Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Sept. 2, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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f of VPERSON, IJte'vayto CENTRAL CAROLINA. nineteenth year pou SAYS RALEIGH IS TO BE AWARDED AGRICULTURE BANK Declares Re. ■ construction Corporation Had So Advised Him On Location T 0 SF.RVE DISTRICT WITH FOUR STATES ■ [nth Carolina*, Georgia and Florida Included; Chair. m3P Fort of Home Loan Board. Urges Mortgage Suspensions Until Help Is Extended " Kep’ - lAP> Flepre m '' >f N »i’h Carolina .said ■ - ?t ( »*•*'ii informed by the : '. M. Corporation that one H :ta. • r-'dit corporations >■ r-d it Ruletgh. ■h- credit office would Ejf . : jurisdiction North and ■ i m I Georgia and Flor jpj ..••■n pi’ai would not he leas | »• *•' hut the definite 1 HE • • * been definitely de-j ■ , ■• • ■'? u';> of ’he Reconstruc- i R • •; . >n tt w.w ?aid that the ■ :<• *!»< n»: yet .selected the *h- ii.’! tcultural credit cor- H •• i i piarters in the Raleigh V i iPK'.NIO.N OF MORTGAGE ■ I-OKI.CLOSURE IS URGED | M ~■- - !.1 -k Ind . Sept. 2- t API — j f mortgage foreclosures' ’ nme loan banks begin op- ! II -:*•■; »i- urged upon building and I i* >•- « . 1 1 1 >n officials today oy ! F i-< . W Fort, chairman of the ; - v directing board ):•:* •:; ’he 40th annual convert- I • ■ nted States Building and I • . -* Fort said the 12 home j • - , would begin to function ‘ . ' '••'t 15, and that "thereafter ■ r ■*■»> ney will he available on m- which we ara getting ■ ■ Pass Has I Floods Riding In | From Rio Grande j “**» Ft-- Text'. Sept 2 (API- j || 1 • :n •”* vellow torrent overflowed! ■ •:* of the Rio Grande river.) ■***.'.? streets in the Eagle Parts I -«•- li-’rict and part of the Mexi- ! *?’ •-••v- of pi»dras N'egras. ■ bv extraordinary rains, the ■ ■ riving at an estimated rate •‘--oi »..• Rn hour. It was feared a *he »n’ire city would be flooded. ■ _'*'•?* ’wo-story buildings in the w -’*' s r> • business district collapsed ■ ' 'vTers weakened their foun •> • f'.-tv of residents of the low !y-1 ■ *- were carrying their house j ' "’• ring to high ground, and I ■ ~ wore moving goods out of) ■ I CHAPLIN WINS OUT I FOR HIS CHILDREN * A-2»'e, Cal. Sept. 2.—<AP>— -* ':gh* of Charlie Chaplin, film o-oh ... •„ gppp his children out of ■ e lo’nreH. ended successfully to h ■ • 'tg the plan of his former. •-i Grey Chaplin, actress. | R. F. C. Will | Invest New j I Sums Soon! . . ! and Con-j Mruction Project to Benefit From This Money , -’on Sept. 2. (AP) -Ways - -ome more of its millions v to work in two huge in- | ' n-truction and agriculture) a '.tv < chief concern of the j ‘ T i'nn Corporation. '■ m ,nt employment was the) , ' 'trmour.ced for corporation -of seif.liquidating eonstrue ■'•jeets Hirvey ‘ . Couch, dl rharge of this loan field, bv the relief act. added that 'r">iation meant the most work possible time. ‘ h ’hi" objective. It Is analysing ’I 1 " *■ I projects, and Couch said >f the self-liquidating ad ■’ iv he expected next week. 1 :■ e i belt line bridge at New nuted to give three years T'nb men is receiving parti •i -•’t.ntjon. Hntiiprsmt *o*' L THi MSoesaa, ’■rw" Defeat. Shortridge? • - ■» jm Leading Senator Samuel Short ridge for the Republican senator ial nomination in California, Tal lant Tubbs, above, of San Fran cisco. appeared to be the likely opponent of William Gibbs Mc- Adoo, the Democratic choice, in the November election. Tubbs is a “wringing wet" CITIES AND TOWNS TO URGE PROGRAM Fi LEGISEATIi State Municipal Association Outlines Plans at Meet ing In Raleigh Thursday WANT MANY STREETS KEPT UP BY STATE Would Also Have Uniform Data For Officials To Take Office; Would Unload on Counties Full Burden of Relief In Cities As In Counties Dull) Dispatch ftnreaa. In the sir Uniter Hotel. nv J C. ItAftKKRVILI, Raleigh. Sept. 2. The {cities and towns in the State, through the North Carolina Municipal Association and Its cecutive committee, are already lay ing the groundwork for an etensive legislative program they hope to get through the 1933 General Assembly. This program was revealed here Thurs day following the meeting of the exe cutive committee of the association. The two most important legislative proposals out of ten decided upon at this meeting are the proposals for the abolition of the State tax on gasoline used by municipalities and for the ap portionment of some of the gasoline tax collected by the State to all cities (UonUnued on Page Six.) ROOSEVELTINING, IS GARDNER BELIEF Newspaper Polls Show Pre dominating Sentiment For Democrats Dull? Dl*pnt«h **«—««, in the *'r 4A »lt-r M. tel. AY J C BaSllßllVtl.il Raleigh. Sept. 2.