The Want Ad Way Is The Effective Way.' .- -Nuf . 'Ced. ' . Page Eight. " One Cent A Word, , 20 PAGES H 20 PAGES OIN t w VOL. 4 NO. 12 CHARLOTTE, N; C, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 27, 1 913 PRICE: 5 CENTS U fi . f LA- VA- -iX- -U N M & V P'O ONE SECTION. 1 ysteiy Of The Millionaire Milkman 's Daughter Solved T) s. A ATI tC ITT rJl7t7 ! O-V-M 4 - ? t.' . T- In Alabama cf Btr Father At Last After X Widespread Search Last ing For lhreeDays. proceedings, As He Wishes jke Maiter to Be Closed. ijdf-.-.- - - i ta:er r father p in a ?, X. J till-Vl- ' office. N SI Special to The Newe. Raleigh, April 26. President Ector H. S. Smith, of the States Trust. Com- father 0 Jhe (rirl Announces schemes, is not to be extradited to ' " i this StfltP Tho p-iivorrnr r,F 11,,h-n. Jlfrr egal has reconsidered honoring the requi- omuii since ii aeveioped mat smitn is "wanted in Jefferson county. Ala bama, on the charge of embezzle ment. Governor Craiz has cranted a rar- & don for Wiley House, of Wilson coun- rj.-ira Forden, 17 years old, ty, who has served eight years of a 4" froni Washington by her " twelve year sentence for manslaugh- t?n days ago and placed ter. ine plea for pardon was based arium at Pompton Lake, on tne belief that .he has undergone !3c sufficient TMinfchmont alraodt- " j u..u.uj. Two wcnien. one uenoeu iu 1 uu'cuiur traig uas aaaea to ims a-v Veen Mis. William H. ; office force Clarence McKain, a ;-vit?. wife of the "chewing j stenographer from Lenoir-who will rTki3?" of Cleveland, O., drove assist Miss Mae Jones in stenograph- tile last Wednesday afternoon y '-'. met Ramona on the road. The s:rl jumpea into me ma- "rhi'-o accoinoanied h her nurse T.o pretested against ine acwou, i save tie nurse ine sup bbq ui's Ip-tire party disappeared. i Gail Borden, the girl's father, -3 f-n-n Us rooms in the Manhattan tctel New York City, declared X U!s teMef that Mrs. White had 1 1 t::a-ce innuence over tae gin 4ird to!d ter he had taien his v i daistter away irom xne oiuer ,.-1 wasnington, April 26. There is a ;on:an through detectives w no .rf dylnK of tuberculosia in xfDT-d thera together in an aparx- -a-. Sct in Washington. ft. southeast Washington tonight. She i -, .-Cn raiiPii in a detective is seven years old. She does not know acericy and the police of three that si-e is dying; neither does her cues and the searcn began. , moiner, tne only parent left. The Thursdar night the missing -.f . iauier aiea more than two years asro. ? girl as reported from the hotel He left a mother, and daughter : Tart. New Haven., eonn, wnerc strong ana vigorous. But there - was :j:t"as saui sne ana yuhs uv insurance. Ana tne mother and ?cd another woman had spent the baby girl lived as best they could e t!sht and left for Boston. ?"s on the earnings of the woman, i Detectives traced the women j. They -got along well for a time. ? to Boston but could not find Three months ago, however, the baby i iem until today, when Borden S took eick'. The doctors said she had sent for. . w rheumatism. But the applications sug- J He sirl was found ill and on gested grave no relief. Then one day verie of a nervous" break- - recently Dr Carv.fJmVRnn. rami our. ;down ia a private house in the ge0n on the Mayflower and personal . t..'- r I n Mrs T"i1to i r . . . . .. r,a sn.u-.-u. - puysicaan or tresment Wilson, was Her fathers called Into fnnEnltotlrm U. iairlina. SENDS TO FLOWERS DYING CHILD lii left the city, took her in charge. ed the malady as tuberculosis. The n: 1 i : i -i n uugiudj yuysujiaiis saia no. iney . ... .. .. ,. , VKV.MUWUUV: WUJC 0 , , ivr. .7 . -; ;.,.--v.