ASSOCIATED ’ - PRESS dispatches VOL,UME XXV REMARKS IftDE BY GENERAL KIKE ARE CUT f ROMMS All Mention of Remarks Made at Court Martial by General Kings Are Ex punged From Records, j GENERAL KING HAS APOLOGIZED And Counsel For Colonl Mitchell Asked That Mention of the Fuss B 6 Eliminated Now. leashing! on, Xov. 30.—<4>)—TV Mitehelfxcourt martial today expunged from its record alt meution of Vie-l episode of Friday when remarks, by j Brigadier General King, n member of! the court, brought ’ vigorout objections I from rounsel for fTolcnol Mitchell. - Represeutatlve Frank It. Reid, of Illinois, chief counsel, for the nccused army officer, asked that the record be amended to obliterate the passage. General King, Mr. Keid indicated at the time, had remarked that certain ]diases off the examination of a wit ness were “damned rot." General King apologised at the time. At the opening of today's proceed ings, Major Allen W, .Guillott, lis- , sistnnt trial judge advocate, attempt ed to address pile court regarding the defense evidence, but the cryirt up-. . held an objection of Mr. Reid. Ilefore it was stopped, however. Major Guillon assorted that the de fense had “utterly Tailed” to prove the truth of Colonel Mitchell's .rharges of j iueompetency, neglect and near trim son on the war and navy departments by their conduct of the mitional de fense. The prosecution mapped out its pro giem so as to give navy witnesses an opportunity to testify' as to Colonel Mitchell's charges against that branch of the service. j Commander H. C. Richardson, pilot of the JJC-3 in its attempt to cross j the Atlantic in 1919, said the racing j craft in which Lieutenant Person was killed in 1924 lit Fairfield, Ohio, Mad been in storage from the time of the l’alitier race** in 1923 until April, 1924, when it wsr turned over the army air service. ■ Cokmejj Mitchelljlaid charged.that Teriitsilt Was killed in a dilapidated HIC plane const nl ft oil for a race two years before that in whieh th» lieutenant , met his death. Commander Hicbard sen deelared the mnrfiine was in “good condition" when it was released to ilie army, and that while it was de- to the arniy in April of 1924. it did'not crash until tlic following , September. SMASH RECORDS IN CULVER CITY SPEEDWAY TEST Eiliott First; Haiti Again Second; • Comer Third. Culver City, Cal., Nov. 29. —Five world's speed records were broken here today during the running of the Cul ver City 230-mile classic. The event was won by Frank Elliott, who .es tablished a new record for 230 miles with an average' of 128.87 miles an hour. Harry Hartz finished second, three fourths of a lap behind Elliott. Fred Comer wa* third, Bob McDonough fourth and Earl Cooper fifth. Four of the five records were brok en by Cooper, who was lending the field untH he ran out of gnsoline on ltic 183th lap. One accident married the race. • “Red" Cairens suffered a skull frac ture and iiossible internal injuries and Jerry Wunderlich less serious injuries when their cars collided on the 24th lap. Automobtlists Warned to Fight Shy of Hillaboro. ' Greensboro, Nov. 29—Following complaint of many motorists that they bad beep charged with speeding while passing through Hillsboro on Thanksgiving Day, Coleman IV. Rob erts, vice president of the Carolina Motor Club, in a signed statement, announces that the organization will erect speed trap . warning signs on earfi side of the village ami will ad vocate a new highway avoiding the town. Tornado Destroys 32 Houses. Sofia, Nov. 30.4-G4>) — Thirty-two Mouses have been destroyed by a tor nado in the outskirts of Sofia. It forced many people to flee from their homes in their night clothes last night. . There will' be a joint ' meeting of the grammar schools of No. 2 School and the Primary School Teachers’ As sociation Tuesday afternoon at 3:80 o'clock. As this ia to be a very important meeting, every member la urged to be present. City Tax Notice Effective December Ist, 1986, penalty on city taxes. Pay now and save additional cost. CHAS. N. FIELD, City Tax Collector. The Concord Daily Tribune , North Carolina’s Leading Small City Daily , ! ( A VERY SHORT SPEAKER j | ■”— -b# •< i . Angelo Risso, who is t7 \fagmjr ''- | years old a%d less Ilian three feet tall,'is a member-of Ihe debating team of Tech High school at Omaha. Scb. He's shown here chatting .with a I fellow student of normal height. Risso uu HE KILLED SEVEN, {Wilmington Officer Says Prisoner Told Him He Had Killed Seven Men In His Life. Wilmington, X. c., Nov. 30.— OP) — A gels-declared slayer of sevej! men, ft Bhwrpe. a*, today ew teitte tof Fierce County. Gay; to answer a ehnrgc of murdering Sheriff I. C. JJrooks of that county in March 1922. When arrested here yesterday by Deplity Sheriff 'Tindall, of Wilming ton. ctficers sny the man told them that he had killed seven men and add ed “1 would gladly kill you too, blit you caught me without a gun." i Police announced this morning that they bad lenrned Sharpe's alius was 8. R. Living ton. SLAYER OF HINSON TO BE ALLOWED BOND Self-Defense Will Be Plea of Man Who Killed Pineville Postmaster. Charlotte,.. Nov. 28.