Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / April 15, 1946, edition 1 / Page 1
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1E£ttîters0tt ïlaîly Btspatdt THIRTY-THIRD YEAR "ftPSeSSSSA*"'Vr'Sha* HENDERSON, X. MONDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 15, 1946 FUBUS,^^y^DV?EKNO°w FIVE CENTS COPY Iranian Envoy Here Told To Withdraw Complaint On Russia Azerbaijan Says, However, Russians Not Getting Out BRITI.W l»rrOS'-S. I mi Inn. %prh IV ■ \ Γ 111!· British BovpiM"»rn! ln-M-v·■■» (lie Iranian (|iios,ir.ii v!i >i>>d I·.· left <!ii th" *rv ν c ι.ιπ i! :i",.-ti !;». I !·:ι ; in 4n; l -d ϋ, «i:·! "M'es a'.'CO ·»1 in Ί . »<»·.·■ il I ιιΊ r Src;ctar> Jîrrtor t<·" "iI ' Ή lin- House of ( omm 11 t'> day. Τΐ'''·'Γ;ίη. pri! 1 ( M') — Prince MezaiTar Firn-z. propaganda director. said today that Hussein Ala. Iranian am .;is ·"'<>r to the United States, had bpen instructed "ir.iYned iatfly to withdraw In η'.- com before the securiiv coun cil." · vn The nation previously had nia.de an issue before the I'nited Nations over th · continued presence of R u s s i ; η tro >ps. which Moscow now savs will be withdrawn by May f>. (The council is scheduled to enn • .<:ι·ι· t:ie in.n.an question ;it ι meet i' il at .'Î f\ m. in New York ! 'day. British and American sources in New York in'.icat ·.i t tat their ,·.· ur.tra· \\cuid oppose a Ru/sian a::" pt t h;<· ο t';o case rtaaivcil iron t:i igcnda.l An official foreign rour-e : ' Tabriz. npifnl of semi-autii ornons .Vzerba' jan province. ;a:d today there stiH were no signs of Russian »··.. .··. .ti ·. there. The Rr>ci army is "improving il ;·· mnrmiration system and puttie. ·■·» a >'c\v rest camp and of:ic;a : · i apnt facilitinι'ιρ inf rmant sai i. Radio Tabriz said the Λ/ι government has received no con - municntions from the Tehcin go. crrmnt and denied report ·· ' .it nc Ro'.iaticns between the re ι ι<· arc b( "5 plat · ed. Firouz said yestcrdav that !ra\ had asked "representatives 'if t ic A/"''baiian people" t · a enferen,· at Kara.i "in the near future." An Iranian general stai: ■ · f t i ι ·< · ■■ saiil the army was "re<.'.eup> ing rarrisens at Kazv'i ". former north It · ι inn headquarters of th" Russian army. Λ local transnortation com pany official said the Iranian armic ; had engaged seven!ν bu.-ο- I'er mov ing troops into northern Iranian ' posts. Roll Call On Draft Asked Washington, April 15 (ΛΡ)— Ιϊ·λ covcred from ;i case of roll t: 111 fright, House members clamored in day for a recorded vote on passa:1,'.· of a cutdown draft extension bill. They were still smarting from cries of "politics" shouted last wee.; during the debate that preceded adoption of amendments orderiiv; a five months induction 'holiday,' and a ban against drafting teen-agers. There were no roll call votes, on which the members are recorded ii. dividually, when the bill was j.■ i* in shape for final approval late to day. No one asked for a roll call on banning the induction ol Hi an i ID year-olds and fewei than tills members demanded a revrd vol· on the amendment halting all in ductions between May 1Γ> and Oc tober 15. With more than 3tn) mem bers on the floor, 01 requests wen necessary before the roll could b<. called. Happy Days Again ORIGINALLY INTENDED for shipment to Germany by submarine, the first big batch of raw Japanese silk to arrive in the United States since August, 1941, is shown unloaded at Hoboken. N. J. Girl in photo show» how it will be used, (international House Boss Is Planning New Control More New Homes Under $6,COO Are Aim Of Rulings Washington, pril IV — ΆΡ)— Housing Boss Wils>n W. Vyatt is drafting further construction con trols designed to put more m w homes on the market bearing price tags of $6.000 or less. Officials m a position to knew said today the national Housing admin istrator expects to establish area quotas which will require that a cer tain percentage of homes in each region be built to sell at less than $10,000. the ceiling now generally in effect. These officials, who withheld use of their names, said the quotas will be based on building costs in each area. Under a preliminary plan subject to a rev ision, the syslem would work something like this: If MIA found that one-third of all new homes authorized in a certain area were scheduled t<> sell for $(>, 000 or under, it might rule that m the future fifty per cent of all au thorizations should be in that prie·.' category. If 20 per cent were being built to sell at from $6,000 to S6,500, this might bo boosted to thirty per cent, and so on. The aim will be to build as many homes for as much less than $10. 