rgENPERsON, j gateway to ' CENTRAL CAROLINA. NINETEENTH year inn DEFENSE 10 HEFT POLICE WITH PARADE IN CAPITOL Drniecl Permit For March on Grounds. Leader Say* j They Will Parade There Anyhow desponsibility ON POLICE. HE ASSERTS’ Confcerence Breaks up With Threats: Parade Would Be: Held In Connection With Supreme Court tion of Scottsboro Ne groes' Case \ > Al’» j •> j. int .» permr. top- j ii r . In’e: national i/t. | :•> t rmly told Capp'd * •1 !• .1 •> tiolcl ?» demon. I v ■: i.», Capitol grounds | he Sco'.t boro ( I :i wi.rh seven Negroes j -.1 - n diath at Scottsboro. j . •-saijlt <»n two white I - n a ::ii.r._• before the Su- ' \ t. » b> n delegation nf ■ . r t s Sj e •'**<■ n-sistan: inter -3 - -1 -*• *•: ry of the De. - calkd this morn. '’ipM n Stephen J. Nash, of - • ; ...«■ to askc permission .«> Te'pre.o-ntstives of the . n pa rede on Capitol • rente broke up with • -n '•putoi after Captain Nash srant th~ permission. : t .1 menihrs of his organi ; - it right to cn’er the Cap . .nnid declared the mar. | . : pa'ade Monday, and that j r.r r*; ,’v wu son the police if t RUENT PORTO RICO TORNADO KILLED 247 i : Nov 3 lAPI Gover- | •’ f Porto Rico today re- j -»7 persons lost the.r lives rr Ports Rican hurricane. Instill May * Bp Brought ToL.S.]\low txtradition Treaty Now In Effect Be-j tu Lcn America and! (irccce ! N'm 3. fAPt With | ■> < ii* ton hpstv l»etween the! , * t, ‘ >»nd (iieece now in ef-} i- i • tr-u de-,.. i informed quar* «' likely that steps have j 11 > bring about the arrest i Ih.-uil. former Chicago} ' i>. by the Greek gov-: • • -i . • « ” ’ ' leial- refused to say wheth- i ‘ * i it hot it iy a had been request-I In-nil! in Athens, it was! ! ‘ t, ,t Meaty ratifications! "• ringed before two Chicago I *e < attorneys left for • -erk Insull * , * x'radilion cannot he es-j eital documents in the! . ~ 1 ‘ hugs and » presiden- > tenched Athene, and ad-: officials in Washington * tv whr'hrr the lawversl , -uch papers or wall re ‘ "■*" ,l 1 i Europe. " ' ex> hange of the instru-! '■l'.ta'.on was made known •Vhens and promptly was, ‘ ! ’’ 1 s tate Department. I ’ exchange was made 1 _ 1 in Washington. i Hoover Begins Campaign 1 rip Across Continent ' ' " * v,v - 3 1 AP> Turn- V, . , ' ; ,n, P«ißn trail for the lust: (i nv ' fo ‘ re-election. Pi-eel-; ' today on a awing . n ‘‘ '‘esignrd to take, .'■.iif ui California on elec- I < .. , Xh , h;s r ‘ ose 't advisors, the j -• iU ‘ yed in th « quiet; ;r i r " ’ House for final pre-; T.n* •:i- ' l " ‘tuiude five major ad ' i „ ’ M ore of shorter talks . “ l ’ latf,, mi of his train, l. *" 11 Wlll peak at Spring* i, v '; rno, *.»w afternoon, St. * r ,I; ht. Madison, j HENDERSOiAWa iicnuersmt Satlu Lltarrrrtrh Or TH* ABBOCIATBD PRBB9. Hubbub for Roosevelt in Hub ' • 4 * f ** * v *' ** i w! V : • M j BL 4* W 7 Js&K * * m K J mrmg. , JfSL '.JF * m m jjfff < '*r ™ HyH »: f ~#^^BBBsßl 'or a moment a political meeting took on an appearance of an after-the ■ edding demonstration as admirers showered Governor Franklin D. loose veil and his co-speaker. Governor Joseph Ely of Massachusetts, nth confetti, when the Democratic candidate made a campaign address .t Boston. The targets of th<* confetti-throwers seem to enjov the experi ence. something new at a political rally. Five Women Killed Upon Crossing Near Richmond May Poll Heavy Vote ■ jewisjjl jSSSmiI Morria Hiliquit A large vote is expected to be cart for Morris Hiliquit, Socialist candidate for mayor of New York. He is a well-known lawyer. Chiropractors To Meet In Columbia For 1933 Session Ttaleigh. Nov. 3 1 AP)-- Dr. G. A. Bauer, of Coiumtoia. S C., tßxlay was elected president of the Tri.State Ch.ropraetic Association, and Colum. bin was chosen as tbe convention city for the organization next year. The »,*'>'ait ion this afternoon con rliued its first anrual meeting which opened h*re yesterday. Dr. J iv. -f horn ton. of Goldsboro. Dr. J. S Stoker of Roanoke Va . r.;i 1 If J Ft. of Spartan burg. S. C . »' r< elected vice.pifc.N deuts" Dr. J W. Phillips, of Flor ence. S. C. was elected secretary and 1 • on sill el" The convemionvot cd to disucss problem cases at a clinic in connection wi.h next year’s meeting, and named Dr. Harry E. Fedder. pres,dent of tiie Linci 'n Chiropractic College, of lil nois. to be in cnarge. Saturday morning and St. f’nu! Sat urday night. He alao will make a final radio appeal over a nationwide broad casting network election