HENDERSON.
gateway TO
CENTRAL
CAROLINA
ninetmni h m&V
BANK OPENS NEXT TUESDAY
YANKEES?,
CU?S 5, IN
3RD GAME
YANKEES jiOl 020 001U7 8 1
(L BS j. .102 100 001-594.
VWigley Field, i iiicago,
Oct. I.—The NVv York*
Yankees continue i their
landslide toward VV orld:*
( hampionship he* twiiy
tefore an ea&mat> crowd
of 51,000 and won the third
of the series by the
score of 7 to 5.
The weather was fair and warm and
j nK'what better than '.hat which
>r.tvied the contes‘«nts a:.d fan* in
New York on .Wednesday ano Thurs
day. Among notable* a::en.ing the
t me were Franklin D. R >osoeU *nd
Mayor Anton Cermack.
Thrills came often and vu'h *ix
circuit clouts predominating; woof
ifitse being from the bat of Ban.. Run
h . second being the longest e.ei hit
Wrlgley Field, and two by Ia)l Geh- I
rig; Hartne*t and Kiki Cuyler »f the !
Cuba, accounted for the r -tnaintr? two !
Charlie Grimm Cub nanager u.-ed j
Tout pitchers in the battle, while Joe I
Pj” inaertad Cwq v b.
a conspicuous veteran of world lf »s. I
H-rb Pen nock. |
Bo^Seorel
Yaskees Ab K H Po A K !
C »mbs cf . 5 1 n 1 « <) ■
e®well Jb 2 1 0 2 . O'
Ruth If , 2 2 2 < 01
Gehrig lb .* 2 2 13 0
Lszxerl 2b 1 0 1 ! l
Dickey c 0 1 2 . 0
Chapman rs 0 2 <> t> 0,
Corsetti vs 0 1 E i 0
P pgra* p 0 O » A 0
Pennock p • 0 0 " fi 0
To als ?' 7 827 13 1 (
Caba Ah R HI Pn Ar!
Herman 2b • 1 0 J i I
English 3b » 0 ft I :» 0 |
Cuyler rs > 1 3 1 •» 0 ;
Stephen son If ; 0 11 0 0 j
M>>ore cf 11 0 3 0 0 i
Grimm lb 1 o 1 < 0 f> !
Hartnett c 11 110 11 j
Root p 2 0 0 0 0 0
Malone p (.» 0 n o o o
xOudat 1 0 *• 0 (• 0
May p 0 0 0 0 0 0
Tinning p 0 0 nj 0 O 0
xxHernsley 1 0 o 0 0 0
Totals 35 5 927 9 4
xPatted for Maktiv in sth.
xxßatted for Tlnn ng In Hth.
Scone by Innings R H e|
New York 301 020 not 7 8 1:
Chicago Ifr» 100 on. 5 9 4 j
•I
Summary—Runa hattlxi in: Ru"h, 1
4; Cuyler 3; Gehrig d; 1; Eng
lish 1; Chapman 1; Hartnett 1. Two
Tremendous Majoyty For
Democrats In Sttate Seen
r-
Ortiy Piowlrt PiretK,
la Ur **t Walter lad .
UT J. f. ■A>NNMVI LL V
Raleigh. Oct. 1— Democrat* in Norll
Carolina are more militant and enthil
Elastic than they have bee in in year*
with the raeult that a Democratic ml
jority for the national and «uB
tick eta of not lea* tttjan 100.000 n gM
' “« r, v beins predicted Iby the pcu.
Aiders who have refcantljr bee ‘fl
ov “r the State. Several who lavi
>n the middle and *ar*tert) ieo Mt
recently report a steal * |TOfaii ,f ‘*W
*iment in favor of 9* tnr
Party In all tbeec eMlwli M»' fe
that 400.000 vntwH ft bd ct for
th “ I>emocrtUlc caadSrT* to ttrpo
'fmber e lectio*. • , *1
‘ 1 have never asurh k 4om
among the fiJ at
the present joptcism
“'•d enthua inert. Jo the no
c very the S
Aid 'rum
L - r asbiatnnt aat.
Hpnffli*rsmtoatlft © tsnafrh
tanan Wnia
Sahie Old Babe
.s.
|rtf?Sn
CABK RUTH
—.u
j base hits; Cuyler. Grimm. Jurges,
i Chapanan. Home rums: Ruth 2; Oeh
-1 rig 2; Cuyler 1; Har nett 1. Stolen
bases: Jurges Double plays: Sewell.
