HENDERSON gateway to central CAROLINA twenty-third year All Kinds Weather Being Experienced Except Heat Wave - I Wind Stormy on Lake and Sea, Dust Storms in South- ! west; Snow, Hail, Sleet Also EPIDEMICS FOLLOW IN SOME 'SECTIONS Montana Has Moderate Earthquake in Western Part of State; Cold Winds Drop Temperatures To Zero in Dust Storm Areas of Southwestern States illy T!i<‘ Associated I're.ss) Vi»t»i-tll v every form of atmosphe re ;nnl climatic disturbance except a wave plagued some part of the Northern Hemisphere today. The (lenient s dealt body blows with wind storms on land and sea. dust -i in ms in the southwest, snow, hail, and rain storms in various ~f ihe United States, carth ,,s in Montana, and files fanned L\ winds. Epidemics followed in the wake of .t,,rms. A Hollywood, Cal., movie company was isolated high in the Sierras and several members of the troop, including Mary Astor, actress, i • iU d Director Klliott Nugent, wore ill with influenza. An undetermined malady caused illness of hundreds of Indian children of Do- Nnvajos tribe lands near Gal lup, N. M- Montana reported a. “moderate” i ("irtluiuake in the western part of the state. Dust storms struck part of Okla homa. Texas, New Mexico, Colorado and Kansas. Cold winds dropped tem peratures from AO degrees 1o zero. Estimates of deaths for the last 48 hours neared 250, including at least ?>.') in the United States, 100 in Bul garian blizzards. 10 in Italy, 28 in Great Britain and an unestimated number in coast storms in European j waters GRANDDAUGHTER TO FORMER KING BORN j Home. Feb. 11.—(AP) —The Infanta j I’.eat l ice gave bir t h today to a girl, • the first grandchild of former King j Alfonso of Spain. The spokesman for the former mon arch said ' oth mother and daughter were doing well. Prince Alessandro Torloinia, the In fanta’s husband, was at the hospital. Former queen Victoria came to I’uine recently to be near her daugh ter. reviving old rumors of a recon ciliation with Alfonso, which royalist sources raid was being promoted, by the Italian royal family, with whom Victoria was staying. MY IS. DAVIDSON j HOUNDED ON WILLi Attorneys Argue Before Jury Gets Case of Big Statler Fortune —— < ’arllnjge, Feb. 11.—(AP) —Opposing •■‘"in <■! con!ended Mrs. Elva. Statler David,on was “bounded’’ in leaving l"'r .pGU.OtX) estate to her husband, H. P.radlev Davidson, Jr., and that there "as no evidence any one influenced ii'i as they offered summations to day in the suit over her will. Asserting the youthful Statler heir ' r w;i.,s forced to making the will in favor of her husband of two months, 1 . 1,. Spence, attorney for the tubjec aid VV. M. Barton Beach, her financial advisor, “hounded the poor iit down’’ until she made it. I.' aeli is smart, all right,” he said ‘Cuuiiniind on Page Three.) inflation Insurance” Is U rge Samuel Liebowitz Samuel Liebowitz, nationally-known attorney and defender of the Scotts boro boys, has joined Bruno Richard Hauptmann’s defense in his “last ditch” fight to escape the electric chair. S. C. HIGHWAY HEAD ORDERED RESTORED Circuit Judge Says Gover nor Overstepped Au thority in Ouster LONG OPINION GIVEN Governor Is Enjoined from Further Action Toward Chief Highway Commissioner in His Long Controversy Columbia, IS. C., Feb. 14. —(AP) —• Circuit Judge G. Duncan Bellinger to day reinstated Chief Highway Com missioner Ben Sawyer and permanent ly enjoined Governor Olin Johnston from further removal proceedings against (he official he had made the central target of his long highway fight. Judge Bellinger handed down a 49- page order granting all three requests made in a petition by Sawyer last Monday. The order declared John ston’s suspension of Sawyer void, can celled an executive rule for him to show cause why he should not be per manently removed from office, and enjoined the governor from further action. Ther cicuit judge held that the State Highway Commission, which had elected Sawyer to serve until 1938 had the exclusive right, under State law, to dismiss him. Governor Johnston had ousted the commission twice with the State mili tia October 28 and by quasi-judicial proceedings December 6, in a long battle to displace it as “extravagant” and “politically dictatorial.” Cotton Consumed Shows Increases For Last Month Washington, Feb. 14.