Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 15, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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henderson GATEWAY to central CAROLINA fvVENTY-SECOND YEAR JAPAN TO PROTECT NORTH CHINA’S REVOLT ********** ********** ****Kn .._ Italian Capture Os Strategic City Os Harrar Is Imminent ETHIOPIAN TROOPS TIGHT ITALIANS IN BLOODY STRUGGLE Native Warriors Ambush l est Column of Northern Army in Battle Last ing All Day ITALY RETORTS BY bombing attacks Ethiopian Encampment Lit erally Blasted Out of Exist ence from Air; One Priest Killed and Church Burn ed; Bombings Also Occur on Southern Front ill* I'll** Associated Press) i iiinn correspondents in Ethiopia Mini i'il today the capture of the *ti ito«;ie city of Harrar was immin |)|i|i:itches to Rome said the Ital- Colonel Malctti- leading a force ,' mtivc soldiers, had advanced in the valley of the Fafan river to a I■ I'ion only about 28 miles “from hi- immediate objective.’’ The defenders of the Harrar region tv, ir reported retreating in disorder oft or i pitched battle yesterday. Hanai. the second largest city in Iphi'ipia. is just south of the impor ir,:it riiltoadc onnecting Addis Ababa end Dji' outi. French Somaliland. It • liar, fonvs in both north and south inued on Page Two.) JUDGMENT WITHHELD AS TO MACHINE GUN Wihon, Nov. 15. —(AP)—Judge O. T’ lv.t'kinsMn. in general county court lioif unlay, reserved judgment after In mi - Marshall Wichard plead .ii’liv and T N. Norris plead in irn mi charges of possessing a tih-mai hine gun and firearms with cij permits. Tin i w ll wore arrested with a small fna 1 in their automobile here last Philippine Rule Given To Natives M Political Prisoners by U. S. ( io\ ernor General As I ,ast Act Man'll**, P. r., Nov. 15.—-(AP) The t'" r '.lonmj{ ,if *><i political prisoners— final official act of America’s last Knvf'moi general of the Philippines— H 1 dido aid today as the Filipinos over government of theii' own is '|,,u Hie inauguration of Manuel T '/oii a first president of the com """oveaith, Frank Murphy, retiring • ''hoi general, announced his ac -1 'tiiuk this will set an eaniple of on tinned on Page Six.) House-Cleaning Needed To Lift Railroads Back Continued Business Revival Next Two Years Will Help l hem Wonderfully, But Competition Will Hold Short Hauls; Increased Costs Are Piling Up **' ROGER W. BABSON, * '"P.Vright 1935, Publishers Financial Bureau, luc. . ’ Park, Mass.. Nov. 15. , ' ll ~U ' famous Coolidge market y!" »h«* average railroad l: juried at $83.30 per share i;,,,. 1 " r \ Vs l H R(‘ industrial stock at Eoday twelve years later— are about $35.00 and $143.- Railroad shares have , 11 I 'j aX p»i cent, while industrials tl l , " v d 54 per cent. This com- , (I ‘i j’* ows that the rail ‘ujfnti n< i' ' ailing. Conse ’' ' 'H. to give a diag Hintitrrsmt tlutlti IBfsiJatrhl ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIWiINIA. L i?^ aKD WIRB SERVICE) OF THB ASSOCIATED PRISMS. Nationals Keep Control But Lose Some Strength In Elections In Britain British Victor ■F wmm K l »SK» ■ -r ■ ' 1 Stanley Baldwin The British National cabinet, com posed chiefly rtfc Umiaervsrt4s^~-frea4- ed by Stanley Baldwin, above came out on top in the general elections yesterday. Thus Baldwin remains as British prime minister. The Conser vatives made theii - appeal for re-elec tion on the basis of the present war scare in the Mediterranean. ROOSEVELf CAUGHT BETWEEN l FORCES One Set Advises Breathing Spells and Catering to Conservatives OTHER MORE LIBERAL Tells Him Millions Depend mi Him Hiul Now Is Time To Strike; He May Wish Breathing Spell Himself By LESLIE EICHEL New York. Nov, 15.—N0 one knows President Roosevelt’s mind. But it is conceivable that he is torn between two conflicting forces. He still has two sets of advisers. One set advises “breathing spells,” the other set ad vises a direct standup fight with con servatives. At least, so it generally is believed. President Roosevelt’s conservative advisers unquestionably tell him something like this (much of it has | appeared in their writings and inter- I views): is a eg lservative country. Get people off the dole. Make an fort to balance the budget. Play up to business. If it sees prosperity un der you, it will be reluctant to change to an unknown quantity under the Republicans. Consult the Big Boys. (Continued on Page 3 Second Section) nosis of the railroads’ illness. Kails Suffering From Shoek For an average of 1,014,000 cars loaded per week in 1929, traffic has fallen to 557.000 cars in 1933. and 600,000 this year (estimated). This tre mendous loss of business —roughly fifty per cent —has been a terrible •shock to a highly capitalized industry burdened by inflexible overhead. Lit tle wonder that only a few roads are earning their fixed charges today. From a shorter term viewpoint, the depression has been the rails’ biggest (Continued on Page 4, Second Section; HENDERSON, N. C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 15, 1935 Ex-Premier Ramsay Mc- Donald Is Defeated for Re-Election in Thurs day’s Voting government” might HAVE 200 MAJORITY Previous Majority Was 412; Anthony Eden Wins By Handsome Majority, But Sir Juhn Simon, Home Secretary, Barely Holds On To His Office London. Nov. 15.