Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 27, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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f HENDERSON j (JATEWAY to CENTRAL CAROLINA twenty-second year JAPANESE TROOPS POOR INTO NORTH CHINA Government Slowly Gaining Control In Brazilian Uprising Local Troops Force Surren der of Rebellious Enlist ed Men at Aviation School COMMUNISTS FORCE ROUTED IN NORTH Government Claims It Dom inates Fresh Rebellions, But Censorship Is Speed- i jjy Applied; Civilian Corps of Vigilantes Join In Resisting |{i<> (Jr Janeiro, Brazil. Nov. 27. -.(AIM—The third regiment of iir;«/ilian infantry, in rebellion a the government since be lorc dawn, surrendered in its bar nv'ks this afternoon, leaving Fed eral authorities apparently in con trol throughout the nation. Kiy do Janeiro, Nov. 27 (AP) —Loyal government troops forced the surrender of a re bellious group of enlisted men at the aviation school here to day. then fixed bayonets for a ciiyrge against the third infan try regiment, which had risen iiu against the government. The rebellion. which broke out in i nilu' i-! Brazil, spread to the imop.- stationed in the capital carlv : day only a few hours before the • i.v(>vnmo , ’t announced it had recap- ! luicil Natal, the capital of the a tat'’ ; nf Kin (J’ande do Norte, which rebels \ i/cil In t Saturday. A gmup of sergeants and private 4 - I of battalion one, stationed at Villa Militur. in surban Rio do Janeiro, at- j 1 tchi'd the aviation school early in the day. Bombing planes immediately roar id over the aviation school and drop ,pi'd bombs. The school’s hangars vuiight fire. The punishment was (Cent iuued on Page Four.) A.T.&T.Ends Its Evidence j In Rate Case Kalcigh, Nov. 27—(AP) —The South "in Hell Telephone and Telegraph Company rested its case today in its fight again -it rate reductions ordered by the State Utilities Commission, '"id Judge G. Vernon Cowpcr, presid ing in Wake Superior Court, recessed Mir bearing until Monday. H F. Woodruff, of Atlanta, assis- imt vice-president of the telephone '■eaipHiiy, was the last witness pre "utrd. though others may be offered i" rebuttal to the State’s evidence later. Trial of the case has been under "'ay for five weeks. The rate reductions ordered by the Utilities Commission would amount to more than .1:300.000 annually and "ould affect 78,000 customers in * N 'oith Carolina. Troops Join In Oklahoma Body Search Wounded, Captured Gunman, in Mo nientof Conscious ness, Admits Killing Dkluhoma City, Nov. 27.—(AP)— ■ "tional Guardsmen joined Okla "'Uia’.s grim search for bodies today Chester Comer, wounded gunman, ' niained Unable to elaborate his "ambled admission of slaying three 1 "ns and hiding their todies M'. a pile of bodies. .. .Fittstown ..• • ,lc ar Ada.’’ ! b-<: 25-year-old hitch-hiking oil la worker, a bullet in his brain, Untiterstut -Batin SJfapatrhj ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. Wlß * SBRVICE OF fHB ASBOCIATHD PRESS. Faces Red Revolt President Getuiio Vargas (above) of Brazil has ordered his loyal arm) to quell revolt of Communists who are reported in control of Natal and Pernambuco under the leadership of Luis Carles Prestes as general South American outbreak threaten; in Argentine, Chile and Paraguay 't'entral Press) EHRINGHAUS WILL LIKELY SOON PICK NEW LIQUOR BODY Governor Was Waiting On Supreme Court Ruling, Which Indeed Was Very Indefinite TESTS OF COUNTY ACTS IMPROBABLE Absolute Certainty as to Legal Status of Liquor Stores To Await Another Legislature; Commission Would, Therefore, Have Much To Investigate l>»ily lllNiinlcb n,ir»*JU», In (hr Sir Waller Haiti, 11% J. i . IIASKEItVII.I.E, Raleigh. Nov. 27. —Governor Eh ringhaus has indicated that he is in mopd to name the commission to study liquor conditions in North Car olina and that he may have the names ready during the week. The act creating the commission was the only Statewide measure that the General Assembly of 1035 would pass. It killed two State control bills, (Continued on Page Four.) Ellsworth Ship Plans For Rescue New York. Nov. 27 (AF) —Steps