Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / March 31, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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’ HENDERSON, gateway TO CENTRAL CAROLINA. TWENTIETH- year SENATE PASSES BEER Sharp Upturn In Business Past Few Weeks Reported In Many Parts Os Country CURVE OF RETAIL IRADE IS UP MORE IRAN USUAL TURN Heavier Demand For Wear, ing Apparel Reported by Dun & Bradstreet Weekly Review BEER PREPARATIONS ARE FELT IN TRADE Autos, Trucks, Bottles, Bar rels, Glasses and Other Es. sential Commodities Feel Spurt of Demand; 265 More National Banks Have Been Opened Washington, March 31. — (AP) —Sec- narv Wood in of the Treasury re pented today that 265 national banks with deposits of $350,000,000 have been restored to 100 percent banking func ti; •n through reorganization in the ten-day period ending March 25. The wtpkly statement of the Fed rval Reserve System showed a gain of sl4 444.000 in gold reserves during the week ending last Wednesday, a drop o'. $125,759,000 in member bank I'dio wings, and a decrease of $225,- OCOOOO in the volume of money in circulation. The Department of Commerce esti (Continued on Page Three.) Japan May Push Drive Into South Occupation May Be Extended If Chinese Press Fight, Jap General Says Changchun, Manchuria. March 31. -(AP)-Lieutenant General Ktiniaki Korso, chief of staff of the Japanese arm Icm in Manchuvia, and reputed "Erams" of the Jehol campaign, told 'he Associated Press today that con tinu'ng sporadic Chinese attacks elong 'he Great Wall of Chbia were only resulting in wanton and whole s''le acrific of Chinese lives and may '•ring on an extension of the Japan- r ’e occupation into North China pro- FC.\ Asked whether the Japanese army rf uld avoid occupation of Peiping if *he attacks continued, General Korso said: "l'- is impossible to ignore such challenges. But at the same time we thus' consider the international fac 'ors involved in the possible oocupa -1 (, n of Peipin, as well as the risk to 'he lives of Japanese, foreigners, and peaceful Chinese residents of the old capital.” tThere are 700 American civilians "no £OO U. S. Marines in Peiping ) Oust Jews From Courts And Stores In Germany Berlin, March 31.—(AP) Nazi R 'orm troopers today cleared Berlin courts of Jewish judges and at torneys. Among those ousted was Chief Jus irft Kurt con Soeiling. Newspaper reporters who are Jews, Marzfstg or 'Ommunfuts henceforth will be bar *eri fr °m ciiminal courts professional- The Wolff News Bureau sgys that 'he town of Annaberg, shoppers coming cut of Jewish stores were 1,1 "P by Nazi pickets, who pasted ’'pnn their foreheads stamps reading: traitor? bought from Jews.” Skiing a tO-year tradition { Jewish ■.y - » WMm | Lieithersmt y • V*. * *' . ; WIRE SERVICE OF THK ASSOCIATED PRESS Lx-Kaiser’s Latest Photo > jt \ Wr M A portrait of former Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany and his wife. Princess Hermione. made a couple of weeks ago at their home in Doom, Holland! show* the former ruler arrayed in his most r £esp,end£nt uniform, whiefy recalls the days when he was the great European War Lord. With the rise of Chancellor Adolf Hitler to dictatorial power in the Fatherland; Wilhelm sees hope that the country can be educated into a return to a monarchy. i TORNADO KILLS 21 IN THE SOUTHWEST East Texas and Parts of Louisiana and Arkansas Hit by Twister PROBABLY 100 INJURED No Large Cities Struck and Com munications From Remote Sec tions Makes Accurate Count impossible as Yet (By Ihe Associated Press.) Tornadic winds accompanied by rain, hail and lightning killed 21 per sons In three states late Thursday. The twisting terror swooped down on towns and villages in east Texas, northwestern Louisiana and south west Arkansas and apparently blew out in northeastern Louisiana. No accurate estimate of the num ber injured could be made, but re ports over crippled commanscation channels in the storm area indicated more than 100 were hurt. No large cities were struck. ONE DEAD, MANY HURT IN STORM AT DAVENPORT, MISS. Davenport, Miss., March 31. —(AP) —An unidentified Negro was killed and several others were injured here early today when a tornado swept through a section of the Mississippi delta country and caused property damage estimated at more than $50,- 000. directors of Rudolph Karlstadt and Company, operating department Btores in Hamburg and Berlin, have resigned. Other Jews in key positions also stepped out, ostensibly leaving the company’s affairs entirely in the hands of non-Jews. Reports from the United States that the Nazi party might be persuad ed at the last minute to refrain from launching its drasitc economic war on Jewry tomorrow seemed only to add fuel to the fire today. A new proclamation defined the ac tion as the beginning of a war on the entire Jewish race of the world. A iparty declaration said it will be fought “until victory is ours.” ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED Roosevelt Names: Child Health Day _____________ * Washington, March 31.—(AP)— President Roosevelt today issued a proclamation calling upon the na tion to set aside May „ -Day for "earnest consideration” of the na tion's youth in observing Child Health Day. Expects T% Have Men at Work In Forests By Mid-Summer Washington, Mlarch 31 (AP) —Pres- ident Roosevelt today lafaSde his for est conservation em|pk>yttn(ent pro gram law ; by signing the bill tvhd.e his aides rushed to intake ready for enlisting thousands ffrexm. the Cities’ jOble)ss for the work. , , > .