CurilTlEßsON, TtF'VAVTO i t’NTRAL : f.iKOI.INA. year ROOSEVELT TO MEDICINAL LIQUOR I MORE LIKELY THAN! BEER IS FOR N. C.j Bills To That End Consider- 1 Certain To Be Pre sented in 1933 Gen- ■ eral Assembly I DOCTORS, druggists ARE STRONG FOR IT |* Would Be Life-Saver for [heir Business And The-] rpcuticaliy Sound, It Is l Held By Some; Opinions] Vc Expressed by Proses- ! oonal Interests • • IM»|irit<* Hnrn« In t' medicinal liquor •a th- prescriptions of ! ; ,■ll.led much more « • • *ii the i epfii I of ;he ; . . •• enfoicement act. no- . . *n hi political circle*. 1 | of n prescription li- , i to he difficult, ac-J i I belief. ’in* the i-aloof medicinal i -o • i iOpeal the Turling-t v. . undoubtediy he intro-’ ‘.he 193 S session, it i.- ’ ’ •• f th*- new member* of I •: itit ati *M -torn county is I •e .i- alnady preparing « i . the Turlington Act. so 1 a. ' >he .-ale of wine and ' t*- ue id to be working ' rue .i, it*,. But the bulk of j i" • ; 'he- more conservative i is (hat there is v'r-l • ■ hence for .the reiteal of the., 'c* the Slate s bone dry . .lorcement uct passed in 1 - forthcoming General Art-; 'inti-.d on Page Three.) II VIOLENT DEATHS THROUGHOUT SOUTH 1— ULtti'a 1.a.. Nov. 11. (Al*)— ] guns and fire caused * H ' i|p;iths. of It persons In week- j •t‘ HudentH n\er the South. tor car tniHluip-* coat eleven 1 1 1 rearms accident* two and ••fe iilie Durham Road Man Cicts Contract In j Smok\ Mountains] _i * i . Tenn.. Nov. 11 (AP> - ; of Durham N, C.. will’ 'i ■* road in the Great I '•I oil t-un< National Park. | > i oum ement today said j *77207 -l with North Carolina' No 11J The bids will be \ \\ ■-no gton The contract will j ■ i f>om fhetc. Arranging Kith Hawk % Dedication 111:1 1 Preparations Iriho Made For Memorial U cut on Saturday •* .., '* K , '*■ 300 men ,’be grounds with ’’ . • "'eniert. Hrttiteramt Batlu Btsuatrh r ffi L r» l fS2jr«* •* rvic » or TH* ABfIOCIATBD PRESS. Dr. Frank Graham Is Elected Head Os Greater University Six WOMEN SENT TO CAPITOL HILL 5 * jM x 1: ~ 1 ■'' i i ■Mr s, .Ivm k.-s ' 1 Miss OT.ou^lilm Two new congresswomen w:l! grace . the lower houoe of Capitol HU when j the new to Washington [ in March. They ate Mrs. Virginia 1 Jenckes. Indiana Dcmocru*. and Miss Katheryn O Louphlin. Kansas Demo- ( crat Three veteran members. Mrs. | Republicans Are Urged To Push Relief Program, Then Let Democrats Pav J Rum Gang Drowns ! Col. Robins At Sea ; Boston, Mass.. Nov. 14.—(AI') A story of the drowning at sea by | rum runner* of Colonel Raymond ] Robins, missing prohibitionists, and j friend of President Hoover, was told today during an investigation of Ralph Code, 40, alleged swindler. I No trace of Colonel Robins has been ! found since e«rly in September. | i Insurance Amendment Put Across Other Three Voted on Last Tuesday Apparently Beaten By Big Vote Raleigh. Nov. 14 (AP) - Raymond C. Maxwell, executive secretary of th State Board of Election-, estimated today, on the basis of elo-tion returns from 43 of the State's lhfi oiunties. that only one of the four proposed constitutional amendments vend on last week had carried. Amendment No. 3 to provide for protection of insurance for wives and children had ft favorable major.ty of about 45.000 and appeared safe, he said. The amendment to provide for sub mlwion of future proposed constitu tional changes at special ekctions ap parently lost by upwards of 35.0 W votes; that to change the terms of office by sheriffs and coroners from ‘two to four years appeared defeataed by upwards of 40.000; and the one to create aoiidbofrial dJ**i<*s loot by more thug tiuaie^- ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER ---PERSON, N. C„ MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 14, 1932 CONFER WITH HOOVER ON WAR DEBTS Florence Kahn. California Republican; ,A£ r ’■ Mary Nor.on, New Jersey Demo crat. and Mrs Edith Rogers'. Massa chusetts