Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / July 7, 1934, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR Political Truce Had In Germany LITTLE INTEREST IS SHOWN IN ELECTION IN FOURTH DISTRICT Vet? Is Hardly Fifth of I hat Cast In June 2 Primary, 1 list Reports Indicate DEMOCRAT CHIEFS BECOMING UNEASY Determined Effort To Get Out the Vote Is Started In Raleigh for Fear Repubii cans May Elect Brantley Over Cooley Purely By Neglect Ralnuh. July 7. (/P) Very little in trust was being shown by voters of rh♦' fourth congressional district today 3s the fate of Harold D. Cooley, jv-moetat, and Hobart Brantley. Re publican rested on their vote in the special election to fill the unexpired tetni of the bite Edward W. Pou. In Raleigh, where a normal vote is about 10,000 there had been far less than 1000 votes east this afternoon. Reports from the other cix counties In thed istriet also indicated a very light vote. In Rocky Mount only 29t poisons had voted at 1 o’clock in pre cincts where 2,137 ballots were cast in the June 2 primary. Democratic party leaders here and at Rocky Mount were expressing anxiety and here a determined effort was started to get out rue vote. Wake is usually hpavily Democratic. R ■publican leaders said they had no lepoit.s a~ to the voting in Johnston and Randolph counties, their party strongholds but added that if voting was brisk there, then Brantley had an excellent chance to become the first G O P congressman from the dis trict in 34 years. Roosevelt Tours San Juan Before Continuing Trip sur. Juan, Juerto Rico, July 7. 'APl—President R0036V61t pur sued his x-acation cruise energeti cally today rising early for a tour es San Juan aiter a night of con ference of a new plan for the re habilitation of Puerto Rico. After a first hand Inspection o? the capital, the President was scheduled to lear6 about noon to heard the cruiser Houston and set iai! for the Virgin Islands. Paris Is Ready For Riotings Paris. July 7. (>P) —The cabinet to day ordered mobilization of thousands of police for riot duty to prevent flashes tomorrow (between patriotic groups around the tomb of the un known soldier where thousands of members of the “Croix de Feu’" 'mosses of fire) are to march to morrow .Scarred and limping from wounds 'f battle, these veterans annually match to Paris’ world-famous memo rial. there to rekindle an eternal flame. This year the ceremony has been suddenly lifted to political sig nificance with dangerous possibilities. The ‘croix de feu” has promised the government to avoid provoking left v. ing groups, but communists and so s i«lists have arranged rallies in pro t< st againsta display of strength of rightist elements’ Brains Not Brawn Leads Strike Os Longshoremen San Francisco, Cal., July 7. (Jp) —A brains not brawn” leadership took over direction today of union labor’s fight in behalf of striking longshore men As steel-helmeted riflemen of the State patroled the waterfront, dele gates from 120 unions—representing 45,000 members—voted last night to leave the matter of a general strike in the hands of a ’’strike strategy committee” “This strategy committee is the __ — * HENDERSON, N. & imtitersmt Datly Btspaitbl ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION CAROLINA AND VllftlNlA. ■ ‘ Named Jap Premier ■HR grW* ’|PBh llfc JP Jn nv Admiral Okada Japan’s reply to the world in th% forthcoming 1934 naval parley was given with the appointment of Admiral Keisuke Okada, * Above, former minister of navy, to form a new cabinet succeeding the Saito government which had re signed. After the Manchurian crisis last year, the saber-rattling cabinet of Gen. Hayashi gave way to the calmer Saito ministry. DOUCHTON FIGHTS FOR SMOKIES PARK ROAD A! CAPITAL Recommendation for Ten nessee Route for High way Is Believed To / Have Been Made DQUGHTQN TO SEE SECRETARY ICKES Learns Nothing New From Contact With National Parks Director; Route Be lieved To Have Been Re commended Would Put Park Highway Long Way Off Washington, July 7. f/P> —Represen- tative Doughton. of North Carolina talked today with Arno D Cammerer, national parks director about the route for the proposed highway from the Shenadoah National Park to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. He hoped to see Secretary Ickes of the. Interior Department later today. A special commitee including Cam merer, Thomas H. McDonald, chief of the Sederal Bureau of Roads and George L. Radcliffe of Baltimore, regional public works administrator, submitted a recommendation to Ickes more than two weeks abo but it has fConfJriued on Page Six.) same move now*’, said John O’Connell, president of the central labor council, "it will lead to organized movement in case of a general strike later, and would mean that brains and not brawn would direct us. With thew aterfront district quiet momentarily under the threat of bayo nets and bullets for those who riot. President Roosevelt s labor dispute board prepared for public hearings Monday to determine issues and prac tices in the strike, which began May 9* when 12000 longshoremen struck. LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS. HENDERSON, N. C. SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 7, 1934 Paper* Substitute? rmam* " f riiiiiilMhilf JM Rudolph Hess Rudolph Hess, Nazi party power, is reported to be in line to succeed to vice chancellorship of Germany if Hermann Goering does not step into place of Franz von Papen. (Central Preea) GOVERNOR FAVORS 0 RIV [R S’ LICENSE FOR E N TIR E STATE But Wants No Cost Added to