Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 19, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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rgEbinERSoN. GATEWAY TO J central 1 caKQI.INA. I NINETEENTH year [.s. Budget \\ ill Be Cut Large Sum Estimate* Submitted Will Be “Considerably Low er" Than $4,135,000,. 00G For 1932 EXTRA session of CABINET ASSEMBLES Huge Deficit of $700,000,- 000 Already Run Up Get ting Attention Rivalled Only By Consideration Administration Is Giving War Debts Issue V. . • ..!> Nov 19 (AH' AfteY .. • unary meeting of the cab- 1 bx President Hoover to i .. .. ’h' be.lctal budget. See' r • .. •> .1 newspapermen th«‘ <„• (. ■ would be forwarded to . -p.-ider ibly lower" than • ► .il.ts «*ot»m submitted last year rung for neatly two .. i mi.'is of the official family . . ..v.-cutive offices saying that •hti; particular expen . i.d be expected. -- Mills said i><» had today ~v t Chairman Byrns of the ■ . - A 'i : .[.nations Committee that :-i ■ .’i »tion and subsequent ac *•. Democratic House commit •»w v, u have caused repeated , > >■- in in* political arena. - . r ilrrady this fiscal year COO; unit that pro ?- - ‘.een getting attention rival . by the war debts. Governor Pinchot To Certify Davis As Senator-Elect *i-Hng?on. Nov. 19. < AP» Gov r I uifhot of Pennsylvania inti r. h-re todav he would issue a f election to Senator Davis Pennsylvania, but might • - . . 1’ with a separate letter of - ■ > the Senate. ”1- | ruylvania governor, during - • ••’ campa gn. urged the Re : S'a‘e Committee to replace, ' < Divi.- a< Republican nominee.) under Federal indictcaent . g • loiation of the lottery lawt. • j’mchot has reached no de •h- Davis cage he indicated. ■ lined to feel that the ma-, 4 s;ned by the senator In the - • • ’.on entitles him to the cer- > ■ >: •uection However, he made •hvre has been no change in u ide toward Davis and inti : - n- w;n weighing the advis : -ending sqnarate letter >*-n:.te challenging Davis’ right ‘tu‘. king VIDOR WORKS AT DUKE ON FILM .m Nov. 19. iAP»— King reiebtated motion picture di ■ ■■ >k time out today for the - ' iro !’ih football game at :• Hill leaving his research at - * iverdty in search of material historical scenario. I - i- taken a room in the Uni- • 1 ’ i r . > ti and j s niaking that his : ri> h‘ adquarters. although he ’.: k Lawrence Stallings, author ■’ ’."me near Reidsville. Grange Has Aeu Record l or Units and South Car olina Largely Re sponsible for Year’s Grow th .. . < Nov. 19.._(AP)_ , v N' rth Carolina and • "imi. ’1... National Grange " ’hat for the first tt- i’ had a list of new , larger than the record decade ago. • ' : >’on. secretary, reported •f, . annual session - 1 '.ration now has 15.866 x •■ r ange<. Only ten times i . >8 years, he said, has .J-, ( ’ w subordinate Granges •an..., ,y ,n ‘ J ? his is one of the Mr .\ ~t. t .. ' ,e P f Tt showed that tw... „ 1 w as in a large part •n r °' >h increase, T 56 of • • being establish- . . . \ ’ p ‘" t year under the 11., i. , " Scott, of Haw • e tna-ter. HrnJirrsnit LBAIMP WIMB BUVWB OF THB moCUTKDPim HWIfW ATERS OF COLORADO fo**BPta22Sfc£^lwiL ßßßMiGi I Bbml •. Bird! ml col the first time in its history the Colorado river has changed ' its course according to the will of J Senator Wesley L. Jones, Washington, Passes Away Health Is Broken by Strenu ous Campaign For Re- Election, Only To Be Defeated HEART AILMENT IS FATAL TO Had Been In Congress 33 Years, and Was Author of. Famous “Jones Five-and. Ten** Prohibition Law; Third Ranking Republi can In Senate Seattle, Wash.. Nov. 19.—<AP> - His health broken by a strenuous and unsuccessful campaign for re-election. ; L. S. Senator Wesley L. Jones, of Washington, member of the impor tant appropriations committee, died of a heart ailment in a Seattle sani tatium today The 69-year-olii sena£or had enter ed the sanitarium ten days ago to re cover from the fatigue of his political fight against Homer T. Bone, Ta coma Democrat, hoping to leave with in two weeks for the national capital. But he had not been in robust ■ health since he underwent a series of operations three years ago. and the ardor of the campaign aggravated a heart affliction of long standing. He died quietly at 2 a m.. with his son and daughter—Harry B. Jones. Seat tle attorney, and Mrs. Arthur Coffin, of Akina, Wash.