HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA I'WENTY-FOURTH YEAR ROOSEVELT URGES COURTS 10 BE LIBERAL * ♦ ¥ * aft » AL X u v » .. .. .. „ ’ Legislature Gets Bills To Abolish Absentee Ballot 1 PRESIDENT THINKS NO NEED TD ALTER THE CONSTITUTION “Enlightened” Interpreta tion of Nation’s Organic Law Is What Is More Urgent NRA PROBLEMS ARE DECLARED PRESSING Statute Outlawed, but Is sues Remain, Roosevelt Tells Congress in Annual Message Delivered in Per son at Joint Session of House and Senate Washington, Jan. 6 (AP) President Roosevelt called today for an “enlightened” interpre tation of the Constitution to har monize Congress and the courts in meeting “present national needs. Standing before a joint session of the overwhelmingly Democratic 75th Congress, Mr. Roosevelt, without men tioning the Supreme Court by name, said "a liberal interpretation” rather than "alteration” of the Constitution was needed. He reaffirmed his be lief NRA objectives “were sound.” The itatute of NRA has been out lawed. he told the assembled Senate and House. “The problems have not. They are still with us.’ ’ The President, greeted with shouts and cheers by Congressmen elected in the November landslide that returned him to office, said it was “high time for democracy to assert itself’ 'when militarism was leaping forward abroad, adding: The process of our democracy must not be impelled by the denial of es sential powers of free government.” As the first cargo of $7,284,000 of munitions and airplanes licensed for export to Spain slipped out of New York harbor, Mr. Roosevelt urged quick action to halt such shipments, said some dying statutes should be ex tended quickly and a deficiency ap propriation swaftly made for relief purposes. 2 Condemned Men Fail To Win Appeals Raleigh, Jan. 6.—(AP) The Mate Supreme Court found “no error” today in two capital cases and ruled unconstitutional a law providing for the licensing by the North Carolina Real Estate Com mission of eight real estate brok ers and salesmen. The licensing law had applied only in certain designated counties. In declining a new trial to Alfred Puckett, of Richmond county, een >‘ i cud to asphyxiation for the murder ' f Roy Rhyne, the court automati cally set his death date as January 22 unless the governor intervenes. Charles Smith, Columbus Negro, fnund guilty of first degree burglary, v i" was refused a new trial, also will din on that date. Bitter Under-Cover Fights For Agriculture Positions Grange and Farm Bureau Have Their Men for Senate and House Chairmanships; Compacts by no Means Favored by All, Not Even All of the Farmers Daily Dispatch Kureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. lly .1. C. IIASKERVILL Raleigh, Jan. 6.—A bitter under cover fight has been in progress and i more and more intense for the chairmanships of the House and Sen ate agriculture committees, it was learned here today. The reason for '•bis unusual interest in the agricul ture committee is the expectation that a tobacco compacts bill will be in ti oducod early in the session and the forces for or against this bill are anxi ous to have chairmen named who will be favorable to them, according to most observers here. The two most influentail farm or ganizations in the State, the Grange and the North Carolina Farm Bureau, aic already on record as favoring the - ' _ • iitmilprsmt DatUt TBtanatrh only DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIISINIA. LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. France Ponders Mobilizing Army On Spanish Frontiers MOVING DAY FOR HOEY FAMILY si I fciMIMP Gov.-Elect Clyde R. Hoey, who will be inaugurated Jan. 7, is shown with Mrs. Hoey and their daughter, Isabel, at their home in Shelby while mak ing preparations for moving to the executive mansion in Raleigh. EHKHAUS HELPS AGRICULTURE WORK Governor’s Administration Also Noted for Friendli ness to Labor MANY PRISON REFORMS Local Government Units Have Been Assisted in Lifting Themselves Out of Their Financial Difficulties Daily Dis|»iit«'h Riirenn. In the Sir Walter Hotel. lly J. C. MASKER VI M, Raleigh, Jan. 6. While the admin istration of Governor J. C. B. Ehring haus is pro:ably better known for its fiscal and educational reforms than for anything else, much has been done for agriculture, labor, for local gov ernments, highways and along the lines of prison reform, those