Heniterann Hatltj Dispatrb ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THIS SECTION OF NORI Jti CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA. ; Y SEVENTH YEAR L.EASEU WIRE SERVICE OF THE ASSOCIATED I'KESS. HENDERSON, N. C., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 1-1, l!t-10 l'UHDISllKD kvkky AKTEUNOUN KXCKl'T SUNDAY. FIVE CENTS COPY Nazis March Into Paris I ritain Drops Plans tor Long War; Wants (/. S. War Materials Money And I Credit Fund is Released liccb 5 tee i-Produc ing Plants Now In Nazi Hands; Ammu nition Factories In S >iuh France; Much .VdUrial Lost. ! 4.— e in Ainencit of . will tire explosives.1 , : ..y was allocated tor' tiie change in policy. .» id. Britain is giving >• tt - a blank check in • y kind of usable war a- can provide. i-up was indicated iol urc in British military • Britain had sent rein-, France t<> join the a I- | .-.hting behind Paris. aimed at later pro- > be permitted to stand in j •tie fullest possible effort . British sources declared, tly the result of the loss •" . sources because ot the : ■ ri"kt "U France. J _ • . (in percent of France's : plants now are in j i.-. these sources said, • i- true of many tac xd on Page Five) heaped Com ict Recaptured 1 oday X. t\. June 14.—(AP)—j -yc.'ir old escaped con • county. who escaped • m !; near here Thurs ri'nred m Halifax coun : i noon today. ['• • fieiura>s and Anio prison guard.--, an • re. They said they ' -b hideout at a farm • •« >!iiks from here 1 s irojn Wilson. Bullitt In Nazi Custody r .»,«.• 14.—f AP)—Trul Berlin reports that .Vidian ('. Bullitt was • • «■ !• -i . June 1-'.— (AP)— Charlie. Hopkins. 63-year old Negro, was exe- I cu ted today at State's Prison for inur- ! der and became the first person exe- 1 cuted in the death chamber here from Rutherford county. The Negro contended that his gun accidentally discharged, killing policeman Roy Watkins. Four de puties who arrested him witnessed the execution and said that Hopkins; 1:1 »«.iv v lwit twice at Watkins. ' Measure Permits To bacco Growers T o Vote on Question of Establishing Tobacco Marketing Quotas For Three Years. Wa. hington. Juno 14.—CAP)—Ley-1 islation tn permit tobacco growers to vote nil the question of establishing tobacco marketing quotas for three yar periods instead of one became; law today with the signature of I 'resident Roosevelt. The act amends the definition of | -carry over" in the agriculture ad justment act so as to exclude from consideration in determining the marketing quotas tobacco of the HI.'!!) and 1!)tu crops nurciiased for the IJritish trade and temporarily stored in this country. The measure authorizes upward adjustment of the national tobacco, marketing quota for any period by j not more than 20 percent and makes it possible to spread over a period of two or three years adjustments re quired to eliminate surpluses. Th«» act provides that the national mai l t liny quota for flue-cured and burlev tobacco for each of the three /Continued on Pace Two) Case Now In Federal Court Could Vitally Affect School Setup In North Carolina Daily Dispatch Bureau, In the Sir W -lu-r Hotel. By HENRY AVLKILL Kaleigh, June 1 k- As North Caro lina's School Commission wrestled with more or less minor problems: Thursday, a Federal court in Ashe-: •. ill<- ua> preparing to hear ar.uu ments in a ease which could have the must profound affect upon the entire otlup of North Carolina s> caching profession in the publicj chools. The case is of a Nor;olk, Virginia, i iCgro who contends that under the j 'ederal Constitution all states must ive equal pay to teachers of all races k-|io hold the same class teaching crt!!'ieates and which are assigned to lie same kino ot teaching. To do (Continued 011 Pa^e Seven) Babson In Plea For Allied Cause Noted Economist Says American "F ront" Now in Europe; De clares America Should Give Credits To Allies. ! by koc;i:r w. babson. Copyright 1!M0. Publishers Financial Bureau. Washington, June 14.—It now must | In." clear to every American that Hit- > lor stands lor world domination. The j United States .- uddenly find? 