Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / July 5, 1934, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR 176 Fourth Os July Deaths In Hitler To Keep Von Papen In Cabinet, But Ousts Him From Vice-Chancellor Job CAMPAIGN RENEWED AGAINST TOWS Catholic Archbishop of Mun ich Also Reported Held Prisoner By Nazi Rulers UNREST IS GROWING AWAY FROM CAPITAL Dissension and Fear Mingle Wilh Dissatisfaction In Many Parts of Germany; Von Papen May Be Sent off for Long Stay In Interest of His Health 8.-rlin July S. (/Pt —Franz von Papjn. th? burr under the saddle of the Nazi regime, will be stripped of the vies chancellory, the foreign depart ment of the Nazi party indicated to dav. but he will be permitted to re main in the cabinet as Saar commis sioner. Thus, with the puzzling problem of th* vice chancellor's disposition for the first time somewhat clarified, re ports indicated that the Nazi have re opened a vigorous anti-Jewish cam paign in provincial centers claimed major attention. Along with these reports were rumors that Cardinal Michoel Saul harbei .archbishop of Munich, was be ing held prisoner. These reports stirred with others less well substantiated of a growing unrest and dissatisfaction outside the capital, pointing’to growing dissension and fear. Vice Chanller von Papen’s office, next to that of Hitler, was stripped of its papers and furnishings from top to bottom, and all his belongings taken to his private home, where his (Continued On Page Four.) . Guardsmen Ready In Frisco Strike Os Longshoremen San Francisco. Cal. 5. (iP) Na tional Guards were marshelled for a march onto San Franciscos battle ridden water front today if striking marine workers prevent oP er& tiong of the state-owned belt line railroad. Acting Governor Frank F. Merbiam, coming to the scene from Sacramento, announced that he would call out the troops unless the strikers permit op eration of the besiaiged piers, also cwned by the state. WEST NEEDS RAIN VERT BADLY STILL Great Plains and Southwest Suffering From Want Os Precipitation Washington, July 5 (AP)-A con tinued deficiency of rainfall over the Great Plains and in the Southwest was reported today by the. Weather Bureau. The weekly statement of conditions said showers during the past week were beneficial in the Northeast, At lantic coast, states, Appalachian moun tain regions, eastern Ohio and part of the lake region, hut high temperatures in the interior, in the absence of ex tensive rains of (material importance, took a heavy toll of the scanty soil moisture.” Cultivated crops were "progressing satisfactorily,” bu tpastures were still blighted, and in the southwest “even most cultivated crops were suffering.” Rain was badly needed in eastern Montana. Most of the Dakotas, southern Min nesota, part of /lowa and Missouri, northern and western Arkansas and Nebraska southward and south westward.” ■ _.^t- 1 Hpititerentt Hatlu ©feuatrhlsis ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION CAROLINA AND VlfftlNlA. ■ ’ Our New "Assistant ’ ... . : ' : x .. . Three camera studies of Donala K. Kichberg, Mi A cjou i p the President to be director of the Industrial Emergency Commission, t post tantamount to “Assistant President of the United States ” Serving under the former Chicago lawyer will be Secretary of the Interior Ickes Secretary of Labor Perkins, Recovery Administrator Johnson and Relief Administrator Hopkins. (Central Press) U.S. To Demand Payments By Germany On Sums Due Even Break With Great Britain Sought By Wash ington for Obliga tions Here NOTE MAY BE SENT WITHIN SHORT TIME Otherwise Diplomatic Con versations Would Be Held; Germany Owes American Investors Around One and A Half Billion Dollars On Bonds Held Washington, July 5. (/P)—The United States will demand that Germany give America an even break with Britain in her payment of debts. This became known today as the of ficial reaction to news that the Reich has agreed to pay interest for at least six months on Dawes anc* Young loan bonds held by British subjects. About $1,500,000,000 of German obli gations are held in this county. Au thoritative sources said a new note asking equality may be dispatched to the Reich. If no note is sent, diplo matic