lUJMjLii ores of Deaths Reported As eS ult Os Tornadoes In West; •roperty Damageto Run High (ill! HIT Persons Reported jin Garland, Texas, i \ianv Deaths Re ■d'in Other Towns. H'RI ALSO |;|T TORNADOES ported Killed at El- One Is Known Dead .Louis and Five Re-j j Killed Elsewhere. t hf Associated I’ress)) lij TV [icrs'i! - were killed. t inn' injured. .•Did property I ii( ] sjinitmm it i by torna- b V t , winds tlnit la-hod thej , u ,-r ~vi*r t !i«* week j.,jj ;j„u were rxpeered to ’ ementarlly ;t> midit i«m:i 1 re rorViwl. j bit. with _•>' urrreil ;:t Garlau 1 and Ne- 1 within •>•"* niid"- of 1 'alias. v in Mirrouri the tornado I d 14 dead. j ! ~x ri:e tornado swept jrs Sa:nrd;i\ nicht. ten were tod. In lowa a woman ' to wliiii her motor car was a dm-iii- a heavy rain ( .May '.l.- OP) Sev were retnirteil killed and j inure injured by a tornado '; ,i part of the residence eec- | s town of about 2.000 per- j today. Two hours after ! four 1 mdies .had been re- ; j d fourteen injured had been ] Manet* to Dallas. L nrified dead were : Monroe i i ami Mrs. ('. *L Smiley and )< uu,,. ' ( 11 orkers said several other i; w missing Most of the ; re trap!>ed in their beds as r struck her ween .'! and 4; ' > iiicndng. Among the two ! ’ seriously injured, were I, hiidren of the Smileys. ij showers and hit'll winds fol-! ] twister, i bily a small port; ic residential district was : few >inall lions** were lift fur a block or more, and : a dozen were demolished. ! led Dead at Eldon. Texas. ( i City. Mo.. May o.— (A 3 )— ] , kin. of Kidoti. which was j ( a tornado last night, ar- j ! today and said at least six >- were killed by tlie storm, j ’ y the twister struck the ! 1 w of the town and demol- M Fthing in its path. He said most of the night" in first ' ( and helped carry at least rsotts from demolished build- iss Advised of Casualties. nis May !).—(/?) —Eleven t ere killed ;t t Garland, in < mt.v. Texas, and sixteen at 11 olliiis contity. Texas, by I to telegrams re- ' ued Cross mid-western bead- 1 ere ti-Hin chapter represe.n- [ chairman of the Col- ‘ eliapt*-r. telegraphed that ! 'tnty persons were injured '• three-fourths of the resi isine-tejitlis of the busi- IB " S destroyed, and ainatte was estimated at be wKHi and smio.Ooo. Killed at Nevada. Texas. May if.—Seven per- ' 1 f, l at X« va'jUt twenty miles west Dwitlis Reported. « M "- Ma V H.—t/p)—Fi V o ) reported j ( , | I;IVP been ! ®'"Huber seriously injured | M 'dgbi :tt Auxvasse, j ‘‘"land Kerrington. towns ' Unfits Phillips j J Ol : 1 his (laughter. Della. **4 mjtired. Miss (May al-I 7' np d killed. / u “7'. 70. former I Al.oway comity, was j K “ r r«igtoii. i i anah > '. ilrs ' ! 1 ' E P, 'SS S \t r j,? son ’ Thomas, was hand* ,IS! ; s l*ed injury. ,!, e U.iggs plttce iJ L A ' luld named »«* ,-m * s’ a l % tod-,, U v Ud! struck St. daw j ' l|!ll( ‘ m "s threes i " i,l " t Awindow glass THE CONCORD TIMES J. B. SHERRILL, Editor and Publisher Flood Waters, Affected By High Winds, Cause More Damage New Orleans, May o.— ( winds which sent waves knawing at the earthen embankments proteeting south central Louisiana from the Miss issijrpi, today increased the hazard against which an afmy of men was fighting along a far ttnng levee front. Hundreds of men guarded the em- I bankments. and the slightest indica tion of weakness brought reinforce | incuts on the double quick to carry j sandbags into position and rear pro tecting abutments. A sand boil de veloped on the levy on the east side if Huron Rouge, but quick work avert d danger of a break, M him Die high winds increased the per 1 along the main Mississippi front SEEK TO BREAK WILL OF JUDGE GEO. 11. BROWN Suit Involving Estate of Half Million Starts at Washington Today. Washington, X. May 9.