Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Oct. 13, 1934, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON (lATBWAY TO CENTRAL CAROUNA TWENTY-FIRST YEAR FEAR KIDNAPERS HAVE KILLED MRS. STOLL German Government Mo ves Drastically To Clarify Debts [»rl)is Involve Economic and Financial Relations With The United Stales (iK.RMAN AMBASSADOR DELIVERS THE NOTE J)r. Hans Luther Serves Of fi< ial Notice in Note Deliv ered to Asst. Secretary of State Phillips That Reich Would Abrogate Commer cial Treaties in 1935 it <*p>rit;lit by tin* Associated Press) Washington. Oct. 13. <(p> The eco ,<tiiiic fninssod German government •ocl v made a drastic move to clarify involving economic and finan ■ •ia illations with the United States v- announcing its intention in termi i, ** i ’iM unconditional “most fav- ■ ni. I nation" commercial treatries ; wain this country on Oct. 14. 1935. P: Hans Luther, the German am- ; ha doi, served official notice in a j >: m d note delivered to Assistant S.'.u *tary of State Phillips that the I Ft. i h would abrogate the treaty nex*. year. A' the sometime he was understood j ’o nave expressed the hope that a a w reciprocal agreement wit)? us | 'th<' most favored nation” would ot; ingotiated by the two governments ii ihe trade agreement program now King cariied on by President Roose- ! Vfir and that mutually profit trade j would continue. The German treaty the first and model of the pact negotiated with by this country after the principal un conditional most favored nation treat ment in commercial agreements has governed trade and commerce be tween the two nations since 1925. Germany’s denunciation of the treaty climaxes a series of diplomatic representations growing out of the Hi'ler government, which controls ;>ll imports, intensive system of monopoly and drastic quota limitations. IWO NEARDEATH IN WILSON SNOOTING Wifr Li ml* Husband Park ed With Girl and Shoots and Brats Them 't'iLot!. Oct, 13, —Ernie StaU i”§: tVilson postal employee, ana hub;* !*oyn#»r, local girl, were shot. * ,lf l eriourly wounded rere last night «ft*t Mr;. Stallings found them in a parked automobile near a road hous*. "ii Hie Goldsboro highway. The girl’s "'iidition was described as critical. ■ 'ffieers, who held Mrs. Stallings, ■id -he smashed a glass with* Tier !>i tol reached inside the car and shot girl in the head, her husband in •ii" headanT then battered the girl m tin head with the pistol butt. Lhihlress I s Freed In Kidnaping Released After Be ing Held 24 Hours in the Stoll Kidnap ing Case r ' . i lesion, W. Va., Oct. 13. iff)— H lt* r Childress, an unemployed man 11 ni Cleveland, was released today •nii i being held for 24 hours for ques "ndi.g H.bout the kidnaping of Mrs. ''■W" Stoll, in oLuisville, Ky. William If. Haywood, department justice agent, said he was satis- ! 'I that Childress knew nothing about the case”. IOOTBALL RESNLTS (First Period) Pennsylvania, 0; Yale, 7. 'outhern California, 0; Pittsburgh 6. heather H)K north CAROLINA ■air. slightly colder tonight. I‘ight frost in central and heavy r "''t in extreme west portion. Sun day fair. Untitersmt TOmUt H t snatch only DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAR OLINA AND VffimNlA » LEASED WIRE SERVICE OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. “Snatch” Victim KmH I " ■Kg' , liil: Mrs. Alice Stoll, pictured here, beau tiful blonde wife of a Louisville. Ky., milli. .onaire, was abducted from her residence in her negligee last Tuesday night by a “snatcher” who demanded ransom of $50,000. The woman’s hus band announced he had paid the ran som. Department of Justice men are at work on the case. Price Slash On Gasoline Significant Companies Believed Getting Level Down In Advance of Gen eral Assembly Daily Dispatch Himim. la the Sir Walter Motel, II) ,J. U. busker \ llle. Raleigh. Oct. 13 The recent redue tion of two cents a gallon in the re tail price of gasoline in North Caro lina, announced first by the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey and fol lowed by all the other gasoline com ing the first step on the part of the panics in the State, is regarded as be large gasoline distributors to get the prices down before the legislature meets here the first week in January. While they completely ignored the re quest made sveral months ago by the Governor, when he asked them if they could not, reduce prices here at least to the lower level being charged in surrounding states, there is reason to believe that they are not ignoring what he said he would do when th< legislature got here, if prices were not rduced. When the governor called the con ference several months ago of gaso line and oil