Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / June 8, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON gateway TO central CAROLINA I TWENTY-SECOND year Senate May Block New NRA Bill If IIICS WARMING EMI y AND FAS! IN STATE CAMPAIGNS Mike I ’un.iiagan’s Entry In to Secretary of State Race Promises Add ed Interest newspaper man is fitted for office Has Had Very Close Politi cal Contacts; Hoey and Graham l eaders for Gov ernor; Free-for-All for Lieutenant-Governor Ap pears To Be In Prospect In S|r tVnlter Hotel. DflffT Dispatch Bnrcaa, BY .» C. nASKERVILL. P.iltigb. June B.—The political pot j« beginning to boil and bubble more actively as additional candidates get into 'he various races for the elec, tjve State offices There are now four candidates for the Democratic nom ination for governor, two candidates for !ieutenar\f governor and two for secretary of state, with half a dozen mo r P p respective candidates balanced cr (he brink of the political! pond waiting to dive in at the slightest en couragement. The most recent candidate to get into the running is Macon Rush Dun ogan, better known a3 “Mike." for the past eight years a free-lance news paper correspondent her*, w-ho tdday announced that he would be a can didate for the Democratic nomination for secretary of state in the primary r.»x f June, opposing the present sec retary of state. Stacey W. Wade, for re-nomination. It is expected that within a few days Thad A. Eure, of Raleigh and Winton. who has been principal clerk of the House in the last three sessions of the General As sembly, will also announce as a can didate for secretary of state. | Dunagan Is Surprise. Dunnagan's announcement today fame as something of a surprise, al though it has been known for a vear or more that he has been thinking o* becoming a candidate. It is agreed here that he has an unusually large acquaintance over the State both as a result of his long experience in fCnntlnued On Page Four.) Child Strangely Missing At Home In New York City New York June 8 (AP) —The moth er of five-vear-old John Kaul. who has been mising since Thursday night, said today she had received a myster ious telephone cal! that her boy was safe Mis Kaul .vour baby is safe." the caller told her "God bless you. Good bye " Mrs Kaul said the person called her at her home about 10 o’clock last night, speaking in a low voice like that of a 'crystal gazer such as you hear ever the radio and in the movies." Folice and telephone company offi cials were unable to trace the call, and both authorities and the dis traught mother were inclined to doubt its authenticity. Expressing fears that the njessage might have been the work of a crank. Mrs Kaul said: It may have been a peculiar per son who didn’t know a thing about the case." Insurance Men Name Officials Raleigh June 8 (AP)—'William DeR Scott of Graham, today was elected President of the North Carolina As sociation of Insurance Agents here as T. r - 38th annual convention of the organization ended. Scott was advanced from the vice presidency to succeed McAlister Car son. of Charlotte. Dan C. Boney, State insurance com mission, discussed new laws affect !p4, the insurance business, as the final session ended He said that in the ten years he had followed insur anee he had never seen a General As sembly that cooperated quite so thor oughly with the. agents association as that of 1935. Boney was introduced by President Carson as '‘the greatest insurance commissioner in the world.” W * LESUE perry MEMORIAL ÜBKAK! iicnitorsmt Datht B tapatrli DJCASBD WIRB BKRVICB OF THHJ ASBOCIATHD PRBBI. Three Bids Being Made to Be 49th State - _ „ % URITfeD STATES • g CC £ kT 9 Jp " T* okfe - Puerto Rico now have bills before Congress providing for their elevation to u‘ ‘ e “ ood< new interest of federal government in settlement of Alaska has given rise to '« * ! ” •* f* ! *° r -V becoming the 49th state. A new state will not give flagmakers an artistic problem rrangmg the stars symmetrically while preserving ranking position# @f the state® as above sketch indicates (Central Press) Japan Preparing For Fresh Invasion Into North China Tokyo. June 8 <AP>—Japan's war machine in Manchuria was reported in press dispatches today to have been ordered today to prepar for an inva sion of China unless the Chinese gov ernment submitted to Tokyo’s ulti matum . Tuesday was reported to be the day bv.,which China must act. A Rengo dispatch from