-v--iw new Detter. But the case progressed Bosms. pril 26. Kainona Bor- andNwhen Dr. Friedmann came here 'rf ,daus,ht.f ot r K.'S"?; ruuOMire milk dealer, Gail Borden, ed The German savant said no. He ts is L?r father's care tonight af- stated that he did not guarantee a :v her sensational rfespreaJ search of thr?e days . i esc iu'i auu i Pk: auu uraysou appealed to Airs. nder yonc? girl was said to be on UnIted states. He told her the story, ie verae of a nervous breakdown He asked her whether she would go 'Lea she was i'score! by de'ec- and see this child. She did. She has sves in a r.ack By residence in " been there several times since. To ecsirany -srith Violet an?. Gladys Snrl- day. with the president on a brief Ku uiece cf Mrs. V.'illi&m H. White, "vacation, Mrs. Wilson took the great "a vbor... it is believnd, she ha l run x-hite house automobile and went iTsy irom the La!;?, v. j "orcen tunaun 'o tnnirht toat fiere t.ouI.1 be .10 lejal proceedings "i tliat he v.ish.i he incident to ! considered closed. Mrs. Whits and ter n:f--Ps co.ild not be found 2nd as belhved thev hail lpft Jhfl cilr. The was tc ill to be taker. 3m the c;ty au-.l will remain here ycf A-3S reported to hnve t'jTp'l h?r fac'.u.-; vrarmly and oxuuts- i rii as -Ji.v npnitPr o.r lha 0a tne raa-ilv !.. hr- fl,.r,- fr.ni no . , . .. , sitari-.-. - . --r- "v- upeiousas, i-.a., April zt. ine mys- T w ti nr ri cji in uii i ii i. hi x i is fii mm in iiiii in this citv cr. 'y Qf r-i,imhio nca hv Rnhrt n tviiti. tho sanitarium at Iomlon 0ver to the house where the baby is ., Iat Weinesday ater- ilL She took with, her a big bunch 61 Mor. ' w lnT tntL-r la 'ne 'ae cf c-or;e friends in the Back DUNBAR TANGLE NOW BELIEVED Tn PF snm IU Ut UULILU o V;;Vr..' ,JtI l-.DU J bar. wealthy planter trl tr tV .V , u nauir-! 0.tDf he and Mrs. Dunbar r,v.; . . 4 "- ' who was kidnapped - r - "- Aii met ui in? noiei d h ? l:;f 'vhen thev tr:efl to when tele g,rl Mi h,d give.! :hem the br H t ZnfZ I!; 'V! ,,IC-, lad was n here 'and which claim as their son, eight months ago, finally rlparpd late this afternoon they tried to w1Jrl tpiporam frnm oBardman. S. C. Julia Anderson, who had claimed the boy, stated the lad was not hers Bo-den -v- ' , , The boy taken from J. P. Walters is hrB ?n-aVp0!a? 4tofferini not mine," she wired. "He had none ani" - t? ,'r her- rftu,rn nd of the scars mentioned in the descrlp-i-r"n" "r-15""1 acUl?n tion sent here. I guess Walters dis aw,v - iln i?' wh("" tlJe posed of my boy, sold it, or gave it W lnh.e suddenly Jway illrrn,..; . r . Mr. Dunbar immediately maae nis rrocu.on wou'd be dropped ; wI1 ,n which he named the littie fel- j low, whom the parents, relatives and the whole town say is Robert, Jr., as 1 TT. Strike Ltadtrx A . 'equal heir to tne estate, ine otner Arrester at Patterson half aside from the mother's portion I is to go to Alonzo, 6-year-old brother 'rf th.o Rtnin and recently recovered Mlif. "I"" io. neereu I ti- - OI lr,clr followers, three . ltlw- " . - , . t- ;. -avrr f )T 'Dp prpq t Kil y ! iic o 1110 ivoi uvi " 3-i - arrsiOfi hpro tnnnv ' .uv u... - M iy.-c . -"-n iiere louay ,!QnH r Uav 'Lir- ' under indictments UIUU& ? inntlns ta riot and 'pSach! treated him since he was two days V Tn, . I TT-V 11 V, iTna ft Tvaca thp fire I iicii an iiiio v"iu i- bells of this little town were rung and the copulation assembled at the Dun- rs union. h,H . .71 yj- bar home. Only one person was ab- lad rVi-iVv. twtbiea ana sent and that was the man ringing the Den. It is believed he will be charged with the kidnapping of six different boys. Mrs. E. G. Flair, of New Or leans, is among his accusers. She says It 4 zabeth Curky Flynn, ' na Tatrick Quinlan. e local leader of tbe ?"U:;i, n it VuItIUS to oc served ir, va looil, the I. W. W. -ers taf-i ".u ",a1 been commuting ri , 5" f rotn x York. Hay- Df3 tht he would rn tVhT,l" he tok !?er son and kept him a pris W 10 make a iLf.K S eneC" oner on a flat boat three months. '-l r, ,v . , . " a speech tnmnrrnw . . : . . . - i iv, ,wcod ::rrl ... esl . generate but abuses the lads by "whlp- Sn:!e counsel fh ii? !o them with a strap. lst violent Djel the strikers t i hate brats." was his frank ad- n and .