! I . 1 ! v f wh»re Tammany is ‘ <r!y popular. ’ "f Walker should have ■ f fffrt >t j? held. Some po- I y.* , ' lr 'ni«n*ator3 believe that New I .J* vv ‘’ 15 electoral votes might ’h- governor's action in the t.x»r ~ Rules Are Outlined For Minority Party Tickets Ik thr s, r Wnlfn Hntrl ' < '2 Absence of mem .,., H ■'•••fc Hr>iird of Elections *,. t . ' ** miction to forego its »i.. ' * * " '' to have decided «,.. s _ 1 ,r " - 'i‘ »hf> coinolidation of h„ " 1 n,) the fixing of stan ‘han th>* regular party ■- t - the board was to • f . . ‘ r * today, but Chairman c .. ' * ! Secretary Raymond ,« notified of the ab • 'ot-mhers now on their ' wished to • r ' embers present when i putting the names of • t . 1 i-ites on the State v. f r 'vi hepn settled. ? .. ‘■'■•l Dennis G. Brum t: - hat there are condi „ 'b ' h independent po •j-. * ! ’ *'• their represen •- , -•ate ticket. If 10 per " . I ‘‘ i 3 petition for place ? i» . ’ herr may be provision • , . . hoard. But it can *'vt ’ ;, ni' s on hte regular the law requires ■ o r . ' ' been nominated Tv,, ‘ ‘ P’unary. *• -. ' tn; electors are not » t , h'lmary and yet they ’h" ticket. Under the *■10.,, 0 ’mits tehm to be . ite ticket it is poe • y Prohibitionists or Hrniivrsmt WIKI BIRVICI or THE ABB<KIIATBD PRBH * HOMF LOAN BANKS’ BOARD HOLDS FIRST MEETING Members ot the new federal home 1 loan bHfik hoard, central adminis- ! train' M£i u, j »he proposed HHtitmei ■ f'-'iri 0 f mortgage dis- | * K theii Hrst meet- i Mayor Curley Will Tour West For Gov. Roosevelt Boston Executive Makes Mo vie in Behalf of “Forgotten ..-an. Meaning the Unemployed, Whom Roosevelt, He Says, Will Take Ou t of American Life New York. Aug. 12—<|AP)—Mayor James M. Curley, of Boston, who on September 1 will start a campaign tour for Governor Rooeevelt, which will extend to the Pacific coast, be came a movie actor In (he Demo cracy's cause for seven minutes to-! day. He made a talking picture of the ■ “forgotten man," whom he identified SEESSWING BACK TOWARD DRY CAUSE; Anti-Prohibition Sentiment Reached Crest In July Primary -Vote STATE NOT GONE WET Refusal of Reynolds Men To Make Finish Fight on Mrs. CBrny as Vice-Chairman Looked Upon m Significant noIIT 1- the sir H-«-> Raleigh. Aug. 12. —Decision of IJe utmant Governor-nominee Boope Til lett of Charlotte and all other Re publicans to swear by the State Re publican platform, and all its siccity. moves politicians here to the convic tion that the Republicans are satls (Contlnued on Page Six.) Socu-.ists to get the State’s sanction. There is of course ample opportunity for the use of privately provided tic kets. "stickers” or written names. The law would require the counting of all such votes. A political party Is defined as one which polled & certain number of votes in 1914. That date was set fol lowing the 18i2 failure of either Re publicans or Progressives to poll 50.- i 00 votes in the celebrated Taft-Teddy feud. The date was moved up from 1900 to 1914. There has been set no date for* the meeting of the State board, which is called by the chairman. In some states. Judge J Crawford Biggs, chairman of the board said, minor parties are required to submit petitions signed by a certain percent age of the voters in the previous election. If North Carolina would adopt the minimum, one per cent, petitions with 6,500 names would have to be sub mitted. The 192» vote was approxi mately 650.000. The maximum per centage ia 15. North arolina has no set rule, but Attorney General Dennis G. Brummitt is of the opinion the board of elec tions has authority to make one. Ten thousand voters must sign petitions for an indetendent candidate or a candidate of a minor party to get their names on a primary ballot under the primary law. ii mi ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED ing in the department of com merce building, Washington, D. C. They are. left to right around the table. H. Morton Bodfish, of Chi cago; Nathan Adams, of Dallas, as “the ten million who