—State wide interest is being manifested in the effort of relatives of the late Judge George H. lirown. for many years one of the outstanding members of the legal profession in North t’aro lonia. to set aside the will which the judge made about two months before his death, on March 16, 1926, and in which he left his entire estate, valued at approximately half a million dollars, to his wife, Mrs. 17aura E. Brown. The case comes up at the May term of-Superior court, which convenes here on Monday, Judge Frank A. Daniels, presiding. Judge Brown for 14 years was a judge on the Superior court bench and -at the end of that time was elevated to the North Carolina Supreme court. He was an active mefnber of that judiciary body for more than 15 years, at which time he retired. When Mrs. Brown, ai* exeutrix, of fered the will for probate, a caveat was tiled by relatives of the judge. Among these were two sisters and several nieces and nephews, Mrs. Minnie E. Shepherd, of Raleigh ; Mrs. Martha B. Crabtree, of Goldsboro; A. I>. Mac- Lean, of .Maxton; Rev. Sylvester B. Mac Lean, of Charlotte; J. Dixon Mae- I/ean, of Red Springs; Rev. John Allen Maclean, of Richmond. Ya.; Arthur Mayo, of Washington; Thomas and Sylvester Sparrow, of Gastonia ; Evans and George Sparrow, of Char lotte; Minnie S. Keyes, of New York; Robert D. Groom, Jr., of Maxton. and Mattie Brown Baldwin, of Maxton. Davidson is After Eight Months S shoo!. Lexington, May 7.—Two confer ences between the board of education and citizens of Thomasville. Abbotts (’reek and Midway township have, failed to definitely solve the proposed school consolidation that would pro vide eight months' school for all the pupils »ii»t?» now in consolidated areas on the northern side of the Southern Railway, which divides Davidson county almost in half. However, de finite proposals have been made and Dr. J. H. HLghsmith. State high school inspector, will come here May 11 and take a tour over the territory with Superintendent Hasty and members of the county board of edu cation. Three present consolidations and four districts not now ill consolidat ed area, one of them the largest six months’ school remaining in the county, are concerned in the matter. Midway. Wallburg and Fair Grove consolidated districts all desire por- tions of the territory. THE STOCK MARKET Reported by Fenner & Beane (Quotations-at 1:30 P. M.) American Tobacco B 131% ; American Smelting 150% ' American Locomotive 111 l Atlantic Coast Line 182% Allied Chemical 139 I, American Tel. & Tel. RkD/k American Can 49 Allis Chalmers 109 Baldwin Locomotive 189 » Baltimore & Ohio 123% Bangor -*3 j Bethlehem Steel ->l% Chesapeake & Ohio 176% Coca-Cola I DuPont 24:>% Dodge Bros. 21% Erie i,; J% , Frisco 115% j General Motors 196% j General Electric 98%, i Great Northern 89% Gulf State teel* 53 Gold Dust 53 Hudson 3-2 Int. Tel. 135% Kennecott Copper 64% j Liggett & Myers B 102% Maek Truck H 5% Missouri-Pacific 54% j Norfolk & Western 181% | New Y'ork Central 150% 1 ! Pan American Pet B r - 58% ! 1 Rock Island lOl% [R. J. Reynolds 122% Stand. Oil of N. J. 37 • Southern Railway 126% I Studebaker 54% I Texas Co. 46% Tobacco Products - 1 100% U. S. Steel 169 I ■ i U. S. Steel, New 121%J Vick Chemical 57% ; Westinghouee I— 73 Western Md. 37% | Chrysler 44% danger of a break was not believed Imminent. Above Raton Rouge, along the Bayou Glaisses, where the levees are encountering the crest of the in land lakes pushing down from the breaks in the embankments along the Mississippi.and ,ns:is. a hreai was declared inevitable. The crest of the flood had been lost by observing experts. Apparently, they s-a'.d, it was somewhere in the surging sea which covers northeast Louisiana. The river at Baton Rouge remains stationary, although a rise of .1 foot was shown at Donaldsonville between Baton Rouge and New Or leans. SEES SMITH AS BOON TO SOUTH i Paul Green Says Election of New York Governor Would Liberate “Solid South.” i j New Ycfrk. May o—.“ One of the ■ best things that could hap]>en to the South would be the nomination of Al i Smith. Paul Green , 52-year-old auth or of the Pulitzer prize-winning play, “In Abraham's Bosom,” said “I be- j lieve Smith's nomination, with the end- j less arguments and difference that i would follow, would 'break up once for all old loyalties of the ‘solid south' —political, religious and social—and set the vigorous new south free to come into its own.” Mr. Green spent part of liis Pulitzer prize money last Friday to come from the University of North Carolina, where he is assistant professor of philosophy, and see his play, “The Field God, 4 ' which has been running three weeks at the Provincetown play house and moves up town to the Port theater Monday. He will return to his classes at Chapel Hill Monday. The young playwright who started life as a North Carolina farm boy and taught school before he could go to college has abiding faith in his part of the United States. •“The old windjammers and windbags have had their day,” he said today, “the south’is