conversations to that end are expected to be press. Britain’s threat to «*eize German commercial funds in England was con sidered potent. But the United States enjoys a “favorable” balance of trade I with Germany. That is, Germans buy I more from Americans than Americans | buy from Germans. | Any idea that the United States 1 could follow the British way of retalia tion therefore, died aborning because this country stood a chance of com ing off second best in any trade with Germany. MARIE DRESSLER IS STILL SICK WOMAN Santa Barbara, July 5. (AP) — With virtually no change in tier condition since she passed' a major crisis » wdek ago Marie Dressier, 62. film star, continued to rest comfortably today at the C. K. G. Billings estate here, where she is critically 111 from complication of ailments. LEASED WIRE SERVICE OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS., HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 5, 1934 Ex-Premier Slain? jSShhB ■Hr mjjjjjljH I Wpl W H §>. Ijlli J|La pi&l’lfe-. Mw JH ms ■ i iSI® ■ , mM . JBmtmmNKRKKI Gustav von Kahr ft is reported from Berlin that Gus tav von Kahr, former Premier of Bavaria and Catholic Party leader in Munich, was killed during round up of opponents of Hitler regime, Kahr frustrated Hitler’s “beer putsch” of 1923 and is said to hav« been on the “black list” since. (Central Press) W HELD NOT GUILTY Harper and Carroll Absolv ed of Blame for Recent Series of Fires Raleigh, |Fuly 5 (AP) —Magistrate J. B. Danielly this afternoon dismiss ed charges allegedly connecting Sam Harper and Robert Carroll with a re cent series of fires in Wake Forest. He (Continued on Page Two) President’s Wife Leaves Asheville Asheville, July 5. (AP- Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt and her two companions on a visit here. Miss Marion Dickerman and Miss Nancy Cook, of Hyde Park, N. Y. left Asheville by automobile this morn ing after a two-day -visit to the mountain industries of this section. Mrs. Roosevelt said she would 4|rive to Morristown, Tenn.* the Norris dam, which, she and her friends will inspect and to Tage well, Va. SCHOOL FOLK ARE ACTIVE IN FIGHT FOR SPEAKERSHIP Lumpkin, of Franklin, Said To Be in Line for Their Support in The Next House BOWIE AND CHERRY WANT COMMITTEES Angling for Either Finance or Appropriations Chair manships Rather Than Speaker; Brunswick School Head, New House Member, Wants Education Poßt Aijft Dully Digpntrh Unrena. In the Sir Walter Hotel, nv .1 C. DASKERVILL. Raleigh. July § 5 —'Thq.--contest for the speakership of Yhe House in the 1935 General Assembly is becoming more active now that the second primary is over and the nominees for the House definitely known. The three leading contenders are still William Grady Johnson of Pender; W. L. Lumpkin of Franklin and Laurie Mc- Eachern of Hoke. The names of Gregg Cherry of Gaston; Reg L. Har ris of Person, speaker of the 1933 (Continued on Page Three.) Clerks of Court Rush Convention To Enjoy Outing Elizabeth City, July 5 (AP) —Deter- mined to complete all business by late this afternoon in order that - Friday may he turned over completely to sight seeing and a trip to Dare county, su perior court clerks of North Carolina plunged into the most important work of their seventeenth annual conven tion here today. The convention evened last night a 50-minute meeting, at which time the visitors were welcomed to the city by Mayor Jerome B. Flora. President J. N. Sills, of Nash /county, responded to the address of welcome. SAYSISTIERS NOT VERY BRIGHT Justice Talks Plainly In Hearing Primo Camera’s Love Troubles New York. July 5. (JP) —Most prize fighters are not very bright, Supreme Court Justice Peter Smuck observed today. Justice Smuck made this startling statement during a consideration of Primo Camera's financial and amor ous difficulties. “Except one or two prize fighters who kept their money,” he said, “most of them are of so low a mental ity that they don’t know money when thev see it”. Tne specific question which Justice Smuck was asked to decide was what part of SBB,OOO deposited by the Madi son Square Garden Corporation be fore fight with Max Baer should be held in escrow to satisfy a $15,773 breach of promise