—Bond jn the sum of $5,000 for Zeb Darnell, held in the county jail here for the killing of Joseph P. Hinson, Pineville post master, Thanksgiving night, will be furnished Monday. Darnell is a pros perous farmer with laud possessions well worth the security of the bond. He declined his freedom through this channel and bad not altered his dis position towards the offer Saturday. Self-defense will be the probable plea of the defendant at the trial, said J. Lawrence Jones, one of Darnell’s attorneys. Mr. .Tones said that Dar nell would be temporarily freed on next week. Darnell said he shot Hinson after the latter hath struck him down. The trouble started at nu alleged “drink ing i>arty" at the home of Pink Mor row at Pineville Thursday dight. Darnell surrendered, after tlk- shoot ing. Seven witnesses testified at the coroner's inquest. Mr. Hinson's body whs fojrwarded to Iredell county near Mooresville, for burial. The former postmaster was a mem ber of the 74th Company, Sixth Regi ment, A. E. F. He was affiliated with the Pineville lodge of Free Masons. Junior Order awl Red Men. He is survived by his mother and eight sis ters. Royal Standard Not Lowered. London, Nov. 30.— Even among the people of 'England few are aware that there arc forms ar.d ceremonies connected with the use of the British flags besides the regulations nsto the signal ing pf messages and the dis plays in t-he times of general re joicing. But there are, ar.d the use of the Royal Standard is an interest ing ease in point. It is never lower- 1 ed on occasion of deaath, excepting in the case of the reigning sovereign, and this has accounted for the fact that on the deaath of Queen Alexan dra the Royal Standard has continu ed flying at the mast-head over Buckingham Palace and Marl borough House, while the Union Jack has everywhere been at , half mast. , Struck by Auto and Desperately Hmt. Salisbury, Nov. 28. —-Joe Brown, o ten-year-old son of Mrs. Spencer Jones, is in the Salisbury hospital, unconscious and apparently desper ately hurt as a result of being struck I>y ah automobile driven by O. S. Trogden, and Trogden is under bond to appear in count; court December 16th. BODY OF DEAD MAH FOIIIOiimi Filin' I Body Was In Auto and It j Was Wrapped in Robe.— Cause of Death Is Not! Knovgn by Officers. Raleigh, Nov. '3o.—)—Cofim-r 1,. today in an automobile parked hear the local baseball pork. The mau apparently had been dead for some time. He was,wrapped in a heavy automobile robe. , The police said they were without clue as tt- the man's identity, except that the auto mobile carried a Durham license. The investigat'd! was to determine! whether the man came to his death by j foul play, or from natural causes. _ MYSTERY SURROUNDS GREENSBORO KILLING I Coroner’s Jury Says Synder Was Hit Over Head With Blunt Object. Greensboro, Nov. 28.—Mystery sur rounds the death of Charles Synder, nge r ] 28, who early this morning was cut in two by a freight train. It was said by two young men just after his death thnt he crossed the South ern railroajj tracks at a street here and was knocked back on the track by an automobile and run over by the locomotive of n freight train. However, tonight the coroner's jury declared that the man was hit over the head with some blunt instrument and thrown under the train by an unknown person or persons. The two moil, who said they were eorapaions of Snyder, named C. O. Parrish ami W. M. Butler, were re leased. Average Low Rating For County Jails in the State. Raleigh, Nov. 29.—0 f 09 county jails recently inspected under the joint supervision of the State board of charities and public welfare and the State board of health, 43 fall below 75 out of a possible sanitary score of 100, while only eight rated 90 or above, according to the report of In spector L. G. Whitley, released today by Mrs. Kate Burr Johnson, state welfare commissioner. Hie scores are based on sanitary conditions, and do not relate to man agement or methods of punishment of the personnel of those in charge, Mrs. Johnson said. The highest score was made by the Wake county jail, with a rating of 97 1-2. The lowest. 30, was given Cumberland jail. Eight other jails scored only a few points above 30. Those scoring above 90 were the county jails in Dnplin, Cumberland. Durham, Guilford, Johnson, Rich mond, Rowan, The Bucombe countv tail was rated at 81 1-2 and Forsyth | county 86. ’ No score has been reported for the Mecklenburg jail. Money Is Pledged For Extra Session Austin, Texas, Nov. 29.