Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Jan. 28, 1936, edition 1 / Page 1
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HENDERSON GATEWAY to (entkal CAROLINA TWENTY-THIRD year HENDERSON TEMPERATURE LOWEST SHOWN George V Buried At Windsor / After A Pompous Procession i Through Streets Os London iSS OF HUMANITY SILENT, TEARFUL AS CORTEGE PROCEEDS New King Edward and His Three Brothers and Oth er Royalty March Behind Coffin BIG CROWD BREAKS OVER POLICE LINES Score of Women Faint As Officers Battle To Control Throngs of People: Queen Mother Unable To Sup press Her Emotion at the Final Rites London, Jan. 28 (AP)— King (it'oruv \ made his last journey through packed London streets today, amid the tolling of cath edral bells, and was taken to Winds* r Castle for burial in the nival tomh beneath ancient St. Ceorge s chapel. Th< majestic funeral procession from V.'i -tmiuster hall began rm the noiodiou- Big Ben of Westminster tower <■ liifiled 9:45 a. ni. (4:45 a. m. ‘-'andard time). Th ■ royal coffin, which rested in ■ rat,> for four days, was carried out of Westminster hall and placed solem nly upon 'a gun carriage. A great crowd stood silently and tearfuliy as the new king. Edward VIII. his three brothers and other royal and diplomatic mourners fell in line .foot behind the coffin, which' was (jt awn lo Paddington station, and placed I bore on a train for Windsor, j ( Mary, heavily veiled, and the j other women of the royal party, rode j is earring s immediately behind King r.'iwanl. the Dukes of York, Glouces iT’im) inned on Paeo Two 4 _ : Two Army Fliers From Fort Bi Killed In Capital! a ;i-'T<iiio)o>i, .Jail. 28.-“(AI‘l Two army filers were injured fa tallv tirtay when the plane in which they left Pope Field, Fort Hrag?. \. C., this morning crash ed in lauding at Bolling Field. The\ were identified as Second lieutenant, William K. Payne, of the air corps reserve, and lieute nant Dudley E. Whitten, of Whar ton. Texas. Payne was Killed instantlv and Whitten died » few minutes later. ' cust of wind which sent their plane suddenly out of control was t>elieved to ba\e caused the crash, hut officers declined an opinion pending further investigation. Payne was the plane’s pUot and Whitten a passenger. An investigation of the cause was started immediately by of ficers of the field. 'submarine 0 blast Navy Yard Workers at Ma nila Badly Hurt; Sub marine Also Damaged Manila, p. 1.. Jan. 28. —(AP) Bight Cavite navy yard workers "ere injured, five seriously, when batteries aboard the U. S. "Navy submarine S-40 exploded today. None of the navy personnel was injured. The submarine was seriously damaged. The S-40 was in drydock being o\rrhauled when its batteries ex ploded. The exact cause of the blast was not immediately deter mined. A navy board liegan Investigat ing the explosion as soon as the injui, n were removed to a hos- Tdtjii me mor.al library i . UtNDERsON. N. a . mrttorrsott Batin 43 tapatrh only DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGTOIA ’ ' leased wire service of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. GOV. 0. K. ALLEN, OF LOUISIANA, CLAIMED BY DEATH AT HOME * ! Governor Dies Oicur K. Allen Rome Claims! New Victory In Ethiopia i : Charge Red Cross T rucks Carrying; Munitions; Musso-j I ini Courts Hitler (By 'The Associated Press.) Fascist headquarters at Home to day reported a new victory on the I northern Italo-Ethiopian front and capture of a Swedish hospital unit : asserted to have been transporting i munitions on the southern battle line. { A communique by Marshal Dado-i glio. commander of the northern in vading forces, said the Italians were, victorious in a new four-hour engage-j mcnt on the Eritrean front, j Five hospital trucks marked with Red Cross flags and carrying 27 cases i of munitions were taken at Wadara, i together with flags and war drums; of Has Desta Demtu, the report lie- j ! dared. From General Grazianai. Italian commander in the south, came the j claim of success of the Ganale Dorya I battle. The Italian “hell on wheels” : column, imported victorious in a ! smashing southern offensive, pushed | eastward from Negholli. Premier Mussolini at Home was re j ported in excited political circles to 1 have turned to discussion of a pro jected Italo-German accord, design ed txj offset Franeo-British under j standings.. Highway Commission Warns Os Slippery Road Dangers In All Sections Os State ljatlj Dispute* II nr run, i In The Sir Wnlter Hotel, «v J. C. BASKI.UVILI. | Raleigh, Jan. 28.