HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY FIRST YEAR JERSEY. SMS MURDER MDICTMENT OF HAUPTMANN • * ” * • t t y y y y Revolt In Spain Flares Anew As Government Claims Big Victory HUGE GOVERNMENT ARSENAL IS TAKEN BY REBEL FORCES Three Suburban Towns Near Barcelona Are Reported In Hands of An archists FEDERAL SOLDIERS SENT TO THE SCENE Warships Bombarding One Town Held by Extremists; New Flare-Up Comes Just as Government Has Claim ed It Had Broken Back bone of Revolt Madrid. Spain. Oct. 8 Ovi scat <»f a huge government arse nal. was taken by rebels today in a new outburst of revolt against the government, cropping out simultane ously at several noints. Reports from Barcelona said three towns in the outskirts of the city. Matorell. Sabadell and Badalona. were in the hands of anarchists. Troops were dispatched to the trouble cen ter. Reports reaching Madrid also said Hoops were bombarding Ugo and Oijon in Asturias province, where the rebel-i were reported solidly entrench ed Warships were bombarding Zijon laying down a barrage for advancing troops. The reports said the rebels were equipped with machine guns and light artillery and were well for tified within the city. Casualties were reported to be heavy. In the capital, government forces pounced upon the anarchists and syn dicalist revolutionary committee, ar resting its members. Barcelona reported troops and re vels were staging pitched battles with In the city, with the telephone ex change in danger of falling into ex tremist hands at any moment. The new flare-up of the four-day revolt that has taken an estimated Simi lives, and caused some 3,000 cas ualties. came when the government has announced that the backbone of (Continued on Page Three) COMMUNISTS RULE IN PARI OF SPAIN Army Officer Shot and Kill ed; Rebels Are Repulsed In Madrid 1 adit, Spain, Oct. 8. (AP) —A "irnnnioKt republic was declared today at tire neßarb.v town of I’arrlo del lt«*y as rebels set fire to the city liaJl and II churches, destroyed municipal archives and killed the mayor and several other dissenting citizens. ARM) OFFICER SHOT AND KILLED BV THE REBELS Barcelona, pain, Oct. 8. (/p)—Cap ta'ii Gonzalo Massano. of the Spanish -utnv's general staff, was shot and li l ♦fl by iebel9 today while ho was i du g in a stall automobile. HEAVY FIRING AS TROOPS REPULSE MADRID REBELS Madrid, Oct. 8 y Justice Carew’s clerk, and also by a court attendant just before the hearings were resumed. pointed to organize another gov ernment ministry. Above are shown, Madrid, where scores have been wounded; Premier Lerroux whose inclusion of conservative Catholic deputies in the cabinet. compared with 53.8 percent a month ago, and 66.7 per cent a year ago, and 56.2 percent the 1923-32 average on October 1. The indicated yield of lint cotton per acre is 165.9 pounds, compared pounds two months ago, 208.5 pounds with 162.6 pounds a month ago, 160.9 picked in 1933, and 169.9 pounds the average acre yield 1923-32. The condition of North Carolina’s crop as of October 1 was 76 per cent and its indicated production 646,000 bales of 500 pounds each. Duke Power Goes Into S. C. Courts Columbia, S. C., Oct. 8. (AP) The State Supreme Court heard arguments today on a petition of the Duke Power Company and its subsidiary, the Southern Public Utilities Company at Charlotte. X. C., that they be allowed to inter vene against a proposed PWA loan to Greenwood county for a $2,- 767,000 power development on the Saluda river. TfSerjisi Latter Claims It Was Acci dental But He Is Placed Under Arrest Thomasville, Ga., Oct. 8. g—Judge Roscoe Luke, of the city court of Tomasville, former member of the State Court of Appeals, was arrested today on a warrant charging him with the murder of Oscar Groover, formerly associated with Judge Luke in a loan company. Judge Luke was arrested by Sheriff Gordon avis at his office on a warrant sworn out by H. F. Groover, brother of the dead man. i Groover was shot in front of Judge Luke’s office as he was get ting into automobile, udge Luke said the shooting was accidental. A co oner’s jury later said death was acci dental. weatherT FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Fair tonight and Tuesday; Not much change in temperature. PUBLISHED EVERT AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. brought on the crisis J** Largo Caballero, former minister of labor, reported