HENDERSON gateway TO ' CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-SECOND YEAR WAR NEUTRALITY BILL PASSED BY SENATE BRITAIN MAY SEEK AMERICAN SUPPORT AGAINST MUSSOLINI London Developments Out lined at Washington by Message from Lon don Embassy AUSTRIA LINES UP ON SIDE OF ITALY Official Organ Praises Mus solini’s Course in Ethiopian Crisis; Cabinet and Others of Fascist Hierarchy Await Bidding of Their Dictator London. Aug. 21.—(API—A British bid for American cooperation for so lution of the Italo-Ethiopian crisis may be the next move from Down ing Street, itw as indicated today as the political drama was intensified hy preparing for the emergency meet ing of the cabinet tomorrow. Any Anglo-American action would be an addition to League of Nations measures. Grave-faced s’atesmen, one after the other, visited the foreign office before noon. First was the leader of His Majesty’s opposition party. John Lansbury. Then came Lioyu George, followed by Ramsay McDonald. The king at BaTmoreal kept in touch through his official listening post. Sir Clyde Wigram, private secretary to His Majesty. The State Department this morning has an up-to-the minute British view from Ray Atherton. American charge d'affaires. who forwarded a full re port to Washington after another con ference last night Britain has yet made no formal move to enlist Amer ican cooperation, but it is believed a way is being prepared for this. fol. lowing the cabinet session tomorrow. CABINET AND OTHERS TO WAIT MUSSOLINI BIDDING Rome, Aug. 21. (AP) Cabinet members and other leaders of the Fascist hierarchy awaited orders to day for military duties in East Africa just as if they were privates in the (Continued on Page Eight.) Selassie Thinks Whole World May Become Involved Addis Ababa, Aug. 21 (AP) Weeping as he talked, Emperor Haile Selassie predicted to The Associated Press today, in a re markable interview, that war be tween Italy and Ethiopia would not only drench the two countries in blood but might drag in the whole world. Bar Association Cruise Nears End At Norfolk, Va. Aboard S. S. Reliance, En Route to Norfolk, Va., Aug. 21.—(AP)—Law yers on the convention cruise of the North Carolina Bar Association, irounding out a jaunt to Nova Scotia, turned their thoughts to business and administrative matters today. New officers were to be elected and other business transacted at a final business session. The Reliance is dut» in Norfolk today *and then the dele gates will depart for home- MOIPQENT OUSTED TROM POST Tries To Make Himself Dic tator But Fails and Is Imprisoned Guayaquil, Ecuador, Aug. 21.—(AP) -Joss M. Velasco Ibarra, stripped of hie office of president, was a military prisoner today. His attempt to become dictator was frustrated when army leaders re pudiated him in favor of the Con stitution. Seizure of the president was accm plisheci without bloodshed. Imprisoned with Velasco Ibarra W(r <' three aides, who were accused ' • being parties to the coup which ' hisco Ibarra intended to bring Dbout at Uu >’n today. Tmtitersiim tlrnhi Btspatrh ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. WIJl* SERVICE! 09 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Defies Mob Threats gH jig mm liiifii jg| Judge Merrill E. Otis Threatened with a beating Vy mob leaders who blocked tw« foreclosure sales in northwest Mis souri, Federal Judge Merrill E. Otis defied the threats and spoke at a homecoming gathering in Hopkins, Mo. Armed department of justice agents circulated through the crowd, however. Judge Otis referred jokingly to the threats in his speech. He had decreed the foreclosures. bmTwillacU Cabinet Members Favor Fi nancial and Economic Pressure at Once PLAN FOR FIRM STAND Strong Position To Be Taken At Ge neva When League Considers Sanctions; Full Cabinet To Act Soon London, Aug. 21 (AP)—Seven leaders of the British cabinet to day tentatively approved a policy demanding financial and economic action against Italy if that coun try attacks Ethiopia. The ministers had been called into a special informal session hy Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin. They conferred two hours. The decision. although tentative, calls so- a strong British stand at Geneva in the forthcoming League of Nations session for financial and economic sanctions. This idea will be taken up by the full cabinet tomorrow in an emer gency meeting. Throughout the day there were in dications Great Britain might seek American cooperation outside Geneva for solution of the Italo-Ethiopian crisis. WEATHER FOR NORTH CROLINA. Local showers