'icp-tII j in a desperate position—caught be- 1 tween Allied Canada and un.table; Mexico. New methods of warfare j bring home to us the slartling pre- \ c.'i ioic ncss of this position. Until the advent of the bombing plane, isola tion was a wonderful theory. Today, 1 tins concept, like neutrality and in- j ternational law. is as dead as a door j nail. A pack of wild animals are rov- j ing over the world. To protect Amcr- i in. we should immediately give the . allies credit and all our available material. To be realistic, the question today is not shall we get into the war—but j rattier, how shall we get out of it? ! Do we choose to fight on American ' soil or choose to t'iyhl on foreign soil? The iine between defense and par- ! ticipation is becoming thinner and j less distinct every day. Back in 111lii, ! we were sure that we had l'uught for j ii right cause. The imperial German j army differed from the present nazi i army only in that it was less dia bolical. less brutal, less ruthless. Twenty-five years ago we joined the ullies to save the world for demo- j iTacy. We believed that we were ! right and I am sure we were. Too Kind or Too Harsh? Our great mistake was in under- J (Continued on Page Five) A T1 T' • Army 1 o I rain 10,600 Airmen Washington, June 14.— (AP) —j Plans to product' 10,U00 trained men i a year, including 7,000 pilots to stall \ Hie nation's expanding army air force, were announced today by i Secretary of War Woodring. The plans involve use of three of the air corps' principal operating I bases as training centers lor pilots I and instructors, in addition v> the | existing "West Point of the Air" at | Randolph Field, Texas. The period of training has been ' ordered shortened by a month. It! will be 33 weeks long, Woodring dis- j closed. In addition to the 7,000 pilots, 3. [>00 bombardiers and navigators will L>e trained annually to man the vast ly expanded air forces. French Army In Retreat Tired Soldiers, Assail ed by Mightiest Forces of Germany, Await Word As To How or Whether Battle Is To Go On. Tours. June 11.—(AP)—Beating a ictrenl from Paris, (lie tired PV'ivh irmy withdrew southward \>night. assailed by the mightiest forces of Ihe German Reich and awaiting word a-; to how or even whether the battle of France is to go on. j The latest word here was that Herman divisions preceded by Mash ing columns of tarjhsj and armored < ?ar^ had closed aroi&id the French capital. I : It was officially confirmed that 1 o the cast and south of Paris the ] Hermans had reached Romillv. 65 ! niles southeast of Paris, well down 1 (Continued on Page Five) (x)saHwi i < FOR NORTH CAROLINA. I Partly cloudy tonight and Sat urday: scattered showers in in- i terior. 1 Bold Frontal Attack Begun Against France9s Maginot Line; Le Havre Also Taken Quick Change in Nationality ■ • • jiOtUSSSt v : A mechanic at the Curtiss plant, Buffalo, N. Y., with a spray pun is shown at work on one of the U. S. navy bombing planes recently marie available for purchase by the Allies. At top, the U. S. insignia on the trade-in plane is marked out. Bottom, the plane is marked with the tri color bulbcyc of the Allies. (Central Tress) Roosevelt Says All Possible Aid Given President Points to Hitler's Record in! Comment on Report That the Fuehrer Had! Said Invasion of Amcricas Is "Grotes que". Washington, June H. — (AP)— President Kooscvelt repeated today that all possible help was being ex londrd t<> the allies, and pointed to Hitler's record in response to a re-1 port that tlx- German canecllor had ' said invasion of the western hemis-j Inhere was grotesque. Mr. Roosevelt was told at a press' :*o:iferencc lhat Hitler had called the l)os:'il)ilily of German invasion of the Americas •"grotesque" in an interview ividi a newspaper man. Asked for comment, the Chief Exe- • •utive said he conid give none except [o say "that it brings lip recollOe lioiis." lie authorized direct quotation. lie added lhat his remark could n> enlai'ged on with dates and na tions, going back over quite a pe riod of years. Mr. Roosevelt announced two ad i font in wed no page two) Italian Envoy Visits Hull To Lodge Protest \Va> lyton. June II.—(AT)— Aniba.. iiclnr Ascanio Colonna of Italy v i.