Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / April 4, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON \TEVVAY TO CENTRA). CAROLINA rWENTY-SBCOND YEAR SENATE GROUP CUTS SALES TAX TO 2 PERCENT Big Work-Relief Bill SHU Deadlocked In Congress ' SENATE AND HOUSE MANAGERS UNABLE [0 COME TOGETHER ( nnferencc Lasting Over An Hour Breaks Up Abrupt ly With Glass An nouncement NKA is bombarded BY MORE ENEMIES Rf(nvny IJnil Is Step To rH Fascist Stale; Busi ness Leader Denounces Abolition of Holding Com paries; Wallace Yields Ground on the AAA \v *. 1 April 4. (AP)—fteiv *>» .i <l M managers of the tight l, • • .?V2?0.nOO.OOO work-relief I Pi Mure again today failed to jjgr. • i h ill for final passage. \ . .ii ••nee lasting just over an (.ipi hi >k up abruptly with Senator ( ,i - i'.'k, announcing "There is no c; renir 11 1 yet." :l ; Yiiginiun, despite optimistic 11 <■ 11 <i. in nthiM quarters that a ‘Pip:ninis* 1 would be effected, said he ■iut e.oi know wtirn the eon frees of !V (wo houses would meet again. To -1 ; i sslon wa held just 74 dav; *'?<■! the money measure was first in (rndueed. | T'ie unendment mirier dis- | ateomerjt would require spending on til- 1 ‘ woi k one third of the $(*>0,000.- i ■ i ;»I Ini") f* d to states. This was od r >-**<i i<\ tb*' administration and i (.i.nforeea were insisting on i i-w language. • F'\ wis bombarded with critic- j rn before the. Senate Finance Com- j rijHrf, V, v Lowell Mas'Ul. fOlf'T COUII - i t summer's Darrow review i ' " 1 ife termed the recovery unit II nnHnnerl on I’fltn Throe* llills lull Back Again ] ( f>on Floor Hall* r>l**i*nteh Bnrenn, In the Walter Hotel. —Apiii 4.—By tiie narrow flar £in cf one vote the much-dlscuss 3fi Hill liquor control bill will reach t> n floor of the Senate tomorrow for The Senate Finance Commit after only a few minutes of argu '»trr| ,s 7 to accord to the bill v % tii" treatment it bad received at ' r h and. r>f ihe Judiciary No. 1 "iin’ tvee. "without prejudice" re- P"r V '■'amendments were tacked t.o the h d it'-' ill reach the Senate just ‘‘ wa-. written. Senator Harriss •man chairman of the finance rr, mittep 1 1 jja series of amend > to iiffcr, hut will present them M> *• S‘M»»tp floor. His amendments d'nntlnued on Page Thriw* Newman Claims His Plan Will Get Needed Revenue ' 'll Be Sufficient I o Give teachers 25 Percent Increase Years, Senate Finance Chair,man Says; Divi dends and Highway Money To Get It Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sfr Walter Hotel, BY O. HASKERVILL,* -igh. Apiii 4.—Ther evenue bill )" o id** enough revenue t<* grant P' i c* nl. increase in salaries for x"d I "ichors, principals and all employes for both years of the 1 mum. itiste;w| of the 20 per cent ‘ > w the first year and the 25 per 1 inn - «.se the second, if the Sen ; ud House will adopt the bill as "<i by the Senate Finance Com- Senator Harriss Newman, m* ii,,n) of the committee, said to- He a iso said he hopes ro have Ttntftrrsmt Bailn Btapatrli ONI,Y DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIrSnIA. * w fH® SERVICE OF THBJ ASSOCIATED PRESS. On Way to Death at Beginning of Life WMm mm. % iIiTW *v. 4Mo***p*'*■'s' ' ir* At the age when other youths are beginning their lives as citizens, those four boys ere traveling th§ last mile to death. Enrico Angelino (left to right), 20; Ray Orley, 21; Newman Raymond, 21, and r nomas Gilbnde, 20, tried the easy road when they came to New York from small towns. In their 22nd holdup, one of them shot a policeman; now all are to die in Sing Sing, where they are seen being taken, lireir cumbiued iiijauees at the end of their criminal career* totaled $3.21. (Central Pres») Government Tactics Are Responsible For Cotton Paralysis, Gardner Says Delay in Announcing 1935 Loan Value for Staple De« nounced by Former Governor SAYS BUYERS FEAR PRESENT CONDITION Not Going Into Market Ini Face of F'ossibile Later Sharp Declines; Says State ment from Government Would jStabiHze Confi dence of Public Washington, April 4—-(AP) —O. Max Gardner, former governor of North Carolina, today