Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / June 18, 1935, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO mm i'uugh AGAINST TEACHERS Paid Money for Lob , hying Just As Many Big t Corporations Did • in the Sir Wnlter Hotel. llullv nUpnli'h Hurra* BY J. C. BASHERVII.L. Raleigh, June 18 —Back-fire from lobbying figures carried in the papers and summed up by this bureau in yesterdays’ papers, have been many and vigorous, and one of the most needless pieces of extravagance, in the opinion of many citizens, was that expenditure of the North Caro lina Education Association which em polyed Ex-Senator (Stover P. Dun nagan, of Rutherford. Many friends of State Superinten dent Clyde A. Erwin have been fear ful of damage to his candidacy next year, since Mr. Dunnagan came from Mr. Erwin's county. There were more attacks on Mr. Erwin from school leaders, though, than from any other source. While he stood for $22,000,000 apportion each year of the biennium, for the schools, he was always con siderate of the administration and was assailed for that reason. The edu cation association probably never re ceived any counsel from Mr. Erwin to employ anybody to lobyb against the administration. But the teachers, whose pay has caused so many of them to abandon the profession, according to publish ed reports, are put in the attitude of paying out money to influence legis lation, just as power and tobacco com panies were. It does not leave a good popular impression and newspapers and individuals are taking the teach ers to ride for doing it Mr. Dunnagan spent the whole four months here and worked. His $2,500 and more expenditure will pass as I lobbying goes, but the impression here has been that the teachers had help enough. There were four big dailies which wrote daily broadsides at the legislature in the interest of the teachers and they had on the ground at least four big men in the organization who gave much of their time to the cause Considering the impecunious character of the teacher, a $2,500 grant to a lobgyist who had not qualified among the Upper Ten, must be regarded a lot of money. Still, these teachers have been taught to believe that the way to get legisla tion is to go after it with money, not for she legislator, but for some smart attorney whose duty it is to ’’work” the statesman for his vote. Deposed Secretary Claims Favoritism And Graft Abound \ (Continued from Page One.) full committee would uphold its ac tion. The President and congressional advisors agreed upon a new Federal alcohol control program, levying oc cupational taxes on importers, brew ers, rectifiers and wholesalers, and putting administration of the new laws under the Treasury. A subr-committee of the Senate un official silver bloc decided that Sec retary Morgenthau’s recently letter on , the administration silver purchase po licy was ‘'most unsatisfactory.” I • I We Appreciate Good Words *:•’ : ’'' '‘ 1 ' ' pk V ! * Truthful talk about our bank by those who know whereof they speak can only do us good. In telligent explanations often im prove understanding and en hance appreciation. You may do a real favor to some friend by telling him how our bank can help him by passing on to him instructive points about our complete banking service. We have many friends who never miss an opportunity to recom mend our bank and their good opinion has contributed a great deal to our bank’s growth. First National Bank In Henderson Henderson, N. 0. The 3&er Hamfe i For years to come the conditio* of Max Baer’s hands when he lost the" World heavyweight Title t® James J. Braddock will be a sub ject of controversy among ring followers. X-ray examination re vealed old fractures, aggravated by blows Max delivered in his bout with Braddock. The ex champ is pictured in New York shortly after losing his title. Government To Continue Tobacco Control Even If Act Is Killed by Courts (Continued from i*age One.) constitutional, efforts will be made to devise some other plan under which growers participating in the program will receive more than non-participat ing growers.” The tobacco director said that pros pects seem favorable for a reasonable income from flue-cured tobacco this year. ‘‘Due to the splendid cooperation of growers in all parts of the (tobacco) belt, which resulted in a reduced crap last season, the excess supplies of this type of tobacco have been eli minated. “World consumption is oeing main tained at around last year’s levels. It is larger in the United (States and in the United Kingdom, which are the two leading consuming countries.” Hutson said the indications are that the consumption of American grown fiue-cured tobacco during the year now closing will be between 5,- 000,000 and 10,000,000 pounds more than any other year, including the high years 1929-30, and 1930-31. 