--c oa baU h... !f . a . were , re" ' Governor Brewer, of Missis&ippl, will 'acuph ban .; T 5I3Je not grnt extradition writs until tne frv Ue manrl tll.Monday to excitement at Opelousas blows over, a. who was hrt5 Tn8e 01 as Wa"erB is certain to be lynched if aeia in $7,000. brought here, . ' mission in jail at Columbia. o Vote; No Taxes," - x 7 Jis iuiuiciniess s uen. - yf-v v -' . " " ' ! J' pj'- :vf , I, t-x4-'?'l!;;v.'' MipiW. ' - . '(Duchess Adetine .of Bedford.)-. m." , . London, April 26. "No taxation, without representation,'' 'is the ultimatum issued by 'Duchess Adeline of Bedford, one "of "the" most prominent society women in England and an ardent suffragette, to the ' British ' government. The Duchess declares- she will not pay- a shilling of i taxes , to the : British Empire on hervast estate to the British Empire until she has. been given the right to vote. t. .. ' ; -;-; . r if SUFFRAGE flood t i d e: of victor y" V-- y.V, Washington,- .April , 26. Viewing with something akin to exultation the fact -that the greatest ' national equal suffrage leaders today for the "first time pleaded their cause . before a friendly committee of the senate,-Mrs. Robert M. LaFollette, of Visc6nsip, tonight, declared ' that Ve cause is nearing the flood tide of victory." ,-' "The eyent" of today signalized the presence in the United States senate of eighteen :metbers.' from states where women exercise .the right .to suffrage. It marks the - turning point, hvond which a .powerful sroD Jn the upper branch of congress is constantly exerting its influence toward 'the gen eral enfranchisement of American wo men. The fight is on" in 'congress un til we shall have won. "Thf women who addressed the committee today 'Ifeel ." that - their cause could not have received. more rt'p-nUv and consideration. -For once a majority committee, 7by its very qr- ganization, proving the present import ance of the Issue, Leara ana agrtea with our speakers. We are confi dent of the future." . ' Th Rev. Anna Howard Show . pres- idpnt of the National - American Wo-' man Suffrage Association; .. Mrs. Wil liam Kent, wife of tne caiirorma rep resentative; Mrs. KoDertJM.x.ai'oi lottA wife of the Wisconsin- sena tor; Mrs. Helen .Varrick Boswel!, Mrs. Helen Gardener,-Senator snaircn oi PninraHn. Renresfentative .-Bryan. tf Washington, and Gilford Pinchot, were among the speakers at today s hear- intr a written areumeai was suuimi- ted by Mrs. ..Rosamond . Sutherland, wife of the senator from Utah.- The closing: address by Dr.. Shaw, in which she discussed the educa tional qualifications of men and wo-v men, and in which she pointe 1 out the antagonism to ' equal suffrage -n:au tained by "all groups and forces un dermining and corrupting the charac ter of our young people," fairly -swept the committee and audience-of-suifra-. gists into enthusiasm. j Pope Is Safely : . ! Convalescent Rome, April 26. Pope Pius X. to-. nigLi was considered safely conva'es-. cent and Professor Marchifava, on bis 1a!i visit , for the day, promised, the pontiff that if nothing unforeseen c currea he might sit up longer tomor row than on any day since '-.his last relapse. r B it the holy father was disappointed nevertheless. He-: wanted to receive American pilgrims and other constan tl&e year visitors-- in audience tomor row and this his physicians positively, farbade. They told the Pope; that if ' he refused to take an absolute rest he mighf never hold-another audience. , - ADgelo Sarto .the aged, brother, of the Pope, departed this 'morning for Mantura, nea Venice,, where he is a rural mail carrier-. . -. - - - ;" I Cahgressmn Ndriow Escape Washington, . April 26. Members of the ' senate and - house- naval commit tees, back Irom a visit to r.he target grounds of the Atlantic fleet, in lower Chesapeake Bay, were congratulating thtrriseives tonight on a narrow escape- from being blown to smitherens by the monitor Tallahassea while Dolphin. The big cost defence ship at : a ' vessel - near the Dolphin, mistaking her for the ram Kat ahdin, the .target. "It was an excusable mistake," said Representative Witherspoon, of Mississippi,- . one of the - naval ; - commit tee members. "It was made - by gunners confusing a "white -spot on the smoke stack of the Hercules, which . stood di rectly" in ' front of the Dolphin, for a vvbite. spot-oh the: target. : .' "The. mis&ile . sounded: like, an ox plosion : wben it . whizzed - over the Dolphin. If evidently went between soivio rcpes and our smokestack and sunk-in the;. water -'.