■ He directed the Department, of La bor to supervise enrollment of the idle, making plain that he had in ruind selection, of men wlho went to the me!trapol(StarL centers during boom days, now to carry out the task of putting the many watersheds of the nation again in condition to pro duce tiim/ber and guard against floods This first point of his emergency relief program was auitboried .ate yes terday by Congress. At the' Request of some of those who sponsored the legtelaitiion, he deferred signing of the bill until today. “It is the hop elof Mr. Roosevelt to get some men to work within two weeks By irtidksutmimer, he believes, over 200,000 men can be wielding axes and pushing spades in the for ests. YORK, S. C., CHILD KIDNAPED AT HOME York, S. C., March 31—(AF)— Frances Adickesi six-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Withers Adickes, Jr., who separated sev eral weeks ago, was seized while playing in the yard at her grand mother's home here today and, whisked away in a large haroon sedan occupied by two women and a man. HENDERSON, N. C., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 31, 1933 v!'*' •- • ' Daily Dtguatrh IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. BILL AND SENDS IT TO HOUSE uSesinTc, Nomination Sent to Senate By Governor Ehringhaus and Unanimously Approved TAKES UP DUTIES FIRST OF JANUARY Present Corporation Com missioners, Abolished By Legislature, To Hold Of fice Until Tfiat Date; Win borne Faces Electorate In 1934 Election Raleigh, March 31.—(AP)—Stanley Winborne today was named by Gov ernor J. C. B. Ehringhaus to become North Carolina’s first public utilities commissioner. Mr. Winborne has served for three years as a member of the Corpora tion Commission and ex-officio se curities commissioner. The Corpora tion Commission was abolished by the log'slative act creating the utili ties commission. The nomination was sent to the Senate this morning by the governor, and confirmation came immediately on unanmous rising vote. Senator Mc- Neill, of Cumberland, moved that the nomination be approved. The second was by McDuffe-e. of Vance, and on mot-'on of Brown, of Pender, the un animous vote was taken without the Senate following custom and retiring into executive session. As the new utilities commissioner, Mr. Winborne will take over direction on Page Two) Roosevelt To Direct Farm Bill Washington, March 31. —(AP) President Roosevelt today took into his own hands the administration farm bill, summoning all the mem bers of the Senate committee to the White House for a conference. The Le.ui'ors had voted so have Chairman Si.iJ.ii, Democrat, (South Carolina, call on the President and ask hm if he would approve some changes made in the bill, but when efforts w«re made to make the ap pointment for Smith, Mr. Roosevelt sent back word that he would like to have the whole committee t 0 come to the White House this afternoon. Already opponents of the bill on tthe (committee (have pri vately that the did not have the strength to re-write it thoroughly as they wished, but there remained a number of changes which had been voted into the measure. They sought to get a decision on these from Mr. Roosevelt and pend ing the conference they abandoned the closed session study of the bill. Prior to the decisio nto take the bill to the President, the committee thad by unanimous vote of the 15 members present, decided to include in dts report on the bill a recommen dation for expansion of the currency, on a motion of Senator Thomas, Democrat, Oklahoma. AW ILL f*# Rogers \j p ssyi: Beeverly Hills, Calif., March 31 —Glad to see that reforestation and employment bill pass. We gn»t to have a lot more forests and trees; otherwise these cigar ette smokers won’t have anything to hum up. Say, here is something that for the good of the internal revenue collectors ought to be made straight: We all kinder smile, and the paper s headline it, any time that somebody gets a refund on their income tax. That’s given wide publicity. But here is something that everybody don’t know, because they are not al lowed to publicise it: They collect in lots more hack disputed taxes than they pay ops. It’s news if you can . get any thing out of the government, but if the government gets anything out of you, that ain’t news; that’s just a habit. But Uncle Siam has no more faithful, or fair servants. ' Yours, # WILL. sß4,ooo,oooAppropriations Measure Also Passes Senate And Goes Back To The House First Photo of Reynolds Baby f ■ JHp. Ssßßg : VYV : • ‘ Mfc V : " IVx. . . ; ; Thi- is the first picture made of Mrs. Libby Holman Reynolds, widow of the tobacco heir, and her baby son, Zachary Smith Reynolds lr h™ January 10th. It was made as ,the former “torch singer” left PennsyL van.a Hospital in Philadelphia with the infant heir to the ReySs millions. Ihe baby weighed less than four pounds at birth and now tins the scales at seven. Sale of Beer In The Army Legal Washington, March 31.