Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Feb. 1, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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"henderson, gateway to U CENTRAL CAROLINA. TWENTIETH YEAR Further Debt Moratorium Pending Washington Meet Is Now Talked In London CONFERENCE WON’T BE ‘SWAPPING’ ORGY, CHAMBERLAIN SAYS British Treasury Head Says Many Obstacles In Way of Return to Gold Standard MORATORIUM SEEN IN EVENT OF DELAY Will Be Necessary If Delib erations In Washington Arc Drawn Out; Parley Likely To Begin Next Month; Next British Pay ment Is Due June 15 London. Feb. I.—(API —Possibility Hint, the United States will grant a moratorium on further war debt lay outs from Great Britain until a new *i moment is completed was reported today in London newspapers. ' The next debt payment is due June 15- Lard Rothcrmere’s Daily Mail, in-' dependent conservative in politics, said this possibility “is suggested in well Informed quarters.” It added that tuch a step would be necessary if deliberations of the Anglo-American debt conference at Washington were protracted. The conference is planned lor as soon as possible after Presi dent-elect Roosevelt’s inauguration. NOT BIG SWAPPING DEAL, MR. CHAMBERLAIN STATES London. Feb. 1. —(AP( —Great Bri tain does not look upon the approach ing debt conference at Washington as a “great swapp’ng deal.” Neville Chamberlain, cancellor of the ex chequer. declared today at a iuncheon o' American newspaper correspon dents. Neither can England "contemplate with equanimity return to the gold standard until we are certain that it will work better than it ‘did Just be fore we left it," he said. ' j ’’Great Britain believes in a stable international standard of value, but there are many conditions to be ful filled before she returns to gold” AMBASSADOR SAIIX FOR LONDON TO MAKE PLANS Now York. Feb. I.—(AP) Sir, Ronald Lindsay. British ambassador to Washington, sailed for London to day to make arrangements with Pre meir Ramsay MacDonald for the forthcoming British-American.. confer ence on war debts. He said he expected <o be back at his post by March 1. " r - Japan Drops Some Claims In Far East It Inacce pt a b I£, May Quit League and Leave It To Survive* If It Can lokyo, hjeb. 1. -(AP —Japan has wi'hdrnwn some of its objections to League of Nations program for t-'mciliation of 'he dispute with China ll ! 'he government is not too san- R'un?! ihat. its new terms will be ac cc|>iible to 'he League. " 'hey are not. Japan will serious ■ consider withdrawal from the so c,elv °f nations, a foreign office • jok, sntan said, leaving it to survive, " can. without this country’s par ticipation. 1 >ul ■ ,f H does survive,” said the esrnai ’. “it. will be a greatly 1 "Scd organiatlon." a 10 hevv Japanese offer, evolved at special ca bi ne t meeting, accepts riit. .? i,>a, * on in 'he process of con i * ton it the League drops its in of ti° n ° dec * ar e against recognition s fttte of Manchukuo and places rr T u P''n the competence of the - ioll commission. '♦'C/ATHER n KO J’“ NORTH CAROLINA. Ik ,^w dy , With ra,n ton »£»*t and Thin-*/ 1,1 extrertlH ♦*»* portion cCff r “* ! ~o< much ® fc tn temperature* Hcnbcrsmt 51 atly Hispatrh ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND WKINIA. * FULL „.£S ASEI> WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. After Debt Pow-wow With F. D. R. ■Bp >jg| : Sir Ronald Lindsay, British Ambassador to the United States, is the center of an inquisitive group of newspapermen as he leaves the “Little White House,” Warm Springs, Ga., after his four-hour conference with President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt concerning the proposed debt dis cussion with Great Britain. The envoy, who flew to Georgia from Wash ington, expressed himself as pleased with the “informal and unofficial, but satisfactory” chat. New Roosevelt Cabinet Slate Made At Capital •Flits Senator Cordell Hull In as Secretary of State and Glass as Treas ! ury Head SENATOR WALSH AS ATTORNEY GENERAL Miss Frances Perkins, of New York, Is Listed as Secretary of Labor; Final! Adjustment of Places Ex pected To Be Completed In Few Days Washington. Feb. 1 (AP) —Tihe laiteit prevwi of the over-changing Rdooevelit ce biimet /picture * as seen by some Democrats in Washing!bn w.hfo ordinarily arc well informed, in dicates that nearly ail of the cabinet rests in the new admin i sit rat ion hav e been offered, and several definitely settled. 