judgment obtained against the deposed heavy weight boxing champion by Emelia Tersini, London waitress. Judge Smuck reserved decision. He thought, however, that the Italian pugilist ought to be put in jail for contempt of court. WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA Generally fair tonight and Fri day. Serious Riotings Upon Water Front At San Francisco Police Charge Group of 200 Strike Pickets and Hurl Tear Gas Bombs At Men ONE PICKETIbADLY HURT IN DISORDER Pickets Hurl Rocks As Po lice Charge; Fire Breaks Out in Box Car Containing An Automobile, Set Afire Despite Warning From Governor San l ,Francisco, Cal., July 5 (AP) Rioting broke out again on the water front here today. Police charged a group of 200 strike pickets and hurled tear gas bombs at the men. At least one of the pickets was in jured seriously. Vassili Zakharoff, a member of the Marine cooks and stewards union, was clubbed over the head and knocked unconscious. As the police charged, the pickets hurled a few rocks. Fire broke out in a box car contain ing an automobile. The fire Depart ment tore out the side of the car and extinguished the blaze. A tear gas shell set fire to weeds on top of Lincoln Hill. The box car was set afire despite a warning to strikers by Governor Frank Merriam not to molest State owned property. The belt line rail road is owned by the State. FOES OF NEW DEAL TALK VERY LITTLE They Say Government Only “Priming Pump”, But Roosevelt Replies By LESLIE EICHEL (Central Press Staff Writer) New York, July s.—An editor says we do not present the adverse side of the New Deal enough. As a commentator, we naturally fol low the doings and the sayings of the people who are doing and who are saying. We have even gone further. We have gained the anonymous ideas of Wall Streeters and manufacturers who have preferred not to speak out. Otherwise it has been difficult to ob tain any constructive anti-New Deal opinions, except that which may be bleaned from speeches which nearly everybody already ha s heard or read. The antis are not talking much. * * * Weakness In our travels and in our studies we have come upon New Deal weaknesses which we have diligently recorded in this column. The chief weakness’of the New Deal (Continued On Page Four.) AUTO CRASH FATAL NEAR CHOCOWINITY Washington, N. C., July 5. (AP) —Drury Settle of Greenville was killed at Chocowinity ?ast night when his automobile crashed into a freight train at a crossing. Robert Exum, of Snow Hill, and Carl Brown, of Greenville, were brought to a hospital here suffer ing light injuries. Settle suffered a fractured skull and died before he could be taken to a hospital. Roosevelt Will Receive * The President Os Haiti Aboard U. S. S. Gilmer, Accom panying President Roosevelt, July 5. (£>) —President Roosevelt cruised leis urely along the northern shors of an cient Haiti to a rendezvous today with President Spanio Vincent of the is land repufc’ic After a successful Fourth cf July fishing on c.ioppy Bt lmii'.*, waters, President Roosevelt was scheduled to receive President Vincent at noon abeard the cruiser Houston. President Vincent who went to PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, Widowed Queen ft ' 'i'.y Wkg'i.f:: ■ -jf - wr 7 J s \ Il| • Jill % Death of Henry, Prince Consort of Holland, ended one of the most bril liant royal alliances of a generation. He married Queen Wilhaimina in 1901. They had one child, Princess Juliana, heir to her mother's throne. (Central Press ) SSoUBLE New Cars and Trucks In crease 100 Percent First Half of 1934 Raleigh, June 5. (,/P) —Sales of new automobiles and trucks in North Carolina in the first siy months of 1934 more than doubled the sales in the similar period of last year, L. S. Harris, director of the motor bureau, reported today. In six months this year 19,115 new cars and 4,816 new truci*s were sold compared with 9,599 cars and 2220 trucks disposed of in the same period of 1933. June sales of cars aggregated 3,726, while 672 trucks were sold. Greenwood County To Revise Appeal For Power Credit Washington, July 5. (AP)— Greenwood county, South Carolina, notified the PWA Power Review Board today it would revise its application for a $2,767,000 allot ment