Newspapers / Henderson daily dispatch. / Dec. 7, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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"SfyDERSON, SAVEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA. NINETEENTH YEAR ASK farm Board ASK FARM PRICES MHO TO LEVEL OF OTHER GOODS Elaborate Scheme Outlined Ev harm Board, Includ. ing Debt Cut To The Cooperatives CURTIS AND GARNER OFFER COOPERATION pledge Assistance To Dirt Farmers In Relief Program tor Agriculture; Want Highe- Prices For Farm Products Throughout The Unicd States ■C i Dec T. tAI * • Cuii . action t<> increase the in 'he American farmer by . th>- general level of agri • in n < • to a par with other »' ; h advocated today by mi board. ft* Iti pronged pn b!cm wa< as • • Congress in a special r» legislative recommendation.', ud the board's stabilization • were powerless to achieve I • hint as to the board's ideas on i m of such legislation was (Continual rr Page Five.) NtCRO-S ASSAULT * CASE GIVEN JURY VV . resvllie, Dec. 7.—(AP)— The Tving the case of Charles Rose. Negro. charged with attempted .-.-aijlt on a five-year-old . ■ began its deliberation at o. o.ilay, ni, was given the re ea Her • of Judge Hoyle Sink and .aments of attorneys. '• • ’edifying yesterday in his behalf, denied the States cou i *hat he lured the girl to his •ii oni mistreated her. Roosevelt Will Study U. S. Set-Up ill Call Kxperts To Warm Springs Next Month To Inform Himself **• •• :• gton. Dec 7 iAPi Frank. ' * rioonevelt plans to make a J.’h study of th** whole struc •f the Fedora! government dur ’ ues of t&lksk with experts he • ’<> Warm Springs late in ‘ of the president-eb-ct wore •'* today fhortlyl before he • •" Washington for a 15-minute ’" : "ie speeding on to New York tt’ontinued on Page Four.^ Belgium Again Requests Postponing Os Payments ~ ' ' Dec -7. 'Af*» Paul *" today pre > w note to Secretary Stim ku.- for an extension of the '■'iium on war debt payments. ' '>inn»unication was an elabora* . 1,1 tx P ,Hn ation of Belgium's first on November 15 which re* ‘ ‘d e -uspenaion of pa>-mentß due ■ nii'er 15 pending a general re ' ti at ion of war debt payment*. '~" mi h '-« a payment of 12.125.000 . •' ''we on December 15. '‘ntireiy interest and not ■ •"•iirtbi* ‘. r " ' (Ah ‘ ,j{ Belgium's funded deR ' ! mted States was $400,680,000 • '* 'iiio *32,191,273 has been paid. , auo.rs in all— Great Britain, *“* Poland, CzecbOfr t>. uaut rww ME jMj HeNDeasc Wrttorramt ©ally Itanqffh AR ...... -?. NLY DAILY PUBLISHED LN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIISIIMA. r or L THR A ?S£U wtKB w«»vica ur THK ABBOCIATKD PRESS. MORE MONEY As Congress Met For “Lame Session , _ ** ♦ i ET £§§§3ra2& ■ ■ m ;; * 4 *-s|far- ; Wf \ y 1 f ? MM 11 SSBMjrj*i HhH \ *""i iu. v •**" • f the 'lon ,of Kepreaen'.atives as Congress met lor ttn. important and probably last “lame duck” session A few minutes after ..peakeivAinrnrr caLled ti*e House to- order ike Vice President-elect’s / DEER IS UNLIKELY IN NORTH CAROLINA DESPITE CONGRESS Big Vote On Repeal In House This Week Arous ing New Hope Among Beer ' Folks ADVOCATES - ARGUING ITS TAX ADVANTAGE Claim It Would Bring In $500,000 Annually; Op ponents Point To Grave Menace of Intoxicated Drivers on State Highways and Other Objections Onllr llivpatrh Barra*, In tt*e Sir Wnlirr Hotel, pr j r. itASKFinvii.i,. Raleigh. Dec. 7. While tne large vote obtained for the prohibition re peal resolution in Congress, lacking only six votes of the needed two thirds majority, is causing the beer enthusiasts to have new hope for beer by Christmas, or at least early next year, the outlook for beer in North Carolina is not bright, accord tng to most opinion here. For even if this Congress or a special session of the next modifies or repeals the on Ptgfl Four) lovakia and Latvia - have formally asked an extension of time mi De cember 15 payments, pending iccon sideration of war debt agi cements. BRITISH, FRENCH I’KIMTLRS WILL DISCUSS Paris. Dec. 7.--<AP>- Her riot said today that he will make no decision regarding the French policy on the money owed the United -static until after he has taU. d tomorrow with Prime .Minister MacDonald oJ Great Britain. . . „ Mr. MacDonald was in town today, but the two premiers will await tire arrival of Neville Chamberlain, Bri tish chanceller of the exchequer, wh to due tonight, before undertakim discussions of the situation. And Dirt Brewers, Pleading Cause, Promise Everything Good Would Bring Trea*ury $330,000,000 Revenue, Furnish 300,000 Men Jobs and Re lease $360,000,000 In Re habilitation of Breweries Throughout Country Washington. Dec. 7, (AP) Wit )H ssca for brewers depicted heed as a biinger of good tidings for business and the Federal treasury- in the open ing of testimony before the House Ways and Means Committee today on the Collier bill. Advocating a brew of four percent alcohol by volume. Levi Cooke, of Washington, and R. A. Huber, of St. i/ouis on bcnalf of the United States Brewers Association estimated a $5 a barrrll tax would enrich the Trea sury by i : 330.945.1)00 a year. Addressing the powerful commit tee. but turning now and then to the crowded audience., said the FIVE MEN TO DIE THIS WEEK, NEXT Four Slated For Electrocu tion at State Prison Fri. day Next Week • Raleigh. Dec. 7.