blamed tiie govern ment's delay in announcing the 1935 loan value of .cotton for what he de scribed as the "state of complete paralysis” in the cotton industry. He said buyers were not going into the market for fear present prices ba.sed upon the 1934 loan values of 12 cents a pound on cotton may be lower than in the season. "The trade does not want to buy cotton goods based on a 12-cent value when there is some doubt this value may not be continued,” Gardner de clared. "If the government, would make a definite announcement re garding the 1935 loan value, it would have the effect of stabilizing the con fidence o) the public and the trade that cotton will not sell for less in the fall than it is now.’’ tiie bill in shape so that the Senate can start consideration of it by to morrow unless somt unforseen diffi culties arise. "If the Senate will retain tiie tax on dividends from domestic corpora tions, as written into tiie bill by the joint, finance committee and adopted by the House, the retention of which I favor, and also agree to divert sl,- 630,000 a year from tiie highway fund or $630,000 a year more than the bill now proposes to divert, the revenue bill will yield enough to grant a. 25 (Continued on Pas« Two.) HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 4, 1935 U. S. Won’t Start World Navy Race Washington, April 4.—(AP)—-‘‘lf a naval building race is started,” tays the T3-year old boss of Unde Sam’s floating defenses, "It will be started by other nations* not by us." This emphatic emphasis of Am erican intentions not to start the tiling which mam have said might result If a new naval treaty is not reached to replace the one Japan has denounced, effective December 3J, 1936, comes from .Secretary of the Navy Ulaude A. Swanson. Will Hake Income Tax Sclied tiles Inheritances Also In cluded in Proposal To Remove Most Exemptions Dally Dispatch Bureau, Iji the Sir Walter Hotel. By C. A. PAUL Ralsigh, April 4.—Two State tors will propose drastic changes in the inheritance and income tax sec tions of the North Carolina revenue act when the current revenue bill reaches the floor of the Senate for debate. They will propose: (1) That all in come. beyond the existing exemptions which include SI,OOO for single per sons, $2,000 for married men. S2OO for each child and so on, be taxed at a flat rate of six per cent; (2) That the present exemption of 15 per cent of net income which is donated to charit (CnnHnueirt on Page Three! EDWIN R. OVERTON, 77, IS DEAD AT SALISBURY Salisbury, April 4.—(AP) —Edwin R. Overman, 77, brother of the late U. S. Senator Lee S. Overman, and re tired merchant died at his home here this morning. He had been in ill health for several years. Funeral services will be held at the home Friday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock, with burial in Chestnut Hill cemetery here. M’DONALD LETTER FORGES IN STATE “Who Doubled - Crossed Who” Is Basis for Argu ment After Bryant Made Exposure | WARREN, ERWIN AND DANIEL GIVE ALIBI T hey ATI Deny Furnishing Appropriations Chairman With Evidence That Some Think Defeated $22,000,- 000 F mid for Schools for I vro Years Daily Dispatch Barents, In toe Sir Walter Hotel, B ¥ J. C. IiASKEItVILL. Raleigh. April 4 —The school forces are split wide open, with State Super intendent, Clyde A, Erwin. Secretary Jule Warren and other big-wigs of the North Carolina Education Asso ciation on one side of the fence and with Dr. Ralph McDonald, represen tative from Forsyth countyT most of the classroom teachers am. most of the more progressive county and city superintendents on the other. The cause of the split is how the letter written by Dr. McDonald to the va? ious superintendents of the State, in which he urged them to support the move for a school appropriation of $25,000,000 a year for schools in stead of only $22,000,000 a year as advocated by Superintendent Erwin and th° North Carolina Education Association, got into the hands of Victor S. Bryant, of Durham, chair- I Pnntln upd Ori Pflfp Fmir- ) Two Men Stabbed In Textile Strike At Oklahoma Mill Sand Springs, Okla., April 4.