changing and changing fast. The groups of independent think ing and reading southerners, who don't feel that their first duty is to he good deinooracts and Episcopalians, are growing bigger ever day. More books tire (being sold and read than ever be fore. In fact, the south is the great book market of the near future I be lieve. x “And as a source of art, the jsouth has got about everything, it seems to me. Once it wakes up, with its varied life and industries and its highly di versified population, it may well be come tin inexhaustible spring of literature and art.” Mr. Green has not the slightest wish to live in New York, he says, and intends to stick to the south for a j long time to come. He also intends jto stick to a job of some sort, no j matter what financial success may I come to him. 1 “If I ever give up teaching, I’ll j probably go to farming,” he said, i “People who do nothing but ‘practice j their art' all the time are apt to get I long-haired and queer.” Mrs. Green accompanied the play -1 wright on his flying visit. They have | two children, a boy and a girl. Mr. j Green was graduated from the UTii jversity of North Carolina in 1921, his ' education having been interrupted two j years by the war. Darnell’s Sentence Reduced. Raleigh, May 9. —The commutation was for Zeb V. Darnell, of Mecklen burg county, serving a term of four to five years for manslaughter,''and reducing it to a minimum of two years and a maximum of five years on the county roads. The commutation was strongly urged by Judge James L. Webb, the trial judge, nine of the jurore who tried, the case, the solicitor and many citizens in Mecklenburg county. In commenting in this case, the governor said: "Investigation shows that Darnell had not been a bad man prior to the time of this trouble* and except for the fact that he went on the witness stand and by reason of his honesty 1 and integrity in making a statement of the facts, it would have been dif ficult to have convicted him.” This commutation will leave only a few more months for Darnell to serve. Life Term For Trying to Pick a Pocket. Buffalo, 6- —For attempting to piek the pocket of a man on a street" car Charles Stauer, 50, of ! this city, was sentenced to life im prisonment by Supreme Court Jus tice Thomas H. Noonan today. Stau ber had a previous record of felony convictions which made the life term 1 mandatory. ! “For twenty-eight out of the fifty vears you have lived you have been in trouble.” Justice Noonan told - Stauber. “You’ve been in various prisons. You’ve been in hospitals for drug cures. You’re sentenced to Auburn prison for the rest of your natural life.” | A village of 152 inhabitants hither ’ to unknown has been discovered in the mountains of northern Japan by 1 census takers. The inhabitants do not speak modern Japanese. CONCORD, N. C., MONDAY, MAY 9, 1927 Enormity of Health and Sanitation Problem in Mississippi Flood Areas . Tribune Bureau Sir Walter Hotel. Raleigh. Mny9.—The enormity of tlie health and sanitation problem in the flood-torn areas in Arkansas, Missis sippi and liouisiana. and the size of the rehabilitation problem after \the j waters have receded, is graphically - i given in a letter to the State Board jof Health from W. H. AYeir, Assist- ( I ant Sanitary Engineer of the Board, | land one of the seven men loaned the ! ;Flood Relief Organization by the,State i '(Board of Health. Weir is stationed i ; in, northeastern Arkansas, Dr. H. A. ( j | Taylor has been assigned to duty in gtthe levee district in the southeastern s | part of Arkansas, while Dr. J. S. Car . Jlcy has been sent to the western part ( jof Arkansas. * Word being received indicates that the Arkansas State Health Depart ment is sorely in need of additional help of all kinds —physicians, sanitary engineers and sanitary inspectors be ’ ing the most immediate need. Condi p tions are daily growing more and more t acute, the situation in Arkansas Dinore serious from a health and sam f i tary viewpoint, than in the other two > states. ! Conferences are being held between Arkansas State Irlealt officer and the Governor looking toward the adoption I of a plan to, divide the state up into J districts, according to hetjlth problems j and administrative officers and sani- | tary engineers assigned to these areas, |i Weir advises, and a better system than j 1 now. being used is expected to beji