--at his bedside. Sen ator Jones’ defeat by Bone ended his record of 33 years of continuous ser vice in Congress, At the time of his death he was Republican whip anti third ranking member of his party in the Senate. Legislation sponsored by the vet eran senator included the so-called "Jones five-and-ten" ftquor enforce ment law . FUNDERBURK HEADS GRAUP OF TEACHERS Fayetteville, Nov. 19.—(API— Ray Funderburk, superintendent t>f the New Hanover county schools, was elected chairman of the Southeastern district teachers here today. Dr. F. P. Gaines, praeident of Wash ington and Lee University, and for mer president of Wake Forest Col lefe, made the principal address. Roosevelt Majority t 15289,672 Raieigh, Nov. 19 (APl—More than 712,000 votes were cas in -North Carolina for a new State record in the November general election, a com Lplet ebut unofficial tabula ion by Raymond C. Maxwell, secretary of the State Board of elections, today showed. In the presidential contest 712,028 votes were counted, divided as fol lows: „ . Franklin D. Roosevelt. Democrat, 498,000. Herbert Hoover, Republican, 208,- >334. Norman Thoma*. Socialist, 5,599. William D. Upshaw, prohibitionist, Bb. -- only Daily ; man. The rushing waters have [ been diverted through two tun i nels on the site of the great L. S. Senator Dies ! ■ußWt' ’CM ■EXjr J| * z/ - j ILfey EB/ xpl I Wesley L- Jones COMMISSION FEELS CRITICISM UNJUST Corporation Body Thinks It' Acted to Best Interests ; Os All Dally Dlupsteh nnrena. In the Sir Wnlter Hotel., »IV J C. RASKP.ItVILL. Raleigh. Nov. 19k--The members of the State Corporation Commission feel that most of the criticism of the rate agreement concluded with the Southern Public L’tiltiies Company, because of the provision which de 'finitely institutes the new rates for only one year, is not justified. Most of this criticism has been because the commission agreed to the provision that if the present rates do not prove satisfactory at the end of a year, higher rates may be instituted. “The commission made every ef fort to get the officials of the South ern Public Utilities Company to re move this condition.” said Commis sioner Stanley Winborne. "And It was only when it became evident that an agreement could not be reached unless it was accepted that it decided to agree to the proviso. We took the position that it was better to assure the subscribers of this company a saving of $900,000 for a year than none (Continued on Page Three.) Says Short Hour, Week i Is Remedy Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 19. —(AP) Reiterating the belief that the five day working weelc and six-hour day are America’s only hope for eliminat ing unemployment, William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor prepared here today for the opening Monday of the federations annual ccnvention. Green said the nation must either divide the available work or support an army of unemployed. _ . newspape r PUBLISHED IN THIS HENDERSON, N..C., SATURDAY, Batlu Boulder dam project,- at Boulder City, Nev. This outline picture shows progress made jon the dam. BUDGET HMDS TO BEGIN MONDAY Preparation of Estimates For Legislature To Be Started at Time R. S. McCOIN A MEMBER )> part menu And Institutions May Not Be Called In Until Did of Week pr First Part of Fol lowing Week Onlty L>lapntch Horema. !■ tke Nir Walter Hotel ■T J- C. nttKEHVILt Raleigh. Nov. 19.—Although the Ad visory. Budget CoroßaUsion -is to hold its first meeting Mbnday. November 21. tn start work on the preparation of the budget it is required to sub mit to the General Assembly for the 1933-1936 biennium, no hearings for the State departments and institutions will be held until after the middle of the week and probably not until the next week, according to Henry Burke, assistant director of the budget bu reau. "There is a possibility that the com- i mission may be able to hear some of ; the departments an dinstitutions next *, week, but indications are that none of these will be scheduled for hear ing before Monday, November 28,” M.'