—(AP) —Two men were stabbed and several others injured today as strikers and workers fought at the Commander Textile Mills here. The battle was brief and ended be fore officers arrived, but the oppos ing lines of men and women armed with clubs and other weapons still were standing in the road in front of the mills. Charges that the mill had violated a contract recently signed with the union were made by union members, who would not elaborate. “WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Cloudy, preceded by rain in east and north central portions early tonight; Friday partly cloudy; slightly colder on the north coast and in extreme west portions to night; slightly warmer in west mui central portions Friday, Europe Is Divided Over Proposal For Maintaining Peace France is To Seek Agree ment To Frighten Ger many by Presenting United Front GERMANY UNLIKELY TO BE TRAPPED NOW Not Expected To Join: Pam European Accord; Britain Against Forging “Iron Ring” Around Reich; Rus= sia and Poland Favor East ern Locarno. (By the Associated Press.) Conflicting views on the best me thod of guaranteeing Europeon peace were apparent in the capitals of Eu lopc today as statesmen made ready for the forthcoming conference of the powers at Streasa April IJ. High French sources disclosed For eign Minister Pierre Laval will seek a double-barrelled agreement, design ed to frighten Germany by creation of a formidable united Front among France, Great Britain and Italy, at the same time laying the basis for a general security pact to which the Reich should adhere, German participation in a pan-Eu ropean scheme, however, was describ ed as unlikely by a Reich foreign of fice spokesman. This source asserted Reiclifuehrer Hitler's preference is for crisp bi-lateral agreements, clear ly defining the obligation of the sig natories. The attitude.of Great Britain-, which repeatedly has indicated its lack of sympathy for any system designed to forge "an iron ring" about Germany remained uncertain in the light of latest developments. French however, expressed the view the Bri tish course would be clarified in the course of the Stresa conversations. Premier Mussolini, host to the con ference, lias let it be known through his newspaper that Italy’s attitude is that Stresa marks the renunciation of the "dangerous Utopias of disarma ment." Soviet and Polish interest centers (Continued on Page Two) Relief Load In Ihe State Is Declining "Washington, April 4.—(AP) —A 4.5 percent decline in the number of families on relief in North Car olina in February was shown to day in a report by the Federal Emergency Relief Administration. Obligations incurred for relief were reduced 17.9 per cent, or from $1,751,295 in January to sl,- 347,206 in February. The number of families on re lief in February was placed at 65,640. as compared with 68,698 in January. Sheriff And Miner Killed During Riots Gallup. N. M. April 4.—(AP) —Sher- iff M. R. Carmichael ana an unem ployed coal miner were shot to death and five persons, including one wom an, were wounded today a street riot precipitated by a shouting crowd of more than 300. Disorder flame*! when a crowd rush ed sheriff's deputies, removing pri soners from a hearing in a justiefc of the peace court growing ou\ of an eviction case. The jobless man slain was identi fied as Ignacio Velarde, 37, a World War veteran. Deputy Sheriff B. W. Roberts said either Velarde or another unemployed miner, shot Sheriff Carmichael thro ugh the head, and the deputy then opened fire and shot both men. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY Tells of Tax **Losses ? * ■■|x ■ > • •• . && • w “ v Y.' > S f . •; | | Andrew W. Mellon Leaving a hearing of the federal tax appeals board in Pittsburgh, where he testified he sold certain stocks ir. 1931 to establish $5,- 600,000 losses for income tax de ductions, Andrew W. Mellon, ont of the wealthiest men in the world, is pictured above. The hearing is on a charge of income tax evasion in 1931 when Mellon paid $047,- 000. The government sets $3.