Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Jan. 24, 1936, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA TWENTY-THIRD YEAR FDR VETOES BONUS, HOUSE OVERRIDES IT Bitter Warning By Mussolini Against New Security Pact Mediterranean Accord Framed by British Call ed “Danger to Eu ropean Peace” NEW SUCCESSES IN ETHIOPIA CLAIMED Complete Victory for Ital ians in Three-Day Battle in Tembien Region Reported by Commander; Water Holes in Desert Area Claimed Seized (r,y The Associated Press) i;c»me spoke out today in bit ter warning against Mediter ranean security arrangements among “sanetionist” powers, while her armies claimed ag "Tessive successes on both northern and southern Ethio pian and southern African fronts. 11 ihr. - *' prepared for Geneva, dis -riimtion to tlie .sanetionist nations a T ' :[ a- that Gr»at Britain's action arranging Mediterranean mutual assistance agreements with four other powers constituted a “danger for Eu ropean peace” nd tht it ws outside tin- I.eguc of Ntions covennt. Mrsrf.il Badoglio. Mussolini's high ••ommonder in Africa, reported “com plete victory" for the Italians at the ! rj of ;r tore -day battle in the sou ; .rn Timbien mountains. Itu-.vn in the arid Ogaden, General < irazbni, mounted on a truck, rode :it the head of his column into Neghel li, capital of Galla Borana, to climax : eix-day drive in which the southern army plowed straight through the ,heart of Idas Desta Demtu’s Ethio pian-'. •■•nd seized a! lthe water holes within 20 miles of Dolo. These reports of Italian successes ■fr*lowed upon Ethiopian claims that “thousands of Italians” had been kill 'd in th< Tembien battle, and that Ras i•• son-in-law of Emperor Haile •Selassie, was yet undefeated in the south. Las Death Displeases Witnesses “Will Be My Last,” Says One Who Sees Youthful Negro Asphyxiated Raleigh, Jan. 24*—(AP)—Allen Foster, 20-year-old Birmingham, Ala., Negro, was asphyxiated here today for criminal assault on a Hoke county white woman in the first lethal gas execution east of the Mississippi river. It was eleven minutes after the •lectrical apparatus operating the gas generating equipment was tripped be fot<- physicians pronounced the muii 'k-vj, and witnesses who had seen (Continued on Page Three.) Supreme Court Best Friend Os Farmer, Babson Declares Economist Says Chemists, Not Politicians, Will Solve Farm Puzzle; Future and Hope of Farm Is In Finding New Uses for Agricultural Products BY HOGF.It W. BAUSON, Copyright 19:56. Publishers Financial Bureau, Inc. Baboon Park, Fla., Jan. 24.—1 know liothicjf about lawyers except, like sectors, you are lucky if you can keep ‘' : liom them. Therefore, I can not 1110 legal phases of the recent i-r< loe Court decisions. Whether v good or bad law, I do not 1 •». These decisions are, however, *-<i upon good economics. The Su >nenu- Court has done the farmer a 11 Uultimately both farmer __ ' H ., .esue fetrrv u ilonuorsott Daily Btspa tth ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA LEASED WIRE SERVICE OP TIIE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Removes the "Ouch” K': ' 'v^B| V 1 I|| : |ML m W; M ■ :V. Dr. Leroy L. Hartman Children, and grown-ups too, need have no more fear of visiting the dentist. Dr. Leroy L. Hartman, head of the New York Columbia School of Dental Surgery has made free gift to the profession of new iesensitizer which will eliminate pain in the iiliing of teeth. (Centrat Press) MENTION i With Repeal of Sales Tax, State Warrants Issued For Expenses LIQUOR TAX UNLIKELY Distillers Already Claim They Are At Disadvantage by Competition In Other States Because Os Levy Dully Dispatch Unreal*. In The Mr Wnlter Hotel. lly J C. UASKtiJH VRI.t. • Raleigh. Jan. 24. —Could North Car olina do what Kentucky has done if the North Carolina sales tax should be repealed? Would the measure which Governor “Happy” Chandler has put it}to effect or is advocating as a substitute for the sales tax, prove effective in North Carolina? These questions are being asked in State governmental circles following the receipt of word as to how Gov ernor Chandler is meeting the situa tion in Kentucky as a result of the repeal of the sales tax which last year brought $10,009.14*0 into the Kentucky treasury, one-third of which was al located back to the counties and towns for local use. It