who are evaluating the accomplishments of the past four years point out. The farmers have probably benefit fed as much from the Ehringhaus ad ministration as any one group. In ad dition cO the large reduction in pro perty taxes which resulted when the State took over the cost of maintain ing the schools, it is now generally conceded that but for Governor Eh ringhaus and the firm stand he took with the AAA in Washington, the to bacco farmers would not have been (Continued on Page Six.) enactment of a tobacco control and compacts bill, while most of the iarge tobacco farmers are also interested in the enactment of a bill of this nature. They believe that it will limit acre age, hence decrease the size of the to bacco crop and accordingly compel the tobacco manufacturer to pay high er prices for their tobacco. The com pact and crop control movement is also regarded as having the full ap proval and cooperation of the United States Department of Agriculture and the Federal Agricultural Extension Service. Many Opponents. But not all of the tobacco farmers favor the bill, it is agreed. The smal (Continued on Page Six.} HENDERSON, N. C., WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 6, 1937 Bad Weather For Hoey’s Inaugural Raleigh, Jan. 6. (AP) The weather Bureau today forecast “cloudy weather with rain at in tervals” for Raleigh tomorrow on inauguration day. Committees in charge of the in augural ceremony! for Clyde Hoey, of Shelby, who will become the 81st governor of North Carolina elected by the people, still predicted a huge crowd would be here. Farmßr reau Seeks Quick Control Bill Speedy Action On Tobacco Compacts Is Sought in The General Assembly Daliy Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. By •>. C. BASKERVILL Raleigh, Jan. 6. —The North Caro lina Farm Bureau Federation is go ing to seek to ram-rod a toibacco com pacts and crop control bill through the 1937 General Assembly as quick ly as possible. This decision was reached in a meeting of more than 100 directors and members of the Fed eration here Tuesday, at which the legislative program was outlined by President J. E. Winslow and Execu tive Secretary H. F. Arnold. Copies of the model bill which will be present ed, which was written in Washing ton and which was said to have the approval of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture and the officials of the old tobacco division of the AAA, was distributed to the members present and they were urged to go back to their home counties —32 coun ties were represented at the meeting —l<> call meetings of the tobacco far mers in those counties, get them indorse the bill and then apply pres sure to the members of the legisla ture from those counties in an effort to force its enactment as soon as pos sible. Secret Committee Named. At this same meeting a secret com mittee was appointed to call on Lieu tenant Governor W. P. Horton and Speaker R. Gregg Cherry to urge the appointment of chairmen of the Sen ate and House agriculture committees who are “dirt farmers,” and if pos sible toibacco farmers, instead of to (Continued on Page Four.) Britain, Meanwhile, Hurries Array of Fighting Ships To Mediterranean Region RUSSIA AND SPAIN HURL ACCUSATIONS Bitter New Charges Aimed at Italy and Germany; So cialist Government Rushes Reinforcements to North west of Madrid as Fascists Press Attacks Madrid, Jan. 6, —(AP) —Fascist artillery and air attacks disrupted • tihe capital's celebration of the Feast of the Magi today as insur gent gunners dropped six-inch shells into the central district and airmen bombed University City. Sixteen tri-motored bombers, es corted by 24 pursuit planes, bomb ed Socialist lines in the North western University City area, and a sector ten miles from the cap itnL (By The Associated Press). Soviet Russia and Socialist Spain launched bitter new accu sations at Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany today, while France considered rushing troops to her Spanish border, and Britain shifted 172,000 tons of fighting ships in the' Medi terranean. Another Soviet steamer, the ninth, was seized by insurgent sea forces in the Straits of Gibraltar. ' Geneva—The Spanish government, protesting dual violation of her sov ereignty by Italy and Germany sought League of Nations action. Moscow—A government spokesman (Continued on Page Six.) Hoey Off To Raleigh For Inauguration Shelby, Jan. 6. —(AP) —Governor- Elect Clyde R. Hoey, accompanied by Mrs. Hoey and their daughter, Miss Isabelle Hoey, left Shelby at 10 o’clock this morning by automobile for Ra leigh, where tomorrow he will be in augurated. Only one city traffic officer and a State highway patrolman escorted the car to the city limits in deference to the wishes of the governor-elect. “I want to leave Shelby as a private citizen and Without; formaUfty’,’'’ he said. chilleMng FOR MATTSON BOY Intercede for His Safety; Strangers Visit G-Men Headquarters Tacoma, Wash., Jan. 6.