- 089,000 as the sum due. Reilly Says More Faets Are In Hand Defense Chi e f in Hauptmann Case Fired Just As New Trial Is Sought New York, April 4.—(AP) —Edward J. Reilly today received notice of his dismissal as chief of defense counsel for Bruno Richard Hauptmann, and said the action came "just when we were going to make application for a new trial, based on new evidence.” Reilly, who headed the unsuccess ful defense in the trial of the maw charged with the kidnaping and mur der of the Lindbergh baby, said the new evidence would be the testimony of several persons -willing to say that they had seen a strange automobile loitering in the vicinity of the Lind (Continued on Page Two 4 Perquimans Camp Scene Os Uprising By State Convicts Elizabeth City, April 4.—(AP) —Fif- teen Negro convicts at Woodville pri son cgmp near here, in Perquimans county, were still in revolt this morn ing after two of their number had been wounded and a third had been overcome by tear gas thrown into the cell blocks they occupy in aeffort to quell the uprising. Beginning last nigi.t, th* it It broke out this morning ant. continued as the prisoners refused to i< rt.”*. the iff 12 it today I TWO SECTIONS. I FIVE CENTS COPY ABOUT 13,800,000 iS REMOVED FROM REVENUE MEASURE Dividend lax Also Remov ed, But Committee Re tains Chain Filling Station Levy ATTORNEY GENERAL CUMMINGS SPEAKER Tells of Efficiency of Crime Detection Agency In Wash ington; Lauds Biggs and McLean; Frink Denounces Page’s ‘Damnable Bills” From Bladen Raleigh, April 4—(AP)—The Sen ate Finance Committee this morning by a vote of 9 to 7. reduced" the pro posed retail sales fax rate in the bien nial revenue bill from three to two percent. The committee also struck out a new taxing provision io levy normal income taxes on dividends from stock of corporations, but refused to eli minate the new tax proposed for chain filling stations. A motion was made to report the bill out to the Senate in its amended form, and this was discussed for 45 minutes, after which the committee recessed to meet again (his afternoon. T< took the committee just about twb minutes to reduce the sales tax rate and eliminate the dividend ik*. knocking something like $3,800,000 in estimated revenue from the measure. ’ The action was in marked contrast to tiie attitude tlie committee took yesterday, when it wrote s'924,®Cf(Vl additional taxes into the measure Im.) eliminating exemptions of cdn.ttHbuL :i; tions from taxable incomes and ap- - plied a three percent, sales t6* to ' gasoline sales to increase highway fund diversion from sl,ooo.oot> tb sl,- 630,000 yearly. . The elgislators met In joiiit aes-r sion to hear Attorney General Homer S. Cummings. Cummings, who devot ed himself to an extemporaneous dis cussion of tiie work of his depart (ContlniiMi on Pupo Tmni Old Electric Chair To Go; Kill By Gas Oally Dtapnteh Bureau, In the S|r Winter Hotel. By C. A. PAUL Raleigh April 4.—North Carolina's 25-year-old electric chair is on its way to the junk pile. In its stead will be erected aiethal gas chamber, where violators of the: State’s capital crime laws will be put to death at a cost of 90 cents each. A preliminary sur vey of senatorial sentiment reveals practically no opposition to the bill which has already passed the lower house. Rejected finally after being accepted once was the amendment by Bladen county’s Representative Page which would have caused the gas chamber to be built on wheels and propelled from county to county so that those paying the death penalty (Onnllniiwl on Pae« Thw> cell block in the order in which Cap tain J. M. Tolar, superintendent of the prison camp, demands. Captain Toler ordered them to leave two abreast. He is afraid that, if permitted to leave: altogether, more trouble i» ii re sult. A request > r mure te. -.os been sent to TV boro. .S)i« > .t.s XContiaa i cn P . .. 0,
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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April 4, 1935, edition 1
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