1 This information presents the situ at.ion as follows: State —Senator Cordell Hull, of Ten nessee, if he wants it; otherwise, Owen D. Young, oi Nfew Yoirk, if hej wants iit. Treasury—Senator Carter Glass, of Virginia, wfho has not yeit acceded, but generally is expected to. War —Former Governor George H. Dern, of Utah. Justice—Senator Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. , Post Office—James A. Farley, of New York. Naivy—/Still open. Senator Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia, in case Sen ator Glass refuses t.he Treasury. | Interior—Senator Bronson Cutting of Nt\w Mexico, if he w/ants it. Oth erwise the place is open, wiith John B. Elliott, of California, prominent among the possibilities. Agriculture—Probably Heinry A. Wallace, of lowa. Commerce—Uncertain. William H. Wood/i n, of New York, preferred, but probably won It accept Labor-Miss Frances Perkins, of New York. However reliable this slate may be (Continued on Page Three.) Truck Driver Is Killed In Crash With Street Car Salisbury, Feb. I.—<AP)—A. R. Pat terson, High Point bread truck driver, died in a hospital here today of burns and injuries received yesterday when his truck and a street car collided between Salisbury and Spencer. The street car motormdn was in jured, but his condition was not se rious- Two car passengers also sus tained sligk* injuries* n'' - ? • HENDERSON, N. C., WEDNESDAY .AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 1, 1933 • ————————J ■ - • , : . _ r • .1 * v ’ * ; Reichstag Meet Hitler To Block Berlin, Feb 1 (AP)—Chmcellor Adolf iiitlcg mbtainde from Pres ident von Hlndenburg today a de cree for dissolution of the Reich stag to meet next Tuesday. < AGAINST BLOCKING ALL RAIL CREDITS May Still Be Made Safely to Some Carriers, Com ,missibner Says Washington, Feb. 1. —(AP) —Joseph B. Eastman, Interstate Commerce commissioner, advised a Senate com mittee today not to block all further loans to ‘dhe railroads, saying ad 1 - vances can be safely made to some of the carriers. Eastman explained that his views were personal, and that Commissioner Mahaffie might disagree with him;. “Government loans to railroads are justified in my option,” the said, “If funds cannot be obtained on rea sonable terms from private sources, if it appears that the security offer ed will be adequate, and if it further appears that the results will promote or protect the public, interest. “It Uis possible to be certain only of the first of these conditions. The adequacy of the security and the ef fect upon the public interest are, in the last analysis, matters of judgment involving ia forecast of the future. Broadly speaking, justification for government loans involves an assump tion or belief that they will serve to bridge over a comparatively brief per iod of stringency, at the end of which time such loans will not be neces sary” Urges Emergency Program To Help Restore Farmer Washington, Feb. 1. —(AP)—Talking for the cotton cooperatives, Charles G. Henry,, of Memphis, today urged a Senate committee to approve an emergency credit program to help in the financial rehabilitation of the farmer. Henry told the Senate banking sub committee he sat in on the confer ! ence of farm leaders at which q four point plan for financial rehabilitation of the farmer was drawn up. Three of the four elements of this plan were described as contained in the Robin son measure now before the commit tee. Ground Hog Won’t Influence Weather —• f — ' C Chicago, Feb. I.—(AP)—A lot of folks ar© going to be afraid of their own shadow tomorrow, and if they have a good chance of be ing fooled, C. A. Donnell, chief of ' the Chicago Weather -Bureau, said today. * ? For tomi orow is Ground Hog day, and so far as the Weather Bureau is concerned, It isn’t going to make one particle of difference if. the well known woodchuck sees his, shadow, or doesn't ‘.We’ll keep right on having va rieties of weather for the next six weeks regardless of whether Feb ruary 2 is fair or cloudy.” HT© ad ded that the probability was that winter days Would dominate, too, because February and March were winter months. f > A SraSra! Not 10,000 but Around 3,- 000 Attended, But Case Was Stated in Clear, Moderate Way MUST NOT DEFAULT , TO THE CHILDREN Statistics Presented Show ing Comparative Expendi tures and Curtailments In Slate Expenditures On Schools and Other of Its Objectives Unity Dispatch Rar<*«a, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. B ASKER VIM.. Raleigh Feb. I.