I HENDERSON GATEWAY TO CENTRAL CAROLINA f\\ ENTY-FOURTH YEAR Flood DEAD 111, WITH 550,000 HOMELESS Secretary Perkins Attacks General Motors In Refusal To Attend Strike Meetings MOTOR GIANT HAS TAILED IN DUTY, IS SECRETARY’S IDEA Police and Pickets Clash Again in Weeks-Old Strike, With Many Persons Injured PLANT IN DETROIT SCENE OF TROUBLE One Woman and Four Men Hurt; Labor Leaders De clare “Tomorrow We Will Have Real Picket Line and Nobody Will Get In;” Coast-to-Coast Spread Washington, Jan. 26 (AP) Secretary Perkins said today the General Motors Corporation had "tailed in its public duty” in refusing to accept her invi tation to attend a strike peace conference. POLICE ANI) PICKETS IN FRESH CLASH AT DETROIT Detroit, Mich., Jan. 26 (AP) —Police and pickets clashed again today in the weeks-old General Motors strike, five persons being hurt as union men tried to prevent office workers from enter ing th Cadillac unit of the corpora tion here. The clash followed closely on a dis turb; tnc( la-'t night at Anderson, Ind. in which three persons were hurt. One woman and four men hurt in 'in nude > at the Cadillac plant were removed by union representatives for pr.v, t( treatment. From the union .'Uind truck at the scene came the an nouncement: ("morrow we will have a real pick et line and nobody will get in.” 1 G-M strike extended from coast '''’ 1 s t today for the first time as c< rporation finished plans to re "i 39,900 of its more than 125,000 1c,1,, -‘ employees to work tomorrow. Money Need Big Ally Os Liquor Folk legislature Mav Re sort to Statewide levy To Solve Its I’roblems I>silly DlMpatch Huroiiu, In the Sir Waller Hotel. By 11entry averill. - r h, Jan. 26. —Entering as it '.to every activity and action legislature, the pressing neces -1 finding more revenue to meet iog expenditures has become or favoring the advocates of of liquor in their battle a -she drys who would retain the if ion system in North Carolina, 'to same time that this need for has driven State and county •er.s much closer together, a, l|:i appeared in the heretofore oiks of the drys, this coming Dorn differences of opinion over ' of strategy to be followed in efforts to bring about a State ' ferndum and thereby they outlaw the liquor stores now op -1 in 17 counties. ' v day since the legislature con ic re for its opening session it f, ome clearer and clearer to all 'nod that the law-makers are a herculean task to raise v enough to take care of the increased spending recommend ih" budget commission, and hoi institutions are seeking sll,- '' more than the $70,000,000 rc icnded in the budget, the task 1 come even more difficult. 1 follows, then, that anything 1 will bring in revenue is cer u> get careful and painstaking r ' on with the legislators already 1 f.v inclined toward it because i evenue-raising possibilities. (Continued on Page Two). Utettiteramt LEASED WIRE SERVICE OB’ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Social Security Leader Tells Legislature Task Will Continue For Years Act Not Perfect, But Most Effective Yet Found, Frank Bane Declares; Draft To bacco Allotments; Retire ment of Judges Orde red; Money Bills Up Raleigh, Jan. 26. —(AP) —Frank Bane, executive director of the Fed eral Social Security Board, told the North Carolina legislature, which is grappling with measures to provide old age and child labor aid, today the problem would continue for years. The legislature already has for old age assistance, old age pen sions and aid for indigent children, and a measure to provide for assis tance to the needy blind is due thi9 week. Bane said “the Federal social se curity act is not perfect, and probably will be the most amended law passed by Congress in a long time, but it is a constructive effort in the right di rection.” “The Federal program is the most effective of its kind yet found,” ha Counties Would Pay Fourth Os Old Age Pensions Funds Federal and State Money Would Be Administered by Counties, Whose Boards Would Pass on Eligibility of All Beneficiaries; Bill Is Offered Daily Dispatch Bureau. In the Sir Walter Hotel. By J. V. BASKERVILI, Raleigh, Jan. 26.