Lazzeri. Gehrig Left on bases: New
York 11 Chicago 4; Base on balls: off
1 Pipgms 3; Root 3; Malone 3; May 0;
Tinning .0; Pennock 0. Struck out:
by Pilpgras 1; Root 4; Malone 4; May
1 1: Tinning 1; Pennock 1. Hit* off
I Pijigras: 9 In 8 1-3 innings; Root d in
4 1-3 inhtage; Malone 1 In 2 24 in
nings; May 2 in 0 innings. Hit by
May. So Wall. Lasing pitcher: Root.
Winning pitcher: P’ipgras. Time of
game 2:12. Umpires Van Giafflan.
Magerkurth. Din«*n and Kletn.
| EXTRADITION FOR
KIDNAPER DENIED
! lu-itl'Kkj oniffnir l.« To Sent*
j lenkins To Tt.*as K»r Getting
j Ills Young Son Tin re
!
! Frankfort. Ky.. Oct. 1.- (API- Ex-
J tradi on of Hubert Johnson Jenkins,
t>ir. •<» Texas, was denied today by
Rub I^ifoon.
J* '. s an electrical engineer in
Lm; .vilte, was ndeted n Dallas, charg
ed v rh kdnapng ha young son. Hubert,
Jr., '.nd brng ig him to Louisville.
Tiie child.- mother was killed sev
eral years ag- in an autrmobile acci
dent after shand enkins had been
and her father, the late
Mayor T. L Bradford, of Dallas, was
| taeade guardian for young Jenkins, and
left him urtirge share of his estate,
j estimate* ■51,000,000. Bradford died
4 reqently. Jenkins' defense was
‘ tltut he went to Dallas and took
hie after the guardian had
died. ■ '
Hay from a trip
atern counties,
decking up on
of patients in
Institutions,
s s e normally
revaiiin? .opio
was that sot
counties would
sr the Novem
psphere 1 w
ty officials is
nd Nm.”
n out over the
lure that there
f imocrattc
is conservative
lor publication,
r tbs situation
. j toaewii «» *■» T*»*i d ,
°W»y DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OP NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA.
Hoover Pledges Negroes
Their Equal Opportunity
Tells Negro Group of
Vote-Getters G. O.
-PMViH Not Abandon
Its Duty
Washington, Oct. 1. fAP» Stand
ing before a group of more than ISO
Negroes gathered from a score of
states. President Hoover today told
them: "You may be assured that our
party will not abandon or depart from
its tradlional duty toward the Ameri
can Negro."
In response to several brief speeches
by the Negro representatives, gather
ed at a joint national com
mittee to get out the Negro 1 -*<ste, Mr.
Hoover added:
"I shall sustain this pledge given in
the first instance by the ijpimortal
Idncoln and transmitted by him to
those who followed as a sacred trust.
“The right of liberty, justice and
equal opportunity is yours."
The chief executive was interrupted
•by applause several times.
He stood bareheaded upon a curv
ing flight of steps leading down from
the south portico of the White House,
while his visitors formed a semi-circle
around him.
One after another, the chosen spokes
men of the Negro group stepped for
ward to deliever their words to the
President.
Seven Dead,
20 Missing,
Cloudburst
40-Foot Wall of Wa
ter Roars Through
T'ehachapi Pass In
California
Bakersfield, Cal., Oct I.— <[AP)
Leaving seven known dead and at
least 20 missing a 40-foot wall of water
roared through Tebachapi Pass, 40
miles from here, last night after a
cloudburst.
The current struck a Southern Pa
cific trestle 40 miles south of Bakers
field. hurling a locomotive and seven
freight cars into a canyon and Killing
the engineer.
Mr. And Mrs. Peter Kadd and their
two children perished when the water
wall struck their gasoline service sta
tion and carried it away. It was be
lieved several others were in the sta
tion at the time and also were swept
into the flood.
In addition to these fatalities, the
bodies of two unidentified parsons had
been recovered today
The treip carried an undetermined
number of itinerants and authorities
believed many had been swept away
mnA buried under the dehris In the
wake of the current.
HENDERSON, N. C., SATURDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 1, 1932
ONE OF KING’S GUARDS INTRIGUES HUTCHINSONS
fl| m 1 ’ f .