-.only, fifty yards away.- -Windows on the Hercules were smashed, by the air-concussion and an officer on the Dolphin ; felt tho hot air caused by the vacuum of the shell's passage."- - ' r ': - . : The navy department has wired for an'offlcial ; report on the matter. KILBArtE AND DUNDEE TRAINING. . Los Angeles," Cal., April 26 Al though they" are-both down to weight, 123 pounds, featherweight champion Johnny 'Kilbane and the contender, Johnny. Dundee, -kept on working to day and will -"continue until - Monday evening, 24 hours before their 20 round battle ati Vernon. , G Measwe auntlet Debate 1 1 ie co. TO HAVE MAG BIFICFJT STOBE The lease signed yesterday after noon at 2 o'clck by the J. B. Ivey Co., for the handsome new building to be erected by Mr. D. P. Hutchison on North Tryon immediately north of the Realty Building is the most important event in the mercantile life of the city that has transpired' in years. It al most marks an epoch in the business center of the city, as it means not only the addition of a large and elegant new building on the Square, but en larged mercantile business, the build ing which Mr. Hutchison will erect . j.' j. . w ij vx. lu, , . -1 . ... . - enlarge their business and carry it on ten feet away, a government officer on a most extensive scale. The lease t was waif inc. with a warrant fnr tho I? It uns Qf 0 m m en ouse Yeggman Paroled by Blease Takes "French Leave" Columbia, S. C, April. 26. James Johnson, a notorious yeggman known as "Portland Ned" who was serving a ten year sentence in the state peni tentiary for cracking the safe of a manufacturing company in Spartan burg in 1902 and stealing $10,000 in stamps was yesterday paroled by Gov ernor Blease, and today calmly walked out of the govrenor's office and escaped it covers a preiod of ten years. Since Mr. Hutchison first announced his in tention of replacing the small build ings on his lot between the Realty building and Kress the latter building also owned by Mr. Hutchison a number have desired to rent it, several from a distance having desired to rent it, but the Ivey Co., were fortunate enough to secure the prize, and the building to be erected will be built to yeggman'3 arrest for robbing a post omce at Plymouth, N. C, June 18, 189S. . . . The governor and another person who were in the room with the yegg man wen into another room for a mo ment and while they were gone "Port land Ned" opened a door leading into the corridor of the state house and got away He served seven years in the Feder- be drawn by Mr. Louis Asbury. noSSi,"!0 Initlanta for robbms the will be architect in charge of the entire construction. The plans call for a building three stories and basement, the latter to be up-to-date in every re spect. The building will be 56 feet wide and 160 feet, and it is to be com pleted by August 1914, Mr. Hutchison will spare no expense to . make the building one of the handsomest in this section. The fronj will be very ornate, and will have one of the new receding fronts with court allowing space for ten show windows. It will be the only building south of Richmond with this style of front, and there being only one in Richmond. Mr. David Ovens, of the Ivey firm, and Mr. Louis As bury the architect recently tpok a trip North to look at the large store build ings and get points for the new Hutch ison building that is