HENDERSON GATEWAY TO central CAROLINA twenty-second year SENATE BEATS BONUS, 40-54 5/a: Fliers Peris h As Naval Plane Crashes In Naval Maneuvers' FIBNKUN COUNTY MIGHT BE USED BY ORYSIO TEST ACT Kiirgrss (Quoted As Admit ijjic New Laws Have Crea ted Bad Situation in Ihe State pKI .sr.NT LAWS ARE NOT SATISFACTORY One Reason Drys Will Not l ight in Each of 16 Voting Counties Is Said to Be That They Would Really Like to See l iquor Control in Prac tice. Iliitlr IH«|inlcli Rertnt, In (he S|r Wnlter Hitlrl, i" ... V. n ASKEIIVILL. njlpisli Mhv 23.—The dry forces h.-Migpd their plans for combat ting Hi*- new liquor laws recently pass nl I v ihr General Assembly and in ;-trail "i -.Peking an injunction in each *f Hi*- IS conn ties as they call elec tion* I** vole on whether or not they wit: coni inue under the present State |i liihition law or set up county liquor •a.res and county liquor control plans will seek to obtain an injunction in mily on*' county, it. was learned here today While Cale K. Burgess, chief political diategist and campaign man a£Pi foi the United Dry forces, con tiinip. to refuse to make any state, men! as t<> his plans, it was learned today) that he told one of his friends "informally” that the drys had decided to seek an injunction In only one county, probably Franklin county, which adjoins Wake, and that no move would he made to stop the elec tions that have been or will he called in the other counties. It is uttdeistood that a conference was held bet ween Burgess and several others here Tuesday, including 1 at (Continued on Paee Bight.) Infant Paralysis ‘ Cases Climb to 13 I liroughout State Ralrtrh. May 23 (A.P)—Known • os of infantile paralysis in North f, aralina rose t*> 13 today as the State Roaid of Health received a report of a ■second case in Pitt county. Declaring that he continued to hold little fear of an epidemic, Dr. J. C. Knox, State ••pidemiologist, neverthe less, urged physicians to which care less, urged physicians to watch care forward their report to the health of* hen the moment it is dignosed. ID MQNEYMUST LIFE RELIEF LOAD Labor Now On Relief Gets IVference on Highway, f Tossing Jobs. Dully Dispatch Hareni, In (he SI- Wnlter Hotel. R aklth May 23.—While no official Duidiony have yet been received f, orn Washington with regard to the P *penditure of the $9,500,000 allotted u> Carolina for new highway 1 f, nstruction and grade crossing eli "nnafion, it has been learned that 90 i ' I cent ~f workers employed on these T'M'ct must, be taken from the local ®mrt£f>, w .y relief polls, Chairman 1 apus M Waynick. of the State High and Public Works Commission, y "' hxlay. Rut so far no definite in fl uctimic. ha ve 'been received with re c;"d l*> w„ge scales and other details. I ‘ !f this $9,500,000 must he spent crossing elimination and I J lf for now highway construction. 'hahman Waynick believes that r ' r "t ually the President will allot an ad'litiona.i $300,000,000 from the new billion dollar relief fund, and , ""t of this next allotment North "olina will get at least $7,000,000 T ' l ' l " f oi road construction and the 'haration of highway and railroad guifjo crossings. 1 11 -ferns evident that the reason Part of this fund was alloted at " time was to see how rapidly the M| ' ,,Us slate highway departments '' 111,1 get, into action and how fast " >' • "'•ld absorb relief labor on hign " 'V and grade crossing elimination (Continued ou Page Two,), japnJiprßnn Datlu tli snatch ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VimNlA. * 'CiM mm • *:•-,■ .aSBiiBW 1 s | MmMw n N ' A new view of the White House kitchen, with insets of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nesbitt, in charge Because they know President Roosevelt's diet so well, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nesbitt, aeigh- Steel Launches An Attack On Closed Shop, Wagner Bill New York, May 23 <AP) —Leaders of the steel industry launched a con certed attack on the closed shop, labor union activity and the Wagner bill at the 44th general meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute today. ’ “We. stand squarely for the open shop,’” declared Eugene G. Grace, president of the slhstitute, and in his keynote address. Grace called the Wagner hill “Vi April Auto Deaths Are Year's Low 72 Fatalities Fewest in 1935, Despite In crease in Number of Vehicles. Iw the Sir Walter Hotel. Dally Diiuatck Bureas, BY J. C. nASKERVILL. Raleigh, May 23.