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Henderson daily dispatch. (Henderson, N.C.) 1914-1995, December 28, 1935, Image 1

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn91068401/1935-12-28/ed-1/seq-1/

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HENDERSON
GATEWAY TO
CENTRAL
CAROLINA
I WKNTY-,SECOND YEAR
French Chamber Backs Up Laval
MANCHOUKUO ARMY,
WITH JAPANESE AID,
MARCHING ON CHINA
Japanese Planes Assist In
l hreat To Sever Part of
Chahar Province
From China.
STUDENT DISCONTENT
FLARES OVER CHINA
j n Many Centers Young Men
March in Protest Against
Japanese Domination oi
Northern Provinces: Chin
ese General Tries Suicide
To Arouse People.
'"ilmnghai, Sunday, Roo, 29.
i \| *> —\ MaiK'lxMikuan army, a*»-
sUt-H In Japanese airplanes wiid
:l < report today, vhs ad
>.fi< ins h<tos* C'lialiar province
..f i Itjna. and threaten in* to
V-* >r port of It from ( hilies*• con
trol.
Til*' invaders wore reported to bo
drivlm: :» military wedge toward
•■hat'? Tit on fhahar's western fron
• : . r , rt'xi possUHy isolating tho north
< ru half <>f tho province.
Simultaneously, I?.odd irt ’pilar-, im
,?•- tho pro-J a panose loader I,iu-
Tmii? wore reported to bo in
vading northern Hopoli proviuoo.
They wTo said to be nionaoing the
rail renter of Clumping, 25 miles
north west, of Peiping.
Chinese observers expressed the op
inion the Manehuuktian thrust into
Chahar whs inspired by the .Japanese
in att effort to out trade routes be
tween China and Outer Mongolia, the
independent republic, in which Soviet
influence i.- dominant.
Tlr're roll roes also said they be
lieved the Japanese army planned to
♦iyhteii its pressure in Outer Mon
golia.
Japanese niiii'arist.s were reported
to be bargaining with North China,
officials for installation of a Mongol
regime friendly to ..tanchoukuo.
- • * - —i
niMCOXTKNT IN
CHINA FLAKES IN CITIES
Shanghai, Sunday, Dee. 21* (AP)- -
Student discontent with the govern'
nieut policies in North China, flared
Dj widely separated cities of China
early today.
Despite vigorous measures to sup
(Continued on Page Five)
U. N. C. Professor
Sii> s Wilson Tried
To Fight in 1916
Chattanooga. Tenn.. Dw. 28. —
(AP) —A. M. Arnett, of the Uni
versity of North Carolina* said to
day lie had proof that President
Wilson tried to enter the war In
It* 16—a.nd incidentally claimed for
himself a “scoop” on this prize
historical story.
He gave his story to the American
Historical Association, in convention
In iv, and announced lie would da
is rate on It next summer in a book
with the provable title “We Kept Him
1 Wilson) Out of War.”
Aniet* declared be has proved that
i ri-purted "sunrise conference” in
April, l p|f>, between President Wil
on, < lujde Kitehln, Democratic floor
leader </ the House, and Kepresetita
tiv» ;> Clark and Flood was not a
"myth” as thought by some his
torian. but an actual meeting at
which Wilson expressed eagerness for
immediate war, only to be blocked
temporarily by these three men.”
The United States did not go to
war until April, IP 17.
HOOVER BLUNDERED
ON BANK CHARGES
Record is Against Him on
Bank Closings in His
Term of Office.
Hy lenlie kktiel
Central Prevs Staff Writer
New York. Dec. 28.—Strategists in
both major political parties undoubt
edly are agreed on one matter- —that
former President Herbert Hoover
maijr :m error in trying to blame the
11? > bank crashes on fear of
Hoo: evelt.
Mr. Hoover called attention to a
subject people were just beginning to
forget.
Am in* opened the way for the
f C'-'p tin vp»H oi? Psgfe Three.)
Henftrrsmt Batin Dispatch
ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA
l; ri‘,Vs E . l i u VV SERVICE oi
HIE ASSOCIATED PRESS.
His Decision Fought
$
rL w V
ui
Jmlgr Merrill E. Ot»»
Decision of Federal Judge Otis in
Kansas City case declaring Wagner
labor Disputes Act unconstitu
tional will be appealed to U. S.
Supreme Court. Judge. Otis was
Appointed to bench ten years ago
by President Coolidge.
fCentral Pm*)
REPUBLICANS FEAR
10 RELY ON BORAH
t *
Party Might Have United on
| Him Had He Been Spe
cific About It.