Republican, were re-elected. Mrs. Hattie Caraway. Democra frtm Arkansas, once again will be ihe only woman sitting in ’ll* 1 senate. Would Reap Popularity for Befriending Needy A» Democrats Anger Public With Tax MIGHT BLOCK SUPPLY BILLS THIS SESSION Would Force Roosevelt To Call Extra Session To Pro vide Money; Radicals, Seeking Federal Playing Two Big Parties Against Each Other By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington. Nov. 14. —Republican support of an extensive- and expen sive- program of relief at the winter session of congress, for all classes of the economically distressed, with the Coming Democratic administration left to find money to meet costs of the scheme, is being urged upon G. p. P. managers, as a sequel to the Jeffersonian victory at the polls. The plan, of independent radical origin, by no means was conceived with a view to the promotion of ulti mate best interests of the Republicans Nevertheless, its authors, while readily conceding that what they have in mind is the furtherance of ends of their own, are arguing with Hamil tonian strategists that its adoption will serve the purposes of the Repub licans in simultaneously placing them (Continued on Page Three.) Turner Attempts Record Hop From New York to West Kansas City. Nov. 14. —(AP)— Col onel Roecoe Turner landed for fuel here today at 12;40 p. m.. today, cen tral standard time, five hours and 45 minutes after leaving Hew York in an attempt to establish a new east-west transcontinental record. He left again in ten mtnutes for Albuquerque* N. M. He covered the 1.144 miles from the Atlantic seaboard in five hour* and 37 minutes actual flying time, having stopped 17 minutes at Colum bus, Ohio* PUBUSUED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA BROOKS AND FOUST ARE NAMED HEADS FOR THEIR UNITS No Vice-Pre*ident Selected For University Unit by Trustees Meeting In Raleigh ZNGIN&ER SCHOOLS - LEFT UNDISTURBED Differences Over Status of State College Prolong Meeting; Tatum Petition to Govern About Teaching In Institutions To Be Con sidered Raleigh, Nov. 11. (AP> Dr. Frank Porter Graham today was elected president of the greater University of North Carolina. The election was made bv the full board of trustees of the consolidated university. Dr. Graham is now president of the University unit of the consolidated school. The board named J, I. Foust as vice-president for the woman's col lege unit at Greensboro, and Dr. E. C. Brooks as vice-president of the State College unit here. Each was president of his institution before the consolidation. No vice president was named for the univer sity unit at Chapel Hill to succeed Dr. Graham. Differences over the status of State College in the merger scheme which linked State. N. C. C. W. and the Uni versity of North Carolina into the greater university caused a prolonga tion of thp meeting of the trustees. A committee was appointed to draft resolutions showing the board's at titude on State College in the future. The resolution adopted by the full board set forth that there is no in tention to defnote any of the institu tions to the rank of a junior college or o discontinue the schools of en gineerin;: at Chapel Hill or at Ra leigh. The board also adopted a resolution that it receive the petition presented to Governor O. Max Gardner by L.. A. Tatum, retired textile manufacturer of Belmont, which asked that some thing be done about the "dual system of teaching in the Stale's institutions especially Carolina and N. C. C. W The resolution provided that the peti tion shall have due consideration of the trustees. Burn Town Wrecked By Wind Storm Eiundreds of Bodies and Other Debris to Be. Destroyed In Cuban City Camagiiey. Cuba, Nov. 14.