—Automobile acci-’ dents killed 72 persons and injured 492 in North Carolina in April, accord ing to figures released today by Di rector L. S. Harris of the motor ve hicle bureau of the Department of Revenue. There were 367 different ac cidents in which persons* were killed or injured. T\vSz figures bring the total in the first four months of this year to 322 killed and 1.937 injured, as compared wlCh 257 killed and 1,658 injured dur ing the first four months of 1934. This is an increase of 65 in the number killed and of almost 300 in the num ber injured. The number of persons killed and injured and the number of accidents for each month from January through April, in tabulated form, is: No. of ac- Kiiled injured cidents January 90 506 363 February 77 482 375 March ~ 83 457 385 April 1 72 492 367 Totals 322 1,937 1,390 Fewer persons were killed in April (Continued on Page Five) REYNOLDS FORTUNE ARGUMENT IS HEARD Raleigh, May 23 (AP) —The vali dity of a family agreement for di vision of tlie $28,000,000 estate of the late Zachary Smith Reynolds, of Winston-Salem, was in turn at tacked and defended before the North Carolina Supreme Court to day and the oral appeal arguments will continue tomorrow. ljdasbd wire service of the associated press. OLD NEIGHBORS WATCH PRESIDENT’S FOOD HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 23, 1935 I bors at Hyde Park, N. Y., are in charge of the culinary department | at the White House. A new view clous.” T. M. Girdler. chairman and president of the Republic Steel Cor poration, termed it “the outstanding legislative monkey wrench which to day theratens to jam the wheels of recovery.” “Busihess is ready to?go forward,” said Gr&ce. “It : is being K&ited by un due emphasis on reform; unsound, biased and ; perhaps.: even Unconstitu tional legislative proposals; political maneuvering, unrestrained public ex Justice Clarkson Has An Operation Charlotte, May 23 (AP)—Asso ciate Justice Heriot Clarkson, of the North Carolina Supreme Court, underwent- an operation today at St. Peter's hospital here. Francis O. Clarkson, liis son, said Justice Clarkson withstood the operation very well and is getting along nicely. “His physicians tell us tlie opera tion was in every way a, success,” he said. The operation was to correct an ailment from which Justice Clark n had suffered for months. LIGGETT & MYF.RS Durham Factory Notifies Regional Board It Will Comply With Act Atlanta, Ga... iMlay 23.—-(AP) —The regional labor board today was ad vised by the Liggett and Myers To bacco Company plant at Durham, N. C., that it would comply with the col lective bargaining provisions of the national recovery act. Tlie plant, which employes about. 4,- 000 workers, had ibeer cited by the board for having refuses to bargain with a committee representing Ciga rette Makers Union No. 176. Frank E. Coffee, director of the re gional board, today announced the company's decision. < BEAUFORT TO VOTE ON LIQUOR JUNE 29 Washington, N. C., May 23.—(AP) — The Beautfort county commissioners today called an election for June 29 on the question of legalizing sale of liquor in the county. “WEATHER" Local thundershowers this aft ernoon or tonight; sii.Jitly cooler • tonight; Friday generally) fair; cooler in east portioioiL —one of Hie few ever obtained—* of the kitchen in 1>« executive mansion is shown. penditures, currency tinkering and in creased tax burdens." He cited the record of the steel in dustry’s experience with employe rep resentation plans and said: “We know that this method of co operative collective dealing is better foi all parties concerned than is the old. worn-out idea of strikes and con flict with all of its attendant losses to the employe', the employer and the general, public.” Proposal Os See, Wallace Called Bunk New England Tex tile Leader Replies to Argument For Processing faxes Concord, N. H., May 23. —(APi—. John J. Riley, assistant secretary of the National Association of Cotton Manufacturers, believes Secretary Wallace's proposal to scrap the pro. cessing tax in return for abolition of the