1858 —'William C. Redfield, New York manufacturer, congressman, Sec , retary of Commerce under Wilson, ''born at Albany, N. Y. Died June 13, 11932. IUDNDSRSON, "(N. CJ DAILY DISPATCH, TUESDAY, TONE 18, 1935 Georgian Praises Set-Up Made Here (Continued from Page One.) alterably to it. He is pure North Car olina there. "We have so much to learn from North Carolina on roads and schools that they are our chief concern,” Sen ator Lester told this correspondent “l have enjoyed my stay greatly. I think you have done a wonderful thing with the highways and prisons. And, of course, you have made mar velous progress in education. Our states are very near the same size in area and in population. Naturally what would work well in North Caro lina might work with us, too. You certainly have a wonderful system of roads and schools. "We are also interested in your lo cal government commission and it has done a great deal to cupb unrestrict ed spending. I have been studying that act and like it. 'My visit to North Carolina is purely for the purpose of getting the best from your system and reporting it to the next general as sembly.” Senator Lester does not think that the smallness of Georgia’s bonded debt—only about $4,0005,000 will make any great difference in the kind of laws which that state will need. "You have gone about your high* way system right, I think,” he con tinued. "You have a perfect system of financing and it has not (been neces sary for you to pay as you go. We have been doing that in Georgia and we have not been making the use of convicts that you are making now. I think that was a great step that you took when the State merged the pri son and highway departments ” Senator Lester was asked about Governor Talmadge, his friend. The executive thinks that North Carolina’s record shows Mr. Talmadge at least to be "half right.” The governor’s op position to the Roosevelt administra tion, Senator Lester said, has been made to look worse than it is. "But North Carolina has been able to make these wonderful strides under its own powers,” he said. "You have not founo it necessary to get the federal func tions to working for you. And you have a marvelously developed State. We think we can do the same thing. And we think there is too much us urpation of State’s rights. If that ten dency is not curlbed, I do not know where it will end.” The Georgian, member of a Sen ate which has 51 of a State with 159 counties, naturally wishes the preservation of some forms of local government. And hew as very happy to find in North Carolina evi dences that it is possible to advance a commonwealth with the consent and even the enthusiasm of all its people. He will carry that message back to his people and ask them to undertake to do the same thing for themselves. Helen Morgan Sues •. v. •;*</>; 3gg|pggja -. ■ V Maurice Helen Maschke, Jr. Morgan Charging that her husband tried to force her into a suicide plot, Helen Morgan, torch song singer, brought suit for divorce in Holly wood from Maurice Maschke, Jr,, Cleveland attorney, and son of a well-known 0h i • politician, Maschke denied the charges, as serting he is too fond of living to try to drive his automobile over a cliff as his wife stated in her complaint. /lout Numskuu ; - ~ j * DEAR NOAH-HAVE YOU ■ RECIPE FOR RAGAMUFFINS’ | t'AC-LA/IM TOLUEP6ON ST.CROIX FALLS, Wise DEAftT»OAH = »F= THE TEA LEAVES, DOES THAT Give The COFFEE GROUNDS For* PIVORCE ? MRS AtBtAT JENSON BE-MtDJI, MINN' DEAR NOAH =I S RABBIT FARMING a hare RAISING E7CPER.ie.NCfc ? GeovochoßKA TIGER HANDICAP By Jack Sords ———————————————. WMose. failure to - ' M f : : 12EACM AIS (934 Mjtmi Form is HAND! capping* /s? jg The DBTj?oit fitare(2? <a Ohio Will Be One 1936 Battlefield (Continued from rage One.) achieve. It is not, as an organization, much in love with "cheap money,’’ but it is formulating a “bill of rights” that will play an important part in the 1936 election. It hopes to travel its own road, fearing Father Cough lin may lead to fascism in spite of himself The collapse and outlawing of the NRA has worked to the Rooseveltian advantage in the industrial regions. Statements of his concerning the Constitution and protective rights have swung large bodies of organized men into his camp. There can be no question concerning that, if one min gles among the men in these indus trial regions. The President may have no clear idea of the road he will follow, but these men are defining it. And if the President goes even only part way on the money program of the Coughlin-silverites, that group, too, will join forces with the indus. trial workers in the President’s sup port in 1936. But the re-election of President Roosevelt is not so much the aim of these groups, as a constitutional con vention, to make certain there is no back-tracking hereafter. President Roosevelt is not looked upon, by them, as a radical or even as a progressive, but as a stepping 'Afir r " j"' 1 "’"' I ■■ wtr»" 11 l”'■ w • 11 • 1 r .s&aamKeHPc < • '*— — ... . . —^ ••• • • " 12 Spend just 1 . IV/ minutes * W “«PONTIAC )A General Motors Value | | ~ . You 7 !! find it's evert \ mw 7 / better than it looks! 