HENDEItSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR 19 NORTH CAROLINA TEXTILE MILLS REOPEN Master Os Burned Liner Thinks Fire Was Os Incendiary Origin MPTIO FIRE HUGE FINER MADE ON PREVIOUS If • Locker, Where Blaze Was Discovered, Blew Out At Start of Fatal Fire Last Saturday CHARGES CREW WAS NEW, UNDISCIPLINED Congressman Advises U. S. Steamboat Inspection Service of Information Obtained; More Than 100 Persons Perished De struction of Ship at Sea N<>w York. Sept. 10. (AP)—Chief Of ficer W. M. Warms, master of the Mono Castle, as frie brought death to more than 100 of its passengers Saturday, told the government inquiry today he suspected the blaze was started by an incendiary. Warms said he based hi 3 belief on the fact that an incendiary attempt was made o nthe boat on its previous voyage. Ho also thought significant the fact that a blaze was discovered in the ship's locker, which blew out at the start of the fatal fire. When, speak ing about the earlier fire, Warms said "some one set it”. Inspector General Dickerson N. Hoover, of the steam- I Continued on Page Four) PROBEffISOF Crash Near Wilkesboro on Sunday Afternoon Has Only One Eye Witness Clingman, N. C., Sept. 10— '(AP) — An investigation was launched today into the crash of a cabin monoplane yesterday near here which claimed the lime of the Pilot-Owner Carl S. Coffey, 36, and three of his friends Tiding with him. Passengers of the young North Wilkesboro aviation enthusiast were Murph Mathis, 43, Roaring River farmer; Robert Green, 27, Clingman merchant, and Lester Boyd. 25, ar auomobile mechanic of Yadkinville. near here. The plane crashed into a field. There wa sno eye witnesses except an 11-year-old-girl, on whose mother’s farm the plane fell, just a few hun dred yards from Greene’s home. The girl said the motor of the plane sud denly stopped and ti fell to the ground turning completely over. Maine Vote First Os 10 t his Week Senators, Congress men, Governors to He Chosen in Pri maries Over Nation (By the Associated Press) The Maine election today, forerun ning the November 6 elections in 47 other states, opened a week of prima ries in ten states. . Primary elections for representa tives will be held tomorrow in seven states —Arizona, Colorado, Louisiana, Michigan, New Hampshire, Vermont and Washington, Arizona, Michigan, Vermont and Washington pick senatorial candi dates as well. Primaries for the House will be held Wednesday in Maryland and Georgia and Thursday in New York. Maryland, too, will make nominations £° r the Senate. Democrats of South Carolina wiV choose between Cole L. Blease and Glin D. Johnson tomorrow for gov- Is a run-off primary. smtitersmt il atlit Blsmrfrh Actual Rescue of Morro Castle Survivor lit Mpj ill,, jif* s v w WKB? <" jll|g ft ». f m 9 m s Bi. it J||l| 9 m pHHHr .y. wm ■ '■ i WsBSBBm' jBBBBHbHIIiu.- W i * witting, eager rescuers wid this woman survivor of the Morrb Castle steamship disaster ax she is hauled aboard the S. S. Monarch of Bermuda to which she swam from the burning wreck. (Central Press) Communists Are Blamed For Morro Castle Blaze And One In Canal Zone Internatonal Radical Or ganization Accused by Crew of Vessel at Balboa COMMUNISTS NAMED BY HAVANA OFFICER United States Has Asked no Inquiry at Havana of Sabotage in Connection with Saturday’s Holocaust in Early Morning Off Jer sey Coast Balboa, Canal Bone, Sept. 10 (AP) —Several officers of the Grace liner Santa Rita, which made port today with a fire in her hold, declared aft er docking that "the fire here and also on the Morro Castle was the work ‘of an international radical or ganization.’ ” COMMUNISTS ARE BLAMED BY HAVANA PORT POLICE Havana* Sept. 10 (AP) —Captain Oscar Hernandez, chief of the Ha vana port police, declared today: "The Morro Castle fire seems to have been the work of Communists, apparently of a passenger who board ed the ship with fire-making chemi cals in his baggage.” U. S. NOT REQUESTING ANY INVESTIGATION IN HAVANA Havana, Sept. 10 (AP)—Gabriel Landa, secretary of the treasury, to (Continued on Page Three) 15 Negro Convicts Make Their Escape At New Bern Camp New Barn, Sept. 10. (AP) —Fifteen Negro convicts escaped from the State Highway prison camp near here early last night. The escape was made through a hole in the barracks floor, cut with safety razor blades. Eighty other prisoners refused to ac company them. J. L. Jordan, Negro preacher .this morning carried his 17-year-old son back to camp. None of the remain ing 14 had been located at noon today. ONLY DAILY LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS., NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VISHNIA. HENDERSON N. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 10, 1934. Reciprocal Pact With Greece Near Washington, Sept. 10 (AP) —The State Department announced to day it would immediately negoti ate a reciprocal trade agreement with Greece, increasing to ten the nations with which the United States will soon seek pacts in the hope of increasing trade. snkMiii7 Want Hand In Parleys Van Horn Wires His Industry De sires Part In Agree ments New York. Sept .10. (AP) Peter Van Horn, chairman of the code au thority of the silk tetxile industry, to day telegraphed a request to the President’s strike mediation board in Washington that the silk mill own ers “be let in on the board’s efforts to settle the textile strike”. The telegram pointed out that the silk employers had only learned of the union’s latest offer of settlement terms through the newspapers, and asked the board what it expected the silk manufacturers to do about it. Mr. Van orn said that the board, which is headed by Governor John G. Winant ,of New Hampshire, has not invited the silk industry to partici pate in its efforts to settle the srtike. Wather FOR NORTH CAROLINA Generally fair tonight and. Thursday. . r . STRIKE oKITY i Manufacturers Take That View, and Workesr Los ing Faith in Set-Up WHERE TROUBLE LIES Administration Hoped Capital Would Sacrifice Part of Its Profits to Restore Employment, But It Has Not By CHARLES P. STEWART (Central Press Staff Writer) Washington. Aug. 10.— NRA is blam ed by the generality of the employing class’ representatives, who are num erous in Washington in connection with strike negotiations, for the spread of labor trouble throughout the country. The workers’ spokesmen do not exactly blame the National Recovery Administration, but they do say that increasing friction between capital and labor conclusively demonstrates the set-up’s inability to cacmoplish what its creators hoped it would ac complish. From talks with leaders on both : sides of pending issues, it is quite evident what the basic difficulty is. The White House clearly expected to improve labor’s status, including the taking up of the slack of unem ployment, at the sacrifice of a con (Continued on Page Three) l™ Willing to Accept Sales Tax Substitute, But Not Legalizing Whiskey Daily Dispatch flnreno, In the Sir Walter Hotel, Raleigh, Sept. 10. —The lady from Yancey, Mrs. Charles Hutchins, who is to be the only woman member of j the 1935 General Assembly, has gone back home, but she tells your bureau that she isn’t afraid to say where she stands on the general sales tax. She is for it. ? “It was no embarrassment to me in the campaign,” she declared before' returning home Saturday. “It was no issue. I did not hear one objec (Continued on Page Four) Manufacturers Make Big Inroads In Strike Ranks In Carolinas Territory However, Many Mills That Were Closed Operate with Heavily Re duced Forces BIGGEST RE-OPENING MOVE IN BURLINGTON 28 of 39 Plants Running, but Number are Hosiery Mills and N6t Yet Affect ed by Strike; Heavy Guards Make Openings Possible in All Cases Charlotte, Sept, 10 (AP) —Manu- facturers made heavy inroads into strike ranks in the two Carolinas to day, reopening 52 mills with the aid of National Guardsmen and heavily armed special officers. However, many of the mills which were closed by union flying squad rons ran today with heavy reduced forces. The largest reopening movement was at Burlington, N. C., where seve ral National Guard companies escort ed those who wished to work, but only an estimated 1,200 of the county’s 7,000 workers were on the job. Twenty-eight of the 39 plants are running.. _ A number of them are hos iery mills and not yet actually af fected by the strike call, although some of them were not running. Survey figures shortly after noon revealed 160 plants running in North Carolina and 65 in South Carolina, with 200 still closed in North Caro lina and 95 in South Carolina. Os an estimated 117,400 workers normally employed in the involved area in North Carolina, 64,000 remained idle and 53,400 worked. The strike per centage was larger in South Carolina, where 42,355 were idle and 21,955 at work. In no case were reopenings effected without the aid of heavy guards. Ehringhaus Reply Gets Hugh Okeh Many Messages Commend Answer to Lawrence Criti ism Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel, Raleigh, Sept. 10 —'The impression hereabouts is that Governor Ehring haus got President R. R Lawrence, of the State Federation of Labor, told in the telegram replying to Mr. Law rence’s statement the governor had broken faith with the federation pres ident. The executive has not at any time since he took the office made a state ment so direct. He hasn’t consumed anything like so much space as his bristling retort took up. He received yesterday and toda many telegrams commending him for his reiterated purpose to protect any strikes who is being maltreated, but also to protect and citien who may wish to work. The governor turned neatly upon Mr. Lawrence in the Flying Squad ron’s activities. The federation head had been warned at least 24 hours that the squadron must not fly about North Carolina- The Gorman mes sage from Washington repudiating the squadron and disclaiming any federation authority for its visits, turned the issue back upon Mr. 