Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 12, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON, GATEWAY to CENTRAL CAROLINA. NINETEENTH veak ALUMNI OF STATE . BECOME RESTLESS ON MERGER PEARS f ol ,r It Engineering School Goes To Chapel Hill, Means Passing of Their College IT |S RECOMMENDED IN ONE OF REPORTS Would Mean Reducing of Institution to Little More Than Junior College, Some Think, And Alumni News Devotes Much Space To Situation IHIIr L>l«i>a(<-lt ftitraaa. In ISC *»>r \\ nllrr llnlrl ,il I C H«»KKII VII.L l’ What is going to itn.u* ihe Srhi*ol of En_;i 'h** of trustees of 1 I’mvi‘jsity of North i '• go'ni; t,» bp !,*ft at I i- was expected until I>r <"r“oige A Winks rxperts" recommend ■ 'h»* i miplete tomoval nf j . _• 'o Chapel Hill and »ls .*»»•! mice than a junior j , _ ■*;.] the trustees carrv out • I i>utpn.-'C of its founders • >; • to maintain State Col • Mi- states technical and ag - hooi? questions that are being! • w.’h increasing insistence. -• «re College alumni and r-red with or interested in n And if they are not nn . h\- the board of trustees. , • i\ indication that the ques ' t uversitv consolidation, ap- ! - • -errled hr the 1931 General ; • !.- mi\ he thrown back into! f he 1933 General Assembly. I •1- tikeiv to become one of 1 ■ • vital and difficult questions j •' Assembly will have to i wi'h I' is agreed that the Uni • • i. a whole that is. all the ■ h *oi- which now compose the • i’. of NortA Carolina will do - log ether and get thlnga • r-foie the Gftheral Assembly v • if the conspUdation ques "u wn back into the General A 'T.">i again, there la no telling i\n.--c • will come out or when. V.- :c iier amount of the space in • » \ • mbcr Issue of the State -•’> i N a just off the press here. •<"l discussions o? vktihus tii n consolidation and k»*i - no status of the engineer* In the regular monthly t- >m Me To • You." L. Polk -• * i- M e editor, comments on s he made recently h> Judge \ T iwi end. who drafted the Uni -oiidalion bill, to the effect • r-. location of the Engineering be bugaboo of the present He stated further that "I whrte it 'the Engineering (C ntlr.ued on Page Seven) WRIGHT MEMOrTaL ON NEXT SATURDAY; ! _ Nov 12 «AP> Exercises' i unveiling of the memo-, Wright brothers Wilbur 11 i , r-.rommemoration of the! • '"fu flight in a poweidriv-. ;■ <n<- wul he held starting at m ncx' Saturday at Ki'ty '■Vi: Department announc ' • "-'a-hsugion today. (Iplimism In Y V. Found By Gardner • « (j'»\crnor Back From • Business Trip H ippy After. Ar • t inances N *"-. I- 1 Api A general 1 ’!■’srru-ni i- prevailing in " * * • • * M.,t o Max Gardner ' “l”*' tus return from a tip ti, :n ~hp north. • A'-'ui i,e came hack “ "•' - N,t w York it was ar :.o?i . I-.-UCS ,»r the State - - r Su.Vm.ofM) aiul due this ."newed. It also was an -1 'he State had arrayed ' v l ’" < ’ ,K tO fiom North Caro ’l - - H,, * f ' r Gardner, one of the •idei* footbali sane, put • . 1 * ;t ' " { =>• <e and attended l, "" T* ,th Garou. j State foot - ■ ii* ♦* h p» t* /' N ’ew Yo,k. Covet, , Gard ' , ! ect John Q B t q n g. lieasurer Jonn P. * ■•<*>■> pleasant Chat ' rv-mocnetic hct:rn>.,n. t 1 . Jftmitersnn or THB ABBOCIATRD PRBBI. Hometown Boy Makes Good - : or _ wHtom |p jm I 1 !u K ,‘u en n lU on , ly onc ln man y. many millions io return to hi« n„„u- t«,v » vith the Presidency „f the United States m his pocket. ,«.! ,• t |£ 1 vd'^Park f ° R ° ost ‘ vt ' l ' "".ling that hu» l *’ N , • r l v £ f. hhors luaved a ram siorm to welcome him home iftor h,s great landslide to v.etcry This photo was made on the X ; -csstul candidate’* return home after the noils Hoover Renews Pledge Os Cooperation Toward Return Os Prosperity Must Have Continued Unity I n Constructive Action All Along Economic Front, K e Says In Rear Platform Address; Explains H urry Back to Capital With President Hoover. En Route to Washington, at Glendale, Cal., Nov. 12. (AP) President Hoover broke his return journey to the White House today with a speech here, pledging cooperation to continue eco nomic recovery. Speaking from the rear platform of his special train, the executive said: “If we are to continue the recovery ao evidently in progress . during the past few months by overcoming the hriany difficutlies which still confront us, we must have continued untiy in constructive action all along the TOE ELECTION ~ j IN PENNSYLVANIA Negroes Reported Paid $1 Each For Their Votes In Delaware Washington, Nov. 12 fAP> Repre sentative Hearstiil Ragoon. of Arkan sas. chairman of the House Campaign funds committee, today announced that an investigation into the Dela ware and eastern Pennsylvania elec tiens would open here November 13- Ragoon said numerous complaints ■had bee nfiied with him on elections i both states, particularly about Phila delphia. Apparently he said, consider abli evidence purporting to show that voter were purchased in Delaware ai c o would be presented at the hear ing . * Repre.