to construct a municipal power plant. Approval of the Greenwood al lotment was protested by the Duke Power Company. A change in the application, it was saitf at the Re view Board office, wllf make nec essary a scheduled hearing, at which representatives of the coun ty were to answer the Duke ob jections. Washington recently to visit Mr. Roosevelt, planned to board the cruis er off Cape Haitien, beneath the green island mountains. From there President Roosevelt will proceed to Puerto Rico for the first landing of his vacation voyage tomor row at Mayaguez. He will ride over land into San Juan. The President had a good haul in his five hours of fishing on the Fourth, with his sons Franklin D., Jr. and John Roosevelt. FIVE CENTS COPY U.S. NATION OBSERVES MIN SANEST Death Toll Lowest Since 1929, Sharpest Decrease Being From Use of Fireworks THREE DEATHS ARE REPORTED IN STATE Two Drownings And An Automobile Fatality In North Carolina; No Un usual Number of Fatalities Here From Celebration of America’s Birthday (By The Associated Press- Death took a half holiday as Caro linians observed the Fourth of July. A check-up today showed there was no unusual numbei of aeaths from motor accidents, drownings, fireworks or other violent or accidental causes. North Carolina reported three deaths —two drownings and an auto mobile fatality—while two deaths from automobile mishaps occurred in. South Carolina. Henry Earle Bennett, 26, a farm hand, was drowned in the Catawba river near Charlotte when tie ventured into water too deep for him and Rob ert Harper, 19, a Negro, was drowned in the inter-coastal waterway canal near Sea Breeze in Pender county. Near Fayetteville Clara Belle Horn® 19, was fatally injured when the car in which she was riding turned over after a tire blew out. TOTAL OF 166 DEATHS FOR FOURTH OF JULY REPORTED (By The Associated Press- America celebrated its 158th birth day anniversary in tne sanest manner in recent years, with the lowest num ber of deaths since 1925*. A total of 176 men, women and chil dren gave up their lives on the an niversary of the signing of the Dec laration of Independence, a drop of nine from last year, and only about one-third of the number who perished in 1931. The sharpest decrease was in the number who died as a result of th® use of fireworks. Only three persons perished from this cauze compared with seven in 1933. Stavisky Prober Is Himself Under Critical Inquiry Paris, July 5. (AP> —Inspector Boney, chief inspector in the fam ous Stavisky affair who got an official kiss from former Premier Albert Sarraut for recovering the missing Stavisky checks, was be vestigated himself today. The Stavisky committee In the Chamber of Deputies voted to send his testimony to Minister of Jus tice Henri Cheron for action. Boney has been under heavy fir® because of a midnight meeting with an informer, a “mysterious personality”, after which Boney delivered! to Sarraut the mysteri ous check stubs representing, it was said, transactions of millions of dollars. BISHOPCAION IN ATTACK ON REPEAL Says Thousands Now Know; They Have Been Deceiv ed and Betrayed Washington, July 5. (/P)BIn a sharp criticism of post repeal conditions, Bishop James Cannon, Jr., of the Me thodist Episcopal Church, South, said today “multiplied thousands now realize they were deceived and be trayed as to the results of repeal by the leaders of both political parties". The clergyman, in a formal state ment, declared “the saloon had re turned despite party prspfllsea that it would not; that all great Protestant bodies were calling for aggressive ac tion against existing conditions, but that the Roman Catholic church has prevented and probably will continue to prevent a well nigh solid front against prohibition”. “Now that the. unthinking, reckless, deceptive craze for repeat has spent its force,” Bishofj Cannon said, ‘the people are discovering the wreckage which has bene wrought, for repeal has developed the most distressing conditions in the country at large thaw the writer has ever known.”
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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July 5, 1934, edition 1
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