Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / May 28, 1946, edition 1 / Page 1
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w « ' * Hvnliprsmi Bally Bisyatrb THIRTY-THIRD YEAR TT; T^^VVluiss1'' HENDERSON, N. C., Ti ESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 28, 1&46 ''! ,:VV■.■ii-N.'!--.1l-'-N""N FIVE CENTS COPY Sen. Gloss, 88, Oldest Solon,Dies Had Not Attended Session Since ’42; Former Wilson Aide Washington. May 28 t \ 1 Bon ato' ( aiter (il.i of Vir.vma Ion time tneuilier "t ( on .re -. ' hither "i (In- Kcilm al Re rve Sy tem" an I i n. , a cabin t in in n r Hi I early (chav of congestive li art failure. The i'l U> I tnotnb a of the Si n nte. he was 1; 1 la t .Ian 4. Heath came in In apartment a' the May flowei Ilolel, where In jived with his second wife, Mary. Class hail been . u ill that h-' \ia- unable to appear ill the Sen it Miiee .lime ID 12. 1’.realise i f the. a Virg'ioa Re I• 11 * 111iri : ought unsuccessfully la 4 v, , : to hav e In 1 at dechued v.i (.nit and a : peeial dee!a>n ealle 1 tn name a siieces or Virginia court threw the suit out and the Supreme (. nul l declined to review the case. In Wilson's Cabinet. Alter winning election nine time as a member of the House. Glas lesigncd m 1918 to become Presi dent Wil: on's Secretary of the Treasury. He left the cabinet in 1929 t ■ accept appointment as Senator and was reelected five times, most re cently to a term expiring in 1949. President Roosevelt ottered to make him Secretary of Hi 1 Treas . :v again m 1928, but Glass declin ed . Class received much of the credit fm creation the Federal Reserve System because of lie part in draft ng the Federal Reserve Law when he was chairman of the House Com mittee on Banking and Currency in 1933. Broke Over XR.V He was bitterly displeased when pi M i s\di abandoned the gold stand ,j He also broke with the admin ii.-dion over the NR \. crop reduc ii,m. spending and the 1917 Supreme Court reorganization plan. N’ever-the - less Roosevelt who Imully called him "an unreconstruct ed rebel," remained his personal friend. It was generally known that his icason for declining to be Roosevelt's treasury secretary was failure of the President-elect to give him what the Virginian would regard as satistae torv assurance of a "sound-money policy on the part of the forthcom ing New Deal administration. Dies Senator Carter Gla»c Virginia—Demociat ( Jiina Peace Talks Start In Nanking Hopes For Peaceful Settlement Strong; Conditions Outlined Nanking. May 28 —(/P' A delega tion <>! the thir.i party Dem* cratie League arrit ed lotiax I" pen talk with government and communist lea iers designed to bi 1 g peace in A . inch,a in. ••We are very b oe'ii! of a peace ful .settlement," Dr. Car-on t hang. ! league Iaider, t 11 reporter-. Me. i time, the got ermi out's Cen tral News Agency specified three ••principals" it termed prerequisites ! to negotiations and Chians Kai-shek, in Mukden, was reported t< have an nounced two conditions upon which he would resume truce talks. •] he agency's cnnditii ■ s were onunierated in an editorial c rc ilated i y the ministry of information. ’ The agency's editoii.it -a d it •warmly welcomed' resumption of peaceful negotiations and announced these three cr> ditinns: L Communist forces should evae : u: to the Harbin-Tritsihar-Changchun ' railway and ‘'launch no further at tacks northeast of it-' 2. Armed conflicts elsewhere should lie mediated by executive (tri;' e) headquarters lield teams. 