evolved. “The local state sanitary enginer-l' ing organization is, as far as 1 can j ascertain, only one man, and there are f little or no county health organizations [ in the affected areas,” Weir continues - jin his letter. “The problem is larg* j from both an engineering and medical < | standpoint. Immunization of thous-j > ands of refugees both in concentration j< camps and in villages or small groups, . i together with the mass of rural popu- j 1 lation, offers the big medical problem, j t “Sanitary engineering problems take jl almost endless forms. Refugee camp ' ( sanitation, water supplies and sewer- J 1 CALL IN OUTSTANDING SECOND LIBERTY LOAN 1 Treasury Will Use Every- Device to j Notify Holders of $1,700,000,000 of i Call. I Washington, May I)—Using one of, the greatest publicity machines ever: adopted by a government agency, the treasury will call the $1,700,000,000 outstanding of the second liberty loan. 1. These bonds, representing the -bnlone*f] of issue of $3,807,865,000, j will.be paid on November 15th, the j tenth anniversary of their issuance. j ( and will not hear interest after that ' date. Notice of the call will be advertised s in every American language daily, j' weekly and semi-weekly newspaper, 1 and placards will be placed in every | post office and all banks and trust i companies. Radio will be' used by the treasury : department for the first time Tuesday j when Assistant Secretary Dewey will j broadcast announcement of the call through a hook-up of station as far west as Kansas City. A similar broadcast will be made from San < Francisco. ! Secretary Mellon explained that in 1 view of the intensive drive during the < war to get the bonds into as many ( hands as possible, the treasury feels 1 under obligation to inform every bond holder that his bond will cease to bear interest after the November date. j The call does not mean that the ( bonds will be paid at the present. Roth the second liberty loan 4 per , cent and the second liberties convert- , ed 4 1-4 per cent are called and it was regarded by Mr. Mellon as "quite probable” that prior to November 15th, the treasury will offer an op portunity to exhange the bonds for other government securities. If cash is desired the holder should present the bonds after October 15th. Tlie im portance of spreading word of the call over the entire nation was emphasized at the treasury, where it was pointed out that there still are in the hands of their holders approximately $30,- 000,000 in government securities on which the interest has ceased. Os the original issue of the second liberty loan, bonds aggregating $750,- 361.000 have been redeemed and SL -300,166,150 were refunded this year into 3 1-2 per cent treasury notes. A total of 34,739,175 bonds were deliv ered to owners. These bonds would weigh 222 tons, a statistically-minded treasury official calculated, and “if spread out would cover almost exactly one square mile of the earth's surface.” There are now outstanding 3.624,416 bonds. Since they were issued, interest ac crued and payable to May 15th will he $1,327,006,885 representing issue- and payment of over 7,750,000 interest ohecks and redemption of more than 130,000,000 interest coupons. Peach Crop Cut Short. (By International News Service) Raleigh, May 9.—Chances of North Carolina producing a bumper peach ’ crop this summer were blasted in the ( latest l'eport from the State-Federal crop reporting service. r • Estimates place the 1927 produc , tion at approximately 2,500 carloads. I These estimates were made from re -4 ports by 100 peach growers of the • sandhill region and also a personal > survey of the field. :* Unfavorable weather is the cause of the decrease in this year’s yield, it was stated. 