Meet Your Friends At Greater Henderson Day Thursday I HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR JAPAN STIRRED BY ARMY’S PLANSFIMANWAR Another Huge P WA Appropriation To Be Asked Os Congress WOULD TIDE OVER UNTIL UNEMPLOYED ARE PUT IN JOBS Would Like to Have ‘'Real Appropriation”,. Rkcs Tells Newspaper Men at Meet REPORT OF BILLION DOLLARS ERRONEOUS Secretary Says No Definite Amounts Tave Been Ex pressed; 200 Millions Needed to Keep Going Projects That Have Al ready Been Put into Work W;ishingto*n, Oct. 2 it\ for loans. These are market ed through the Reconstruction Cor poration, MORE OF GASTONIA MILLS ARE OPENED Cs.st'j.dA, Oct. 2 (AP)—Six tex tit*. mill*, reopened In Gastoa eouotj today, leaving only 11 of ♦ hr. <’«jimty*• 104 piantH closed a< * » result of ti»e recently textile • trig*-. Approximately 17,000 are now employed. Conference 1 h er Labor Truce Held ( Kitcome of Roose \clt Suggestion to Capital and Labor Not Vet Certain Washington, Oct. J 2 (AP)- -White Hon c officials said today President Roosevelt had already started confex -1 with individual leaders for a truce between capital and labor, but that t hoi e would be no general or group pulleys with either side. It was explained Mr. Roosevelt had talked with several leaders in indus trial and labor circles, even before his. address, and would continue to con fer with them from time to time. tu.st. how the plan will work out will depend on the ideas developed at these individual conferences, it was said. Officials added that the President knows only at this time his objec tives ‘‘for capital and labor to give fait trial to peaceful methods of ad dicting their conflicts of opinion and interests.” It was also stated on behalf of the President that the plan was not de signed as a short cut to collective bar • uning or as a move to stay several strikes in key industries this winter. itmtitersrm &mht Utapatrh LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS., Tliese exclusive and remarkable 1 pictures from the Byrd South i Tolar expedition were brought 1 through with great difficulty from ' the frozen south. One of the j cows taken on the expedition by I Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd is ■ Huptmann’s Associate Sought By Jersey Police In Lindbergh Kidnaping Lumber Yardmen Saw Hauptmann Pull $lO Gold Bill and Partner Caught Him and Put Up Small Change; Suspect’s Alibi Believed Exploded Washington, Oct. 2 (AP) —The Washington btar said today that two secret witnesses had shatter ed the alibi offered hy Bruno Kiclmi'd Hauptmann to prove he was not the “John" of the Lind bergh kidnaping. The Star said in a story by Kex Collier that one of the witnesses was nnderstod to be the so-call ed “mystery woman" with whom District Attorney Samuel J. Foley, of the Bronx has held 21 number 7 Killed As Plane T ails In Channel Foikstonel, England, Oct. 2 (AP) An airplane with seven occupants crashed into the English channel three miles from shore today on a projected flight to Le Bourget field Paris, France, killing all of them. Two of the passengers were wo men. ENFORCEMENTOF ROAD LAW URGED Sentiment Growing All Over State for Curb on Recklessness Daily Dispatch llurenu. In the Sir Walter Hotel, I*y J. C. Daskervllle. Raleigh, Oct. 2 —Sentiment is grow ing in all sections of the State for stricter laws governing the operation of motor vehicles and for better en forcement of these laws, with parti cular advocacy of a State drivers’ (Continued on Rage Three) ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIiISnIA. . . 11 HENDERSON N. C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 2, 1934. shown being taken out for oxer- j cise on the ice and snow, wearing a heavy blanket to protect it from cold which reaches at times 60 below zero. The snowmobile, shown resting on the ice, is near the anchored supply ship, the of private conferences. The oth er Is her husband. Trenton, N. J., Oct. 2 (AP) —An as sociate of Bruno Richard Hauptmann; Lindbergh kidnap suspect, who appa? rently knew the German carpenter was passing “hot” ransoc money was being sought today by the New Jer sey State police. Colonel H. Norman Schwartzkopf, (Continued on Page Three) GEORGIA SOLDIERS AGAINCALLEO 001 Six Companies Mobilized and Sent to Unannounc ed Destination Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 2 is;»a;- viet from interfering with the power of the Japanese navy, and “made fu tile the threat of HenEy L. Stimson, former United States secretary of State.’ In this connection it referred to al leged utterances of the late Rear Ad miral Edward W. Eberle to the effect. I hat the American navy was capable of assuming any offensive necessary *0 enforce the “open door” policy in China. LABOR BOARD HEAD WILL RESIGN POST Washington, Oct. 2 (AP)—Lloyd K. Garrison, chairman of the La board Relations Board, told re porters tod.iy that he W2is going to give up his duties to return to the University of Wisconsin as acting dean of the hiw school. Six Kidnap Indictments In Tyrrell Dealth Penalty if Convicted Permit ted L n d e r U. S. “Lindbergh” Law Columbia, N. C. Oct. 2 (AP)—'lndi cations charging six men and one wo man with kidnaping Will Morrisette, of Camden county, and taking him across the Virginia Stat eline, where he was beaten for assisting Federal revenue investigators in the seizure and destruction of a still in Currituck county on August 6, were announced here today by J. O. Carr, United States district attorney. The indictments were returned un der the “Lindbergh kidnaping law,” and Judge I. M. Meekins, who is pre siding over the Federal term of court which opened here yesterday, explain ed that the maximum sentence is death or life imprisonment. It was expected that the case would be tried at the Federal court term now in session here, but court attaches in dicated that a continuance would be granted. _ _ jJ