distributors and asked (Continued on Page Six) ALEXANDER’SFATE BOLSTERS AMERICA JHe Was Dictator and Turns Public Here Against Dictatorship By LESLIE EICHEL (Central Press Staff Writer) Cleveland, Oct. 13—Views of the in terior of the United tSates are im portant—for the views of the interior govern Congress. Immediate reaction to the assas sination of King Alexander of Yugo slavia indicated a view that dictators soonor late fall by violence, or breed violence. Yugo-Slavia was another product of the Versailles treaty. In a nation of 13,000,000 persons there are 5,000.000 disfranchised Croatians. who evident ly object to a Serbian dictator who desire a republic of their own. The assassin was a Croat. * * * Against Stalin’s Views Views of Josef Stalin, Soviet dic (Continued on Page Two.) HENDERSON, N. C. SATURDAY AFTERNOO N, OCTOBER 13, 1934 RUSH OF OFFICERS IN WOMAN’S SEARCH CAUSES THE FEAR City, County and Federal Agents Search Entire Area At 16 Acre Estate STRIKING CONTRAST GUARD WITHDRAWAL Guards Were Withdrawn Yesterday to That Ransom Money Could Be Paid; Louisville Director of Safe ty Searches Long Aband oned House for Clues - Louisville, Ky., Oct. 13. </P) Feart Mrs. Alice Stoll might have ineen kill ed by the kidnapers who stole her from her home Wednesa-»y was indi cated today by a rush of city and county police and federal agents to search the entire area around the 16 acre Stoll estate on the fashionable. Lime Kill Lane near here. Belief that the woman’s t)ody might F;e found was expressed by one po liceman as he dashed up in me search convergency of about 50 officers in striking contrast to the withdrawal of all guards a short time before yes terday’s announcement tnat the ran som demand had been met. unlac Wakefield, Louisville director of safety, whoi led one party concen trated on a long abandoned house a few miles southward of the Stoll home. Hesearched it intensively from cellar to attic, poking under its partly fallenin floors, but his only answer to a question prompted by the po liceman's remark as to whether he was looking for Mrs. Stoll’s body, the $50,000 ransom or the kidnaper him self was “I can’t say except we are not overlooking clues”. brummitTcles BACK IN ARGUMENT Strikes Out at Treasurer Johnson’s Stand on Teachers’ Pay (Special to Daily Dispatch) Raleigh, Oct. 13- - Following is a statement issued today by Attorney General Dennis G. Brummitt in ans wer to .State Treasurer Johnson’s stand on pay for school teachers: “There is a report here in Raleigh that, a high school student is receiving for out-of-school employment wages a bit higher than the average salary paid his teacher. This may account for the repetition of State Treasurer Johnson’s announcement that he was the first man to advocate higher sal aries for teachers. But it has not brought him to the point of voting for such an increase instead of simply saying he is for it. “Let's take a look at the facts. “On February 16 Dr. A. T. Allen publicly said that Alabama was receiv ing aid for its teachers from Federal funds on th ebasis of an average sal ary of North Carolina teachers was .S6B per month. “Later the State obtained $500,000 from Federal funds for teachers’ sal aries. This was accomplished in face of the official declaration that the teachers would, be paid in full regard less of whether an allotment was re ceived from the Federal government. Teachers’ salaries were not increased by this $500,000. It simply Helped to balance the State budget. “The result was that Federal aid was extended to Alabama teachers at the rate of an average monthly salary of SB4. In North Carolina it was lim ited to an average of S6B per month, since that was the maximum of the State standard teafchers’ salary sche dule adopted in September of last year (Continued on Page Two) Patrolmen Called Off In Missouri’s Man-Hunt Capital City, Mo., Oct. 13. (vP) —Col. B. Marvin Castell, superintendent of the Missouri highway patrol, today ordered all troopers engeged in the .hunt for Charles Arthur (Pretty Boy) Floyd, outlaw, to return to their reg ular assignments. For 24 hours 40 highway patrolmen and more than 250 peace officers sought to track down the southwest Slain King Returns to His Troubled Land The coffin of the assassinated King Alexander is placed aboard the Jugoslavian destroyer Dubrovnik at Marseilles for the sad journey to dead monarch’s homeland. The ship is the one that carried Ki£g Alexander to i ranee for his good will” visit. Central Press photo by radio *** SPAIN’S TELEPHONE COMMUNICATION CUT Effects International Com munications to Halt False News Reports TO GIVE OUT REPORTS Government Will Use Radio And Its Representatives