HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-SECOND YEAR WEALTH TAX MAT BRING IN $900,000000 tt X » AA ifc * dfc at - ... .. » Fourteen Dead, Property Loss Os Millions In New York Floods VIOLENT RAIN AND ELECTRIC STORMS HARDEST IN TEARS Bridges and Raiiroad Tracks Washed Out and High ways flooded in Many Sections BUSES, AUTOMOBILES UNABLE TO PROCEED Gas and Electric Services Suspended and Hundreds Driven from Homes In Low lands Area; State and Red Cross Called on To Admin ister Relief Albany. N. Y.. July 8. —(API —Up- State New York counted 14 known dead, four missing and property dam age in the millions of dollars in the wake of the most violent rain and elects ic storm in recent' years. Bridges and railroad tracks were washed o ll t. highways flooded, buses and automobiles marooned, gas and electric services suspended in Bath and Hornell. Hundreds were driven frcm their homes in lowlands. The American Red Cross and Gov ernor Herbert H. Lehman sought im mediate reports of the damage as oi- j ficial machinery was set in motion, to j relieve suffering. Mayor Leon F. Wheatley, of Hor- j r.ell. appealed to the State temporary ! relief administration for funds to pro- j vide food and clothing for persons | i nn P«e« Five) Cotton Crop Second Least For 30 Years Washington, July 8- —(AP) —Esti. mating that 29.166.000 acres of cotton were in cultivation on July 1, the De partment of Agriculture today said that, with the exception of 1934, this was the smallest July 1 acreage re ported since 1905. The current total was said to bn an increase of 4.6 percent over July 1 1934, but 28.6 percent less than tha average acreage for the five-year pe riod 1929-33. The department’s report showed in creases for all major states except Oklahoma, ranging frolfc four percent in North Carolina to ten percent in Louisiana. A decrease of seven per (Continued on Page Three) thaddeus page to BE CONNOR’S AIDE Washington, July 8 (AP)—Presi dent Roosevelt today sent to the Sen ate the nomination of Thaddeus S. Page, of North Carolina, to be admin istrative secretary to R. D. W. Con nor, national archivist, who was form erly a professor of history at the Uni versity of North Carolina. Rockefeller Passes 96th Anniversary VY orld’s Richest Man Still Has 19 Natural Teeth and Is In Good Health Lakewood, N. J., July 8-—(AP) — John D. Rockefeller, Sr., was four score and sixteen today and enjoyed the best of health in years. Routine in “golf house” with its 25 servants remained unchanged, with any birthday observance barred. The nonagenarian’s son, John D. Rocke feller, Jr., spent the day with him. “He hasn’t felt better in many years” the son said. His dentist Dr. Max Goldstein, re ported that the annual examination (Continued on Page Three). Hmtiirrsmt tlmlu Btsimlrh ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. * \s Ethiopians Prepare for War gppppjr jpjppPr ipr © Hearst Metrotone Net** Newest pictures from Abyssinia show soldiers of Emperor Haile Selassie, eauipped with modern arms, training near Addis Abada for the threat* ened war with Italy. Note the eoldiers are barefooted. The Italian forces are said to be eauipped with • gaa to burn the feet of the defenders. (Central Press) Press Paralysis Preventive Drive; Peak Likely Near Raleigh, July 8 (AP)—A three-way preventive and treatment program was under way in North Carolina to day in the campaign medical science in making against infantile paralysis at the State's record-breaking flare of the disease saw eight new cases listed today to make 320 this year. The new cases came, three from Guilford county and one each from Davidson, Duplin, Gaston. Vance and Warren, as the disease continued to center in the middle part of the State. Figure* at the health office showed there 63 the week before. 60 the week end ing June 22. and 57 the week ending June 15. making the incidence last week the lowest in a month. Dr. Carl V. Reynolds, State health SacSy Few Details Left Before PWA Grant for Port Ter minals Is Given •Raleigh, July 8 (AP) —Governor Eh ringhaus g£id today it would be “some days yet” before the contract between the Morehead City Port Commission and the Federal Public Works Admin istration will be signed so that a $297,- 500 PWA loan will be available for port terminals at Morehead City. “The port commission is the agency which applied for the money, and the loan will be made to it.” Governor Eh ringhaus said. “The contract must be signed by the officials of the Atlantic and North Carolina railroad and the (Continued on Page Three) PIRATES MAKE HAUL ON GAMBLING BARGE Long Beach, Cal., July 8 (AP)— Five pirates today boarded the lux urious gambling barge, Monte Carlo chained its crew and escap ed with what Ed Turner, owner of the boat, estimated was $32,000 in cash and jewelry. LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. HENDERSON, N. C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 8,1935 officer, pointed out that a vaccine pre ventive campaign is under way in Greensboro and that studies bing car ried on in connection with it by Dr. Lloyd Aycock, of the Harvard Infan tile Paralysis Commission, may make “one of the greatest contributions yet made in prevention of poliomolyetis.” PARALYSIS MAY BE NEAR PEAK; EXODUS CONTINUES Dully Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel, BY J, G. BASKERVILL, Raleigh, July B.