Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Dec. 19, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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fHENDEkriON, ! ijaVEWAY to CENTRAL CAROLINA. NINETEENTH YEAR Wintry Week-End J Leaves 25 Deaths In The Southland Accidents Respo nsib le, Many of Them Traceable to the Cold Envelop ing the Section , FOUR OF FATALITIES IN NORTH CAROLINA Four Also in Louisiana, While Georgia Leads With £is?ht; 14 Due to Automo bile Mishaps, While Six Succumb to Exposure to the Weather V. air a. Ga.. Dec. 19 (AP) ' v in try left the ' nh with 25 dead from v dents, and many of he aiities were traceable to . cold. > «!• xths wero du<’ to auto mvh ips on the icy Mreelsmnl ♦ix deaths resulted (from ex v.( wer*- fatally burned n"d • • - killed in a boiler explosion. •\ * train and one mas drowned . n’ub after being overcome by ffrom a heater. t - i led in deaths, with eight. Ciioli"* and Louisiana report ; .r t-tch; Alabama Mississippi • V r: nta tw 0 each, and Kentucky, ■> ~ Cato.ina and Florida one each. I'M F LOSE UVKS WHEN' I.OG HOCSE IS BtRNEI) it i. Ohio Dec. 19 ( APi Four • - .ns were burned to death early r» wh.'n fire destroyed a log house Gloucester, north of here. Vote Soon For Giving Out Cotton .1. i;* "it. Dec. l'J. — lAIM —Ar- -.♦••it were made today for the • u act on the Jones bill to give “ “ b iles of Farm Board cotton Red Cr«Ms to alleviate cold 1 •he unemployed, and on the! !:•' imiMs measure to pay the Mexi- ' ~ l• vi-tnment $30.1*10 for the deithj ’.v , ( .f its nationals. Fi re Traps Firemen In Charlotte 1 11><‘ te. Dec. 19 »Al’> Two fire r i upped under a falling floor i ... .-ocd from a burning clothing •h i today, while den.se clouds •i "kc front the building impeded •r. < fforts to cheek the flames, • ' appeared to be spreading to • :bv -ones. nn .James Fluse and W. P. Aiw ■'i- fit omen, saved themselves • phyxiation by remaining close floor as far as possible, while ■in tiroke in the rear of the '■•re to extitcate them. • •• flumes raged on unchecked firemen had fought them for • h.in an hour, and downtown was blanketed by heavy . which opured from windows ' bunding. Corbitt Company Builds Huge Truck For U.S. Army Makes Run From Aberdeen, Md., Proving Grounds To F" ort Bragg In Record Tim e and Meets Every Test, Measuring Up To All Requirements Promised s UUpatrk ■arraa, i »■ the sir Waiter Hotel. I J ntSKKRVILL. -l) Dee. 19. What is prot>ably I -•■-I and most powerful truck | 1 ' " here in the United States, j built by a North Carolina. I 1 ! pawned through here several 1 -“- This u a specially built .nti!l*iy transport truck built i rm Uie United State* Army " t ‘a i.itt Motor Truck Company Henderson L.XAAXD wihi annoa or TUX AHSOCIATXD PRBBI. New Cabinet Head ■k , i m jbl JoitpH Paul-Boncour Paul-Boneour is the r.tw French pre mier. having succeeded in forming a ministry after Camillei CtiautcmpS failed in the undertaking wlien the Herriot cabinet resigned after it 3 de feat in the French Chamber of Depu ties over the payment of the Decem ber debt installment to the United States. Paul-Boncour dynamic states man has represented France at Ge neva conferences. MORE POWERS FOR COMIWSSIDN URGED By RATE ENGINEER Recommendations for Hand ling Utilities Made In Report of Dr. Charles E. Waddell reductiowTgiven ARE NOT ALL ASKED But $1,107,000 Cuts In Elec tric Charges Considered Big Accomplishment And Achieved Without Litiga tion and at rifling Cost to People Uuiir OUpatrk 11 area a. In Ibr Sir Waller llnpl nv J C B*«K KILVII.I,. Raleigh. Dee Neither the State Corporptvm Coran #s.'Sc,n nor Dr, Charles E. Waddell, rate expert and eng.neer .or ihe commission, regard the total reduction in rates of $1,107,- 000 resulting from the recent “con ferences” with the power companies as entirely satisfactory. Dr. Waddell says in his report to the commission that was made public Saturday. But he does consider it about the best that could be accomplished under existing laws and conditions and es pecially within the short length of lime during which the rate reduc tion agreements were i But Dr. Waddell does not stop with these reductions. He submits seven very definite recommendations for the <Continued on Page Seven) | on a test run from Aberdeen proving ! yrouhds. Aberdeen, Maryland, to Fort I Bragg, where It is undergoing ftir j ther tests. On the run from Aber ; deen to Raleigh It broke the world s record for transporting heavy artil lery having covered more than 8w miles in one day. The truck fully Inspected by engineers of the Stajp Highway Commission here dur (Continued on P*S* Ssvsa^ 1 < * . ■ < i NEWSPAPER ONLY DAILY HENDERSON, N. f —— ■ —* HOW THE DEBT PAYMENTS STANpI Bi DEFAULTED K Extra Session Looms Now With Jam Os Legislation Increasing For Congress Washiugion, Dec. 19.