are unem ployed and walking the street." He said he had seen the forgotten man 2.000 strong In the bread line at Time 3 Square, along Wack avenue, Chicago, and on the Anacostia plains at' Washington. "I am confident," he said, “that Governor Roosevelt will take the for gotten man out of American life and restore equal opportunity to all." Brookhart’s Nemesis J HI i , jhbDi t .JUKI* •fc • | v ! I ' .S' ; J. . . :> . |:£ " Henry Field, who defeated Sena tor Smith W. Brookhart for the Republican nomination to the United States senate in lowa, ar rives in Chicago in a happy mood to tell newspapermen just how he managed it. Field continued on to Washington to attend the Hoov er notification ceremony. BUR kTSTATEMENT TO RISE UP AGAIN Both Parties May Use His Views On Stock Market And Relief Moves Dailr DtapaT -S R*r«a«. la (kc Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Aug. 12.—Henry Burke, as sistant budget officer who astoundel the natives a few days ago by tell ing them that he doesn't think much of the ederal relief measures and even lees of the boom in tbe stock mar ket, desires only one amendment to the story which was written after his return from his "vacation." “j said there Was no good in the stock market advances and that we (£HiUaued on Page Sin). HENDERSON. N.’ C„ FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 12, 1932 AWAIT ELECTION * **»££>r 0 ?* 1 Ue ’ s4^' Batlg UtapatrLj IN THIS SECTION, OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. Tex.; Franklin W. Fort, of New Jerssy,. chairman .of t{ie boa*d, Dr. * John " M.* Cries, of Ohio, and William E. Best, of Pitts burgh. INDUSTRIAL BOOM MAY BE CLOSE IN WAKE OF ADVANCE Activity of Markets Believed Stimulated by Revival That May Be Very Near at Hand BED ROGK -REACHED ALREADY IN PRICES Wall Street Takes View That Jarring Loose of Ac. cumulated Latent Demand Is Imminent, or Early In 1933 at the Latest; Big Boom Likely By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington. Aug. 12 Signs of an economic improvement have been be coming quite convincing of late. Thu- fa*- the/ are principally stock market si„n . Unemployment positively is increas ing. Exports continue to decline. Mer chants still complain that sales are mighty slow; collections slower yet. I Prices of a number of important \ classes of raw materials, however, are beginning to show a rising tendency. This i 3 what brings cheer to market traders’ hearts. They believe it fore- j shadows an all-around revival. Wall Street has had several little J spells of bullishness before, since the crash of 1929. It had one when the moratorium | was announced, another when the* bankers’ pool was formed, a third j when the Reconstruction Finance cor-I poration was created and a fourth i when the Glass-Steogall bill was pass-1 ed. These were "shots in the arm.” Each ! (Continued on Page Three.) German Veteran, .On His Death Bed, Is Appreciative; Washington, Atig. 12.—CAP)— j To fulfill a promise he made to an unknown American soldier who t saved his life, a German World I War veteran now on his death bed has sent to Secretary Mills a . bracelet of 21 coins which will be i placed In the West Point Museum, j A few days ago. August Ullrich, of Scltieslen, Germany, wrote the secretary of the treasury that-he might -die “any time,” and -“L therefore, lay in your hands a-; bracelet made out of old German coins as a sign of appreciation for 7 a nation whose soldiers, even in war treated tfcelr enemies with great consideration, and the sol* ; dier who saved my life without giving his name and address.” Mills replied that It would be given to the museum where “it will remain as a lasting symbol In recognition of a worthy deed by an unknown American soldier, - and a generous act on your part In .. so nobly expressing your apprecia tion.” WHfHIR FOB NORTH CAROLINA. Partly cloudy; slightly Moles on the north coast tonight; partly cloudy. , _ - TO ACTON WALKER Reform In Prohibition And Renewed War On Depression Lead In Hoover Acceptance PRESIDENT GOES ' FAR BEYOND OWN PARTY PLATFORM Hammers Away On Econo mic Emergency And Steps, Past And Con templated To Meet It PROGRAM IN ACTION, EXECUTIVE ASSERTS Promises To Propose Such Other Measures, Public and Private, as May Be Necessary From Time to Time To Speed Economic Recovery of the Nation Washington. Aug. 12.