It, Merely Making It Method of Checking on Drivers TOLL OF ACCIDENTS BECOMES ALARMING Governor and M a ny Others Realize Something Must Be Done to Minimize the Growing Hazards of the Highways; Would Help in Enforcing Traffic Laws Dally Dlsualft Barsaff !a the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BiSKERYILL. Raleigh July 1. —There is a grow ing demand from all sections of the State for the enactment of a State wide drivers license law as a safety and accident prevention measure ac cording to most observers here. Peo ple seem to be realizing that too many are beings skilled and injured each month in automobile accidents and that the only way to reduce the num ber of these accidents is with a State drivers' license law. Carrol Weathers, recently nominat ed to the ! State Senate from Wake county, has already announced that he will introduce and seek the enact ment of a drivers’ license law and is already assembling data on the sub ject. Several other members of the next General Assembly are reported to have the same thing in mind Va rious newspapers over the State are vigorously advocating a drivers’ li cense law. The Raleigh News and Ob server this week carried an editorial advocating the coupon hook gorm of drivers’ license, which would require every driver to carry a coupon book, in which the officers would drite the form of violation noted whenever the (Continued On Page Four.) io mams. TOLLS NEXT WEEK Highway Commission Hopes to Open Morehead and Wrightsville Lines Raleigh, July 7 (AP)— CJhair man E. B- Jeffress, of the State Highway and Public Works Com mission, said today that he did not yet know just when tolls will be removed on the Wrightsville Beach causeway near Wilmington. Daily Dlspnteli Ba'psi In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J Cj. B4SKEBVILI, Raleigh, July 7.—lt is still hoped that the purchase 0 f the Wrightsville Beach causeway and bridge and the Morehead City-Atlantic Beach bridge can be completed and all tolls remove by July 10, Chairman E. B Jeffress, of the State Highway and Public 'CestteUfcd cc Page Hire* :* Self-Government Planned To Replace NRA ’s Control NEW REGULATIONS FOR INDUSTRY ARE TO BE PERMANENT J Close Supervision Would Continue To Be Exercis ed Under The Propos ed Program FINAL APPROVAL BY PRESIDENT WAITED Although Official Confirma tion of Plan Is Withheld, Authoritative Source Says It Is Virtually Assured; Be, ing Formulated by Admin istration (Copyrighted by The Associated Press) Now York, July 7. (/P) —A plan to replace the NRA with self-government for industry, an authoritative source said today, is being formulated by President Roosevelt’s administration. Under the proposed plan, codes would become a permanent feature of ndustry; which would govern itself under the close supervision of the Fed eral government. General Hugh S. Johnson, NRA ad ministrator has taken the lead in the reformation, the Associated Press in formant disclosed, anh **as been in New Yoik for several days conferring on the change. Steps toward completion of the new project? were initiated by Johnson several weeks ago in a preliminary set-up submitted to President Roose velt. Suggested revisions are being made for final approval by the Presi den t. Although therew a?, no immediate confirmation by the government the source of the information —one close to the administration —said carrying out of the program is virtually assured. Hollands Metropolis Has Riots Amsterdam, Holland, July 7. (JP)— Rioting thought to have been cnecked with the arrival of additional soldiers and police, broke out anew late today, resulting in two more deaths bringing the total to six for the day. Four were killed this morning when police and troops cleared all the dis turbed areas, using tanks to flatten barricades. The rioters are mostly unemploy ed, incensed at a reduction in city dole payments. Among 50 taken to a hospital earlier today, the condition of six were said to be hopeless. Relief Not In Sight In Heat Wave Summer Continues Its Boisterous Course Over Most of the Country (By The Associated Press) Summer continued its boisterous course today over a nation which knew not what to expect next. The east hoped for early relief from a heat wave which has matched the 16-day record set in 1901. but warmer r»n Pay# Thro® * WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA Showers and thundershowers to night and in east portion Sunday; generally fair in west portion Sun day; slightly cooler Sunday and In extreme north portion late tonight. Another "Elba” for Papen? Franz von Papen,, shown being expelled from TJ. S. in 1916 In photo a* left, is now unwelcome in Berlin, too. and forced leave of absence as vice chancellor appear? to await him, due to Nazi pressure. Meanwhile von Papen, whose newest photo (right) shows him in a religious proces sion. ..as been under protection in his home shown in background above* (Central Press) i U. S. Qualities To Go Ba-'k on Gold Basel, Switzerland, July 7. (AP) —America qualified! for ar. etqrn to the gold standard by its January gold reserve act, Leon Frazer, president of the Bar*.