itI.MH'JK.vUN ! CATI AVAV TO I CENTRAL CAROLINA rWKNTY-SECONI) YEAR LINDBERGHS REACH LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND, ON TRIP FROM U. S. Vamouft Family Disembarks From Freighter American Importer as Crowds Watch. POCK WORKMEN SEE TRIO COME ASHORE Special Police Cars Escort Them to Hotel, Where They Go Into Complete i Seclusion; Lindy, Bare headed, Carries Infant Son Down Gangplank. I. \ • i | . Enghind. I )cc. 31 (AIM- I ( ii.ii If .' A, Lindberghs, declared b, i)■■ihlht.s ot Urn pii’W of their ship u i:.i\ i* l»*ft Hi** I’niti'd States to ; ,,i(i the execution of Bruno Iti<*li i A K iupimann, landed here today ftf! i rough trans-Atlantic trip, and v. * in'o itnmediate seclusion in a , iiit*' in the heart, of Liverpool, j How long they will stay in England j ~f -a hi t her this will be their home I r , •;' , mod unanswet ed. rimy dashed down the gangplank of steamer American Importer, \ iMi h carried no other passengers. .j f.Tortod t*y a earload of detec -i'fs. drove directly to the Adelphi hotel. • ... I Ihet • the famous flier, his wife and : Ui ,l their tilree-year-old sou, don. j p wiflly through the lobby with out regi tering and went directly to their rooms. , E\« n the number of the hotel rooms were kept secret. I’he American Importer, arriving on its «yllll J’ 4l Msjjg towBBmMHmIwMBbEWI MBTOiIW: A;aWBwjBmgMKBSB»PaMSa!II! ■ * 111 : Rev Dr. F ranLl n Joiner | Rev. Dr. f ranklin Joiner of Phila delphia. is chairman of American com nil tee of Church Unity Octave Council, which addressed communi cation to Episcopalian? suggesting (hat a reunion of denomination* I was necessary to ofl’sel foes o! < ihrist ianii v. YOUNG DEMOCRATS SNUBBING BAILEY Efforts of Senator’s Friends To Dominate Jackson Dinners Fail. IS PASSED UP IN WAKE State Organization Wanted Place for Him, Itut Local Group Decided Otherwise; Gossip Be hind Events i*nH* (*i«*i»;i(«-li UnrniM, 111 Tbe Sir \\ rt!M-r Hotel, | II y .1. «. HASH ICII \ 111, Raleigh. Dec. 31. Efforts of the; bsmlters of Senator Jfcsia.h W. Bailey; to turn the Wake county Jackson Day j dinner, to be held here January 8. by I tbi> Wake County Young Democrats, I into n Bailey rally have failed, do spile the fact, that the State officers; of the Young Democratic Clubs ex erted tremendous pressure in an ef fort to have Senator Bailey invited to ; make the principal address at the din ner. it was learned here today from an authoritative source. But Senator Bailey has not been (Continued on Page Five) Chicago Slaying Baffles Officers As Probe Goes On Chicago, Dec. 31 (AP) Blank walls j of .silence such as unually confronted the police in the Chicago gang slay ing of prohibition days, hampered their efforts today to trace the kill er *rio who shot down State Jlepre aenative Albert J. Prignano Sunday night, in the old “bloody twentieth” rd. Angelo Lazzia, an automobile sales man, from whom Police Captain John Norton sought to learn about the own ership of a, car abandoned by the killers, refused to talk. A police squad shot off Lazziaks hat last night at his home as he tried to escape. In the hall a revolver was found of the-same calibre as the one which killed Prignano. The gun was given to ballistics experts for study. SHIES RESISTING BURDEN OE RELIEF Not Only That, They Are Trying to Shift New Loads To Uncle Sam. Hot Springs, Ark. Dec. 31. —There is one hting apparent in Arkansas. It is the same thing that the writer has found apparent in every other state he has visited. The state does not desire tp take back its burden from the federal government. It de sires to shift additional burdens to the federal government. Here in ArkAjasas we find Senator CConHp'enq on Ttys. HENDERSON. N. C., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 31, 1935. Pittman’s War Remarks Stir japan’s Diplomats « AmHntsador Saito —H» His government * full report of Senator Pittman* speech. Senator Key Pittman of Nevada, chairman of tl.e powerful foreign relations committee, stirred up an international controversy when lie asserted ly charged in a speech at. Las Vegas. New, that Japan’s