tonight and Thursday; not much change in temperature. Roosevelt To Fix Cotton Loan Soon Washington, Aug- 21. —(AP) Presi dent Roosevelt expressed hope today that he could soon announce the cot ton loan figure on the 1935 cotton Cl ’°He expected to' sign the amend ment strengthening the agricultural adjustment administration late today tomorrow after study by experts. HENDERSON, N. C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 21, 1935. J. M. BROUGHTON IS OF MATE BAR Elected Aboard Ship As Summer Convention Cruise Comes to Close at Norfolk STATE DEPARTMENT JUSTICE APPROVED Urges Governor’s Naming of Crime Commission and Favors Strengthening Os Anti-Lynching Act; Revi sion of Corporation Law Is Also Urged Aboard ft. S. Reliance, En Route to 'T nr fr,lL Va.. A"*. 21 (AP) —.T. M. Rronrrhton, of Raleigh, was elected of tho 'North Carolina Bar Ar-oojntinn f*">r tho fominn year at -qpf’ino tipr.f.ion of its convention nriihp to Nova Scotia. as were Irvin Tucker. Whitevil'/: Buv Rob erts. Marshall, and Frank Heckler Wilmington. Fr«d Sutton. Kinston, end Alston Stubbs. Durham, were Np'-forY to th*» eyemthm comTnitrtee. Croat.ion of a State Department of Tnstice. as recommenced by Attorney General A A. F. Seawell, was en dorsed by resolutions. In other resolutions the association endorsed the National bar program of the American Bar Association, re commended appointment of a crime commission by Governor Ehringhaus and urged enactment of a summary judgment act. The association voted for appoint ment of committees to make studies looking toward strengthening )the anti-lynching act and revision of the North Carolina corporation law. The closing convention session was held on shipboard this forenoon as the Reliance steamed toward Norfolk, where it was due today. Will Move 131 Women Prisoners Unity Dispatch Bnrena, In the S>- Walter Hotel. BY J. C. lIASKERVILL. Raleigh, Aug. 21—Within the next day or two, 131 women prisoners now in the women’s division of the Cen tral Prison here will be removed from the section of the prison in which they have been imprisoned to th«* Wake county prison camp Number l, now being vacated and made ready for these women, Oscar T. Pitts, act ing executive director of the prison division of the State Highway and Public Works Commission, said today. Os these 131 women prisoners, 31 are white women and 100 Negro women. Many of them are serving long terms for murder, second degree murder or for attempted murder, as well as for larceny. When this move is made to the Wake county prison camp, it will be the first time many of thesb women prisoners have been outside the prison enclosure in years. The women prisoners are being moved so that their part of the prison may be fireproofed. The white prisoners who have been in this prison camp are otday being moved to Camp Polk prison farm, west of Raleigh and they will be housed there and work out of there just as they did from the prison camp The Negro prisoners will be distri buted to other prison camps over the State. The women prisoners will then be moved into this camp just as soon as a few changes have been made to make it more suitable for housing the women. The same prison (Continued on Page Three.) In his press conference he indicat ed he would take his time in naming the directors of the Federal Reserve Board undre the new banking legis lation. Mr. Roosevelt said that James A. Moffett, Federal housing administra tor, would be allowed his desire to return to private business, but would stay on the job a little longer. Rogers Family At Bier Os Comedian Awaiting Funeral Test for Huey —Mi Unusual importance is attached to Mississippi gubernatorial election, August 27, in which Hugh L. White (1.), wealthy lumberman, opposes Paul B. Johnson (r.), congressman, because Huey Long support of Johnson caused Senator Theo Bilbo to demand that Long keep out of campaign. (Central Press) M’DIALD BID MAY RUN - OFF PRIMARY Raleigh’s State Officialdom Pirtually All Against Winston’s Can didate WOULD LOAD DOWN BUSINESS IN STATE Some 10 to 12 Million Dol lars Would Be Needed To Replace Sales Tax, Which May Mean Trebling of Franchises, Licenses Doily Dispatch Itnreim, In the Mr Walter Hotel. BV J. C. BASKERVILL. AiUgJ. 