is estimated that the abolition of the sales tax in Kentucky within the last ten days will reduce the revenue of that State between now* and June 30 1936, by $3,500,000 and that the counties will also lose $1,750,000 in revenue that would have been allocated back tu them. _ , , , The first step being advocated is the issuance of from $2,000,000 to $3,- 000 000 in interest-bearing State war rants at a high rate of interest to bridge the gap until the legislature, now in session, can devise ways and means of finding new revenue with which to replace the revenue lost as (Continued on Page Four.) and city worker alike will hail it as a significant victory. The Farmers’ Difficulty There are four primary sources of all wcatlh: Farming, forestry, fish eries and mines. As the income from the«-e major activities declines, then the" nation’s industrial payrolls drop likewise One is the lock and the other is the key. The East, and the West must prosper or suffer together. To this extent, the politicians are correct HENDERSON, N. C., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 24, 1936 MEMBERS DEMAND VOTE AS SOON AS VETO IS RECEIVED ___ Democratic Leaders Seek to Delay Vote Until Mon day, But They Are Voted Down SENATE TO ACT ON VETO NEXT MONDAY Senator Harrison, Adminis- j tration Sfcalwbrt, j It Will Be Overridden and Says He Will Vote That Way; Roosevelt Stand Un changed Washington, Jan. 24 (AP) — A heavy Democratic House voted 024 to 01 today to over-j ride President Roosevelt’s veto ol the $2,491,000,000 bonus j bilk Members barely awaited to j hear the reading of the brief handwritten veto message be fore demands of “Vote, vote,” j were shouted. Democratic leaders sought to delay the ballot until Monday, but were voted down 189 to 131. The Senate does not meet until Monday, so final action was delayed ever the week-end*. Leaders there predicted the senators would join the representatives and make the bill law over the President’s opposition. Mr. Roosevelt’s handwritten mes sage returning the bonus bill “withoul my approval” broke precedent of a quarter of a century. Senator Harrison, Democrat, Mis sissippi, chairman of the finance com mittee, and an administration stal wart, said: “It is my opinion that the veto will not. be sustained I. shall vote to over ride the veto.” In his short text. President Roose velt referred senators and represen tatives “respectfully x x x x to every word of what I said in last year’s veto of a currency expansion bonus pay ment bill.” “My convictions are As impelling to day as they were then.” the President said. “Therefore, I cannot change them.” He added: “The bill I now return differs from last year’s bill in only two important (Continued on Pnire Two ) Manchukuo Crisis Coming To Climax With Mongolians Tokyo. Jan. 24.—(API—Numer ous new frontier incidents be tween the Japanese-advised state of Manchukuo and Soviet-influ enced Outer Mongolia drove the east Asia border controversy to day to an apparent climax. A Japanese news agency dis patch from Hsinking, capital of Manchukuo, said the recurring clashes brought a vigorous pro testation from the Manchukuan foreign office to Outer Mongolia, considered by officials as a vir tual “final warning.” TALK KIRKPATRICK AS REYNOLDS FOE Charlotte Lawyer Appa rently Retiring from the Race for Governor Daily Dlanaicl* Mnrenw. In The Sir Walter Hotel, Hr J. C. BASKWRVIMj Raleigh, Jan. 24.—News just receiv ed here to the effect that Colonel T. Leßoy Kirkpatrick, of Charlotte, has withdrawn from the race for the Democratic nomination for governor and instead will become a candidate for the Democratic nomination fox' the United States Senate against Sen ator Robert R. Reynolds in 1938, is causing some mild interest in politi cal circles here. The opinion is that the colonel is merely postponing his own political execution another two years. It has never been definitely known here whether he was actually ever a candidate for the nomination for governor in 1936, although he has talked of becoming a candidate for the past four years. When he was a member of the Senate here in 1933, 1 he announced that he was a candi date for governor in 1936, but not Farm Bill Agreed Upon By Senate Agriculture Groups One Man Drowned As Roanoke River Rages In Carolina —— -. ~s% ——••-• •• . —— —sar _. ** ■ j . ■ ■ S'—-’ - 7> ,; • ... ..v, ■?. •':>!. ; - v ; ■ . v •. .