Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / July 18, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
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-Jenderson, GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA. YEAR GENERAL CODE Farmers Will Be Allowed To Plow Cotton On Permit Action Taken To Permit Growers To Get Food Crops Started Before It Is Too Late notices ARE SENT TO COUNTY AGENTS Approval of Agents And County Reduction Com mittees Required First, However; Destruction of Crop Is In No Instance Al lowed Without Permit Washington, July 18.— (AP)— Farm administrators today made public a plan under which cotton farmers who d,n«d agreements to curtail their output this year will be permitted to pj.T up portions of their fields with out having to wait for formal accep tance of their offers. The act on was taken to permit far mers in some of the cotton produc ing areas, where climatic conditions are favorable, immediately to plant feed crops for home consumption. This telegram was sent to county agents notifying them of the new plan: “The secretary of agriculture has authorized acceptance and approval of all producer contracts where same are approved by county agents and county committees. “Printed instructions and emer gency perm t blanks are on the way to be used by farmers on permits from county agents to destroy imme diately cotton without having to await arrival of formal acceptance blanks 'lnstruction and emergency permit «Cnntt"ued in Page Four.* Chapel Hill Man, . Shot in His Home, Dies at Hospital Durham. July 18 (AP)—John Crtel *5 shot through the back with bu«k sfot a? ft* whs .«having in, nig Chapel last night died in a hos- IP'*®! here today. Creed was fiTed at through a win dow. Clay Blackwell, of Canrboro, whose fchroged wife was Vreed’s house- k «per, is under arrest at Chapel Hill hi connection with the case. , Police said fhey found a freshly d.srhatged shotgun at Blackwell’s ' me an< T r hat tracks leading to Creels house were similar to Blackwell's for* prats. Blackwell, a former cash register 82l? ' man , had been working in a mill ne -r Chapel Hill. Park Board Selected By Ehringhaus W. of Me-, I) ow e 11, Ma d e Chairman; Clark, Connor on Budget. j Raleigh, July is. —(AP) —Governor H Ehringhaus today appointed •trese-ntatlve w. W. Neal, of Mc rpT' 11 coun, y to be chairman of the n ™«« State Park Commission. ' bpr members of the body were as follows: tcionci Foster Hankins, Lexington; ■ R n Aikftn . Hickory; Thomas W. ,? ( ' r } I' Asheville; and C. A. Cannon, ,;I '-oncord. «j f ,V' ank ins and Aiken were de r,,j f Qr part investigating . mrmttee authorised by the 1933 leg urc, t<, KO i n t o the affairs of the 11 commission. " >r *'bringhaus also announc f or nnpointment of James H. r r tk. or Bladen, and H. G. Connor, v "t Wilson, as members of the ad budget commission. I 4Thir 1 Moltlll CAKOMNA. , , c’oud.y tonight and Wed , : Probably local showers in l ’ n -l south portions. Htttiterawt tUtthi: FULL LBABED WIKI BBRViea OFTHB ASSOCIATED PREM Happy Grandma mWTmi ... Newest photoof .the “First Mother of the LandC* It shows Mrs. Sarah Delano Roosevelt in Boston, on her way to visit her great-grandchil> dren (the children of Mrs. James Roosevelt and Mrs. Anna Roosevelt Dali) at Rye Beach. N. H. (Central Press) High Point Workers To Celebrate Some Workers Re turn Under Agree ment and Others Anxious To Do So , High Point, July 18. —(AP)— The Industrial VJorkers Association, which is leading High Point’s strike of ap proximately 6,000 hosiery and furni ture workers, went ahead today with plans for celebration of the organiza tion’s birthday in the face of open threats on the part of some who wich to return to work that the afternoon’s parade would be “broken up.” Meanwhile, employees ol the Tate Manufacturing Company and the Fly back Novelty Company, both wood working plants, reached agreements with the management and returned to work. The Tate Company announced a re (Contlnued on Page Seven) WELFAREIDY 10 . UPHOLD MRS. BOST State Commission! To Stand By Her In Vetoing Meck lenburg Officer Dully iMMjinfoTi Pnremt. In (be Hlr Walter ««►•»! ev j_ c n*«Kßurn i. Raleigh, July 18.