1 Ultra-Violet light is now employed r with marked benefit to keep monkeys, c> reptiles and other zoo animals in good health. t age systems for many inundated towns and villages, and their rehabilitation ; disposal of animal carcasses by the thousands as the water recedes, pro tection of the people from sewerage vegetables now going to market; in spection of milk supplies and an al most indefinite list of other engineer ing and health administration prob (lems, | “All of this work must be bgun at once while the areas are covered (With from three to 5(1 feet of writer,” jWeir continued. “On our trip today from Memphis to Little Rock, our train often travelled over tracks that were covered with flood waters. Areas in the southern section of the state tArkansas) are under much deeper water and we must make our first trips to sec these in hydroplanes. Biologies (Typhoid and other serums) are dropped from planes and distribut ed by boats. “The first efforts along public health lines are necessarily emergency relief measures to prevent outbreaks of ! disease with the receding waters. Permanent measures will have to be a part of the gneral rehabilitation [program which will require a long period of time, and many millions of contributed dollars. Dr. McMullen, director of Hood relief work for the Red Cross at Memphis together with the Arkansas Health Officers, have both commended North Carolina for being first state to offer the resources of its Board of Health, both supplies and personnel, as well as the work which the seven men already sent are doing. Dr. McMullen has notified the Board here that if conditions keep on getting more serious, he will probably have to ask for still more men from i North Carolina. Dr. Laughinghouse, State Health j Officer, has already announced that he j will be glad to hear from any physi- j cians or others who are in position to ! volunteer their services for flood relief work, and that he will at once put them in touch with relief headquarters for assignment to duty. Tlie Red Cross will pay all transportation and living expenses. *- URGE P. & N. EXTENSION. ) Business Men Tell Commerce Com mission Line Has Done Great Ser vice. Washington, May 9. Business men along the Piedmont and North ern railway are urging the interstate commerce commission to grant the company permission to continue its lines north and south. Many letters .have been received saying the roai has done a great service to rue terri tory through which it passes. The Union Storage and Warehouse company has sent in a very enthu siastic endorsement of the interurban line, saying that it is largely re sponsible for the industrial develop ment of the section about Charlotte. Other concern tire equally as en thusiastic for the new extension pro gram. THE STOCK MARKET. Several Factors Contributed To Demonstration of Strength in Mar ket Today. New York, May 9.—04*) —Continued easy money, satisfactory trade news, favorable dividend expectations and heavy investment buying all contribut ed to a pronounced demonstration of strength in today’s stock market. Gratification in banking circles over action of Secretary Mellon in calling for redemption of outstanding Liberty 4 and 4 1-4 bonds, and prospects of further gold imports from France were oustanding influences in a more cheer ful seutiment. Closing was strong. Total sales approximated 2,000,000 shares. Assault With Pistol Over Trifling Matter. Charlotte. May 7.—Thomas. Tur ner, cotton mill employee, of Bel mont, is in a local hospital with bul let wounds in the neck and chest and George Hooker, filling station pro prietor, Its being held without bond pending the outcome of Turner s in juries as the result of a shooting al leged to have started over a gas bill. Hooker was charged with assault.' with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. Roy Hooker, brother of George and. a brother of the wounded man were arrested and released under bond. While arguing whether a gas bill had been paid, it was said, George Hooker shot Turner three times, the bullets taking effect in the back of his head and chest. Turner is expected to recover un less there are complications, hospital authorities announced. With Our Advertisers. You get the good Goodyear service free at the Yorke & Wadsworth Co. This will often mean dollars to you. Your choice of any coat in the Gray Shop for only sl4. Many are worth twice this price. Your choice of sport coats now only $7. These are excel lent values, and you had better buy them quick. See ad. Tennis rackets, balls, covers, nets, etc., at the Ritchie Hardware Co. They will restring your old racket. See ad. in this paper. Rogers brushing lacquer, paints and varnishes at the Yorke & Wadsworth Co. Fibre furniture in the most, allur ing colors now’ on display at the Bell & Harris Furniture Co. One big table of ladies’ patent strap and blonde kid shoes at Efird'e. On ly $1.95. Several other bargains just as good from $2.45 to $5.95. See ad. for description. Today and tomorrow at the Con cord Theatre. “The