—(A I*) — Prohibition, farm relief, approp riations and economy—those were Monte of the stumbling blocks fac ing Congress today as it entered the week before Christmas with the conviction growing that a special session next spring is in m ttabte. House Democratic leaders pre pared for the vote this week on beer, vetdently confident of pas- Sentence In ! Pine Lifcvel j Bank Theft! Ralph Barbour Gets 15 Years and Rup ert Wilson Five; Two Acquitted Smithficld. Dpt. iy.-tAP* Ralph Barbour today was sentenced to serve 15 years in Suite's Prison, and Rupert j Wilson was given five years by Judge W. C. Harris for their part in the robbery of the Bank of Pine Level, near here last fall. Barbour pleaded guilty to tli< crime and attempted to take all blame, but a jury found Wilson guilty and ac quitted two others, Victor Barbour end John Hamilton, of connection with the affair. Judge Harris.said he would recom mend a parole for Wilson when he completed one year of his terra. — ~i — Gardners Are To * Entertain Public New Year Sunday Raleigh. Dec. 18.—(AT)—Gov ernor O. Mu Gardner and Mrs. Gardner will entertain North Car olina’* "public” at a reception at the executive mansion Sunday aft ernoon, January I. as the final act of the Gardner administration, under plans now being formulat ed. Governor Gardner said today It was planned to have the mansion open to the general public from 3 until 6 o’clock, New Year’s af emoon. Round Trip Hop Across Atlantic In 1933 Planned Dayton Ohio, Dec. 19. —(AP) —Ten- tative plana for a roundtrip trans- Atlantic flight in 1933, for the pur pose of testing new airplane equip ment and devices, have been an nounced by Louis F. Green, of Day ton. The flight also would be in com memoration of the 30th anniversary of the first flight of Orville and Wilbur Wright at Hawk. ft. C. WuThM FOR NOJtTH CAROLINA. Cloudy . tonight and Tuesday; slowly rising temperature in west portion toulghkand In central and wmt part»o» »!*«*?• fJ'v- ~ 1 * - * 1 I ► ’ Uatlu Btspalffi PUBLISHED IN . c., MONDAY AFTERNOON DECEMBER 19, 1932 sage there, hut conceding difficul ties when Die proposal reaches the Senate. Both the House and the Senate today devoted time to minor leg islation. with the former also continuing debate on the Interior Hepahaiwt approinfottotM bill, the second of the eievfo aaajor supply measure* which mat he enacted if a special session Is to avoided. ‘ME’ FUNGS 1 WAT CRITIC Chaingang Ward Wrathful Toward Man Who Lays Plots on Him Newark, K. 4., Dec. If) (AIM Mrs. Vlnent Bums Vincent Burns, of l'allsadcs, N. -J., sister- In kin' of Rnbeit Klliott Burns Georgia chaingang fugitive said -today R telegraoa- sent to her and signed with the name of Murphy Hal'ow-y, Atlanta lawyer, stated that Miillmvii: was in possesion of facts which cun save Bums from extradition. Newark. N. J„ Dec 19 i AH) - Robert Ulliotf Burns, fighting a re turn to a Georgia chaingang. flung the word “lies’’ today at Sidney George Flagg, of Seattle. He declared Flagg was telling un truth* when he declared that Burns planned Hwo hold-up* and got Flagg to take part in them. He also denied lobbing his way to freedom from the chaingang to which Georgia want.* to return him. Burns, author of “I Am a Fugitive from a Chalngagng.” issued this I statement when he read Flagg’s story. “It is abosluteiy untrue. Every word is a He. Flagg did not go to the same chaingagng I went to” POSSE HUNTS FOR OFFICER’S SLAYER Greenville, Miss., Dec. 19 lAPI A posse of officers and citizens, led by bloodhounds, hunted delta countiy today for Cleve Kaiser. 25-year-old negro who shot and killed Town Mar shal W. J. C. Davia. 45. of Glen Al lan, as the officer tried to arrest him. f^pOGEltS \j P 4oys: Santa Monica, Calif., Ike. |».