—(APl—Four men under sentence of electroccution faced execution at State’s Prison on e week irom Friday, on December 16 and an other. Ja«e Jones, is scheduled to die this Friday. December 9. Jnnes convicted of the murder of J. H. Poole, a local filling station operator has never denied his guilt, and. unless Governor O Max Gardner intervenues with executive clemency he will die this week. "I had rather be dead than stay on Death Row." the 19-year-old Negro boy said today. One week rrom Friday Ed Denver, of Columhus county; Joe Stafford, of Wayne county; Harvey Wallace, of Lee county, and Alec Grier of Jacn son county, are slated fn«* execution unless the governor interferes. OUR WEATHER MAN . * .118 daysA KFOSf CHRISTMAS HENDERSON, N. C., WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 7, 1932 Farmers TO BALANCE U. S. j resolution calling for the repeal of the iSih Amendment was introduce'. I by Representative Rainey. Democratic floor leader, arid defeated by six i votes. The Heaae Cm pin mi is shown opening the session with a pravsr. bet. >v* uppoited could be sold for nine tt.. : .1 b lido and that its leg alization would t::u.-e S369U.O(X).fHK) to be npent to lohiabijitate 'breweries and 300.000 men would be given work With the present brewing capacity in the country- at 15.000.000 barrels ; annually, he said a 10.000.000 barrel I capacity would be needed before long, j Following Cooke's testimony that | the 2:75 percent by weight provided ' in the bill placed before the commit tee by Chairman Collier was insuf ficient In alcoholic content. Huber said a 3.2 percent beer was a better, product. The latter would be four percent by volume. ‘Marchers ' At Capital Departing Washington, Dec. 7. <AP>- Truck after truck headed into the west and south today, taking the last of the shouting, singing demonstrators for unemployment relief over the long, tedious miles to their homes. With a iinal jeer at the police who had confined them to a pavement en campmcnt. the men and women piled into their vehicles, stowed away blankets end said thev were satis fied with the showing they had made. Police and vigilance was not relax ed until the last truck was gone, and then, wearied and dog-tired from al most continuous duty since Sunday, the hundreds of Washington bluo coats sought their rest. ITALIAN LINER AT SEA IS REPAIRED St. .Johns, X. F.. Dec. 7.—(API —The Canadian I’rww said today that the new Italian liner Conte •dl Savoia. reported disabled rti >9 • miles off the coast of Newfound land, has been rqairetl and Is proceeding toward New fork. Weather FOR NORTH CAROLINA . Cloudy, with rain tonight and In east portion Thursday morn ing; colder Thursday and la ex treme west portion tonight. Urge Relief | Mills Asks : Enactment | Sales Tax i 'Tre asury Head Savs w * i Exercises Adopted ; Have Failed and He I Urges Repeal Washington. Dot*. IL —-(Al*}-~ The turbulent sales tax Issue was tossed squarely hark Into the lap | of Congress toay by Secretary ! Mills with a recommendation that a 2 1-1 per cent general manufac turers levy be adopted. In his annual report, the secretary of the treasury said the present spe cific excise laxcs adopted at the last session of Congress had failed to pro duce the expected revenue and he proposed their repeal. Mills directly' asked the House to 1 reverse itself. Only six months ago, that body bolted its leadership to vote tCoaUnued oa rage Three.) ANOTHER SENATOR . IN FROM COLORADO Washington, Dec. 7. (AP> Karl C. Shuyler, a Republican, took the oath as senator from Colorado today succeeding Wal ter Wa'ker, Democrat who served by appointment for two day*. AW I LL POQERS \j p jays: Beverly Hills. Calif., Dec. 7, Tliis country is so hungry this mcrnliig they could eat a Lame Dock. If you want to really know { one of the major things that’s wrong with us, go take a trickle, i get this week's Saturday Evening Post, read the first artte’e In the-e— iVs by Sam Blythe. Then go out, and before you buy { the baby a rattler, your sweet heart n toothbrush, your wife a ! pair as rubber boots,, ask If they “were made in America.” Then you can show your patriotism, and not just keep asking “what's the matter with this country?” ~ ' England la. doing it, th« jvotid is doing It, but out society don't think they smell right imhni they . been dipped in foreign perfume. Yours, WILL, PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT ttUNDAY. Drastic Economies Urged On Congress By The President * Maioritv „ t* . : Hp 111 1 9 JM | ■ ■ 9kh| - ' : r r* -tt timm'Tir ~~ ’’earn VVf.sning inn in time for the opening sns.