eve. Although final plana had not been made today this last address may be made from some Far Western city on the way to the coeat. There is a pos sibility that It might be made from the moving train, or perhaps from a tapped telephone trunk In some spar sely settled community along the route to California. Mr. Hoover announced Ms plans to return home to vote in a speech last night broadcast on the, coast *n cele btAttAa OL "ffihUXOfOi* - newspaper ONLY DAILY Car Apparently Had Stalled on Tracks; Crossing Clear Both Ways Richmond, Va.. Nov. 3. (APi Five women were killed today in an automcbile-train cro.sh at Greendale. Henrico county, near here. The dead o-e: Mu. Grace Land, 40; Mrs. W. H. driver of the car; Mrs. E. R. Metz. 30; Miss Mary Stone, 17; Mrs. A. H. Henley. 45. All were residents of Laurel. Va. t VV. H. Hall, an eye witness, said that the train carried the automobile more than 200 yards down the track It was a southbound train coming into Richmond over the Richmond Fredericksburg and Potomac tracks. R. L. Fox. engineer of the train No 80. Atlantic Coast lane from New York to Jacksonville, said apparently the car stalled on the track in front of the train The light coach was ear ned between a quarter and a half mile on the tracks. Apparently the women wore killed instant l>. Coroner A. T. Trayman, of Hanrico county, went to the scene to view the bodies and start an investigation. W. H. Hall, of Dumberton. Va.. an eye witness, easd the whistle sounded sev- 1 i ral times. The crossing H perfectly level and there is visibility in both directions. IT'S A DEMOCRATIC YEAR; HERE'S PROOF Medfivld, Maas., Nov. 3 (AP) — For the first time in the history of this town, according to the oldest Inhabitants, Medfteld tonight will have a Democratic rally. ATTITUDE OF DRYS CAUSES NO WORRY Endorsement of Republican Candidates Will Not Af fect Results Uxllr Dispatch Duress. In the Sir Walter Hotel* nr j. c. nASKERvnt. Raleigh, Nov. 3.— The action of Dr. A. J. Barton, representing the com* bined "dry” forces of North Carolina, in issuing a statement indorsing thir teen of the fifteen Republican can didates for State and congressional offices as being "satisfactory” to the drys. has brought forth no comment here from Democratic leaders. But the feeling among those in Democratic circles is that this statement will have little or no effect upon the outcome of the election and that all the Demo cratic candidates will be elected' by tremendous majorities. This action on the part of Dr. Bar ton and the "drys" of the Stale was not a surprise, since a statement of this sort has been expected ever sinoe Dr. Barton issued a questionnaire to various candidates some weeks £Cgntiuu«4 on £?*• XX9i JLS PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. HENDERSON, N. C„ THURSDAY AFTERNOON. NOVEMBER a Ki 39 I GARDNER SPEECHES PRESENTING FACTS, GETTING RESULTS Believed Doidg More To Clinch Campaign For Democrats Than Any Other Speaker SHARP DECLINE IN VALUES EXPLAINED ! People Understand Langu age When He Say* Crops in One County Were Worth $21,000,000 Under Wilson i And $4,000,000 Under Hoover Regime Dnlte Ol*pnr<-* Harms Is the Sir Waite* Itatel. UY J. r IIAShEIMIIIL , Raleigh, Nov. 3.- -The campaign speeches being made by Governor O. Max Gardner are doing more to clinch to campaign and convince those who s o far have been more or leas in doubt tibout the .soundness of the Demo cratic doctrines, both national and State, than of any of the other speak ers, according to the hulk of opinion here. This is because Governor Gard ner is talking hal’d, cold facts rather than generalities and is bringing these facts down to the counties and com munities in w-hich he has been speak ing. It is apparent that Gardner has delved a little deeper to get his facta in oixier lo make a more lasting im pression upon the minds oi those who hear him. After his speech in Greenville Tues day night, scores of residents of Pitt county told him that he had told them more about Pitt county in that speech than they had ever been told before and tat for the first time he had made plain to tnem the fundamental dif ference between political doctrine of the Democratic and Republican (Continued on Page Fosr) ROOSEVELT GUEST MOTHER AT DINNER Albany, X Y , Nov. 3 (AP) — Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democratic. Presidential nominee, left shortly before nom today for hi* Hyde Park home for luncheon with his mother before making ab automobile swing through Jersey City and Newark, N. J., late this afternoon and speak'Mg |n New York CHy tonight Street Car Systems In Berlin Idlej i Workers Strike In Protest Against Wage Cut and City Has to Walk Berlin. Nov. 3.