Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / April 29, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON GATEWAY to CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-SECOND YEAR SENATORS MOVE TO RUSH R 0 0 SEVELfPROGRAM Commons Is Told Germany lias Placed Orders For 12 Huge New Submarine Craft BERLIN CONCEDES WORK STARTED ON WAT PROTECTS Whether Construction Is Under Way, or Held Up Pending Naval Talks, Uncertain ;1R JOHN SIMON’S STATEMENTS VAGUE British Foreign Secretary In sists On Not Being Pressed Fcr Details of Govern ment's Knowledge of Situ ation: May Again Resort to League London April 29.—(AP) —Sir John Simon, Biitish foreign secretary. told rh» HoU'f? of Commons today: The German government has In timated that orders have been given for construction of 12 submarines of 250 tons each This matter now is un der consideration.” Although S John did not amplify this statement it wa3 definitly stated ir. other quarters that the Grman con struction was understood to have been undr way tor some time. The foreign secretary said the gov ernment was considering the "legal ity of the German submarine dis closures, hut had not yet. determined whether it should protest to the Lea gue of Nations. . He did not reply to questions as to whether it was proposed to go on with conversations between Great Britain and Germany.” I ought not be pressed to give a further answer today.” said Sir John, under questioning. One* of the questions was -whether the government would take immediate stops to bring notice of thi3 further violation of the Versailles treaty to th c League of Nations. Sir John revealed that the govern information regarding the 12 submarines was dated April 25. He H’onUniian on Thf«*.) Negro Desperado Gang Chief Taken Near Fayetteville FayeUe'-ille. April 29.—(AP)—Theo dc:e Coleman, escaped convict and reputed Wrier ryf a band of Negro 'Wperadoes, who have been commit ,r g a «eries of hold-ups and ware ' use robberies in this section, was C-Cured this mealing in Hoke and -• r* county deputies after officers "I blasted an attempted store rob v at Aberdeen with a barrage of buckshot.. Gilman is wanted in Robeson rfl ' ln,v on a charge of murder, alleg having slain a member of his ' n ?ar>g in a filling station robbery. Crisis Grips Illinois For Relief Need t E rnployees Directing Aid To 620,000 Per sons Fired as Funds Are Exhausted 7uu h<Ca> ' 0 A P rll 29 (APW—'With the S crisis growing hourly pis ♦ '“rnployees administering §4 t 0 *20,000 persons in 101 down f:ounties were fired today, ef tomorrow. r*.u« from the Illinois emergency St ‘„ t commission, which heads United mum 8 , rf ' lief activities in the State, ncd its workers they would not Mcded after the close of business TLiitlnued on Page FourJ Hpjtiteranit D atht Hisuatrli _ ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. ■ SERVICE OF IHB ASSOCIATED PRESS. Textile Group’s Effort To Reopen Whole Tariff Issue Blocked In House Assails Radio Fries* fiaHHHRRT i M&feft.- . * —<*>*s! -Jj *v . ■&-a|||| i Senator Josiah Bailey Climaxing an all-day filibuster in the senate against the Costigan-, Wagner anti-lynching bill, Sena tor Josiah Bailey, North Caro lina Democrat, accused the Rev, Charles E. Coughlin, by implica tion, of sponsoring the bill and, in a bitter denunciation of the radio priest, charged him with “fomenting revolution” and threatening to “snatch the halo from his brow.” Housing T o Start Early In 16 Cities Roosevelt Gets List Where $100,000,000 Can Be Put Out By Mid-August Washington, April 29 (AP)—Presi dent Roosevelt received a report to day that work could be started soon in 16 cities on proposed low cost housing projects under the $400,000.- 000 program. Secretary Ickes, public works ad ministrator, and Horatio B. Hackett, director of housing in the PWA, listed the following cities Boston, New York, Buffalo, Atlan (lVtnHniioii on Pajp Thr«n» C 0M 0N COAST GUARD Action At Beaufort One of First on Record; Death Due to Wreck Beaufort, April 29. —(AP) —One com plaint, one of the first in history in volving a North Carolina Coast Guard station, was lodged against the Cape Lookout unt here today by the mas ter and owner of the pleasure boar, Miss Gattis, which was wrecked near the cape April 21. The sworn statement, charging lax ness in duty, was being attested be fore the clerk of superior court al most simultaneously witn the funeral l (Ccufciuusd on Pago Fcar) HENDERSON, N. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 29, 1935, Regular Democrats on Ways and Means Committee Prevent Sub-Com mittee Study MAINE DELEGATION SEEKS QUICK HELP Continuity of Textile Indus try There Depends on Re storation of Profitable Ope ration Immediately, Gov ernor Brann Tells Cabinet Committee Washington, April 29. —(AP) — Re gular Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee today blocked attempts of those interested in cotton textiles to reopen the whole tariff schedule at this session of Congress. The came soon after the Presi dent’s cabinet committee, studying the whole cotton textile situation, heard an appeal from Maine for immediate assistance. It had 'been proposed that a sub committee of the ways and means committee be named to study the ques tjon. of imports, particularly with re ference to cotton textiles. - ■ On almost a completely’.partisan vote, the committee postponed inde finitely further study of imports. QUICK ASSISTANCE ASKED BY MAINE’S DELEGATION Washington, April 29.