tariff has “a. little tinge of what is called bunk about it.” The tariff, which protects Amer ican industry, Riley today told the New Hampshire League of Women Voters, also guards the American far mer from "a blast of outside competi tion “that would stagger the most tugged agriculturalist. Riley listed numerous agricultural (Continued on Page Eight) Fresh Plea OfNRA By Coal Head Washington. May 23 (AP)—A final congressional showdown on the Fat man bonus bill neared today as the Senate debated whether that infla tionary cash payment measure should become law over the Roosevelt veto. The House, meanwhile, devoted it self to miscellaneous bills. Its ways and means committee heard a prediction from Eugene Mc- Cauliffe. president of the Union Pa cific Coal Company, that conditions tantamount to ‘'civil war” would be IQosiincid czi Fee® 2*1702 BIG PATROL PLANE LOST j™ GAME Crew of Giant Bomber Go to Deaths Without Know ing What Happen ed to Them TRAGEDY IS SOUTH OF MIDWAY ISLANDS Occurs 4,000 Miles From Pa cific Coast as Huge Craft Pauses To Seek Aid For Sister Ship Forced To Land on Rough Seas in Mid- Ocean Aboard Battleship Pennsylvania in MSd-Pacific Fleet Maneuvers, May 23. —(AP)—Six naval fliers on a mery flight were killed when their huge patrol plane crashed during the Unit ed States fleet maneuvers in mid. P acific. commanding officers revealed today aboard the flagship Pennsyl vania. The six aviators forming the crew of the seaplane 6P7 went to their deaths without knowing what happen ed, officers said, after shattered re mains of the craft had been picked up. The tragedy occurred Tuesday night but was not disclosed until today after all hope for the men’s lives had been albandoned. The victims’ and their home ad dresses : Lieutenant Harry A. Brandenburg er, 37, executive officer of the flight squadron, Belleville, 111. Lieutenant Charles Joseph Skelly, 30. San Fr.ancisco. P. C. Lits, aviation chief machinist mate, Ocean View, Va. Chief Radio Man F. M, Derry, Rochester, Mass. P. J. Pbfeau, aviation machinist mate, fiVst class, Wrentham, Mass. Q. A. Sharpe, aviation Machinist mate, third class, Heavaner, Okla. The tragedy brought the fatalities from the unprecedented maneuvers to eight, seven of whom died in airplane crashes. The eighth was killed in the (Continued on Pago Five) Speakeasy Murder Defense Rests In Wilmington Trial Wilmington, May 23. —(AP)—Coun- sel for James B. Lewis, charged joint, ly with Luther Har grove with the speakeasy murder of Cole G. Pridgen, local linotype operator, on the night of December 23, 1934, rested their case in superior court today. The defense of Hargrove, however, was continued with an effort to es tablish an alibi for the defendant. In his own defense, Lewis took the stand at the beginning of court this morning and denied any complications in the killing of Pridgen. He said he left the establishment early in the evening after Buddy Advant had fail ed to return with his car, which he had borrowed. He fixed the time (by saying that he looked at a building clock and then proceeded to a lunch room for supper, coblMb But Wants Reforms Out of the Way and Forgotten Before Campaign By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Staff Writer Washington, May 23.—Plenty of sen ators and representatives agree with General Counsel James A. Emery of the National Association of Mlanufac turers, Ex-President Henry J.. Harri mac of the United States Chamber of Commerce and other business spokes, men, who contend that economic re covery is being delayed by uncertainty concerning pending so-called "reform legislation”—that there would he an immediate brisk spurt if Congress would postpone “reform” until next winter and adjourn now. Politicians, however, have someth ing besides immediate recovery to think about. Considerations as to 1935’s election ((bnMnnjA nn Pw.