-entaUvp Blade, New York, headed a group of investi gators to gather the evidence, Ragoon said. One investigator for the committee, the Arkansan added, had informed him that Negroes in Delaware were paid a dollar each for their v r tes, and that an investigator had been compelled to close the polls at one plac e because of apparent irregularities. Savs Democrats Should Stand Bv Pledge of Liquor Washington, Nov. 12.—(AP*- Repre sentative Oliver, Democrat. Alabama, told newspaper men today that he felt it to be "the duty of every Demo crat to carry out the party’s platform and pledges" on prohibition, as well as other things. ~ . . . The Alabama Democrat said he had "resented the slur made by President Hoover In his St: Louis speech that we southern Democrats would not carry out our party's platform. Olive said it was his puropae to cooperate fully with the president and vice-president-elect in carrying out the platform in modification of the tuaendmenL « i r*“ ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER economic front." "I shall work for that unity dur ing the remaining four months of this administration. Furthermore, it is our duty, after the fourth of March, to cooperate with our opponents in every sound measure for the restoration of pros pet ity.” Mr. Hoover declared he was re turning early to Washington from his ■home in Palo Alto. Cal., "In special concern that the measures and in strumentalities which we have in mo tion on an entirely non-partisan basis shall continue to function vigorously and contribute their utmost.” I SENATOR NYE IS INJURED IN WRECK North Dakota Solon In St. Paul Hospital Follow, ing Auto Smash Up St. Paul. Mit>n., Nov. 12 (AH) — United States Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota, was injured today in a nautomabile mishap and brought to a hospital here. His injuries had not be* ndetermined at 12:30 p. m. His automobile was badly damaged. Ny e who was re-elected last Tuesday was en route to Chicago to meet his wife. From Chicago they planned to go to Washington in preparation for the session of Congress started next month. Details of the mishap were not avail abU immediately. Physicians said Senator Nye’s in juries o n first examination wen not cosidered serious. Round Trip From Frisco to Gotham , Being Attempted Kansas City, Nov. 12.—(AP)— Colonel Roscoe Turner arrived I here freon Los Angeles at 10:44 a. m, central. standard flme, today i one hour and 12 minutes behind schedule on his attempt to fly from New York and back to Cali fornia In approximately 22 hours. Albuquerque, N. M., Nov. 12.—(AP) > —Colonel Roecoe Turner, attempting a round-trip speed flight from Bur l bank. Cal., to New York, landed here , at 5:33 a. m„ Pacific standard time, time refuelled and left four minutes l later for Kansas City, t Colonel Turner took off from the t United Airport at Burbank at 2 40 t «l m.. PST., in an attempt to fly from Los Angeles to N-w York and return > 5,044 miles, in approximately 22 hours. 1 Weather reports showed clear » weather over the route except at s Columbus. Ohio where there were overcast skies, rain and snow* g— L HENDERSON, N. C.. SATURDAY Satin StaiJatrfi PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. G.O.P. OLD GUARD HAS HEART SET ON COOUDtSEra Waiting Only For Hoover To Oet Out To Unfurl Coolidge Emblem and Start Campaign ELECTION NOT MUCH SURPRISE TO THEM And Few of Them Care Much What Happened To Hoover, for They Could Not Get Along With Him; Boom For Cal Ready By Inauguration Day By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, Nov. 12. Just watch the mastheads of the G. O. P. Old Guard! Beginning by inauguration day, at the very latest, this banner will be 'seen fluttering from it; “Calvin for president in 1936!'' Maybe the Old Guard will wait un til Herbert Hoover :s out of the White House before hoisting the Northamp ton ensign. Maybe not. The Old Guard is impatient and it has the ensign ready- It has had it ready for some time. It would have liked to hoist it for last summer's Republican con vention, but had to recognize regret fully that that would not do. Now the Old Guard wants to get it aloft us speeddily as possible. The sooner it launches ithe movement for recon solidation of its forces, the better, the