" fls 1 s MHr w ‘ ■
MISBI - < m
ym -Hw m mMm ■ 07/ m mk m wm.
ti ■Jß am - Jmm mUk
w ®B ♦n ■
r* »< >4 «£ wm u m
cl • ' -U S ffi I 9
. I « r -"n'l t I I j-iTrliirf I v 'iT' i - ' i t
A guard b«>dt*ckcd in all his finery |
Dutaide of Buckingham palace, J
London, intrigues th» “flying
Hutchinson family". Mr. and Mrs. ,
George Hutchinson and their two
children, Kathryn and Janet, have
been doing some sight.-eeing in
the British metropolis following
Six Men Injured
At Illinois Mine
Canton. 111.. Oct. I.—( AP) Six
men were injured today when a
crowd estimated at l,l>oo attacked
miner* as they attempted to go to
work in the Clesnies and Pschir
rer cool mines, among the largest
in the Fulton county independent
field. The State police and deputy
sheriffs were rushed to the scene.
se\ eral shots were fired. The crowd
of pickets forced a Toledo, Peoria
and Western train crew to abandon
efforts to move cars from the
Pschlrrer mine. A number of auto
mobl'es and trucks were badly
damaged In the melee.
GIF LEADEW
NEBRASKA HOPEFUL
Hoover May Carry State, A*
Farm Unrest Not So
Acute There. \
i
(Charles P. Stewart, touring the
middle west, investigates the |ee
litlcal and economic situation in
Nebraska.)
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Omaha, Neb., Oct. I.—The serious
rebuff to the La Follette dynasty at
the recent Wisconsin primaries lends
itself to almost as many interpreta
tions by leading politicians through
out the progressive mid-west as there
are leading politicians to interpret it
Functionaries of the Nebraska Re
publican state committee ( I talked
with a number of them at once and
their comments fell too fast to as
sign with much accuracy to each
(Continued on Page Sever..)
Republicans In
South Carolina
Ask One Ballot
Rock Hill, S. C-, Oct. I—(API J.
T. Hambright. representative national
committeeman, said here today attor
ney* for his party would appear be
fore Chief Justice Eugene S. Blease,
of the South Carolina Supreme Court
in Columbia, to ask for an order re
quiring the election board to show
cause why the names of all candidates
should not appear on a single ballot
in the general election.
•The Republicans claim two ballots
will destroy “the secrecy of the bal
lott."
WIATHfR
FOB NORTH CAROLINA.
Fair tonight and Sunday; slow
ly rising temperate* Sunday and
la west portions tonight. *
their rescue off the coast of
Greenland where their huge plana
crashed during their transatlantic
flight
7 OF 10 REPUBLICS
OF SOUTH AMERICA
WEN BY REVOLT
i
Disturbances Range From
Minor Attempts At Revo
lution To First Clast
Civil War
UNDECLARED WAR IN
PARAGUAY, BOLIVIA
Brazil Is Locked in Civil
War, With Similar Con
ditions in Chile and Ecua
dor; Paraguay - Bolivia
Fight and Brazil's Rising
Most Important.
(By the Associated Press.)
Disturbances of the public order,
running all the way from compara
tively minor attempts at revolution to
first class civil war. are affliciting
seven of the ten republic in South
America.
Paraguay and Bolivia are having
an "undeclared war" over the Gran
Chaoc territory, which lies on their
borders. Colombia and Peru are at
loggerheads as a result of the seizuie
of the Colombian cit yof Leticia by
Peruvians. Brasil is locked by civil
(Continued on Page Five.)
U. S. Arms
Plan Under
Discussion
Disarmament Com
■ mittee at Geneva
Studies Restriction
Os Effectives
Geneva. Oct. 1. -(API—The execu
tive committee o fthe world disarma
ment conference today agreed to an
'immediate discussion of President
Hoover’s plan for limitation of effec
tives.
Taking up the plan submited yester
day by Hugh Gibson. American min
ister to Switzerland, the committee
began the first study of provisions of
effectives into relief of national de
fense forces.
It then adjourned until Monday.
The committee of Ift. which is the
executive body of the ordinary As
sembly of the League, joined the Lean
gue Council today, regretting officially
that Japan had recognised the new
Manchurian state of Maachukuo. In
doing so the committee said Japan
took “a step likely to prejudice settle
ment of the disputes."
It rejected, however, the protest of
W. W. Ten, Chinese representative,
against the delay granted by the Coun
cil in considering the report of the
Lqague commission of inquiry in Man
churia. , -
im« --
imuaa &c£?^ff mu,oom •
FIRST NATIONAL TO
START AGAIN AFTER
CLOSING JANUARY 2
/ ' . / ’ L_
W. S. barker Is New President, With R. G.
Harrison Active Vice-President and
F. B. Robards As Cashier
After being closed nine months since last January 2,
the First National Bank here will open for business on
next Tuesday, October 4, it w r as announced today. The
new name will be First National Bank of Henderson,
as changed from The First National Bank of Hender
son.