000 as possible, but in each area some probably will continue to sell at the ceiling. In areas where building costs are high, the minimum sale range might have t<> be, say, $ii.f>00 and under. But the system would work the same way. "We haven't been able to do any thing like tiiis before," the official said, "because we haven't had any postwar cost information tor indivi (iuul areas. Some contractors havt contended that they couldn't build lower priced homes than their ap plications called for. Now we can say, "Others are doing it, so can you'." ! » M Primary In Second Phase With Some Hot Contests By Ι,ΥΝΧ MSBIT. I Daily Dispatch Bureau Raleigh. April 1"). — With lists cios'.'d for candidates in all laive. county and township contests, the primary campaign tiiis week enters upo its second phase. Coun ty candidates will no longer be afraid to take positions with respect to solicit >rs or congressmen test they stir up opposition to themselves Since fï o'clock Saturday the books have been closed and no others can enter the various races. From statewide viewpoint the c<· gressi'.nal races otter most in terest. thcugh in some counties con tests for sheritts or ountv commis sioners may overshadow the con gressional campaigns. Only four in cumbent congressmen are without opposition: Graham Barden in the third district, Harold Cooiey in tho fourth, R. L. Doughtcn in the ninth and A. L. Bulvvinkle in the eleventh Ln tilt' eighth and tenth there ar contests, the eighth having an ar tual vacancy since death of Con gressman VV. O. Burgin who liai stated he would not r η again, ;·ιΐ Congresman Sam Krv in hav ing an nounced he would not be a candidat in the tenth. The tenth distri t nu is regarded as a pushover Im· H ; : :. ilton C . Jones of Charlotte. The eighth district is tangled with speculatio' over date . ι · cial election to 'ill the vauric; .11 nomination for the po-t by 1 :e ex ecutive committee Name- 1 1 Wa tei Lambeth o! Thon.asv'llo. l··. congressman: H. P. (Pat) Taylei Wadesboru; Miss Jane Pratt, η jnany years secretary to the sever; congressmen who have serve,I tl district; George L. Hundley 1 Thomasville: Roland F. Beasley a:i (Continued on Page Eight.) Truman Dedicates FDR's Estate As A National Shrine m in ■ ι ι ι : tho Roosevelt home in Hyde Park, Ν . Y.. President Harry S. Truman delivers a brief ad- , 'ire-· a ■ lie ·,.· . at;.- the Roosevelt estate as a national shrine. Listening to him are · '. r. . singer Marian . n< ν,,οι. Κ. v. George W. Anthony of St. James C hurch, Hyde Park; Rabbi Jerome Γη ;er of Poughkecp- , : : , .η: Vu I). Roosevelt; Brig. Gen. Harry Van han. aide to Truman: and. to the ι V< of the President. \ Juliu;· K· Sera ;nry "f thj Interior. Sitting at Mrs. Roosevelt's feet is Fala, the late FDR's pet Scotty. (In- < te; national &' undphoto), ι Bowles Thinks Menace Passing Jf Controls Stay, IriHaticn Perils May End By 1947 ———— ( Washington. . ;>:-i 1 l.">.— (AIM —iconomie Stabilizer Chester Poules told senators today that ' it price controls stay 111 effect there is reasonable hope that "we «ili he out of the woods of extiomr inflationary danger by the rntl of And if this happens, h" testified ;it Sénat.· lîank;:^ Com:ι .'e hear ings, "i'< ntrols c: η he lifted general- ! ly by June 3'i, HK7, in all but the areas of acute shortage." Bowles opened the administration's drive for a one-year extension of the Office ni i'rice Administration which otherwise expires June :j-i, lU4b. Bowles told the senators: "Our people are watching to so·' whether 01· not their government reai'y means business in holding down the co.;t of living. Our Π,ΟΠΟ, 000 business men are watching to see ιί' .· w.-aliened price control act will further in.iiase their costs of production. "Our O.iian.iHM) farmers ire watch in-, if to μ·ο if we arc to indulge another po twa · gamble with infla tion siieli as cair.ed 4")0. iO() farm , foreclosure allot World War I. i "Our 17,(l()(·.oiin industrial workers I are watehii".'