• ‘ • • : -7" .. : ; .1 “ v - ~ * T ——a, One man was drowned and another swam 200 yards to safety when the rampant Roanoke River swallowed the boat in which they were rowing West Getting Some Relief From Cold;Nearly 100 Dead Chicago, Jan. 24.—(AP) —A new blast of Arctic weather slashed down tlie eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains today with more more sub-zero weather for a shivering nation. Snow barriers deepened over the northwast just as the eastern half of. the country whs beginning to recover j from a two-day frigid wave that left at least 110 dead in 17 states. Temperatures rose slightly from! South Daktoa and Nebraska to New : York as wild gales spent their force j over the Atlantic ,but more icy winds j ■whistled down from Canada’s Me- j Kenzie river basin. The cold eased up in the east, but : many communities remained snowvj toTuSnw But People Demand More and More Easy Money and It Cannot Quit ‘BOONDOGGLERS’ CITED Receiving Enough To Sustain Life But Not Enough To Buy Drinks and Go to Movies When They Choose By LESLIE EISCIfEL New York, Jan. 24—Financial cen tralization of the United States in Washington is likely to occur at an increasing pace. T. Jefferson Cool idge, undersecretary of the treasury, opposed it. Ho resigned. He was the best “Wall Street” man in the treasury. The term “Wall Street” is not used derogatively. It connotes a financial scheme centered in New York. But the present financial scheme tends toward Washington. President Roosevelt probably will be blamed for it. That, however, is not going to the root of the matter. President Roosevelt and Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau actually have tried to stem the tide. But that tide is not restricted to one nation. Nor can it be blamed on “sovietism. ” When the capitalistic structure cracked under the strain of the de pression, governments all over the (Continued on Page Three.) VltlllHl FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Fair, not quite so cold in south west. and extreme west portions tonight; Saturday mostly cloudy, with rising temperatures, jpossi | bly light snow to the extreme west . near Roanoke Rapids. The arrow j points to the spot where Paul Massey, |of Weldon, was drowned. His com- I pan ion, W. H. Portis, swam to safety. bound. A milk shortage developed, in New York as a result of drifts piled up by the worst blizzard since 1888. The gravity of the tion was heightened fby promises of more snow today. Chicago. Jain. 24.—(AP)—In tense eoid which paralyzed the upper half of the nation, leaving almost 100 dead and widespread property damage, today appar ently headed for the Atlantic ocean, as moderating tempera tures with more snow were fore cast generally. The fury of the storm apparently spent itself on New England, New York and New Jersey, but sulb-zero frigidity still held many midwestern and northwestern states in its icy Four Perish When Their Home Burns Knoxville, Md., Jan. 24. —(AP) — With ice-coated, snow - blocked roads cutting off rescuers, four members of a family of five were burned to death early today when fire destroyed their isolated frame house on South Mountain, near here. A ten-year-old boy, the only sur vivor, escaped with sever© bums and bruises while leaping from a second floor window after his heroic attempt to rouse the fam ily had failed. The child, Charles Swope, 10, told firemen he was awakened some time after midnight by the crackle of fire, and found his bedroom aflame. RADICAL SOCIAUST^ Senator Albert Serraut Suc ceeds in Forming New Cabinet at Paris Paris Jan. 24. —(AP)—Senator Albert Sarraut was successful to day in his attempt to form a new cabinet for France —the 101st gov ernment of the third republic. Sarraut, who already has serv ed his country as premier, is a veteran of the radical socialist party. The cabinet he has formed is a transition body to keep the gov ernment running until the parlia mentary election, which will be »**lrl In April nr .Mn.y. r::ci.:sHED every afternoon EXCEPT SUNDAY. The river was at its highest flood stage in nearly a quarter century, and had inundated wide areas of low lands and damaged many small farm homes. (Associated Press Photo). grip. Hundreds of thousands of dollars of property