3. Communist troops should be reorganized according to the army nationalization plan. GERMAN PEACETIME BOMB TARGET - — •* ••*—r t AMERICAN AND BRITISH OFFICERS study two huge holes ripped in the roof of one of the submarine pens at Farge, Germany, by heavy bombs dropped in experiments conducted by the U.S.A.A.F. and the R.A._. Only two oi the big missiles have succeeded in breaking through the steel and concrete walls which are 14-feet thick- 'International)_ Old Dobbin Making C ome-Back College Station. Raleigh, May 28. _Paging the automotive industry John Lewis ;> d railroad men. tic long-faithful hayburner.-, are making a comeback in the transportation Mold without benefit of engines, coal or Pullmans. Marking to the days when a lad courted his cirl in an open-air carry fuses to be counted out ut the gct up-and-go picture. Citing official I' S P.ureau of Census figures released t clay, In I. O Sehnub. director of the State College Extension Service, said that the number of horses and the three countie,. ot \ mee. 1 redo I. and Macon alone bad > creased by 1,1)40 since 1910. The n '> e m Vance was 100 to a total ol 3<>~. Macon, 30.3 to 1,309; and Iredell. 03, to 2.646, oxer the five-year peri d These are the animals wtiieti still supplv most of the field powc ' "i [North Carolina farm production much of the back country and city milk wagon transport ti >. and ! while a rpokcsmii' for the NA(, anion was not available for comment t was assumed that the iron-shee gee-gees stand ready to get back inti harness on an even wider scale i necessary. Indications Point To Coal Agreement; Sen.MurrayAsks6-MonthStrikeTruce Veto Of Legislation ‘Harmful’To Labor Condition Of Truce W; sii i. tt n. May oPi • Senator .lap c !. fli :iay • I M < • V.ontana pi . i; n >■ d nil y i a. .1 labor i! ter I ’niii 1 1.t i 1 ::■ 111 .. . . nui'it ••trike truce in 1 i t n !■• • a \ ( if tiie ('a- >■ nit .-la- ", ail! cal v, itli Irawal of .-trike-.ti all la:a-latino. During the truce (,' "iigress could study the wlmli Held ol workcr manageiiiii t rdatii n.-. .-aid .Murray. a ho as chairman of the Senate I.n l.or C''im11 itlee lie ; dded h a tv- . porter laat .".'ei I . ‘ an as v.'li" 1 f;cl friendly to unions have (ii: u.-u-- I ad this | ipi rid. The Montana senator's suggest ii m j came as the Senate was scheduled In beg n its second day at debate | ■ : 1 house-appro. ed legislation all- I thorizing the government to t '■;<■ es struck facilities, providing jail ti : 1 for leaders who decline to cal! o walkouts and making reca1' it'rau: 1 wu'kmu subject to induction ini the army. Adjournment Planned (The office of Senate Secretary Leslie Billie said leaders pi.mile > I , follow the usual proemi re an adjourn out of respect In Senatm Carter Glass immediately after con , oiling a' 11 a. in. LSI, Glas die I early today. I As the pos.-ibil;ty a!' a cal *rik. sett lenient tint alem-d I" e.it I uda> . , ground from under the droll section, at the bill there were these other j developments: . 1. Republicans aimed a ball' dor.-I en amendmenis .11 the I h e a lent measure, chief of w hich would wipe , out the draft acta a entirely. 2. Democratic leaders apparently j stalled efforts to for e 1 tic le. sed Case bill before the House. Willi til** min t ol lay:a.-, the emerge . y n eas - , ure before Mr. Truman . a t. Labor Leaders Blast Bill. 3. Labor leaders fired hot blast ■ at both measures, with CI< > I’ria-i-| dent Philip Murray asserting tli.U the sole aim < f !he twi> ai l- . "the destruction of the labor more menl of this nation." t. A coalition of Senate Repub licans .aid Dim a icra 1 ■ 11 gi: P aed ! hr lines in an effort to emasculate tin bdi. Mu pray s si iggestit 11 for a strike trace evoked no immediate re- j>ons< from labor leaders, who. like Murray, j would get rid of bath tai 11s. The committee chairman sad he thought most major disp te now . had been settled, with the eueea'i a j of tlie thieatened maritime .