. t<· see il the prudent balance between wages and prices | i- to be r::..:' I'le-.i. or abandoned. Ou·· UMl-.io.e ;o or more of white col lar workers and people li.ing on !:χι ιί ιη··>-ι.»· are watching to see if flies an· : 1 be squee/.cit again be- . two ii ri-in:·. r- nts and prices and ; relatively stable income." j Manchuria's Cajùial Has Martial Law battu: i mo ι: \\ \ν. CtiansclHiim, Α, ι η > ίι ιι ι· i a, April 15.— ι \1'ι- \ bailie for ChuuûchuiiÎ was under wav to cia> between Chinese govern ment and commun! .1 forces. The communists launched an attack vester·:.!. two li >urs be fore the final withdrawal of So viet occupation forces from this Alaiichurian capital. The com munists alrcadv have gained control ol all three airfields in this vicinitv and sifted into the city from the suburbs. Chungking, April ià —(AP) —· Chancn Maii. :.uria s capital, was reported der martial law today, with ten.sio: increasing as Russian tumps oy.h ated the communist stiri'i unded city. The vernment Central \ews Agency dispatch said the govern ment garriMin commande!1 inside tht city laid dov 1 strict rules, in ludnu a prohibition against public gatherings. The d'spatch also charge.i that ι 1 ■ π■ ι■ u 11 i s t t r ο ci ρ s attacked Changchun's airfield l'or U11 hour: yesterday as the Soviet rear guard was w.tiidrawing from the city li estimated that 30.000 comni mist t r o"iis had surrounded the city Government troops number far less foi the bulk of the American equipped first army is some I0( i: les 1 way. being resisted in its ad vance by contrat »->st troops in tht \ ;e:nitv of Szepingkai M \( i: ( OMMISSIOM IIAs NOW ARRIVED AT Ml KDKV Mukden. April 14 i.\IM- ( l)e laved) — The three-man "peace" . ont ••■ission, accompanied i\v thiee con ι issioners of the Sino-.lapanese ex ccutivo headquarters, arrived here . no >n todav and immediately con s, lted with the sen a r representa ti\e.· of the government, WOftlD POLICE FORCE PATTERN MEMBERS OF WORLD POLICE FORCE UNITED STATES 40.000 MEN ONE CARRIER TASK FORCE 1,000 PIANES GREAT BRITAIN NONE ONE CARRIER TASK FORCE 500 PIANES RUSSIA 200 C00 MEN NONE NONE FRANCE 20,000 MEN NONE NONE CHINA 20,000 MEN NONE NONE M ON THE AGENDA of the U. N. Security Council, meeting at Hunter Col lege, New York, is consideration of plans for formation of a "world police force" of the United Nations. While no official pattern has been announced, it is understood that the U. S., Russia and Britain will fur iii. h the basic land, sea and air forces, while China and France provide smaller air contingents. The above chart indicates how the various nations may ligure. Contrary to many theories, it i.-, said that Jhe final pi.m will nut call for a huge and powerful force. Thus a U. S. carrier force would probably be based in the Pacific, while Britain vould use the Mediterranean area. And Russia, weak in naval equipment, would supply the largest number oi troops. It appears certain that this is not to be a unified force and that personnel of the B:g Three would not serve in xed contingents in widely scattered areas; nor is a force to be regularly | utrolling the world's trouble suots. (International) U. r\ Aid May Be Sought In Rioting In Montana Copper Strikers Attack Homes Of Non-Strike Group I ϊιι * ! ■ · ■ ' ' ι . Λ pi i ! 1 >.— (AI') — j Governor Sam Ford disclosed today I Unit ■ ' - ι· r m.· ::;ώ a..king tin j 1 ι·'ι, I'.iJ . ί ι . 1' help to Stj liois la ii.itte liiiit loll sci res ο: I houses wre.ked, tun boys wou· deo and aa 11 m anou: ι ceu :i a π. -j c r ο. | moostc - aiaier arrest. Declaring in He in a taat he woula talk wit.. natte peace o; liters, great ly out! ι · 11.· ci 11 y tie.- u radac.-, be· : ire deciam·; v. htther t. iisk lui teiie:..! ...-.-ι.· tame, the governoi s. i l. " l lu'.v ι,".,.· officers » assured me \ e.-u 1:he.v had things under e. ut:' ; ■ ' apparently lhe> didn't.' .As ta.. copper nulling ten ter — "i : ■ : it·- : 1 ill on earth' — sur veyed the wreckage iront the sec onu mg'i; <·. aiior.nled voilente, la i.or leaner.- aiiM ottieials pleaded lui' cessation of destruction. The roving band.-- ivntcivil their alla ks on in.mes ai \voi:iers who did not join a miner's s'.nke. city authorities re ported. M'.en.i A! MeLeed declined to say how ni.my peiv-ons were being held, reporting "tney're all juvu iles," ana that they had ueen arrested lor loot ing. lie indicated sever..1 were girls. Other authorities said the van : dais — aa. hiding one group oi aoout . 