to Give Reports Abroad, Other Means Free Paris, Oct. 13. (ff' —All international telephone communications with Spain were cut. today and the Spanish em bassy announced that the government at Madrid had suspended the forcigi, telephone service to prevent “trans mission of false news with the delib eratep urpose of injuring Spain”. However, the communications said,, “the government is leaving free divers other means of communications’’ on its side, the government will give ac curate reports abroad of the situation in Spain by radio and by its repre sentatives. norfolkUThern M A Y STOP TRAINS Deprived of “Mullet Road’’ Lease, It May Quit Ope rations There Daily Di«pa;«'* Barca*, In the Jir Walter Hotel, By J. C. Bankervllle. Raleigh, Oct. 13.—Intimations have been heard here to the effect that the Norfolk, and Southern, peeved at the action of the State in cancelling its lease to the Atlantic and North Carolina railroad from Goldsboro to Morehead City, is threatening to dump the entire road back on the State or “in the governor’s lap” and stop operating trains over It. It has also been learned from reliable sources that nothing would please the governor more than to nave the N. and S. do' this and thus forfeit its op erating bond of SIIO,OOO, which would then immediately become available in cash. This amount in cash, it is understood, together with the fact that the forfeiture of this bond would automatically give the State complete control of the road, woula be all that 1 (Continued on Page Six) desperado, who with two companions was believed to have been seen yester day near Mexico, Mo. He was re 'ported seen in other Missouri and soutrern lowa points throughout the day. The long vigil throughout the night, Castel said, produced virtually no clues. Thebelief was expressed by Castel that tile men had escaped. Blame Terrorist’s Band Os King’s Assassination Prison Populace Sets New Record Dsiily Dittr-ntch Huri-.-in, In the Sir Walter Hotel. IIV .!. O. UASKERVI 1,1,. Raleigh, Oct. 13.—The State pri son system has the largest popula tion now it has ever had, Director J. B. Roach pointed out today, the latest report shouting a population otn October 1 of B,O£K prisoners with a total of 9,776 prisoners handled during the month of Sep tember. Until tile last month or so the average population has been about 7,800 prisoners a month. Os this number, an average of about 6,700 prisoners a day are be ing worked on the roads, the others being used on the various prison farms and prison camps. A great many of these are those physically unable to do the work required on the roads, but are able to work on the farms and in the gardens at the various prison camps. During September 106 prisoners escaped of which 75 were captur ed, making a net loss of only 31 prisoners. «R S Many Leaders Speak At Gathering Held In Ra- • leigh on Friday Daily Dispatch Bureau, (it the Sir Walter Hotel, By .1, C. Baskcrville. Raleigh, Oct. 13 —“It would take the Republicans 50 years to develop and get together a gathering of women as able and as interested as this group,” Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus told the group of about 250 women at lun cheon at the Raleigh Woman’s Club Friday, a feature of the all-day rally of women from all over the State, held by Mrs. C. W. Tillett, Jr., vice-chair man. At the morning session Mrs. James H. Wolfe, acting director of the Wo men’s Division of National Democra tic Headquarters, told the women of the most effective method of organiz ation, especially among women, and Dr. D. D. Carroll, dean of the Uni versity’s School of Commerce, went into the economics behind the “New Deal” and the beneficial effect it is having and will continue to have on the lives of the American people. Miss Beatrice Cobb, national com mitteewoman, of Morganton, brought a brief word of greeting, and Miss Harriot Elliott, head of the political science department of Woman’s Col lege, Grensboro, showed the responsi bility of the government to its citizens, and now the present administration is meeting that responsibility. At the luncheon, after Mrs. Tillett had introduced the prominent men and women present, a sort of “Who’s (Continued on Page Two) PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Yugoslavia Accuses Hun gary of Harboring “Us tashi” Blamed for King’s Death BAND THOUGHT POWER BEHIND THE KILLINGS Identified By French Pre fecture Personel As Those Behind the Sinister Plot; Think They Sent Woman With Gun (Copyright by the Associated Press) Paris, Oct. 13. (ff) —The terrorist band “ustashi” which Yugoslavia at* cused Hungary of harboring was iden tified by the French prefecture per sonal as the