—Although the State Board of Charities and Public Welfare has not yet announced any decision with regard to the case of M. M. Gray, whose election a3 Meck lenburg county welfare officer was vetoed by Mrs. W. T. Boat, commis sioner of charities and public wel fare, indications here are that the board will uphold Mrs. Bost and re fuse to confirm h.'s election. Mrs. Bost declines to discuss the matter, saying i< is out of her hands entirely an dill I he hands of the board, of which Colonel W. A Blair, of Win ston-Salem, is chairman. Those who ' on Page Seven) 3 ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER ON HOURS AND WAGES REING DRAWN IIP SILVER ARGUMENT DELAYS PROGRESS ON WHEAT LIMITS Big Four Wheat Producing Nations Reach Agree, ment With Danu. bian Countries BE SHARPLY CUT DOWN Preparing To Resume Nego tiations With Soviet Russia for Like Project; India and Spain Object to Limita tions on Their Sales of Silver s Lbndon, July 18.- —(AP)—Progress in negotiations for limiting wheat ex ports was counter-balanced today by a fresh setback in conversations re garding the use of silver, as the world economic conference tottered toward its close. The “b'g four” wheat producing na tions—the United States, Argentina, Australia and Canada—were said by the chief American wheat delegates to have reached an agreement with four *Danubian countries whereby exports from the latter countries will be held to 54,000,000 bushels this year, and 50,000.000 bushels next year. Subsequently the “big four” repre sentatives prepared to resume negotia tions with Russia regard ng a like project and to take up similar pro posals with European importing na tions with a view to inducing those countries to abandon some of their import restrictions on the cereal. The silver comm.ttee, slated to con vene after a recess of several days, was unable to assemble until tomor row and it was reported that India objected to an export quota for silver, which the United States had suggest ed, and that Spain had raised sharp objections to a restrictive agreement on its monetary silver. musErid Marries Hannah Williams, Divorced Wife of Kahn’s Son, In Navada Elko, Nevada, July 18 (AP)— Jack Dempsey, former heavy weight boxing champion, and Miss Hannah Williams, Broadway mus ical comedy star, wqfre married here at 9:30 a. m. today. The couple applied for a license at the county clerk’s office, and were married a few minutes later by Justice of the Peace A. J. Mc- Farland. They were attended by friends who had motored here with them from Salt Lake City. After the ceremony, they left lior Reno by automobile. Dempsey and Miss Williams gave their ages as “over 21” in their application for a license to wed, and each reported a previous marriage and divorce. The former champion was div orced in Reno in 1981 ftrom Es telle Taylr, the movie actress. Roger Wolfe Kahn, son of Otto Kahn, the banker was Miss Wih llams’ first husband. She divorc ed him at Reno a few months ago. Lithuania To Honor 2 Airmen Kaunas, Lithuania, July 18.—(AP) —A monument in honor of the trans- Atlantic fliers, Stephen Dairus and Stanley Girenas, who crashed yester day in Germany, will be erected by the Kaunas Flying Guild. The bodies of the airmen will be brought to the capital tomorrow. A military escort will be provided to take them to the cathedral to await a State funeral Thursday. The Lithuanian government has de clared a period of national mourning for Darius and Girenas. for whose arrival thousands had awaited al ] Sunday night here. Both were Amer icans and had served in the Ameri can forces in the World Wtar, but both were natives of this country. l f PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OP NORTH Henderson, n. c„ Tuesday afternoon, july is, 1933 Balbo 111 America: Closeups of Flying Columbus Photos, taken since his arrival in America, reveal the human side of Maj. Gen. Italo Balbo, youthful com mander of the Rome-to-Ghicago armada. He wears the Fascist black shirt with his uniform, smokes inces santly when out of the air, is superstitious, likes jokes. Pictured with him is Bfrig. Gen. Pellegrini, second in command of the epochal mass flight over the Atlantic. Balbo was one of three associates of Mussolini in organizing the Fascist revolution and devised the castor-oil punishment for opponents. He wears a beard to appear older. (Central Press) Wiley Post