—The counties must share from one-third to one fourth of the cost of old age pensions and of aid to dependent children un der the administration bill introduced, in the Senate and House last night by Senator L. L. Gravely, of Rocky Mount and Representative Ernest Gardner, of Shelby, But the counties also have wide oowero in the admin tration of the law, in that the county boards of welfare and the boards of county commissioners must first ap prove all those found eligible for pen sions or other aid before any of this assistance can be given. The maximum under the old age pensions portion of the bill is S3O a month to persons 65 years of age or older, but any person with a monthly 4PRCT.SALES TAX NOT EVEN LIKELY Talk of Increase Grows Out of Incessant Demand for Money Dnily Dispatch Bureau. By J. C. BASKERVILL Raleigh, Jan. 26.—Some talk of the possibility of increasing the sales tax to four per cent instead of decreas ing it to two per cent is being heard in some legislative circles here un less something can be done to stop the present steady and upward trend in requests for appropriations. But most observers are confident that the sales tax will not be increased, also that it will not be decreased, but is likely to remain at three per cent, with the exemptions restored as re commended ifcy Governor Clyde R. Hoey and the Democratic platform. Commissioner of Revenue A. J. Max well .today expressed surprise that any one was even considering sug gesting any increase in the sales tax and said that he was definitely op posed to any increase in the rate of the tax. “I think it would he very unwise to increase the sales tax beyond three per cent with the exemptions restored just as I am opposed to decreasing the tax to two per cent without any ex emptions,” Commissioner Maxwell said. “No other State that I know of imposes a sales tax of more than three per cent and I think it would, set a bad and dangerous precedent to increase it. I doubt if the finance com (Continued on Page Four.) ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS HENDERSON, N. C., TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 26, 1937 told the legislators. It is “an enabling act” which leaves to them the ques tion of determining costs by fixing amounts of aid to be granted and re quire State administration. A sub-committee of the House Ag riculture Committee met this after noon to complete work on re-drafting the allotment section of the proposed tobacco compact bill to limit prduc tion. MONEY BILLS ARE BEING RE DRAFTED FOR PASSAGE Raleigh, Jan. 26 —(AP) —Faced with ibills to provide for old-age pensions, old age assistance and aid for in digent children under the Federal so cial security program, the legislature Continued on Page Five.) 1 income of S3O a month or more is au tomatically ineligible for the pen sion. Os this amount, the Federal gov ernment will pay the State one-fourth and the counties one fourth. The bill also provides that the county welfare ihoards and boards of county commissioners, in determining the amount of pension to be allowed any individual shall take into consid eration his or her needs, expenditures and stands of living, and that thq pension may be scaled down accord ingly. Thus, where it is found that a person may get along on S2O a month, instead of S3O a month, the smaller amount will be allotted. No inmates of State or county institutions will be eligible to receive these pensions, but can become eligible by leaving Continued on Page Five.) Child Bill Vote Test For FDR Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. By J. C. BASKEHVILL Raleigh, Jan. 26.—How much weight the “Roosevelt influence” really has in the North Carolina legislature will be tested within the next day or two when action is taken by the assembly on the proposal to ratify Ihe Federal ' child labor amendment. ! Os course, thers are many other : factors in the question, but admittedly ' the amendment wouldn’t stand a | ghost of a chance except for the fact ! that the President has so pointedly ’ appealed for its ratification. Even) ; with his endorsement, the amend ment will go down to defeat, most ' observers agree, but it is likewise con ceded even by its bitterest foes that (Omt , '’ied on Page Five) \ OUR WEATHER MAN S FOR NORTH CAROLINA. i Cloudy, occasional rain tonight and Wednesday; somewhat colder tonight. dai;y As Devastating Flood Rushes in on Helpless City 'I, |l |h iiilllllh 11 i i | lii ' l||||| |l jIM li 11 lllilii 1 I ' I' 1 M il'i i illllllllllll |/|l 'h ii|'i . : First actual photo of the surge of the waters of the Ohio river over the top of the 62-foot flood, wall which has