preparatory to a possible rescue ex pedition for Lincoln Ellsworth and his pitot, Herbert Hollick-Kenyon, were in progress today aboard the base ship, the Wyatt Earp. Ellsworth and Hollick-Kenyon were last heard from at 10:48 a. m., east ern standard time, Saturday while they toward the Bay of Whales, former base of Admiral Rich ard E. Byrd in the Antarctic. Word of the rescue preparations was wirclessd to the New York Times and the North American Newspaper Alliance as another day passed with out word of the explorers’ where abouts. . Should no news be heard within the next day or so. then it remains only to carry out the measures out lined by Ellsworth in a statement* left at the Wyatt Earp, in which the /explorer outlined his procedure in the event of a forced landing and his inability to send communications, the message said. - ; HENDERSON, N. C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 27 1935 pdbubhbd bv»«v AFTBRNOO* ’ *■' l > x BXCBPT MUNDAT. AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST. REVOLI J m A TLA -V -f / c X. « Sandc] . N V; 1 s y~ g - J p I.tK /KS. ' / ** AM P3^ (I rV> j/ l m ; /)/ / A y>\ { 2. J s / , r jMwPecift C' \ ) - / w s/ t 'nau\_. \ / j '»**«*. Jfmm * . J Oi - -{Tttttfas' ' St - v 81 'E •W.BJWjPwa wwwfc.*—, JB& J, ■ y l ? \ % Y oe Janeiro; - \ I OCEAN • ■derd& /V. !t/A tam wwitL Ms Scene of revolt Belief was expressed by observers in Rio Dc Janeiro that the uprising repotted in four states in northeastern Brazil might envelop tha nation. The revolt is a Socialist-anti-imperialist movement. Ac ini ding to lirst reports, the revolt is led by non-commissioned officers of the army in the states of Pernambuco, Rio Grande Do Norte, Alaeroag and Parahyba. shown above on map. McDonald And Maxwell In Face To Face Tax Debate Professor Tells Tax Wizard He Did Not Inform Legis lature of Facts Last Sprin g as to Property and Cor poration Levies; Say s Maxwell Beat Bill Raleigh, Nov. 27.— ■( Apj-Dr. Ralph W. McDonald, who is ' seeking the Democratic gubernatorial nomination next year, today carried his disagree ment over taxes on corj>orations in North Carolina personally to A. J. Maxwell. State revenue commissioner. Dr. McDonald told the revenue com missioner he agreed with a recent study of property taxes, wnich show ed North Carolina had the lowest per capita tax in the nation, but contend ed Mr. Maxwell should have so ac quainted the legislative joint finance committee last spring. “I do not think you have ever been Italy Withdraws i Recent Furlough Rome- Nov. 27.— (AID—Reliable information said today it was be lieved the government had largely cancelled the furloughs recently extended to about 100.000 soldiers, and that new troop movements had been ordered. An authority said that Italy was sufficiently worried about talk in the League of Nations concerning placing an embargo against oil shipments to Italy to “make some movement of troops.” Officials refused to explain what troop movements were ordered, or whether the Metaruao division, which had been ordered removed from Libya, had sailed. FDR 10 ASSEMBLE TAXATION EXPERTS Effort To Be Made in Win ter Conference To Find Percapita Levy By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, Nov. 27.—The taxation conference which President Roosevelt intends to call late in the winter will be a tremendously important gather ing. And it will have an almost infinite ly intricate problem to deal with. (Several years ago I tried to ascer tain what the average American pays in taxes, but gave it up as a hope less job when the late Joseph S. Mc- Coy, then actuary of the treasury, as _ /Pn** OH C'/Mi e \ consciously dishonest, but at times you have certainly been misinformed or uninformed,” Dr. McDonald said. The former Winston-Salem college professor, who was a member of the 1935 legislature, met Mr. Maxwell face to face in the office of the revenue commissioner. The gubernatorial candidate gave newspaper men whom he had called to attend the conference, copies of a newspaper story of last February quoting Mr. Maxwell as saying North Carolina taxes on corporations are (Continued on Page Five.) Republicans Falling Into Foes’Hands Taking Huge Cam paign Funds Will be Used Against Them By Democrats By LESLIE KICIIEL New York, Nov. 27.