—(API-The main transportation system of Berlin- the world's third largest city—was paraiz ed today by strikers against wage cuts and affecting 23,000 workers. Only the state operated Stadthahn, a single link in the vast system, was running. Asa result, thousands of early rising Berliners were forced to brave a driving rain to get to work. Some preferred to chase taxicabs. Others dashed for the nearest Stad thahn station. The strike was called at 5 a. m.. and by 7 a. m. the police had taken over all loading points on bus. street car, subway and elevated lines as a pre caution against disorder. The police guard was set up after a few of the conveyances normally used to carry transport employees io work had ventured out, only to be met by a barrage of stones from strike sympathizers. Three men were arrest ed. ; v ; : Meanwhile police were placed at transport terminals and turned away those who appeared for duty. Their numbers were augmented at some ter minals by groups us unemployed seeking work. The tie-up was complete despite the fact that transport workers failed to vote the required three-fourths ma jority for a walk-out in protest against the latest wage cut. WEATHER FOB NORTH CAROLINA. Fair tonight and Friday; soofe what wanner Friday mud on the sAi.h coast tonight. FOB HENDERSON. For 84-hour "period ending at noon today: Highest temperature, 07; lowest, 31; no twin; southeast Find; clear, ; •,„» ■ $62,000 Cut Given Durham By Corporation Commission On Electric Service Costs HUNGER MARCH RECALLS THIS Grtuit Britain’s hunger march, which has kept all of London un easy for several days, recalls this masterpiece of news photography which first appeared in 1925. It shows • ragged pauper running with oathetic desperation after the 1 G.O.P. LIKELY TO GET NEW ENGLAND Ar* Pre»ent Indications Point That Way, Correspond ent Declares SAYS MAINE CHANGED Mat-sachtr Hlm And Rhode Islr>\d Voted for .Smith in i3iS*ec»n».- He Was Wet; Deinocn's Ho|iing (Charles P. Stewart. Washing ton correspondent, traveling in the east, summarizes the New Eng land situation as he sees It.) By CHARLES T*. STEW ART New York. Nov. 3.- There is no use I in ti-ying to account for it. but all, indications point toward a G. O. P. 1 victory throughout New England at; the coming election, aespnc the fact that at least tnree of its six states, should, logically, be fairly good pros pects for the Democratic column. To be sure, the whole area is nor mally Republican. Maine went Democratic, on its early state election, no longer ago than last September. As a member of the organization at Jeffersonian national headquarters remarked to me. “There certainly is no reason why the Pine Tree state shoitld have changed its political mind ina mere matter of seven or eight weeks. Why assume that it has.” Why indeed? Nevertheless it gen erally is assumed that it has. Massachusetts and Rhode Island are different. They went Democratic four year# ago mainly because of their devotion to A1 Smith personally; partly because they are very wet and A1 is a wet. And Mr. Hoover and the G. O. P. were regarded by them as identified with (Continued on rage Two.) Ruth Nichols In . Crash at Start of Trip for Hoover New York, Nov. 3. -CAP)—Lightn ing action saved Ruth Nichols, famous aviatrix. from probable death early today when her plane smashed up on the take-off of a tnans-coniinentaJ campaign flight for President Hoover As the plane, freighted with a large supply of gasoline, shot down a 3,000- foot runway at Floyd Bennett field. It skidded off at 60 miles an hour, went into a ground loop and buried its left wing in the ground. Quick as a flash, before the craft struck. Miss Nichols cut her switch to prevent her gasoline from catching fire and burning the plane and her self. Ambulances clanged to the scene as Mias Nichols eUpped out of the badly damaged ship. "Are you hurt?" attendants cried. "No,” she said, smiling and trying to conceal her exasperation over the mishap. “Nothing can hurt such an gld hand at this game as I am," PUBLISHED EVERT AFTEIMOOS ■XCBPT SUNDAY. royal carriage, begging alms from King George. Now certain ele ments of the unemployed, who number many thousands, have made attempts to storm Bucking ham palace and to invade the houses of parliament. HOOVER IS PANICKY IN FACING DEFEAT Showing Poor Sportsman ship In Trying To Scare American Voters HE IS TAKEN TO TASK Aswrl im That Government Will Ci»l --YSpao U - ess Hr Is Re. Elected Is Sheerest Effrontery, , Gardner Declares Dnllr Dispatch Barca a. In the S‘r \\ niter Hotel BY J <’. K/t*KKII VI LI.. Raleigh. Nov. 3.