—(AP)-p A visit by two southwest Wash ington men to kidnap investiga tion headquarters today revived speculation the abductors of ten year-old Charles Mattson may be hiding near Shelton. The pair was identified as a Shelton business man and a resi dent of Hoodsport, near Shelton. They were closeted with agents at the Federal Bureau of inves- Continued on Page Five.) OUR WEATHER MAN FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Cloudy tonight and Thurs day; occasional mist and rain; not much change in temperature. Seizes Spanish Ships ' i Admiral Carls, new commander of Nazi fleet. Disagreement over the naval pol icy of Fuehrer Adolf Hitler in reference to Spain resulted in the surprise retirement of Admiral Foerster, commander of the Ger man fleet, and the elevation of Admiral Carls, above, as new commander. According to reports, Admiral Foerster insisted it would be disastrous to the small German fleet to risk trouble with the British and French navies. Admiral Carls, however, has been boldly seizing Spanish Loyalist ships—carrying out Nazi policy in a striking manner. —Central Press FOR Visions Fast Rise Os Militarisms President Urges Safeguards to Pow ers of Free Govern ment in U. S. Washington, Jan. 6. —(AP) —Presi- dent Roosevelt summoned the courts today “to do their part in making democracy successful,” and “within the framework of the Constitution,” “at a time when militariasm has leapt forward” abroad. Addressing a joint session of the Congress from the speaker’s dais in the House chamber, the President said : “The vital need is not alteration of our fundamental law, but an in creasingly enlightened view with re ference to it. “We do not ask the courts to call non-existent powers into being, but we have a right to expect that con ceded powers of those legitimately implied shall be made effective instru ments for the common good.” “The process of our democracy must not be imperilled by the denial of the essential powers of free gov ernment.” Many Sections Os South Threatened By Flood Waters (By The Associated Press) Thousands of southerners anxious ly watched cloudy skies today while dozens of streams on the Gulf and At lantic watersheds rolled along in the flood stage danger zone. A week of almost ceaseless rain in the holiday period submerged lowly ing lands and did extensive crop dam age. A generally clear Sunday and Mon day gave brief respites, but resump tion of rain late in the latter day and yesterday revived the threat. There was some cessation overnight 4 but PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. One Bill Proposes Electrocutions For All Capital Cases Business, Movies Pay Highest Wage Washington, Jan. 6. —(AP) —A peek into the pay envelopes of some of the nation’s b»g men and women, afforded by a Treasury De partment report to Congress, show ed today that top salaries went to movie stars and captains of in dustry. OE EArS IN MOTORINDUSTRIES Hopes for Settlement, How ever, Turn to National Capital, Where Plans Are Talked ALFRED SLOAN OFF TO DETROIT OFFICE Motor Giant’s President Hastens to Seat cr Trou ble; California Governor Calls on Roosevelt To In tervene in 69-Day-Old Sea Strike (By The Associated Press.) Opposing leaders in the strug gle between the United Automo bile Workers of America and the General Motors Company in De troit showed no sign of a truce today in the labor conflict which has taken 50,000 men from their jobs. HOPES FOR SETTLEMENT TURN TOWARD WASHINGTON (By The Associated Press) Hopes for settlement of the far flung automotive and maritime strikes centered today in the national capital. , Government leaders considered ways of adjudicating employer-worker differences costing 90,000 workers employment in those, two divisions of business and industry. President Alfred Sloan, Jr., of