5UÛ —- were mostly women and - yoiau; tlnlaren. I Saiuroay mgnt and again last I night, gari.ns oi men, women and . teen-age bays, armed with axes and ■ traveling b\ track and automobile ι -ro\ erl i f streets ot this strike . b·· ι d eopper milling community oi -i(1,01)11 and its siibiU'os, unloading at ι private homes to bash in windows . no doors ami throw wrecked lur . nit .il an - tile yards. Tu.i youths . w ere wi ended by gunfire, the second last night. MtAIHER I OII NOKTH CAROLINA. Partly tlouilx anil warmer to ni·: III: Tu.Mia> considerable cloudiness and warm. 10 \ iolcnt à Deaths in Week-End (lîy The \ssociatcd Press.) Four Ncgr^e diet! of suffocation in a Scotland \"eck jail and two youths were killed when a racing motor cycli loft Charlotte track t" play a big part ι ι sending the week end violent de'itit toll m North Cai olina to al lea-: ten. Deputy Core!:.·:· E. F. Tanner, ol Halifax eounty. said the Negroc. were arrested Saturday night on charges of drunkenness, and were found dead yesterday morning. A coroner's jury found that suffoca tion resulted from smoke from a burning mattress in their cell. Robert Donaldson, 112, of Char lotte, and Mickie Albert Plott, Hi, of Concord, were the victims of the race track tragedy. Seven other per sons, including Gray Putnam, of Belmont, driver, were injured when the speeding motorcycle went out of control on the Southern States Fair track and plowed through a crowd of spectators. A Marine flier discharged from service only ten days ago was kill ed yesterda\ near Kinston when his light plane crashed. He was Lt. Stanley F Smith, 26. of Kinston, and Sault Ste. Maiie, Michigan, and a veteran of combat flying in the Pacific wai theatre. Near Cramerton, Mrs. Arthur .1 Edycean, 121·. of Gaston county, and Superior. Wis., was fatally injured when her automobile overturned on a bridge. Willie S. Leach, Negro, was shot to death early Sunday night in an altercation near Charlotte. Inves tigating authorities said another Negro was being held. Allison Ambrose Lucas, Jr., 22, ot Lucama, died in a Johnston count\ hospital early Sunday of injuries re ceived Saturday night in an auto mobile collision between Micro ant Selma. · Slaughter Controls To Be Restored As Black Market Curb Packers Falsify Claims On Subsidy, Clark Intimates Washington. April Γ. ( \ Ρ > 'Γ h< jrnviTnmcnt announced 1 day that more \\ a r ' i m · laughter controls will lit' re hired soon in a move to curb (lack markets in meats. ΟΙΆ and the Agriculture l)e lartment. in a joint statement, aid a slaughter quota .-ysU'm ν i ! I be put into effect to pro ide "better distribution of he country's present meat sup •ly through established chan lels and at ceiling prices.' ΟΡΑ s: .cl the program will reduce liberation? of "certain slaughterers '•ho have increased their slaughter :reatlv dur'· s recent month.-." This, he agency added, wi'.l make it pos ible for established packers to ob i.in more livestock and thereby in rcase thiei' production to more learly normal levels." ITTOKNEV GENERAL HINTS ΈΛΠ) BY THE P.\< Ki.KS. \\':->hi:i!»ton. April l.'i. (AP) - Ml r'iev General Tom t lark diie.tei in FBI today to rnve in'.ale re port. ha; many mea! packers have at en.pted to dei'r.n.d the Federal gov mment by falsifying claims 'or sub id. (·.·. I II. j 'Ι : 1 η Τ - !:Π\0 CCOil received. *l;n-k - ·;i.·ί ι a statement. "th:U some i;u kci'.-' are paying black market rice.- !'> )· live cattle, thi s making it mposible : >r other packers to se •;irc rattle lawfully. and then are ob aining rubsidy help from the gov •••nmont !·ν reprc -1 ηt :n;; that pur •hases'were made ;.t legally per nissible prices." Λ Justice Department ol'l'i ial who •ann· t be named .-aid the subsidy •emulations provide that a slaugh erer who bids up the price of cattle eyi nd the permis ibio maximum 'orfeits his rights to subsidy helι rom the government. •"In lalsify reports of the prices aid. ; ι d to cl. im subsidies < n the . ot . ieh false information, con 4:' to.- .1 in:id on the Unite:' Siatos," he said. The official said the maximum : 11 > !" ι h-i de price- loi' li\'e cattle ar r.xerl a ta level designed to permit 'ackers, with t'.ie help o! subsidies. 11 .-'.-luahter and sell dressed bee! within Ik··1!- I 'fi.il ceiling pri· es. To discourage c npeting packer. fro i! bidding op the.