Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Jan. 11, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-SECOND YEAR SAYS HAUPTMANN WROTE RANSOM NOTES Ask Government To Spend $675,000,000 For Retiring Poor Lands BUYING OF LANDS WOULD BE SPREAD ACROSS 15 YEARS National Resources Board Recommends Purchase of 5,000,000 Acres Per Year BOARD’S STUDY TO GUIDE EXPENDITURE President Has Said He Would Use It As Standard In Use of Huge Four Bil lion Dollar Work-Making Fund; Would Stop Land Settlement Washington. Jan. 11.—(AP)— A huge program to spend $675,000,000 in v-uving up pool land and retiring it from farm production was recommen c'd to President Roosevelt today by Uie National Resources Board. The purchasing would be extended «'i 15 years. 5,000.000 acres being bought each year at an annual cost of 515.000.000. "This farm land, comprising 450,- (JOO farms, should be withdrawn from •igi icult lire." the board said, “in or •i‘r that both the natural and human v uuices of the nation may be con served." ’Hie report, drawn by the board's tr, ud planning committee, was supple mentary to the board’s earlier study, which President Roosevelt told Con r • would guide the expenditure of four billion dollars in his new work- program. It urged that the >V(lual government and States take i l( <>nlimied mi Pago Two) NEGRO ATTACHE IN LEGISLATURE DIES Kaleigh, Jan. ll.—(AlM—Henry Mwater. Negro attache in (he eoakrooni operated on the second floor of the State Capitol for leg islators. dropped dead at his work about !»:."iO a. in. today. Ho had been an attache during Atwater was about 50 years old, legislative meetings for several sessions. Dan Terry, superinten. ‘bid of buildings and grounds, said. May Relieve Sherriffs Os Collections Dull.*' lllipnlrh Ilnrena, In the S|r Walter Hotel. Raleigh. Jan. 11. —You may be fniorj with the unusual thing of hav -1 *'K the sheriff refusing to take your tax money if the advice of the local s'ovf.T'iirnent commission is heeded. I hat, indeed, would be a novel ex perience for most North Carolinians; but don’t think for a minute that you ic going to avoid payment just bccHuv the sheriff is sticking to his job of still-raiding instead of collect big taxes, for the commission recom >»' nds that special tax collectors be (Continued on Page Three! shortsessTon of LEGISLATORS SEEN Rule Prohibits Wildcat” Measures Be »'»g Slipped Through llnil.v IH»|,nt«*li IlHrenu, In Hu* sjr Walter Hotel. Haleigh. JJan. 11.—A shorter ses of the North Carolina legislature prospect as a result of action akf*n by the Senate Rules Commit inquiring a twothirds majority otc by the Senate as a whole be "ti « bin reported unfavorably by H committee can be placed on the ' 'deodar. Hy taking this step the Senate has ' bowed the lead of the lower house. many sessions the House has re. I; ll( :d the two-thirds majority. How (he Senate went the House one (Continued on Page Pour) Hrttitersnn Batin iHsmttrh DAIL\ NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. * LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Social Insurance Measures Given To General Assembly GEORGIA STRIKERS UNDER ARREST fcjHK «• vxMBaHS v v m, jHki ‘ & 1 "W * SSWrXT- fpf ■■ :<» - '• • > • 'JiNfo i§|| 'vNik JH ■ g& mvww'J® _ [fa waumg^mwT^y' pMW H h^^hlhhkhhS^l iw a jyg |j HHK■.' Ww ■ii’.mN i IIIIIHMM ifllflllllol jWtSCTn fP%| yHBB Protests by the United Federation of Hosiery Workers followed ar rest by national guardsmen of strikers at a hosiery mill in Ross ville. Ga.. where workers walked Broad Social Insurance Program Given Congress By President Roosevelt Brummitt Illness Is Still Critical Raleigh, .lan 11 (AlM—Attorney General Dennis G. Brummitt pass ed a very restless night last night and was exhausted this morning, hut otherwise his general condi tion remained unchanged. Dr. Carl Bell said after his call. Mr. Brum mitt continues in a critical condi tion with pneumonia, following in fluenza. iiif Tried, Convicted, Sentenced To Hang, But New Trial Had Been Given Franklinton, La.. Jan. 1L — ■ Jerome Wilson, 30-year-old Negio, convicted of the slaying of Delos • Wood, chief deputy criminal sheriff of Washington parish, was seized oy a moh of citizens early today shot o death in his cell, and his body was taken from the jail and dumpe on the road three miles north of ie (Cmitluued on Paffe Two) HENDERSON, N. C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 11, 1935 1 out when wages were reduced. Top, strikers under arrest are fed in Atlanta armory. Below, strik ers being brought to the armory I from Rossville by guardsmen. Unemployment Insurance, Old Age Pensions and Public Health Aid Involved TO BE SUBMITTED THE COMING WEEK Special Consideration To Be Given States Which Under take Programs of Their Own Along Same jLine; Gold Suspension Before Court Washington. Jan. 11 (AP) —A broad social security legislative program was outlined to congressional leaders to day by President Roosevelt, provid ing for unemployment insurance, old age pensions and public health aid. Secretary Perkins, chairman of the President’s special committee on the security program, explained that di rect Federal grants were involved only in providing funds to states which have laws for care of the aged and indigent. The plan also would set up a Fed erally-sponsored old-age pension sys tem to be controlled and supported by states. Likewise the unemployment insur ance program is to he administered by states under Federal supervision. No direct Federal aid is involved. The secretary of labor said there (Uoutinned on Page Three) i BRIEF SESSION OF : LEGISLATURE HELD IN STATE CAPITAL Local Bills Only To Be Con sidered Tomorrow, Then Adjourn to Mon day Night MESSAGE tWILL BE PRINTED 3,000 Copies To Be Made Available; Senate Reso lutes for Mr. Brummitt’s Recovery from Pneumonia; Governor Asks Repeal of Toll Charges Raleigh, Jan. 11.