Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Dec. 22, 1932, edition 1 / Page 1
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I HEMPERSON, ! gaveway to CENTRAL ! CAROLINA. nineteenth year Outlook For Beer Not So Bright In Senate; May Be Vetoed By Hoover PASSES THE HOUSE BY BIG MARGIN IN idnesday’svote; Prompt Consideration Pro mised in Senate in Mid- January as Next Step PR VS CONFIDENT OF ITS DEFEAT THERE ii it Does Get by Upper House, They Feel Presi dent Will Veto It and Con nress Cannot Pass It After That; Important Provision Set Forth u-liington. l>co. 2?.—(AIM — ( '!!’•• (till 1 1» legalize 5.2 perrrnt 1 r. passed hy Iht llihiw y**tfr <li\. uih prwntfd to the Senate < <la> mid referred immediately to tin judiciary committee without [ j iiinglon. Dec. 22. i Al’> The I • t i?k 32 beer biti. which rode ; .h the House on the wave of a I • - •< mijortty lato yesterday, came! --• of two new hurdles today—the t*e and presidential approval. :on*.pt consideration was promised) tiie Se" <te probably in mid-Jan hv if’ei <> vote has been had on nooj h.c.i i»' ioa L fcitt Democratic; '• ’«r w»io not voicing the optim-I l*i dictions which preceded vie- f the House yesterday. -hile the wets continued jubilant j •he 230 to 165 votes which spell- * •h«ir first successful attempt to! itf\ the Volstead law in 12 years. ... members confidentially asserted lie measure would he defeated <>tl:«r end of the Capitol. If not ' t’ev held that Piesident Hoov-1 •nd not approve it. and that it, i a he passed over his veto, in imuortant provisions of the! .3 2 percent beer hill passed by ll"U f and sent to the Senate are: | .Miize hc«*r. ale. jsnter and lager) 'Continued on Cage Four) MACHINE COMPANY PLANT IS BURNED ■ 1 .ill*'. Krb. (Af’> Fire de - «t the plant of the Carolina Ma- CoCmpany here today. Dam wer*- estimated at There no insurance. 835,000,000 Set Up For Road Work so Percent Cut In hind in Agriculture 1>• 11, Reported to tlie House (n.ufton. Dor. 22. (AP) The Agriculture Department \ Pill. betting aside only $35,000/- Kfdeial highway aid in the " f i-/••« I wsvs reported to the House its appropriations committee v. i. the t4nt«2 or the nine big • i ippropriations measures to be since Congress convened, tio- Treasury-Post Office mea tli«*ady has been sent to the and the House plans to con i' con .{deration of the Interior ■ rtmerit bill today. • o sr out President Hoover's re- dation for reducing the Fed highwa.v relief aid allotment by ‘")<i the committee allowed on • in uni of the usual annual SIOO ' outlay. •h< Hurcau of Federal Roads said w arid meet the maturing obliga te the states for the full fiscal "f '•'••31 due partly to the $12,- ' Ml emergency employment relief ‘Po.pi tat ions measure made at the ; -ession. WUTHIR * C >K NORTH CAROLINA. foitowed by rain Flf “«d in west portiM tonight; n >t much change in tanpenlm Hrnhcx-snit zssLfEßr CHRISTMAS CARDS MEAN FREEDOM rvapr-r . —— ■ - ■"! . ■■— l '•*- i A i *vA Se. Ae' -f > ' \ J&l9 * < • - 3: ■ * ' « y* f * * * ; v > n - t *<i -i ' »• - M ■ c -a *■ "f#§?' r ind wtcnccor enu-ntcy - 5 ' A* lhv wf 5 UiK Nowak***L »si Aci aiui d«l thereby «pr<s» yhc-.r of Aa; and P'S**" 1 account of tuch toa- I 01 l "" YHl,wu E«i>vr, *«b .m- .«* M&i M Two hundred Christmn? cards of Gov. James Ralph of California are ready. Each is a pardon in red, white and blue, and bearing a huge gold seal, which the gov ernor is presenting to violators, serving terms in county jails, of MERGING OF LOAN AGENCIES PLANNED Democrats Study Program For Closely Knit Farm Loan Authority IS HELD Morgenthau Meets With (k»ngre*sinnai Dadim To Map Carrying Out Campaign Pledges By Gov ernor RoPsevelt Washington. Dec. „*2. <AP>—Henry Morganthau, Jr., representing Presi dent-elect Roosevelt, met with House and Senate Democratic leaders today to frame a program for consolidating Federal agencies concerned with loans to farmers. Morgenthau, New York State con servation commissioner, and close f i iend '.>f Governor Roosevelt, met with Speaker Garner. Senator Robin son. the Democratic leader, and other Democratic spokesmen on the farm question. Several other senators, representa tives and farm leaders yere in the con ference. the prime purpose of which was said to be to carry out one of Mr. Roosevelt's campaign pledges, consolidation <?f farm loan agencies. The puipo.se is to merge eight gov ernmental agencies which have been created to make loans to farmers into one closely knit organization, with a single policy. Statesville Bank Receiver Ordered Put Under Arrest Asheville, Dec. 22.