—(AP)— Tn*» President’s cabinet committee study ing the cotton situation today heard (Continued on l*n.ge Three) F. D. R. Secretary To Attend Dinner Southern Council Washington, April 29.—(AP)—John E. Edgerton, president of the South ern States Industrial Council, an nounced today Marvin Mclntyre, sec retary to President Roosevelt, will at tend the Council banquet tonight with about 500 southern industralists and 100 members of Congress. The principal address of the assem. bly will be broadcast ov«_r the Dixie network of the Columbia system be ginning at 8 p. m., eastern standard time. Mclntyre has been thrown recently into intimate contact with the South. He was the President’s unofficial ob server at the cotton manufacturers’ convention in Augusta last week. Group Seeks Third Party But More Liberal Minority Refuses to Go Along With That Program Des Moines, lowa. April 29 (AP) — The National Farmers Holiday Asso ciation was definitely on record to iday in favor of a third political party, but a minority group rejected the proposal, saying such a party would be “only another capitalistic organi zation Formation of a new national politi cal party “expressing the desires of farmers and laborers,” was advocated by the Holiday group in resolutions adopted at the close yesterday of its annual convention. The action was ♦ alien in the face of a speech before {Contfsuod an Page Fqo&2 in Mass Attack on Cotton Problem it. convention and raw cotton export situation*, prepared to give hearings in’ ittee named to study the textile Rhode I sland, North Carolina, South Carolina, New York CottonTextiwJ^tn+^n 86 ** 1 11® 1 ™ 68 from Maine . New England Council. These are headedby GovZZrl L J .£*»„ Code and Island. Rep. A. L. Bulwinkle. Sen. J. F. Byrne* G H Dor?, and Geo«f H “ d Rh ° d * (Central Press) LEGISLATORS FACE THE COMING WEEK House to Lass Revenue on Final Reading As Both Groups Meet At Two O’clock SPENDING MEASURE REMAINS IN SENATE Hill Liquor Bill Will Likely Be Replaced by Day Plan Already Passed by House; Register of Deeds Bill Ex pected to Be Beaten in Senate. Daily Dispatch Bnrcsa, In the Sir Walter Hotel, By C. A. PAUL Raleigh, April 29. —Important issues are at stake as both houses of the legislature reconvene here this after noon at two o’clock. Before the low er house is the biennial revenue bill for its third reading. After rejecting the first conference report on the measure on Thursday, the House ac cepted it with only a minor change on Friday afternoon and passed it on second reading at an after-midnight session that night. Final passage this afternoon is conceded. The bill will then go to the Senate. Still before the Senate is the ap propriations bill which calls for the expenditure of more than $65,000,000 during the next two years beginning (Continued on Page Three) Would Prefer Roosevelt To A Mills, A Hoover Or A Fletcher Washington, April 29.—(AP)—Sena tor Nye, Republican, North Dakota, said today he would prefer to vote for President Roosevelt in 1936 if the Republteans nominate “a Hoover, a Mills, a Fletcher or any one of that type ” The man who is directing the Sen ate Munitions Committee investiga tions gave his thoughts today in an interview. “Which of the available Republicans would you support?” he was asked. ♦Continued on .Page Three).,. “WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Cloudy, probably showers Iff east portion tonight and Tuesday • and in west portion tonight; some whatt colder Tuesday, Roosevelt Asks Nation To Help Make New Work Program Great Success Few Republicans Talk of Address Washington, April 29.—(AP)— Republicans geherally on Capitol Hill commented less readily today than Democrats on President Roosevelt’s address to the nation ‘ la|;t night. One exception was Senator Borah, of Idaho, who said he was “very) favorably” impressed. Senate Vote On Liquor Is To Be Close Drys Can Block Day Bill Entirely If All Are Present When It Is Called. Daily Dispatch Durean, In the Sir Waiter Hotel. By C. A. PAUL Raleigh, April 29.—Senate liberals will have to resort to strategy to get the Day liquor control past the dry barrier. Despite the fact that legisla tive sentiment is wetter than it was several weeks ago the Senate, if all 50 members should vote, would kill the liquor bill. According to a survey of opinion, there are at least 26 senators who are avowed drys. Unless some of them re absent or can be induced to change their minds the Day bill can not pass Passed by the House last week the Bill is now in the hands of Senate Judiciary Committee No. 2, which is the same committee which first con sidered the Hill bill. The committee is not very wet: the best the liberals (Continued on Page Fom) ARREST RESULT OF AMBASSADOR’S CALL Boston, Mass., April 29.