Hsinking. Manchukuo. said that orders; to place Japan’s war machine ih Manchuria is in readiness to roll southward across the Great Wall if China fails to sub mit tc the ultimatum were issued to day from the general headquarters of General Jiro Minami. Japanese mili tary chief of Manchukuo The dispatch said a midnight coun cil meeting of Minanii's staff was held Sign Contract At Once For Morehead Port Fund Rich Cuban F reed By His Kidnapers Havana. Cuba, June 8 (AP) Antonio San Miguel, 78-yqar-old railroad magnate, was released to day after three days in the hands of kidnapers, but refused to say whether the $286,000 demanded ran ion was paid. Dirty and unshaven, the financier was freed only thre blocks from his home. He said he believed he was held on a farm about 20 miles from Havana, and that his captors treated him roughly. Saying he wanted to take a bath and rest, San Miguel refused to see news paper men. BORAH NQW CHIEF _ ROOSEVELT CRITIC But for His Age He Would Be Ideal Rallying Point of Conservatives By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Staff Writer Washington, June B.—ls only Sena tor William E. Borah were not quite so old — And yet— < The Idaho solon has made himself so pre-eminently the champion of states rights, as against President Roosevelt’s championship of central ization, that many politicians are wondering whether anti-New Deal al- ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND vnuMNIA and that afterwards Lieutenant Gen eral Jugo Minishio. after consulting with War Minister Hayashi. now in Hsinking. issued “important orders." The military authorities agreed, the dispatch said, that these orders con cerned preparations to "assume the iniative in the unfortunate event that the Chinese fail to display good faith.” as the Japanese phrase goes. CHINESE 32ND ARMY WILL MOVE UP TOWARD TIENTSIN Shankhai, China. June 9 (Sunday)— China’s 32nd army, considered among China's best troops, today began mov ing toward Tientsin, w-here Sino-Japa nes erelations apparently are approach ing some sort of crisis. Attorney General Seawefi, Back from Washington, Urges Quick Action By State RAILROAD S BOARD TO MEET SHORTLY Will Be Called by Governor Ehringhaus Soon As Suit able Date Can Be Fixed; State Must Agree To Back Bonds for The Government Money Raleigh, June B.—(AP)—Upon the recommendation of Attorney General A. A. F. Seawel! that the contract with the Federal PWA for funds for Morehead City port devekjpmeents be signed at once, Governor Ehringhaus this afternoon laid plans for an early special meeting of the directors of the State-owned Atlantic and North Caro lina railroad to consider the question. The property and receipts of the railroad will be pledged as collateral for the loan. The board of directors of the railroad will be called to meet in special session just as soon as a suitable date can be decided upon. Governor Ehringhaus said TWO DROWNED FROM EXCURSION STEAMER Vinal Haven. Maine. June 8 (AP) — Two persons drowned and scores of others were thrown into the sea, nar rowly escaping death, today as the Belfast excursion steamer Castine struck a ledge in a thick foe and listed heavily. HENDERSON, N. C. SATURDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE », 1935 FINAL WARNING IS GIVEN TO CHINESE TO WITHDRAW' Tientsin. China, 8 (AP) —The “zero hour" in the latest Sino-Japa nese crisis was brought nearer tonight when a group of high Japanese mili tary left for Peiping to serve a “final warning” upon certain Chi nese troops to withdraw. The move v r as announced by Japa nese military headuarterqs here. Among those who went to Pieping were General Isogi, Japanese military attache at Shanghai: Colonel Sakai, chief of staff of the Japanese garri son in North China; Major Ohki, a staff officer, and Captain Ohhiran, an officer attached at Nanking FIND IRE CASES INFANT PARALYSIS Health Officials Renew Warnings; Raleigh Sun day Schools Halt Raleigh, June B.—(AP)—Health of ficials today renewed their warnings against congregation of children as five more infantile paralysis cases were reported to Dr A C. Bulla, county health officer. As a result of the continued out break. Raleigh church schools which were not open the last two Sundays will be closed again tomorrow. No classes below the intermediate de partments will be held. The paralysis victims reported to the State Health Department today, who live in Beau, fort, Edgecombe, Franklin, Wake and Harnett counties, bring to 63 the of cial number of cases arising since May 1. Electric Line In Kansas Dynamited As Troops Arrive Columbus, Kansas, June 3.