- —CAP) The town of Santa Cruz del Sur be came a gigantic funeral "pyre today on the order of military authorities. The destruction of wind and water that also took the lives of probably 2,500 CObans last week was thus com pleted for the sake of sanitation. This actio nmade it probable that the exact number of lives taken by the hurricane of last Wednesday will never be known. x Meanwhile President Machado was ready to leave the capital to inspect the hurricane-torn areas, and govern mental agencies sped up the task of relief and rehabilitation. • < The minister of the interior, who estimated the dead at 2.500. traversed much of the 100-mile wide path of the hurricane during the night with military authorities. LEATHER FOB NORTH CAROLINA. Fair and warmer tonight. Tues day increasing cloudiness and war mer; rain Tuesday night; colder Wednesday. Present Debt Notes Sir Ronald Lindtay, top; # Paul Claudel, below Upon these two ambassadors falls the weight of making the requests for reductions or moratoriums on debts owed by foreign powers to the United States. Sir Kona Id Lindsay, British ambassador, pre sented the British note, and I'aul Claudel, French ambassador, sub mitted the French petition tor a reduction. COMMITTEES MEET TO PLAN START OF CONGRESS SESSION St. Lawrence Waterway Hearings Begun by Group Headed by Senator Borah, of Idaho ANOTHER HEARING IS ON IN CHICAGO Delves Into Federal Com petition With Business; House Elections Probe In Two Eastern States Also In Prospect To Start To morrow Washington. Nov. 14. The lask of preparing for Capitol Hill's annual legislative grind lagan today with hearings by a Senate group into the St. Rawience waterway treaty be tween the United States and Canada. Senator Borah, Republican. Idaho, as the head of a Senate Foreign Re lations sub-committee. has invited witnesses to testify on the treaty, which was negotiated under the di icction of President Hoover, and signed by Secretary Stimson and Canadian Minister Herridge on July 18. Meanwhile, out in Chicago, the House committee investigating gov ernment competition with business re sumed its study today under the di rection of Repuresentative Shannon, Democratic, Missouri, ( An investigation Into the Delaware and eastern Pennsylvania elections by the House campaign funds com mittee will be’ launched here tomorrow by Representative Ragou, Democrat, Arkansas, chairman. Intensive Search For Two Children Appear Kidnaped ; Jacksonville, Fla.. Nov. 14.—(AP) An intensive search for two missing children was launched here today un der the personal direction of Mayor John T. ALsap, Jr., on the theory they had been kidnaped. Every available officer was ordered into the hunt, and cooperation of surrounding communitiM was sought. Jane Sutton, 13-year-old high school girl, disappeared late yesterday after noon with an automobile in which she sat while waiting for her aunt to make a call at the home of a friend. Billy i Jim Finley. 12, failed to return after I he left for Sunday school yesterday morn inf. . U niversity AND VIRGINIA. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTIftNOON -EXCEPT 81TNDAY, Expect Conference MondayOrTuesilay Next Week Likely “MA“ IS IN AGAIN 4K*H(BI ■ pig Eg wKm Mra. r?;-guson Mrs. M iriam l;t» Ferguson, who has been elected governor ot Texas for the second time follow ing a stormy political campaign, ia shown on the front porch of her borne at Dallas with a telegram congratulating In r upon the elec tion. Her husband, Jim Fergu son, has toned two terms ;.s gov ernor. FINISH ELECTRIC - RATES THIS WEEK Corporation Commission To Complete Power Com. pany Negotiations DUKE COMPANY FIRST Agreem*it Virtually Reached With That Concern; Carolina I'ower and Light iToposal I* Not Yet Satisfactory Dali; tHftimtfk llurt-nii. In the Sir Waller tlntrl. BV J C. II ASK Ell Yl 1,1,. Raleigh, Nov. 14.