protected Portsmouth in other flood years. ROOSEVELT CALLS MEETING OF LABOR, BUSINESS LEADERS White House Says, How ever, Purpose Is Not Set tlemeht of General Motors Strike DISCUSSIONS DEAL WITH LABOR LAWS Preliminary to Legislation To Be Offered in Con gress; Miss Perkins, Lewi.., Green and Chamber of Commerce Officials and Others Are Included Washington, Jan. 26. —(AP) —Presi- dent Roosevelt has called three con ferences of labor and business lead ers for late today to labor legislation. White House officials, in announc ing the meetings, said they were not for the purpose of trying to settle the automobile strike. Asked if the President had for mulated a program to place before the conferees, the President’s aides said the discussions would be preliminary to legislation. To the first conference at 2 p. m., the President invited Secretary Per kins, John L. Lewis, chairman of the committee on industrial organization; Sidney Hillman, president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, and Charles Howard, president of the In ternational Typographical Union, and secretary of the C. I. O. Next to meet with the President Continued on Page Five.) Trial Bitter Over Treason Os Russians Moscow, Jan. 26. —(AP) —The prose cutor and the presiding judge clashed heatedly today after mention of a “certain foreign official” in the trial of 17 confessed plotters for the over throw of the Russian communist gov ernment. “I absolutely abject to restraining the evidence of a defendant,” Prose cutor Visiwinsky shouted, and then argued bitterly for five minutes with Judge Ulrich, presiding at the mili tary collegium of the supreme court. Ulrich allowed the testimony to con tinue under stern warnings neither the name of the official nor his na tion be divulged. The argument interrupted testi mony allegedly implicating the “cer tain foreibn official” in an attempt to wreck stratebic coal mines in Siberia. SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. Fresh Rains Cause New Floods For Rivers Over Eastern North Carolina Seven-Mile Dyke at Caledonia Prison Farm Not To Be Menaced, However; Cape Fear, Neuse and Tar Riv ers Will Rise Again; High Waters at Williamston Raleigh, Jan. 26. —(AP) —Lee Den son, in charge of the Weather Bu reau here, warned today that “heavy to excessive rains” during the last 24 hours would cause the fifth material rise in a month of the waters of the Cape Fear, Neuse, Tar and lower Roanoke rivers. The Roanoke rise, however, will come below Weldon from present in dications, Denson said, and will not threaten the seven-mile dyke at Cale donia prison farm. “It rained hard yesterday and last night at Caledonia and a material rise in the river there now would doubt less break the dykes,” penal division TAR HEELS DONATE Throughout Carolinas Citi zens Spring To Aid of Flood Regions (By The Associated Press.) Carolina citizens gave liberally to day of their man power, navigation facilities, money and other resources to aid flood sufferers in the stricken Ohio river valley. , In dozens of communities through out the two states Red Cross quotas mere quickly over-subscribed and goals doubled and more contributions gathered. Winston-Salem WPA sewing rooms were mobilized, with 4-0 women on hand .to bend every resources in mak ing mattresses to send to the flood area. A special train bearing 25 surfmen and seven motored surf boats from North Carolina Coast Guard stations, Continued on Page Flv®.) tripleTnquTry” of BUS TRAGEDY begun Civil Authorities, State Commission and Owners of Bus Line Are Investigating Miami, Fla., Jan. 26 (AP)—A three way investigation was pushed today into the disaster that brought death by drowning to 17 passengers of a bus crossing the everglades. Expert mechanics sent independent ly by civil authorities, the State Rail road Commission, and the bus opera tor, Tamiami Tours, Incorporated, ex amined the big mudlcaked vehicle that rolled into a roadside canal 25 miles west of Miami. Utatrafrli PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON inTTrn EXCEPT SUNDAY. FIVE CENTS COPY Director Oscar Pitts said. Denson said the Neuse, already slightly out of its banks, would rise a little higher at Goldsboro and Smith field, and its flood would he prolong ed, while new rises and possible floods would occur in the Cape Fear and Tar rivers. At Williamston, where the Roanoke has been in flood since January 7, the water was 13 feet today and still ris ing. Riverside terminals and lumber yards were under water, but tne town was not threatened. A wind blowing water up the river and two inches of rain forced the stream higher than had been forecast. Handful of Republicans In House To Heckle Demo cratic Majority Washington, Jan. 26.