—(AP)— Two lines of the Empire District Elec tric Company were denamited today as a battalion of Kansas) National Guardsmen arrived here after a re ported outbreak between union and non-union mine members. The court house here was convert ed into a temporary barracks for the troops who weer ordered into the field late yeshjrday by Governor Alf M. Landon. Troops on duty included an infmtry company from Kansas City, Kans., and two cavalry troops. WEATHER Cloudy, probably occasionar rains tonigbt and Sunday; slightly cool er in east and centra! portion® to night. POWER TO PROTECT FRANC GIVEN LAVAL BY 233 TO 15 VOTE French Senate Supports New Premier by Even Larger Majority Than Chamber BIG DEFICIT FACES TREASURY AT ONCE Where To Get $415,000,000 Is Problem of Lava!; Pro pose Investigation of ganized Panic” Directed Against Franc in Recent Weeks Paris, June B.—(AP)—The Senate approved Premier Pierre Laval’s de cree powers to protect the franc by the overwhelming vote of 233 to 15 to day after the emergency measure had been grudgingly passed by the Cham ber of Deputies. Previously the Senate Finance Com mittee had approved the decree bill after disclosing a budget deficit of 6,500.000.000 francs (approximately $415,000,000) and the Treasury faces thed ifficult task of finding this huge sum, The deficit, because of railroad ob ligations, was estimated in the Cham ber yesterday at 19,000.000,000 francs. The Senate committee, concluded the emergency powers were urgently need ed to avoid devaluation. The powers, withheld from others were granted within 24 hours after Laval took the helm of the govern ment. Parliamentary investigation of the recent "organized panic” against the franc was proposed by the Chamber Finance Committee, and the prosecu tion of speculators was started with the first indictment, The new premier succeeded where Pierre Etain-Flandin and Fernand Bouisson failed by limiting his de. mands and promising to use h'is de cree powers sparingly. Widen Hunt For Tacoma Kidnap Gang Tacoma, Wash., June B.—(AP) Searching by air and on the ground for the hide-away haunt used in the George Weyerhaeuser kidnaping widened today as strong indications were given that the identities of the abductors were unknown both to Fed eral agents and to police. A report that 20 Federal reserve notes from the $200,000 ransom were found yesterday in bank receipts at Salt Lake City was followed by an other that E, F, Connelly, Federal agent in charge of officers here, was missing from his office today. Indications that names of the ab ductors of the nine-year-old boy, who was released a week ago, still were unknown to officers, came when au thorities revealed the “two-gabled” hide-out house holds the key to their identities through fingerprints. The house w r as believed abandoned by the gangsters. An authoritative sources disclosed the young kidnap victim has told es pecially what part of the home he saw his captors touch with ungloved hands The child said the house was gray, with two gables, and “near water and a railroad curve.” Forces For And Against President Are Lining Up Ey LESLIE EXCHEL Writer of “The World at a Glance” column for Central Press (This is the second part of a two. part article.) There are two factions fighting President Roosevelt. The conserva tives of both parties (termed as "re actionaries” by their opponents) are hailing with delight the Supreme Court decision. If the federal govern ment cannot restrict corporations or individual employers, cannot say how many hours a man may (be worked or what he should be paid, then there once more is "freedom of action.” No employer can be forced, under present gtntirf.pcs to Ujjr?ain collectively or to PUBLISHBD BVHRY AFTERNOON BXCBPT SUNDAY. Allots President Too Many Powers, Some Critics Say String-Puller y A New photo of Gen. Kiro Minani, Japanese commander in Manchu kuo, who pulls the strings of the puppet state. He’s reported to be preparing to carve another rich province from China, including the old capital at Peiping, and seeking to oust Chiang Kai-shek as general issimo of the Chinese. (Central Press) Judge Hay eg Will Rule On T obacco Act Decision on Tax Pen alty About Ready; Talmadge To Ad dress Dissenters Winston. Salem, June B—(AP)—De cision by Federal Judge Johnson