—(AP) —Cotton consumed during January, was re ported by the Census Bureau today to have totalled 591,309 (bales of lint, and 55,974 of linters, compared with 498,- 329 and 55,170 for December last, and 550,553 and 61,024 for January last year. Imports for January totalled 14,547 bales, compared with 12,738 for De cember, last, arid 7,682 xor January last year. Exports for January Jled 525.- 636 bales of lint and 17 of linters, compared with 877,480 cid 40,785 for December last, and 465,711 and 12,- 573 for January last year. SMITH, TALMADGE WILL BE PROBLEM l Talmadge Likely to be Bar red from Convention, But Not A1 Smith By CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, Feb. 14—The Franklin D. Roosevelt management does not take at all seriously assertions by such politicians as Governor Eugene Talmadge of Georgia that the present White House tenant will not even be renominated at the Democratic con (Coutinued on Page Foui,l 8 PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY Adds Provisions Restricting Loans and Credits To Nations Warring Each Other AMERICAN NATIONS PARTIALLY EXEMPT Law Will Not Apply to Them When Fighting Non- American Nation; Monroe Doctrine Fully Recogniz ed in Act; Passage in House Monday Predicted 'Washington, Feb. 14 (AP) —The House Foreign Affairs Committee to day unanimously approved a bill to extend the present neutrality law un til May 1, 1937, with additional pro visions for restricting loans and cre dits to belligerents and exempting Latin-American nations at war with non-American countries. Virtually identical to a measure al ready reported out of the Senate (Foreign Relations Committee, the measure is expected to be called up in the House Monday. That procedure will prevent amend ments, limit debate to 40 minutes and require a two-thirds vote on passage. The bill would advance to May 1, 1937, the present February 29 expira tion date of the existing neutrality law, which directs the President to place embargoes on shipments of war implements! to belligerent na tions. Loans and credits to warring nations would be held down to short term commercial amounts sufficient for normal peacetime trade. The amendment, to make the pro posed law inapplicable to American republics fighting non-American pow ers was in recognition of principles of the Monroe Doctrine. Roosevelt Is Not Endorsing Plan of Low-Cost Housing Washington, Feb. 14. —(AP) — The White House emphasized today that the “go-ahead” signal given Senator Wagner, Democrat, New York, for the drafting of housing legislation did no( represent a presidential endorsement for any specific plan. Mr. Roosevelt, while interested in the low-cost housing problem, de scribed the proposal today as still very much in the preliminary stage. The President’s discussion yester day with Wagner, Secretary Morgen thau, and Peter Grimm, Morgenthau’s housing advisor, covered slum clear ance, low-cost housing loans and sub sidies to local communities and an ex tended authority to insure loans for home modernization, and repair. Wagner said he would draft a bill along these lines and introduce it be fore March 1 for action this session. He put the Federal cost the first year at between $300,090,000 and $490,000,* 000, FLOODS IN PROSPECT IN CAROLINA RIVERS Raleigh, Feb. 14.—(AP) —Floods were in prospect again today for Eastern North Carolina streams. The Weather Bureau here issu ed “advisory warnings” that over flows could he expected in the Cape Fear, Tar, Neuse and Roa noke rivers, due to rains and melting sleet and snow but the stages expected were not forecast. Warning To japan Given By Soviets Frightful Conse quences Forecast if Border Incidents Are Continued Moscow, Feb. 14 (AP) —Coincident with publication of reports of a Japa nese-Manchukuoan invasion of Soviet advised Outer Mongolia, the authori tative Soviet writer, Karl Radek, de clared in Izvestia today that Japa nese militarists ‘have lost their minds' and warned them not to try the So viet’s nerves. “They will learn our nerves are in complete order, and if necessary, our hands, too,” Radek asserted. Numerous clashes have occurred re cently along the Manchukuoan-Outer Mongolian border, the most serious a clash between Japanese-Marichukuoan troops and Outer Mongolian forces Wednesday, in which Soviet dispat ches said ten Japanese-Manchukuoans (Continued on Page Three,).