—A fund of $300,600 has been pledged by Tex ans to defray the cost of a special session of the legislature to investi gate official acts of Governor Miriam A. Ferguson's administration with a view toward possible impeachment proceedings, it was reported here to day. Obtaining pledges for underwriting the expenses is said to be in charge of Will C. Hogg, of Houston, son of the late James Stephen Hogg, a gov ernor of Texsr, and Rerpesentative T> K. Irwin, of Dallas, who started the move for a special session. Two hundred thousand dollars is reported to be from north Texas. CONCORD, N. C-, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1925 Torrential Rains Have Caused Damage to Some Localities In Florida ■' ' • -a— CARRYING NEWS TO HANOVER Queer Superstition About Figure Thkt Appears on ltratli of It.'i.val IkrK* ! London, Xnv. 30.—The death If Queen Alexandra has served to 4- call the popular story of the "ghostly boatman of Hanover." whieh is be lieved to this day by a large number of people, especially by the ‘Thames: watermen. It seems that on the night of June 2fi, 1830. .Col. Dawson, who married the adopted daughter of Mrs. Fiixherber. was standiryt with I a friend on Westminister bridge. wh>n he saw a small wherry cdh taining a little muffled figure dari from . the shadows and swiftly and noiselessly make its way down tin river. While they were watehing the small craft a Thames waterman nearby xelaimed in an awestruck voice, “There.goes the boatman to Hanover.' On being asked what he meant, the man exclaimed that King George must be dead, as the figure always appeared on. the demise of the sov ereign. his consort or the direct heir to the throne, and rowed to Hanover to carry the nows. On returning homo Colonel Darner heard thut George IV. bait died (i the hour when lie saw the wherty set out fom beneath the bridge: The ghostly boatman is said to have come over with the house of Hanover and to have been seen at the death of each of the English I ■ sovereigns of that dynasty, or mem j hers of their families. | When the Prince Consort died pi 1861, the boatman is to have i appeared from beneath Westminster | bridge, and. again, at the very : moment when Queen Victoria breatli | ed her last at Cbiobrne, on the Isle of j Wright, not only many Timmies watermen, but quite a number of I well educated, level headed and re | sponsible jieople allege that they saw I tho messenger of death bending to his oars on his ghostly errand to j Hanover. On the death of Edward (VII. the story was again revived. It is a queer superstition, quite in keeping, however, with those' accord ing'to which the death of a mefobCr of the hoifse of Holienzollem or of Hapsburg was always hearldcd by the apparition of a white lady. : .IT ... 1 •- r - S NINETEEN COURT TERMS IN SESSION THIS WEEK R. B. Rcdwhte. Monroe, " Named as Emergency Judge to Preside in .Mecklenburg. Raleigh, Nov. 29. —Nineteen Su perior courts will be in session in as many North Carolina counties dun i ing the coming week. Ten regular j terms of court open tomorrow morn- I ing, terms of coqrt begun this week j or last will continue next week in i eight counties, and Governor McLean has called a special term to begin tomorrow in Pitt county. TMe special term in Pitt is for the trial of civil cases only, and is callt-d for two weeks. The court will lie opcueil by Judge A. M. Stack, of | Monroe, but as Judge Stack has a term of court opening in Davie coun ty on December 7th, it iR probable that the governor will name some other judge to hold the second week of the special term. R. B. Redwine.of Monroe, has been named by the governor as emergency judge to hold court next week in Mecklenburg, relieving Judge Thom as J. Shaw, of Greensboro, who will open a two-weeks’ mixed term of court in Caldwell tomorrow. MORRIS KILLED IN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT Jury Fnds Catastrophe Was Caused By His Own Carelessness, and So Reports. Salisbury, Xov, 29.—Jack Henry Morris, of Winston-Salem, was killed in an automobile accident at second creek bridge, near Salisbury, just after midnight this morning. A jury summoned by Coroner Summerset sat on bis ense today and decided thnt death was caused by an auto mobile accident that was the result of Morris’ carelessness. Morris and his companion, K. F. Collins, also of Winson-Salem, were coming towards Salisbury, and Mor ris, who was driving, apparently lost control’ of the machine, a Biiick roadster, as he neared the creek bridge. The machine firßt struck a post and then threw Morris partly out of the car and caught his head and chest between the ear anil a bridge abuttment. Morris was thirty years old and leavi-s n wife and one child- He was a driver for a Winston-Salem laun dry. The body was taken to Winston- Salem today. Fighting in Streets of China. Chefoo, China, Xov." 30.1— UP) —It is estimated that 35 men have been killed and fifty wounded in fighting in the streets of Chefoo between armed factions. - A battle began yesterday when mu rines coming from Tsingtso endeav ored to occupy barracks Over t'lie op position of 'Chefoo troops. (. ; Mrs. Riley L. Wlisou Dies After an Operation. Salisbury, Xov. 20.