11
HENDERSON I
! i; VIEW AY TO
i CENTRAL
! CAROLINA
|\\ ENTY-KECONI) YEA It
EXTAR POLICE TO
PATROL DOCKS AS
LINDBERGHS LAND
Britain Sees Famous Family
f leeing America Because
Os Crime Conditions
Here.
CONSIDER ENGLAND
MUCH SAFER PLACE
Lindberghs’ Search for Safe
ty Has “Astonished Unit
ed States,” Says London
Paper, Much as if Prince
of Wales Would Leave for
Like Purpose.
I,,m.|.jn. I L‘ l <AP) British au
• ii.riii iii H.today tluit extra po
(• would patrol tin' docks of Liver
pool v.'lk'ii Coloni'l atul Mrs. Charles
A | iiiilinu ”h arrive from the United
.'••tate "eking sanctuary from threats
..I Kidnaping; their small son. Jon.
Otherwise. officials said the Lind
-1 i,. would he assured the same
pi Heel ion by the nation’s helmeted
ml iilnc-jaekoted hobbies and the
pi unclothe men as any other visitors
England.
The extra pound to be turned on*
t Liverpool will he only a siliall one.
uihorities asserted, demonstratin';
Dial r.ritish police have not the slight
est fear that kidnaper.* or any others
i.utside llie law will attempt to molest
the Lindberghs.
The sailing of the Lindberghs from
Yi'w York early Sunday was inter
p"ell• d "'•netally by the British pi».:ss
i., mean that they were obliged to
rice their own country because of
••rime conditions.
The noted family was described as
..•Hiinn eeJusion in safe, quiet Bug
la nil. . where Colonel Lindbergh was
aid to have been immensely impress
ed hy, the efficiency of British law
and eu lunm in guarding the rights
.if private citizens.
Some English newspapers said life
in Aavrica had been rendered un
bearable f i»r the Lindberghs by
threats of gangsters against three
year old don.
The Lindberghs’ search for safety,
tin Daily Herald said, haa “astonish
ed the United Htutos.”
"The shock received by millions of
Americans, reading the news, was
eoinpurablo only to that which would
oeeijr in England should the Prince
of Wale.: announce he no longer felt
cure in his own country.”
No Dispatch
Christmas Day
In Keeping with a custom as old
the paper itself, the Henderson
Daily Dispatch will bring out no
issue tomorrow. The entire organ
ization personnel will observe the
only holiday It takes during the
year.
Ehringhaus Will Decide
About An Extra Session
Soon After First of Year, Governor May Settle Matter;
But Social Security Issue Is Held in Washington;
Governor Not Fear ful of Dr. McDonald
Hj .». t, II \SKISHVIfiL
I lliircmt,
lit The Sir WaiKer Hotel.
Raleigh, Dec. 24-Governor J. C.
*5. Ehringhaus, In Edcnton and Eli
zabeth City for the remainder of the
week will give himself and the spe
cie I session talk a rest.
'Hie governor thinks both need it.
• lie past 30 days have been filled with
Washington negotiations, all of which
t'Midcd to make him less anxious to
have an extra session to wind up his
official work. As the legislature left
his program in May he was fairly
'veil pleased. He did not get all that
he asked for and he may have receiv
ed in an instance or two better than
he expected, hut his ambition to bal
ance hi.- budget and to carry the state
through his four years with a surplus
l'aihe.r than a deficit, was realized.
H'jee '_]•> ho h:i bnd mijoh hogiUCCC
Mtnbtrstm Hatlii Htspafrh
VVUI,i; SERVICE Os
MU. ASSOCIATED PRESS.
POLITICIANS FEAR
j REVOLT ON TAXES
i . .
Country Becoming Tax-Con
scious at Rate That is
Alarming Them.
CONGRESSMEN SEE IT
States And Local Governments Im
pose Most of Visible Taxes, Itut
Resentful Public May Not
Discriminate.
Jtv CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Staff Writer
Washington, Dec. 24. —New Deal
members of both houses of Congress
arc arriving in Washington, for their
winter session, in a much perturbed
frame of mind over the growth of
tax consciousness throughout the
country.
1
1 It. isn’t so much that taxes arc high,
t What worries New Deal politicians
is the fact that the newer forms of
’ taxes arc so plainly visible to or
dinary folk, with millions of votes to
cast.
Income taxation is painful, hut to
(Continued on Page Six.)
with and the more he
worked about the national capital the
less he felt moved to have any special
session. Perhaps the greatest pres
sure put upon him was political and
the appeal was to his own pride. He
has been counseled very completely
that a special session would “cut the
ground from under Dr. Ralph Mc-
Donald’s candidacy,” and the execu
tive has no objection to removing Dr.
McDonald's foundations, particularly
since the Forsyth man many times
declared his object in coming to the
legislature to be the destruction of
the Ehringhaus administration. But
the governor never has thought the
McDonald candidacy is strong enough
to justify calling a legislature back.
The conviction grows the more the
*--- Tr > 2° r ?
