Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Feb. 13, 1934, edition 1 / Page 1
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hkndekson gateway to CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR WOMEN, CHILDREN FED TO FLAMES IN AUSTRIA’S WAR * * * * ***** ********** ******** *"" G uarantee To Bank Deposits May Be Limited By New Act Os Congress TEMPORARY PLAN MAY BE EXTENDED ONE YEAR LONGER That Procedure Would Be Substituted for Perman ent Plan as of the First of July NEW TAX BILL IN HOUSE WEDNESDAY Calls for $275,000,000 of New Revenue, and Is Cer tain To Meet Strong Oppo sition; Senate Delays Mc- Cracken Trial, Independ ent Appropriations Raised Washington. Feb. 13.—(AT 1 ) A trimming of Federal sails on the bank deposit, insurance law began today, ibut Congress still has to do the task after it finally enacts more urgent bills, such as that putting more mii lions into relief and the CYVA. Presidential advisors, it became known, started drafting recommen dations expected to favor replacement of the present unlimited liability of the deposit-insured member banks, with a limit provision when the per manent fund takes effect in July. Before heading Sonateward to re sum • argument over giving in to the House on amendments to the relief appropriation, members of the bank ing committee asked for the Treasury attitude on efforts to extend tne tem po! at y deposit insurance plan for one year, rather than letting the perma nent plan take effect, as now required The House Ways and Means Com niittie, meanwhile, made ready for word tusscls on the floor, beginning n n Pag® Three.l W ould Drop Couch From The R. F. C. Mississippi Co u ■ gressman To Oust Man Throttling Lo cal Communities Washington, Feb. 13 (AP)—Demand that Harvey C. Couch resign from the Heconstruction Corporation board of directors was made in a formal latcment today by Representative ißankin, Democrat, Mississippi. Basing his statement on tire publi cation bv the Federal Trade Commis sion of salaries received by executives •>r power companies, Rankin said that ‘'unless Couch resigns from the Ft. F. C. at. or.ee, President Roosevelt ought, to remove him.” "The Couch interests has been to tho South what the Insull interests w<re to the North,” Rankin said. " l liey are today plundering the peo ple of Mississippi with power rates, •hiowing every obstruction into the way to prevent towns, cities and miin icpialities from owning and operat ing their own power plants, or from power from the Tennessee V ,; 'lley Authority at Muscle Shoals.”’ NR A Reverses Policy To U rge Some Region Codes Feb. 13.- (AP)— The today decided to abandon past policy and encourage the formation regional codes or agreements in trades which arc clearly outside interstate commerce. ’•"gli S. Johnson issued this state nient: it is recognized that in the de- Vli, |Hnent of a program of indus- ' 1 i f ' 1 self-government, where national nidu.sU ies must be organized national *y. wo may wisely follow the theories Ul ''Jer lying the organization of our i ''flora 1 union of self-governing states, utilizing national organizations and Actional standards where they are " ; rtionally applicable, and providing 111 practice! moaner for local con HrttiUTsmt LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. NEW JAPANESE ENVOY AND FAim.r ' S '- ' >'• . I mm * iPILv JmiMm 1 %\t Wm Wmir if mms ™IHBrf ::v,: : X.. gßßHßfglß«>fi^ Jm jfflßKEm gig wKmfSr' Ambassador Hiroshi Saito, new Ja- j panese envoy to the United States, is pictured with his wife and daughters, iSukiko, seven, and Masako, four, ) Japs’ Army-Navy Budget Is Biggest In History EDUCATION MEET TO DRAW CROWDS Views of Many Groups To Be Received Iln Ra leigh Friday Dully Dispatch llurran In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Feb. 13-Responses from professional people lal over North Carolina to the recent invitation to a conference to he held in Raleigh February 16 have been so heavy that State Superintendent A. T. Allen did not know today whether the hall of the House of Representatives will hold the conferees who arc going to talk curricula with the educational people. Dr. Allen has been persuaded long that the schools are going to have a lot of changing to do in order to meet the conditions of the world. Two weeks ago he invited representatives from all professions to meet here Friday to consult with educators on a changed course of study. The State superintendent thinks there is noth ing more certain than that the schools will have to change their policy. He thinks a great many people in the State think the teachers have been fCont.lnijpri nr* Pjitre Four' trol of local affairs." The new type of codes or agree ment, is proposed to bo used for such •trades as laundries, restaurants, taxi cabs and barber shops, but not for (local retail stores. These, because they handle pro ducts generally manufactured in in terstate commerce, are to remain or ganized on a countrywide line. The new policy wasi viewed a.t NRA as meeting the increasing enforce ment difficulties in such trades as dry cleaning, where it has proved •next to impossible to secure com pliance on a nationwide scale and in which prosecution of violators is es pecially difficult, because their busi ness is so clearly outside the usual scope of interstate commerce. ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPE R PUBLISHED upon their arrival in New York City from their native land. Saito suc ceeds Ambassador Rebuchi at Wash ington. Approximation of $272,020,. 