—(AP)—Returns from yesterday’s general election showed the National government re tained its majority in the House of Commons today, although Ramsay MacDonald, lord president of the council and first leader of the Nat ional government, was defeated. The voters had returned 366 Nat ional government members to the Commons up to 3 p. m., and that number consistuted the majority in the total of 615 seats. How great the majority might ac tually be was not shown by these returns- although some estimates were that the government might have as •«wmy-,a3 200-ratue seats than the op position. The last majority for the National government was 412 seats. Defeated with his father was Mal colm' MacDonald, colonial secretary. Anthony Eden, minister for League of Nations affairs, was re-elected by the huge majority of 24,816. Sir John Simon, home secretary, squeezed back into his seat by a majority of 642 votes. Negro , 70, Os Granville, To Be Executed Oxford, Nov. 15. —(AP)—John Kinyum. 70-yoivr-old Negro, was convicted. |in Granville Su|>erior Court today of criminal assault and was sentenced by Judge Henry A. Grady to be executed by lethal gas on December 27. Kinyon was charged with at tacking Miss Irene Peed, a young white woman of the Creedmoor section. At the time of the assault, feel ing ran high in Granville county, and when caught Kinyon was rushed here by highway patrol men to prevent a possible lynch ing. 317^SSnG Highway Patrol Bearing Down on Highway, Oc tober Record Shows Daily Dispulrk Rnrean, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKKRVILLE. Raleigh, Nov. 15—-Highway patrol men arrested 317 drunken drivers during October, as compared with 250 drunken drivers arrested in Sep tember, according to the monthly pa trol report made public today by Captain Charles D. Farmer, com mander. In addition to the arrests made for driving while drunk, high way patrolmen made 2,581 arrests for other violation, procured and served warrants for 2,625 other drivers and issued citations to 1,829 others. With the exception of the arrests for drunk en driving, the other arrests, war rants issued and citations are slightly below the number issued in Septem ber, when 3.111 were arrested. 3,041 procured and 21,726 cita tions issued. The slight decrease in arrests, war rants issued and citations is attribut ed to the fact that drivers are being somewhat more careful, having learn ed in September that the patrolmen really mean business. “Drivers are at last beginning t D > u jr-iinus 1 cl - -• v - / John Bull on Job fn Egypt Rioting British troops rush to the aid of native police when rioting breaks out in Cairo, Egypt, scene of new anti- British demonstrations. Pitched battle between police and students resulted in several deaths British aoldiers were confined to thair barracks during the first outbreak. (Central Press) Reported Slain Daughter of general he had exe cuted is said to have assassinated Marshal Sun Chuang-Fang (above), onetime Chinese war lord, as he was leaving Tientsin home where he had lived in retirement for seven years. (Central Press) UTK-Canada Reciprocity Pact Signed Hull and Premier Attach Signatures To Tariff Accord in FDR’s Office Washington, Nov. 15. — (AP) Amid ‘protest over expected tariff reductions, the long negotiations for a Canadian-American reciprocal trade treaty moved to a climax today. Premier W. L. McGenzie King of Canada sped here to sign the pact in a ceremony in President Roosevelt’s executive office in late afternoon. Secretary Hull was nominated to sign for the United States. The treaty, first recipricity agree ment between the two nations in more than half a century, is expect ed to become effective by the first of the year. It is part of the New Deal’s program aimed at increasing inter national trade through mutual low ering of barriers. The provisions of the pact will not (Continued on Page Six.) OtJR WtATUEB MAN FOR NORTH CAROLINA Clovdy tonight and Saturday, with Cscis.x;ni. liSfbt -i:*.s J some vh -A o:Mer £u-urda« Kir-lcu, Hull Fourth Time Warns Os Trade With Italians Cites Roosevelt’s Ruling That All Such Transac tions Are At Own ers’ Own Risk CONTRARY TO U. S. NEUTRALITY STAND Secretary Says Administra tion U: Watching Closely Exports to Italy and Ethio pia; Certain Commodities Named in Statement Issued By Hull Washington, Nov. 15.—(AP)— As serting a considerably increased amount of war materials is being ex ported from the United States, Sec retary Hull directed the attention of (American business again today to President Roosevelt’s warning that any transactions they have with Eth iopia and Italy are at their own risks. “The American people are entitled to know that there are certain com modities such as oil, copper trucks tractors, scrap iron and scrap steel, which are essential war materials, al though not actually arms, ammuni tion or implements of war. and, ac cording to recent government trade (Continued on Page Two.) MARYLAND MURDER IS BEING PROBED Upper Marlboro, Md., Nov. 15. (AP)- A blood-stained automobile was sought by police today as they strove to solve the mysterious slaying of Core Corinna Loring, bride-to-be, as who was beaten and strangled with a piece of wrapping cord. A theory