—f AP)— A presidential call for prohibition re form and a promise to beat down the economic "hurricane" leads Repub licans into the 1932 campaign. A tensely expectant audience of Re publican leaders in vast Constitution Hall heard Mr. rtoover iaat night in hia speech of sos rm-t nomination go far beyond hia party platform and demand a new order of liqulr control. Mr. Hoover hammered away on the ecenomic emergency and steps, past and contemplated, to meet It. He blamed over-optimism and speculation j in this country’ as the first cause of, trouble, and the worldwide economic; collapse resulting from war evils as the subsequent and more devastating) cause On his efforts to meet the sit-! uation, he said: “These programs, unparalled in the ! history of depressions in any country! and in any time to "-are for distress, | to provide employment, to aid agri-1 culture, to maintain the financial j stability of the country, to safeguard j the savings of the people, to protect] their homes, are not In the past tense ! - they are in action. 1 shall pioposej such other measures, public and pri- ! vate, as may be neressary from time | to time to meet any changing situs- i tion, and to further speed economic! recovery. That recovery may be slow, j bot we will succeed.” Raleigh’s Second Boy Burglar Gets Reformatory Time Raleigh, Aug. 12 (AP)—Raleigh's second boy burglar to be arrested this week told Police Judge Barnes today he had refobed eigtit to ten stores. The lad, Marvin Chappell, 10, will be sent to Jackson Training School with Charles fclso 10 arrested Sunday, who confessed five robbberies. Marvin said he knew Charles, but they did not work together. He> said he j entered stores through windows and carried off what merchandise he could carry. Huey Long Gives Luck i Mr. Garner New Orleans, Aug. 12.—(AP)—John N. Garner, the Democratip vice-preai dential candidate, stopped here briefly today on his way to meet hia runningmate for the first time since their nomination. He declined to comment on political issues until be had talkec with Gov ernor Franklin D. Roosevelt. Half way through hia breakfast. Senator Huey P. Long breezed in, dressed in a white suit and carrying a fancy cane. "Hello, Jack; thought 7911 might wish to topch my garment to bring you luck.” 'grinned the kingfishi “Judging by what you did for Sena tor Caraway, I think I ought to do it three times,” replied Garner as he Upped Huey's lapeL POBUSHBD BVBRT AFTMNOOM EXCEPT BDNDAT. He Accepts It f It • ' —l ■ ■ »*%. President Herbert Hoover RIOTS CONTINUING" IN SOUTHERN SPAIN - ASREBEUJONENDS Fatal Clashes Occur Be tween Guards And Boist erous Groups In Num ber of Localities | BUILDINGS BURNED BY THE INSURGENTS } riimshment of General Jur go, the Leader, Planned by Government; Public And Private Property In Many Cities and Towns Is Under 1 Guard Madrid, Aug. 12.—< AP) —Rioting I and burning reddened muen of south ! ern Spain today as the government I laid plans to punish Colonel Jose San j Jurgo. leader of Wednesday's abor | tive rebellion, and his followers. I One man was killed and three ! wounded at Santa Fe. when <’lvil guards dispersed a group which burn ed the agrarian casino. One workman was killed in a political fight between laborers and employers. A civil guard was killed at Seville when a mob at tacked the Jail. At Seville corcons of soldiers were posted around religious houses and heavy guards patrolled the streets. In the towns .of San Lucar and Az nacollar mobs set fire to the chur ches. but the fires were put out by eitizen volunteers. In Santiponce a’ mob attacked the mayor, seized his cane and beat him with it. He was rescued by a group , of town hall guards. A line of guards was stationed : around the buildings of the new Spain Las Provinces at Valencia to protect ■ it from mobs, and General Liquelme, j rushed from Switzerland by airplane ! to take charge of a menacing situation J DR. GEORGE CLAY i CALLED BY DEATH] I Former Rector of St. Mary‘» School Diet In Duke Hos pital From Cancer Durham Aug. 12.