—Democrats be lieve that Republicans are playing in to their hands. (That remains to be seen.) Some New Deal spokesmen are pointing out. that, the new national finance committee named by Chair (Continued on Page Six.) COTTON LOAN PLAN IS GIVEN APPROVAL New Orleans, La., Nov. 27 (AP) — The board of directors of the New Orleans Cotton Exchange approved the cotton loan and subsidy plan to day, and said it had brought increas ed business for the trade and created a "perceptibly better feeling.” “WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Cloudy, followed by occasional rains in west portion late to night or Thursday, and In east portion Thursday; warmer to night hut colder Thursday night and in extreme west portion Ttiiir«J» r rj.fi*- >!«op Extension Os Sanctions May Result In Forceful Resistance From Italy Mussolini Quoted As Say ing Recently He Was Convinced England Plans for War SIGN SEETsToF NEW EUROPEAN UNREST Meantime, Ethiopian Claims Fresn Successes Against Italians, With Retreat from Makale, AH of Which Is Denied by Official Italian Sources (By the Associated Press.) '1 he eastern African conflict be tween Italy ami Ethiopia engen dered new European unrest today. Sources close to the government of Premier Benito Mussolini said forceful resistance might be ex pected if the league of Nations pressed for extension of sanctions against Italy. Recalled were two statements de scriptive of the situation on the north ern side of the Mediterranean Sea. One was that attributed to Mus solini only two days ago that the im position of an oil embargo on Italy ■‘would mean war.’’ The other was that of Henry J. Allen, of Kansas, former United States senator, who said six weeks ago after an interview with II Duce. that Mussolini was con vinced “England means war.” One the east African front, Ethi opian reports—denied in Rome— of victories on the southern front were followed today with a communique at Addis Ababa saying 1.000 Italians oc cupying Makale on the northern front retreated yesterday to Adigrat. Italian advices were sharply con tradictory. Ethiopians, they said, on the northern and southern fronts were putting up bitter,' but ineffec tual, resistance to the Fascist invad ers. As the League of Nations general staff of experts assembled at Geneva (Continued on Page Two.; SALISBURY CHAMBER LEAVES U. S. GROUP Salisbury, Nov. 27.—(AP) —The Sal isbury Chamber of Commerce, by un animous action last night, voted to withdraw membership from the Unit ed States Chamber of Commerce until such time as that body “reverts to its original status as a trade organization and discontinue its activities as a po litical organization. Meekins Is Silent Over High Honor In lb«> Sir Wallrr Ifuiel. Dully UiMiiateh Bureau, U% 4. V. IIASKERVIIiLK. Raleigh, Nov. 27. —Federal Judge I. M. Meekins isn’t saying he is, and be isn’t saying he isn’t considering the presidential proposals which have ap peared in the papers recently. The judge was here yesterday and he will ho here again next week on court matters. There is no hiding the fact that he is in the national eye. Ther ecent declaration of Senator Wil liam E. Borah that he would veto the Wagner-Costigan Federal anli fContinued on Page Five.) OZ shopping days until Guiding Hoover? mm Si Ben S. Alien The man always at the ride of former President Herbert Hoover these days is Ben >S. Allen, above. Allen is believed to be the guid ing publicity spirit, lie and Mr. Hoover first met when Mr. Hoover "as conducting the food adminis tration. Allen became his secre tary then. Prior to that In- was a newspaper correspondent in Lon don. QUOTAS MIGHT BE FIXED ON EXPORTS OF WAR MATERIAL Shipment of All Oil, Cop per, Scrap Iron and Steel Would Be Strictly Limited MAY ASK CONGRESS TO PROVIDE SYSTEM May Be Designed To Limit Trade With Belligerents to Normal Volume; Ad ministration Wishes To Avoid Absolute Ban On Such Exports Washington, Nov. 27 (AD — Showered