Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 28, 1935, edition 1 / Page 1
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fl!/ f IJW jPVt )J w -- X i / / — lIfcNDERSON gateway TO CENTRAL CAROLINA I WENTY-SECOND YEAR JAPS SEIZE TIENTSIN AS CINNESE WITHDRAW * * ********** *************** * Tobacco Sales Pass 19 Millions With Average Over 22 Cents WAREHOUSE FLOORS CLEARED FOR START OF SELLING MONDAY Market Will Run Two Weeks and Maybe Day or- Two Longer Before Christmas Halt MAY TAKE A MONTH FOR THE HOLIDAYS Post-Christmas Season Is Counted on To Run TotaU Close to 25 Million Pounds Goal Set at Start of Sales Period in Early Fall; 80 Percent Sold Willi a total of approximate ly l!Llf>0,000 pounds sold to Tlwgiksgiving. the Henderson Inbacco market was prepared today for the resumption of sales next Monday morning, and expected a big break of the golden weed. The average this fall ha sheen slightly over 22 cents perNpound. While definite figures were not ob tainable loday for Wednesday’s sain, 'vhieh was small and ranged around .Vi.WO pounds, compilations through Tuesday showed the market to have disposed of 19.708,938 pounds for sl,- 2R9117.75 for an average of a trifle ever 22 cents per pound. Sales on Monday and Tuesday of this week amounted to 716.960 bounds and brought $146,648.40 for an average of around 21 cents. The market this season, for the nine number of selling days, has paid etil considerably more money than (Continued on Page Three.) Five Dead In Fire In Apartment l *»rl Worth, Texas, Nov. 28 (Al*) • ive persons trapped In a blaz "*K apartment house were burned •'* death and six others badly in jured In leaps for their lives here today. •■’fforls at identification of the dead n ' p,, e temporarily halted when those "ho knew the victims were rushed to hospitals themselves for emergency '''raiment for serious burns and bone hacturcs. ’’be injured were burned and hurt (Continued on Page Four.) Ehringhaus Recently Got New York And lowa ‘Told’ Governor’s Claims for Nort h Marolina’s Tax Payment* and It* Miserly Treatmen t by Federal Government Cause New Yorkers to Rub Their Eyes Dally Dispatch llarraa, In the Sir Walter Hotel, J. C. IIA SK !<iltVl LitiK, Nov. 28 -‘Senator Dickin • on of lowa had a run-in with Gover- Khringhaus at the N<fw York Chamber of Commerce meeting 1 ! week and repercussions therefrom .iof iound entirely unlike the after ”'. 1 ! thp - Duke and Carolina game. H ; senator and governor were on £ i m,,t ,< less program The governor Hntftrrsmt tlatly Utapatrh ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. * LJDABIDD Wilt® 8BRYICB) OF THB ASSOCIATED PRBBS. Washington Lacks Report About Japs Washington, Nov. 28.—(M*)— The State Department was without any official advices today on re ports that Japanese military au thorities had taken over an airport at Tientsin in which Pan-American Airways was interested. Official comment was withheld, but It was believed in unofficial quarters that whatever incident may have occurred was of a char acter that could he adjusted by Id eal authorities. Chinese reports at Shanghai said an American pilot arriving <*t Tientsin airport with a plane had hern molested hy the Japanese military. RURAL SOU BEST MARKET IN NATION, AM CHIEF STATES Retail Sales In This Section at Highest Point Since 1930, Cully A. Cobb Finds passengefTauto PURCHASES HIGH Show Increase of 295 Per cent First Six Months of 1935 Over Same Period in 1932, Business Indicators Show; Other Sections Benefit as Result By CULLV a. COBB, AAA Cotton Chief, (Written for the Associated Press) Washington. Nov. 28 (AP) — Business indicators for the past 21 months have pointed to rural customers in the South as the most aetive in America. This year to date rural retail sales of general merchandise, as reported by the Department of Commerce, has been at the highest point since 1930, with the greatest gain made in the South. In the southern region, these rural retail sales showed, an increase of 23 per cent in 1934 