r HE NDER«ON Late WAY to (•KNTRAL | TAR^HI-INA tLenty-skcond yeah MUSSOLINI AND BRITAIN REACH AGREEMENT Both Democrats and G. O. P. Pleased at Elections DR. R. M. ANDREWS IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF M. P. CONFERENCE p r> t. W. Bates Chosen Sec retary for 20th Year, Both Being Re-Elect ed to Office RFV. T. G. MADISON IN ANNUAL SERMON High Point Minister Preach er at Opening Session im Forenoon; Dr. Andrews, in Annual Report, Denounces liquor Stores; Dr. Broom field Preaches Tonight By RKV. J. L. TIIOI.T7.NGER j) : TV M. Andrews, of High Point. ; i,. . Iccted president for a fourth nd Dr. C. W. Bates, of Wins ■ on-Bult'in. was chosen secretary for h tventieth consecutive year when *h" nnnual election of officers for jos w i held this afternoon by the North Carolina Methodist Protestant 'Vi?*: nee. which opened here today. Pi Andrews had twice before serv ed th» conference in five-year terms, rh“ limit in consecutive tenure as PMSirlcnt Os the 171 votes cast in to. dav electinn. one of the high spots of tho opening: day. Dr. Andrews poll ed 9S. the other 76 being scattered anions a number of other ministers. Aft"! the- balloting, the conference made Dr. Andrews’ election unani mous. Dr Dates’ election was also made unanimous. Conference Is Opened Tho 108th session of the North Carolina Annual Conference of the .’/■*)heni Protestant Church opened No* tbi i morning with the president P*v. r; M Andrews, D. D.. High Point presiding and conducting the worship •* i vice, with Mrs. S. R. Wat ran at the organ, playing Lvoff’s “Pus >ian National Hymn" as the prelude. Hymns used in this worship serv ice. were, Come Ye that Love the 1 "I'l." to the tune of St. Thomas, nod How Firm a Foundation" sung to rh*‘ tune, Adeste P'iedles. The Scripture lesson was read from Colos sian- third chapter, invocation was spoken by the president of the con ference. Sermon by Itev. T. O. Madison Rev. Geo. W. Holmes, Graham, of (Continued on Page Five.) Cotton Co-ops Arc Defended By J. C. Stone Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 6 TAP) -nv r stone, former chairman of i‘ f ederal Farm Board, defended ”' n cooperatives today with the ■ "mf>nt tliat they “were made the . for tho entire cotton indus 'n Hie disastrous 16-cent loan of ' )rtober. 1929." ‘on< told a senatorial sub-commit h"!td»'d try Senator McKellar. Dem I <'nnessee, that, although co i .a* iv e representatives conferred h 'he fairn board nearly every day (Continued on Page Two.) Near Record Auto Listing Proves Prosperity Coming Pack and Is Coming Fast In the Sir Walter Hotel. HiHly DlMiMiteh Bureau, J. V. UASKFIIVILM4, . < Xov. 6—'With automobile i \ , ' j 1 ’''Olio now amounting to 500,- ••''itti Carolina and promising 'hose of 1920. when the , ! "-idtrationfe went almost to ~ " l|l,< with new car sales rap ( “Pie niching the 1929 record, iom i of Revenue A. J. Max ,,: »ri t helieve that the Re ..h ' ""i big bankers correct in ” ' lit jon tn«. President Roose non Z, " New a, '« n flop ""min goirifc to the bow ©“‘wfcßSQliN.tt, mstwgtsam &mlu Uispatrii ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND * ' LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF i'HHJ A-SHOCIATiD PRESS. Conference Leaders Re-Elected REV. R. M. ANDREWS, 1). D., President. High Point. DR. C. W. BATES, Secretary, Winston-Salem. TRADE CLIMBS BUf EMPLOYMENT LAGS Industry Demands Less Spending and Less Tax ation to /.Make Jobs GOTHAM BALANCES UP LaGuarriiu Saves New York City $35,- 000,000 in One Year; Wagner Bill Faces Early Test in Court By LESLIE EICHEL New York, Nov. 6.—Earnings fig ures for the last quarter of the year will be surprisingly good. In many trades, business is increasing contrary to th“ usual trend at this time of the year I —notably in gasoline and oil. But employment does not improve in the same ratio. That is a problem which has not been solved—a prob. | lorn affecting one-fifth of the popula tion. The administration, stung by crit i icism of huge spending, pleads for i private industry to take up the em ployment lag. Industry responds 1 by demanding (Continued on Page Three.) j wows. ! “There is every indication both in North Carolina, and in the nation as a whole that prosperity is returning and returning fast,” Commissioner Maxwell said. “For people have more money and are spending more money than since 1929. And most of them are giving President Roosevelt the credit for these improved conditions. The result is that they are going to relect him for another four years, re gardless of the complaints of the Re publicans and a few disgruntled bank (Continued on Pa£ e Tbre?.}. HENDERSON, N. C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNON, NOVEMBER 6. 