Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Oct. 5, 1933, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTIETH YEAR SENATORS HALT GIANTS PARKER REFUSES TO QUASH INDICTMENTS IN ATTACK CHARGES Court Also Refuses Motion' for Change of Venire Or For Jury From An • other County drawincToFjury FOR TRIAL STARTS Beaufort Kelly and Florida Bullock Accused of Kid-j n?ping and Attacking Van- Dyke Child; Race Issue In jected Into Case by Negro Attorneys r>ef nso motions to quash indict ments on the ground that Negroes had been excluded from the grand jury, and for a change of venire and stil an: her for the calling of a jury from another county to sit here were all overruled by judge R. Hunt. Parker in Vance Superior Court this after noon In the case of Beaufort Kelly and Florida Bullock, Negroes, charg ed with kidnaping and attacking Mary Lena Vandyke 16-year-old daughter cf Mr and Mrs. A. L. Vandyke of this county several ago. Exceptions were taken by defense counsel as a basi3 for an appeal later should that be decided upon. After ill motions had been made by *h<' defense and answered by the State and when the court had denied all of thsm th- drawing of a jury for the .rial cf ’he two Negroes was started. It was expected the rest of the -day would be required for that. Judge Parker's ruling climaxed a day of bsttling by C. J. Gates and M Hugh Thompson, Durham Negro attorneys, who fought alone for the quashing of »h p indictments on the ground that Negroes had been denied p'ocei in ’he grand jury. They sum moned to th< stand county officials t 3 te’l how f h ■> jury was drawn, and as c; that celled Negro propertyy owr* and tax payers to testify they h d net received summons for jury d iy. 1. 0 Everett, Durham legislator, ? waring with the defense, declined :3 a party to the motion for quash ing on a ground that injected the race ir::;e into the contest. He led the ap- T r :l however, for change of venue an l summoning a vpnire from outside. V'h'n. the motions were first made V rlnesday afternoon. Bullock had no counseh since J. C. and T. S. Kittrell, who had been representing him had withdrawn fiom the case when the tac- question was brought into it. M. C pf-ar<?e appeared in court today as attorney for Bullock, and will assist in th- defense through the trail. He made t clear at the outset ,of the t' nng today, however, that his client r " >s taking n' part whatever in the ■ r 2ec dings brought by the Durham I gro atiomeys for Kelly PwPghte.’ cf Deeds H. M. Robinson !Continued on Page Eight) Troops Put At Mine As Score Hurt Medical Attention Delayed as Helpers Fear To Take Risk of Injury i Harrisburg, 111., Oct. 5—(AP)— A ' ,J 7 night cf terror in the coal min np region brought troops to southern Illinois today after ten men had been ? h't, a hotel bombed and a railroad b’ dgf, hi iwn up. The outburst was due to the mili tant acts of pickets friendly to the progressive miners who tried to stop work in a mine manned by United. Mine Workers. After bombing several homes of miners and firing on citizens, the pickets formed a 15-mile line around tho No. 43 mire of the Peabody Com- T any and shat at every one going to ward th‘- mine. Person -, traveling the highways with cr knowledge of an y trouble were *T.-t at by pickets. There were 1,500 /pickets ar.d they would not allow doc *'"'3 or ambulances to enter the line v ' here wounded miners lay for hours. llo.riMb,.-g. 111. Oct. 5, (APl—Na tl;.,Hit Guard troops were ordered into (Continued wo Page Three.)! * ttttwvvKtnx Umltr msxxntth I American Slain mt i i BUI : Robert G. Lotspeich Robert G. Lotspeich, American manager of a meat company branch office in Havana, is one of the victims of the bloody skirmish staged by soldiers and striking army officers in the Cuban capi tal. Lotspeich, a native of Lon don, 0., was struck by stray bul lets as he stood in an apartment building watching the battle. Big Profits Came In To Dillion, Reed Over $7,000,000 Made From Pools In In . vestment Trust Manipulations Washington, Oct. 5. (AP) —With profits of almost $7,000 000 to members of t,he firm of Dillon. Reed and Com pany from pool operations in invest ment. trust stocks already disclosed. Senate investigators sought today to show additional gains. Robert E. Christie, Jr., a member of the firm and prospective head of th: American Investment Bankers As sociation. was questioned again about the operations which yielded rich re wards to him and his associates on stocks for which they paid only 20 cents a share The hearing was delayed for 15 min utes whi’e the senators waited for Pe cora and his aides to arrive. Pecora was delayed by negotiations for him t.o run on the McKee ticket in New York for district attorney of New York county. Rushing into the committee room breathlessly. Pecora said he had not made a decision With Clarence Dillon, s p nior part- I iner of the banking firm, sitting be tween them, Pecora questioned Christie about sales of the stock in the United States and foreign securities corporation, the investment trust or ganized by Dillon, Reed in 1924. Byrd Antarctic Ship Is Disabled Off Wilmington Wilmington, Oct. 5 (AP) —Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd’s LOtar ex lpedj::tlon fflagship, the Bear of Oak reported today it was ® distress off treacherous Frying Pan Shoals on (the North Carolina ccest, and ,Later wtas taken into tow toy the 'Stouts, Towing Company tug Blanche. The meagre reports received toy the coast guard' did mot diecloce the na ture of the vessefl’s but coast guardsmen here believed the craft had developed .engine trouble. No serious weather disturbance off (the coast have bean reported for sev_ era'l days. > The coast guard cutter Mexico left, (here at 8:30 a. m. to go to the Bear’s aid, and expected to reach her about 11 a. m. The coast gaard cutter* ONLY DAILY LEASED WIRE SERVICE UP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VlftlNlA. HENDERSON, N. C., THURSDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 5, 1933 FORMER CUBAN ARjVIY OFFICERS SURRENDER TO ARMY The climax of an all-day bombardment Monday of the National Hotel in Havana by troops of the Cuban army came when the 300 for mer a liny officers surrendred. Fifteen of their number were dead and more 1 till an, a score injured. Photo shows the surrender of the officers and their march from the hotel in which they had been barricaded for weeks LEGION DEMANDS STRONGER U. S. DEFENSE Navy Up To Treaty Limits and Army of 14,000 Of ficers and 150,000 Men Sought ASK MODERNIZING OF NATIONAL GUARD Want 50,000 Young Men Trained in Summer Camps Each Year; Against U. S. Entry Into League or World Court and Debt Cuts Vig orously Opposed / Chicago. Oct- S.—(AP) —Mrs. William H. Beister, Jr., of Phil adelphia was unanimously elect ed national president of the Am erican Legion Auxiliary today. With loud cheers, the American Legion’s national convention to day went on record as opposing diplomatic recognition of Soviet Russia and calling for deportation of all communist aliens. Chicago, Oct. 5. —(AP) —A strength ening of the country's defens© was recommended for adoption by the Am erican Legion today. The recommendation was made yes terday in a committee report which suggested that not only the army be (brought up to its full strength of 14,- 000 offices and 150 000 men, but that American's navy be built up to the limits provided for by the London naval treaty. Definite action on this and other questons of national affairs and the election of a new national commander were all that remained for the nation’s defenders in the World War to accom plish before adjournment to meet next year in Miami, Fla. As the ’time for selecting a succes sor to National Commander Lous A. Johnson cirew neari. all seven candd ates seeking his place declared they (Continued on Page Three.! however, had not arrived when the Oak IsQiand life saving station report ed sighting the Bear in tow of the Blanches off Southport a,t. 10:45. Tlhe Oak. Island station said the (two were stlowly moving their way itoport and estimated they would ar rive dn Soufchprt about 3 p m,. Ea rlier the Cape Fea r Coast, gun rid station reported slighting a craft which it believed was the Bear about seven miles off shore, but said if ap_ iparemt'ly was proceeding under its own power and was snot ?