I GATEWAY to u CENTRAL CAROLINA j twknti'-i'ourth YEAR MILD * * * * # _ ******** ********** 4 hitler Withdraws From Versailles Treaty II NOT LONGER ACCEPT BLAME FOR mm WAR Versailles Pact, Ending World War, Made Ger many Admit Guilt of That Heinous Act DEPRIVED GERMANY OF EQUALITY RIGHT Assumes Sole Authority Over Federal Railway Sys tem and Reichbank; Der Fuehrer Starts Second Quadrennium of Rule of Germany With Address Btilin, Jan. 30 (AP) —Reichfuehrer Adolf Hitler, starting to rule Germany for another four years, today “with drew Germany’s signature from the Versailles peace treaty, in which the Reich was declared “guilty” of launching the World War. Asserting Germany’s resumption of military sovereignty was a matter af fecting only the Reich, Hitler told his Reich-tag: ■We have taken nothing from any nation nor have we done any nation wrong.” He declared the German govern ment from now on would exonerate sole sovereignty over the Federal rail way system and the Reichsbank. Then he added: “I hereby declare that through these actions that part of the Versail les treaty which deprived our nation of equality and degraded it to a posi tion of an inferior people has found its natural end. "About all, however, I hereby most solemnly withdraw the German signa ture from that declaration forced upon a weak government against its tetter knowledge—the declaration to the effect Germany was guilty of starting the World War.” State Will Take Over State Fair Raleigh, Jan. 30.—(AP)—The State Board of Agriculture voted today to take over complete operation of the State Fair. The board voided a five-year con tract under which Norman Y. Cham- Hiss, of Rocky Mount, and George Hamid, of New York, have leased the exposition and operated it under strict State supervision. Action of the Icoard followed a rul ing bv Attorney General A. A. F. Sea wall that the members would not be liable personally for any deficit in juried in operating the fair, except in case of neglect or gross misman agement. Governor Hoey said he was backing *be board and agriculture commis sioner. Herr Scott, agriculture commis- Continued on Page Five.) Compact Act Is Puzzle To Legislators J hev Will Vote For It Monday With Maejue Idea of Its I’r'n isions Daily DiM|»at<‘h narenn, In the Sir Walter Hotel. By HENtftY AVERILL. M, ’ lirh ’ Jan - 30 —The House will ii, adopt a tobacco compact ' ! "- probably by an almost un 'll n on vote, but it’s dollars to ' n , u, ' s not more than half a t(, ' !o ‘d»lators (or news commen be' ‘ ilor . f or that matter) will ever . '* l! ' to give an intelligent explana ? r>i what they voted for. (jl ' ; 'h events, out of the welter of 1 u "m and conjecture, and asser -■Vntinued on Page Five) Hcnfirnum tlaifit LEASED WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS EARTHQUAKE * * * * X m ALL OUT? “SUPER” FLOOD COMING! j poplar - : iWJ gggpTSTW Shaded lines show danger area Although U. S. army officers expressed confidence that the 1,200 miles of levees along the Mississippi from Cairo, 111., to the Gu’f of Mexico would hold, despite threats of a “super” flood, army engineers and government of ficials mapped emergency plans for a possible evacuation of 1,000,000 persons in an area of 50 miles on each side of the Mississippi. Should it be necessary to evacuate the Mississippi river valley, it would be the greatest peace-time movement of population in the history of the U. S. Maj. Gen. E. M. Mark ham, chief of U. S. engineers, is said to have stated that it was “absolutely ridiculous to think there was any flood danger in the Mississippi river valley south of Arkansas City, Ark.” The map shows the area being considered for evacuation. Dual Control Liquor Store Plan Growing Developm e n t s In General Assembly Point to That Way Out of Problem Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir Walter Hotel. By J. C. BASKEItVILIi Raleigh, Jan. 30 —The trend is more and more towards the enactment of a Statewide liquor control law which will permit the establishment of liquor stores in counties following county wide elections, under the joint control of the State and counties, and under which the State will get a small per centage of the net profits, observers here are convinced after watching de velopment in the General Assembly for almost four weeks. While the bill which will eventual ly be enacted has not even been writ ten yet and probably will not be in troduced for another week or more, opinion in most quarters is that senti ment among the members of both houses has slowly but surely been crystallizing in favor of a joint State and county control system, with coun ty option, under which the State will get a part of the profits. It is also agreed tht developments during the past week or ten days have been of a nature to pave the way for Continued on Page Five.) FEDERAL RESERVE POSTPONES RULING Regulation on Service Charges De ferred from February 1 to May 1, Foard Says Washington, Jan. 30 (AP) The Federal Reserve Board has postponed from February 1 to May 1 the ef fective date of a regulation prohibiting member banks of the Federal Reserve system from absorbing check collec tion and service charges. The action today was taken at the request of Chairman Stegall, Demo crat, Alabama, and Wagner, Demo crat, New York, of the House and Senate Banking Committees. If they are prohibited from absorbing service charges some member banks’ contend, they will lose accounts to non-member banks which do absorb them. - NLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN TllSf SECTION OF NORTH CAROLINA Roosevelt Now 55 > Is Hale and Well Washington, Jan. 80.