Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 21, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Henderson Tobacco Sales 18,000,000 Pounds For Season IIXNDERSON (i ATX WAY TO CENTRAL cab: TWKNTY-SECOND year CHINESE CRISIS MAT FORCE CRASH IN JAPAN MARKET HAS PAID ABOVE $4,000,000 UPON WEED SALES Sffl-'O'* Average Approxi mately $22.25 Per Hun dred Pounds for Season to Date four sales days TO THANKSGIVING Market Making Good Pro gress Toward Its Goal of 25 M illion Pounds for Season; Will Be Only Three Sales Days Next Week for The Market • !*• i>the Henderson tobacco ■ !v ■ :!i• <> 111; li !< lay reached approx i-r, >: ■' to or beyond the 18.000.000- m.'H: •1 1 mii'-U, with close to $4,000,000 Ivi eli !<•('(> growers for their offer i . iroxling to a compilation of of firi.il 1 uu: announced today by J. , R M<• I > l l ffir* sales supervisor. -Mtisiies showed that through! ■he niarket has sold 17.- 1 7 1 '76 pounds for $3,910,716.78 for an ever „■ approximately 22.25 per hun drril pan ads. Th market had been blocked from Iti<ln\ November 8, through all of ba week : nd up to Tuesday of this \'T‘k. but flouts have aU been clear <-i r.iiw aud the market is ready to re v»* offer ings by farmers with the (Continued on Page Six.) Republicans Ask Campaign Fund t o Battle New Deal '•Vn.v’.ia gt on Nov. 21.—(APi— R:j bablieiu, workers started out today to fi t th‘ war chest from which they «61 i inane > their party’s 1936 cam- I’li.’i in defeat Ok* New Deal. 'Hu'; "'l'm sent on their way by ' I’. rietch’T. who also as chair lunMinned the 106 members of 1 a Heptiblican National Committee m * here December 16 to arrange f t i• x: y-ar’d national convention. Christmas Checks Go To Farmers ■Mg'on, Nov. 21. —(AP)— The ‘a Administration plans to say •' ' Christmas” to the cotton far tune of about $30,000,000 I t guaiantee payments. Hi tnbi r 15 was set as the goal to tin movement of checks. •' ,!l 1 while, pointing to the steady nll f pot cotton above the 12 cents | pun ,j b vel. Cully A. Cobb, admin ’ it ion cot ton chief, predicted the ‘"•''l coni of the price guarantee " "J rail substantially below an ori m;r;iintt!n estimate of $53,000,000 r il b e 4imated that, from the begin "l the now c rop year, August 1. vi'inhet 11. when the spot »ver r pi ml the 12 cents mark, pro (l - sold 5.800.000 of the 7.750 000 " :| b - giiiiieil. and will receive $29,886,- *''' in adjustment payments. Federal Road Fund Is Tied Up In S. C. ' 'olumbia, S. C.. Nov. 21 <AP) -Joe { ‘it executive manager of the State • 1 * w; iadministration Governor loi’.mst.on created by military i ' 1 ’barged today that the refusal •' Miller, State treasurer, to ou: Federal trust funds had pre -1'! contractors on Federal aid 1 projects now under way from paid. f funds are not enjoined by "M' ":,k Court.” Calus said, “but diil") t efuses to pay them out.” '■’ted tiie usual procedure " ii; Federal contract projects " followed to the letter,” , MiHcr was refusing to pay nresn,i». ( | p, the highway MntiU'rsmt Haifa Hiapatrh only DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIM IN LA. ' * ' LKASBD Wilt 11 SBJIYICEI OY THB ASSOCIATED PRBBI. SulTeritig a relapse marked by a heart weakness niter she had suffered a fractured leg in a fall, Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, 74-year-old widow of the Into president, was reported seriously ill at the Roosevelt estate, Oyster Bay, N. Y. The one-time "first lady” is shown in various milestones of her life. (1) She makes an address on behalf of for mer President Herbert Hoover in New York in 1951 ; (2) as she appeared several years ago; (3) the Roosevelt famih’ in 1909. Standing Kermit. SKY IS THE LIMIT IN ARMAMENT FOR THE BRITISH NAVY Tories Riding High After Victory in Recent Eng lish Parliamentary Elections UNITED STATES IS LIKELY TO FOLLOW Well Over Half Billion Fig ure Mentioned as British Program; May Try to Out do All Remaining Coun tries of Europe in Arma ments Program By LESLIE MICHEL New York, Nov. 21.—How far will Great Br itain go now on armaments? That is the question now since the Conservatives believe they have an election mandate. To those who have been following the situation, the question creatse (Continued on Page Four.) engineering division for the work, on grounds that the Supreme Court had restrained the payment of Federal as •veil as State highway funds. Calus said Miller was the trustee of the funds fc% the Federal govern merit, that the funds belonging to the Federal government were intended to finance Federal aid projects and therefore could not be enjoined by State courts. JOHNSTON DETERMINED TO CONTINUE WITH PROGRAM Washington, Nov. 21 (AP) -Gover nor Olin D. Johnston of South Caro (Coutinuod on Face Four.) A FORMER “FIRST LADY” FEARED NEAR DEATH Jl •:*' V : ', \ jftf Iliiljt j ;3§b>&cjs ■■•'<} i?: : :'#^ :; 5 grasp x HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY Half Mussolini’s Army Given Leave Rome, Nov. 21. —(AP) —Premier Mussolini today cue Italy’s army in I half for three months by grant- ■ mg leaves for that period to 100.