*rg TVjiJ PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. ALTERNATE PLAN TO BE ADDED AS RIDER TO THE NAVAL BILL Will Resign '-Y . , r.' '''if~iifgiTaO l^rm'': ’ MHIH Wr 9B 1 ' ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO (WM>& WORLD) Ramsay MacDonald- SSldwii Oculist Warns British Prime Minister He Must Give Up Work To Save His Eyes GENERAL ELECTION PROBABLE IN FALL Baldwin Will Make Numer ous Cabinet Changes In Order To Present As Strong Front As Possible In Cam paign; MacDonald to Have Minor Office London, Miay 23. —(AP)—Political circles declared today the resignation of Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald and the elevation of Stanley Baldwin, lord president of the Council, to that post will take place not later than Whitsuntide, June 9. Sources close to the government said a general election will most likely take place in the early autumn. A new urgent warning by the prime minister’s oculist that he must not con tinue to subject his eyes to the strain inseparable from his office led to the widely circulated report that Mac- Donald’s resignation is imminent. It was believed that Me’Donald would remain in the govern set up, taking over Baldwin’s C> 1 pre sidency. A big shake-up of the cabinet under Baldwin, however, was forecast in or der to present the strongest combina tion possible in the coming elections. Board Will Advise On Relief Pay Washington, May 23 IAP) —Warned by union leaders that the work relief wages fived by President Roosevelt may lead to strikers, Harry L. Hop kins, works prpgress administrator, moved today to set up a board of bus iness and labor representatives to ad vise him on the problem. It was indicated that the board will be asked to make recommendations (Continued on Pee’e v.ip-ht) n*. B'pages8 'pages TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY Administration Musters More Strength Than Ex pected, With Margin of Eight Votes ROOSEVELT SILENT | ON HEARING RESULT Elsewhere White House Ex presses Gratification; Last- Minute Appeal for Bill Is Made by Borah, Who Says Country Needs Bigger Money Volume Washington, May 23 (AP) —The 'Senate today blocked enactment of the Patman inflationary bonus bill by refusing to pass.the legislation over President Roosevelt’s veto. The vote to override was The Senate originally passed th? Pat man bill 35 lo 33. The Yes terday voted to override the v(>to by 322 to 98 ]5 The Senate’s action killed the bill, zut opened the way for ’a new .plriv.e for similar legislation da'sh; t boSiis 1 forces were ready to of fst, an alter nate proposal as a ‘‘rider’* .to the pend ing naval appropriations bill.. President Roosevelt 1 Was having 4j meeting of the allotments boarH 1 wIEWIi the vote came. He was notified imirke diately, bui made no comment. Grati fication was expressed’ elsewherd ftt the White House. ,! '| M ’! hj, The vote came after the Sendte had listened to widely conflicting claims ranging from an assertion!* fcfrb -legis lation may “lead to ruin*? Another that it would he “good business” to pay off the obligations hoyr- Washington, May 23. —(AP)—As the Patman bonus bill supporters concert ed their campaign to override Presi dent Roosevelt’s veto was lost, barring last-minute changes, Senator Borah, Republican, Idaho, today urged the Senate to pass the $2,200,000,000 infla tionary measure. “I make no concealment, I offer no apology,” he said, “for the belief that, the country needs a larger volume of (Continued on Pago Two) Colonel Williams Found Guilty and To Be Discharged Washington, May 23.—CAP)— Col. onel Alexander E. Williams, former assistant quartermaster general of the army, was found guilty today by an army courtmartial and sentenced to be dismissed from the military service Colonel Williams was found guilty of soliciting and obtaining a loan of $2,000 in connection with War Depart ment contracts from representatives of ah' automobile tube concern and giving false testimony by denying the loan before a House committee. engDUlg RECRUITS IN AIR 2,500 New Pilots and 20,00 Q Workmen Wanted In New Aviation Race London, May 23.—(AP) — The air ministry opened a large recruiting of fice for the air force in downtown; London today as a Great Br.ta.in pushed her program to meet Ger many’s challenge with a three-foi* ex pansion of her home deft .se air strength. The ministry announced it V/, J s mak ing “most vigorous steps” -> eep abreast of the air force e-.jai ion plans. Ten other recruiting ti U * : i ;o be established in other .* if b g- and in Sootla*—» 1 . ~ . u Wales. Their purpose w r 4- .o» (Continued en ?z~z ITi'-'-T

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