-Cuke, adding that if evcr.vbi dv waul i cool | oft for six months while Congress investigates the situation - me "rea sonable" legislation might be de vised. SiirrvCouiily » * Ballot Boxes Impounded Dobson. X. May 128. (AIM - A cross-fire ol charges concerning alleged irregularities in Surry comi ty's primary vote in the fifth con gressional contest this morning re sulted in the impounding of ballot boxes from three precincts— Dob son. Elkin and Bryan. The action was taken by the Surry County Board of Elections, meeting to make an official can vass of the returns after protests had been filed by J. Milton Cooper. Elkin, representing Thurmond Chat ham, high man in the district con gressional contest, and by Joint li Folger, Mt. Airy, incumbent, who personally appeared before the board. ' The unofficial returns irom Stir rv counts- gave Folger a majorits for the county ssilh a total ol 1.480 votes as compared to 11.088 for Chat ham. Cooper, appearing lor tho blan ket manufacturer, protested the re turns from the Dobson precinct while Folger demanded a 'judicial investigation” of the vote in Elkin and Bryan precincts. These were followed its' protest, from two legislative candidates con cerning the county ballots in the three precincts, and the county bal lot boxes for these precincts score ordered impounded also. H. G Dob son challenged the returns from Duh:on precinct and George Snow challenged returns from Elkin and Bryan. , , , . In view of the lengthy check to be made of the impounded boxes Arthur P Fulk, of Pilot Mountain, announced that th ■ board would be reconvened at 10 a m Wednesday I to make the official canvass. Walkout Settlement iVithin 48 Hours :orecastBySen.Hil! \V: i;ihg 11 .Wav 28. !'■ '(' ■ 1 .i : cr Itlll’ f D I of Ala ' m a , ,l.v . . mii.i r at <•; le . if . 1 In. .:. ■ , oci t.' i till ' t * ' ' 81 a.f ; ; , , j n t a.' lli'Xt -ill ho i lull told a reporter at ’ with '•parties t-n olh ie ■ - d that ndor It od •••‘.I "arc in ugn omen: ,n principle !> .■ ettleu cat ■1 Pc! a a ' ! in said, that i : or;, uit.iirtscc ...•ir. : ill be MJttlcd (dal'.'r: m r i’l.stpoimL Hill ivni. ■ .-’a a • i'oi'H.v • Iter a a i ■ a "'."a Ill '< P at an L ,i ■. an 1 St '. 1 ; , j ■ r c t h a : rt e aa a - occa L . l.i tic •' side wa ready” tf proct ed with tin ■a t . 1* cat a. tic 1 M " i lull'd a c" ivl'enci. j . ,-t night. K . a.: I ■ : irn.-o v- . t' e fact 1 •,at * i< n . «’> v.'iTt• railed ini •t v IV on *• i:r ! : '1 v inis <•!' pro- | . d methins h;it a nle the n ugh a-;, ; ■ i a "np.-.ri has been worked! ,ut. Mine-. Still Stiunl Idle. I a r e. i i 1 i :nod idle in a:' a lac gir. a ■ i a a ea t - appeal tor he a.ea ' ret a n to work, and the : ,i ' con! ..apply shrank hourly ownrei the danger pi int. .Lev . and Krug had lai lalizingly i:t |e a ,„v gin. .1 : ... ex: ct statu f 1 he negotioli . i. ig ci internet -t with reportin some prog e,'.- but lie si itte yesterday’.' •essiwi liiat ibis 1 r'gress '.voald kee; awyen for all ; artie i sy through he night. Lewis checked all questions it progress lo Krug, but the husky I'MW boss did nat look uphapp-. when he wound up six and one-hal hours of conferences with the In tcric r Secretary and other f’edera1 officials. Speculation Itife. Krug a:..