; LANDON FAVORED NOW
Kansas Governor Seems To lie Gar
nering Good Will of More Ele
ments of Party Than
Any One Else
lly (IIAREES P. STEWART
Central Press Staff Writer
Washington, Dec. 28. —If Senator
William E. Borah of Idaho has a puli
| tical weakness it is the weakness of
! undependability.
Had he declared himself available
; for the Republican presidential nom
ination six months ago he probably
would be today practically the only
G. O. I*, possibility mentoned by his
part y’s strategists.
i There was a gathering of them
| about that time in the capital and it
i was their unmistakable consensus
j that the Idatjo statesmen was the on
■ 1y individual under whose leadership
! they e.ould hope to beat Franklin D.
! Roosevelt at the next election. They
j agreed that he was too old. Many of
! them objected to him as a progressive
j (which the progressives say tie isn't
(Continued on Page Three.)
Hot Political Campaign
In State Seen For 1936
Bitter Contests For Major and Minor Offices Loom as
New Year Begins; Governorship, U. S. Senate and
Congress Seats at Stake in Campaign.
By W. JOYNES MAC’FARLAN, j
Aishociated Press Staff Writer
Raleigh, Dec. 28.—(AP)—-Despite
Hie brew of a legislature, the North
Carolina political pot mustered noth-'
ing warmer than a simmer in 1935.
But there were bubbles on the bot
tom big and rambunctious enough to
blow the lid off in 1930, if they de
cided to go places.
The politically peaceful year, how
ever, saw the Stale desert a time-1
honored prohibition stand adopted in
1908. In its valedictory hours the leg- 1
islature granted 18 counties the right]
to ballot on liquor stores but turned
thumbs down on a Statewide voting;
for legalization. Each of the heavily'
Democratic counties in +he east fiver j
HENDERSON, N. C., SATURDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 28, 1935.
Army Air Chief
1
■■Ml V : '
. .. .
Brig. Gen, Oscar We&tover
, Chief among the promotions oi
eight high ranking officers of the
L". S. army made by President
Roosevelt is that of Prig. (Jen.
Oscar West over, above, acting
chief of the air corp , who Lai
been given full conunand o‘ that
i ®
branch with the rank of ntajoi
general \Yestover succeed Maj
Gen. Pei'jamiu D. Fouloi-. who
1 ia- applied fo> relireutcul.
NO EXTRA SESSION
; OF LEGISLATURE IS
I LIKELY FOR STATE
Most of Those Agitating It
Have Personal Motives
In Doing So, Is
Belief.
REPEAL OF CERTAIN
MEASURES DESIRED
McDonald Wants It As
Sounding Board for His
Campaign Speeches; Ex
tra Session Might Damage
Graham’s Candidacy For
, Governor Next Year.
rtolly Mixumleh ll«r«na,
■ m The Sir Walter Hotel,
IJj ,f. C, HASKftSItA ILL
Raleigh, Dec. 28—No special ses
sion of the General Assembly is ex
pected in most political circles here,
certainly not until after Congress has
met again and taken further action
with regard to social security legis
lation. despite the fact that there is
! still much agitation in some quarters
j for a special session.
The principal reason for this belief
! is the feet that all those who are in
j close touch with Governor J. C. B.
I Khringhaus know that he is very
much opposed to calling an extra
session, principally because he does
not think it necessary at this time,
either for the enactment of coopera
ting State social security legislation
or for any other purpose. He is firm
ly convinced that a special session of
(Continued on Page Two.)
the privilege wont "wet” and opened
stores. The county of Rockingham,
where political margins are closer, re
fused to legalize the sale.
There was no active political cam
paign in the State during the year,
but lines were laid for a heavy bar
rage for 1936 with five men formally
announcing for the Democratic gub
ernatorial nomination. All was quiet
on Republican sections.
Democrats hurling their hats into
the ring were:
Clyde R. Hoey, of Shelby, former
congressman and a member of the
“Shelby dynasty.” A brother-in-law of
former Governor O. Max Gardner;
(Cc n fin no/1 jyn r TF rnn y
Abroadisupheld !
WITH SAFE MARGIN |
Two Votes of Confidence 5
Carried For Cabinet Aft-
Hard Fight on The
Floor.
ORDER MAINTAINED
BY ARMED TROOPS
Govemmert Head Left Free
Now to Pursue His Work
Os Conciliation, Internat
ional Understanding And
Peace Within League Os
Nations Covenant.
Paris, lice. 28 (Al*)—Premier
I,aval won a second vote of confi
dence in the. Chamber of Depu
ties today. 301 lo 261.