—fAP)— President Roosevelt was said to day to haved decided that sale oi the new 3.2 beer shall be allowed in any posts and in naval stores and canteens in states which allow such sales. It - was indicated, however, that because of the limited space for carrying of cargo aboard naval vessels and transports, the bever age; would not be sold on naval ships. COMMITTEE VOTES FOR A SALES TAX Finance Bill Will Be Pre dicted on That Assump tion Henceforth -» Dully Dlxitnlrh Uiirens, In the Sir Wnlter Hotel. : BY J. C. BASKERVULL. Raleigh, March 31. —The joint fin ance committee has again gone to work on writing a revenue bill which will contain some form of sales tax. Decision to proceed with the writing of a; revenue bill on the basis of a sales tax was reached by the com mittee at a meeting yesterday after noon. The vote to include a sales tax in the bill was 18 to 7. The committee for the past few weeks has not worked on the new re venue bill as the result of a dead lock on the sales tax &su6, the Sen ate branch of the committee favoring a sales tax and the House branch op posing it. As a result of : this dead (Continued on Page Three.) FOUR ESCAPE FROM: JAIL IN CABARRUS Concord, March 31. Four Cabarrus county sawed the bars of their cells early today, slid down blanket ropes and escaped so quietly the delivery was not dis covered until later this morning. )other prisoners nearby said they did not hear the men escape. WtATHER tr* * . FOB NORTH CAROLINA. Showers tonight and Saturday; warmer ■ tonight; colder in west portion Saturday afternoon; cold er Saturday night. PUBLISHED EVERT AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY* Senate Refuses To Mix That Question With Appro, priations, However CAUSES [FLURRY ley Observations of Mac Lean Bared as Amendment Is Offered; Rt+ fuses To State His Views on the Questic*.i .. Daily DiM|iatcH Bureau. In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKERVILL- Raleigh, March 31. —One of the hardest fights of the present session is going to center around the ques tion of whether the various school districts shall be permitted to levy local property taxes with which to supplement the amount received from the State, according to the prevailing opinion here. For even if the House finally concurs in the Senate amend ment to the appropriations bill pro viding for a State-supported eight months school term without any ad valorem taxes, the school forces and larger citiers are going to put up a fight to retain the privilege to sup plement the funds received by the State by at least 10 per cent. This was clearly indicated yester day when Senator Rlackstock, of Buncombe county, attempted to offer au amendr ent to the appropriations (Continued on Page Three.) Beer Bill To Pass House By Big Margin, Is Belief Daily Dlupatct Bureau, In the Sir Wnlter Hotel. BY J. C. RAHKERVILL. Raleigh, March 31.—The beer bill will pass the House by a large ma jority when it comes over from the Senate, according to a poll made to day by several interested House members. A boll by one member show ed 60 votes for the beer bill and only 16 definitely opposed to it, the re mainder being undecided. So if the merrTbers who have said they will vote for the bill actually vote for it. it wil’ pass with a big majority. Pre sent plans are to move a suspension of ihe rules and pass the bill as soon as it is passed by the Senate and sent over to the House.. a PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY BEER BILL GIVEN MED PLACE Put on Calendar Without Reference to Qommittee . For Consideration Way APPROPRIATIONS IN SENATE INCREASED About Five Million Dollars More Than Written Into * House Measure, Including Boosting of Most of Allot ments for Administrative Units Rale gh. March. 31 —'(AP)—Adopt- ing exit pa© rt'Snary prooedtuire, the House tocfay voted place the Frances bee rlbiill on its calendar to morrow. The action iwtas the same as passage on first treadling, twit tihe the test vote wilw come on second reading next week . The Senate today refuused to con cur in House amendments to three adUrfinJisl ration 'bills relating to fund ing and beUfJnianicing counity and municipal dbligations, and sent I*the 1 *the bills to confrere nee. Concurrence was voted in a House amendment to a bill to allow certalin persons, especially Bob McNlair, of Rockingham county, and O. G. EJd wlardfs, of Spring Hope, to take the examination for license! to practice pbammlacy. Legalized beer in North. Carolina by May 1 got final Senlate approval to day, and the upper division of th.> Legislature also paused and return - (Continued on Page Ttjjree > School Item Chief Issue To Be Fixed Senate-House Con ference Must Merge Differences on Length of Term Dully Dispatch Barenn, In the Sir Walter Hotel. RY HENRY LESESNE. Raleigh, March 31—The passage by the Senate of an appropriations bill calling for a general fund expenditure of m!ore than $26 000,000 as against the House figure of approximately $23,500,000, brought about the long expedted deadlock between the two branches of the General Assembly, in vo.lvi.ng an eight months State-sup ported school term and a sales tax < Continued on Page Toi*e > Some are wondering what has caused the tremenj/dous of sentiment in the House, recalling that the House defeated the Murphy drug store liquor bill by a vote of about 75 to 23 and that the Cover bill to repeal the Turlington Act wes also defeated by a large majority. But it is pointed out that the Cover bill would have repealed the State's pro hibition law in full and thus thrown the State wHe open to bootlegging of all sorts, while many thought the Murphy drug store liquor bill would have done little more than make sa loons out of most of the drug stores. , (Continued on Page Three.) s
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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March 31, 1933, edition 1
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