'Law rence. The governor made a stinging allusion to the labor leader’s inability ‘to lead. | Other Governors have had fine ser vices from labor heads. The late Thomas W. Bickett, who disliked to use troops, found in President Jim Barrett of the state federation a man who would go among the strikers and stay up all night with them. In the 'Albemarle riot near the close of the ‘Bickett term Mr. Barrett gave his word to the governor that the strik (Continued on Page Three) PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Ehringhaus Won’t Answer Lawrence Raleigh, Sept, 10 (AP) —Gover- nor Ehringhaus today said “no reply was necessary” to charges made last night by R. R. Lawrence, president of t-lie State Federation of labor, regarding use of troops on guard duty in connection with the textile strike. “No reply was necessary, as every statement made in Mr. Lawrence’s telegram, both general and parti cular, had been covered by pre vious statements from this and the adjutant general’s office,” the governor said iq a brief state ment answering inquiries as to whether he would wire Mr. Law rence an answer. Both Countries Sought to Outdistance Each Other During Truce in Leticia War SENATE COMMITTEE TOLD OF ACTIVITIES Nothing in Armistice Ar rangements to Prevent Them from Arming Dur ing Truce; President of Arms Corporation Helped by American Attaches Washington, S#pt. 10 (AP) —Testi- mony that Peru and Colombia en gaged in an armament race during their armistice in the Leticia trouble, so as to be prepared for war at the end of the truce, was given today to the Senate Munitions Committee. The armistice, which terminated five months ago, led to peace, how ever. A. J. Miranda, Jr., president of the American Armament Corporation, told of the race to build up their arm ies. 1 i Previous testimony had brought out that Colombia was keeping closely in formed on the purchase by Peru of planes in the United States during the armistice. Miranda said he knew of nothing in the armistice arrangement to pre vent the governments from arming themselves for expected eventuali ties. Evidence that Miranda, while in Rio de Janeiro on May 27, 1933, boasted the American commercial and mili tary attaches there had been “100 per cent helpful” was given to the com mittee. WAITGIMAJ Both Sides Anxious to Hear from Meekins and Also David Clark Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel, aleigh. Sept. 10. —Neutrals and parti sans alike in the constitutional con test in North Carolina have been read ing the announcements to see which way epublican State Chairman Wil liam C. eekins and Editor David Clark of the Southern Textile Bulleltitn are going to jump. Both sides are now accusing the other of catering to the “interests’. Governor Dick Fountain sees some thing very sinister in the support of many revisionists. Governor ax Gard (Continued on Page Three) a PAGES o TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY PROTECTION IS GIVEN BY GUARDSMEN AND SPECIAL OFFICERS Section of Roadway Lead ing to Cherryville Mill Wrecked by Dyna mite Blast FLYING SQUADRONS LARGELY INACTIVE In Only One or Two In stances Are They Seen; Pickets Placed at Cannon Mills at Kannapolis, but Workers Are Escorted to Jobs by Troops and Guards Charlotte, Sept. 10 (AP)—Nineteen strike-closed North Carolina textile mills reopened this morning behind National Guardsmen and special of ficers, and there was little disorder. A dynamite bomb wrecked a sec tion of roadway leading to the Ho well mill at Cherryville, N C., but the mill continued to operate. No on was injured. The Howell is the only one of Gas? ton county’s 104 plants which is run ning. Eleven mills which resumed opera tions today after being closed by union flying squadrons last week are in Lincoln county. They employ 1,300 of the county’s 1,700 textile workers. Two plants remained closed. Three small Mecklenburg county plants reopened, with approximately 500 at work. Other Mecklenburg plants remained closed. The largest mill to reqpen was at iMooresville, where the MooresviUe 'Cotton Mills, employing 1,200, made , Iredell county completely free from strike effects. The Chicola Mills at Honea Path, S. C., where a clash between union men, non-union men and officers re sulted in seven deaths last week, re opened with a full force today. It was started by 65 National Guards men. Reports this morning indicated ap proximately 4,000 workers returned to their jobs under armed protection. Pickets at such armed points were at a minimum. . - Union leaders apparently, failed to produce the numerous flying squad rons which last week coursed through both states, closing more than 100 mills. Only one was reported this morning, and it split into two parts (Continued on Page Three) TO SUPERVISE CANE SUGAR WITHDRAWAL Washington, Sept. 10. (AP) —Secre- tary Wallace announced today that the Agricultural Adjustment Admin istration would supervise withdrawal from warehouses of accumulated cane sugar supplies, beginnning next Jan uary 1. Industry’s View Given By Sloane Head of Textile In stitute Silent, How ever, on Visiting Mediation Board Washington, Sept. 10 (AP) The cotton textile industry’s position on the United Textile Workers’ proposal for arbitation of strike issues was explained' in the government’s new textile board today by George A. Sloane, president of the Cfttton Tex tile Institute. Sloane had nothing to say to news paper men as he went into confer ence with the board shortly after 10 o’clock this morning. In a statement yesterday in NSw York he turned down the union pro posal. Even if the manufacturers were willing to arbitrate, he said, the arbitration would have to be on a mill-by-mill basis, as the manufact urers had no central agency capable of speaking for all of thepa. g