—As a monstrous mass meeting, seething with sentiment snd sympathy forthe i schools, school ‘ j*?t Lt-rs and superinrPii ’ent • d-Hgn e*f t" d fc iurage the Ge'eral Assem bly from reducing the appropriations for the schools, the meeting held here yesterday afternoon was a flop. In stead of the 10,000 people in militant opposition to any further cuts for the schools of the State, not more than 3,000 people were present. The city seats 3,766 people .and there were fully 766 vacant seats. But as a dignified, somewhat ne rvous meeting of school people and the friends of the schools for a mod erate and more or less fair presenta tion of the case of the schools as seen from the point of view of the school teachers, superintendents and parent teacher associations, the meeting was undoubtedly a success. Most of the speakers were conservative and mod terate in their presentation of the school situation in the State as they saw it and cited facts and statistics (Continued on Page Three.) Special Handling Os Rail Situation Is Being Sought Washington, Feb. 1 (AP)—Critici zfriig the pending bankruptcy reir r legislation’s a.ttemfpt to expedite rail road organizations, the legislatifve c’om(mittee Os the Interstate Commerce Commission today recommended a thoroughgoing reform of reorganiza tion procedure” by creating a special court or a ne wdepartmemt in thy com mission. j The legislative committee, headed by Commissioner Joseph B. Eastman expressed its viiewis in a letter to Sen ator Hastings, Repuibli'can, Delaware, chairman of a judiciary sub-commit tee which is now considering the bank ru,p.tcy bill passed by the House Mon day. , Commissioner Wilson Says \ • ' - Letter Cost State 94 Cents Asked Employers In State to Save Industrial Commis sion; Senator Waynick’s Name Used Because He Was Familiar With Capital-Labor Disputes Daily Dis|*nt«*h Bureau In the Sir Walter Motel. BV J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, Jan. 31 —The letter maiil ed out last week by Commissioner T. A. Wilson of the Industrial Commis sion and which caused the passage of a resolution ; n the House calling upon; him to explain the cost of the letter dustrial Commission only 94 cents, and all details about, cost the In according to the sworn statement submitted this mloming in reply to the resolution. The statement was /presented to the senate committee on) Propositions and Grievances, to which the resolution was referred after Bills For 8-Month School, Supported Fully By State, . Presented In Legislature f ■' ‘V ? .1- '» v-*“- 1 INAUGURATION BIDS ARE MAH r U — " • m © . r_.„, — ~~ — —" .... ■ . „y•:•’•••• ■?’ .\{ > . > r . •' t lif \ . ■.©frjjtimpntlCotnunSire > •* • . • . ’ * * ?: ; , • * * r • / *. <• /t* >y///■/><//ssss/yW/rfr/sf///// /✓/ fjs*' .L;■;|H Wllhi :|lfli»ut lv»W*irtH‘ll | IhAtn ifrmm ) V dm /j/ ffc'.w* 4 •. . \ • •?!•*. • s. + . * r \ * t . . w/./xvTv.-. • .. v y ; ; jv : : '/ ' " y''«sy y § • DtiS 'l'---/- , ' , £ ts your presence as a distinguished guest is desired at the inaugura tion of Franklin Delano Roose velt and John Nance Garner as president and vice president of 1 Reynolds Is Out To Set a Record Washington, Feb. I.—(AP)—Sen ator BNofrert Ri Reynolds, Demo crat, North Carolina, a newcomer to legislative halls, is out for a record for himself in his first six year term. The record, Reynolds told news paper men, would be not to intro duce a. single bill while lie is serv ing the term. “I think there are too many laws and bill now,” he said. “I think i< would be a good thing for me to serve six years and not introduce a single bill.” Insistence of Reorganization Committee Is Becom- ' : ing Monotonous Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Motel. BY J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, Feb. I—While members of the Senate generally look with favor upon the reorganization committee’s economy bills, they Dave been smartig these past few days under the trium virate’s insistence that bills originat fContinued on Paar Three.) ii'g been passed by the house, f The postage for the letter, amounting/ to <59.90, was paid out of a special fund donated by interested emiployers in the state, and not out of commission funds, Wilson declared. { * Fight Now In Open ' The. resolution palling upon Com missoner Wilson for informal on, about this letter, which was sent to 'employers over the' State telling of the bills’that had? been introduced aimed at the abolition of the Indus trial Commission, was introduced by ((Continued on Page Six.), 15027 • PUB ‘ Aa ‘g&EI? D B UdYt T . I, “0 0 “ , the United States, in Washington, March 4, you may expect your mail to contain an invitation like this. The invitations just have been dispatched. LEGISLATORS LATE Won’t Get Up In Time for Forenoon Meetings of The Committees HOUSES MEET AT NOON Some Members Up Late and Sleep Late Next Morning, Thr*i Try ’ To Crowd Day’s Work Into Few Hours ( 1 j Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKKRVILIi. Raleigh, Feb. I.