to be the J. B. Ivey, Co.'s home. . They decided on the receding court, WHITE SLAVE PROBE UNEARTHS 1 MILLIONAIRE Los Angeles Calif., April 26. Chief of police Sebastian, notified the assistant district" attorney handling the grand jury investigation of the alleged millionaire white slave ring today that when the grand jury meets aerain Monday other prominent men beautiful designs of which are to be than GeQrge H;Bixby wm be summon ed, as witnesses. Bixby, a millionaire banker of Long Beach, -who is wanted in connection with" allegations of certain young wo men, Is still in hiding ,but his attor- seen in New York. Several features for the interior were decided on by Mr, Ivey-while- in Los Angeles, he see ing' there several new and very elegant stores recently erected, the stores of the great metropolises of the West be it any 4hing - more. - erat&-thaa those of the , East. v ; . ; The - interior plans are in charge of Friends Defend And Fots As sail Hew Measure In 7 he . Most Extended Debate lt Has Thus Far Evoked. No Tariff Baron Dictated What Should Go on in This BilV Emphatically Declares Representative Befiin. Washington, April 26. Heavy ar tillery of the democrats, republicans and progressives, was trained on the Wilson-Underwood tariff in assault and defense in the most extended open debate the, measure has been given since its consideration was begun last Wednesday. The discussion will be chopped off short Monday, when "gen eral debate" closes and the bill is ta ken up paragraph by paragraph. .The debate continued until a Jate hour to night. ; . !. That the government's taxing pow-' er has been freely bartered by the repuDiicans to the "special interestb" of the protective tariff was charged by Representative Collier, Mississippi democrat, a member of the ways and means eommittee. "This open barter has stifled Indus-, try," said Collier. "We promise to di-1 vorce the partnership of the govern-) ment on one hand and a few tarlJf swollen favorites on. the other. 'The beneficiaries of this protective tariff system were indignant before use in the committee room. They, were accompanied by skilled lobby-1;, ists. But the consumer upon whom, the burden of these taxes fall was1 not-there; he was not represented ex- " cept by the democrats of the commit-1' tee in their handling of this bill. AUr the friends of protection were there;); those who use to write in the tariff! law the provisions to suit themselves.!; "A tax on wool does not compen-i sate the farmer for the millions of: ?jej.gnng-ftoin his Imttfla.hY. high; Monday - if he will not be arrested on the bench warrant, that was issued for (Several architects working; under the; him.-- The lawyer insists that Bixby, in Did You Forget That -Wedding Gift? Those friends- of yours are to be inarried . next" week and you forgot, to send a present! . It .' was not ' exactly, a' Case of forgetting, perhaps--it was rath- - er a matter of procrastination putting off until tomorrow what was' too r much trouble to do to day. ":Fpr it is a problem I to piqk out a wedding, gift; it's diffi cult to make a selection. v . ; Have ; you "read the -advertisements in THE NEWS ? If you have, not, : read "them . now and it's 10 to 1 "you'll'find an appro priate suggestion for that pres ent something; useful or some thing ornamental. - THE NEWS V advertising col umns are' full of . reliable advice on-'every pursjisising problem. direction of Mr. Asbury. Among the many, fine features will be a rest room and library for the women clerks, a ladies' parlor on the mozzanine floor, stairway leading thereto. There will also be a dining room where lunch will.be served at cost to the clerks; sanitary drinking fountains and every feature of a big city department store of the most up-to-date plans. The building will allow 35,840 square feet of floor space 8,960 on each floor making the largest retail : selling floor space in the state or