Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / June 10, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON gateway TO CENTRAL C A R OLIN A twenty-second year death PENALTY FOR ABDUCTORS OF BOY WILL BE REQUESTED Harmon M. Waley, 24, Ex- Convict, and His Young Wife Confess Iheir Part In Crime r’(RL> MAN HUNTED AI BUTTE, MONTANA William Mahan, Also Ex- Convict. Escapes Officer Who 1 inds $15,155 of Ransom Money i n Ma han's Car; Waley's Father Is Weyerhaeuser Employee n W-jihlncton. June 10.—(AP> j. Fdgar Hoover, director of the F«derd Bureau of Investigation. «.iid todao' h*s agents had ascer tained that George Weyerhaeuser ,ir nine-year -old kidnaped Ta. coma. Wash., youth, had been Ridden at l.V»0 West llth Street in Spokane. Wash. Salt Lake City, Utah. June in.— AF —Federal officials werp Lot on • - *: Ail °f "lie suspect in the George n'a'.-a*h *eti-pi kidnaping vase today while two alleged confessed members •* 'he gii g were in custody of agents T a w-fst'a greatest manhunt Prone vi* open last night when J Edgar H •• diiector of rlie Department of J:* - e investigators, announced at ■ sP 'n. D C. that Harmon M •V'.v. 24-year-old ex-convict, and his •j .e . -o|H wife had heen arrested here and had confessed participation •1 • a ?2'k*n*x» kidnaping of the young Tuoma. Wash, lumber fortune heir. \ widespread search for William M»ban. also an ex-convict, was cen tered at Butte. Montana, where he fled •T'erday after deserting a motor car - which police discovered $15,155 of tr.» ransom money. Mahan was recognized by J E M eney, a city detective, but the sus r- t escaped when the officer was hiked abruptly in his pursuit by a bulldog Members of Mrs. Waley's family disclosed today that Waley w-as the sen of a foreman in one of the Weyer haeuser lumber mills in the Pacific Northwest. Mrs Waley, who was taken into <Continued on Page Six! To Ask For New Roads Over State frs the Sfr ll’nltM Hotel, l)a!!r Dlapntcfe Dareat, BY J. C. B.tSKERVILL. Raleigh June 10. —A laige number delegation? will appear before the testing of the State Highway and vVotks Commission here Tues -i' ,r . ask that numerous ned roads -* bui> Chairman Capus M Waynick -•lid *odav An unusually large delegation is ‘xrecred from Mecklenburg. Lincoln Cataw'a counties to ask the com. - ; 3i' r; »o build a new- highway from C'irlotte to Newton byway of Den- i ''*■ which would run across Lincoln j C'-’-rv* into Cataw-ba This route is (Continued on Pas* Two > Regulations On Sales Tax Begin July 1 Rules on Wholesale Me rc h a n-t s and Wholesale Sales to Be T lghtened Lp. Dally Dispatch Barn*, 1b the ajr Walter Hotel. *? J. C. HASKEHVILL. Raleigh June 10 —Many changes being in the new sales tax ~ : “-s and regulations being formulat- t * by *he Department of Revenue and ich will go into effect July 1 and •' J ?er 3 ede the present rules and re flations, it was learned from an au ritative source today. -he regulations governing whole -3 ‘r merchants and wholesale sales ~' c e-pecially going to be tightened J P itw as learned, so that merchants ~ ! ‘l ro longer be able to sell goods in raigr iota to contractors, mills, sac - _ ;Continued on Pafis £t7C/. iicitxlPi'Gmt Datlit cUsmrirli LIC AS ED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED FREiS. Japan Threatens / i, V. • <*• f\ \ T ,y y *•* / \ I 'V w / i <*** ■J V } •> * SHANGHAJjj^ Drastic actron by Japanese mili tary force? m North China ws* threatened in an ultimatum de manding that issues must be set tled quickly in accordance with Japane?e view?. Opinion pre vailed in Shanghai that the Jap anese armier would occupy Tien tsin and Pieping a? a result of ’ hin o ? e officials* failure to con duct affair? in the Peiping and Tientsin areas in a manner satis factory tp Japaft. WASHING [BN TAXI DRIVERS STRIKE AS SHRINERS ARRIVE Declare They Were Insulaterl by Charges In Connection With Handling of Traffic THEY ALSO RESENT FREE AUTOMOBILES Claim General Motors Has Installed 350 Cars To Transport Shrine Visitors to All Farts of Capital; Capital Fears Serious Situ ation May Arise Washington. June 10.