Old Guard feels, it will be. To unfurl the Coolidge emblem with Mr. Hoover not yet politically cold, so to speak, would be indecorous -the Old Guard knows that. Perhaps it can restrain itself until after the funeral but it is no certainty the old Guard longs mightily to see that banner streaming in the air. There probably are not many folk who imagine that the election result was unexpected by the Old Guard. Doubtless the Old Guardsmen general ly will be given - credit for anticipat ing what was coming as foreaightedly as anyone else. There may be those, however, who assume that the G. 0. P. Old Guard Is in mourning for what befell on election day. And. indeed, pome Old Guardsmen are for what befell them. But as for what befell President Hoover! —tut, tut! The woods are full of beaten Old Guardsmen who attribute their own defeat to Mr. Hoover, and if one could hear what they are all saying at the present momene, it is safe to state that one would be shocked. The G. O. P. Old Guard was not (Continued or Page Font) GRAND JURY RAPS LEGISLATIVE COST Montgomery. Ala., Nov. 12. CAP'- The Montgomery county grand jUty today r. or red a true bill against a mtember of the Alabama legislature and in 'ts report to Judge W. U. Jones condemned “the unwarranted expenditure of public money by the recent legislature.” PLEADS GUILTY AND GETS LONG SENTENCE Elizabeth City, Nov. 12 (AP) - Frank Tlbertson, Jr., today pleaded 1 guilty to assault upon his wife with a pistol with intent to kill and the jury hearing the case was discharged. Judge R .Hunt Parker sentenced Albertson to nine to ten years at hard labor In felon’s stripes. Roosevelt Improving From Cold Albany, N. Y-, Nov. 12.—<AP> President-elect Roosevelt, buffering from a' cold, was “much improved.’’ hlg staff at the executive mansion said today. Although he had thrown off the worst effects of the ccdd he contracted in the closing arduous days of the presidential campaign, Mrs. Roosevelt prevailed upon him to re main In bed for the second day. Visitors at the mansion were asked to put off their engagements with Mr. Roosevelt to allow him a com plete rest over the week-end. , The slight fever he had yesterday had improved today. WEATHER FOB NOBTH CAROLINA. Fair tonight and Sunday; some what colder tonight, with frost, probably heavy on the. mao* and AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 12, 1932 WHO WILL BE THE NEXT SPEAKER? ff ga «v*** ;, k ' j John McDuffie John E. Rankin K.luaid \\" J'nti of Alabama of Mississippi ‘ of North (timlm-. The nation in general and the j Democratic party in particular are wondering who will be the next speaker oJ the hou*? of rep reaentativeb, succeeding Vice j Caribbean Storm Deaths Increase (By the Associated Frees) Sixty-seven more deaths have been added to the total of the Carlb bean hurricane, which took more than 1,000 lives in Cuba. The storm struck on Tuesday night in the Cayman Islands, about £9 O miles northwest ot Jamaica, killing 67, injuring many others and inflicting heavy prop erty damage. Big Strike In Geneva A Protest Geneva, Nov. 12. (AP)—A 24-hour general strike, protesting the death of 10 persons in this week's rioting, went into effect in this international “Hence" capital tooay wnue troepe were mobilized as a precaution against renewed violence. The strike was part of a demon stration of protest organized by the Socialists as an aftermath of the mac hine gunning of a political meeting Thursday night. Greensboro Man Identifies Negro As Slayer There Durham. Nov. 12.—(AP)—Robert Vestal, of Greensboro, came here to day J.and positively identified. Dave McNair, a Negro, as one of men who 1 shot and fatally wonnded Mrs. Joseph McCown# mother of three 'chil dren, at a Greensboro filling station, last night. Vestal was an eye-witness to the shooting. McNair, found in a Plum street house early today with bullet wounds in his teg and abbdomen, was one of three Negroes being held as suspects in the Greensboro shooting. ELECTED^PRESIDENT OF ECONOMIC GROUP Atlanta. Ga., Nov. 12 (AP)—Dana J. B. Crank of Louisiana Satte Unte versity, txiay was elected president of the Southeastern Econom^^ Associa tion . In .the same busing session the names of the orgaaitttioa was changed from Southeastern Economic Conference. War Debt Problem Will Be Thrown Back Into Congress Again At December Session ÜBUBHED EVERY ATTBJtMOO* EXCEPT SUNDAY. ui *vorwi k aroiim S President-elect John N. Gamer in one of the ranking offices of tlie government. The choice is expected to be made from the five i Democratic leaders shown here. ! 