—The .paved liigh -1 ways are still very icy and slippery i in almost every section of the State, | despite the efforts of the highway department to make them safe for , travel. Chief Engineer W. Vance ; Raise said today. For while the roads i have been cleared of snow, the sleet] which preceded the snow in most sec- j tions left a film of ice over the roads which nothing but a rising tempera-j ture will remove, Baise pointed out. j “As long as the temperature re- j mains below freezing, we are power less to do anything more than we have done to make the ™?,d* HENDERSON, N. C., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 28, 1936 Righthand Man of Late ■ Huey Long Succumbs to Cerebral Hemorrh age at Mansion HAD LATELY BEEN ELECTED SENATOR j Rose from Humble Ranks in Small Town, Carried Along To Power by Slain Sena tor; Lt.-Gov. Noe Becomes j Governor and Steps Into Long Shoes Baton Rouge, La., Jan. 28. — ( \P)—Governor O. K. Allen died unexpectedly today at 10:40 a. ni., central standard time, from what was announced as a cerebral hemorrhage. Governor Allen was seized with a •Midden attack at (he executive man -1 s ion at 8:50 a. nj. He had apparently been in good health, and was jUA't preparing to leave the mansion for bis | executive offices in the State Capitol. Lieutenant Governor James A. Noe, of Monroe, automatically succeeded j Governor Allen as chief executive of j i Louisiana, As lieutenant governor and j presiding officer of the State Senate, j 1 he has always been a staunch suppor- j ter of the late Huey P. Long and Gov- j 1 ernor Allen. I A corps of physicians hastily sum— j mended, including Dr. C\ A. Lorio, one of the physicians of the late Senator J Huey P. Long, political associate of j i thq governor. ; But all medical attention failed to ; rally the governor, and lie died at i 10:40 a. m. His death was announced | at 10:55 a. m. by A. P. White, secre- I taiy to the governor, and as the news I us the passing of the governor spread I rapidly through official circles and over the city, a large number of of ficials and other friends of the gov -1 ernor hurried to the mansion and j formed a great crowd around thoi building. Governor Allen was born in. 1881 in j the small town of Winnfield, La., and! grew up as a boyhood companion of j ! the late Senator Huey Long, who car- j | j-ied him along with him to political; power in Louisiana. After Huey Long’s death from a : pistol bullet, Allen became the titular head of the strong Long political ma chine, and led the organization to a, i sweeping victory at the polls on Janu-j | ary 21. In that election he was elect- j ; ed lo the United States Senate for! j the unexpired term of Senator Long, j running until January, 1937. He died at the height of his poli-; itical career and after a strenuous, stumping campaign over the State, j For sometime Governor Allen had been suffering from heart, trouible, but recently his health had been regard ed by iiis friends as improved. State officials would make no legal comment on procedure to be follow ed in selecting a nominee for the Senate in plaee of Governor Allen. But E. A. Conway, secretary of state, declared that "we will follow the law.” . travel,” Baise said. “Monday we or dered the maintenance crews to use sand and gravel on dangerous curves and especially slippery stretches of highways, but it has been impossible to put sand and gravel on all of the places which are Slippery and dan gerous. So we are anxiously awaiting above-freezing temperatures and ■ warm sunshine, the things most need ; ed now to get rid