2|L —Whije official State circles here are almost solid in their opposition to the candidacy of Dr. Ralph W. McDonald for the Dem ocratic nomination for governor, be cause his platform is almost in di rect opposition to the prevailing school of governmental thought, both here in the capital and over the State generally, a majority of State offi cials and political observers her© agree that he is already a dangerous candidate- A good many are already of the opinion that McDonald will throw the campaign into a second primary and that the two left in this second primary will be either Clyde R. Hoey or A. H. (Sandy) Graham (Continued on Page Eight.) New Patrol Will Start Duty Sept. 1 In the Sir Walter Hotel. Daily Di*pnYrh Bnrean, ( J»Y J. C. BASKERVILL. ' Raleigh, Aug. 21.—The enlarged highway patrol of 121 officers and men, including the 66 new patrolmen whose names were announced Tues day, will go on active duty by Kept -1 at the latest, and probably by Sat urday, August 31, Captain Charles D. Farmer, commander of the patrol said today. The first shipment of new uniforms left the factory yesterday and the final shipment will be made in a few days, so that all the patrol men can be completely outfitted by the end of next week. “The patrolmen will be out on the highways and ready to arrest all the Labor Day drunks that get behind (Continued on Page Three.) Train Bearing Wife and Children Reach Los Angeles from East Around Noon OKLAHOMA TRIBUTE GIVEN WILEY POST Body Arrives In Giant Air plane, Ending Longest Fun eral Flight in History; Large Crowd at Municipal Airport As Death Plane Arrives Los Angeles, Cal., Aug. 21. —(AP) — The Rogers family will be together again here foday- -with a vast sad dif ference. Mrs. Will Rogers and the children, Will, Jr., Mary and Jim, were hurry ing by train from the East, due to arrive about noon. They were speeding to a funeral In. stead of a happy reunion after gay areial adventures The body of the famous comedian, who kidded the great and the near great, and made them like it, await ed them in a simple bronze casket in Forest Lawn cemetery. Thousands of others waited also to pay final tribute to the actor philo pher who crashed to his death with WUley Post in Alaskan wilds. Tomorrow a guard of honor com posed of two score army fliers will attend the casket as the doors of the chapel are opened to the public. OKLAHOMA PAYS TRIBUTE TO INTREPID WILEY POST Oklahoma City, Okla., Aug. 21. (AP) —Oklahoma paid solemn silen tribute today to Wiley Post, whose home-coming ofr the first time was not a joyous one. The body of the dauntless little air man, who was borne here late yes terday in a giant air liner ending the longest funeral flight in history. A large crowd lined the municipal airport as the ship arrived and the body was transferred to a hearse. Kidnap Group Are Trying For Bonds jAwaiting Appeals Smithfield, Aug. 21—(AP)—Six of the eight defendants convicted here of kidnaping three young Johnston girls and taking them to New York for immoral purposes sought to ar range bond today pending appeals to the State Supreme Court. A jury convicted the group, all members of a single family, last night after four hours deliberation, but two of them, Margaret Lee Beasley, and Nellie Beasley, 17-year-old twin sis ters, drew suspended sentences of a year and did not appeal. LOBBYPROBESGO^ — Black and O’Connor Both Publicity Hounds and Very Jealous By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, Aug. 21.—How child ish lawmakers sometimes can be was illuminatingly and amusingly demon strated by the recent desperate fight between the Senate and the House of Representatives for possession of Howard C. Hopson, the public utili ties magnate, especially of Associat ed Gas and Electric fame. The row started over the clause, in the utilities bill, to abolish holding companies the “death sentence clause, as it was called. The holding Companies naturally opposed it furiously. The clause’s ad vocates accused the companies, lobby q£ various unethical practices. The companies’ spokesmen counter-charg ed that the administration, which fa vored the “death sentence,” also was lobbying, and that its lobby was un ethical 100. - TWO INVESTIGATIONS Into these charges and counter charges of unethical lobbying two congressional investigations were be gun simultaneously—one by a special committee of the upper chamber, un der the chairmanship of Senator Hugo L. Black of Alabama; one by the, rules committee of the House of (Continued on Page Three.) fr'UHLasuMD avail* aftbrnoom BXCBPT HONDAV On 'New Deal’ Dollar Republicans are insinuating that “New Deal” propaganda idea prompted choice of reverse (top), of Great Seal of United States, never used before, as design for new dollar bill. The Latin motto on the seal means “A new order of the ages.” The more familiar face of the seal is shown below. CONGRESS M JOLTS ra