<. Burke said. "No schedule for these hearing; his yet been made out." The Advisory Budget Commission is composed of Governor O. Max Gard ner. as director of the budget; Sen ators Lee L. Gravely, Rocky Mount, chairman of the Senate appropria tions committee, and R. Grady Ran kin, Gastonia, chairman of the Senate finance committee; R. L. Harris. Rox boro. chairman of the House appro priations committee and U. L. Spence chairman of the House finance com mittee; and R. S. McCoin. of Hender-• son, and A. H. Graham. Hillsboro, two appointed members. The law requires this commission to i prepare a tentative budget of the i needs of all State departments and | (Continued on Page Three.) STRANMRY IS RELATED BY WOMAN Tells Virginia Authorities Was Kidnaped at Jack son, Miss., Home Winchester. Va., Nov. 19. (AP) A young white woman giving her name as Eula Wooster, of Jackson, Miss., appeared at a filling station at Gore, near here, late last night, and told the proprietor she had been kid naped in Jackson by two men. brought there and abandoned. The girl, aobut 21 years of age. said j she was the daughter of Robert Woos ter, of Jackson. She said police here reported that her abductors stopped their automo bile near the filling station, criminally attacked her and abandoned her. She was unable to identity her captors, but said that one was a white man and she believed the other to be a Fili pino. She told officers she was seized on the streets in Jackson late Thursday afternoon, bound and tied and driven hurriedly out of town. They drove al most continuously, she said, stopping in Roanoke yesterday afternoon for sandwiches. Then they continued up the Shenandoah valley toward West Virginia and Pennsylvania. When they arrived near Gore, about 112 miles of here, she said, the men attacked her, abandoned her and re turned toward Winchester, bhCTK)N OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA- AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 19 1932 Wright Memorial Unveiled At Kitty Hawk On Scene Os The First Airplane Flight JL WRIGHT MEMORIAL On the left above is !he 60-foot high pylon marker i reeled by the United States government at Kitty Hawk. N. C.. in commemoration of the first flight of a heavier-than-air machine Missing Man Found ■ (g* AB Si' COL. RAYMOND ROBINS. COL. ROBINSPUT INTO SANITARIUM Missing Dry Agent And Philanthropist Found In Western Carolina Asheville, Nov. 19. (AP) -Colonel Raymond Robins, noted prohibitionist and peace advocate, found in the Western North Carolina mountains yesterday after a disappearance of more than two months, was brought to Asheville today and placed in a sanitarium under the care of a phy* sician. Colonel Robins, who is suffering from amnesia, was brought here by automobile from Whittier, a small vil lage in Swain county, where lie’ lived for more than two months under the name of Raymond Rogers. John Grier, of New York, a .nephew who identified the missing philan thropist yesterday; -issued* the Toltow ing statement: _ . . .. . "Colonel Raymond Robins is at pre sent at Norburn hospital in Asheville and under the care of Dr. Mark A. Griffin, of Asheville. "The doctor has given orders that >io one is to be allowed to see or speak with Colonel Robins, but that We is to be kept quiet and free from disturbances of all sorts. "Mrs. Robins is expected to reach Asheville by motor this afternoon, coming from her Florida. Dr. Griffin, who is nMr In charge of the case, states that It is absolutely im possible to give a correct diagnosis of the case until further observation. "Colonel Robins arrived in Ashe ville at 9 30 a. m. today.” HEATHER FOB NORTH CAROLINA. Flair with a cold wave, pfobabiy freezing temperature on the coast tonight; Sunday «U colder in east and central portions. _ Dtspafrli MEMORIAL AND PUBLISHED EVERT AFTERNOON EXCEPT BUNDAT. MAN HONORED ORVILLE WRIrtHT- at that spot on December 17. 1903. On the right is Orville Wright is the surviving brother of the pair whe achieved the feat, Wlbur Wrgiht hav. ing died som eyears ago. The dedi cation was held today. SALES TAX SEEMS GROWING IN FAVOR Especially In Eastern Caro, lin Is Idea Gaining Ground Fast BURDEN TO BE HEAVY GeneraL Luxury' and Gross Sales Taxes. In Addition to Income levies As Now May Be Im posed by Legislature n-llr ntaenrea Rareaa. la tbe Sir Walter llatel . tIY J. r RAMKERVILL Raleigh, Nov, 19. Sentiment seems to be increasing over the State cer tainly in the eastern part of the Slate, for a general sales tax similar to that now in effect in Mississippi, accord ing to reports reaching here. It is also generally conceded that a bill pro posing either a one per cent or twe per cent general sales tax on gross sales and incomes as well, will be in troduced early in the 1933 General Assembly. The Mississippi general sales tax imposes a two per cent tax on all gross sales and incomes, in (Continued on Page Eight) Mail Pilot Jumps From Plane After Losing Way In Fog Rock Hill. Nov. 19.