<n distress. The Oak Island station’s later re port, caused thei be’.ief here the Cape .Fear station was mfstake™ in the idrnl’tfy of the ship ft sighted. Admiral Byrd is not aboard' the Vtjssel-. ■_ ' , Ujfcfc, Lindberghs Elude Curious In London London, Oct. 5. —(AP) —Colonel and Mrs. Char!cs*A- Lindbergh won a gam** cf hide and seek today with persons who wanted to know where they were staying and how long they intend to remain. Some newspaper*! speculated on various rumors, and ethers respect ing the travelers’ desire for privacy 'merely printed photographs of their arrival at Southampton yesterday. It was rumored Mrs. Lindbergh was en route to Cardiff, Wales to visit refines. A pilot who flew tc Southampton to bring Lindbergh io Croydon, if necessary, quoted the ■colonel that he would not be in London for two or three days, and added “ he is going to visit some friends in Wales.’’ STATESCOie b¥~ WITH WALL STREET Threat of Placing Credits With State Banks Got Lower Interest j~ _ ■■— —1 ■ - Daily Dispatch Rnrfna, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C BABKEHVIS.I,. Raleigh. Oct. 5. —With Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus calling signals 'and State Treasurer Charles M. John leon carrying the ball, the State, of North Carolina scored another touch down against Wall Street when it se cure the renewal yesterday of $4,682,- [l6O in notes at a rate cf 4 1-2 per Kent. Until slightly more than two months ago, tha State had been pay ing six per cent interest on these notes. But as soon as the 1933 Gen eral Assembly passed a revenue act that assured the balrric’- ng of the State’s budget, thus amply safeguard ing its credit, Governor Etoringhaus and State Treasurer Johnson went to New York and insisted that these notes be renewed at a rate of not more than four per o:nt. They point ed out that the State’s budget was balanced its credit absolutely sound, that it was able to meet all its ob ligations and had led all the States (Continued on Pasre Three.) HELD FOR DEATH OF BOY HITTING TRUCK Canton, N. C., Oct. 5. —(AP) —Al- bert Traiitham, 30, a passenger on a wood truck which killed Clifton Swan gen*,, 11, yesterday was charged by police today with grabbing the boy by the shoulder as the truck passed him and causing the boy's head to strike the truck body. WfATHIR FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Partly cloudy tonight and Fri day; possibly showers on th« coast: not much change in tem perature. _ . , Second Tobacco Hobday Is Urged On Ehringhaus Unnamed Outstanding' Grower Urges Fresh Ef fort To Obtain Higher Prices for Weed PITT COUNTYGROUP PLEDGES ITS HELP 5 ■ - Ready To Do Anything Gov ernor Asks; Executive Still Waiting Word from Wash ington; No Reply Yet Re ceived from Appeal Sent Roosevelt Raleigh, Oct. 5. —(AP)—Another tobacco marketing holiday for North Carolina to try and force a better price for the weed was suggested to Governor Ehring haus today by an outstanding grower of the State. The name of the man proposing the idea, could not be learned, but it was understood he has been taking an ac tive part in the efforts to raise tobac co prices, and it was known that the governor was consdering the sugges tion . Today the Pitt County Tax Relief .Association telegraphed the chief exe cutive an offer to do anythng so ad Sum in his efforts to improve the con dition of tobacco farmers, and added: “Administration confidence and grati (Continued on pa«r Three.) Hurricane Will Miss Florida Miaarii, Fia., Oct. 5 (AP)—-Move ment of a tropical storm apparently in a northeasterly direction into the Atlantic ocoam from Havana today removed further possibility of dang erous winds to the lower Florida east icoast, the goveirnme,nifc WfeatJher Bu_ reau here announced. Having lashed Key West, on the extreme southern tip f the peninsula, •with its outer winds after striking Havana full force the disturbance today was believed by meteorologists 'here to be central at sea east of here moving in a north or northeasterfy course away from Florida. The highest steady winds reported (here, were 34 mit.es- an hour from the ■north, with * occasional gusts at 50 miles. The government barometer, which reached a Tow of 29.13 inches early today, later began & steady rise and liad readied. 29.21 at 9:30 a. m,. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Baffles Giants Brjj-,18 : jjf j ■ j Earl WbiteliiU ™F ShDEBTS Promised by Roosevelt, But Congress Is On Record Against Move | Washington, Oct. s.