present course was toward eventual war with the United States. Later, following a retort from Jan- Campaigning Law-Making _ Gold Clause Again In Supreme Court Wa/.kington. Dec. 31. —(AP) —A fresh attack on the constitution allty of tbe act of Congress abro gating clauses in contracts calling 1 for payment in gold was filed to day with the Supreme Court. . The appeal was presented by a Columbia concern which contend ed that Hie law did not apply to international transactions between non-residents of the United States. The action was brought against the Industrial Mortgage Bank or Finland in an effort to recover $5.- 31)7 on securities instead of the face value of $3,135. • 1 \ .. .’ • . " -* r‘- -•- ’*- • •• , Mr. Daniels Pressed As Bailey Foe Ambassador Listens To Many Callers But Makes no Com mitment Whatever. Daily Dispatch public’s attention. While Democratic leaders were busy framing a program for the ses sion opening Friday, the New Deal strategists were at work with an eye on next fall. Opponents were not idle. Postmaster General Farley broad cast a statement last night that “the constantly rising tide of prosperity is the answer to all the attacks on the Roosevelt administration.” At the same time, political observ ers woinSi'ed whether a remark by former Governor Joseph B. Ely, of Massachusetts, indicated that Alfred E. Smith would lead an anti-New Deal movement in 1930. Ely made known that he would support Smith for the /Democratic presidential nomination iC Smith ran for it. The Democratic leaders in Congress were studying today methods of de (Continued on Page Eight.) Waynick Urges Everybody To Stay Off Roads Unless They Must Ride. Daily Ulttmiti'fc Mtiresw. In Tbe Sir Walter Hotel, Itj .1. I’. MASK ERA 11-L Raleigh, Dec. 3L.—All of the State highways, including all of the hard surface roads, have been scraped clear of snow and the highway main tenance forces are now hard at work charing off the secondary roads, Chairman Capus M. Waynick, of the State Highway and Public Works Commission, said today. But this does not mean that all the roads are now clear of ice or of slick spots. “My advice to motorists is still to drive very carefully and at slow speeds and to use tire chains if pos sible, since there are still many icy spots on the roads which the scrap ing did not remove,” Waynick said. ‘‘And while some of these places are melting off during the day, they freeze up again at night and become slicker than ever. So the only thing (Continued on Page Five.! FOR NORTH CAROLINA Snow late tonight and Wednesday, not nuite so cold toni ’ht. * * F.iji A man —“Pittman’s argument* *hsMr « eomplrt* lark of understanding of the Far F.**t." BIG INCOMES DROP AND SMALLER ONES RISE DURING 1934 Million Dollar Earnings Re ported by Only 32 Per sons, Against 50 During 1933. 3,568,788 INCOMES IN CLASS BELOW $5,000 Less Than Total Returns Filed Had Tax Liability, But Government Tax Total For Aggregate Incomes Shows Big Gain in 1934; Tabulations Revealed. Washington,' Dec. 31 (AP) —A drop in the number of higher bracket in comes and a considerable increase in the lower were disclosed today in the Treasury’s 1931 income tabulations. The total net income for the year, preliminary statistics showed, rose 11.9 percent, while the government’s taxation share increased 35.8 percent above that, of 1933. The 193 t returns showed 32 persons in the million dollar income class, as compared with 50 the year before. In comes between $300,000 and $500,000 showed a drop from 111 to 116. There were J 77.122 persons, however added to the number of those with in comes less than $5,000, bringing the total to 3,568,788 in 1934. An increase (Continued on Page Eight.) Its “Use Tax” Is Just That, And Supreme Court Test Is Coming. Washington, D. C. Dec. O— Ohio’s new ‘‘use tax” is certain to be at tached in the federal courts as the equivalent of a protective tariff against, other states and therefore as unconstitutional. The "use tax’s” purpose is to coun teract Ohioans’ tendency to do their buying beyond their home state’s (Continued on Page Eight.) More Snow