held by Robert W. Hicks. Washington criminologist, led police to order a check of all garages in nearby Virginia. Maryland and the District of Columbia. bitterfightfor SUPERINTENDENCY Alderman Expected To Give Clyde Erwin Run for His Money In 1936 Hally UiKiiiikh Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. C. BASKKRVILLE, Raleigh. Nov. 15. —A spirited con test for the Democratic nomination for State superintendent of public in struction is in prospect as the result of the announcement today by A. B. Alderman- county superintendent of schools m Greene county, that he is a candidate for tne nomination in op- PUBLISHHD BVBitY AFTBRNOOH ■XCBPT HUNDAY» Woman Flier Is Downed in Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Nov. 15. (AP)—Jean Batten, forced down at Praia Secca, Brazil, while on a flight to Rio de Janeiro, reached this city this morning in a Brazil ian army plane, leaving her own damaged ship ft! a salt swamp. New 1 Zealand aviatrix, first Wo man to fly alone over the South Atlantic, had landed at Praia Sec ca, about 50 miles north of Rio de Janeiro, because of la< ft of fuel. Three army planes had searched for her after she was hours over due here, following her departure from Natal early yesterday oil the last leg of an England to Brazil flight. Japan New Concern of Big Powers New Land Grab In China Appears Im minent and Nobody Can Stop Her By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington. Nov. 15.—Japan’s ac tivities in China are beginning to worry occidental diplomacy more, if anything, than Italy’s in Ethiopia. Italy can be stopped by bottling her up in the Mediterranean. Japan can’t be bottled. She has ac cess to the open ocean. She can be beaten in an ugly fight, but she can (Continued on Page Two.) Jews In Germany Deprived Os All Political Rights By Decree Os Nazi Government Berlin, Nov. 15. —(AP) —All poli tical rights were taken from Jews in Germany today by an official de cree defining closely the citizenship and dacial laws promulgated by the Reichstag at its Nurnberg session during the September convention of (he Nazi party. “The Jew cannot be a Reich cit izen. cannot vote or cannot occupy public office, ruled the decree, pub 19 Pages Today TWO SECTIONS. FIVE CENTS COPY THREE PROVINCES NOW ON VERGE OF BREAK WITH CHINA Japan Believed Definitely Sponsoring Move To Cre ate New State Like Manchukuo WILL USE FORCE IN DEFENDING REVOLT North China Campaign for Independence From Na tionalist Government Be lieved Near Climax; Ho pei, Shantung and Chahar Provinces To Break Off Tokyo. Nov. 15.—(AP)— Japanese dispatcher from Peiping: and Tient sin indicated strongly today that the alleged popular North China cam paign for independence was near a climax. A definite breaking off of Hopei, than tun g and Chahar provinces from the central Chinese government at Nanking was predicted to come with in two or three days. The overwhelming consensus of non Japanese authorities was that such a movement would be definitely Japan fostered and that any allegedly inde pendent regime arising in North China would be under the protection of the Japanese army. Such a development in North China, where Nanking’s sovereignty has been weak since the Japanese military and 'political coup last summer, would be similar to that which came to Man churia, now the Japanese-sponsored state of Manchukuo. Vernacular newspaper dispatches described vividly a tide of “indepen dent” sentiment sweeping North China and said Japanese authorities in that area were ready to oppose forcibly any person or party ‘‘attempt ing to interfere with this legitimate popular movement.” Georgia Negro Is Sentenced To Die On Murder Charge Moultrie, Ga.. Nov. 15. -(AP) John Henry Sloan, stuttering Negro who confessed slaying a white youth was safely on his way to prison to day for electrocution December 10. after hand-to-hand fighting between State troops and an angry crowd which threatened lynching. “I’ve never seen men keep their eqqulibrium like those guardsmen did when the crisis came,” said Ad jutant General Lindley Camp. One shot apparently from the crowd signalled the start of the fight yes terday as picked infantrymen es corted Sloan from the court, where he was sentenced to die foe. shooting Otis Gay. TALMAOGE APPEALS COTTON ACE AGAIN Says Compulsion Replaced Volunteer Plan Under Bankhead Set-Up Washington, Nov. 15. —(AP)—Gov- ernor Eugene Talmadge. of Georgia, frequent critic of the Roosevelt ad ministration, again asked the Sup reme Court today to permit him to file suit attacking the constitutality of the Bankhead cotton production control act. The new brief wari filed in behalf of Talmadge by M. J. Yeomans, Geor gia attorney general. The Department of Justice has opposed the motion, (Continued on Page Four.) “Jewish functionalise of the gov ernment will be pensioned December 31, 1935.” Another decree dealing with the new blood honor laws forbade mar riages between Jews and “quarter- Jews” or between “quarter-Jews” themselves. Aryan domestic servants may re main in the service of Jews. the decree provided, if they me 35 years or age or over. _
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Nov. 15, 1935, edition 1
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