—(AP)—Finan- I rial spokesmen of two governments gathered to discuss around a Treasury conference table the $9,658,000,000 owed{tho United States by Great Bri tain. Representatives of the London gov ernment sought to press Britain’s de sire to end payments on war loans, which under the 1922 funding agree ment still have 51 years to run. They were Sir Frederick Leth Ross and T. K. Bewley. Under Secretary Dean Acheson of the Treasury and Frederick Livesey, assistant economic advisor to the State Department, received the visi tors in accordance with President Roosevelt’s promise last spring that debtor nations seeking to be heard would be heard. But Acheson and Livesey opened dis cushions with full knowledge that in a formal expression not three years old Congress, which has the final say on any debt changes, flatly opposed cancellation or reduction. Stabilzation of the pound and dollar were forecast for consideration before the meetings are over. ; 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY WHITEHILL BLANKS NEW YORK GIANTS 4 TO 0 THIRD GAME Limits Them To Five Safe ties While His Mates Gets To |Giants For Nine PRESIDENTTOSSES FIRST BASEBALL Heinie Manush Gets Ball As Souveinir In Mad Scramble Buddy Myer Is Batting Star of Game With Three Hits, Field Is Wet At Start of Game by Early Rain Griffith Stadium, Washingon, D. C., Oct. s.—President Roosevelt was cu hand hwe today, tossing out th*J first ball with Heinie Manush, Senator outfielder catching it, to opfen thi i first of the 1933 World Series games at the Naticna‘l Capital and remained to see Earl Whitehall southpaw the New York Giants into submission, blanking them 4 to 0 allowing them only five hits whale mates were get ting to Fred Fritzsimmons for a total of seven and his successor Her man Bell, for two. A short lived rain fell about an hour before game time, leaving the field, damp but this had little to do with the playing of tha afternoon. L,.|tle Buddy Myer, probably the goat of the opening game in New York with three errors, was easily the star of today's game, rapping out thrae hits out of his four trips to the plate. Oniy three Giants got as far as third base, then after two were oipt so effective were the southpaw slants’ of the Senator hurler. A JptLay by p»ay account follows: First Inning Giants—Moore open* the first game 'in Washington with a fly to might for the first out, GosMn making a good catch. Crbtz i s out Biueg* to Kucil. Terry is out at first, Mye* to Kuihel. } No ruins ho hits, no erro-*. • ©inters— Myor singles to hit f-s ld. Goisdin. doubles to right field' Ir.te scoreboard with Mjyer Sbc :. • third base. Manush flies ou. . ty .« in deep short. Crotnin hit te n\ slmmorns who knocked, the ball .. to toss 'him out laJtl first, Myer sccr..., Qn the play. Schulte doubles to rig. , ecorirg- Gosliin. Kuhiel hits to Rya. who tossed, to Critz to bag out Sehull. - Two runs, three hits nio errors. Second Inning Giants —Ott Himes out to Manush ,i. ieft fbefld a very pretty c'atch. Bavx singles to Deft field.' Jacksan u. . Davi* goes to second on Whjtehijlfl > wiJiid! pitch, Jackson walks. Mahout, hit to Cronin who teased to Myo to Kuihel .for a double play. No runs one hit, no errors. iSenai^jiriS' —IBliuege dcublies l e 'l field down the foul Lne. Stewv 'bounds out, CPitz to Terry Blivet taking third. Whitehiil hits to 5' simjmons who tosses to Jackson 1- itbc throw was high and wide, Blue safe at third with Whitehiil itak. first ooi the fidlder’s Choice. (Continued on Page Three Tax Isn’t Cause Os Mark-Up^ Peek Says Retailera Creating Erroneou > Impression on The / Trade i • Washington, Oct. 5—(AP)—G?c 3 N. Peek, farm administrator, said t - day that the cotton processing tax '! 4.2 cents a pound is being errer - ously employed by retailers as ax. euse for ‘large mark-ups in prices f retail cottop goods.” He announced that a nationwide ' - quiry is being made into retail r,t i practices in connection with cc - plaints that consumers are being t 1 ,the processing tax alone is reap - sible for price boosts. Peek said tb f are attributable only in small part a 'he levy. As the first step in fixing respc: - | sibility for what he described as "V i i fair tac'ics” hecalied a conference 7 r ! October 11 of local .store executives \ j business "the practice of sal‘n fores > | attributing large mark-ups to the processing tax alone,”
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1933, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75