- <AP> District Attorney Frank C. Patton, of Morgan ton. said here today he had ordered the arrest of Earl W. Jcnc;. former Statesville bank receiver, pending an audit of his books. and that he ' pro bably will be charged with violation of his trust.’* Jones, now under arrest in W)iming ton. where he was found two days after having disappeared December 5, was receiver of the Commercial Na tional Bank of Statesville. He disap peared a few hours before he was to have turned over the bank s affairs to W. H. Spradlin, sent by Washing ton authorities to relieve him. Reports from Wilmington today said Jones had recognized his soh, Earl Jones, of States, upon his arrival there today and talked with him for some time, * ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBT.ISHRn Measure the Wright act, California’s Dro hibitipn that was repealed at the November election. The doc uments, a sample of which is above, are being awarded to all those who were nob previous of fenders or involved in violence. Tobacco Seasons For East Closed Raleigh, I»ec. 22.—(AP)— All to- Iwcco markets in North Carolina's New Bright licit were closed for the season today. Those which had not wound up MVson'K sa'es earlier In the month shut the doors yesterday. Markets closing yesterday were Farmvllle, Goldsboro, Greenville. Kinston, New Bern, Roberson v I lie. Rocky Mount Tarboro, and Wilson according to information received by the State Crop Reporting Ser vice here. A few New Bright Belt markets closed earlier in the month. Refusal Os Extradition Denounced i Georgia Governor Scathingly Attacks Jersey Executive In Burns Case Atlanta. Ga.. Dec. 22. (AP)—Gov ernor Richard B. Russell, Jr., in a scathing statement on the refusal of Governor A. Harry Moore, of New Jersey, to permit extradition from New Jersey of Robert Elliott Burns, fugitive from a Georgia chaingang, today charged Moore's action was a direct violation of the Federal Con stitution. m .“This decision.'* - Russell said, "makes it easy to understand how the most horrible crime of modern times, the kidnaping and murder of the Lindbergh baby, which shocked the entire world, could occur and go Un punished in a state whose governor has f such ideas of law and the pro prieties as manifested by the Judg ment in this case. Governor Moore. Russell said, Is either desirous of "basking in the light of some cheap publicity.'' -or else is completely “taken In'* by the state ments and writings of Burns, “which have beert proven • false 1 and are a slander on the State of Georgia, and its Institutions,’ 1 HENDERSON, N. C., • . '- ■ *- •< T mc.JvjOpf|^_ - tt a <3atUi tlisuatrb IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 22, 1932" 1 NORTH CAROLINA’S HIGHWAY FUND NOW $3,000,000 SHORT No Possibility of Surplus To Be Diverted to Schools or Any Other State Usage JEFFRESS _ REVEALS ACTUAL CONDITIONS Cuts and Slash* is Have Been Made, but Tremendous Decline in licenses and Gasoline Coi tsu mpt io p Have Played I Hovoc With Huge Highway Funds linllr 111—| Iflich Ri|r#«n, l« ibr 111 Walter Hntal Raleigh. Dec. 22. - North Carolina's highway fund for the present year is $3,000 ,000 short and I any calculations on diverted funds 'or other th&n highway uses are nDt to be trusted, according to the figures of Chairman R. B. Jeffress of tHe State Highway Commission. Mr. Jeffreys had a communication In the papers this morning comment ing on figures of Dr. Albert S. Keis (Continued on Page Seven) Two Suits, Each For $50,000, Are Filed on A. C. L. Fayetteville, Dec. 22 (AP) —Two suits, each ior *50.000 were filed agaiet the Atlantic Coast Line rail road company here today by the fa ther of two young persons killed In a grade crossing crash near her e Sept emitter 13. W. F. Cannady. administrator of the estate of Euland E Cannady, hir son, and Dr. P. W. Olive, adminis trator of the estate of Miss Orion Ojtve hia. d—ghfr, -tiled OawiU. . Two other persons were also killed in the wreck. Tar Heel Women Beseech Alms of New First Lady Dnitr Dlnimtrk Burma. In the Sir Walter Hrtal. Raleigh, Dec. 22 -Mrs. Franklin Roosevelts North Carolina admirers are so numerous that she finds it nec essary to turn over some of her mail to women of this State when requests go to N« w Tork for contributions from the First Lady of the Landslide. Mrs. Kooscva'.t was requested by one North Carolina woman to send $250 to pay on a note. Another Tar Heel sister asked for a smaller amount and when Mrs. Roosevelt turned the