of the ice on the J roads.” With the temperature four degrees j below zero at Boone and only four i degrees above zero in the Asheville I section, highways in the mountain I Art />■»■» tin(ro Services for Late King George V Held Here Funeral services for the late British king, George V, were held today at the Royal St. George’s chapel, Wind sor castle. Arrangements were made to take the king’s coffin back by train from London lo Windsor. Arrow New Dealers Ask Support Os Roosevelt Ickes Calls on G. O. P. Progressives To Offset Democratic Defections Washington, Jan. 28. —(AP) —Cam- paign shots roared from New Deal ramparts today as Congress slowed to a walk after its bonus dash. Secretary Ickes led the firing. He urged progressive Republicans to swing behind President Roosevelt and thus offset any loss of strength &- mong conservative Democrats. Additional guns were unlimbered by Senator Robinson, the Democratic leader. He prepared to reply in a radio speech at 10 p. m., eastern stan dard time, tonight, to Alfred 15. Smith’s denunciation. Before a convention of the United Mine Workers, of which he is presi dent, John L. Lewis, asserted bluntly that Smith has gone back on prin ciples he long held sacred. In Congress, the President gained support for his nomination of Mar iriner Eccles, Utah ibanker, and five others to the new Federal Reserve Board, which will have increased powers over the nation’s credit after February 10. The Senate Banking Committee, whose members include Carter Glass, of Virginia, an opponent (Continued ou Page Five) OUR WEATHER MAN FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Fair tonight, Wednesday in creasing cloudiness, followed by snow or rain Wednesday night; rising temperature Wednesday »Hd i-tt? tOlS'eht Jw ■ weat iiodssi points to royal St. George’s chapel. Photos show Windsor castle, and exterior and interior views of St. George’s chapel. Wallace Again Assails Supreme Court Decision Refunding Process Tax “Greatest Legalized Steal i n American History,” Agri culture Secretary Says of Repayment of $200,000,- 000; Means Record D ividends To Firms Washington, Jan. 28. —(AP) — Con-i tending this is probably the “greatest j legalized steal in American history,” j Secretary Wallace today renewed Ins 1 attack on the Supreme Court’s de- j eision refunding $200,000,DU0 to pro cessors. Wallace, in a radio address over a | national network, cited profit figures of various processors to show the • large returns they would obtain. "In the Hoosac mills case,” Wallace j said, “the Supreme Court disapproved j the idea that the government could take money from one group for the benefit of another. Yet in turning over to the processors this $200,000,000 which came from all the people, we are seeing the most flagrant example P FOR GOVERNORSHIP But Greensboro insurance Man May Contest For Lieutenant Governor Dally Dispatch Qnrenn, la The Sir Waller Hold, II y J. C. RASKERVILL Raleigh, Jan. 28—Julian Price, of ; Greensboro, president of the Jeffer- J son Standard Life Insurance Com- j pany there, will not be a candidate for the Democratic nomination for gov- , ernor, as much as he would undoubt- j edly like to become governor, and in spite of the reports here from time to time that he may get into the race, according to the opinion in most poli tical circles here. But there is a strong possibility that Price may be come a candidate for the nomination PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. of expropriation for the benefit of one small group. This is probably the greatest legalized steal in American history. “You will get. some idea of its size when you contract these refunds with the profits of the processors in their most prosperous years. Cotton mills reported profits of $30,090,000 in 1929. The processing tax refunds amount to $51,000,000 on cotton. Flour mills reported profits of about $20,000,000 on their wheat flour business in 1929; their processing tax refunds amount to $67,000,000. Packers' profits on their hog busi ness in 1929 were in the neighbor hood of $20,000,000. Their processing tax refunds are $51,000,000.” HIGHWAY BALANCE PLACED TOO HIGH Cash Is $8,899,596, Not $13,- 000,000, or $18,000,000, Waynick Says Unity DiM(iatcl| Wuiean. In The Sir Walter llote-. Ily J. C JJASKEttVILL Raleigh. Jan. 28.