Now Safely At Irkutsk Flier Nearly 17 Hours Ahead of Post and Gatty Record Made In 1931 ; Irkutsk. Liberia. July 18 (AP) Wiley Plost, American round-the world flier, landed her e at 3:35 p. m , Moscow time, today (7:35 a. m. t eastern standard time). He planned to take off again at 11 o’clock this evening (3 o’clock eastern standard time.) Post’s arrival in Irkutsk put him 16 hours, 84 minutes ahead of the time made by Harold Gatty and himself in their round the world trip. Together they reached Irk utsk 91 hours, 59 minutes out of New York. He arrived here 75 hours, 25 minutes out of New York, New Housing Body Os State,To Meet - At an Early Date Raleigh, July 18. —(AP)—A» meet ing of the special housing commis sion, created by an act of the recent legislature to regulate “limited c>l - housing corporations,” today was expected to be called shortly. Limited dividend housing corpora tions, under the act, may be incor porated subject to regulations pre scribed by the commission, which has authority to fix rentals. When Is A Girl Fickle? Sally Gwynni thought she loved Ted Chandler but the sophistication and suav e manner of Fired Proctor made her Jess certain. She had to admit she was attracted by the latter. “When is a girl fickle?” Sally asked herself for the first time in her young Jife. ;> Sally’s storv. “Vacation Escapade.” answers her question. It’s a thrilling ■mystery romance 'by Arthur Shum fway, great for summer reading Exclusively i n Henderson Daily Dispatch Starting Today CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA Wets Seek Half Os Goal From Today’s Election Prohibition Balloting In Alabama and Arkansas Ad mitted Crucial by Both Si des; Drys Hope To Stem Surging Tide and Dela y Decision Until 1934 (By the Associated Press.) Repeal forces, racing to reach their goal before Christmas, strove to ; round the half way post in the South today, while prohibitionists fought to ! send them sprawling. Arkansas and Alabama, threw open voting booths today to decide their stand on the proposal to block the eighteenth amendment from the Con stitution. Tonight the foes of national prohi bition will know whether they have garnered half the states necessary for repeal. Sixteen states have voted to ratify repeal up to today. Thirty-six are necessary to change the Consti tution. Balbo Sees Fair Under a Disguise, Chicago, July 18.—(AP)—Gen eral Italo Balbo saw the World’s Fair at close range today and without the usual crowd of admir ers who have dogged his footsteps since his arrival at the head of the Italian air expedition. Slipping away from a society event planned in his honor at the exclusive Casino club, he gathered a half dozen friends, changed from his uniform into a dark bus ness suit, donned a slouch hat with brim low over his eyes and visited the fair grounds early today. Hood Hits Ruling By Brummitt In the Sir Walter Hotel. Unity dispatch Bnreaa, HI J, O. B/VSKERVILii. Raleigh, July 18.—The General As sembly expressly gives the commis sioner of bank sauthority to employ "competent local attorneys” in the li quidation of closed banks and there Is nothing either in the acts of the the legislature or in the Constitution that gives his authority to the ator ney general, Commissioner of Banks Gurney P. Hood ells Attorney Gen eral Dennis G. Brummitt in a letter made public today. The letter is in: 1 reply lo one from the attorney gen-j j oral written some weeks ago in which i I (Continued o» Page Three-i Dispatch Before the week is over, 20 states, containing 49 per cent of the popula tion of the United States, will have recorded their will on the problem. Tennessee votes Thursday and Ore gon Friday. Arkansas and Alabama were the first strictly southern states to bal lot on prohib.tion and sides felt the result was fraught with much significance for their cause. Prohibition rorces expressed confi dence that if some of the southern states held fast to prohibition, they could put. the final test over until next year, and thus better heir chances of preserving he eighteenth amend ment. Wage Base State Pays Is Studied Some May Get Sal ary Lift by Reason of Higher Classifi cations Given Daily nUpatch Unreal, In (he Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, July 18—State emipolyes who have been scraping