—Long insensible to the fact that there wa-s a ’’panic,” the “panic" has at last seized President Hoover. Now. with his knees shaking and his teeth chattering, he is trying to pass his own fear and the fear of his fellow Republicans on to the rest of the country and to make it believe that unless he and his panic-makers are restored to power that there will be a worse “panic” and that “grass will grow in the streets of hundreds of cities.” This is the way most of the Demo- 1 eralic leaders here sum up Mr. Hoov er’s most recent speeches and the psychology he evidenced in Ehem. But without exception they see in these speeches only the personal fear and desperation of Mr. Hoover that he will not be re-eheted -the frantic efforts of a drowning man about to be suck ed into a gigantic whirlpool “Mr. Hoover and the Republican K —_ lOaotinuad on Page Three.) SANFORD TRIAL IS • NEARING THE JURY Sanford, Nov. S.—(API— Argu ments to the jury in the trial of Elvin White and Charlie Myers, Negroee. charged with the murder of N. H. Perry, store-keeper, and Thomas Beal, farmer, at Cum nock Jne 18 were begun in su perior court here today. Three argument*, were complet ed before the luncheon recess, and indications were the case would reach the jury late today. Convicted Preacher Is Sentenced; Says Frame-Up Muskogee. Omaha. Nov. 3.— Reduction in electricity rates of the Durham Public Service Company to save Sfl .- 000 annually for the consumers in Dur ham today ware ordered jnto effect November 10 by the State Corpora tion Commission. The Durham company, after many hours of conference with the Cor poration agreed to a new scale of rates reducing all types of service, but moat particularly, com mission members pointed out, grant ing littlest customers some real i reduction.” Announcement of the action In the Durham case was the first since the Corpora tion Commission launched a Light for lower electricity rates on July 21. Commission members said It w;ls not certain when action might be talren in cases of other public utilities which have been called into confers ence. • •«■-« • Under the Corporation Commission a •order issued today in the Durham matter, the revised rates become ef fective on November meter readings. It also provided that should the Duke Power Company, as a result of the commission’s investigation, make any reductions in prices it charges the Durham Public Service Company for Its power, then these reductions si ill inure to the benefit of the cmuum;rs of the Durham company. NEUTRMYtHTS WOULD BE DROPPED Herriot‘s Plan Revealed A* More Far-Reaching Than First Seibn „ _ Toulouse. France. !Nov. 3.—(AP>-< Premier Kdouard Harriot's new dies armament plan calls for abandonment of the right of neutrality by subscrib ing nations, it was disclosed today aa M. Herriot's radicral socialist party gathered to approve his foreign an 4 other policies. The convention, is expected to giv* the disarmament, project, as part of the foreign pol'cy, the same over whelming endicsement the premier won in the Chamber of Deputies last week. It was reveeied In connection with the abandon r.lent of the neutrality, that ts e disarmament scheme envisaged ar. anti-war pact with the United Staff a. The report of the party; on foreign affairs adds this: •‘lf the "United States accepts the Capper vt olulion to amend the Kel logg pact, a great step toward the problem of the liberty of the sea* will hav*e been achieved.” it was me. and God in his heaven knows it." He paused and then proceeded (o deny the trial testimony of John Wolsey. former -hies of police, con cerning purported relations between the preacher and his present bride. 12-year-old Ida Beet* Berrie. before the first Mrs. Berrie died last March 21. “Tour statement comes with poor grace,” replied Judge Crump. “Ton had a chance to take the stand and deny these charge' and so did your wife. You didn't do so." He then passed formal sentence, which was assessed by the jury which convicted Berrie, ,