Unknown Sol dier,” for the benefit of the War Moth ers. , COUNSEL FOR GRAY : DENIES DEFENDANT i 1 EVER JIT SNYDER William Millard Tells Jury t Gray Was Lucky to Have Escaped Blows by Mrs. Ruth Snyder. • { [WOMAN’S LAWYER TO SPEAK LATER Lawyer for Gray Tells Ju rors They Should Find Him Guilty of Nothing But Manslaughter. - New York, May 9. — (A 3 ) —Summa- tion of the case of Henry Judd Gray was completed today and that of the case of Mrs. Ruth Snyder follows. William Millard, addressing the jury for Gray, asserted that Gray never struck Albert Snyder at all, and that only luck naved him from being felled by Mrs. Snyder. He asked for a manslaughter verdict. Mrs. Snyder was likened to a “pois onous serpent” who drew Gray into her glistening coils so that he could not escape, in the attorney's argu ments. Counsel for Gray also charged that Mrs. Snyder had planned to poison Gray on the same night her husband j was killed. Only Gray’s steady drink j ing of whiskey, the lawyer said, saved j him. Attorney Millard, for Gray, told the j jury that “Gray struck at Snyder but missed him.” *He added that “the blows that stunned Snyder were all delivered by a woman, Mrs. Ruth Snyder.” Mrs. Snyder’s attorneys pioved for a mistrial during Gray’s lawyer’s ar gument, but wae overruled. When he started his summation, he devoted most of his time to assailing Gray’s claim that Mrs. Snyder domi nated him. The defense summations were closed after approximately four hours. Court then adjourned until this afternoon, when the district attorney sched uled to begin. Governor McLean’s Summer Schedule. Raleigh. May 9.—'Governor McLean has arranged his summer .working schedule. J Shorter hours and more rest will be the governor's daily program during the hot summer months. Governor McLean, although he says his recent rest in the Wisconsin lake country did him good and he’s feeling fine, is now on this JTMiour day trick. Until recently the governor received capital newspapermen twice daily— in the mornings and the afternoons. Now, however, by mutual agreement, the conferences will be held at noon on three days of the week —Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Gov. McLean Planning Vacation in Wisconsin. (By International News Service.) Raleigh, N. C., May 9.—Carolina's summer executive mansion probably will be in the Wisconsin lake coun try. While no announcement has been made by Governor McLean yet. it is expected that he will again spend his vacation at hi« ctunp in Wisconsin. The Governor spent a month at Lake-o-Lakes last summer, passing away the time by wood-cutting, it’s told around the eapitol that the Gov ernor is no mean ax-slinger. Out to Kill the Joy of Sucking the Thumb. Des Moines, May 9.—Thumb suck ing is a vice in children and should be prevented Dr. Wesley C. Darby told the lowa dental convention. Sinus trouble, so prevalent nowadays can be traced to this habit, he said. “The gums and jaws are thrown out of their natural position, causing protruding teeth.” Dr. Darby said. “The sinus is drawn down and nar rows the nasal breathing aperture, thus making the children mouth breathers.” The weak man is apt to be restless; the great man always tranquil. I CAN YOU SCORE j TEN ON THESE? j QUESTIONS 1— Who fired the first shot in the American Civil War? 2 Who commanded the opposing forces V . 3 What American warship made a record-breaking voyage at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war? 4 Why was a Republican governor of New York refused a renominatiou in 1898? 5 Who served as vice president during both of the Wilson adminis trations? 6 What «s the most effective way of getting rid of things you don’t want and oc acquiring the things yon ' would like to have? 1 7 Name four southern border states which did not secede from the Union. 8— When did the first ironclad war ship go into action? 9 -What is the factor in retail business without which success is im . possible? . 16 —What American city is located pear the meeting point of four states? (Answered on Page Seven) $2.00 a Year, Strictly in Advance. Definite Reports From Daring Airme- hacking , During ..iingHours Flood' Fund i i ___ Concord Contributions. Previously acknowledged... .$2,032.62 Mrs. Jno. A. Scott..,.; 5.00 Popular Tent Church p. 26 Mr. and Mrs. Ridenhour.* Jr. .. 10.00 I>. C. Bonds 5.00 ’ Bethel School 14.00 Nature Study Club .... 