J. Hayes in the case involving constitu tionality of the Kerr-Smith tobacco control act is expected by early June, according to persons here interested in the case. On penalties of more than $1,000,000 paid by North Carolina farmers alone are involved in the decision and a lar ger amount will be involved next year as the penalty tax now is 33 1-3 per cent, instead of 25 percent last year. The case was initiated at the in stance of the Piedmont Tobacco Non- Tax Association to prevent collection of penalties on tobacco sales in ex cess of AAA contract allotments, to prevent indictment of farmers failing to pay these penalties and to estab lish that these transactions were not subjected to interstate commerce ieg (Continued on Page Eight) bar child labor —unless a labor union through its individual power, forces such action. At the same time, the decision is hailed by some progressives (power ful ones, too) as ending monopoly, whereby “small businesses have been crushed ” See a Severe Setback On the other hand, the decision Is denounced by otherp rogressives and by New Dealers as throwing the na tion back into an indusltralism of “free-booting such as civilization no longer can tolerate.” Furthermore, with restriction gone by the boards, PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY May Allow Roosevelt Grsst Authority To Relax Trust Laws, Sena-* ? : tors Fee! ~f : RESIGNATION <ROM RICHBERG PLEASES His Retirement Tends To Soften Opposition Some what; New Measure As sailed by Republicans As Propaganda License on Federal Regulation Washington. June 8— (AP)— Sena, torail critics of NRA began a minute study today of the Roosevelt admin istration’s “stop-gap" plan which sped through the House late yesterday by a vote of 264 to 121 These senators feared that the re solutions extending a midget NRa agency for nine and a half months entailed more authority to relax the anti-trust laws than understood at first. On the other hand* critics were somewhat softened in their opposition to the recovery administration by the announcement that Chairman Donald Richberg had resigned, effective June 16. and that the President has; accejk ed the resignation ■ , While Richberg has had maty sup porters on Capitol Hill, critics of ttye recovery law have centered the Tr life on him and his policies. ’*■{■ However, they scrutinized •'clpsbly the provisions for exemptions, frfcun the anti-trust law Though Roosevelt said yesterday that Any voluntary code of fair practices which business may erect must conform to the anti-trust laws, the House',a.:feW hours later insisted on continuitt# bW : * h ,■ v *»i L (Continued on Pago to liliP ABOUT PWA LOANS Local Government Commis sion Monday to Formu late Its Procedure Daily DUpatet Barents, In the Sir Winter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, June 3.—A meeting of the Local Government Commission has been called for Monday at which tlm» it is expected to formulate its policy with regard to Federal public works loaHis, 9tiat® Treasurer Charles M. Johnson, who is also director of local government, said today. During the past two years the Local Government Commission has held to a rather strict policy with regard to these gov ernment loans and has refused to per mit counties, cities and towns to bor row from the government for public projects unless there was a real and definite need for the improvements they desired to make with these loans. “I have no way of knowing yet what kind of an attitude the full com mission will take towards these pub lic works loans in the future,” Direc tor Johnson said todav. “But if it still has the same views it has had the past two years, I am inclined to believe that it will adopt about the (Continued on Page Three). 8 Players Bunched In Golf Play Oakmor.t Country Club, Pittsburgh, Pa., June 8. —(AP) —Eight players, paced by Jimmy Thomson, of Califor nia, and Sam Parks, Jr., hometown favorite, were bunched within four strokes of each other toda at the conclusion of the third rour.. the United States open golf chan n i.lp thereby assuring a great sir ’ :L nat tle for the title, already I<.. l»y ■. r. Dutra, Thomson and Park r • ~a and were tied at 54 V.c 1.. > > * ly faulted at the cut.- A oi r !. round , x *—, I 'CcrAlnu.'. i jjy
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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June 8, 1935, edition 1
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