24 MINERS KILLED IN ENGLISH SHAFT Explosion Occurs la Edge green Colliery at Ashton in-Makerfield 100 MEN IN THE PIT Follows previous Tragedy On October 10. When 19 Men W«*r e Killed When Elevator Dropped 1,500 Fert To Boston* Wigan, Lancashire. England, Nov. 12. (AP) Twenty-iour miners were killed early today in an explosion at the Edgegreen colliery at Ashton-in- Makerfield. The accident occurred while 100 men were working in the colliery on the night shift. On October 10, nineteen men were killed when a colliery' elevator drop ped 1.500 feet to the bottom of the pit shaft. Wigan is the center of the rich coal area extending some 20 miles west of Manchester. Ashton-in-Makerfield is five miles due south of Wigan, and one of the many coal mining villages in the section. , BANK MESSENGERS ROBBED OF $4,000 Little Rock, Ark., Nov. 12 lAP)-- A young messenger and Negro porter of the People's Trust Company were,' robbed of $4,000 which they were tak ing to hteir bank from the Federal Reserve branch today. Forced into a»n automobile in the downtown seetkou, the two were driven into the resk'Jen tial section, relieved o fthe naoney 'and released. J jury To Receive Case of Casey In Afternoon Today Kinston, Nov. 12 (AP)—The judge’s, charge and one more attorneys argu ment remained today before this jury t takes the case of Herman Casey, charg ed with murdering James Causey, Sus folk, Va. t lumberman, here July *, 19ft. «■ Jesse A. Jones, chief of the defense counsel .told the jury it would have been possible for Causey to have met death in the accidental burning of his i automobile instead of his being thul t and the car burned by Caoev, a* His State charges. 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS com 1123,060.000 DUE NEXT MONTH, WITH PAYMENT UNLIKELY England And France Have Already Transmitted Notes to Washington On Subject GREECE FAILED TO PAY ON THURSDAY Hungary Ha» Advised She Cannot Pay; British Note Forwarded Hoover, And Senator Reed y Pennsyl vania, Sayy; Congresr Will Get Question Again Washington. Nov iJ <AJ*>—The many and varied speculation* on the contents n f Ihe British and French debt notes, has caused the Stale Department to decide to make them public for Monday morning papers. This decision was reached today after consultation with the Brit ish end French cnibMdes. 81m ultaneon* publciation will be m** 1 * in Kurope. Karfy publication was decided on to squelch reports that were de clared misleading. At first it seemed likely tlfe noted would be kept secret until President Hoover’s arrival to Washington. v Washington. Nov. T2.—<AP) —Pros- pects that a Congress already on rec ord against further reduction or can cellation may again be handed the war debts problem appeared today a s President Hoover sped eastward to discuss the matter with government leader^. exceeding sl23.‘kNi,(niO— the first since expiration of the mora torium last June -are due December If*./ 1 but already England and Fiance hAve transmitted notes on the sub ject, Greece has failed to make * pay jnent due last Thursday and Itongary has announced her inability to pa \ Secretary Stimaon forwarded the British note to the President, who is due to arrive Tuesday. said it would be make public simultaneously in England and America, probably next Tuesday. The French note was descril*-d as “in the same category." Senator Reed. Republican. Pennsyl vania. meanwhile, said on Capitol Hill that the entire war debt problem "will be thrown into Congress'' at the be ginning of the December session. An administration spokesman. Reed took a prominent part in securing approval of the Hoover one-year moratorium. FIND ROCKY MOUNT MAN FATALLY HURT Rocky Mount, Nov. 12.— (AP) -• Richard. Bass. 21 silk mill worker, died in a hospital here early today a few hooirs after he was found with a fractured skull near the city limit*. He wu* brought here by five young men who reported they found him unconscious, apparently from heavy, blows about the head, and a coroner’a inquest was called. - -- i i * Mrs. Gregory Is Secretary To Reynolds —— r **<•*%. Daughter Os Late Senator Overman Appointed; Steno grapher Named. - Asheville, Nov. 12.—(AP)—Senator elect Robert R. Reynolds today an nounced the appointment of Mr*. Ed win C. Gregory of Salisbury, as his private secretary', sad Miss Pa a lett of As he vi fie, as his chief stenogtapher. Mro. Gregory. Caujghter of the late b~uator Lee S. Overman, will assume - tier duties after Reynolds has been 1 sworn in as North Carolina's juntos senator about Decmabr IQu
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1932, edition 1
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