let ter over to local people who could do something to help the distressed seek er after aid she resented the prying into her personal affairs. When the survey of her needs was made it was d ; scovered that the North Carolinian was simply trying to find if Mrs. Roosevelt would give her anything. Considering the majority that Mr. Roosevelt received in the election it would seem that the coming White House queen is in for considerable almsgiving. Mrs. Roosevelt is being helped to dispose of her Tar Heel postulants by people in their com munity. For instance when a woman writes Mrs. Roosevelt for aid the let ter comes back to the community from which It was sent and the real needs as suffering sisters are ascertained. How many of these letters are writ ten by stupid people and how many by seekeis after notoriety or notice of some kind nobody knows. But it is rather embarrassing to North Caro lina people to have their State put into the mendicant’s column by these persistent appeals to the busiest woman in the world. f AW I LL Low Angelos Oil- Dec. 22.—1 don't know why Mr. Hoover is all excited over the debt yet. That’s all over now. He did a mighty good Job. We was owed about one hundred and twenty-five millions, and he col lected over a hundred. Anybody can get four-fifth nowadys is a mighty good job of collecting. And besides, France is going to ■ pay. So, it looks like the debt thing is all settled till next De cember, when It will be Mr. Roose velt’s Christmas present to try and get on our tree. Time to worry over a debt Is before you get It, not after you got four-fifths of It. So, arguing over the debt now is Just''like arguing over the last election. Yoon, WILL 14 f ♦ Roosevelt Again Declined Any'Joint Responsibility For Hoover Debt Procedure CAPITOL PAGES BATTLE IN SNOW K Washington cameraman gets close enough to snap the annual snow battle between the pages «f the aenate and house of repre France Will Seek Debts Settlement I’ariih Dec. 22.—(A I*)—The mln istrria 1 declaration prepared by the new cabinet says the Paul-Boncour government will bend every effort to a general settlement of the war debts protocn. But In view of the political sit uation in the United States, the declaration warns, the negotiations must be conducted with extreme prudence. DECISION NOT 10 PREVENT MERGERS Chowan Chase, Ruled by Supreme Court, Big De velopment on Schools Daily Ulapateii Dnmi, la tbt Sir Walter Hotel Raleigh. Dec. 22 —Supreme Court op inion in the cel< biated Chowan case, wherein the insurgent residents of three districts for a time conducted their own school rather than go into the high school consolidated district, will not materially affect the school consolidations throughout the State. Tbe court opinion which came down yesterday merely finds that the State Board of Equalization cannot effect consolidation of its own will. The Constitution of North Carolina cam 4 to the rescue of tfie insurgent* who resisted thg consolidation of River View, Ward’s, and Ryland’s elementary school districts. There was nothing wrong in the State Board erf Equaliz ation’s insistence that the high school be maintained and transportation be furnished; but tne Supreme Court found the Constitution standing in the way of consolidation fropi Raleigh. In other words, the 1931 M&cLean act did no, confer upon the State (Continued on Page Seven) Police Reporter Found Unconscious In Car In Garage Indianapolis. Ind., Dec. 22.—(API Ray Seidle. 35. police 'reporter for a Chicago newspaper, was found uncon scious in a garage at his parents’: home here early today, his throat, mouth and nose tightly bound with adhesive tape and his knees pinioned, while nearby blazed flames from a pile of rubbish. Police who investigated said Seidle; semi-conscious, several hputp later; nodded his head when asked If two men assaulted him as he drove into the garage. He was rescued by his brother, Robert, who was aroused by a neigh bor. Officers sa dithey believed; the reported had managed to throws a brick through the garage window, then tumbled unconscious across the button of the automobile horn, which sounded an alarm. y f They were unable to determine a motive for the attack. Robert Bddle said his brother carried about S2OO, which was missing. j PUBLISHED EVERT jUTTIXROOI EXCEPT SUNDAY, sentatives, a short distance from the capitol. It has the earmarks of another Democratic-Republican encounter! FARMER IN WILSON WIPES OUT FAMIEV Rodney JLatman, 28, Kills Wife; Two Small Chil dren, Then Suicides