—(AP) A Boston policeman who “didn’t like the looks of a spectator at the State House today during the visit of Au gusto Rossi, Italian ambassador to the United States arrested the man and took him to police headquarters. A knife was found in the pocket of the man’s overcoat, but the officer. Detective Charles Perelli, later stated r.o actual attempt was made on t'--= aashasssidoPs • • , , .. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTBRNOOE EXCEPT SUNDAY* Wants It To Be Cleanest and Most Efficient Example i * of Enterprise in World WOULD GET IT iU FULL SWING SOON President Strikes High Note of Optimism In Fireside Chat Over Radio Sunday ! Night; Answers Critics Who Say Administration Plan Is Confused Washington, April 29.—(AP) —After appealing to all Americans to help make the $4,880,000,000 work-relief drive “the most efficient and clean-! est example of public enterprise the world has ever seen,” President Roose velt sought today to get the vast un. dertaking "in full swing by autumn.” Meanwhile, Congress faced the pros pect of a prolonged session extending well into the hot summer. The Presi dent, in the “fireside chat” last night in which he outlined his work-relief program had called for action on such controversial issues «*s social se curity. extension of NRA, banking and utility holding company legislation. His remarks on works and legisla tion were regarded today as two sal ient portions of the address. Another was the note of optimism the Presi dent struck as he sat before the mi (Continued on Page Three) Part Win By Foes Os Diversion Dally D!apatc£ Buena, In the Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh, April 29. —The anti-diver sionists, who have opposed the fur ther diversion of highway funds to the general fund, have both lost and won. For while they lost their fight against the further diversion of from $630,000 to $790,000 a year from the highway fund to the general fund, in addition to the $1,000,000 diverted tti the revenue bill as it passed the House they did win some important conces sions from the conference committee. For as the section calling for the dl. version of the additional amount was re-written by the committee, provision is made that none of this additional amount shall be diverted. 1. If it will any way endartger grania 6 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY LEADERS TRY HARD LEGISLATIVE MILL NRA, Social Security And Other Big Administrative Measures Are Be ing Held Back ANTI-LYNCH BILL BLAMED FOR HALT Meanwhile, House Begins Work on Bank Bill Roose* velt Said He Wanted This Session; Business Leaders Cheered By Optimism Voiced by President Washington, April 29 (AP)—Urged by President Roosevelt to enact his full “reconstruction” program, con gressional leaders strove mightly to day to berak the legislative jam that is holding back NRA, social security and other big administration meas ures in the Senate. The Senate Democratic steering committee was summoned into an ex traordinary meeting to canvass pos sible strength behind a motion to side track the controversial anti-lynching bill. This has caused the present snarl. Southern senators warned a summer-long filibuster, if necessary, to defeat the measure. Meanwhile, the House bgan ae&ate on the omnibus banking bill' •, by the President last night as tion he wants this session. \ -ug,. Business leaders, noting. Mr. Roose velt’s optimism over recovery spects, met today at th£ annual Vniidtit ing of the Chamber of dbrrrnqe rjse. : of the United States, ready td' iTk' tbi* much of the administration's”'pfbjj gram, particularly antl-hpldlng cdih-‘ pany legislation, be abandoned.. . j;' Speaker B T7 rns prfedicted men today that "considerable sion” would be provokfed ‘!(4ff tflpj House by the utilities hordingJjom-' pany bill if it contains the provision for abolition of all Such Corti panics. Senate Bill Would Divides NRA Function Washington, April 29. —(AP)— A proposal to sjbolish NRA and turn a portion of its authority over to the Federal Trade Com mission and the Labor Depart ment was introduced In the Sen ate today by Senator King, Demo crat, Utah The Utah senaltor, one of the leading Senate critics of NRA, of fered the bill as a substitute for the administration measure to ex tend the recovery law for two years. "f He proposed to give to the Trade Commission jurisdiction over fair trade practices, and su pervision over hours wages to the Labor Department. Dictatorial Trend Seen As Evident Washington to Be come Autocratic Toward States When Congress Leaves. ' ■ ■ « —w By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Staff Writer . Washington, April 29.—Many prop hets look for more trouble, between Washington officialdom and exe • rtive authority in a number of the states, after Congress’ adjournment inan is likely to develop while the nauo.vJ. lawmakers are still asseiii i■_ * ir. v :a capital. Congress, in session, i:; 'omit-ring of a restraining influx • t:q (Ccnttoesd c~ ” L
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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April 29, 1935, edition 1
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