1 ‘ 2Sr s “ u " T *" u c VI/ One look tells you why America calls Pontiac the most 2 ‘ Solid Stecl "Turret-Top" 7. The Most Beautiful beautiful thing on wheels. One ride tells the rest of the Bodies by Fishe* Thing on Wheels story. In no more than 10 minutes jou will make the 3. Completely Sealed Chassis 8- Patented Fisher Vants astonishing discovery that America’s lowest priced * » ... lation fine car is even better than it looks. * “ Tn * on the Eight and De Luxe Six L Concealed Luggage List prices at Pontiac, Michigan, begin at $615 A mWm 6 u. . . « and S P are Tire Com* for the Six and $730 for the Eight (subject to SOI C Record-Breaking Economy partment T OID ,0 - c ““ ai Gillam Auto Co. IMOTOR, SI AEjMiil CO# Owen Motor Co. arren on, N. C. Garnett and Orange Streets—Henderson, N. C. Oxford, N. C. - »UM9 A ggBHSSS2S& stone. IN THE MEANTIME Between now and the 1936 political conventions, there is likely to be in dustrial ferment. Such industries as coal, steel and rubber probably may unite to smash the growing organization of labor. There is constant talk of that here in the heart of the industrial region. "It is now or never,” the indus trialists say. President Roosevelt’s ingenuity with both sides may be tested by the strug gle developing sporadically in this re gion. TodajfjSmes PIEDMONT LEAGUE Yilmington at Charlotte. Richmond at Asheville. Norfolk at Portsmouth. AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Detroit. New York at Chicago. Boston at Cleveland. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at Philadelphia. <St. Louis at New York. Cincinnati at Boston. Chicago at Brooklyn. StaMrns CENTRAL STATE LEAGUE Club W. L. Pet Ca-Vel 13 3 .813 Henderson 11 6 .647 Jalong 7 8 .467 Durham 7 8 .467 Hillsboro 5 9 .357 Oxford 3 12 .200 PIEDMONT LEAGUE Club W. L. Pet. Asheville 31 23 .574 Charlotte 29 24 .547 Norfolk 27 25 .519 Wilmington 25 28 .472 Portsmouth 24 30 .444 Richmond 23 29 .442 AMERICAN LEAGUE Club? W. L. Pet. New York 24 19 .642 Chicago 27 21 .563 Detroit 29 23 .558 Cleveland 29 23 .558 Boston 26 28 .481 Washington 25 28 .472 Philadelphia 21 29 .420 St. Louis 14 34 .292 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club: W. L. Pet. New York 35 14 .714 Pittsburgh 33 23 .589 St. Louis 30 23 .556 Chicago 27 23 .540 Brooklyn 24 26 .480 Cincinnati 21 32 .396 Philadelphia . 19 30 .388 Boston 16 34 .320 ——" -r --[Pfks (bit's ——2- PIEDMONT LEAGUE Asheville 8 Richmond, 7. Portsmouth 6; Norfolk 3. Only games played. AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 11; Boston 2. Only games played. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 8-5; Cincinnati 3-1. Chicago 5; Brooklyn 3. New York 14; St. Louis 3. Pittsburgh 12; Philadelphia 5. We’re Experts at Cleaning sss?* SPORTS & M CLOTHES Has your suit a shirred or fH pleated back? If it has, you can’t expect an ordinary m , SfcapL pressing to make it look like M IVlen S what you bought. Ask your I SUITS wife; she’ll tell you there has ■ to be hand finishing. That’s 1 d only one of the many little % “jfr “extra cares” you’ll like about Phone 296 our cleaning and pressing. x Phone 296 IDEAL CLEANERS Hend ersem Nine Tomorrow Plays Wake Foresters A baseball game that much in interest and excitemeUtT* been arranged for tomorrow aft ‘ ais at League Park, when the pS'“ oon Tourists will have the Wak* 3011 Coileeians as their opponents 631 The hour is 3:30 o’clock The n casion will be known a* t-w 1 nc - The Wake Fore* team"' posed of former and present T‘' Wake Forest College piayen- day In view of the fact that it ~ ■ day of the usual weekly half-hnJ he in business houses of the cm- *, day crowd is hoped for. ' ’ ar £ 8 DUKE SCHOOL FOR COACHES JULY 15-20 Durham, June 18—Duke university-, fifth annual summer school for '’oab" es, conducted by Wallace Wade his assistants on the Blue Devil arh letic staff, will be held for s i >; da _ this summer, July 15-20. For the past four years the school has been a four-day affair and was ex tended two days this year at the re uest of the many coaches who attend the school each summer. Football under Coach Wade, who=e teams have won 120 games lost 25 and tied seven in his 16 years of coachinr features the school. The Duke men tor is recognized as one of the greatest coaches in the country and as the out standing authority on the teaching 0 t blocking and tackling. Blanche Sweet, oldtime movie star torn in Chicago,. 39 years ago B. H. Mixon Contractor and Builder “Builds Better Buildings’’ All kinds of Building Wall Papering Painting- Roofing and Interior Decorating. PHONES* ollke ' ar j lvjmcia. Residence 476 _j
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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June 18, 1935, edition 1
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