- The State Cor poration Commission expects to com plete its negotiations with the three remaining electiic power companies' over lower rate schedules within a few days and to promulgate new or- ; dey.s putting the luvised rates into es- 1 feet by the end of this week, it was j learned at the offices-of Die commia sion today. Ths three remaining pow er 1 companies are the South Utilities .Company of Charlotte, the Carolina (Continued on Page Two) RECEIVER NAMED IN MIDDLE WEST FIRM Chicago, Nov. 14. (API- Federal Judge James H. Wilketson announced today an equity receiver for the West ern Power and Ught and Telephone Company, a $20,000,000 holding com pany for 375 middle western com munity enterprises. The court had ap pointed Robert L. Tudor as receiver last Friday, but the action was sup pressed until today. The various utility companies em braced by the corporation served 650.000 people, the activities including sale of gas. light and power, water end telephone service, soft coal and wood. Receivership was asked by a group of creditors holding notes totaling $150,000. _____ 6 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COHY Hoover Extends Invitation In Message Sent From Train On Which He Is Cominp East GREAT BRITAIN AND FRANCE ASK RELIEF Would Extend Moratorium Fending International Conference on World Debt Problems; Walsh Hints At Possible Extra Session of the Congress Executive Mons ion. New Ymk, No 14. ‘ APi President -elect Roosevelt today prepared a reply to President Hoover s invitation to a While House conference on the wur debt situation. It was bejicved by those close to the New York goveinm- that he would a* - cept the invitation and suggest tt e conference he held on Monday or Tuesday of next we?k. Mr. Roosevelt s irpiy. the governor's secretary said, would not be complet ed until this afternoon. CiKKAT BRITAIN AMI FRANCE SEEK IMMEDIATE RELIEF Washington. Nov. 14.--(APi—Great Britain and Fiance, each four billion dollar debtors to the United States, today sought iclief from further pay ment pending an international con ference on world debt problems. Publication of their formal reqquert, made to a government already on record against further reductions or cancellation -oincided with a tele- Sisra from President Hoover to Presi dent-elect Kcutievcit, inviting his Suc cessor to i conference on the sub ject an action without exact pre* cedeul in all presidential history. It brought also suggestion of im« mediate congressional consideration. Senator Walsh. Democrat. Montana, that if “it becomes necessary to dispose of the matter at once :l spe cial session of Congress shotifcd be •called.'' Representative Ragon. Tlenioeiat, Arkansas, who drafted the declaration against further reductions wbith C jn giess attached to the Hoover /me-\ -ar moratorium on Inter-govejn neutal debts .recommended an nunediata iContinued on Page Tm««.) Paraguayan Army Is In Final Drive In Cfiaco District Asuncion. Paraguay, Nov. 14—. after fight ing two battles near strategic Fort Munoz, in which 5(00 to 300 were re» ported slain. The Paraguayans claim two vic tories after the fighting over the weelc end. They said both battles weral fought in the vi» inity of the Baliviaa staff headquarters. Capone Men Bottling Up Beier Trade • »F* Preparing To Seize By Intimidation Mo nopoly on Business If Legalized >is*t Chicago. Nov. 14.—(AP)—Reports were current today that members of the gang of Al Capone are piannlfi;; to controj the legal beer business in Chicago if and when beer ia legalized The Chicago Herald-Examiner said that it had heard that gangsters hokl options on two breweries and that they were negotiating for more plant*. The newspaper said its information was that the gang**, “muscle men" have been intimidating speakeasy pro prietors. forming a bartenders union and warning all concerned that they must stand by the hoodlums or take the consequences. Mayor Anton J. Cermak at French Lick, Ind.. was quoted as saying he had heard similar reports, ■' a indi cated officials were prepsi , l# to deal wnh the situation. _