ONIA r DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAR OLINA AND VIRGINIA
WolP
■
And there were intheHrrrP** 111 * 1
same country shepherds 1100 £g:. .->\ * ~ UHL"* 1 -
abiding in the field, keeping / . : Hi ; And suddenly there was
watch over their flock b\ J MMmW'l' \ with the angel a multitude of
lUglt ’ the heavenly host praising
And, 10, the angel of the G ° d ’ and Saying '
Lord came upon them, and gHffigH Wllfl Glory to God in the high-
i<‘ glory of the Lord shone / cst, and on earth peace, good
lound about them; and thee will toward men.
were sore afraid. V
< i<l , . , -v ' And it came to pass, as Ihe
And the angel said umo <^JB> & ..■ A angels were gone away from
1 lem, I* car not: lor boh old Giem into heaven, the sh.ep-
1 bi mg you good tidings .>1 herds said one to another,
gieat jov, which shall be to -Let us now go even unto
all people. >■ f f Bethlehem, and sec this
For unto von is born this MBEdF *, 4 \ - tl ’i'' l!? l ich , is < j°?’ e 1 , l ° '’“a*!
day in the Cite of David a MMMMR»Sr wluch the Lord hath made
Savior, which is Christ the < f WI " US ~
hord. And they came with haste,
Amt this shall be a sign Moitegag j- an< * found Joseph,
unto you; Ye shall find the ''“■ -/ ' C Bab ° ' y ‘" g ’"
babe wrapped in swaddling *" ' I il .o c.if
clothes, lying in a manger. »-f ~
BK
im i T *sfW*i
Hi yg l tr ** <g>|
HENDERSON, N. C„ TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 24, 1935.
It is here again. And the greeting is the same because it can’t
be improved upon by any juggling of words. And the sincer
ity is just ar real as it ever was, because it can’t be any more
so than it has always been.
The news staff, the business office, the composing room,
all the news boys and the management—the whole organiza
tion—of this newspaper extend to all their friends and to
every man, woman, boy and girl everywhere the old, old wish
and greeting at this happy season—
A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY AND
PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR .
Henderson Daily Dispatch
ITODOLOV 1 TODOLOVEAFFAIR
■‘Man From San Francisco”
Drawn Into Continued
Probe of Death.
Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. 24 (AP)
Two loves of Thelma Todd, and an old
and a “new marvelous romance”
were studied by grand jury inquisi
tors today in an effort to find a pos
sible murder motive in the strange
death of the actress December 15.
Waiting to apepar before the grand
jury, Ida Lupino, screen actress, and
her father, Stanley Lupino, English
comedian, told the district attorney’s
office of a “vacant chair” at Miss
Todd’s last party, and of a fresh ro
mance with “a man from San Fran
cisco.”
“Thelma and I slipped off by bar
selves for a moment during the party”
Miss Lupino related. “She said to me
rather coyly, ‘How’s your love life?’
“ 7 I replied, ‘I haven t any ju?t
(Cc-tic-ci oz 77"? Yzzi >
C SoSTonomy
Great Demonstration in
Shanghai Demands That
Government Act.
Shanghai, Dec. 24 (AP)—Thousands
of singing and shouting students des
cended on the north railroad station
today, forced their way in through
barbed wire entanglements and po
lice cordons, and held a huge mass
meeting of protest against North
China autonomy.
The student throngs pledged sup
port for .their comrades who took pos
session of the great terminal in a
coup yesterdays and paralyzed rail
way traffic while demanding free
transportation to the Nanking capi
tal to present their protest against
northern separation from from the
central government.
The unarmed police were ordered
by authorities to avoid violence, which
it was feared might lead to auti-j'apa-
WARNING TO JAPAN
VOICED BV SOVIETS
Submarine and Destroyer
Fleets Quadrupled in Past
Four Years.
NATION IS PREPARED
Any Attack From Pacific or Baltic
Will Fed Power of Mighty War
Machine; Germany Included
In Warning.
Moscow, Dec. 21. —(AP) —The Soviet
Union, in a thinly disguised warning
to Germany and Japan, announced
today that its submarine and destroy
er fleets have been made four times
their former size in the last four
years.
A statement printed in the gov
ernment newspaper Izvcstia said that
the coast guard fleet had been in
creased 1.100 percent, but gave no
figures bearing oil the actual strength
of any naval unit.
The whole statement bristled with
emphasis on Russia's undersea pow
er in the Pacific and Baltic and ap
peared to foreign observers to be
particularly significant, coming as it
did on the heels of the alleged threat
by Japan in Manchukuo to invade
Oilier Mongolia.
The Mongolian government, whose
(Continued on Page Two.)
All Victims
Bus Tragedy
Are Placed
Final Identifications
Reveal Christmas
Sorrow in Many of
The Cases.
Hopewell, Va., Dec. 21.—(AP)—Vir
ginia’s worst bus accident —the drown
ing of a driver and his 13 passengers
in the Appomattox river here early
Sunday morning—evolved into a
Christmas tragedy today as complete
identifications of the victims revealed
that many were bound home for the
holiday.