sev eral states.. ' The Ivey" Co., consists of Mr. J. B. Ivey, Mr. David Ovens and Mrs. Mur ray Long. The firm has but recently increased its capital stock. Raleiyh Party Neatly Complete Seven new signatures were added to the list of the forty-two citi zens who have signified their inten tion of going to Raleigh on Monday to be there for the freight rate confer ence between the freight rate commis sion and the railroads, and the ship pers to be held on Tuesday. This leaves only three more vacant Pullman reservations to make up the desired number of fifty-two. . "" Following are the names of latest signers to the agreement to take reser vations: B. J. Guthrie, George Wads worth, J. R. Pegram, Carolina Manu facturing Co., T. M. Barnhardt, Ira Turner, W. J. Chambers. The cars that have been secured by Secretary Caraway of the Greater Charlotte (Jlub, under whose auspices the Charlotte party will be conducted, will0 leave Charlotte by way of the Southern, on Monday night at ten o'clock. There will be no changes nec essary, the car will be carried straight through to Raleigh, and will Jeave that nlaee on Tuesday night. This will en- . tail an absence from the city of only one day. This is a feature tnat nas commended the trip to the business men of the city. The trip will be man aged precisely as the Trenton trip whir.h was taken some . time" ago by ' representatives of the club. On that Urip all the finances were turned over I to one man who made all the arrange- ments and secured all the reservations t collectively, thus saving considerably I in expenses and lnestimaoiy in conven- In the meanwhile a petition, address ed to Governor Craig has been circulat ed asking that a special session of the legislature be called to render some relief in the matter, of freight rate dis criminations if the railroads do not ' see fit to take the matter up and act i.ln aCCOruauue wim juufeiiicni. ui i the governor and the freight rate com mission. The petition further pledges the' support of the signer to tne gov ernor in any action he may take. t It has been circulated very gener ally through the city, several copies being placed at those points in the city about which there is the most passing of the business men. One copy was passed around by Assistant Sec retary Barr at tbe : meeting , of the Greater Charlotte Club last night, and practically all the members who have not heretofore signed it attached their signatures to the petition last night. A - common with others has been the vie tim for some time of a blackmail ring of young girls. . v BRYAfsW TO CALIFORNIA DIPLOMATS' MADE SanrnmPTito. Calif.., ADril 26. That the visit of Secretary of State Bry an, who arrives here Monday,, is . mam ly a diplomatic move to assure Japan that her interests will be looked after carefully, is the general beliei nere tnnis-ht. Although it is concluded that the nremier ct th federal cabi net will undoubtedly effect changes in the character of the pending anti o 1 ion nwtlintr iiiii. none doubt that the primary effect of his trip will he- linn tho feelis in Japan. t Do-ioiotnra , tnni2ht. discussed the l,,j.fcj.n.w- - v ----- . secretary's vitit at length. Assemblyman' Stanley Beredicti, progressive leader of the Los Angeles delegation said: "Of course Bryan's , coming i3 not only to show Tokio that her interests are being carefully watched by the Federal government, but that Presi dent Wilson, has in this connection, broken all precedents : in sending .the secretary of state to confer with a state legislature." "Bryan's visit will result in con fusion, predicted assemblyman George B. Finngari. "I anticipate that ad lournnient will he -rushed and that there is a growing plan ''in certain quarters to blame Bryan's visit for muddling legislative acticn generally, and.. to ascribe to this turn of affairs failure of certain big bills to pass. I am convinced that the Panama-Pacific Exposition -directors are respon sible for nine tenths of the agitation to curb aiiti-alien legislation; I know the fair people have been flooding Washington with telegrams of protest.".