-itc-d Secretary II ill today, and one of i)i.s aide . aid ih.it lie* had prote ted against what wa described as a campaign to arouse anti-Italian h cling in the United States. The Italian embassy was said to lie prcpai ing a statement concern-! ing lite prote.!, the reason lor which wa. n>>t specified by the aide. Karlicr, the embassy had said it might have a statement about a re port Iroin New York that police there had doc ument.- showing that I the Indian consular service was seeking to promote fascism in this eounlry. Whether I're ident IJoosevelt's re cent • |)(4'ch at Ch-'U'lolte-ville. Va., | in which he termed Italy', entrance]' into the war a stab in the back at' France, figured in the protest was j cot disclosed. AH Peace Talk Rejected By German Press Chief By LOI'IS P. LOCIIXER. With the Gorman Army enroll to to "\iris, Juno 13 (delayed) — (AP) — Countless thousands of fresh German roops were being speeded into the :one of operations today as Dr. Otto Dietrich, personal press chief of Adolf ^itier, rejected all talk of peace and* aid Germany's only aim now is to vin the war. Adressing foreign journalists. Dict ich said: •Germany is simply unbeatable no natter what may yet come. The uehrer towers high above all our ■ncmios. Nothing can avert their de eat and disaster." Ridiculing earlier assertions by the cyders of Great Britain am! r:;v>c. hat Germany would be forced to her knees. Dietrich pointed In Germany's) present j>«>-iii«in and said that com-j plete victory was the goal. He said that peace might have been' had before the war started at the price of the Polish corridor and of i plebiscite in the regions of Poland ivhich the na/.i government claimed is German. As he talked, the new troops marched. looking Iresh and confident and accompanied by the nosl modern equipment. While questions concerning cxact y wliere the troops were going were net with a shrug of the shoulder, neaning it was a military secret. I have Ve definite impression that . filler, while at present e-ineentrat ng on Paris, n .-i n"t le;-v:ng En;, JxllCl Oi-lt -1 V. a.wi—i* French Government Flees From Tours, Presumably to Bor deaux; Hitler Orders Three - Day Celebra tion Throughout Reich. (By The Associtled Press) Hitler's armies inarched into the treets of Paris today, captured the •itaI .French port of Le Havre on the English elumnel, and in their hour )l triumph—bitter defeat for France —launched a hold frontal attack on the great Maginot line itself. Rapidly-swarming German mech anized columns poured behind the main Maginot fortifications be tween Paris and Montniedy to im peril from the rear the 1,000,000 French troops manning the steel and concrete line. In case of an assault from behind it was not believed that the French could turn their Maginol guns around. "Pursuit of the enemy until final destruction has now begun," the nazi liigh command declared. The nazi high command said Montniedy, vital northern anchor of the Muginol lino, lias been captured and declared there has been "coin plate collapse" ol the French all along the 200-mile western front France's high command, however, insisted the French retreat was be ing carried out "in the greatest ord er." The French government was re ported lieeing from Tours, presuma bly to take reluge in Bordeaux, on France's .southwest coast. The frontal attack on the Maginot line centered in the Saar region. Destruction of eight allied trans ports off Le Havre and damage to six others was reported by the nazi high command, indicating heavy losses to British troops rushing to support their beleaguered French al lies. Madrid announced that Spanish troops have occupied the interna tional zone of Tangier in the name of the Sultan of Morocco, "to safe guard the independence and neutrali ty of the city"—which lies opposite the British stronghold ol Gihralter. it was not immediately apparent whether this action heralded the en .'Continued on Page Five» Reynolds Demands Senate Action On Deportation Bill Wa him;ton. June 14.—(AP)—Im mediate Senate action on a resolution for the deportation of Harry Bridges, west coast CIO maritime leader, was demanded today by Senator Rey nolds. Democrat. North Carolina, in view of House passage by a 330 to 42 vote. The Harry Bridges defense com mit!'e gave notice at San Francisco thai it would call for a nationwide protest against the House for approv ing the legislation directing the at torney general to send Bridges, an ali