Tne grim task of naming the last
, .. —<*.
PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON
EXCEPT SUNDAY.
SCENE OF NATIVITY
READY TO OBSERVE
ADVENT OF CHRIST
Government Plan
For Relief Holds
Washington, Dec. 21 (AP)—Th«»
Roosevelt administration set its
lace today against any change in
the policy under which the govern
ment cares for 3,500.00*4 employ
ables, and turned responsibility for
other destitute over to local agen
cies.
Expressing the belief that 3.-
'►oo.ooo was an ace lira to estimate
of able-bodied persons in need*
President Roosevelt said yesterday
that the *4,000,000,000 work fund
was designed to take care of them
and no more
To care for more, he indicated,
would mean that the funds would
not be large enough to go around,
Christmas
Finds World
With Travail
Not in Nearly Two
Decades Has Peace
Been so Threatened
As at Present.
(By Tito Associated Tress)
Christmas comes tomorrow lo a
Europe more troubled by internation
al tension incident to the Italo-Ethio
pian war than on any December 25 in
nearly two decades.
Italy’s determined pursuit of its
war with Ethiopia in East Africa,
and the League of Nations’ no less
determined efforts to halt the con
flict, converted celebrations of the na
tivity of Christ into a day of inven
tory of arms.
\Yith Britain, whose foreign policies
suddenly have been put into the hands
of a man convinced that only coopera
(Continued on Page Two.)
DECURE SHORTLY
U. S. Senator, Lieutenant
Governor, Auditor Involv
ed in Competitions
Ilsiily II it roll if, I
In The Sir Waller llutfl,
l!v J. C. MASK Kit\ IMr
Raleigh, Dec. 24 —Early in January.
1930, North Carolinians expect to find I
out whether they will get a chance J
lo vote for Willard Dowell for State i ;
auditor, Frank W. Hancock for Unit- ;
ed States senator, Willie Lee Lumpkin ;
for lieutenant governor, and M. Rush
Dunnagan for secretary of state. ;
Mr. Dowell is not certain whether
to race Baxter Durham or to hold
the present position of chief prodder ,
(Continued on Page Six.)
iUDhristmas'/S
19 Pages
Today
TWO SECTIONS,
FIVE cents copy
Little Town Os Bethlehem
In Palestine Sees Pilgrims
Converging From
Many Lands,
PRAYERS FOR PEACE
MINGLE WITH BELLS
Thousands of Worshipers
From Four Corners of The
Earth Pour Into Village
Where 2,000 Years Ago
The W ise Men Followed
Star to the Infant Jesus.
ETHLEMEM, Pal*
estine, Dee. 24 (API
—The prayers of
Christian Pilgrims
for an end of the
Italo-Ethiopian war
*he pealing of bells
mingled today with
bailing anew the
birth of Jesus of
Nazareth
Throughout Ilia
day thousands of
worshipers f r o m
many lands poured
fW
Uito Bethlehem to celebrate Christ
mas Eve in this little market town
where 2,000 years ago the Magi found
the newborn -Jesus in a manger.
Some trudged laboriously on foot.
Others rode in automobiles along the
broad highway from Jerusalem, eight
miles away.
At midnight a symbol of the Star
of Bethlehem, which guided the three
wise men long ago. will be set ablaze
above the altar in the Church of the
Nativity built directly over the spot
where the Christ ijiild is believed tp
have been born.
Then, in the dim, half-light, with
medieval effect, priests with swing
ing censors will group themselves be
fore a curtained niche In the trans
copt. The great congregation will
shout “Halleluiah” as the patriarch
draws aside the curtain to disclose axt
effigiy ofUhe holy child.
Agaip the hells will pea! out her*
(Continued on Page Two.)
Deallis On
Roads Rise
In 2 Slates
Young Couple Killed
At Benson Crossing
Mullins Car Dives
Into River.
Four Oaks, Dec. 24 'AP)— Mils
Meta .Shaffer, 23, a teacher in the
Benson schools, and Alfred Tomlin
son, 27, of Wilson's Mills, were in
stantly killed when their car was
struck and demolished at 9:30 o’clock
last night by an Atlantic Coa3t Line
at a crossing in the heart of town.
Witnesses expressed the belief the
automobile skidded on the icy streea
*s it crossed the railroad, causing the
accident.
Miss Shaffer’s home was at Cherry
ville, Va., but she resided here with
Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Strickland, re
latives. Funeral services will be held
hero Christmas morning.
Tomlinson was the son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. M. Tomlinson, of Wilson’s
Mills. His funeral will be held to
morrow afternoon.
TWO YOUTHS DROWN WHEN
UAH PLUNGED INTO RIVER
Mullins, S. C., Dec. 24 (AP)-Two
20-year-old youths were drowned arid
a third was barely conscious today
after he broke out of an automobile
that plunged through a bridge rail
ing and trapped its occupants in the
(Continued on Page Two.)
WEATHER
FOR NORTH CAROLINA,
Partly cloudy tonight and Wed
nesday: slightly colder In nort&
und west portions tonight, r|