The vote wait on direct approv
al of his conduct of foreign af
fairs.
The Chamber began balloting im
mediately on a. motion “approving
the declarations of the government,
and expressing confidence in him
<Rival) to pursue his work of con
ciliation. international understanding
and peace within the eßague of Na
tions covenant*’
previously, 1 -aval had wrung a nar
row vote of confidence from the Cham
her of Deputies bv a vote of 296 to
276
STEF RHEUMET EI) GUARDS
ON DUTY AT THE CHAMBER
Patis, Dec. 28.—(API—Steel-hclmet
ed mobile guards, with carbines
swung on their shoulders, were held
in readiness for possible disorders to
day outside the Chamber of Deputies
as Premier Ra,val's cabinet faced the
danger of overthrow in a Chamber
/ote on his foreign policy.
.Small crowds which gathered out
sub' the old Bourbon palace, in which
tiie deputies meet, were kept moving
by large forces of police as the mo
bile guards posted themselves in the
shelter of the nearby railroad station.
As the time for voting approached,
(Continued on Page Thiee.)
1836 Outlook For
Cotton Brightest
In Several Years
New Orleans, La., Dec. 28 (AP)
—Growers and handlers say cot
ton will enter 1936 under the best
venditions in several years.
A guarantee of 12 cents a pound
for all cotton from this year’s
crop, a government program that
enables the staple to move freely
into the normal channels of trade
and a rejuvenated demand for
American cotton from abroad,
have combined to provide a dis
tinct improvement over the con
ditions a year ago.
Sales Tax Talked
As Substitute for
Tax Upon Payroll
Washington, Dee. 28 (AP) —A
luxury sales tax was put forth to
day by Chairman Buchanan, Dem
ocrat, Texas, of the House Appro
priations Committee, as a means
of giving financial backing to the
social security program.
The Texan’s suggestion was made
as congressmen, returning to the
crowded capital for another session,
discovered apartment rentals rising
and living quarters hard to find.
Buchanan's idea was to substitute
the tax for that which under the so
cial security law puts a levy on pay
rolls and employees. While there was
no indication whether there was any
White House backing for the propos
al, it was known that many adminis
tration officials frown upon sales
Dixcs.
A proposal that tho nation be split
Unto administrative segments, with
ten or twelve “little capitals,” was a
subject of controversy.
The American Liberty League de
scribed the plan suggested by the
President’s committee on natural re
sources as a “dictatorial” move de
signed to cut tho nation up “into
provinces, or satrapies.”
Senator Thomas, Democrat, Okla
homa, said it was worthy of conside
ration .
Senator McNary, Republican, Ore
gon, thoght the plan might encourage
decentralization of government-
WEATHER
FOR NORTH CAROLINA.
Snow, probably* mixed with
rain tonight and Sunday; slightly
warmer to east, oortien tonight
Italians Forced To Retire
In Brutal Ethiopian Fight,
Addis Ababa Advices Claim
SON “BOOMS” GOVERNOR LANDON
<*■>- r
HI Iks
pigijj£ ' L^hShSRI
Governor Landon and his sou
John Cobb Land on is doing a little booming of bis own tor Ms father
Gov, Alf M, Landon of Kansas, who Is being prominently mentioned
for the G. O. I'. presidential nomination. Os course, young John’*
booming i- < f lbe holiday sort, with the medium being a toy drum,
is in the Landon home at Topeka
Milne Faked Kidnaping
As Matter Os Publicity
Mystery Writer Hoped In That Way To Gain Stage
Job; Breaks Down And Tells G-Men Whole Story
After Lengthy Questioning in New York City.
New York, Dec. 28. —(AI J ) —Con-
fessing that, his kidnaping was a,
hoax, engineered in an attempt to get
some money, Caleb J. Milne IV was
arraigned today before U. S. Commis
sioner Garrett W. Cotter on a charge
or attempted extortion, a violation of
the United States postal laws.
Bail was fixed at $7,500.
A hearing on the charge was set
for January 9.
New York, Dec. 28. —(AP) —J. Ed
gar Hoover, chief of the Federal Bu-<
NO!HELP I FOR FDR
Expert Holds People Be
come Conservative in
Times of Prosperity
By LESLIE EICHKL
Central press Staff Writer
Westward Bound, Dec. 28.—Papers
that one picks up eti route west are
full of news of trade gains. They are
almost phenomenal.
“Won’t that help the Roosevelt
campaign for re-election?” this writer
asked an '‘expert” for a financial
paper.
He answered: “No. The more mon
ey people get the more conservative
they become.”