— a majority of the members of the General Assembly still refuse to have their morning’s •sleep interrupted and decline to at tend any sessions of the General As sembly before noon. For in spite of repeated efiorts made by Lieutenant Governor A- H. Graham and Speaker H. L. Harris to get the meeting hour moved up at least to 11 o’clock, a majority in both houses continue to set the hour at 12 o’clock. The excuse given by those who fa vor the noon hour for the convening of the General Assembly is that many members cannot attend a session at any earlier hour because of a com mittee meetings in the morning. But those who know the facts know that this is given as an excuse rather than as a reason, and that the real cause (Continued on Page Two) Leas'Case Argued In Nashville Nashville, Tenn., Feb. 1 (AP) — North Carolina officials who came here late yesterday with requisition papers asking the return of Colonel Luke Lea and Luke Leja, J>r., to that state to submit to sentences imlposed for violating State banking laws, were in conference today in the of fice of a Nashville attorney. Solicitor Z©b V. Nettles, of Ashe ville, and A. A. F. Sejawell, assistant attorney general of North Carolina, Conferred with Attorney General Roy eßeler, of Tennessee, and Nat Tifton, assistant atittonney general. The . conference started shortly aft er 9 a. m., and they had, riot emerjg'- ed at, noon.’. The purpose of the con ference not announced. - * O PAGES 0 TODAY I ___ J FIVE CENTS COPY’ SIX-DAY WEEK IS i OF THE MEASURES Money Would Be Provided 4 From Sources I Other Than Tax Upon Real Estate ImState SENATOR MacLEAN AUTHOR ONE BILL, Pay of Solicitors Cut SI,OOO Annually by Bill Passed In Senate; Last Tax Hearing Is Held and Writing of Revenue Bill Is Attually Begun j; • Raleigh, Feb. I.—(AP)—Bill to re quire the State to provide an eight months State-supported school term and passage of further measures aim ed to reorganize the State govern ment in the interest of economy held the legislative spotlight today. Both the Senate and House got pro posals for State-Supported eight months school terms, with the money coming from sources other than real estate taxes, and the joint education committee decided to name a sub committee to draft school legislation. The evident intent of the committee, meeting before the formal legislative session, was that such legislation session, was that such legislation pro vide wo eight months term. Fathered by Mac Lean. The Senate school bill was father ed by Senator Angus W. Mac Lean, of Beaufort, author of the 1931 school taw, which provided a State-support* (Continued on Page Three.) More Cotton Will Be Used ; j During 11933 . ■ r Federal Bureau Says World Consumption of U. S. Crop Will Be Larger ’ Washington, Feb 1 (APl—The Bu reau of Agricultural Boonomic ; today ■forecast an increase in wlarld ccnsump lion of American cotton th/s year over 1931-32. Domestic consumption during the first five months of tih© 1932 33 season was seven percent greater th m i • the same period last season, the bureau said. “The increase over last season /jhoul become greater as the season ad vances,” the bureau said, “barring a recurrence of such an acute financial and business situation as that which depressed cotton consumptin 43 per cent frm March to July last season.' #MVILL ROGERS Vy *sgys: Beverly Hills, Calif., Feb. I—. My snow that was to melt yester day didn't melt. It was unusual snow. 1 You see, the chamber »f com merce had. led these folks to the , mountains, (you can always trace all devil', nent to h chamber !of commerce. The chamber didn’t figure. It would snow, because they had passed <>o resolution demand ing snow. But it did snow. Well, you take a southern Call* fcytiian and put him on a snowP drift or anywhere ©ls© Where he can’t see a filling station or a cafeteria and he is. ready to “write out his will. Thcrre wasn’t a suit of long underwear in the bunch. Now We got to set ’em under these oirauge trees for three months to thaw ’em ouff. \ We can a»»d diolive on climate, but it takes a real north* r»*r to digest these snow-balls. I Yours, s * T ’ :j ’ ' W££*>- j.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Feb. 1, 1933, edition 1
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