heading the revolt; and a scene from the supressed 1932 uprising, when a monarchist restoration putsch failed. OVER HALF OF CROP IS ALREADY GINN FI) FOR 1934 Washington, Oct. 8 (AP)—Cotton of this year’s crop ginned prior to Oc tober 1 was reported today by the Census Bureau to have totalled 4,- 954,346 running bales, Including 87,186 round bales counted as half bales, and 3,799 bales of American Egyptian. Ginnings for North Carolina to Oc tober 1 were given as 74,652 hales, as compared with 289,782 bales to Octob er 1 last year. unESer Meantime, Business And Labor Want To Know Where They Are Going By LESLIE EICHEL (Central Press Staff Writer) Cleveland, Oct. B.—“So far as that thing known as business ‘sentiment’ is concerned, Cleveland )« the bluest community that I have visited thus far’’, writes Bernard Kilgore in the Wall Street Journal. “Probably”, adds Mr Kilgor.e, “the current late of industrial activity h;:s a great deal to do with it. When ali the September figures are in, they will show that industrial Cleveland has lost all of its gains since the New Deal began”. Tlun one turns to the Youngstown Vindicator, mentor of this great steel area, and one reads on the front page this headline: “Industrial Sky Brighter Over Dis trict. Fairless (erecutive vice presi (Continued on Page Two) Non-Signing Growers Os Tobacco Test Kerr Bill Winston-Salem, Oct. 8.. (Jp)—Non signing Forsyth and Davidson tobacco farmers are organized to test the con stitutionality of the Kerr-Smith to bacco controdl act,' leaders of the movement announced he« today, a meeting has been called for Tuesday night at Wallburg, and the dissenting 6 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY ACCESS TO JURY’S RECORD IS DENIED DEFENSE LAWYER Bronx County Judge Refuses Hauptmann’s Counsel Permission For Ex amination JERSEY GRAND JURY GIVEN ITS CHARGE Court Says Indictment Should Be Returned If State Presents Sufficient Evidence; Witnesses Se« Cluded in Separate Room For Hearing New York, Oct, 8. (AP)—James M. Fawcett, counsel for Bruno Richard Hauptmann, said today that he \tfas prepared to intro duce “witnesses in any court” to show that Hauptmann was not present at either the kidnaping of the Lindbergh haby or the trans fer of the $50,000 ransom money. Flemington, N. J., Oct. 8. (AP) —Colonel Carles A. Lindbergh came back to Hunterdon county today to tell the grand jury what he knew about the death of his 21 months old sou, kidnaped 3i months ago. The flier immediately went, to the grand jury room to testify. Flemington, N. J., Oct. 8 (AP)— Supreme Court Justice Thomas W. Trenchard today solemnly charged a Hunterdon county grand jury to in diet Bruno Richard Hauptmann for murder if the State presents suffi cient evidence that Charles A. Lind bergh, Jr., met his death accidentally or intentionally at the hands of the German carpenter at the Lindbergh Hopewell estate March 1, 1932. The justice directed the grand jur ors to return to hear the testimony of the 23 witnesses summoned by the State. George N. Robinson, of Jut land, a retired dealer in farm sup plies, the foreman of the grand jury, led the jurors into the star chamber. Attorney General David P. Willentz, County Prosecutor Anthony M Hauck and Assistant Attorney Joseph Lannigan, the State’s legal staff in (Continued on Pago Three) TV A Loses In Ruling In Tennessee State Utilities Body Refuses To Dismiss Protest Against Pri vate Sale Nashville, Tenn., Oct. 8. (/P) —The State Railroad and Public Utilities Commission today overruled a motion of counsel for the Tenneessee Valley Authority that petitions protesting the sale of privately-owned electric utili ties property o the auhority be dis mssed. The commission defined the ground on which the sale may be protested, elding that questions as to the con stitutionality of the ederal statute creating the TVA “are not within the province of the commission”. Owned by the Tennessee Public Service Company, the properties in volved are located in and round Knoxville. The TPS seeks to sell them to the TVA for $6,190,000. planters will lay pins for raising a (“defense” fund to defray court costs. An oiganization now forming will (£>• made permanent in this meeting. The attacks wjill be based upon the ground that the law violates the guarntee of uniform taxtion tht is included in the Constitution by direc staetment an 4 by implication, j