over 1933, which was (Continued on Page Fight.) talked about North Carolina and its fiscal works. Senator Dickinson was supposed to discuss the Federal acti vities unrelated to politics, as it is understood. The two were to take about 20 minutes each. The North Carolina speaker held himself down on strictly state policies, Senator Dickinson, who indulges the humor that he is a candidate for the presi (Contlnued on TrecO. HENDERSON, N. C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 28, 1935 •'\ Chcink JBK Sa a f Oi "to it - ; WBBII a lli-M&’ FOR ALL MATERIAL THINGS P'jJ for all that comfort brings ' ;M?A - MEN ° FFER THANKS * .3jß AND FOR THAT LARGE IMMEASURE- / \/\ ffi Ms 1■" ABLE STORE Z\ZX Z® K 1 aKII OF MANKIND S SAPIENCE OPENING X A /V 1 LIFE’S DOOR, Z SSS CAN HE BUT STRIVE z to kelp ALIVE f ifiSK THE WINDS OF KNOWLEDGE BLOW MgS H , : fflMB ING CLEANLY THERE g » \' J| CLEARING AWAY ALL PREJUDICIAL A AIR . . . THUS MAN GIVES THANKS. fIK II W —C. DAVID VORMELKER. ill Laval Policies Are Upheld By Heavy Vote In Chamber Paris, Nov. 28.—(AP)—- The French Chamber of Dep uties today declared its confi dence in the economic policies of its premier, Pierre Laval, by a vote of 345 to 226. The ballot, regarded as a powerful show of agreement with the Laval program, came within a few minutes after Parliament reconvened today, climaxing weeks of heated discus sions of the government’s economy S. C. Road Body Hits Opposition Columbia, S. C., Nov. 28.—(AP) Governor Olin D. Johnson’s mil itary highway regime, a month old today, encountered at the same time its first revolt. The revolt came from Charleston, where police were under instructions not to recognize an arrest made by. the new highway administration’s patrolmen for failure to buy auto tags. Senator Coatesworth P. Means, of Charleston county, said he would ask (Continued on Page Two.) WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Occasional rains this afternoon and tonight; colder tonight; pri «j»v mcsfcly cloudy and colder. measures. The Chamber of Deputies was heav ily guarded. Soldiers wrc brought in from the provinces to reinforce the Paris garrison, wbfilc hundreds of police and mobile guards encicled the Cham ber and others patroled the boule vards because of the tension between radicals and nationalists. Throughout the morning the cap ital and provinces were quiet, al though a member of the Fascist vet- New Revolt In Brazil Is Now Feared Recent Outbreaks Declared Merely Beginning of Fas cist-C o m m u n i s t Strife Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Nov. 28, —(AP) —Some political sources said today the uprising in north east Brazil and In the capital it self, which the government crush ed with loyal troops, was but the first sharp conflict between so cialistic and fascist trands. With the dual rebellions by seditious (Continue& cn Paye Three.) prans organization, the Croix de Feu, was seriously wounded by a rifle shot fired from the doorway- of a case as he tore a radical poster from a, wall in Lyon. As soon as the Chamber of Depu ties met, Premier Laval demanded a vote of confidence for his anti-de valuation program of economy de crees. He asked for the vote in postpone ment of the deputies’ fight over the Croix de Feu and the other nation alist leagues. Goaf Bills Rulings Go Both Ways Washington, Nov. 28.—(Al*)—■ * A midnight decision in the Dis trict of Columbia Supreme Court sustaining parts of the Guffey coal central act and invalidating others left the way clear today for a final Constitutional test of this New Deal measure. Unexpectedly delivering an oral op inion last night, Justice Jesse C. At kins held constitutional the price fixing and taxing provisions of the law, designed to apply the broadest peace-time regulations to bituminous coal. He declared invalid the sections providing for determination of wages and hours through collective bargain ing. Attorneys for James Walter Carter, president of the Carter Coa. Com fContiruoci eu Page PUBL.ISHBD