Imposition of NRA Terms on Government Con tracts Abandoned for This Session INHERITANCE LEVY , OUT OF TAX BILLS NRA Proposition Was On List of “Musts” for This Session and Had Already Passed Senate; Congress Toward Adjourn men by Saturday Washington. Aug. 21 (AP) —Con- gress still is bent going home by Saturday night, but in their dash to ward adjournment legislators has de livered two jolts to major parts of the Roosevelt administration’s program. Some hours after a Senate-House conference committee had approved a new $250,000,000 tax bill, which em bodied many administration ideas, but left out the new inheritance (Continued on Page Three.) Paralysis Waning Rapidly In State; 30 Are Infectious Raleigh, Aug. 21.—(AP) — The Ssfaifitrle paralysis epidemic ap parently is fast dying out in North Carolina. Records at the State Board of Health office showed there were only 30 of the 549 cases which have been reported this year are still in an infectious stage. Three new cases were report ed to authorities here today. Cabinet Group Strong For Cotton Processing Taxes Presiden|t’s Committee Urges Control of Japanese Cot ton Goods Imports by Friendly Agreement; Urges Further Study of Regional Wage Scales Washington, Aug. 21 —(AP) —Dis- continuance of the cotton processing taxes was opposed today by the spe cial cabinet committee which has been studying the ills of the cotton textile industry. The committee suggested control of imports of Japanese cotton goods, preferably by means cf a voluntary and friendly agreement” with Japan. It also recommended establishment of a continuing committee to study the problem of regional wage differen tials in the textile industry. These and other recommendations O PAGES o today FIVE CENTS COPY MEASURE PRESSED INOOOSEINFAtt Roosevelt Is In Favor of Seven-Point Resolution Hastily Jammed Through Senate MANDATORY BAN ON ARMS IS PROVIDED Munitions Makers Would Be Licensed amd ’ U. S. Ships Transporting Arms Would Be Denied Protec tion; Hopes for Adjourn ment This Week Dimmed Washington, Aug. 21.—(AP)— A seven-point resolution designed to safeguard American neutrality in event of a foreign war was adopted today by the Senate. Attemtps were already under way to assure House action President Roosevelt was reported in favor of the move, coming as It does at a time when the Italo.Ethio* pian situation is causing grave ques tions for; European governments In particular. Spurred into action by omnibus war signs abroad and a filibuster by mun itions committee members, the Sen ate speedily endorsed the foreign re lations committee compromise resolu tion. Representing a compromise be tween a more drastic program ad vocated by the Senate special muni tions investigating committee, headed by Senator Nye, Republican, Nortß Dakota, and the State Department attitude, the resolution provides: A mandatory embargo on exports of arms, munitions and implements of war to all belligerents in a foreign conflict. A system of licensing munitions | manufacture and export as a perma nent ’policy of this government, along the lines of the Geneva arms treaty of 1925, ratified earlier in the ses sion by the Senate. A ban against American ships car rying arms or munitions under em bargo to any belligerent port or to any neutral port for the re-shipment (Continued on Page Three.) H r™PROSPERITy. Neither Prosperity Nor Se curity Today Except for Privileged Few By LESLIE EICHEL New York, Aug. 21.—This part of our era may be known as the Period of the Failure of High Prices. Hitherto, high prices have been syr/jnymous “prosperity.” To day we have the return of high prices—in the stock market, for com modities, for nearly everything ex cept land, and land, once it is fore closed into fewer hands, may follow. And, today, except for the priv ileged few, there is neither prosperity nor security. The many still areb ruised and walking in darkness- If President Roosevelt faces larger and larger oppositionists votes at the polls, itw ill not be because h© desires an amendment to the Con stitution or because he taxes wealth or even the man of intermedlat* (Continued on Page Five.) were contained in a report submit, ted to President Roosevelt and trans mitted by him to Congress. The processing tax, Japanese im ports and the North-South wage dif ferentials were the chief matters studied by the committee, which re ceived complaint by the industry at; extended hearings early in the sum mer. Other committee recommendations: Legislative and administrative ac tion to meet the problem of excess (Continued on Page Eight.) t