- ; 000 soldiers. It was officially stated that this ! order has no international sig- j nificanee,” but is simply to release j farmers for work and io speed up Italy's industrial production tem porarily. STRIFE CONTINUES IN LABOR’S RANKS ‘ Jurisdictional” Dispute In volves Mine Workers Headed by Lewis By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, Nov. 21. —President John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers of America, who is fighting for industrial unionism’s rights in the ranks of federated labor organzations (Continued on Page Seven.) WPA Totals May Exceed 40 Thousand 34,600 Quota A I - ready Passed and Coan Expects New Approvals Shortly Daily Dispaleh Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. nV J C. BASKED VILLI;, Raleigh, Nov. 21. —The North Caro lina Works Progress Administration today exceeded its quota of 34.600 em ployables and actually has about 35- , (Continued on Page Tv:? 1 Alice and 'Theodore, Jr.; seated, Archibald, the late “T. R.”, Mrs. Roosevelt and Quentin. This was 10 years prior to the president’s death. Most recent picture of Mrs. Roosevelt (4) shows Archibald, left, and Kermit, right, as they greeted their mother in New York this year after she had returned from a South American cruise. Quentin Roosevelt was killed in the World war while serving as an aviator. Alice became Mrs. Nicholas Longworth. and is in turn a widow. SOCIAL SECURITY SET-UPDOUBTFUL Federal Board May Refuse To Accept N. C. Delega tion of Powers COURT MAY REJECT IT Delegation of Legislative Powers to Executive Department by Leg-> islature May Fail To Get Approval. Daily Di*|iat<'h Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. BY J. BASKCItVILLE. Ralegh. Nov. 21. —A good many per sons here, including some of the best lawyers, seriously doubt if the North Carolina law designed to permit the governor to appoint a board to put the Federal unemployment insurance plan into effect, will be held valid either by the Federal Social Security Board in Washington or by the State Su preme Court, despite the fact that both Attorney General A. A. F. Sea wall and Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus are convinced the law is constitutional Both Attorney General Seawell and Labor A. L. Fletcher are leaving for Washington tonight to appear before the Federal Social Se curity Board tomorrow afternoon to explain the North Carolina law to the board. It is pointed out that the Nebraska General Assembly passed a law s *“ milar to the North Carolina law, dele gating to some existing body the pow er to legislate or make rules and re gulations for putting the national un (Continued on Page Six.) AFTERNOO N, NOVEMBER 21, 1935 Ellsworth Starts Second Polar Dash New York, Nov. 21.—(AP)—The New York Times and the North American Newspaper .Alliance re ported today that Lincoln Ells worth had hopped off in his sec ond attempt in 24 hours to fly across the Antarctic continent. Ellsworth and liis pilot, Her rpht HoMock-Kenyou, tpyi been. Ethiopian King Barely Escapes Italian Planes Chasing Him To Capital New Peace Moves Under W ay at Paris as Anti-British Feeling Flares Again In Egypt; Rains Halt Ad vance of Italian Arm ies on Southern Front (By The Associated Press Emperor Haille Selassie was back j in Ababa toaay. having completed an i aerial tour of the southern War front j shortly before two Fascist airplanes | flew over the section he had survey | ed. * The Ethiopian government announc ! ed the Italian machine passed over Harrar and Diredawa in eastern Ethiopia just after- the lion of Judah j started back for the capital, which !he left only yesterday. The com | munique said the Italian planes drop* State Has Cash Balance Over $21,046,624 Oct. 31 North Carolina’s Financial Position Stronger Than Any Time In Re cent Yeard GENERAL FUND HAS $5,383,813 TO GOOD Highway Funds Amount to $14,169,580, With Addi tional $1,495,210 Cash Re serves for Various Items; State Debt October 31 Was $170,664,000 Raleigh, Nov. 21 (AP)—North Caro -1 lina’s Treasury had a cash balance of $21,046,624.53 on October 31 to make i the State’s financial status stronger than it been in several years. The combined statement of the au ; ditor and treasurer for October show | ed a cash balance in the general fund of $5,383,813.18, a balance in the highway fund of $14,169,580.70. and j cash reserved for various items to ! tailing $1,495,210.65. On July 1, this fiscal year opened with the general fund showing an , ; overdraft of $2,310,497.25, while the ! highway fund showed a balance of ! $16,864,248.04. ■ October general fund receipts ■ were $2,652,725.37 and expenditures j were $3,354,659.27. Highway and oth j er special funds received $3,672,582.62 ■ during October and expended $3,313,- , 8108.5.. The State’s total funded debt on t October 21 was $170,664,000. Cotton Ginnings ! To Non .14 Below Figure for 1934 1 ! C Washington, Nov. 21 (AP) Cotton ’ i of this v'g growth ginned prior to > j November 14 was reported today by ■ j the Census Bureau to have totalled > 8.437.084 running bales, counting 167.- ! 159 round bales as half bales, and in cluding 9,119 bales of American Egy- L ptian. Ginnings a year ago to November ■ 14 totalled 8.634,632 bales, including ■ 159667 round bales and 9.021 bales ■ of American Egyptian. Ginnings this year to November 14 States included North Carolina. 