- expected to show tin aping o!t coal operators what kind of agreement lie wanted to a -ike with Lewis but he gave no in dicate it' just wini: he would da that. Tic pro d a e e r s' negotiatin' ii mm Mee and scores of other opera tors remained in town even altc the government stepped in and too the mines last Wednesday. Me; n s hile, spec d ction was rift over possible contract terms. Rep rts on wages ringed upward lrom 14 1 2 cents an hoar more However, government labi r and ec > nmnie advisors were quick to say privately they thought any increase or more than 18 12 cuts an hoic would collide with the wage-price policy of the administration. Market Resumes Advance A*jain New York. Mai 28 ( API — The stock market resumed its advance t" another la-yeai ai'erage high attm absorbing cimsiileigible early profit taking. Better anist of the day were U. S Steel. Bethlehem. Chrysler. General Motors. Greyhound, Goodyear. ,1. 1 Case, Goodrich. Montgomery Ward. I Woolwi.rth. Dougies Aircraft. F.lec | (He Rower & Light and American Smelt oil.:. KIDS' PICNIC ENDS IN CRASH 1 r ««, •*? 7 merr&m I iflwn i—— > w ia CROWDS WATCH RESCUE WORK after a trolley, picnic-boy:;T with school children, ju: red the tracks and crashed into an in n util ty p dc in Pittsburgh. Sixty-seven of the youngsters were injured, eight seriously. Moments after the photo was taken, a porch roi : pei it c lapsed, and four more persons were hurt. (Iiitcrfal.umil A'oui.tiouolo) Labor s Future Course: A New Standard-Bearer? Wallace And Pepper Leading List Of Politicians Acceptable To Union Wadiingt n. May 28. - - l/Pt — The big unions. boiling With politi • ,| u-i'alh I'"!' iTesid*. I 'I niman, dropped some ildi eie hints that they 'might witch t • another standard bearer with Henry \ Wallace and (Taude I'eopi . heading I he list o! acceptable. Caleb.I II I) *1 >.~er e- agreed the Secretary' ( nem . 1 ienato I’eppi r (!) i C.t FI' • id. a. e the lil;e I r 1 i l( II e! I C !., 1 ! i III a I IV . ■ i!' !l .'lit t ,,| a!I ;,ll< ! t they \\ anil"I rn i <>ia e id* nee that otic night he ill be making. The ■ ■ * 'pinion ■ pp*’nr • to ho that i' : - early to tell hettier the ad11ii111: i i on's handho > ol the li-iko on ■ y h; ended the 13 ve u -old la ■ 1 'em* i at .a i till.on. I mul 1 or Thought. However, t - way Republicans ap peared to i mg oil the it at hi l provided Demon- 4 . u on no- mougm. | Lawmakers noted Unit both for- | mer Governor Harold ft, Slassen < t Min lesot i, and Senatni faff 11!) of < )hio were an" > g the t irst to join with the uni' ns in urging ('ongress ■, go slow in rm;>o\\ermg the Pits ident to draft v. o ;ers striking again l the go . eminent. Stassen, aj 11, ,<>! Iile ronton.iod for COP presidcn I a] mi', ination in 1!C". labeled the pi opera I ' total ’arum.” While polilu-. I son- il.ition mount- ' , rl. til" O "I llio mill' its most po.'.or iul later org uii/.ations kept ip a heavy drum fire of nutansm ' • the • program Mr. Truman proposed Sat-j i mala v for coping with st rike - in . i : d i dustrios during the roron er sion period. CK ) I>re~idol d Ph 111 > M rray wa. among the Into. 1 t" blast at Mr. 1 : a- j nan' pr p al. _ 1 National Maritime Walkout Still Set Despite New ()iter X-w v. day l!f! MM- The threat of s t n-wicle ship inst ea rn. am to. I'tei the CK > Nati.d Mantua • l'a . .. one of live mari tjln.. ;,!■ • ;a. w.nka's' union set ,,, A .,11-... . one la. rejeateii as “completely a viequated an offer ,,C a SI.’,s' :::« nthly wage increase .,n(| IA ,.]■-! ;a , adjustments made by Ml Atlanta . . Cull' Coast ship opcr *'’'-’[-Iu■ a by 'die NMl' mem bershi] foil b'v only a low hi>urs an ami'on: , ■ a ul by the group's neg - dating committees that they had reached an agreement on provision of a rg’W ci nt i act based on the \\ agc and a reduction in work hours. Gen. Eisenhow er, Ailm. Nimitz Back Hemisphere Plan \V; ■ May I’ll. 1 |..]t' \m. ' ' tel Nimii ' "d <'mu IK«. g!il !