—Governor Frank lin D. Roosevelt, of New York, the Democratic nominee for president, Is gaining strength daily throughout al most all the eastern and northern states, with the possible exception of two or three of the rock-ribbed Re publican states in New England. ac cording to Governor O. Max Gardner, who has Just returned from his vaca tion. During his vacation. Governor Gardner spent almost a week in New York and had Intended being present at the Roosevelt rally at Sea Grit, New Jersey, but did not get to. "Most of the newspaper polls that have been conducted in most of the northeastern states show an over ■fc oo Pngs Fimi jl ONLY DAILY P NEWSPAPER TO REDUCF,PEBT37 JuAMONT 0 .fl _« p-PT' BUY NINE WASHINGTONS / <'BE; The j billion Hie l l * W nshinctons The <it \ valuation if somewhat \ more than $1 200.000.000. ® * * NORMAN • ♦ Belief has been expressed that the eisit of the governor of the Bank •f England, Montagu Norman, may result in a further announce ment concerning European debts, perhaps in November, and a huge bankers’ loan by public subscrip tion to Great Britain to put that aation back on the gold standard. DEPRESSIONS PASS LIKE ECLIPSES DO, BABSON DECLARES Sun Will Shine Again, But Economic Ills Did Not Come Without Their Real Causes CALL TO CHURCHES WITH OPPORTUNITY People Must Listen to Reli gion Prophets of This Day as They Pin Faith In Pledge of Astronomers Than Sun Will Shine Aft er the Eclipse (Written by Roger W. Baboon the day of the eclipse of the sun, August 31. 1932.) Babeon Park. Maas., Sept. 2. In olden times people were terribly frightened when there was an eclipse of the sun because they were afraid (Continued on Page Seven.) More Jobs Opened In Carolinas East Carolina To bacco Plants Put Many to Work; Tex tiles Resume # (By the Associated Press.) Employment conditions in the two Carolinas continued on the upgrade today, paced in North Carolina by the opening of tobacco stemmertes and and re-drying plants. At Goldsboro, 200 went to work at one stemmery and re-drytng plant, and several hundred prepared to go to work in a few days at another plant. The opeilatlons wfil icontimfc until about February. Plants also opened at Wilson. Kin ston, Greenville and Rocky Mount, giving work to additional hundreds who have been unemployed for months At Anderson. S. C., and Iva, near there, full night operations got under way in two cotton mills as a result of recent additional orders. PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION ( lILNDERSON, N. C. f FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 2, 1932 n >i , Nos*»aN3M TVIHOW3W AUdSd 3TIBTU4 Hath} Stapafrß Governor Norman, upon arrival, went to visit in Maine, close to the summer estate of Thomas W. Lamont, partner in the House of Morgan, international bankers. He then conferred with bankers and federal resepre officials in New York. Gredt Britain has some maturities edming due. Head. Gentian Reich "j •-—- Here is Capt. Herman Goering, a member of Adolf Hitler’s Na tional 'Socialist party, who has been elected president of the Ger man reichstag. His election was made possible through a coalition of the Nazis, the Nationalist and the Centrist narties- FARM BELT WORRIES OFFICIALS Washington Much More Ex. ercised by West Than Coal Mine Troubles REASON IN COAL AREA Industry Itself Is Decaying, But Ag riculture la As Much Necessary Now As It Ever Has Been Before By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, Sept 2.