—(AP)—Measures |to provide unemployment, old age ; and other social insurance, to limit divorces in North Carolina, to remove tolls from Eastern North Carolina bridges and to increase penalties im posed. on automobile drivers convict ed of drunken driving were introduc ed in the House today; The expected announcement of com mittee assignments did not mater ialize. Dr. R. Li. Carr, representative from Duplin, sent forward the unemploy ment insurance measure, which em bodied other social insurance feature? Unde r his bill, compensation would j be provided by the State to all work, ers, farmers and others who wish to work and cannot find jobs. All able, bodied, wiiling-to-work men would be compensated from the State treasury at the average local wage scale, with the minimum being $3 per week for all men over 18 years of age. plus $1 per week per dependent. For women workers, compensation would be pro vided for a period of eight weeks be fore and eight weeks agter child birth If a man is able to obtain part time work, he is to be compensated to the amount of the difference between wha.t he can earn and the minimum weekly compensation provided in the act. The funds are to be derived by the State and are to be dispersed by the State treaslurer. If additional taxa tion is needed, it is to he levied on inheritances, gifts and individual and corporation incomes in excess of $5,- 000 per year. Mandatory Road Terms. Representative Bryan, of Durham, (Continued on Page Two) driversTicense FIGHT IS STARIED Pitt Legislator Has Measure of Drastic Proportions In The House Daily Uisiiateh Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. By C. A. PAUL Raleigh. Jan. 11—The opening gun in the battle to establish a drivers’ license law for North Carolina was fired Thursday when Senator Arthur B. Corey, of Greenville, introduced such a bill. Corey thereby jumped the gun on Wake County’s Senator Carroll W. Weathers, who plans to introduce a similar measure. Complete control of automobile drivers would be placed in the hands of the highway patrol under Corey’s bill. No licenses would be issued to | any person under sixteen years of age. and applications for license from those under eighteen would require the signature of a parent, guardian. L or employer. Chauffeurs would have to be at least eighteen. Car owners would be liable for the operation of a ' vehicle by minors: Habitual drunkards, dope addicts, 1 and mental incompetents would not be licensed. Those released from hos s j FOR NORTH CAROLINA, Fair and colder tonight and I Saturday. » Assails Accuser wL : jjij JggZg David Friedlander (above), New York theater manager, describes Amandus Hocbmutch, octogenarian German-American who “put the finger” on Hauptmann as Jersey visitor day of Lindbergh kidnaping, as a former employe he discharged because he had “hallucinations.” (Central Press) LIME IS HERE FOR ~ STATE 10 MOVE ON, GOVERNOR ASSERTS Ask General Assembly To Raise Pay of Teachers and Employees of the State AGAINST DIVERSION OF HIGHWAY FUNDS Favors Drivers’ License for Motorists, and Recom mends Greater Financial Support for University and Other State Institutions of Learning Daily IJi*|»ai«'h Bureau, In (he Sjr Walter Hotel, HY .1. C. BASKBRVJL.I.. Raleigh, Jan. 11.—The time has come for North Carolina again to loosen up its purse strings, turn its back on the gloomy outlook that pre vailed in 1933, and provide more mon. ey for its essential activities, espe cially school teachers and State em ployes, whose salaries were so dras tically reduced by th e 1933 General Assembly, Governor J. C. B. Ehring haus told the present General Assem bly and the people of North Carolina in his message to the assembly last night. While agreeing that the schools must be more adequately provided for, especially the teachers, Gover nor Ehringhaus made it clear that n<* does not have any sympathy for those who see only bad in the present State supported eight months school plan and declared that in many respects the schools in North Carolina are as (Continued on Page Three) ROOSEVELT BUDGET HARO TO ANALYZE An Utterly Hopeless Under taking for Any Ordinary Individual By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, Jan. 11—For any ordi nary individual to try to analyze the Roosevelt administration’s budget program is a perfectly hopeless un dertaking. Experts may be able to compre hend it, but I doubt even that. President Roosevelt seems to un derstand it, and I think he does un derstand it