—'AP'— De claring they had been insulted." hun dreds of taxicab drivers went on strike today in the midst of a national conclave of Shriners which taxed the transportation facilities of the capita! to the utmost. Leaders said the drivers were pro. testing against "insults ’ flung at them in connection with the handling of the Shrine traffic. They expressed resentment at a statement by William A Roberts, people's counsel in the District of Columbia. informing Shrine delegates that taxi drivers could not charge them more than re gular zone rates \ The drivers declared Roberts' state ment made it appear that they had been trying to "gouge" the visitors, while they had no intention of doing co. Some visitors to the city reported on the other hand that some drivers had charged them more than the re gulation rates. With 100.000 visitors pouring into town to watch the elaborate cere monies and festivities of the 61st an nual convention of the Ancient Arabic (PntiHniiMl on Page Fom) Alleged Slayer In Ohio Is Reported Going to Indiana Columbus. Ohio. June 10 'AP) —The State Highway Patrol sent out a gen eral alarm today to sheriffs, police and highway patrolmen along the Indiana border to watch for a 1928 or 1929 Nash coupe in w-hich Merton Good rich. w’ho is wanted for the slaving in Detroit of Dorothy Galaher. was re ported to be travelling The highway patrol said it was in formed by Cincinnati police and the Department of Justice that Goodrich, a former inmate of the Lima State Hospital for the Criminal Insane left Coxmersvilie, .his morning ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. t ive More Cases Infant Paralysis Raleigh. June in (AP)—The Mate Board. of Health today re ceived reports- of five new cases of infantile paralysis in North Caro lina. making 24 in June and 45 in May. The official cards filed today were for cases in Caldwell. Cumb erland. Harnett. Wake and Dur ham counties. SIX LONG-TERMERS ESCAPE CALEDONIA BV BEATING GUARD One of Group Later Captur* ed but Rest of Gang Re mained. at Large in Afternoon INJURED GUARD IS SENT TO HOSPITAL , Not Thought Seriously Hurt; Woodville Prisoners Hatch Plot To Escape But Unin tentionally Reveal It To Guard After One of Party Gets Sick Raleigh. June 10.—'AP—Six long term prisoners at Caledonia/ Prison Farm in Halifax county knocked a guard in the head today and escaped Capus M. Waynick. chairman of the State Highway and Public Works Commission, which operates the pri son division, was notified that one of the prisoners who got away at Cale donia had been caught. Caledonia officials reported that Guard Floyd Johnson was sent to the hospital, but farm officials said he was not thought to have been serious ly hurt Carl Williams, alias Tom Jackson, who was imprisoned for 12 to 15 years ro robbery in Northampton county, was caught a short time after he got away. The others escaping were John Henry Lowder, given five to seven (Continued On Pne-e Emir I Famed Sing Sing Baseball Star Is Barred In Minors Albany. N. Y. June 10 'AP>—Ed win G Pitts, the Alabama lad who made Sing Sing famous on athletic fields was ruled ineligible today to play baseball in the minor leagues because he is an ex-convict. The decision was made by the exe- i cutive committee of the National As- 1 sociation of Minor Leagues It means that Kenesaw Mountain Landis probably will have to make a final decision on the legality of Pitts' ! contract with the Albany club of the International League. N. C. State Alunmi W ait Board s Act Determined Fight to Keep Engine e i School There Due At Meeting Tomor row. Dally Dispatch Bnreaa, !e the Sfr Waiter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, June 10.—0tate College alumni and others who believe that the engineering school of the Con solidated University of North Caro lina should continue to be located in the State College unit and *ot be mov ed to the Chapel Hill unit, are anx. iouslv awaiting the report of the exe cutive committee of ths board of trustees to the meeting of the full board at Chapel Hill Tuesday after noon. If the executive committee acts as the special committee which has in vestigated* the engineering school question has recommended, which re frrnifiniied nn Pag* Emir) WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Fair, slightly warmer in ex treme west portion tonight; Tues day partly cloudy, possibly show ers m northwest and extreme nest portion* _ _ _ HENDERSON, N. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, .JUNE 10. 1085 Chinese Capitulate Completely To Demands From Japs In North China: Gigantic Tidal Power Project on in Maine t Sl j 's" P n h n I nj» P nnn le p inßf (be! ° W Jj fo JS- e f footba!! coach West Point, now is Army engineer iiTcharge of 'f ii S r aQUOdd /* PWA Dl ? jec , t * near East P° rt ’ Me., with which the tides and waves (pic £ 2 non W ] !! be harnesse f d u to n< T ate Metric P™' er - The project, which will provide employment im 4,000 men for many months, already is stimulating a boom in Maine comparable to that in the Ten a..ev where tne government ■ other bis? eastern power project is being pushed. ALUMNI DAY HELD AT 11N. C. CLOSING Daniels, Graham and House Join Dr. Rondthaler in Luncheon Talks HAVE CLASS SUPPERS High Spot of Tomorrow's Program Will Be Address of Mrs. Roose velt and Graduation Exer cises at Night GUape! Hill. June 10—The Univer sity campus was thronged today with hundreds of alumni back to attend the University's 140th Commence ment. which promises to be one of the most significant occasions in the in stitution’s history Quartered in dormitories with mem bers of their respective classes, and roaming the campus wearing on their lapels ribbons bearing their names and graduating years, the old grads enter ed with great zest into the elaborate program of the annual Alumni Day. They re-lived their students days at Carolina as they swapped experiences this morning at a reminiscence ses sion presided over by Judge Francis D. Winston, here for his 53th com mencement and 48th consecutive year Addresses by Ambassador Josephus Daniels. President Frank P Graham. and Dean Robert B House featured the program at the annual alumni luncheon held at Swain Hall at 1 (Continued on Page Six) GOVERNOR PRESENTS DEGREES AT STATE 300 Get Diplomas at Raleigh Tonight; Outdoor Ex ercises Are Held College Station. Raleigh. June 19 — Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus will present degrees tonight to 300 mem bers of this year's senior class of N. C. State College. The graduation ex ercises will start at 7 o’clock in Rid dick Stadium The exercises wil be presided over by Col. John W Harrelson. adminis trative head of the college Short talks will be made by the governor, Col. Harrelson. and Dr Frank Gra ham, president of the University of North Carolina Immediately following the cora- Mussolini Checks Attack On Britain By Italian Papers Rome, June 19 (AP) —Premier Mus- I solini ordered Italian newspapers to day to moderate the bitterness of their attack on Great Britain in connection with the Itaio-E-thiopian dispute Although he did not command the press to suspend its anti-British com ment entirely, the premier, acting I through his son-in-law. Count Galezzo | Ciano. under secretary of State for press and propaganda, enjoined publi cations to keep the tone of their cam paigning within certain limitations II Duce is said to have been startled by the extreme degree of antagonism | reflected in newspaper articles and editorials of the last few days. The torrent of denunciation of Great Britain's attitude toward the gust African crisis culminated in a B e Nc Duke s Estate Was $7,496,447 Two Oxford Orphan ages and Kittrel! College Remember ed In His Bequests New York. June 10 (AF) —A net es tate of $7,496,447 was left by Benja min N. Duke, who died January 8. 1929, according to a transfer tax ap praisal filed today Twenty-two charitable and religious institutions get bequests totaling sl.- 165.000. and the principal beneficiary is a daughter. Mary Duke Biddle, of 109 Fifth Avenue, New York The bulk of the estate was in se curities valued at $6,144,287. Duke was a member of the family' which made millions in the tobacco industry The Angier B Duke Memorial, Inc., at Durham, N C . was bequested $580,000 The widow. Mrs. Sarah F. Duke, of PDBXjISHHD EVERY AFTERNOON HXCBPT kUNDAY. r front page editorial in the super-Fas cist daily Ottobre. in which the Brit ish were warned that if they wanted war. they’ might have it MUSSOLINI ORDER ONLY PARTLY CLAIMS BRITAIN (London. June 10 (AF)—Word that ! Premier Mussolini has applied the soft pedal to the anti-British campaign in the Italian press served only slightly today to allay the concern with which Great Britain viewed the Italo-Ethio pian situation Official circles were pleased to learn of II Duce’s action, and express ed the view that Anglo-Itaiian rela tions were at best only a side issue to the more important question of what Italy ultimately may do in East As ; rica. HUMPHREY RIJLING SLAP AT PRESIDENT NRA Blow At Congress, As Was Farm Mortage De cision of Court By CHARLES F STEWART Central Press Staff Writer Washington, June 10.