--(AP> J. S. Buckman. piloting the Eastern Air Transport mail from Richmond to Jacksonville, took to his parachute 15 miles south of here eajly today when he bcame lost in a heavy fog. leaving his plane to crash somewhere in the.. ..vicinity. Buckman landed safely... Buckman telephoned E. A. T. of ficials in Charlotte and then started out to search for the which which was found wrecked, but with the mail safe about three miles from where the pilot jumped. Buckman said he drained his tanks of gasoline to pre vent possibility of fire and then jump ed, landing four miles Edge more, near the farm of A. E. West brook. from whose home he sent word to Charlotte. The mail was taken from the wreck age and sent to Chester by auto-, mobile. Accidents Toll 67 On N. C. Roads Raleigh. Nov. 19. —(AP) —Automo- bile accidents took 67 lives on North Carolina highways during October and caused injuries to 455 persons, D S. Harris, head of the State motor ve hicle bureau, reported today. Os those killed, 32 were pedestrians and eight were children playing in the streets. Hit and run "drivers accounted for seven deaths an dinjuries to 22 per sons. Two persons were killed in accidents caused by driven goin gto sleep. y 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY DIGNITARIES FROM STATE AND NATION. Al THE EXERCISES All of Them Drenched By Rain That Breaks Just As Elaborate Pro gram Is Started survivincTbrother ATTENDS CEREMONY Orville Wright Hears The Things Said of His And Brothers Achievements; Secretary of War Hurley, Ehringhaus and Lindsay Warren Among Speakers Kitty Hawk, Nov. 19 (API A monument to the achievements of Wilbur and Orville Wright, who fie’.' he world’s first motor driven airplane here was unveiled here today while rain drenched the speakers and sev •ral thousand people gathered for the dedication. Miss Ruth Nichols, famous aviatrix. unveiled the granite pylon, as the con cluding act of the ceremonies after Secretary of Waj- Patrick J. Hurley. Governor-elect J. C. B. Ehringhaus of North Carolina, and Congressman Lindsay Warien of the first North Carolina district, had spoken. Orville Wright, the surviving broth er. was present to hear the speakers ’aud his and his brother’s achieve ment -the building and flying of the first heavier-than-air motor driven plant here December 17, 1903. Arrangements had been made to Ac commodate 20.U00 people today, but rain throughout the night and during most of the ceremonies served to de crease the attendance. Rain poured steadily as the exer cises started with Miss Nichols. Ad miral W. A. Moffett, chief of the bu reau of aeronautics of the Navy De partment; General Manus McCloskey, .if Fort Bragg; General J. Van B. Metts, of North Carolina, and Gov ernor-elect J. C. B. Ehringhaus. in he speaker’s stand. ■ With these dignitaries weie General John L. Dewitt, L. H. Rash. Paul Malone and Westover Leach. As the exercises were called start by General Bash, the storm b 1 oke in all its fury, and strong northwestern (Continued on Page Sey n) Acreage In Cotton Cut For 3 Years Cooperative State* ment Says? Growers To Get Less Per Acre This Year < ‘ New Orleans. Iza., Nov. 19.—(APt Cotton acreage t/as been steadily de creased during the last three yeafs, but is still far f*rom the acreage fig urge of 1922, when an unprecedented expansion tagfin, the American Cot ton Cooperative Association reported today. i Land in co’jton in 1922 totalled 30.* 500.000 acres, with prices at 16 cent* a pound, the statement said. Under the stlmulu s of a 22-oenti-per-pound price, the fiverage increased during the next f b/e years by a total of 16.- SOOJOOO act <-s. ending With the record breaking crop of 18,000,000 bales, which brought J.ie price down to 11 cents a pound, t t e report said. "More than 10,000,000 acres have been t i ken from cottpn, but 6.000 - 000 m'c e must be takdn oat If acre age is to return to*the level of IBM,” it w* 4 reported. “The cotton coop erate vi> records do not indicate that the c eflation process will carry acre age entirely down 192 J acreage was below normal. Dut they indicate a likelihood of a do ciyjase for at least one more year. ."Cotton growers will receive less flj-oney per acre this year than last. Ab though the price is abcut half a cent higher, the yield per acre is less by 1 46 pounds leaving the grower $1.85 I an acre worse off. ' mates show that, whereas average cotton land returned 11.10 an acre last year, it will bring this year only ,__z— .
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Nov. 19, 1932, edition 1
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