gateway to CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTIETH YEAR 25 MILLION GIVEN TO ARMY AND NAVY FOR DEFENSE Russia Sees World Peace And Trade Boom In U. S. Recognition MOSCOW WILL RUSH MAN TO WASHINGTON QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE $100,000,000 Trade Spurt Envisioned In Washing ton as Result Os Relations CAPITAL REACTION RATHER FAVORABLE Litvinoff Expected To Ar rive in Two Weeks To Confer With President Roosevelt on Recognition of His Country by United States at Early Date Washir&ton. Oct. 21 — (AP>— A K dy recognition of Soviet Russia w h a result tint boom in Russo-Am erican fad* was forecast authorita tively tcd&y clos* upon the receipt of word 'hat ’he Communist state intends lit'rally to rush its representaive to th- Whi s t House. In an informed but unofficial quar ter, it was stated that Maxim Lit vrnoff. the stocky, outspoken Soviet eomnrssf.t for foreign affairs, prob ably would sit down with President Roosevelt ‘in about two weeks.” Litvinoff, bv employing fast boats and trains, could make the lengthy trip from Moscow in about ten days. Th* w! irl of preparations set off by the President when he read to news rr. n his letter to Mikhail Kalinin, pre si v nt of the Soviet central executive committee that the time has come to "end th* present abnormal relations betw>*n the two counties today brought r. generally favorable reac tion with the capital. Som® officials expressed the opinion privately tha* should the Roosevelt- L'tvinoff conversations solve the dif ficulties in the path of recognition, a trade spurt passing beyond the SIOO,- 000,000 mark could be expected. RUSSIA HAILS MOVE AS '»{» . STEP FOR WORLD PEACE Moscow, Oct. 21. —IAP) —Russia hail •“d as a boon to world peace and to better trr.de relations today its agree ment with the United States to ne gciate concerning American recogni tion of th*, Soviet Union. Events moved swiftly after Presi dent Mikhail Kalinin announced he had accepted an invitation from Pre sident Roosevelt, dated October 10, and added he would send Foreign Ccmmissar Maxim Litvinoff to Wash ington . F ans were rushed for Litvinoff to depart for the United States in a very few day's. Norris Is Backing Up Roosevelt Nebraskan Makes Reservation, How ever, That He Fav ors Inflation Washington, Oct. 21.—(AP)—Senar er Norris of Nebraska was author at:v< !y reported here today to have "tejjrapbvd here that he is back of i ll ' President's program save that he favors currency inflation. He is understood to have been ask ed hia vn-ws on the farm strike move m" nt bv Edward Keating, former member of the House, and now editor o* the newspaper, “Labor,” publish t*d h» rr . Keating was not ready this after r.oon to make public the Nebraskan’s but it was said in other quar ra famil ; ar with the text that it re- anew the Norris support for Mr. Roosevelt on major questions, sav “ d-&i; hg with inflation. WIATHIR 1 0, ‘ NORTH CAROLINA. I’robubly rain tonight and Sun ‘••.v; slightly warmer in west p©r -1 ,ls 1 night and in central and west I ,or ‘ions Sunday. , . .jj^jaannwaoww itmtitersmt Hall u 'Bx&tmtch ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION Of'nOOTH CAROLINA AND VIISINIA. * LEASED wire service of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. He Succeeds Father flffF l^Mp§||| M ML ■ xw WHUA < . . . , v • Jm ■i Mm JHHh| Don F. Sarber Succeeding his father. Sheriff Jess L. Sarber, who was shot and killed by gunmen who raided the jail and liberated a prisoner, Don F. Sarber, 24-year-old deputy, has been appointed sheriff of Al len county at Lima, O. The youth, who is believed to be the youngest sheriff in the United States, declares he will do every thing in his power to capture the killers of his father. LOOM URGED IN PARK HIGHWAY i Jeffress Proposes Route In Great Smokies That Would Be Matchless Daily llUpnfpk nnrrni, In the Sir Waiter Hotel; nr J. C B>BKKRVII«L. Raleigh Ocr. 21. — Heartily in favor of the park-to-park highway now be ing advocated to extend from Wash ington down through the Shenandoah National Park in Virginia and on to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee, Chairman E. B. Jeffresg, of the State Highway and Public Works Commission, today ad vocated a loop plan for the highway. Chairman Jeffress believes the high way should folow as nearly as pos siblel the crest of Ithe Blue Ridge piountainc through Virginia and ■North Carolina all the way to the Great Smoky Mountains National park, then cross over into Tennessee land become a high speed highway fContinued an Page Six.) Beer Taxes At Rate Os 150 Million Washington. Oct. 21. (AP) — Beer drinkers are helping support the gov ernment at the rate of $150,000,000 a year. That’s what Treasury figures in dicate on the basis of six months of the legal 3.2 beverage. Exactly $74,- 044,483 was collected in beer taxes, $6,164,967 more in special levies on brewers and distributors, and $105,121 on 3.2 per cent wine. In making public the half year beer return, officials withheld any forecast of what effect repeal, if realized may have on strictly beer revenue. The Treasury figures put internal revenue collections for (he first quar • te r of the 1934 fiscal year (July 1 to September 30) at $613,258,977, a $255,- 150.912 increase over this quarter a jtear afiO. , .HI,, - I HENDERSON, N. C., SATURDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 21, 1933 ROOSEVELT CALLS MMI Believes United States Can Go Further Without Dic tator Than Europe With One NO DEFINITE TERM OF YEARS REQUIRED Much Has Been Done in Past Few Months, But Goal Can’t Be Reached in Couple of Months; Speaks at. Washington College, Which Confers Degree Chestertown, Md., Oct. 21 —(AP>— President Roosevelt called the nation to the “spirit of cooperation” of col onial days as he accepted here today an honorary degree from Washing ton Colilege. Disdaining the “five* year and ten year programs of some countries which have a dictator,” the President declared amid applause: ‘‘ln th J s country, which has not a dictator, we can, I think, move fur ther toward our,goal without giving it a defini been in great demand as a speaker having been aske dto speak in more than five hundred places but as this is impossible all North Carolina citi zens in the vicinity of Raleigh wh' ■wish to hear probably the most fin ne of the few open differences bo tween the Farm and NRA admin is* a ions. Secretary Walflace assailed th s recommendation of the retail indu;>- try, and his views - ....id to ha*.© ; prevailed. »