-'; for Inter national settlements, asserts in his annual report. Outstanding features of tli6 re port wer6 discussed by Frazer with George L. Harrison governor of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, who arrived this morning for im portant financial conferences FEAR" WASHINGTON WILL BESTRICTER Will Get More HarcLßotied Since Congress Left, New York Thinks By LESLIE EICHEL (Central Press Staff Writer) New Sork. July 7,—New York be lieves that the administration will bear down heavier now that Congress has departed. The Harriman Hosiery mil! in Ten nessee is held up as an example. “Either collective bargaining, no in timidation and code wages, or no Blue Eag’e”, seems to be the dictum. Southern plants say they cannot af ford to pay northern wages. To which the government seems to be answering, “R,aise the standard of living and you will have all-around prosperity”. * * * Savers Involved Saving bank' depositors are dircetly involved in the failure of banks to find sufficient sources to lend money, due to lack of trade. Rates of interest on deposits much necessarily decline Bank loans continue to decrease while bankreserves continue to rise. That always bespeaks lack of trade. * * * A World Difficulty Those who are "cheered" over Ger many’s financial trouble? may them selves be hit, International bankers are of the opinion that Germany’s dropping out of world markets will be a serious (Ccstmuted sc Page Tarse ) PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY,, OPENING SCHEDULE ON TOBACCO FIXED Middle Beit To Start Thurs day, September 13, Not September 11 OTHER BELTS CHANGE Tobacco Association at White Sulphur •Springs Alters Program; W. T. Clark Succeeds A B Car rington As President While Sulphur Springs, W. Va„ July 7. (JP) —Members of the Tobacco Association of the United States turn ed their attention to recreation after two days of business session “We are. just going to have a good time today,” said W. T Clark, of Wil son, N. C. new president. The annual convention was set for three days ending today, but Clark said a formal program was not pre pared for the last day He was elected yesterday to succeed A. B. Carrington of Danville, Va. The 1934 marketing season will 5 launched with the opening of the Geor gia markets August 1, a decision of the sales committee ruled. Other opening dates are: South Carolina August 9. Eastern North Carolina August 23. Middle Belt September i 3. Old Belt September \> Dark Virginia November 7. American Sailors Stage Riotous Evening in Nice Nice, France. July 7. (Ip)—Shore leave for sailors from the United States ships Arkansas and Wyoming was cancelled tipday because /of a riotous evening ashore resulting in in juries to 28 men The two battleships had been sche duled to remain at Villefranches harbor until July 12 but it is likely they will leave earlier The condition of Joseph Kline, 22. a wireless operator aboard the Ar r PAGES 0 TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY NAZI RULERS SEEK TO EFFACE TRACES OF 2ND REVOLUTION Chancellor Hitler Leaves for His Summer Home In Bavarian Alps for In spiration ASSISTANTS ALSO ARE TAKING REST But Strictest Vigilance Be ing Kepi As Safeguard Against (Further ,'Trouble; Von Papen I§ In Better Spirits at His Home When Seen There (Copyrighted by Tat Associated Press) Berlin, July 7 (/P)—A political I nice was put into effect today by the Nazi high command in a determined effort to efface all remaining traces of Germany’s bloody “second revolution” Chancellor Adolf Hiller left for his summer home in the Bavarian Alps for inspiration, while his trusted sub leaders arc also taking their first rest since ineir parly’s purging of 'plot ters and traders’. Two million storm troopers, tempor al ily stripped of (heir uniforms, are on a month’s vacation. Their future b.as become Germany’s foremost poli tical problem. A powerful political instrument, these peace-time soldiers are being treated as if they might become greater in power than their creator, Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen, when seen at his home today, seemed in better spirit, as if reflecting the prevailing tendency toward political peace. There was intimation that Chancel lor Hitier s short respite »n the Bava rian hills may be extended to at pos rib !e longer vacation. Rockefeller, Sr., Tomorrow Attains His 95th Birthday Lakewood, N. J., July 7. (AP)— John D Rockefeller, Sr. will be 95 years old tomorrow but to the aged philanthropist it will be just another day, a day of activity carefully curtailed, a djiy of diet strictly regulated Members of his family will be?, there and the man who once was hailed as “the richest man in th« world may have a short drive from the estate with them, or perhaps there will be, instead a game of ' ! Numb6rica’\ Mr Rockefeller’s simple gamep layeu with cards. Revolt In Havana Is Thwarted Havana, July 7. (IP) —Night-long raids on the homes of former army oiticers are believed by the govern ment today to have thwarted a major conspiracy Nearly 40 former officers, most of them veterans of the Hotel National battle October 2, 1933 are held on charges of conspiracy Half a dozen machine guns, dozens of r.fles revolvers and hand grenades and thousands of rounds of ammuni tion, along with considerable equip men I for making bombs were seized in the raids. kansas was sliyhtly improved today, although surgeons have not yet been able to extract a. bullet from his neck. He was ‘shot by Leon Curpy chief of the suppet Damage estimated at 25,000 francs was done to various cares, where fur niture was tossed back and forth with none too good aim between sailors and ruffled citizens of Nice. All the sail ors arrested and injured were turned over tc Amerilan authorities for die-* ciplinarf action.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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July 7, 1934, edition 1
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