—The United States Supreme Court’s recent deci sion in what is known as the Hum phrey case has been overshadowed, as to public interest manifested in it, by the higb( tribunal’s simultaneously, rendered decision in the NRA and Frazier-Lemke cases, which most folk evidently regard as having been by far the most important of the three. This may be a correct estimate, too. Trade, the industries and labor doubtless are more immediately af fected by the NRA ruling than by either the Frazier-Lemke or the Hum phrey opinions. Agriculture is more immediately effected by nullification of the Frazier-Lemke piece of legisla tion (intended to ease the farm mort gage situation) than by the Hum i phrey and NRA findings. Effects of the NRA and Frazier , Lemke judgments, eonomi as well as politial in their nature, are felt right now. The Humphrey issue was, in its ini frj"L**!!**"A rr 6 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY WAY IS NOW OPEN FOR THE JAPANESE TO OCCUPY REGION xrc Threats By Nippon’s Mili tary Machine too Much for The Nationalist Government *?• .* EMPEROR S TROOPS v • TO BE HELD BACK Precedent Established Con ceding Japanese Army Right To Dictate Who Shall Administer and What Troops Shall Be Stationed in Hopi Province Tkyo. June 10. (AP)_ Chinese troops were reported in Japenese news dispatches today to have started their evacuation of North Carolina, signalizing what the messages describ ed as China's complete surrender to the demands of Japanese military au thorities These reports said tlie threat of an an occupation by General Jiro Minami's war machine was sufficient to persuade the Chinese Nationalist government to capitulate to the Jap anese requirements for establish ment of a new regime in North China. As a consequence, the press said, the Japanese troops con centrated in Hopi province, althoiigti ready for action, will not be called on to move southward, at least PprT the present. * Reports indicated that a precedent has been established, conceding thfe Japanese army the right to dict4tfe who shall administer and troupe shall be stationed in Hopi province:* (This area forms the of the old Chinese Empire, and contains ancient capital, Peiping, as well' an the commercial metropolis Jhfi ThlA 1 north, Tientsin) | ~ T ' Jap Troafik Dispatched For Duties Tienstin. China, June 10.—(AP)— Japanese +roops were dispatched to Yangstun today upon reports of the burning of poles of J&fenese military te egraph ine? which a Japanese spokesman said was a provocated in cident "warranting our firm action." The development aroused further misgivings here in the SinoJapanese crisis. Uneasiness which had tended to subside today was further aroused to night with reports that two Japanese destroyers left Port Arthur for Tient sin. Japanese officers said the crafts were tieing up at Tientsin to protect Japanese lives and property. Utilityßill Debated By The Senate Upper House Is An xious To Get It Out of Way To Take Up NRA Extension .. Washington, June 10.—(AP)—■ The Shriners’ convention dominated the Washington scene today, red fezes ap pearing everywhere and giving colon to the Senate and House galleries. Amendments to the public utilities holding company bill were given con sideration by the Senate, Democratic leaders were eager to dispose of the utilitiesm easui s ir. the Senate as soon as possible sc m to take up the skeletonized 1 _.A ex tension bill. Unless the Senate acts mir o. 'k, NRA will expire next Sunuvy. Downtown interest ; .i> i , \u he White House, where - t '. .i board' was called into acbciui. J oca-* sider Lc rr \:.j fe i. * , i ■ ''•'be financed iuu. the *%■' • 4 • '..'Jia
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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June 10, 1935, edition 1
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