the General Motors Corporation, left New York for Detroit, where Federal con ciliators sought to bring company of ficials and union leaders together in an accord which would put 50,000 Gen eral Motor employees back to work. Governor Frank Merriam, of Cali fornia, w’-ed a request to President Roosevelt tor his “personal interven tion” to help restore shipping ope rations on the strike-bound Pacific coast, where a 69-day maritime walk out made 50,000 men idle. President Rooseveli and Labor Sec retary Frances Perkins discussed the automotive strike with the cabinet Continued on Page Five.) forecasts for scattered precipitation over the entire southeast kept con cern alive today. Conditions were worse in mid-South Alabama, where the Cahaba river in undated thousands of acres and a fl r et of small boats stood ready to evalu ate hundreds of families in the Selma- Uniontown area. The Roanoke and other Eastern North Carolina rivers also continued a slow rise that has done consider able damage to highways, crops and a few sawmills. South Carolina streams were receding after doing minor harm. 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY McDonald Men, Led by Lumpkin, Move Early for Election Law Re forms for the State BOTH HOUSES OPEN SESSIONS AT NOON Principal Clctks Named and Hall Johnson Again Made Senate President Protem; Thomas of Again Heads House lilies Com mittee, Cherry Says Raleigh, Jan. 6 (AP)—Bills to abolish the absentee ballot and generally tighten election Yaws, as well as one to abandon the use of lethal gas in execu tions and return to the use of electrocutions, were dropped in to the legislative hopper today as the General Assembly open ed its biennial f ion. The House was convened by Speak er G. egg C nervy, qf Gaston, at 12:02 p. m., and the Senate by its retiring president, Lieutenant Governor A. H. Graham, of Orange, at 12:03 p. m. The first three measures introduced reflected charges of ’’•regularities in last summer’s primai'oi, when Clyde Hoey, of Shelby, defeated Dr. Ralph McDonald, of Winston-Salem, for the gubernatoiial nomination. Two McDonald supporters, Repre sentatives Lumpkin, of Franklin, and Spiuill, of Bertie, sent them up in the House. Besides abolishing the use of the absentee ballot, in prima ries, they wouid abolish the use of markers and assistants in primaries, and would prohibit entrance of per sons into voting booths who are not actually voting. Representative Dellinger, of Gaston, sent forward the bill proposing that the lethal gas chamber, placed in operation last year, be abandoned, and that electricity again be used in legal executions. Without opposition, W. A. Baker, former assistant clerk, was elected principal clerk of the House, and Ray Eyerly, received the same advance ment in the Senate. The Senate forr \lly elected Sena tor Hall Johnson, of Buncombe, again as its president protem. Speaker Cherry announced Repre sentative Thomas, of Anson, 1935 chairman of the rules committee, would again head that, group. NO REAL WORK PROBABLE BEFORE FULL WEEK YET Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. My J. C. BASK Ell VILL Raleigh, Jan 6—The 1987 General Assembly convened in its regular ses sion at noon today, with Lieutenant Governor A. H. (Sandy) Graham pre siding in the Senate, and with Speak er R. Gregg Cherry, of Gastonia, (Continued on Page Five) Embargo On Arms Pushed By Congress Washington .Jan. 6.—(AP) —Con- gress rushed notion today on a Span ish anno embargo, but turned aside first to hear an optimistic report by President Roosevelt on the state of the union. Differences over spending, mone tary and other polic’’ s were forgotten in a general desire to speed the ban after the Slate Deportment reluctant ly issued permits to export $2,784,000 in munitions and airplanes to bleeding Spain. [ Since the neutrality task will carry into the week-end, the Democratic majority gave enthusiasm the ascen dency fur a final c vibration of the November landslide. The con ' ing of the electoral vote before the Senate and House in joint session provided tne opportunity. From the way’- democrats and Re publicans jollied each on returning to work it was hard to believe the elec tion had aroused any feelings. All space in the House chamber had been spoken tor in advance amid sus pense over the projected embargo and uncertainty about what the President would say.