sinister power behind th*. assassination of King Alexander of Yugoslavia Snd Barthou Marseilles Tuesday. Two suspects held in Annasse, ana two men who escaped the police hunt for accomplices of Peptrus Kaleman. the actual assassin, were identified from photographs as memibers of the Yugoslav refugee organiation at Ustashia, which is alleged to oe head ed by a man name Pacerich. It was this organiation, said the police, vvhich sent a pretty brown haired woman to carry the gang’s gun to Fiance. The woman escaped ed capture. DEMOIgM But in Some Places Such Success Would Be Anti- Administration By CHARLES P. STEWART (Central Press Staff Writer) Washington, Oct. 13—Even Demo crats agree that Senator James Hamil ton Lewis of Illinois, chairman of their party’s senatorial campaign committee, does not propose to lose any Jeffersonian advantage, in the coming elction, through failure to claim a great plenty in advance. Senator eLwis lists the following Democratic senatorial victories as as sured : Governor A. Harry Moore over Senator Hamilton F. Kean in New Jersey. Ex-Senator Peter G. Gerry over Senator Felix Hebrt in Rhode Island. George L. Radcliffe over ex-Sena- Joseph I. France in Maryland. Slierman Minton over Senator Ar thur R. Robinson in Indiana. 1 Ex-Governor A. Vic Donahey over Senator Simeon D. Fess in Ohio. John M. Callahan over Senator Robert M. LaFollette (Progressive) and John B. Chappie (stand pat Re publican) in Wisconsin. Harry S. Truman over Senator Ros coe C. Patterson in Missouri. Rush D. Holt over Senator Henry D. Hatfield in West Virginia. epresentative Dennis Chavez over (Continued on Page Six) 6' pages' TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY FARMERS. ANGERED BY BANKHEAD ACT, MAY STRIKE B A C K Growers In Chatham And Randolph May Vote Re publican Ticket in November SMALL FARMER IS HIT MIGHTY HARD Fact That Acreage Quota Produced Surplus Not Their Fault, They Feel; Sheffield Says Shoe Could Be On Other Foot In This State „ , ! Daily Dispa(«*h llurenn, lu (lie Sir Walter Hotel, II) ,1. C, Hawker> ille. Raleigh, Oct. 13—-Democratic lead ers here are frankly more worried the outlook in a good many of the than they are willing to admit over cotton growing counties as the result of the Bankhead cotton law limiting the amount of cotton which growers may market by imposing a heavy tax on all cotton ginned in excess of their quota. In a great many instances farmers who have strictly adhered to their cotton acreage reduction con tracts have produced more cotton this year than their allotment with the result that they are not able to mar ket anything like their total crop with out paying the heavy tax on this ex cess. Randolph and other cotton growing “The farmers down in Chatham, counties in this immediate section are. more than mad over the situation and the arbitrary position being taken by the government, are blaming the Dorn ocrats for the law and indications are that this situation is goin gto make it very difficult for the Democrats to carry these counties in the November 6 election,” one of the Democratic leaders in Chatham county said here today. “While the Democratic party in the State is not responsible for the enactment of the Bankhead cotton law at all, the farmers are so mad that, they cannot bo reasoned with or see the difference. As a result, many of (Continued on Page Two) coSpallsofe Report Shows September Consumption Below Aug. and Last Sept. Washington, Oct. 13. (ff) —Cotton consumed in September was reported by the Census Bureau today to have been 295,960 bales of line and 54,690 of linters compared with 420,949 of line and 61,228 of linters during Aug ust this year and 499,949 of lint and 74,666 of linters during September last year. — |; Laval New Minister Os France Succeeds A s s a s s i nated Bart h o u; Marchandeau Min ister of Interior • Paris. Oct. 13. (ff) —Pierre Laval, minister of the colony, today was named minister of foreign affairs, succeeding the assassinated Louis Barthou. Meanwhile Barthou wat ibourne to his tomb with homage from nearly every country in the world. President Leßrun and dignitaries of many countries walked behind his flag draped casket, over which Pre mier Gaston oumergue pronounced a funeral oration on the vast Esp»anaa© Des Tnvalides. At the same time, Laval appoint ment was made, it was announced Paul Marchandeau, former minister of finance was made minister of tho interior, succeeding Albert Sarraut, who resigned, because of the assassi nation of Barthou and King Alexand er at Marseilles. _ .mA
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Oct. 13, 1934, edition 1
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