—ln spite of advice from health authorities that there is no need to become hysterical over the over the infantile epidemic in North (Continued on Pago Flvo) «« Real Reason for Motor Ve hicle Head Resigning Not As Yet Clear Dally Dispatch Bureau, In the Si- Walter Hotel, BY J. C. BASKERVILL, Raleigh, July 3.—Political circles here are busy speculating as to who will be appointed the new director ot the motor vehicle division of the De partment of Revenue, to succeed L. S. (Pete) Harris, who recently resign ed. There is also considerable specul ation as to why Harris resigned, since he had been with the Department of Revenue for some 13 years, the last four or five years as director of tho motor vehicle and license division. He has been regarded as one of the most efficient division heads in the department and was one of the few division men who retained his posi tion in the reorganization of the de partment by Assistant Commissioner of Revenue M- C. S. Noble, Jr., the governor’s "trouble shooter,” in reor ganizing the department a year or so ago. It was commented on at the time that fewer changes were made (Continued on Page Five.) Six New Yorkers Drown In Floods Ithaca. N Y , July 8 (AP)—Six persons drowned today in flood swollen creeks In southern New York, two when their car was swept from a highway by high waters and four others when a bridge on which they were standing collapsed. Arthur Brokaw and Miss Alice Ferris, both of Interlaken, Seneca county, drowned? when their car was washed fromjthe Elmira-Ithaca highway near Buttermilk Falls, John Solomon and his three sons all of Myers, Tompkins county, were swept awa| r when a bridge over swollen Salmon creek col ~4 ■ - PRACTICALLY DEAD THROUGHOUT STATE Decisive Wet Majorities in Nine Counties Last Sat urday May Prove Body Blow PROHIBITION LONG MOCKERY IN STATE Swing of Every Voting County for Control Indi cates Displeasure at Sham of Enforcement; Bootlegg ing Carried on Nearly Everywhere i nState. Dally Dispatch Biiteam, Iw the S|r Walter Hotel, BY J, C. 3ASKERVILL. Raleigh, July 8. —The Turlington Act, on its last legs for the past two years, is now gasping for breath, al most dead and ready to be carried out by the undertaker. Badly buffet ed in the 1935 General Assembly, the State’s bone-dry prohibition law em erged from the recent legislative ses sion in a greatly emaciated condition (CSontlnii*»«H on Papa P''lT) Huey Long’s Power Is Now Made Perfect Baton Rouge, La., July 8 (AP) —The Louisiana legislature today wrote final approval on 25 bills completing Sen ator Huey P. Long’s State “dictator ship” by destroying all local political patronage and tinghtening his hold on governmental functions and then ad journed. The special session, which ended shortly after midnight with six others held since last December, gave Sena tor Long virtually every power pos (Dun tinned nn Pftfp Three! Rookies In New Patrol Cut To 102 In the sir Welter Hotel, Dally Dispatch Bareat, AY J. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, July 8. —Only 102 of the 145 or 150 highway patrol “rookies” who reported to the special highway patrol training school a week ago to day were able to pass the stiff phy sicial examinations given and the more or lees strenuous physical ex ercises given during the first week, according to Assistant Commissioner of Revenue M. C. S- Noble, Jr., who (Continued on Page Three). wtnutir FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Mostly cloudy tonight and Tues day, with occasional showers in east and central portions; slightly cooler tonight in extreme south west portion. Duce’s Sons to Fly in Africa |||| || W | «£- U > ~ w ~ v ~y Hk «lli I' iH Sr 3 PPfwl Bruno Mussolini Premier Mussolini Vittorio Mussolini Setting an example for the country Premier Mussolini granted permisSio* for his two aviator sons, Bruno and Vittorio, to join the Italian forces preparing to invade Abyssinia. This is the most recent picture of II Dues and his flying sons. (Central Press) 9 Other Counties Voted Saturday To Get Liquor Stores Rocky Mount, July 8 (AP) —Mac- clesfield, a small Edgecombe coun ty vilage, was doing a thriving business stoday as the second liquor store in the county was opened this morning. The opening was uneventful with a number of country folk on hand to see the operation and a few of them carrying away samples of the first “store-bought” rum they had ever seen. Raleigh, July B.—(AP) —With liquor control advocates having made vir tually a clean sweep so far, the last tw 0 counties of the 18 which were authorized by the 1935 legislature to hold referendums will vote tomorrow. The counties which remain to vote BOWMAN GUAY. BIG TOBACCO MAN, DIES Chairman of Board of Rey nolds Company Passes on Long Boat Trip Winston-Salem, July 8 (AP) —A wire received here today by James A. Gray, brother of Bowman Gray, who died at sea yesterday, said that burial would be at sea tonight at 7:40 o’clock, Winston-Salem time. The sea burial was re quested by the dying man. it was said. Aboard the S. S. July B.