3.00 Mr. and Mrs. E. <’. Barbardt Sr. 25.00 I W. M. McEachern 2.00 j Mary Virginia Hagler 1.00 ■! Jno. W. Uook 1.00 Geo. L. Brown 5.00 D. W. Moose 5.00 H. B, Emerson 5.00 Mill Grove M. P. Church 6.40 Midland Community 36.00 Concord Total $2,156.02 Kannapolis Contributions Previously acknowledged .... $512.00 j Mt. Pleasant Contributions Previously acknowledged $102.00 Jackson Training School Previously acknowledged $56.00 Junior Red Cross of City Schools Previously acknowledged SIOO.OO Grand Total $2,926.17 THE COTTON MARKET Opened Easy Today at Decline of 8 to 17 Points, But Rallied 8 to 10; Points Later. • New York. May 9. — (A 3 )—The cot-1 ton market opened easy today at a de- j cline of 8 to 17 points in response to easier Liverpool cables, rather a bet ter weather map than expencted and a tendency to reduce estimates of the cotton area flooded in the Mississippi River States. Active months sold 18) to 20 Points net lower shortly after 1 the opening. July easing off to 15.661 and December to 16.11, but there were reports of heavy rains in some parts of the southwest, which caused ral lies of 8 to 10 points before the end of the first hour. At midday, however, prices had l worked off to 15.62 for July and 16.08 ! for December, the midday market showing net declines of about 20 to 24 points. Cotton futures opened easy; May I 13.61; July 15.78; Oct. 16.02; Dec.) 16.20; Jan. 16.22. American Found Guilty. - Shanghai, May 7.—OP)—Leonard Husar, former U. S. district attorney [ for China, was found guilty today by i Judge Purdy in the U. S. District Court here of accepting a bribe of $34.- j 000 in gold while holding the office ! of district attorney for China. He will be sentenced Monday. Husar, who was arrested last Jan- i nary, testified at his trial several days ago that while district attorney he was appointed representative of Chang Tsuug-Chang, Shantung war lord, in 1924, for which post he received $6,000 a year which was paid in cash month ly. Later he received $750 a month. _ Cook-Stewart. Miss Helen Cook and Marion M. Stewart, of Atlanta, Georgia, were quietly married at high noon on Sat urday, May 7th, by Rev, M. L. Kester. The marriage was very quiet and sim ple because of Mrs. Stewart's recent illness, and came as a surprise to her relatives who wish them a long and happy life. Mr. Stewart is a prom ising young man of Atlanta. Georgia. Mrs. Stewart is the youngest daughter of,Mrs. Ed. M. Cook, of No. 4 town ship. Attend Miss Jarratt’s Piano Recital This Evening. Among the Concord friends and rel atives of Miss Frances .Tarratt, who went to Winston-Salem today to at tend her graduating piano recital this evening were her father, A. H. Jar ratt, and brothers, Hal and Bruce •Tarratt, Mrs. Thomas Ross. Thomas Ross, Elizabeth Ross, Miss Lena Les lie, Miss Betty Leslie, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Bell, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Irvin, Jr., of Morganton, Mrs. Leslie Cor rell, Mrs. W. H. Gorman, Mrs. Leon ard Brown and Mrs. W. H. Gibson. Brown Heads Bar Association. Pinehurst, May 7.—(P) —Mark W. Brown, of Asheville, today was un animously elected President of the North Carolina Bar Assembly at the closing session of the annual conven tion here. H. Sea well of Carthage, Miss Carrie L. McLean of Charlotte, and A. Weyland Cooke of Greensboro, were chosen vice presidents. Henry M. London of Raleigh continued as secretary-treasurer. Judge W. S. O’B. Robinson of Goldsboro and J. M. Bailey of Raleigh were chosen mem bers of the executive committee. V ■■ - War Mothers Convention *0 Open on Wednesday. The War Mothers State Convention will open Wednesday in Washington, N. C. Mrs. W. I). Pemberton, State War Mother, Mrs. R. E. Ridenhour, Sr,. State Corresponding Secretary and president of tlie local chapter, Mrs. J. F. Goodson, State Custodian of Rec ords, and Mrs. E. F. White, Jr., are among the Concord persons who leave Tuesday for Washington. Several other ladies are planning- to go but have not definitely decided. Josephine Carter Oglesby. Judge and Mrs. John M. Oglesby 1 are receiving congratulations on the ’ birth of a daughter, born May 6th, in Marion, N. C. The litttle girl has been named ' Josephine Carter, for her maternal grandmother. ,1 . Wide Reaches of Eastern Atlantic Still Hold With in Their Grasp Success or Failure of Flight. VARIOUS REPORTS GIVEN OF FLIGHT < — New