361,- 812. forced to give up the first, flight and return to the base ship, the Wyatt Earp. because of an oil leak in their motor, sifter three hours and eleven minutes in the air. The explorer and his pilot again had favorable weather for the take-off. with virtually no wind and. a few light ilo'idi PUBLISHBD EV&ItV AFTEKNOOW *XCHPT HONDAY ped no bombs, indicating they were pursuing the Ethiopian planes, or reconnoitering-. New peace moves were under way at Paris, where Maurice Peterson, head of the Ethiopian department of the British Foreign Office was to re sume informal discussions with the French experts. Anti-British feeling was again man ifest in Egypt as students and other groups compelled some shops to close (Continued on Page Four.) SEVEN DYNAMITING SENTENCES UPHELD Grew Out of Burlington Bombings; Defendants Must Serve Terms Raleigh, Nov. 21. —(AP) —.Six of the seven defendants in the Burlington dynamiting case, which grew out of the attempted dynamiting of two cot ton mills during the textile strike last year, lost appeals in the State Su preme Court in decisions given late Wednesday. The court affirmed their convictions but granted a new trial to Howard W. Overman on the ground that his alleged confession to detectives hired by the mills was not obtained in a proper manner. Those convicted were strikers and union members. The convictions up held were John I. Anderson, eight to ten years; J. P. Hoggard, four to six years; Florence Blaylock, five to seven years; Tom Canipe, two years; J. F. Haraway, two years, and Avery Kimrey, two years suspended. U. S. Exports Pass Imports For October Washington, Nov. 21 (AP) United States exports during October were teported by the Department of Com merce today to have totalled $221- 215.000, exceeding imports by $31,975,- 000. and gaining over the preceding month and the corresponding month last year. The excess of exports over imports (Continued on Page Four.) Roosevelt’s Grandson In Court Pleas Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 21 (AP) Cornelius Van Shaack Roosevelt, 20 grandson of the late President Theo dore Roosevelt, and a college class mate both pledged innocent today of charges of assault with a dangerous weapon. They appeared in Cambridge dis trict court on charges of assault on two policemen and a newspaper man (Continued on Page Three.) V I A Hil l FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Fair, warmer tonight, except on north coast; Friday partly claudy; enlder in ncHh &nrl west port jongj 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY BRITISH PRESSURE IS CREDITED WITH Official Sources in Shang hai Fear Halt May Be Only Temporary One, However JAPANESE IN CHINA CHECKED BY TOKYO Army General Told He Is Going too Far in His Acti vities There; Britain Said To Have Assured Chinese They Are Not Meddling In Their Plans. (By The Associated I'ress) The possibility of an upheaval in the Japanese government over the North China situation was foreseen by Japanese political ex perts today due to the abrupt halt in the plans for making North China autonomous under the pro tection of the Japanese army. The experts in Tokyo described the near crisis as a conflict be tween Japan's civil leaders and her military leaders on the Asia tic continent. The autonomy movement in the five provinces of North China came to an abrupt halt today, and indica tions were seen in Tokyo that an im perial suggestion was responsible for the sudden hiatus. lOtficial sources in Shanghai ex pressed the fear that the halt was only temporary, but both Jajanese and Chinese quarters agreed it was definite. The Japanese army’s high com mand in Tokyo instructed its subord (Continued on Page Six.) N. J. Fights r Review For Hauptmann Washington, Nov. 21.—(AP) The State of New Jersey today urged the Supreme Court not to review the con ' : viction of Bruno Richard Hauptmann l l ot kidnaping and slaying the Lind ' bergh baby. A 30-page brief filed by Joseph Lan- I nigan, assistant State attorney gen i eral, concluded with these words: "? is respectfully submitted that i tin* petitioner (Hauptmann) has not I shown himself to have been deprived of any rights accorded him by the 11 amendment, and further that he has been convicted and is now held in custody under due process of law within the meaning of the Constitu : tion.” j Hauptmann recently appealed to the highest tribunal to save him from the j electric chair. He criticized the ac tivities of the attorney general of New Jersey, David T. Wilentz, and asserted the celebrated trial at Flenx ington resembled a “circus.” Ethiopians Smashed In i Big Battle t | Engagement F ought at Altitude of 7,000 Feet in Mountain ous Territory. * Asmara. Eritrea, Nov. 21 (AP(— Italy’s northern army smashed the Ethiopian forces commanded by Ras Seyouam today in a sharp battle, the Italian field command reported. For the last two weeks the Italian expedition has been trying for a de cisive battle with the elusive Ras Sey ouam, who continually during the Italian advance across Tigre province has stayed just outside of reach. Today the Italian forces put his men to flight. The engagement was fought at an on Three.)
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 21, 1935, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75