— The United State* senate sen tenced the Philippine* to 12 more years of American receivership. Wfil you tell me one thing? How can one nation tell when an other nation is ready for Indepen dence? But oar government can do it. Yes. sir, there is not a dozen of ’em that’s ever been west of the Holden Gate, but they just could tel! you to a day It years from now, just when the “Little Brown Brothers” would be able to mess up their affairs as bad as ours- Certainly lucky for us we got our liberty when we did. Suppose the House of Commons in Eng land was holding a clinic over us to decide If we were rradji for H *etf-detenaiaation.” lours, WILL* THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. leas Lose Appeal To U. S. Court Ends Hope of Father And Son of Escaping North Carolina Prison lay x Supreme Coprt REFUSE TO REVIEW HERE Attorneys May Ask Recon sideration, But That Is Rarely Granted; Second Time High U. S. Tribunal Has Refused To Take Up Appeals from ThL State Washington. Dec. 19. tAP» Luke ‘Lea Tennessee publisher, and his .son. Luke Len Jr. convicted of conspiracy to defraud a North, Carolina hank, today, were ilcniecj a review: by the 'Supreme Court of the refusal of the North Caroline Supreme Court to grant them « new trial. Apparently this ended the hope of I-Cfi- a former United States .senator of release from his sentence, • through the Supreme Court, although his at torneys ntav ask for consideration of the action today. Such considera tion, however. Is lately granted. The ruling today was the second time the court has refused to take up the convictions in North Carolina Slate courts of the Leas. On October 21. Lea. his son. and Wallace Davis, former president of tho Central Bunk and Trust Company of AsheVille were refused a reviw of a conviction on conspiracy charges, which included cliims they had de frauded the North Carolina bank. Filipinos Don’t Like Their Bill Manila, P. 1., Dec, tvt. —mF' -A pro posal that the Philippine legislature be given (ho right to reject any Filipino independence measure or ac cept anv provision "with reservations” was made today by Manuel Quezon, pi evident of the territorial Senate. He issued n statement after con ferring with other legislators on the United States Senate’s pa-ssage of the Hawes-Cutting independence bill. His wad a more tempered comment on the Senate's action following near ly 12 houirs after revelations of a threat to boycott American goods be en us;: of objectionable features in the bill. U. S. TAXESFROM STATE HOLDING UP Only 12 Percent Less During Past Fiscal Year, port Shows Daily IN*pati-h Rare**, In Ike .*Mr Walter He tel. ItT J C. HASH Est Cl I. L. Raleigh, Dec. 19 North Carolina's tax bill to the Federal government 'luring the fiscal year closing June 30, 1932. totalled $231,138,991 a de crease of 12 percent as compare I with tht. total payments of $262,849,801i d» i ing the preceding year, p.ccord'ug t gu'es received todry by Bryan W. !=tpe statistician of th' Detaftmtr,. of Conservation fro o ‘he *l. K, Tie i sury Deparimont. i Only in Nevada. Kentucky and South Carolina, according to the analysis by Mr. Sipe. did the tax col lections hold up better than in North Carolina. Virginia waa shown &a mak ing equally as good a showing, the deerase in that State being just 12 (Continued on Page Seven.) PAYING CHECKS TO CONFEDERATE VETS Raleigh. Dec. 19. -■<APi- Checks for $412,390 to Confederate pensioner* of the State are now being distributed, Baxter Durham. State Auditor, aaid today. , •* ai^WL^^^pl PQBUteKD EVERT .A FT JMLUOOi KXCXPT BDNDAT, Cooperation With Roosevelt Sought Again By Hoover Sorry for "'Fugitive’' '' Wk ll if ‘ mm % mm wa Although it was she who turned him over to the authorities in 1929, after seven years of being a fugi-, tive, Emilia Pino (above), former wife of Robert Elliot Burns, of chain gang fame, says she is sorry he has been captured again. She also professed sorrow for having betrayed him when he was a pros perous magazine editor in Chicago. Bums was recently captured in Newark, N. J., where he had lived for the past two years. EHRINGHAUS BEGINS PREPARING ADDRESS Governor-elect Not- To Re turn to Raleigh Until Inauguration Time REALIZES TASK GREAT Fools Humble <i Fac. of Impending Responsibilities; Has Divulged No Data on Gmlcut ot His Ma—gca Bnllt Dlapare* noreoa. In Ike Sir Walter