York Times Corre spondent at Sydney, N. S., Says Airman Passed There During Morning. (By the Associated Press)) The Nungesser plane, White Bird. | was sighted off Cape Race, New Found land, at 10 o'clock this morn ing. said n brief message received to day by the New York Times from its % j correspondent at Sydney, Nova Sco j tia. Should this report prove accu rate and the daring aviators, Cap tains Nungesser and Coll, successfully j pursue the remaining thousand niilnn of their course over the misty Atlantic I they should reach tlie goal of Paris to New York flight about 8 / | o’clock tonight, daylight time. Earlier In the day a report received by the French Cable Company stated that the radio operator at St. Pierre, - J 1 Miquelon, had received word that the | plane had been sighted over New i Foundland. This report lacked coti | finnation/ Havas Agency in New Y’ork ad -1 vised the home office in Paris that they had a definite report from St. Pierre that thq plane had beep sighted over the island at 8:15 o'clock. The French capital promptly staged a cel ebration. loiter a St. Pierre dis- I patch received in New York stated the | airplane had not been sighted over the island up to 9 o’clock Atlantic daylight time this morning. The broad rcatdies of the eastern Atlantic still hold within their grasp the success or failure of the flight. , Reported off Cape Race, the aviators ■ have yet about a thousand miles of sea to traverse in adverse weather conditions. The weather off New Foundland 1 was clear this morning, hut off to the j southeast the daring pioneers of the ' air wore winging their way with a I lowering gasoline supply, and facing .Aj 1 mist and rain with low visibility that j will try every bit of courage they | 1 can summon. i Aviators at Mitchell Field said that under the weather conditions now ob- I tabling, if Captain Nungesser could 1 make a landing in New York he would have performed a miracle even greater than that of crossing the Atlantic, ij | Search lights were turned on during . J the day at Mitchell Field to aid the flyers. Evidence of the distressing flying $ weather in and about New York was had when Commander Francesco de Pinedo, the Italian flyer, was forced down in the heavy fog in Long Is land sound in his flight to Philadelpia from Boston. If the White Bird was off ('ape Race, her course naturally would lie across Cape Canso, Nova Scotia, and then skirting tlie shore line of Nova Scotia past Cape Sable. The avia tors then would head the White Bird for Boston and New York. K • - ' #3 Inquiries at noon at the Radio Cor- , porntion, and independent wireless companies, and the steamship com panies with vessels at scat brought the response that *no word had come • from the White Bird. Another Report. New York. May 9.—( A *)—Captain Nungesser in the White Bird was || sighted passing Cape Race at 10 o'clock this morning, according to a if telegram which the New York Times says it has received from itft corre spondent at Sydney, N. S. The Timea says its Sydney correspondent report ed that the Marconi station at Glace 1 Bay informed him a wireless mesaage from a French liner off the coast of New Foundland stated it had sighted the French plane. “ . Not Seen at Bt. Pierre. St. Pierre, May 9. —(4P) —The Nun gesser plane had not been sighted from here up to 9 a. in. today. Reported at New Founderland. New York, May 9. UP) —The New York 'bureau of the Havas Agency has advised its headquarters in Paris, France, that S. Pierre Miquelon has J§ a rej>ort that the airplane -White Bird was seen over New Foundland at 8;15 o’clock Atlantic time, this morning. jg Nothing Definite. New York, May 9.— UP) —A report <1 received here this morning by the French Cable Co., that the Nungesser plane had ben sighted by the Western Union over New Foundland failed of confirmation from every source, and was not credited. Inquires were made at various radio stations, and Western Union officials said they were unable to verify the reports. New York, May 9.—(A3)—Thirty eight hours after Captains Nungesser and Coli hopped off from the flying field near Paris in their attempt to fly to this city, no substantial advices have come from any sou fee as to their *1 whereabouts. , Mather! Partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday, |j probably local showers Tuesday in the i west portion; somewhat wanner to i NO. 90