damage was caused by fire. Three villages in upper New York were virtually burned out by flames carried by high winds. Small fires in Ohio caused an estimated $200,000 loss Two buildings in downtown Pitts burgh were destroyed with a loss of SIOO,OOO. International Falls, Minn., on the Canadian border, again turned in the record low temperature for the na tion yesterday with a minus 56 de grees. Near Anderson, Inch, 100 persons, including motorists and school chil dren, spent their second night in the Walnut Grove school marooned by eight foot drifts. The group had plenty of food and fuel. M S well raw _____ “More Than Delighted” At Interest Shown in His Campaign, He Says I'aity tJiMi'Mtch Uuieao, In Tbe Sir Walter Hole,. Itj J. C UASKRRVILL Raleigh, jan. 24. —Dr. Ralph W. McDonald, of Winston-Salem, one of the four candidates for the Demo cratic nomination for governor, was here for a few hours on his way back west following the speech which he made in Buie’s Creek Wednesday night. He was even more enthusiastic than ever over the progress of his campaign and said he was continu ing to find tremendous interest in the things he is advocating everywhere he goes. The principal planks in his platform are the repeal of the sales tax and more adequate financial sup (Continued on Page Three.) Labor Defers Action On Constitutional Changes Miami, Fla., Jan. 24. —(AP) — The American Federation of Labor exe cutive council today deferred until its next meeting action on the last con vention’s resolution for an amend ment to the Constitution limiting the court's power to nullify social legisla tion. It was indicated the council was in vestigating whether Congress does not at present possess the power to prevent th eSunreme Court from vie I 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY EVERYBODY HAPPY, | WALLACE ASSERTS Soil Conservation Very Fundamental and Import* ant and Embodied in Measure SEEK COOPERATION FROM THE STATES », _ Subsidies After First Two Years Would Be Conting ent Upon State Aid; Roose velt Wants Agriculture as Profitable as It Was 100 Years Ago Washington, Jan. 24 (AP) A Senate agriculture sub-com mittee of five Democrats today unanimously agreed on a revis j ed farm bill to replace the AAA, I but members were bound to se | crecy on its details for the time ! being. This action was announced shortly after President Roosevelt set the mak ing of agriculture “as productive as it was 100 years ago” as the New Deal’3 goal, and expressed a hope it could be done within the Constitution. Secretary Wallace, who dropped in on the group as it went over amend ments drafted overnight, came out smiling, and told reporters: “Everybody’s happy." ; Chairman Smith, Democrat, South ■j Carolina, of the Senate subcommittee, j who revolted against the otrigln&l | draft, and stated flatly he would not | support a new bill “until it confirms to the Constitution,” niado this brief announcement: “We have agreed upon a bill, and until the chairman can confer with the chairman of the House commit tee, no statement will be made." Walace earlier told newsmen: ‘The soil conservation thing is very fundamental and important.” “In fact.” he added, “you can say (Continued on Page Two.) King George Body Viewed By Populace Million Expected To File Past Bier in An cient Westminster Palace London, Jan. 24. — (AP)—-The first of 1,000,000 sorrowing pilgrims filed today past the bier of the late King George V— a black catafalque ap proached on purple carpeted steps in the ancient palace of Westminster. There the new king, Edward VIII, and the Ibereaved royal family left their liege for four days of public homage before the final service and burial next Tuesday at Windsor. Long before last midnight, crowds (Continued on Page Two.) ing legislation. “We are going into this matter care fully,” said President William Grene, of the federation, in announcing the Council’s action. “We don’t want to defeat our own aims.” He pointed out a constitutional amendment denying the court the power to declare “social justice” acts unconstitutional might possibly be used against labor—“acts might Ibe passed fixing wages and hours or denying workers the right to. “trik^’i
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Jan. 24, 1936, edition 1
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