Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Sept. 27, 1934, edition 1 / Page 1
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Greater Henderson Day Next Thursday, Gala Evetdf&rThls Section HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR LINDBERGH MEETS HAUPTMANN IT BRONX JAIL Gorman Pleads Confidence' In New Textile Labor Body SHE CHAIRMAN ASKSWITHHOLDING OF A NEW STRIKE •Says Organization Had Con fidence in Winant Board as Named by Presi dent Roosevelt APPROVED REPORT BOARD SUBMITTED Appeal Is Issued as New Board Begins Its Delib erations; Will Investigate Charges of Discrimination Against Union Members in Mills Washington, Sept. 27. (/P) —Francis J Gorman, chairman of the textile strike committee, today called upon «I1 workers to have confidence in the new' textile relations board and tc| withhold any action toward renewal of the strike. ( Gormans plea to the former strik ers was issued as the new board set up by President Roosevelt last nigbtj wen to work with instructions to in vestigate charges of discrimination against union members. “When the President appointed the; textile inquiry board,*’ Gorman said, ‘ with Governor Winant, Raymond In gersoll and Marion Smith as its mem bers. we immediately announced thati our organizaion had confidence in thei President’s choice and the personnel cf the board. Th ©report of this board and the recommendation, made to tho President received our whole-hearted* approval’’. I)r. Poe Outlines New Constitution In Grange Speech Lumberton, ept. 27. (IP) —A constitu tional amendment to permi a SI,OOO tax exemption for home owners and a law o permit the deduction of SI,OOO in debt from he value of real estate ve"r advocated by Dr. Clarence cieigh editor, in an address the North Carolina Grange here last night. Dri Po® also included a Federal “equalization fund’ of $1,000,000 for schools in a ten-point tax program outlnied yesterday to the Grange, which is holding is annual convention! her*. Stacy Head Os Textile Labor Body N. C. Chief Justice Is Picked by Roosevelt to Bring Peace to In dustry Raleigh. Sept. 27. (IP)— North Caro linian who became a member of the Supreme Court of his State at 36, and its chief justide at 41, today was chair man of a labor board designated by] President Roosevelt to bring peace in the strike-orn textile industry. Chief Justice W. P. tacy left late, yesterday for Washington to assume his new post, which he will hold only, through the board's formative period, or about two weeks. Other members are Rear Admiral Henry A. Wiley, retired, and James Mullenbach, of Chicago, wiho with Jus — tice Stacy also constitute the person ae lof the steel labor board, of which; the North Carolinian is also chair-, man. Organized labor in North Carolina, •center of the South’s tjeoctile indus try. hails wit hdelight the appoint ment of Chief Justice Stacy, to whom three presidents have turned in their* need for an arbler in labor difficul ties » fmtitersnit Hat hi Hfsriatrh LEASED WIRE BERVICH n» THE associatedpreset New NBA Board Os Five Will Be Named Probably Today By The President Shatters Alibi Henry Uhlig Bruno Hauptmann's statement that the late Isador Fisch left Lindbergh ransom money in his care was re futed by Henry Uhlig, Fisch’s best friend, who told police Fisch bor rowed from Hauptmann to make health-seeking trip to Germany. tCentral Press) Last Guard Units Sent Back Home Troops On Duty In Textile Strike in Carolinas All De mobilized Columbia, S. C., Sept. 27 (AP) — 'Governor Blackwood announced to day that demobilization of the South Carolina National Guard began this afternoon and wil lcontinue gradual ly until all units called out for guard duty had returned home. Adjutant General Dozier said the demobilization began about noon and should be completed by tomor row night. Return of the citizen soldiers to civ ilian life will mark the end of the first complete mobilization of the South Carolina National Guard since the World War. LAST THREE UNITS SENT HOME IN THIS STATE, TOO Raleigh, Sept. 27 (AP) —Adjutant (Continued on Page Two.) Mother Killed Children Because She Loved Them Newberry, S. C., Sept. 27 (AP)— Mrs. Annie Bizzell, who killed two children, wounded a third and fired her home because, she said, “I loved them,” remained quietly in the county jail here today after a coroner’s jury ordered her held for grand jury ac tion. At today's brief inquest, Sheriff J. G. Blease read a deposition taken from Emanuel Bizzell, 15-year-old surviving member of the family, who was in a hospital with a shotgun wound in the shoulder. The boy said his mother “took us children in the car and drove most all day the day prior to the killing. ONLY DAILY Set-Up Will Replace One- Man Leadership of Re signed General Hugh S. Johnson REORGANIZATION TO* BE TRUSTED TO IT Few Indications as to Ap pointments to be Made by Roosevelt; He Is Prepar ing His Address to the Country to be Delivered Sunday Night Washington, Sept. 27. (/P) —President. Roosevelt expects to name a board of five in the next 24 hours to administer the reorganized recovery unit. The President hast decided definitely upon a board of five members to ne place the o le-man leadership of the resigned Hugh S. Johnson. Pending the announcement by thy President, thei|e were few indications otoday