—( AP> Dr George W. Lay, former rector of St. friary's Schorl 'at Raleigh, died in Duke hospital here today from can cer of the esnphrgus. Dr. .Lay was taken to the hos pital yesterday from hia home at Chap*l Hill, wbero he had been ill for. roers time. He waa 72 /eats old. Deajfh came at S:SO a. m. Funeral aervieea will be held ■at Chapel Hill at 5 p. m. Saturday. Bishop Joseph Blount Cheshire, of (Continued on Page ThreeJ. 6 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPTS CAMPAIGN CATCHER SECOND WIND WITH HOOVER'S ADDRESS Roosevelt Speech In Ohio j Next Week Will Be Slap Back at G. O. P. Declaration ! HOOVER IS OPPOSED , TO SALOON RETURN I** u « Wll Be Stressed Aj Drive ror Votes Is Pressed To Conclusion On Election Day; Ardent Drys Have Left Only The Prohibition Party Washington. Aug. 12 -( AP)—Faced I by the issues of prohibition and econo mie recovery, ihe presidential cam- I paign has caught its second wind with ! last night's big Republican Jubilee In Washington, and may be expected to | move at livelier step from now on in ! every section of the country. \ After a period of planning on both i aides. President Hoover accepted th» J nomination with a pronouncement for , a prohlhition~change and a new at tack on depression. Governor Rooed- I veil will reply a week from tomor "1 row *n a speech at Columbus. Ohio, j Then the voters at least will have , thing tangible to argue about. Mr. Hoover’s prohibition proposal— i to leave the question to the states, but tOootlnued on Page Thraa.) '! KILOWATT CERTAIN TO RETURN IN 1933 •I r j Ewing, of Cumberland, Will Bo Back With La’gteiatioii on Power Companies Then . • ’ r > nnily niasslrk Ita-e-m, In the Sir Walter It—tel. j Raleigh. Aug. 12.- Representative I W. C. Ewing of Cumlierland county I whose kilowatt bill was murdered in ! Ihe long General Assembly of 1931. has | been here this week, but out of de j ference to his family and his neigb -1 bors who suffered so terribly last | year, h? is not annonneing what hia t kilowatt bill is to be. The torture which came to Mra. Ewing and the neighbors was tha I word "Kilowatt." Mrs. Ewing came to | something of a biological complex to -1 ward it. a sort of feminine aversion j that is found in fear of the mouse. More than 90 days she heard “kilo watt" from 1,000 to 1,000.000 times a day. It almost hilled her, and Mr. Ewing Is suspending conversation on the subject. However, "kilowatt” Is as certain to come here In January as the inau guration. £ nd legislation that lifts far more revenue than that of the revenue bill of 1931 is sure to be offered. Dead Man’s : Skull Used In Evidence 1 ! Miami. Fla. Aug. 12 (AP)— Usdng i the bulletlgdorccd skull of Haden 1 Clarke, and th>- pistol that ended hia ) life to illustrate hie testimony, Arth ur H Hamilton, criminologist, of Au burn, N. Y., told a jury today that he was “absolutely convinced" Clarke committed suicide. "There M not a 1 scintilla of evidence here to show j that Clark was murdered,” Hamilton testified as a defense witness in the trial of Caytain W. N. Lancaster. British aviator, charged with the young writer’s murder. Clarke was shot to death at the home of Mrs. J M. Keith-Miller. Aus tralian aviatrix. in whoes affections he had succeeded Lancaster. Hamilton's decidedly expressed opinion climaxed a morning of testi mony in which he pointed out various chared eristics of suicide Each of them he demonstrated on the skull or , with the pistol.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Aug. 12, 1932, edition 1
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