■' ag, ver urged O ' r.re 11.dav i. a :d. : i/e transfer ol arm at d . r r • i other nations ol the Waste' Hemisphere. X ,, at / .1 | • lift should there !H anothei he transfer legisla ti<in v dd | ai ail •'orgst us at ton o 1,1, . .... ■ , a n . dilics as one hetni . ■ he’-,- 1 raa The , rutin., heads of t e nav; a,M| v I : a .ed Iu-hire the 1 ha. - a, ■ Committee on a hd , j -t'i <t . broad program o mj’d i-\ i o' a itoin w ith o the ! ,.\n .-rie " | ’’1C id. ■ WEATHER FOR NORTH CAROLINA < onsiderablc cloudiness and cool tonight. Occasional light rain. Siamese I* i<d)tm<y Denied By French Paris. May 28. .1’’ ; a- French pr< • agency l ' ' ■ -■(' dispatch today -• 1 1 l' al re* I ■, nis cl prel endi 1 a 'r '> "I' French troop: 111 Si :.•••: ill ry were "in the domain hie,host Innla-y. ! The rieirn '...s .n .i com.:;: nque from "lien i11 . : '■ 111 ’he expedi tionary col-..'." Tie, >t...ement said v, as' not clc; r ! • "in- false new,” had i -een ’ - _ Happy Adoption 10VELY Susan Peters, screen actress who is still unable to walk because o£ a hunting accident more than a year ago, is shown in Hollywood holding Timothy Richard Quine, 8 weeks old. She and her husband, Dick Quine, received the youngster by plane from an edoption home jn the East. iInternational: Cherry Sees More Rural In dustries Oklahoma City, May 88. — (/Pi — Governor K. Gregg Cherry of North Carolina predicted here today that if strikes d slowdowns continue in urban areas, more and more small industrial plants will appear in se lected rural centers seeking better labor relations In .1 speech prepared lor deliv | ■ ry at the annual luimheon of the iNatiii ,al Governor.- (' mfercnce. the Tar Heel cliuT executive uml a "de '•entralization of large industrial •ilnnts resulting I'm : strikes and slowdowns, will mean a bcttei bnl j meed e-onomy for all." , The farmer.- of the nation look villi alarm. (Ter'-y said, "at ! he cur } mnl ha'fle hot won labor and man age -ont. ; \ d lear boat -ormer or later these two econoa ea| larders ; will join hands to lessen the income j ol thd farmer." He predicted that il organized la ! or is allowed to continue its pres ! ent tactics. "which may result in -piraiing prices and wages, and a i downward trend in lara price- the farn ers ol the ration will unite in ■ ole. ting a Congress that will restore confidence in the government.’ He also predicted that the next few years \v add see the mat on called 'upon to furnish the bulk ol food ex pom s consumed abroad: tl at re cord "rest r< King Cotton ;<• lib- throne by 1SM6': th.d the fan i ers will develop a greater yield per acre fo . . ps; and that the per capita co ■ to. t t of farm p odi < ts In 1948 wo Id le the greatest in his tory. THEY ARE NOT ANXIOUS TO MEET HEDY IN PERSON THE TWO YOUNG MEN, seated at right, Milton Stephany, 10, and William Walden, "6, in whose possession police found most of the $35,000 worth of jewels and furs stolen from the home of screen actress lledy Lamarr, hare good reasons for not wanting to meet the star (lett), with her husband, John Loder, beside her, in l."s Angeles Police Headquarters. Police said Stephany admitted entering the actress home last April 13 *nd Walden tried to dispose of the stolen articles. yolh were held on suspicion of burplary. (inuniawaall.
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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May 28, 1946, edition 1
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