Tonight jrt T t l /y i » Jror Ihe Larolinas snow and icc over t,he Carolinas, weather bureaus 'predicted addi tional snow for the two states tonight and tomorrow. Only the South Carolina coast, where the forecast was for rain, wn)s left out of the forecast of snow. “Not so cold,” was appended however, toi the forecast. At many places the temperature (By The Associated Press.) As a noonday sun today thawed siiirhtlv Hip hpftvv blanket of PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. ITALIAN AIRPLANES DESTROY AMBULANCE UNIT, WITH 32 DEAD Bank of France Lowers Discount Paris. Dec. 31 (AP) —The Bank of France lowered Its discount rate today from six to five percent. Premier Pierre Laval’s Chambor of Deputies triumphs at the end of long series of gold losses caused the bank to cut discount rates. The heavy burden of high inter est rates for industrial and com mercial loans which followed the ei/TuY rise in the discount rates to halt the drain of gold a month ago caused the bank to lower the rates as soon as it felt conditions war ranted. Talmadge to Provide Fund For Georgia Governor Assumes Financial Dictator ship of State Start ing Tomorrow'. Atlanta, Ga„ Dec. 31 (AP)—On the eve of assuming financial dictatorship of Georgia, Governor Eugene Tal madge said today “there’ll be plenty of money to run the State next ye ( ar.” but persisted in his refusal to tell how he will handle the situation. The 1935 legislature failed to pass an appropriation bill for 1936-37. Tal madge, who nas gained attention by his attacks on the New Deal, refused to call an extra session, and said the State would run on as usual. Possibility of a “tax strike” against unchecked gubernatorial control .of finances already has arisen. Some Talmadge opponents cite State revenue collections for the first 20 days of December as evidence of a drying up of tax payments. In this period, slightly ov miles into Ethiopia in the* northern sector, and having been pushed back from initial advances in the south, now face war fare designed to conquer 550 .miles of bad terrain before the Eritrean and Somaliland armies can be united. The Ethiopians, for the first time, are abandoning guerilla warfare and engaging the Italians in hand-to-hand figging. Losses have been heavy. It alian authorities announced 500 white and native troops and II Italian officers have died during the last, month., As many more were wounded. ! ; The Ethiopian losses were estimat ed by Fascists at 4,000 dead and double that number wounded. RAILROAD RATE CUT ORDERED BY I. C, C. Involves Shipments to and frouS North Carolina Cities and In Southern Virginia Washington, Dec. 31.—(AP)-—A re duction ranging from six to seven per cent in class rail rates between point* in “official territory** and cities in North Carolina and southern Virginia were ordered today by the Interstate Commerce Commission, “Official territory” is the area east of the Mississippi river and north of the Ohio river. Rates from southern Virginia and North Carolina points to New York and New England cities were except ed front the reduction. Officials said this was because these rates are al ready sufficiently low. mreSbk Only Brick Walls Left Standing; Building Part ially Insured. Fire of undetermined origin de stroyed the Baptist church in Warren ton around two o’clock this afternoon, with a loss esti mated at about $”0,000, partially covered by insurance. It was understood the heating plant had been kept in operation during the severe weather to pre vent pipes from freezing, and there was some speculation that the flames may have originated in the furnace room. A large part of the structure was in a light Maze when discovered by a pass erby. Only, the brick walls were left standing after the fire was over come. Tiie building was erected some forty years ago and had a seating capacity of about two hundred. The church was located on Main and Kidgeway streets, op- IKisite the handsome new John Graham high school, at the i>olnt where the State highway enters the town from Norlina. Rev. It. E. Brickhouse is the pastor of the church, i