- Assemblymen L. B. Leary (demo crats is confident that Bryan's com ing is "not an effort of the president to muzzle California." He said: "It will have the effect, I believe, of toning down the more -rabid senti- vr-Tt onri rmrtina' dlSCUSSion Oil a calm level of reason. I have detected no disposition to 'crawfish on tins legislation. ' ' ' "If vhe president intended , en tirely' to . defeat anti-alien legislation' declared .aeeemblyman Hugh Bradford of Sacramento, "he would have used 'Big Stick ' methods, instead of send ing Bryan" here. - Representative Berinett, perhaps the Tmost influential administration leader . in the lower house, scoffed at the idea that Bryan's visit will materially change anti-alien plans. "There is not the slightest disposi tion to back down," he said today. wP will deal courteously, with Secretary of State Bryan, but legisla- tion will not De maxeriaiiy i-uaus Bryan, according to present plans, will arrive here early Mondav morn ing. as serted. - He nentArprt hlo - w uh V WLJIV KA.JJ1. the wool schedule of the Tayne-Ald-; rich act." " ' ' ' , "Removal of. the tax on raw wool in this bill," he said, "will enable finer; foreign wool to come in, give a selec-! tion. to the manufacturer for the, in-, creased output- of clothing, with cheaper clothes . for the country, ' and give more employment to labor. . - "We're not here to destroy the sheep industry. And we're not here to build it . up. What peculiar right has the sheep 'baron' to a tax upon, the people? Compared with produc-, tion of other great agricultural pro-j ducts wool growing is one of the least! important in the country." ' ; "No tariff baron dictated what should go in thfe bill," Representative Heflin, democrat, of Alabama, de-' clared. . "The, small remnants of . progres sives have denounced the democratic secret tariff caucus. They held theirs, open. Why not? They have nothing left to caucus about. The republicans have nothing to discuss except to! plead guilty to deceiving the people. "The people will judge what we do and not what we say when we' set out to do it." Heflin said the progressives and re publicans moved alike "when they heard the pop of the whip of the tar iff baron." "Here they sit in this house," ne said, ' hand in hand together, obey ing the will of the tariff lurons, one recommending tariff revision by a 'bord' and the other by a 'commis sion.' That's a wide gulf between them. No tariff board will ever have the right in this country to levy tax es on the people, usurping the func tions - of congress." McReynolds Is Opposed To Undue Dela$ Washington, April 26. Attorney General McReynolds today told the su preme court that an extension of time to July 1st for dissolving the Union Pacific-Southern Pacific merger ea:ht be greatly to the public intere If, but he "emphatically" opposed an exten sion beyond that date, or the granting of discretionary .power to tjie lower courts to extend the time. ' . ' - The attorney general's position was stated in a brief in reply to the request of the Union Pacific attorneys for modification of the mandate, so as to authorize the lower court to extend the time for submission of a plan of dissolution." "This case has been, before courts- for more than five years and the public is entitled to early relief in harmony with the provision of the statute which declares that such cases shall be given precedent oyer others and in every. way expedited," the brief states. THE WEATHER. -J'- -V M. -M. . J9. M .V 5- 1 ri$ it" 'tS- 'A vr SfT ST W T W '? "SC ' r ' . v.v-' , ' ' ' Forecast for North Carolina. - l ' . .. . - -4 Washington, April 26. Fore- a .cast for Sunday and Monday: -4 North and South Carolina, cloudy and cooler Sunday, Mon- day fair. : ; -.. ' . ..' . .