as to who he had in. mind to take over NR A It was assumed the new board would take over much of toe task of reorganizing NRA. i Meanwhile. Mr. oosie-velt was giving thought to the radio address he wlli deliver on l Sunday night in another re port to the nation. In it he probably will discuss in some detail his thoughts for the fu ture for NRA, as well as his ideas on, the business situation. Tonight the President will make a brief radio speech in connection with the New York Herald-Tribune current topics discussion. ireamTk Johnson Takes Issue With Brummitt in Matter of Teachers’ Pay Daily Diapntoh Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel, My J. C. Maskerville. Raleigh, Sept. 27 —The plan advo cated by Attorney General Dennis G. Brummitt for increasing teachers’ sal aries by merely increasing the State salary schedule, as suggested seve ral days ago in a special article writ ten by him and printed on the edito rial page of The News and Observer, is misleading to both the teachers and the public and utterly impracti cal and unworkable, State Treasurer Charles M. Johnson said today when asked by this correspondent what he thought of Mr. Brummitt’s plan. | Mr. Johnson was asked for his opin ion both because he is a member of I the State School Commission and the .State Board of Education, which de i termined the State Salary schedule and because he was the first State of ficial to publicly advocate increased * Continued on Page Six) She then took us to Newberry that night and then we drove about our won community until about 11 o’clock. “Next morning I awoke as she was walking about my room and she asked me for my gun to kill a snake I told her I would kill it when 1 got dressed. She got the gun from under my bed and shot me in the shoulder. I fell and rolled under the bed. When When she turned, I tussled with her and struck her in the face and I ei3- caped and ran to neighbors.” The boy said his mother, who kill ed her husband only a few months (Continued on Page Two) NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VH*BnIA. i HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY AFTERNOO N, SEPTEMBER 27, 1934. May Doom Hauptmann in Lindbergh Trial , fir* <4. staao j S"C. % hmUj IS § v-. x / \ aof sjk tsoszs<STlii> * / \ [■ft p • ,o-»oo 5- O*!W, *■'->\ J ***** * . | »:f ‘ " .■V ‘g'r f * -1.1./&L;., :", - ' „ , . JUJ«nri■ m.ii.■■'■»»»nr. iy sjfefettiwjub s*-»> ihr '.y ytegßaa** tm* nug** ’ j ! ■ MV-H• v- -i'ii'i'hfL^ti'iTi'TjMifiliiiim nr• i.mi.l i rrrrrririwihm r i iih J New Jersey authorities are confident symbols used in Lindbergh kidnaping and ransom notes together with fingerprints left by kidnaper will send Bruno Hauptmann to the electric chair. Symbols, released for **9>lication lor first time, are statical in kidnap note {top left) found in baby’s room, and ransom notes «M.fttabergh «i to Dr. “Jafsie” Condon. Hauptmann’s fingerprints (below) are being talked against fingerprints reported found on window iedga, (Central Press) Woman Is Killed In Wreck Os Auto PineVflle, Sept, 27 (AP)—Mrs. Sam White, 50, wife of a filling station operator here, was killed instantly early today in an auto mobile collision two miles from Pineville. Jasper Burrage, of Charlotte, who was driving Mrs. White’s auto mobile, told police it was struck by a larg esedan occupied by four Negroes, who fled after it struck their car. At the time of the accident, Mrs. White and Burrage were return ing from Fo** Bragg, where they had gone last night to take her son, Private M. White, back to camp. Strike Digs Deeply Into N. C. Taxes Sales Tax Will Be SIOO,OOO or More Less for August and September Daily Di«patck Hnreav, In the Sir Walter Hotel, My J. V. Banker ville. Raleigh, Sept. 27 —Collections from the sales tax will be approximately SIOO,OOO less in September than in August, and this difference is being ascribed almost entirely to the effects of the recent textile strike, it was learned today from the Department of Revenue. It is also expected that the sales tax collections next month will be from SIOO,OOO to $150,000 less than usual as the result of the strike, so that in all the state will have lost ap proximately $250,000 in revenue as a result of the strike. While the collections from the sales (Continued on Page Six) TOBACCO HIGH ON BURLINGTON MART Burlington, Sept. 27 (AP) —The tobacco market here sold 30,000 pounds of tobacco today at an average announced at $30.06 per hundred pounds. WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA Partly cloudy tonight and. Fri day; cooler Friday and in west and central portions tonight Waiting Report On Strike Settlement Report Expected Late To day from Code Author ity oiu Terms of Re cent Walk Out SLOAN TALKS WITH CHIEF EXECUTIVE Refuses to Divulge Nature of Discussions With Roosevelt; Cotton Code Authority Has Just Com pleted Two Day Confer ence in New York Washington, Sept. 27 —(AP) —Presi- dent Roosevelt conferred at length today with George A. Sloan, presi dent of the Southern Textile Institute who announced that a report would be made today by the Code Authority on the terms of settlement of the re cent textile strike. Sloan said the report would deal with questions before the board named yesterday by the President to arbitrate the issues between labor and employers in the huge industry. He said the Cotton Code Authority had just completed a two-day session in New York, and as soon as the re port was compiled lat etoday it would be released. ISloan declined to comment on his discussion with the President, and withheld any further comment until the Code Authority report was made public. GREAIiMFOR HAUPTMANN’S WE Grilled Mercilessly Herself Besides Worrying Over Her Husband By LESLIE EICHEL New York, Sept. 27.