—(AP) —The 8® House Republicans embarked today on a “militant” campaign of opposi tion to any Democratic proposals they deem inimical to the nation’s interest. They instructed their leader, Rep resentative Snell, of New York, at a conference last night to name a nine man policy committee to work out a party program. “We are attempting to organize a militant, cohesive minority,” said Snell Several made it clear they consid ered this course the best basis for a drive to regain lost party power. They said their best orators would, bombard administration action or leg islation they considered unsound or (Continued on Page Five) GASTONIA MAN iT ACCUSED OF DEATH John Childers, 60, Charged With Murder of George Hamrick, 25, Fatally Shot Jan. 9 Gastonia, Jan. 26 (AP) —John Child ers, 60, lumber plant employee, was charged with murder today following the death of George Hamrick, 25, from bullet wounds allegedly inflicted by (gliders January 9. formed of Hamrick’s death until last night, issued the murder warrant to day. Childers is still at liberty under $2,000 bond, but may be rearrested to day, police said. The shooting was unexplained. 8’ PAGES TODAY WORST LIES AHEAD IN STRICKEN AREAS, IS WARNING GIVEN " ■ ' ’W*6s3|pri*'\l Many Thousands Are Ma rooned in Precarious Places and Many Are Refusing to Leave TOWNS EVACUATED BY THE WHOLESALE Roosevelt Calls for Speed in Congress in Furnishing Relief as Lower Reaches of Ohio and Mississippi Rivers Are Further Menac ed by Torrents House Will Pass Relief by Night Washington, Jan. 26 (AP) —Con- gressional leaders responded to pleas of flood sufferers today with plans to rush a $790,000,000 defici ency relief appropriation bill through the House before night fall. As much of the money as neces sary may be used in the stricken area until the administration gets a comprehensive view of relief needs and asks for special or supple mental appropriations. The White House said yesterday the govern ment would share the cost of relief. The members of the president’s national resources committee call ed at the White House. With a national policy of water conserva tion and flood prevention receiving much emphasis among administrar tion advisors, their visit was be lieved to have considerable signi ficance. (By The Associated Press) tens of "thou sands cowered behind weaken ing 1 levees or fled to higher lev els today as the monstrous yel low tide of the Ohio river swell ed to record-breaking flood heights on its sweep to the Mis sissippi. Eddying in muddy, slow ris ing torrents, the waters spread over an area of more than a million acres, taking a toll of at least 111 known dead, driving 550,000 from their homes and leaving many thousands more marooned in precarious straits. $10,000,000 Property Ixjss. Property damage was estimated far in excess of $10,000,000, and on every side came the warning: “The worst is yet to come!” Great Exodus in History. Wholesale evacutions of flood-sieg ed towns in Tennessee, western Ken tucky, southern Missouri, Arkansas and Mississippi, signalled the great est mass flood exodus In history. Refugees poured out of Paducah, Ky., stricken city of 38,000, leaving behind at least 20 dead, and a threat of fire from gasoline-filmed waters. Red Cross officials announced 14 persons drowned with the capsizing of a rescue ibarge there. Panorama of Devastation. From Pittsburgh, in the north, where anxious crowds watched the flood relentlessly spread over the bil lion dollar business district to the (Continued on Page Six.) Embargo On Aid To Spain Seems Sure Neutrality Agree ment Near To Let Spaniards Fight It Out Themselves (By The Associated Press) Heartened makers of neutrality pushed ahead today to formulate a working scheme for leaving Spain alone. Italo-German agreement to join a general embargo of foreign volunteers to the warring peninsula paved the way for a practical plan to keep both men and guns from Spain. The London neutrality committee was called to meet Thursday to ac complish that purpose and to let (Continued on Page Four.)