—(AP)—-Bowman Gray, chairman of the board of the R. J. Reynolds To bacco Company ,died aboard ship yes terday after a heart attack. He was stricken Friday while on a North Cape cruise. Bowman Gray, of Winston-Salem, N. C., was graduated from the Univer sity of North Carolina in 1892. He was married to the former Natalie F. (Continued on Page Five) George W. Hill, 51, Tobacco Head, Weds His Own Secretary London, July B.—(AP) George Washington Hill. 51, president of the American Tobacco Company married his 39-year-old secretary, Mary Barnes, in the Caxton Hall register office today. The ceremony, which was witnessed by nine persons, was performed 1?y J. p. Bond, deputy register. The wedding of the “million-dollar a-year executive” and his secretary cost in fees and licenses two pounds. 14 shillings and seven pence—about $13.15. ' , Hill smiled to the right and left as u e left the office, following the ceremony, but the bridge looked straight ahead. PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. are Greene, in the eastern part of the State, and Rockingham in the north central part of the State, abutting “wet” Virginia. In Greene county, as in New Han over county, which has already voted wet, officials have been restrained by a court order from opening liquor dispensaries until the Supreme Court passes on the constitutionality of the liquor control act, probably late in the fall. Nine counties voted Saturday. All favored the opening of liquor stores by large majorities, except in Car teret, where the result was still in doubt Reports from 14 out of 26 precincts in Carteret gave the con. (Continued on Pnee Thro®* CONGRESS LOBBIES ARE UNPRECEDENTED I But People Have Right to Make Known Their Views On Legislation By CHARLES P. STEWART Central Press Staff Writer Washington, July B.—Lobbying, for and against bills pending on Capitol 1 Hill, unquestionably has reached un. precedented proportions at the cur rent session of Congress. President Roosevelt’s blast in op position to the eveil (If it be an evil) has served to concentrate especial at tention on it, too. Nevertheless, just why folk, whe think that some proposed new law would be a good or a bad thing, (Continued on Pae« Four) cbonTiesTpay SCHOOL REPAIRING State Does Not Now and Never Has Furnished Maintenance Money Dally Dispute* Bnreaa, , In the Sfr Waiter Hotel. BY 3. C. BASKERVILL. Raleigh, July 8. —If school buildings need repairs or additional equipment, the repairs and equipment must be paid for from county or . city funds set aside for maintenance of plant, since the State school law never ha» made any provision whereby State funds may be used either for repair ing school buildings or for the pur chase of new equipment, it was stat ed here today at the offices of the State School Commission. Consequently, the letter which So licitor Zeb V. Nettles, of Ashevoille 'Continued nn Page Three) 8’ PAGES , TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY MORGENTHAU SAYS SUM COULD BE HAD FROWI NEW LEVIES Testifies Before House As Hearing On New Propo sal Are Begun There RECOMMENDATIONS NOT BEING GIVEN White House Says Treasury Head LVterely Making Esti mates on Schedules Sug gested by Committee; Roosevelt Wants Levies Limited to Three-Point Slate Washington, July B.—(AP) The opinion that wealth distribution taxes could be levied to raise $118,000,000 to $901,500,000 annually was expressed to the House Ways and Means Com mittee today by Secretary Morgen ihau. While he was testifying, the White House emphasized that the adminis tration was making no specific re commendations on tax rates and that Morgenthau was simply presenting estimates based on schedules suggest ed by committee members. A plain intimation was given at the White House that President Roose. velt expected the new tax bill to be confined to the three points he sug gested to Congress—levies on high in heritances, on high incomes and a graduated corporation tax to replace (f!nnH><uprl on Pag* Thnwl Claims House Members Met Power Lobby Washington, July B.—(AP)—Repre sentative Rankin, Democrat, Missis sippi, said in a statement today he was reliably informed that “certain members” of the House Military Com mittee “who are fighting the admin istration on the TVA bill” met with (CnntlniiAil nn Pag* Three) Begin Picking of Jury for Convict Case in Charlotte Charlotte. July 8 (AP) —'Selection of a jury to try five former convict camp officials charged with mistreating .two young Negro prisoners so that their feet had to be amputated was begun in Mecklenburg Superior Court shortly before noon today. As examination of the regular ve nire began, Judge Wilson Warlick ord ered a special venire of 50 persons drawn in order that there might be no delay should the regular panel provide insufficient. Counsel on both sides indicated they did not expect completion of the jury before tomorrow. Italy Speeds Mobilization Os Soldiers War in Ethiopia Now Considered Certain Even Before Rainy Season Ends Rome. July B.—(AP) —Italy stepped up concentration of troops for action in East Africa today and some ob servers predicted warfare between Italy and Ethiopia before the rainy season ends in September. The black shirt divisions, it was disclosed; have been increased In strength from 12,000 to 15,000 men. (Continued on Page Three!

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