—“ Why don’t you write something on Mrs. Haupt mann, wife of th© accused man in the' Lindbergh case?” a; correspondent quielries. On© can merely surmise Mrs. Haupt mann’s feelings. One can merely try to interpret her reactions. She prpb ably could not analyse fchiem herself. s this is being written, it is not kmoVn whether Mrs. Hauptmann! knew anything concerning the ran (Continued on Page Two) PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Washington Seeks Easing Os Credit Washington, Sept. 27 (AP) —Ef- fects to loosen credit by encourag ing loans to enterprises and reliev ing mortgage-pressed properties were undertaken today at the Treasury and the White House. Hits Business Either Way; Let Best Method Win, Sinclair Holds By CHARLES P. STEWART (Central Press Staff Writer) Washingon, Selpt. 27. —Reliefe finac in is between the well-knoown, horns; of a dilemma. If it relieves destitution as economi cally ajsi i can, it hurts business. If, in administering relief, it al lows for a profit to bustnieiss it in creases relief’s cost, and business! must foot the bill in the form of higher taxes. And increased axation must hurst business too. his difficulty confronts not only Federal relilejf administrators. Reports from source htroughou the country, indicate that it is puzzling state ad ministrators also. However, it is by (Continued on Page Two) South Carolina Youth Is Suicide In College Room Charleston, S. C., Sept. 27 (AJP) — David Jeffries, Jr., 24, of Union, who enrolled as a sophomore in the medi cal college yesterday, was found dead this morning with a bullet wound in his right temtple on the floor of his room. The discovery of the body was made by the young man’s father. (The student was accompanied to Charleston by his father yesterday, and after the son was located in a student lodging house, the father spent the night in a hotel. Before starting on his return home 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY BAH OF PRISONER IS FIXED AT SIOO,OOO Case to be Brought to Trial as Speedily as Possible, District Attorney Declares LINDBERGH WEARS DISGUISE AT JAIL Enters Unnoticed With De tectives ; Hauptmann’s Attorney Asks $5,000 Bail; Prosecutor De mands That All Bail Be Denied so Prisoner Cain he Kept New York, Sept. 27 (AF) —Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh made a surprise visit to the Bronx county building to day, and, disguised in a line of de tectives, viewed Bruno Richard Haupt mann, former German machine gun ner, charged with extorting $50,000 from the flier. District Attorney Samuel J. Foley disclosed the meeting after Haupt mann had pleaded not guilty to an in dictment returned by a Bronx county grand jury yesterday charging ex tortion in the Lindbergh kindap case. Colonel Lindbergh made the trip from his Englewood, N. J., home accompanied by several members of the district attorney’s staff, and rush ed to the county building. He entered the building unnoticed and as a disguise wore a pair of horn rimmed glasses and a cap. Whisked to the sixth floor of the building in a private elevator. Col onel Lindbergh took his place in a line of detectives and the prisoner was brought in. The disguise served to prevent Hauptmann from knowing that Lind bergh was in the line, but further details of the meeting were not dis closed by Foley. The district attor ney said the outcome of the meeting would not he made public. When the line-up was concluded, (Continued on Page Six) Textilers Looking To Roosevelt Carolinas Still Torn by Dissension With End of Great Tex tile Strike Charlotte, Sept. 27 (AP)—The Caro linas, torn by dissension in the wake of the settlement of the greattextile strike, looked today to President Roos evelt’s newly created arbitartion board to adjust the dispute in the industry. As the first week since the end of the strike drew to a close an Asso ciated Press survey showed that 116 of its 709 textile plants still shutdown. Union leaders in many instan'%9 claim ed widespread discrimination against union workers. The threat of another strike came from Roanoke Rapids, scene of a bit ter controversy for the past few days, but what effect the creation of the new arbitration board would have on the strike vote was not known. this morning, Mr. Jeffries went to bid his son farewell, but found the room locked. After entrance was forced, the student was found lying In the floor, an automatic pistol nearby, with one shot fired, and a cartridge which was snapped but not exploded, nearby. The youth was in his night clothes.. The body indicated that death had occurred only a few hours before, the coroner said, reporting the death as suicide. No note was found nor any motive assigned for the death.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Sept. 27, 1934, edition 1
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