BVBiIY AFTERNOON ■XCHPT SUNDAY, Japanese Rushing Huge Air Base To Rapid Completion China Clipper To Start Final Hop Giuun Island, Nov. 28—(Via Pan- American Radio) (AP) —The great China Clipper swung at an chor in Apra Bay today while her crew observed Thanksgiving Day Mechanics prepared the flying beat for the last lap of the Alam eda, Cal., to Manila air mail trail —an over-water flight of 1,700 miles. The take-off will be at daylight Friday l (3:30 p.m Thursday, east ern standard time). More than 100,- 000 letters will be carried on the trip, tlie only section of the pro jected air mail and passenger route not yet flown by Pan-American shifts. Hordes ofn atives swarmed the water front gazing with wonder ment at the great ship and the men when it carried over more than 6,000 miles of ocean in about 488th hours of flying time. return'troopsto HIS LIBYA COLONY Italian Dictator Says His Country Ready To Op pose Oil Embargo by Every Means ITALIANS OFFENDED BY BRITISH POLICY England’s Failure To With» draw Warships From Med iterranean Angers Musso’ lini; Delayed by Riots In Egypt Believed Due to Italy, England Retorts Paris, Nov. 28— (AP) —Diplom- atic sources said today tliat Prem ier Mussolini, declaring Italy is “ready to oppose an oil embargo by every means,” lias threatened to reinforce Italy’s troops in Lib ya again unless Great Britain withdraws her ships from the Med iterranean. Premier Laval of France, who con (Continued on Page Three.) Both Carolina And Duke Still In Rose Bowl Talk Durham Rumors Reach Raleigh That Impressive Win by Carolina Today May 4 Bring Invitation to West Coast; Duke’s Defeat of Carolina Impressive In (hp Sir Waiter Hotel. Daily Diapatck Bureau, BY J. C. B ASKER VILLE. Raleigh, Nov. 28.—Both Duke Uni versity and University of North Car olina football teams will be consider ed in Rose Bowl negotiations, ac cording to Durham people who were here today. The fact that Duke lost two, and by popular opinmn should have dropped ©PAGES 0 TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY. Chinese Government At Nanking To Protest To Japanese Against j Seizure of Sengtai ! CHINESE GARRISON REVOLT REPORTED Marching Northward And May Mean Bloodless Auto nomy Movement Will Bring Early Strife; Troops Trying To Join Secession Revolt in North Tientsin, China, Nov. 28.—. (AP) —This city was taking on the aspects of an armed Japanese camp today as troops of the Rising Sun Empire mov ed in, while Chinese forces were withdrawn from the Tien tsin-Peiping area. General Shang Chen, former gov ernor of Hopeh province, was with drawing his troops rapidly. The Japanese were rushing a huge air base to completion, preparing for the establishment of squadrons of airplanes. Simultaneously, Japanese soldiers were busy stringing military lines through the streets of the city. These lines were connecting with Tatig-Ku, where two Japanese destroyers have arrived. A correspondent for the Japanese News Agency Rengo reported from Nanking that it was authoritatively stated the Chinese government would protest to Japan against the seizure of Sengtai. Reports that the Chinese garrison (Continued on Page Two.) Sen. Borah Warns Os Sanctions Washington, Nov. 28.—(AP) Senator Borah, Republican, Idaho called on Bio country today to ab stain from joining the League of Nations sanctions against Italy. Saying he did not believe such a move was a. part of the administra tion’s plans, Borah asserted in a statement: “The primary purpose of our gov ernment Is to stay out of the Euro* (Continued on Page Three.) another in the season run, and the further fact that North Carolina lost one game, will not put the two teams out, according to these fans who think Duke’s heavy defeat of Carlina, coupled wit{i the Wallace Wade re putation, may get the Durham school a bid. Duke’s easy and devastating defeat -(Continued on Page Two.), i• 4
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Nov. 28, 1935, edition 1
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