-uou «,£ Congress, Sena tor Walter Walker of Colorado is shown on his arrival in the capital. M*> v ,i- lie.'rated far f lection hy .'-•iiritoi -elect Karl Schuvier whose credentials were delayed because of a clerk's error. W alker rushed from Denver in order to give the Demo ’rats a Senate majority of <m. uu i! Schuyler, a Repuhiicaa, could be sworn m. 43 PERCENT COSTS USED ON MILITARY $1,628,517,319 of Govern ment's $4,248,169,731 Budget Goes There DEBT ITEM 33 PRCNT. Law enforcement Only ] 1H IN-roont of Total Outlay; Agriculture Gets Only 1 2ft Percent Os The Total Wa-shington. Dec. 7.- (APi -Dut of the $4,243,169,713 the government ex pects t„ ,prnd in the 1934 fiscal year. 43.13 pel cent or $1.628.017,319 will go for military purposes. The budget which President Hoov er today transmitted to Congress rhowed general national defense cost ing $525.6670,642; construction for the military $2,210,000; aircraft $15,321,500 and naval construction $43,245000. (Continued on Page Five.) Dwindling Incomes Cut U. S. Reveniues How Earnings of Nation's Taxpayers Faded Jin 1930 and 1931 Experienced to Congress in Mills Report; Main stay of Support Is Greatly Curtailed . Washington, 7. —fAPi—Now the income of the nation's taxpayers faded away in 1930 and 1931 swiftly wiping out the governments chief source of revenue and making new faxes mandatory was explained to Congress today in the annual report of Secretary Mills. *”i- The secretary gave statistics sow ing that the class of taxpayers .,pho produced 97 per cent of the income tax had sharply diminished. The class to that with incomes of ten thousand dollars or above. In 1928 there were 15.789 taxpayers who had incomes of a hundred thousand dol lars zpore, while in 1980 there were 6,152 in 1931 this had dropped to 6 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS DBFS BUDGET Wa,r Debt Payments Fjtom Foreign Nations Included -In Striking Govera .ment Balance PRESIDENT DEFIES DEMAND FOR BONUS Ask Sharp Curtailment la Payments To Veterans; Manufacturers Sales Tax Urged Is Virtually Same as . That Sought Last Yea?; Pay Cuts Asked Washington. Dec 7 »AP» I*r< i. dent Hoover presented to Congress to day a drastically reduced budet. re commending !, 2 I—4 percent manu factures excise tax. retention of the gasoline tax, rigid economies, includ ing an additional 11 percent cut in government .salaries, and a big slaah in veterans' benefits He asked for total appropriations of $4.218.608 344. saying net expendi tures would total $3,256,354,900 against receipts of $2.949.162.713—Leaving & deficii of $307,192,187.1 It was to off set this that the new taxation was proposed. War Debt Not MEttkoned No mention of wa rdebta was made in the entire presidential message, but the report of the secrotary of the treasury, sent to Congress eimultaoe •wtdy. disclosed that payments due from foreign nations had been includ ed in striking the g-»v t rnment’a bal ance. i Neither did Mr. Hoover make any meritio nos legalization of beer. EsO> mated Internal revenua collections included no figure from this source. The President estimated th<* pre*. cut fiscal year would end next June with a deficit off $1.t4«.47RJ807. ex penditures being $3,770,735,0tt0 and rsa (Continued on Page Bix) Borah Asks Repeal Os Homeßank Washington, Dec. 7. t/l V bill to repeal the home loan h;» i act and abolish the system created .1 ’be last session of Congress for firhalizing home mortgage conditions v as intro duced tr>day by Senator fla/rah. Re publican, Idaho. Introducing the bill, Borati fold the senate the act had proved, "wholly unsatisfactory.” He propossrd to re j>eal the entire law except the rider attached at his instigation Tor expan sion of the currency. ”In my opinion,” Borah said, "the act has proven and wil (rmtlnue to prove wholly unsatisfactoi y. It is not reaching und will not rea"!i the hom'? owner or those really in of as si.-tance. and who should have help, if the government is to tjake a hand in tne situation.” 3,142. * - The numbebr >it: taxpayers In lStt bayiqg incomes *7f $5,000 or more d< creiscl 77.1 per. cent froin 1900. Th • tares dropped •* 0 i per cent with 556- 120 persons-jn; ing rt 283.968.000. Th greatest drop vis In the SIOO,OOO o more class, enich yielded $107,896 000 as compared with $237,716,000 th? year previous.. The secret ary *aid the, net Inc ens of persons reporting $5,000 or moi s had dropped. from $18,299,000,000 i i 1928 to *10.909.000000 In 193 C and t* $6.489,000,t00 in 1931. Income fngn tbs sales or real estate stock etc., *droj^ (Coil/uaed da rm <h).
Dec. 7, 1932, edition 1
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