—The national administration is lees worried over trouble In the country’s coal mining areas (as in southern Illinois, most recently) than by agrarian turbulence in the corn belt, now spreading into (Continued on Page Five.) WEATHER FOB NORTH CAROLINA. Mostly cloudy tonight sad Sat urday; probably showers In west and north portions Saturday, and In extreme west portion tonight and Saturday; slightly cooler Sat urday. OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA- Joseph V. McKee Takes Over Duties As New York Mayor As James J. Walker Resigns France To U. S. On German Arms Proffer Will Include Thi* Country In Abrogation of Certain Provision* of Peace Treaty SEPARATE TREATY HERE IS SIMILAR While U. S. Did Not Ratify Versailles Pact, Separate Agreement Contained Many Provisions Like That One; Deny Rejection of German Note Paris. Sept. 2. (AP) —Confirmation hat France will consult not only co •,ignntorics of the Versailles treaty re garding Germany s armaments irtemo andum. but also the American gov ernment, was furnished today in of 'iciai quarters. It was explained that the official judicial reason for American consul tation Is that military, naval and all clauses contained in the Vvrsaillef treaty, which the United States nevei ratified are embodied in the separ nte peace treaty which the Uniter States negotiated with Germany In 1921, derived all rights and advan tages emanating from that part ol ‘he Versailles document. After denying a report that the cab inet yesterday bad rejected the Ger man memorandum, an official spokes man said that France would calmly .and without haste examine the Gar frian initiative in complete eallaWrw tion with other powers Including the United States. Broad Movement In Buying Pushes Stock Prices Up New York, Sept. 2.—(AP)—One of the most comprehensive buy ing movements in the past fort night developed In the stock ex change today. Trading was in moderate volume hut the list moved steadily for ward, several issues reaching new highs for the year. Renewed strength in cotton, which pushed up about *2 a bale, and Improve ment in the recently reactionary bond market were evidently stim ulating to the market for shares. Steels, rails and utilities were particu’arly strong. 11. 8. Steel common advanced $2.25 to a new high for the recovery, above $49 e share. Gulf States SteH advanced $4 to above Sift, a new high for this share. American Telephone advanced $3 to close at sllß a share. Health Men Are Rescued On Sandbar Lost Channel Re turning From Fish ing Trip Outside Near Wilmington Wilmington. Sept. 2. — (AP) — Three health officials, one an official of the State, were rescued today from a sandbar three miles off shore, where they ran aground last night after be coming lost on a fishing trip. The party was made up of Dr. John H. Hamilton, of Raleigh, of the ,-tate Board of Health; Dr. A. H. Elliott, New Hanover county health officer, and J. B. Edwards, county assistant food and dairy Inspector. They disappeared yesterday after, leaving on & fishing trip to Mason boro Inlet, near here. Instead of going there, however, they went to Mason’s Inlet, and, in at tempting to make the shore in the small outboard oKotor boat last night lost the channel. Groping their way about. lh»r ran aground on .t sand er. on 1 .•)(til Island- where they broke t\eir ptej ti ler. The fishermen spent the night there, and today a passing boat discovered their plight and towel them to the mainland. I PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. MAY RUN AGAIN Pw■ in BU. B p r \ ■ 7 EX-MAYOR JIMMY WALKER STRIKE FRONT IN STATE IS QUIETER HmftMS Injured Man at High Point Showing Improvement After Incident at Silk Mills CHAIR WORKERS TO OFFER AGREEMENT Will Return to Jobs If Plans Are Accepted by Plant Of ficials; AH Quiet at Rock ingham, Where 1,200 Tex tile Operatives Are On Strike (By the Associated Press.) North Carolina's strike front was !uiet today after a brief flare-up in High Point yesterday and submission it Thomasvitle of a set of proposals inder which 1.000 employees of the Thomasville Chair Company have agreed to return to work if accepted :>y plant officials. S. T. Spoon was reported recover ing from injuries received when he and six others were struck by the au tomobile of Ernest Albertson as the latter sought to pierce the strikers' lines and returned to work in the Stehli silk mills when* approximately 400 employees struck Tuesday. Company officials immediately post ed a notice the mill would be closed indefinitely or util the wage dispute can be settled. BAFFLING MURDER IN OHIO IS SOLVED Elder Brother Confesses Killing Younger Brother and Sweetheart Lima, Ohio. Sept. 2.