along on drastically reduced wages for many months and whose salaries 1 were reduc ed 38 per cent below the 1930 level beginning July 1, according to the law as passed by the 1933 General As sembly, are smoewhat cheered at the announcement just made by Assistant (Budget Director Frank Dunlap thalt all present salary schedules are be rlng studied with a view to working out new ones. For the only hope any of these employes have: of getting any increase in their much cut sala rites is to be reclassified into a higher position with a resulting higher salary scale. “ i • 1 Assistant Budget Director Dunlap, who is also director of personnel since the 1933 assembly combined the two jobs, is now bolding a series of conferences with department and divi : sion heads, grn ff over present salary ■ schedules and making an individual i st u cly of each emplye. There is no i ' (Continued on Page Four) PUBLISHED EVERT AFTIKNOOM EXCEPT SUNDAY, 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COP’ ROOSEVELT, SICK, i I ENTRUSTS JOB TO RECOVERY BOARD Attorney General Cummings Chosen To Preside At Second Session of That Group DIVIDE ONNEED OF IMMEDIATE ACTION General Johnson Has Far- Reaching Proposal Ready, But Secretary Roper Op poses Forceful Action; Roosevelt Prepared to Use Big Stick If Needed Washington, July 18.—(AP)—Presi dent Roosevelt left with his “recovery council” to day the preparation of any general code for higher wages and shorter hours as he was confined to his room again by a slight indisposi tion. Arrangement was made for a second session of the administration’s ad visory group, composed of members of the cabinet and chief administra tors of the various major recovery laws. They are divided on the neces sity for immediate froceful action by the Federal government to spur bus iness and consumption. Hugh S. Johnson, industrial admin istrator, apparently had ready a far reaching proposal to bring about in creases in wages and the shorter hours in labor immediately, pendng establishment of many of the new in dustrial codes to govern compensa (Continued on Page Four) Man Arrested In Kidnap Banker Case at Atlanta Staunton, Va„ July 18.—(AP)— A man giving his name as Lloyd Demp sey, of Omaha, Nep., was taken into custody here today by Sergeant Robert A. Lynn, of the State Motor Vehicle police force, for questioning in connection with the kidnaping of John K. Ottley, Atlanta banker. Dempsey denied any knowledge of the kidnaping, and said he had neve** been in Georgia in hrs life. He told officers he would be glad to go to Atlanta in order to establish his in nocence. Fingerprints were taken of the man and sent to the Bureau of Investiga tion of the Department of Justice in Washington. Dressed in overalls. Dempsey was taken into custody in the ra.lroad yards by Sergeant Lynn. He said ha came to Staunton from Hagerstown. Md., and that he was on his way home to seek work. Sergeant Lynn took him into cus tody on suspicion because of his al leged resemblance to the likeness of the man wanted in a circular distr.- buted among Virginia police. Dempsey was not placed in ja.l, but was being held in police headquarters. Labor Will Oppose All Discharges Green Says That Is In Direct Conflict With Purpose of Recov ery Act Washington, July 18. —(AP) — Wil liam Green, president of the Ameri can Federation of Labor, said today he planned to investigate any dis charge of employees under the shorter work week in industry. Green said a number of instances had been called to his attention where workers had lost jobs with applica tion of a shorter wefck. He told news paper men this was the opposite in tention of industrial codes, which are intended to spread employment. “I will insist upon, investigation of such cases coming to my attention,” Green said. The federation chief also said a number of complaints were being re ceived 'hat employers were favoring non-union a= opposed to union labor, and that wh-re discharges wer£ tak ing place, 'he union men were go ing. He said this situation should be aired thoroughly before a code is granted any; industry, __
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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July 18, 1933, edition 1
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