— (AP) President Roosevelt was 55 years old today and more than 15,000 well wishers reminded him of it before noon. Pronounced in excellent health by his physician, Captain Ross Mclntyre, the President went about his daily task in his cus tomiry. systematic va> He will entertain at t!ii.er to night his “birthday gang”—news paper men assigned to the Navy Department when Mr. Roosevelt was assistant secretary, and others who travelled with him when he ran for vice-president in 1920. At .11:20 p. m., eastern standard time, the chief executive will speak by radio to birthday ball audiences over the country in connection with the campaign for funds to combat infantile paralysis. TRUSTEES DEBATING COLLEGEAUTONOMY Authority of President Gra- Ham at N. C. State To Be Defined by Board Raleigh, Jan. 30 (AP)—The board of trustees of the Greater University of North Carolina to day referred decision on athletics matters at the institution back to . the executive committee, with pow er to act, after a long debate on the question of President Frank Graham’s powers in athletics mat ters. Colonel J. W. Harrelson, of the State College unit, announced to the board a contract to become head football coach at State would be offered Wil liam (Dock) Newton, now coach at (Davidson, # but (the -trustees argued over whether the dean and president could select a coach not recommend ed by the athletics council. Trustees in Dark Members of the executive group of the trustees present for the full board meeting said that they did not know that they last week approved consoli dation of the physical education and inter-collegiate athletics department into one department at U. C. State and Chapel Hill, but Charles Whed (Continued on Page Four.) HENDERSON, N. C., SATURDAY AFTERNOO N, JANUARY 30, 1937 DEEPENS FLOOD HORROR Memphis Believed Far Above Flood Height Air view of downtown Memphis, with the Mississippi at a low stage According to Edward J. Meeman, editor of the Memphis Press-Scimitar, “Memphis will not seriously be affected by even the Jiighest possible flood.” Meeman, whose view is held by several other competent observers, say that “only a small, low section could be affected. Most of the city is so safe that the Red Cross plans to take care of 50,000 refugees in Memphis”. Vast areas, both above and below Memphis, however, are subject to overflow and U. S. army engineers are bending every effort to strengthen lev eos. This is an air view of Memphis, with the river at low stage. . ... LINES .UGH EN Floor Fights on Major Prob lems Drawing Near in General Assembly’s Sessions REVENUE BILL IS PARTLY RE-DRAWN Vote on Prohibition Refer endum Set for Tuesday; Pensions Bill Offered and Tobacco Compacts Meas ure Is About Ready for Vote in House Raleigh, Jan. 30 (AP)—Repre sentative Ward, of Craven, intro duced a bill in the House today calling for a nine-member State planning board to be appointed by the governor to work out pro grams for the advancement of North Carolina. There were 27 House members present for a five-minute session and six senators attended a ten minute meeting. The House passed a local bill and senators passed five bills, in cluding one by Aycock, of War ren, to fix the salary of a deputy court clerk. By W. JOYNES MACFARLAN. Raleigh, Jan. 30. —(AP) —The legis lature this week drew lines tighter on tax, money-spending and lisuor legislation as it neared floor fights on major problems and killed tihe perennial proposal to reapportion the Continued on Page Five.) OURWEATHEPMAN FOR NORTH CAROLINA. Mostly cloudy, with rising tem peratures, probably followed by occasional rains Sunday, possibly beginning late tonight. WEATHER FOR WEEK Generally fair, mostly mild tem peratures in Florida: frequent rainy periods elsewhere; tempera tures above normal first half of week, colder latter half. Utatrafrh General Motors Actions Surprising Miss Perkins Agreed Only Friday to New Peace Conference and Sloan Cancelled Consent on Return to New York; Anti-Strike Group Sta rts “Sitdown” Policy Washington, Jan. 30.—(AP)—Secre tary Perkins termed an. “extraor dinary performance” today the Gen eral Motors Corporation’s withdrawal from a tentative agreement to hold a peace conference with representatives of the striking United Automobile Workers. “I had assurances and I gave the as surances and then the assurances were withdrawn,” Miss Perkins said after Alfred Sloan, Jr., General Motors president, notified her from New York ne could not carry out the tentative agreement. After a long conference with Sloan in her office yesterday afternoon, Miss Perkins said she felt the long deadlock in the strike had been brok en. She was arranging with John Lewis, chairman of the committee for industrial organization, for the 13 Soviets To Be Shot; . I Saveßadek Moscow, Jan. 30 (AP) —Karl Radek, prosecuted as the “blackest” of 