—(AP) One of the moat baffling crimes In Ohio his tory, the "quarry murders" of Earl Trueedale, 20. and his sweetheart, Thelma Woods, 19, was solved today, police said, by the alleged confession of Loren Ellisworth Truesdale, Earle’s 2J-year-old brother. The elder brother was arrested by private detectives last night and gave the alleged confession, the officers said, in the presence of his mother and father. Jealousy caused-by rivalry in love was described as tbe motive. The younger Truesdale and Miss Wood were slain the evening of Mem orial Day. 1931. Their bodies, weight ed down with atones, were found sev eral days later in an abandoned water filled atone quarry at the outskirts of the city. 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPTJ WALKER HINTS AT CANDIDACY AGAIN FOR VINDICATION Denounces Roosevelt Hear, ing and Inquiry Into His Conduct as “Un- American" STUDIOUSLYUNFAIR IS WALKER'S VIEW No Ceremony Accompanies Accession of President Os City Board of Alderman a* Mayor of Great Metro polis; Merely Walks In And Goes to Work New Yoik. Kept. 2 - (API-Joseph V. McKee, erstwhile president of ths board of alderman, slipped unobtrusive ly into City Hall today, took off his coat and began work as the mayor o' the City of New York. There was no ceremony, nor will there be. for his auecession to James J. Walker, resigned, is automatic: no' *ven the formality of taking the oath of office is necessary Although McKee took up the mayor's work today, he did not take over Walker's former office. Instead he went to his own old office, & large white room, decorated with the por traits of former mayors, and sat at his old flat top desk. Almost bh sensational as Walker’s abrupt resignation and his more than hint that he would seek vindication by running again, was the Tammany mayor’s undisguised assault on the manner in which Governor Roosevelt, national leader of Democratic party, conducted his hearings. “Un-American - - extraordinary inquisition travesty mock trail— perversion of the executive power— studiously unfair biased judge." were .-ome of the phrases that studded the statement he gave out on his resigna tion. He announced the purpose of hla re signation was to "change the venue.’’ Accept Low Bi d s Upon 15 Projects By Highway Board Raleigh. Sept. 2 (AP)-The State Highway Commission met in executive session here today to approve low bids received on 15 road projects yester day and tentatively approved 12 pro jects to be included in a letting set for September 15. All low bidders announced last night except one. received the contract nwards from the commission, and the other contract, in Mecklenburg coun ty. was let to the low bidder on an alternate price. All projects, however, are subject to final approval of thA Federal Bureau of Roads. —. State Case For Slaying Now Rested Three Men In Fay etteville Accused of Killing; Grocery Man in Robberv Fayetteville.* Sept.. 2 (AP> —The State rested its case today in the trial of three men for the slaying of A. C. Willis, a grocer hero, June 11, after Willis’ widow had fren carried scream ing from the court room. Mrs. Willis, affter listening to argu ments over the admissibility of evi dence by Police Chief Roas Jones con cerning alleged confessions of the men on trial, when he went into hysterics. Jeff Webb, one of the defendants, took the stand after the Jury had be»n sent from the room, and he said he shot the pistol in the grocer's store the night of the shooting, but said ke shot at a wall. As he uttered these words. Mrs. Willis screamed and sobbed and »«• carried outside in a semi-conscious cond'tien. On trial with Webb, charged witn ftr* degree murder, are Charles Jones k and Roy Adams.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Sept. 2, 1932, edition 1
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