000 Is Passed by Na. tional House of Representatives 44 PERCENT TOTAL COSTS TO DEFENSE Army Gets $130,000,000 and Navy $141,520,000, Just Short of All-Time High for Navy Alone; Budget Is for Fiscal Year Beginning April 1, 1934 Tokyo, Fdb. 13.—(AP) —A budget bill providing for the largest peace time defense appropriation in Japan’s history was passed by the House of Representatives today. The budget is -or the fiscal year beginning April 1, 1931. A total appropriation of 938,000,000 yen ($272,020,000) is provided for tho army mid navy. This means that 44 percent of the total i2,112,000J000 yen ($612,480,000) goes for defense purposes. To the army the budget allots 450,- 000,000 yen ($130,500,000), the largest /peace-time appropriation on record for land forces. An appropriation of 188,000,000 yen ($141,520,000) is provided for the navy This is just 11,000,000 yen short of the navy's all-time high of 499,000,000 yen in 1921-22. Even Misquotations on Sales Tax Not Drawing Him Out As Yet Daily Disirafrb Uureai, In (lie Sir Waller Hotel. Raleigh, Feb. 13.—Governor Eh ringhaus is not allowing popular mis quotations to prod him into reply, and when he was asked Sunday if he had seen Major Bruce Craven’s dig at ihis excellency, replied that he had, but has no statement to make about it. Major Craven writes this paragraph “R. R. Clark is to Ibe commended for ihis comment on the governor’s de (Gontlnued on Page Three.) HENDERSON N. C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 13 1934 published every afternoon _* x ’ EXCEPT SUNDAY., 40a!Ut is patch IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINL Troops To Aid Austria Suggested Paris, Feb. 13.—(AP)—Henry Borenger, chairman of the Sen ate foreign affairs committee, suggested unofficially today that it might be necessary for France and other [rowers of tire I-eague of Nations to give armed aid to Chancellor Engelbert Doll fuss. The French government already has encouraged Austria to take her quarrel with Germany before the League of Nations. Government officials doubted that international troops would Ire sent to Vienna. TALK BRUMMITT AS GOVERNOR IN 1936 Coalition With Fountain, Which Is Interpreted, Might Mean Trouble FOUNTAIN A VISITOR Goes to Raleigh and Distributes Cop ies of Critical Rocky Mount Paper Toward Power That Be Dully lli«p:i tali Riirean, In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Feb. 13. —Former Lieute nant Governor Richard T. Fountain’s recent visit to Raleigh, coupled with his distribution of the Rocky Mount Herald, and both circumstances re lated to the subject matter of The Herald, started people talking again the governorship in 1936. The Herald was more mildly cri tical than the speeches of Mr. Foun tain were in 1932, and are decidedly more decorous politically than Attoi ney General Dennis G. Brummitt s discussion of the Max Gardner re gime. There has been nothing very pensorious of the Ehringhaus conduct in office. But the Fountain interest in distributing the paper, and the pop ular belief lhat Attorney General Brum mitt may run for governor vn 1936, make people see a possible coali tion of Fountain and Brum mitt with Mr. Brummitt the candidate in tin next race. Mr. Brummitt has not said that he is so much as interested in the office, but there are friends of the attorney general who go about a great deal and wherveer they go there is an im mediate reaction to the Brummitt name. Geographically Mr. Brummitt would he somewhat out of it since he hails from Granville and the East has the present governor. But the East, which is now territorially represented by Mr. Ehringhaus is so far away that the center of the State might (Continued On Page Four.) Asks Death For Leaders Prison Riot Walla Walla Warden Moves Swiftly After Eight Are Killed In Uprising Walla Walla, Wash., Feb. 13. (AP)—Warden James M. McCauley sought the death penalty today for ring leaders in yesterday’s bloody pri son break attempt, in which eight men were killed, seven of them con victs shot down from the walls. “Several of them had given trou ble in the past,” he said. With a rapid investigation was un der way, he disclosed that he contem plated lodging first degree murder charges, with the death penalty re quested. Meanwhile, slight chances for their recovery were held out for two of the convicts who were mowed down un der a withering fusillade of bullets from the wall. Six prison employees, five of them turnkeys and one a guard, suffered from murderous knife wounds inflict ed, by the convicts. Fortune Makers —and Spenders ■—■—» There arc 5,000 millionaires in the United States today, according b recent iigures. Few fortunes survive their founder. Above arc shown three great money empire builders and below them are the young men who today control those fortunes or soon will control them. Top, left, to right, are Judge Thomas Mellon, who amassed the Mellon wealth; John Jacob Astor, I, founder of the great Ast.or dynasty; and William C. Whitney, who built the Whitney fortunes, now greatly reduced Below, left to right, are Paul Mellon, son of Andrew Mellon, who will Dne day spend the Mellon millions; Vincent Astor, present head of that family; and Cornelii.<s Vanderbilt Whitney, second generation spender of the Whitney Wealth. (Central Press) France To Demonstrate Ability To Meet Crisis Doumergue Moves Swiftly and Firmly To Tell World France Can Take Care of Herself at Home and Abroad; to Side With Austria Agailnst Germany Paris. Felix 13.