AXE IS USEIT TO KILL Man Then Jakes Hts Own Life With ShotgMi; Bodlrs Are Found By Dead Woman's Brother, Claude Wells Wilson, Dec. 22 (AP)—A fam ily of four was wl|x*d out «*arly to day when Rodney Kalman, 2k y ear-old Wilson county farmer, hacked to death tils wife and two small children with an axe, end then kilted himself with a shot gun Comncr B T Martin, who re turned a verdict of murder and suicide, lu reconstructing the trag edy, said Eatman, apparently kill ed his wife, Margaret, 21, and chil dren, Georgia Marie, 2, and .Jose phine, aged one, as they slept. The bodies of the mpther and Georgia Marie, attired in night clothing, were fsund In *rie bed, while the bodies of Eatman. who was dressed, and the baby, .Jose phine, were In another. The tragedy was discovered by Claude Wells, brother of Mrs. Eat m&ng 40 Percent Farm Lands Mortgaged Agriculture Expert Says Some of Them Plastered Far Above Their Value Washington. Dec. Ap proximately 40 percent of the farm lands in the United States are under mortgage. j This was the estimate of Eric Eng lund. assistant chief of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, to the House Appropriations sub-committee at hearings today on the annual Agri cultural Department supply bill. About five percent of these farms Englund said, have mortgage debts in excess of their value; about ten per cent debts from 75 to 100 percent of their value, and 21 percent debts from 50 to 75 percent. Much of this Indebtedness is being wiped out through the drastic fore closure method, he said. Engluhd said that in 1990-81, 2.8 percent of all farms in the west-north central states were transferred thro ugh foreclosure or as the result of mortgage indebtedness. 8 PAGES TODAY - FIVE CENTS COPY TELLS PRESIDENT WANTS FREE HAND' WHEN HEMS IN Correspondence Between Hoover and President- Elect Made Public at White House NO AGREEMENT IS REACHED BY TWO Little Action of Any Kind Now Likely Toward Set tling Momentous Problems Until After Roosevelt Takes Office March 4; Useless to Proceed Washington. Dec 22. (API Prcul dcnt-elect Roosevelt, in correspond ents made public today at the White House, declined “to accept any joint responsibility" in the appointment of a commission to explore the war debts and other international problems telling President Hoover. In effecl. that he wished a free hand after h" takes office March 4. DISCUSSIONS BRING OUT NO AGREEMENT ANY KIND Washington. Dec. 22.—<AP— Dis cussion between President Hoover and President-elect Roosevelt on war debts and other international problems have failed to produce any substan tial agreement between them as to procedure, and the probability was seen in informed circles toJay to be strongly that little action will be taken before March 4 toward final settle ment of present difficulties. Correspondence between Mr. Hoov er and Mr. Roosevelt, which will be made public shortly, will indicate that the President feels it would be use less to proceed toward any immediate settlement of such intricate and weighty international questions as those in connection with the wartime obligations to this country. An explanation to this effect was giijen today by an official source, which declined to he quoted direct ly, pending issuance at the White House of the Hoover-Ro'i. r srlt cor respondence. Default Hy France Will Aid Britain England Is Same Old Beacon of Depend ability, land Hats Are Off to Her Bv CHARLES P. ts TEW ABT Washington. Dec. England it lhe one country which seems Likely to profit in the lon* run. from Frances deliberate default in pay* /nent of current Inter-nt on the GalUo war debt to the Umtiid States. America naturally <iooe not profit by it. It already is apparent that France will not. French serurities slumped simumltaneously with announceent of the chamber of deiauties’ vote to re pudiate Dec 15‘a n/ittonal obligation to Uncle Sam. Germany's leading newspapers hasten t o advance the ar gument that the Ir'aids government's disregard of its financial pledge nuV lifies the treaty of Versailles. Reper cussions to the disadvantage of French credit are* noticeable in every direction, the world over in short. In the midst rtf this situation Eng lish integrity is all the more obvious by very reason of such a contrast. True, the Ita’f.an bill, too, was paid on the nail, as were Czechoslovakia's, (Continued no Pace Seven.) OURVttATHEPAUN
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Dec. 22, 1932, edition 1
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