17 convicted Trotzykist plotters against the Soviet Union, today escaped the firing squad deaths decreed for 13 fel low conspirators. The fiery Radek, who declined to ask clemency and learned at the un expected leniency of his judges, was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment and deprived of his political life for five years more. The whisker-fringed editor, once the most authoritative voice in the Rus sian press, strode off to prison be tween two guards with his icy indif (Continued on Page Four.) trioconvictedTn CHARLESTON FRAUD ■ i Charleston, S. C., Jan. 30. —(AP)— A Federal court jury convicted Char les Robinson, Arthur Happenie and Samuel Allen today of conspiring to defraud Frederick Tuttle, retired Cin cinnati,, Ohio, munitions manufactur er, of money later transported in in terstate commerce. AND VIRGINIA. PUBLISHED EVERT AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. peace conference when she received Sloan’s messages. NON-UNION WORKERS AT DETROIT START SITDOWN Detroit, Mich., Jan. 30. —(AP)—Non- union auto workers who “sat down” in the Michigan State Capitol for ten houi’s in protest against “sit-down” strikes in two General Motors plants, said today they would return to the State House Monday if there has been no “definite and satisfactory solution” The 25 demonstrators, employees of the Chevrolet gear and axle plant at Detroit, occupied folding chairs just outside Governor Frank Murphy’s of fice after a conference with him, re maining until shortly before last mid night. The governor, meanwhile, had come (Continued on Page Four.) T'AR.HEEL COAST SURVIVES STORM > 65-Mile Gale Rakes Hatte ras Island and Tide Rises To Five Feet Manteo, Jan. 30 (AP)—Hardy fisher folk of Hatteras island went to work today to repair damage, done by a 65- mile gale and mountaineous tides which swept the sparsely populated area yesterday. Several frame buildings were wash ed off their foundations by the fury of the sea. Highways were washed out in spots and utility lines were crippled. A freight boat was washed ashore and its three-member crew re scued by the Coast Guard. The tides were described as the highest in years. The water was re ported to have riswi five feet in less than fifteen minutes at Hatteras vil lage. FALLS OUT CAR AS DOOR BLOWS OPEN Roanoke Rapids, Jan. 30 (AP)— Bill Rash, of Newton, was being treated in a hospital here today for head and leg injuries which were suffered, he told officers, when he fell from an automobile after the door flew open. 8' PAGES TODAY FIVE CENTS COPY LEVEES CRUMBLING AS WATERS RISE IN EONGfLOOD TRAILS ' > Over 100,000 Men Work Frantically To Build Dykes To Hold Back Swirling Waters BREASTWORKS RISE IN MANY SECTIONS Tiptonville, Tenn., Scene of Earth Tremor in Early Morning; Dramatic De fense of Little Cairo, 111., at Ohio - Mississippi Con flueiice f Being Made Memphis, Term., Jan. 30 (ALP) —A slight earth tremor injected a new and fearsome element into the Mississippi val ley flood fight today near Tip tonville, Tenn., where 115,000 men labored with shovel and sandbags to hold levees against a destructive “super flood.” Dyke workers and townspeo ple reported there was a brief trembling of the earth about 3 a. m. in the area where a cen tury ago an earthquake formed the vast reelfoot lake east of the river. A hasty inspection by engi neers indicated the earthen walls were not breached. WEARY STRUGGLE OF MAN AGAINST RIVER GOES ON (By The Associated Press.) A fresh host of danger, earth tre mors, crumbling levees and rising waters punctuated the weary strug gle of man against river along the 1,200-mile flood trail today. . Brief-lived but terrifying, the earth tremored ominously in Tiptonville, Tenn., in the area where a century ago an earthquake formed the vast Reelfoot lake, east of the Mississippi river. With 60,000,000,000 tons of water cresting down the Ohio river valley in search of lower levels, the drama tic defense of little Cairo, 111., a. river girt city lying 60 feet below the level of the flood tide, neared its climax. Creeping near the top of the 60-foot concrete sea wall, the water touched Continued on Page Five.) Goronerls Arrested In Wake Forest Raleigh, Jan< 30.—(AP)—Chief of Police W. O. Knuckles, of Wake For est, said today he last night arrested Elmer Warin, acting coroner of Wake county, on a charge of drunken driv ing when Waring went to Wake For est to investigate two deaths. The acting coroner was designated by his father, Coroner L. M. Waring, Wake coroner, who was ill. The chief of police said he and Clarence Smith, special town officer, arrested Elmer Waring and a com- Continued on Page Five.) Flood Crisis Speeds Work In Congress Question of Waning Constitutional Gov ernment Raised By Senator Glass Washington, Jan. 30.—(AP) —The flood emergency and problems of long range fundamental policy accelerated government activities this week in a manner reminiscent of the First Roosevelt month in 1933. Relief and rehabilitation in the suf , sering midwest came first. Between conferences on those immediate needs the President began to crystallize hie business and labor programs into specific legislative proposals. With at least 200,000 flood refugees (Cont*r tied on Page Five)