The bank begins business with a paid-in capital of
SIOO,OOO and a paid-in sur plus of $20,000. W. S. Park
er will be the new president, R. G. Harrison active vice
president and F. B. Robards, cashier.
Farmer Financier
. Ml Ml
-i IB jH§
Jn teg
Ford Hovey, velii.,;*\. »* banker of
Omaha, Neb., who has been ap
pointed chief of the Agricultural
Credit Corporations under the
R F. C He is known in the Middle
" r est at one of the rutstanding live
stock loan banker, in the United
States. Mr. Hovey is president of
* **• Stock Yards National Bank of
Omaha.
SEPTEIERINCOI
FI STATE HIGHER
But Total For First Quarter
Less Than Same Period
Last Year
Oailr Dispatch Bnrcan,
In the Mir Walter Hotel.
BY J C. BA «K KB VII.I,
Raleigh, Oot. 1.- A total of $878,954
of State revenue for the general fund
was collected during September, as
compared with only $290,782 collected
in September, 1981, according to fig
ures announced today by Commission
er of Revenue A. J. Maxwell. This
brings the total revenue collections
for the firet three month) of the pre
sent fiscal year to $4,18.>.":/) as com
pared with collections of $3,678,427 for
the corresponding months in 1931.
■ There Is a definite reason for the
larger general fund revenue collec
tions in September, since <bc franchise
taxes were collected in September this
(Continued on Page Five.)
Roosevelt, Reynolds And
Repeal Lead Paper Polls
Roosevelt, Reynolds and prohibition
repeal were running awa with the
poll In the straw vote being conducted
over the State by daily papers mem
bers of the' North Carolina Associa
tion of Afternoon Newspapers, at
which the Henderson Daily ispatch Is
one, when the tint results were given
this afternoon.
The returns am sent regularly to
The Charlotte Newa, which is tabulat
ing the vote. The results of the poll
this afternoon showed;
For President.
Roosevelt <D; 2,461
8 PAGES
TODAY
FIVE CENTS COES
A. A. Bunn, who was attorney for
the closed bank .has been elected at
torney for the new one. and the lew
firm of Pittman, Bridget* and Hicks
will be advisory counsel.
The new board of directors will con
sist of the following prominent Hen
derson citizens: Henry Perry, L. R.
Gooch, R. G. 4v Davis, A. A. Bunn.
J W. Jenkins, W. S. Parker. S. R.
Harris, Jr. D. C. Loughiin, DY. 8. R.
Watson, R. G. Harrison and Jasper
B. Hicks.
Authorization for the announcement
of the opening date was contained In
a telegram this afternoon to R. G.
Harrison, receiver of the bank, from
the office of the comptroller of the
currency in Washington. The mes
sage-gave the bank* number in the
national banking system, and etated
that the new charter was being mail
ed.
Mr. Harrison has been her* in
roootumsd on Page FlseJ
OFFICER AND NEGRO
BANDIT ARE KILLED
Tuscaloosa. Ala., Oct. 1. < AP>—Aa
policeman -and a Negro bandit were
killedain a gun battle on the Univer
sity W Alabama campus last night as
the officer came to the aid of Leonard
A Allman, a student from Pennsyl
vania, and a girl companion, who had
been held up.
GUARWSEMOR
f SACCO, Mg
Officer Exchanges^
With Night
Attorney's Hdfl
Westin Mas?.. Oct.
fire was exchanged
ler and a special officer
guard the home of Dudley Rainey,
former assistant district attorney of
Norfolk county, who aided in the pro
secution of the anarchists Sacco and
Vanzetti early today.
Special Officer Aruthur C. Jones, as
signed to guard the Rainey home im
mediately after the bombing of the
home of Judge Weebster Thayer in
Worcester last Tuesday, said be saw
a man prowling near the entrance of
the house at about 4 a ,nt *
He caught him and asked what hd
wanted. The man said he was hungry
and was looking for food. Suddenly he
knocked Jones’ shotgun from his hand
ran & short distance and fired three
shots from a revolver Jones picked
up his shotgun and fired at the flee
ing man.
Hoover (R> M 0
Thomas (Socialist) «ft
Total 1 SJBft
Far (7. 8. Sonata
Reynolds <D) 2,495
Newell (R) 559
Total $.084
Present law 801
Modification 802
Reauboustion 800
Repeal 1,661
Total 2£64