by a mixture of praise and criticism for the course lliey have taken on the Italo-Ethiopian conflict, high administration offi cials are considering a new step in the neutrality policy. The move under study, authorita tive sourcs indicated, as a system of quotas which would be damped on exports of essential war materials, limiting strictly the export of such things as oil, copper, scrap iroy and steel to warring nations. It is believed Congress will be asked to provide such a system if the administration finally decides on it. The quotas probably would be design ed to limit trade with belligerents to a normal volume. At the same time, it is believed the administration seeks to avoid the ex treme of cutting off exports to fighting countries, a | vhieh Sen ator Pope, Democrat, 1 .o, will push in the nxt session of Congress. ELECTRICITY DATA SENT WASHINGTON Raleigh, Nov. 27. State Rural Electrification Authority today sent to Federal officials additional data asked on a proposal to construct 232.18 miles of power lines in Frank lin, John, ton and Wake counties, to serve 1,479 customers. Federal funds to build the lines were first sought last June, and Wash ington authorities have asked for more information. 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY Japanese Garrison at Peip ing Has More Than Doubled During the Last 24 Hours TROOP TRAINS ARE REACHING TIENTSIN Only “Holding Exercises”, Japs Answer, but Chinese Authorities See Intimidja* tion and Effort To Block National Government In terference' ' Shanghai, China, Nov. 27 (Al ) Japanese troops moved into North China by train loads today while Northern Chinese leaders wavered on the issue of secession from the central Na tionalist government. Troop trains bearing 3,000 Japanese soldiers and war equipment arrived at Tientsin from Chin Wangtao, treaty port of Hopeh province. At Peiping, where the Japanese garrison has more than doubled in the last 24 hours, Colonel Tan Takahashi. military attache, announced that the N< ng I hai railway junction a. few miles east or Peiping, Had ben seized. Public nervousness over the sharp ly increased Japanese military actL vity was intensified by news that the heavily-laden troop trains were arriv ing at Tientsin. The Japanese, taking over a quan tify of rolling stock and control of th<: Chinese military telephone, first (Continued on Page Two.) Clipper Gets Big Greeting FromGuamld . Gua.m Island, (via Pan-American Airways Radio', Nov. 27.—(AP‘—Resi dent of Guam hailed arrival of the mail-laden China Clipper today as end ing the isolation of this tropical Pae cific isle. The graceful sky liner, nearing the end of its first flight over a trans -1 acific air mail route, arrived hero from Wake Island at 3:07 p. m., (12:07 a. m. eastern standard time.) Ihe 1,536-mile distance was covered in ten hours, three minutes. Two hundred pounds of air mail was unloaded and speeded to the post office for delivery, while Captain Ed win Musick, the skipper of the flying boat, and bis eight-man crew, were welcomed by officials. Captain Musick said the big 25-ton flying boat would lay over here to morrow, taking off ori the last leg of the route lo Manila at dawn Friday morning. No New Tax This Session Is Probable Some Congressmen Willing To Wager New Levies Will Wait 1936 Election Washington, Nov. 27 fAP) —'Some members of Congress believe the ad ministration may not ask for new taxes next session, even if the Su preme Court declares the AAA pro cessing levies invalid. The administration indicated some time ago it would seek new taxes to finance fatrn benefits of AAA suffer ed this body blow. Treasury experts will be prepared, if President Roose velt so orders, to suggest several plans for raising $500,000,000. This is the sum estrr.iated to be needed to pay farmers under existing produc tion control contracts. Several senators said today they would be willing to wager that a new tax bill would be avoided, at least until the 1936 election.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Nov. 27, 1935, edition 1
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