This writer countered: “But sup
pose these good times do not remain
—suppose we are plunged into a hole
and need still another New Deal?”
The “expert” quickly responded:
“Then Roosevelt is lost anyway.”
FEWER UNEMPLOYED
Latest unemployment estimates
show a favorable trend.
‘•There were 1,135,000 fewer per
innnrl on r»Qp rr> TT.jf '
PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON
EXCEPT SUNDAY.
reau of Investigation, announced to
day Caleb J. Milne IV "kidnaped him
self as a matter of publicity to help
him get a job on the stage.”
“He broke shortly after midnight,”
Hoover said, “and told us the whole
story of how he had conceived the
idea when he was in desperate fin
ancial straits and couldn’t get a job.”
The youth, grandson of a wealthy
retired Pennsylvania textile manu
facturer, whs arrested by the Fed
(Cojitiiiued on Page Five.) j
SAYS CAPITAL GETS
I EXCESS OF PROFITS
j
‘ Even Wall Street Expert
Sides With So-Called
Radicals in View.
|
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central Press Staff Writer
Washington, Dec. 28. —With busi
ness decidedly improving, why does
not unemployment appreciably de
crease ?
The People’s Lobby went into this
question at a recent luncheon in
Washington. This particular lobby, so
called, of which Professor John
Dewey is head, generally classes as
rather a radical organization. The
views expressed at its gathering here
probably will be regarded by orthodox
folk as extreme. Nevertheless, the
speakers did offer a solution, which
I haven’t heard from any other
source, of the puzzle of reviving busi
ness with but little revival in employ
; ment.
Leading parts in the discussion
were taken by ex-President John H.
iniiorl <xn "0,, crr \ Tm, rrt
** * ~ - 4
8 r PAGES
TODAY
FI VE CENTS COPY
GUERILLA BATTLE
OF NATIVES’ ARMY
Small But Consistent Losses
Inflicted on Invaders by
Bitter Skirmishes e
HEAVY LOSSES ARE
REPORTED RESULT
Rome Says, However, Ethi
opians Flee From Third
Stiff Combat in Ten Days
And Seek Shelter From
Bombings From Air; Hit
ler Is Becoming Active.
(By The Associated Press)
The latest of a succession of bold
forays by Ethiopian troops against
Italy’s invading blackshirts, describ
ed in communiques from Addis
Ababa, gave a fresh complexion today
to Premier Mussolini’s “campaign of
occupation” in Ethiopia.
Practically stationery for weeks.
Italian forces on the northern front
were forced to relinquish Abbi Addi,
2-j miles west of the main northern
lines, in an Ethiopian surprise attack,
said an announcement from the cap
ita city of Emperor Haile Selassie.
If it has succeeded in doing noth
ing more, the guerilla warfare of eu
couraged Ethiopian arms has wor
ried the Italians, and inflicted small
but consistent losses.
The bodies of 20 Italian officers and
many natives, said the Ethiopian gov
ernment, were found oil the battle
field at Abbi Addi, and 100 of Italy’s
native soldiers were taken prisoners.
From Home, however, issued Ita
lian press dispatches saying the Eth
(Continued on Page Eight.)
Says AAA Has Cut
Jobs Sharply For
The Cotton Belt
New York, Dec, 28 (AP)—Ope
ration of the Agricultural Adjust
ment Administration ha* forced
thousands of Laborers onto relief
rolls in cotton growing states, Dr.
A. B. Cox, agricultural econo
mist. told (lie American Statis
tical Association here today.
The cotton acreage control program
during the last three years has caus
ed losses of $280,000,000 to unskilled
laborers and tenant farmers, said Dr.
Cox, director of the bureau of busi
ness research of the University of
Texas.
"Stripped of its frills," he charged*
“the program is an attempt to bring
about a redistribution of wealth by
1 forcibly slowing down production.,’
Asserting that the cotton restric
tion program failed to recognize "in
terdependent relations among pro
ducers, laborers, processers and mer
chants.’’ Dr. Cox stated that “it is
utter folly to think that the heaVy
relief load in the South can be reliev
ed in the future as long as cotton
production is cut one-third.”
Officers At
Angier Held
For Killing
Pollard And Deans
Deny, However,
They Blackjacked
Green Collins
Angier, Dee. 28.—(AP) —Angler’s
only policeman. O. 11. Pollard, and
C. F. Deans were held without bond
today in connection with the death
of a prisoner said by witnesses at a
coroner’s inquest to have been brutal
ly beaten with a blackjack.
Solicitor Claude Cannady said thq
(Continued on Fiva.^

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