to this extent: It appears to me to have been framed with a view to keeping the pot a-boiling, without boiling over, until the end of the 1935-36 fiscal year. By that time the next presidential / )H«' ii H niittit nn Parj JL’ill'SS) PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, Special Agent Os Government Tells Os Investigations Waiting to Testify * || JR/ ; mSr\ ,■ Millard Whited. Sourland Mountain neighbor of Col. Charles A. Lind bergh, as he appeared at the court house in Flemington, ready to tes tify that he saw Bruno Richard Hauptmann in New Jersey just be fore Itidnaping. (Central Press) GOVERNOR SCORES" SCHOOLSCRITfCISM Takes Slap at Those Putting Out Misleading Propa ganda in State CITES PROGRESS MADE Declares State at Least Kept Its Schools Going and Paid Its Teachers in Cash, Even If Low Salaries \ Dail.v llis|ia(i'h Bureau, In tlie Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKER VJJL.L, Raleigh. Jan. 11.—Declaring that “teachers’’ as well as other salaries are at much to low a level’’ and “that we need and must have a substantial increase in our appropriation for schools,” Governor Ehringhaus at thie: same time showed no patience for the critics of the present State-supported eight months school system and took them severely to task in his message to the General Assembly Thursday right. He also took a slap at those who have been putting out “mislead ing propaganda” about the eight months school system and declared (Continued on Page Four) Lethal Gas Death Plan Is Favored Dally Dispatch Bureau, Iu the Sjr Walter Hotel. Raleigh, Jan. 11 —A painless death in a lethal gas chamber awaits offen ders against North Carolina’s capital crime laws if Dr. Charles A. Peterson's pet bill successfully runs the gaunt let of 1935 General Assembly. Dr. Peterson, who represents Mit chell county in the lower house, came to Raleigh for the express purpose of abolishing the electric chair. He has ( IVinH4l n»il on Pay# Four) 6‘ PAGES , TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY Directed Preparation of Ransom Money That Was Paid For Lind bergh Child IDENTIFIES MONEY FOUND IN GARAGE Says Currency in Haupt mann’s Garage Was Part of Ransom Payment; Witness Forms Important Link in State’s Effort To Convict Hauptmann Flemington, N. J„ an. 11.—<AP)— A handwriting expert today named Bruno Richard Hauptmann as the writer of the 14 ransom note received by Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh after thei kidnaping of his 20-months-old batty. 1 he State struck two other im portant blows in its effort to send Hauptmann to the electric chair for murder. The defense scored when it estab lished that a slip signed “J. J. Faulk ner," which accompanied exchange of of $2,980 of the ransom money at the New York Federal Reserve Bank was not in Hauptman’s writing. Thr«s ignificance attached to this point by the defense was emphasized in its cross-questioning of Frank Wilson, special government investi gator. about the investigation of “J. J. Faulkner,” and about the subse. quent suicide of a man of that name” (Two days after the exchange of the ransom gold notes was disclosed, Jerome K. Faulkner, an advertising copy writer, plunged to his death from the top of the Chrysler building.) Wilson, who is chief of thd intel ligence department of the linited States Department of Internal Venue said he investigated several Faulkners, but could not trace --the man making the exchange. Identification of the handwriting on the, ransom note as that of Haupt mann was made by Albert S. Osborne, Sr., who examined both the notes and specimens of Hauptmanns handwrit ing made after his arrest. The State considers it one of its strongest pieces of testimony to link Hauptmann to the actual stealing and killing of the baby. Previous testi mony was concerned chiefly with identification of Hauptmann as the ransom receiver. The fi st ransom note was left on, the. window sill of the Lindbergh nur sery when the baby was taken and the State contends that the writer of thai note was the kidnaper and mur derer of the baby. It is contended Hauptman wrote that note. “How,” Attorney General David T. Wilentz, asked the expert Osborn© (Continued on Page Two) Fight Upon Long Grows 111 Louisiana Governor’s Resigna tion Denied, How ever; Long i Feigns Indifference New Orleans, La., Jan. 11.—(AP>— With Senator Huey P. Long in New York deriding his opponents, the Square Deal Association organized at Baton Rouge to fight his “dictator ship” spread today to the nieghboring parish of Iberville. A group of Claquemine citizens sig ned a call for a meeting tonight at 7:30 o’clock to form a parish group. Meanwhile, reports that Governor O. K. Allen had resigned were counted in official circles. Senator Long vigorously denied the reported resignation. Other officials likewise denied it. The Square Deal Asociation, at a meeting Wednesday night, talked or possible bloodshed unless Long’s die* tatorship is lifted Long, in New York, said he "wasn't a damn hit interested” in t.h L-'.-i'-G ana threats, , . ul
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Jan. 11, 1935, edition 1
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