1935 KENTUCKY BALLOTS BEING TABULATED; RESULT UNCERTAIN Republicans Gain Decisive Control of New York As sembly in Tuesday’s Voting JIM FARLEY SAYS NEW DEAL UPHELD Republicans Carry Philadel phia and Cleveland, But Democrats Win Connecti cut Cities; New York’s $55,- 000,000 Relief Bond Issue Wins Easily DEMOCRAT LEADS Louisville, Ky., Nov. 6 (AP) A. B. (Happy) Chandler. Demo crat, who campaigned for gover nor of Kentucky on a “support Roosevelt” program, led his Re publican opponent, Judge Swope, by 2,111 votes on first returns from the State’s general election yes terday. Swope refrained from making the New Deal an issue. Sixty-four precincts out of 4,219 gave Chandler 7.530, Swope 5,- 025. Twenty-two of the State’s 120 counties were represented in the tabulation, which got off to a slow start, as local races were counted first in a number of coun ties. : j (By The Associated Press) While Kentucky’s votes were bring counted today, both Re. publican and Democratic party leaders expressed satisfaction with the outcome of yesterday’s elections in other states. Republicans haled the election of a Reupblican majority to the New York State Assembly as a good omen for (Continued on Page Two.) Duke Gloucester, Prince of England, Is Wed in London London, Nov. 6 (AP)—The Duke of Gloucester. tall soldier-son of the king and queen of England, and Lady Alice Montague-Doualgas-Scott, 33- year-old Scot aristocrat, were married today in a quiet ceremony in the crimson and gold chapels of Buck ingham Palace. With the plighting of this troth, the Prince of Wales became the British royal family’s only bachelor. HUGE FARM COLONY PROJECT IS SOUGHT Eastern Carolina Newspaper Men Launch Program at Goldsboro Meet D.-iily Dispatch nuresm. In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY .1. C. IIASKEItVILLE. Raleigh, Nov. 5. —A movement to secure Federal aid in the establish ment of a huge farm colonization un dertaking in New Hanover county which would place 1,500 families on 25,000 acres of land there on which they might not only become self-sup porting but actually wealthy, was launched at a meeting of Eastern North Carolina newspaper publishers, editors and business men at a meet, ing in Goldsboro Monday night. The support of the newspaper men pre sent was voiced in the adoption of a (Continued on Page Eight.) Gxjß WIATUtB MAN FOR NORTH CAROLINA , Mostly cloudy tonight and Thurs day; somewhat colder tonight and o n the coast Thursday. 20 on Trial at Last in France’s Stavisky Case After two years of political maneuvering, 20 persons, including Arlette Stavisky, the wido 4 (right) of Alexandre Stavisky, are on trial in Paris on the charge of being implicated in the tremendous swindles bared after the mysterious death of the Russian (left) and the resultant riots (below) which brought . France to the brink of revolution. (Central Press) $8, 897,4231s AllottedN. C. Washington, Nov. 6. (AP) — Comptroller General J. R. Mc- CarL today approved $122,385,369 more of WI‘A projects in 28 states. His action boosted to $2,701,944,- 175 the amount of projects from which State administrators may select those to be carried out. MeCarl also released $9,108,694 of WPA allotments to the 29 states, bringing to $981,648,338 the total available for immediate expendi ture. The value of projects approved today by MeCarl included: North' Carolina $8,897,423. 1 JOBS BEING MADE RAPIDLY IN STATE Reemployment Service Push ed to Furnish Workers For Projects Daily Dispatch Unreal!, In the Sir Walter Hotel. IIY J. C. BASKERVIIiIiE. Raleigh, Nov. 6. —-The various of fices of the National Reemployment Service over the State are now being kept busy supplying the workers for the many WPA projects which are at last beginning to get under way, Mrs. (Continued on Page Three.) Hoey Asks Traveling Mens Aid Daily Dispatch Bnrean, In the Sir Walter Hotel. TIY J. C. BASKERVILLE. Raleigh. Nov. 6- Clyde R. Hoey. of Shelby, is becoming more active in his campaign for the Democratic nom ination for governor, according to re ports reaching here from various sec tions of the State. In addition to making more and more'' speeches, he had just sent o\ a campaign letter to most of the commercial traveling men in the State asking their sup port. It is estimated that between 4.000 and 6.000 of these letters have been sent out, since virtually every traveling man in the State seems to (Continued on tvh.i G. 0. P. Liberal Platform Is Urged by Vandenburg Attack on Everything New Deal Has Done Won’t Succeed, Michigan Senator Says STANDPAT PROGRAM COULDN’T WIN OUT “Lincoln Liberalism” Will Get Voters, and Predicts Year from Today Head lines Will Proclaim New Leader in U. S. and That “the Republic Is Restored” Chicago, 111., Nov. 6. —(AP) —Sena, tor A. H. Vandenburg, Republican, Michigan, today urged the adoption of a "Lincoln liberalism” platform for the 1936 Republican campaign. The senator, frequently mentioned as a presidential candidate, in an ad dress prepared for delivery before the Hamilton Club of Chicago, said the G. O. P. could win in 1936 if it were ready with affirmative plans" for the nation’s troubles. That is what the country wants,’’ he said. i&e must—and shall —produce a specific program out of next June’s Republican convention. ,1“ venture to believe that when the time comes the Republican party will speak plainly, constructively, progressively—and victoriously.” An attack on everything the Roose velt administration has done will not succeed, Senator Vanderburg warned adding that Republican voters, ‘in (Continued on Page Two.) POLICY! MEXICO DISMAYS CATHOLICS See No Freedom of Educa tion, Regardless of Gov ernment Claim Mexico City, Nov. 6.—-(AP) —Cath- olic leaders in Mexico exressed ex treme disapointment today at the lat est declaration of the government s (religious olicios, in wjhich Sylvano Gonzales, secretary of the interior, asserted there would be no modifica tion of r»