-e prices t-> a point where 1hev would have to i" er-charge their c istoni'.'i's or :'uf 11"· a I ;. the -ub.-idy regulations now provide that packers who pa> mni'i than allowed by regulations a ,'t ■:·.:! if·, ι ily I or: e t a part or all 1 the subsidy, depending en the excess amount paid, the official explained. Price ()f Cotton Continues Gains In I)a\ s 1 racle New York, April 15.—(AP)—Cot ton future- oper.od 15 cents to SI ο a bale higher. Xnon prices were SI.lu tu SI lin a bale higher. Ma.v 27.65. July 27.72. October 27.68. Pv. Close Open May ... . 27.4.3 27.46 July 27.58 27.63 October 27.40 27.58-61 December ... 27.32 27.58-6 March 27.40 27.63 May 27.58 27.60-01 IN I s ! ο I .ease Spcrr\ Plant For Interim Quarters New York, \pril 15.— (AI*i — The I'nited Nations plans to I··.·the Spcrr> Gyroscope ( om pam plant at l.ake Success. I.. I., from the Kecorstruction Fi nance Corporation as an interim >.iic for the next three years, with an option to renew for two additional years, officials of the I X sai.l today. To Aid Stettinius ... ^ MINISTER TO SWEDEN since 1941, Herschel V. Johnson (above), 52, of Charlotte, N. C., was nominated by President Truman as a deputy to Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., on the United Nations Security Coun cil. Johnson, who entered foreign service in 1020. will have the rank of minister in his new diplomatic assignment. (International) ΟΡΑ Fight Is New Test For Truman Friends And Fees Of Price Control Br inging Up Guns Washington, April 15.— (ΛΡ) -—Friends and tot's of ΟΓΛ manned their biggest oratorieal rums todav, waiting for the sig nal that will open House debate on the bitterly contested issue ol price control extension. Ί h·· outr ·>·;)· ι·h· 1'resident Truman the severest test on econo ii;ic ι■><11 ii■ lu· entered the White House. Representative Mo roney, D-Okla., told newsmen "there is danger ΟΡΑ will be so amended and made p"Wci le.-s tn prevent in llaii'in. ii: ι in the enemies of price control will be ashamed o£ their handiwork." Before the legislative firing could get under wa.v in the House, that chamber planned to dispose ol another red .hot issue —draft extension—then take up a pay raise bill for the armed services, and devote part of its program to an observance of l'an- \merican day. Thus the actual debate may not ben ii ι ,. m 111 .. : ■ 1.11 t i. · ; in· set for a mid-afternoon meeting of cotton state- η;,:.··.· I" uive the price con trol agency a going-over. Some have proposed that ι >PA be divised o£ control over all farm products. Steels. Motors In l· nietional I ,osses In Stock Session New York, April 15.—(AP)— Steels, motors and -selected indus trial declined t actions to around two points in toc.ay's market, al though .ι few .-eattered favorites managed to resist the general trend. Lower were I S. teel. Youngs town Sheet, General Motors, Chry sler, Goodrich, Sears Roebuck, Douglas. American Air lanes. West ern Union A. American Waterworks, Anaconda, American Smelting and Du Pont. Four Japs Sentenced In Death Of Doolittle Men Shanghai. April là -(AP)— Four ! Japanese army officers were sen rncci today by American tribun.il •η from five to nine years in prison it hard labor toi (he kangaroo court rial and execution of three Doolittle .irmen. The commission which tried them ii led that the defendants acted vithout choice under specific orders rum superiors The three airmen. Lts. Dean E. 'allmark. of Dallas. Texas, and Villiam G. Farrow, of Darlington, . l' . an i Servant Harold A. SpaU. : Lebo, Kan.-as, were executed un ,,.ier the Japanese "enemy airmen's law." The law was enacted by the Jap anese war minis!ι \ after the Duo little raid, and made retroactive to cover the captured fliers. In passing sentence awter two days deliberation. Colonel Edwin R. Mc Reynolds, of Washington, D. C., chief of the commission, said the commis sion found that hi.uh Japanese gov ernment military officers, other than the defendants, were "responsible for the enactment of the enemy air men's law and issuance of specific instructions as to how American pri soners should be tried, sentenced and punished."
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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April 15, 1946, edition 1
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