Hotel, nv j r DtxKCHViti. Raleigh, Dec. 19 -Governor-elect J. C. B. Ehnngliaus ,ias returned to hi* home in Elizabeth City to complete his inaugural address and his first message to the General Assembly, fol lowing his attendance on the aerie* of meetings held by the Advismy Budget Commission. Mr. Ehringhaus intended leaving here Saturday, hut was delayed by the bad weather un til Sunday. While he has already started work both on his inaugural address and his (Continued on Page Seven) Revolution Plot In Argentine Ends . As Quiet Returns Buenos Ayres. Argentine, ee. 19. - 'APi -Developments confirmed the, government’s mastery of a revolu tionary plot today, and the Argentine political atmosphere became the clear est it has been since constitutional ism was restored 1n P’ebruary. ' Definite dispelling of a threat which has been looming in thQ back ground throughout the tion of President Jnato and had be come a major hazard in recent week*, was forecast. •- : McFadden’s Impeachment Attack Was Aimed 'Chiefly At International Bankers By CHARLES I*. STEWART Washington. Dec. 19. Because i seven members besides himself were | ail Congressman Louis T. McFadden j of Pennsylvania was able to muster, j to vote wit * l ljim 1 | when he offered an Hmpt impeachment reKolu a B ainst Presi dent Hoover in the. house of representa tives the other day, V s4ume< i that he f«il-! ed to create a pro- j found impression. ; most lawmakers nre , afraid of the cat I they think the Pennsylvanian might! let out of the bag he is -so auxlous I to open. J Spaces today FIVE CENTS COT President Especially Anxi« out for Continuity of Nation's Policy on War Debts MESSAGE IS SENT TO THE CONGRESS Hoover Says It; Is To Proceed independently ■°f Congress; Interlocking of Debts, , Economic and Disarmament Questions Is • President’s Idea iWashington, E%\,19 (AP) —Cooperation wish Presi. R<*s&< to in sure continuity of AmencaTi , foreign pojl fey as to war debts, the world economic conference and d isa loosed today by er in a messageHcr-ficngr^ss. I-acktng rongressldPTl for revival of the war the F*resident dcclared~~ltVrnce.awCy foi him to proceed independently, of Con gress to act up machinery ror ffurther liebt discussion with the*i- rvauops who have not defaulted. H* suggested an interlocking' of the debt, economic and' dbta rmament quMtions, and indicated that a corn niiaeion on debt-s would be appointed eoon by him. some of the member*, of which would also be delegate* to the world economic conference *et so: Text year, while others would have a Ini.sson with th e present, utaarmameot negotiations. * it ,is the us'iumption here that Mr Hoover already has aaada soma over lures toward Mr. ItooMweit and that the peiaoimei of the group which 1 to handle the debt discussions will tr mbmiiide to the Prealdciu-clrct for hi sappioval before appointment. U. S. Agrees To Examine War Debts Stanley Baldwin Informs Parliament; France Wants New Discussions London, D«-c. 19 (41*)—Stanley Baldwin, told Parliament today that tha United Stated government had agreed to undertake with Great Britain a jo lift examinaU«*i of the whole queatkin of war debt payments. A* spokesman for the government he declin-d to accept a suggestion by a member of the Hraise of Common' that a five-power l€uropea" confer ence be called to d/scuss the |Hjc*tii»i lity of “common aettion” toward secur ing a muia favor*Jiie ua.de balance kntinurd on Pnx» Six) That forf;lng an Inquiry into tb > official conduct of President Hoove* - whose tferm will end lees than tbre t I months hence, anyway —was only It • ; cldenLal'y,- the object of the Keystor t congees f mans’ resolution, scarcely r* - quires saying. It is to lntematiom I bankiirg that be ha* referred fr« - quent fy as the mainaprotng of tfc » expiring administration. As investiga tion/of the president's record wouii be. juore than anythin* else a pro! » ! in*o nctlvdes of the financiers who t j M ’.i’ad'Jei: a« chiefly respo: - • sific. if not for the present depre - ! at least for its severity. The congressmans .own career h: * | jo ?en extraoidinary. fie is one of ti s i fhardesl of the public men of today ) | CConUoued ooFa** met)
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 19, 1932, edition 1
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