—(AP)—Fast and firm action to show the world that France is thoroughly able to take care of herself at home and abroad was planned by the new cabinet after mounted guards early today rod* down rioters in several provincial cities. After a day of comparative tran qulity duiing tho 21-hour general strike yesterday, in which laborers demonstrated against Fascism, dis orders were quelled at Marseilles, Nantes, Toulon, Lille, Roubaiz and Mulhouse. Ehringhaus Declines Com ment on Chauffeur’s Case At Albemarle Albemarle, 'Feb. I'3 <AP)—Saying that he felt the warrant had been issued for the wrong man, D. R. Mor rows has withdrawn a. warrant sworn out bv hitn against Nissen (Red) Arledge chauffeur for Gover nor Ehringhaus, charging speeding and reckless driving through Albe marle on February 3. GOVERNOR DECLINES ANY COMMENT ON WITHDRAWAL Raleigh, Feb. (13 (AP)—Governor ■Ehringhaus today said he had no comment to make on the withdraw al by D. R. Morrow, of Albemai’le, of a warrant charging Nissen (Red) Ar ledge, the governor’s chauffeur, with violating traffic laws at Albemarle. WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Fair and colder; much colder in east and central portions tonight; Wednesday fair, colder in east portion. FOR HENDERSON. For 24-hour period ending at noon today: Highest temperature 45; lowest, 35; no rain; southwest wind; clear. . . i » One was known dead and upwards 150 wounded and injured as a result, of tho strike and accampanying violence. Forty were arrested at Marseilles after a furious pistol bat tlo between police and local mob. A firm attitude toward Chancellor Hitler of Germany to see that Aus tria is protected will he taken by tho cabinet of Premier Gaston Doumer gue, it was indicated. Likewise the government let it ho known it was not afraid to make re prisals against Great Britain follow ing the opening of a trade war with that country. Has No Notioin of Giving Up Committeewoman for Miss Cobb Daily Digiiatrh llureutf. In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Feb. 13.—1 n revenue de partments where she works, friends of Mrs. T. P. Jerman say she will step out now or at any time soon to make way for the election of a Demo cratic national committeewoman. Newspaper men in Washington say (Continued on Page Three.) Wallace Again Opposes Enforced Crop Control Washington, Feb. 13 (AP) —Secre- tary Wallace reiterated to the House Agriculture Committee today his fundamental opposition to compul sory crop control, but said he support ed the. Bankhead cotton control bill because the majority of the planters requested it. Chairman Jones, Democrat, Texas suggested that complete voluntary cooperation in acreage reduction might result from an increase in the processing tax and increase benefit to the farmer. , 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY ARTILLERY RAKES N H 0 U No One Knows How Many Killed as Big Guns Smash $4,000,000 Apart ment in Vienna STREETS RUN RED AS BATTLE RAGES Dollfuss Government Strug gles Fiercely To Put Down Revolt of Socialists; 200 Apparently Killed Outside Vienna; Socialists Hold Munitions Plants 1 Vienna, Feb. 13.—(AP) Women and children were fed to the flamea of civil war today as government ar tillery smashed the Karl Marx apart ment building housing 2,000 Socialist families. No one knows how many were kill ed. The howitzers apparently smashed the third and fourth floors of the greatest, apartment building In Eur rope. The middle arch collapsed. The shelling of the $4,000,000 struo ture was only one corner of the as pect of Austria today, while the for ces of Chancellor Engelbert Dollfus struggled through bloody streets to down the rebellion of the Socialist party. Apparently at least 200 have been killed outside Vienna. Battles raged at Steyr, Graz and Linz as well as in Vienna At Steyr sharp lighting (broke out again early this morning, when So-’ cialists stationed machine guns on top of a hill commanding the town. Other forces of Socialists were in possession of the great wartime mun itions plant. Government forces charg ed the plant repeatedly in a desperate attempt to take the position. Men fell dead and wounded, but there was no time nor opportunity to (Continued on Pajace Three.) To Obtain More Land For Parks PWA Allots $2,235,- 000 for Conservation Work in National Monument Areas Washington, Feb. 13.—(AP)— The Public Works Administration today allotted $2,235,000 for purchase of land for emergency conservation work in national monument areas. Areas in which the land will be bought are in the Great Smoky licma tains National Park in North Caro lina and Tennessee; Shenandoah Na tional Park in Virginia, and Mam moth Cave, Kentucky. Areas that have been acquired in these districts were found to lack ado quaie protection against forest fires, floods, soil erosion and plant, disease because of the nearness of neglected privately-owned acreage. A previous allotment of $1,550,000 for land purchased in the Great £moky Park was revoked and the sum included in the new allotment. A Compulsory plan for raising prices, Jones said, “might cause irri* tation,” and be subject to legal at tack. i 1 - ! Wallace told the committee, how ever, “it should be seriously consid ered whether a mere majority of cot ton producers x x x should be able to put into effect the drastic pro gram contemplated. Furthermore, serious consideration! should be given to the form such a referendum should take.” _ 11
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Feb. 13, 1934, edition 1
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