—The cash balance in the highway fund on January 1 was only $9,899,596 and not $13,000,- 000 or $18,000,000, as has been various ly reported, Chairman Capus M. Way nick pointed out today in a letter to Governor J. C. B. Ehringhaus, call ing attention to the correct figures. A recent newss tory carried in some papers in the State, based on figures from the combined statement of the State treasurer and auditor, gave the balance in the highway fund, as $lB,- r>flunqrl r'ri T^^o r/ > 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY THIRD COLD WAVE , OF WINTER GRIPS I CAROLINAS REGION - Raleigh’s Decline Is Nine Degrees Above Zero In Official Weather Bureau Count NATION COUNTS 260 DEAD THIS FREEZE I Chicago Reports Four Be* low, and Niagara Falls Is Frozen Over for Fourth Consecutive Day; No Great \ Relief in Sight from Far s Flung Cold Wave : (By The Associated Press) The third cold wave of the winter held the CaroHnas in its grip today, sending tempera tures at many points to record low depths. Henderson, N. C., reported a reading of seven degrees below i zero, the lowest ever reached j there. A reading of 11 at Charlotte equal led the previous low for the winter. Readings for other Carolina points included: Asheville, 2; Greensboro 3, Wilmington. 18; and Hatteras 20. Raleigh had its coldest weather of 1 the winter, an official reading of nine i degrees at the Weather Bureau. DEATH TOLL STANDS 260 IN CURRENT WINTER COLD Chicago, Jan. 29 (AP)- —Snowbound highways, ice-choked rivers, threats lof fuel and milk shortages became I commonplace loday as most of the I nation snuggled a bit farther down into its coat collar, and muttered, “Oh well, it can’t last forever.” Frigid temperatures clasped the states east of the Rockies from the Canadian border into the deep south, and the number of weather deaths lose 33 yesterday to 260 for the cur rent siege. j The sub-zero wave, which swept out of the northwest a week ago showed ; little sign of retreating, and weather j forecasts generally for the mid-west «ru states, were for continued cold and in place more snow. Chicago was minus four degrees as i it entered its seventh successive day I of Arctic(-like Forecaster J. R. Lloyd predicted some break : in severity, although thqre is no great ‘ relief in sight from the far-flung cold I wave. ; Louisville, Ky., continued In sub-zero | temperature. The Ohio river there I was two-thirds choked with ice, and (Continued on Page Two.) School Bonds Os Vance County Are Sold for $25,000 Ralciglu Jan. 28 (AP) —The exe cutive committee of the Local Government Commission today sold a Vance county $25,000 school bond issue to Kirschofer & Arn old, of Raleigh, at a premium of $20.50, with the first SIO,OOO of maturities bearing three percent ■ Interest and the remainder 3 1-2 percent. SENTENCED IN LOSS OF MO CASTLE Three Officers of Ship and Owners Get Prison Terms for Fire New York, Jan. 28.—(AP)—Fed eral Judge Murray Hurlburt to day sentenced Eben S. Abbott, chief engineer of the liner Motto Castle, to four years in prison, and William F. Warms, acting captain, to two years. They were convicted of crim inal negligence In connection with the burning of the ship Septem ber 8, 1934, with a loss of 124 lives. Henry E. Cabaud, executive vicorprcsidcnt of the New York & Cuba Mail Steamship Company, operators of the vessel, was given a suspended sentence of one year, and fined $5,000. He was paroled pending payment of the fine. The company was fined the maximum of SIO,OOO. Judge Hulbert vigorously criticized all the defendants. “My regret,” he said as the men stood before him for sentence, “is, sq * I (Continued cn a _j
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Jan. 28, 1936, edition 1
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