-—Mrs. Riley L. Wilson died today following a very serious operation. She had been in ill health for a long time and the operation was decided upon ps a last l-ORo for saving her life. Mrs. Wilson wa* about thirty years old and leaves a husband and two children. Miami and Miami Beach j i Are Under Several Inch-; es of Water With Cars Lining Many Streets. CITY UTILITIES ! BADLY CRILLPLED One Moring Paper Failed to Publish and Another Coud Get Out Only With An Early Edition. Miami, Fla., Jy>v. SO.—(A>)—Tor-1 iTiilial- tropic raii)s beginning la-d ! iliglit ta ml emit bluing through this morning in a steady downpour, crip- j pled the city utilities and prevented 1 the issuance of newspapers. One morning newspaper failed to l publish, another issued an early rdi-1 lion only, and the two aftermon news- j papers face prospects of going all day without being able to turn a “wheel. Power company officials said that a. force of men is kept in readiness to begin drying out generators, coils as soon as the rain stops. Service tnuy be resumed, after four hours of such work, it was estimated. I towntown street intersect; ms are miniature lakes, and some office work ers are putting their clothes in water proof bundles and going to the ofiices in bathing suits. The principal thoroughfares in both .Miami and Miami Beach are under i from several inches to three feet of j water in places, and hundreds of an- j lomobiles, their motors drowned by | high waters line the street - on both sides and mnkc the highways almost impassable. rile rain showed no signs of abat ing during the forenoon, and business generally is at a standstill. United States Weather Bureau Forecaster Kichard W. Gray, sta tioned here, at noon declared that be-1 tween 11 and 12 inches of rainfall had been recorded in Miami by 12 o'clock today. This mark has already established a new record for a single, day's rainfall in this city, and hi greater than any entire November rainfall previous to this time. The. former high mark here was jet on October 24. 1924, when 9.74; inches of ,ruin was recorded. A stationary storm cenforikg -sontb of thy Florida peninsula was given by Forecaster Gray as the cause of the unusually heavy fall of rain here. Although just before noon the sun made its first appearance of the day. I and the showers slacked for a time, j Forecaster Gray reiterated his earlier j prediction of an early, cessation of j rainfall, and said that lie fully ex-1 pected the downpour to continue I through the ofternoon an,] night. He j added that lie felt assured that Miami : had received the bulk of rainfall not ed throughout this section and neigh-! boring cities had experienced only or- i dinary showers. The string of settlements and new ) subdivisions fringing Miami and Mi-I ami Beach are suffering from higli t water fully as much as the two cities themselves, and travel on t'.ip roads j and main highways lying beneath sev eral'inches of water was even more j difficult than in the cities proper. ! Fort Lauderdale Suffers Also. 1 Fort Lauderdale. Fla.. N'ov. 90. C4>)—The downtown business section of this city is under several inches of water as a result of a heavy down pour of rain which began falling last night, and at noon today still was falling. The local telephone com pany is experiencing trouble and high seas are runuing off (lie coast. No damage, ho we vex, was reported. THE RALEIGH TIMES IS CELEBRATING TODAY; Sixty Page Edition Printed in Cde j bratun of SOth Anniversary of Its Founding. Raleigh. N. <*.. Xov. 30.—(A>>—The Raleigh Times celebrated the 50th anniversary of its founding today, is suing a CO-page special edition in four sections. N The pai>er contains a resume of the activities of Raleigh of today, and also touches on many incidents of tbe past half century. The edition is pro fusely illustrated with capital scenes of the past and present, nnd many of the prominent men of Raleigh are among the, contributors. Lutheran Brotherhood Hold Quauter ly Session. Salisbury, Nov. 29.—Two hundred j and fifty meii representing Lutheran! Brotherhoods from six counties met at Haven Church, this city, this after noon in quarterly session, and nn in teresting program was put on by the brotherhood of Haven Church. Offi cers for the year were elected as fol lows: J. L. Fisher, of Salisbury, president; C. D. Castor, of Concord, i vice president: A. L. Lippard. of Salisbury, secretary. D. \V, Moose, of Concord, treasurer. Alexandra's Betrothal Recalled. London. Nov. 30-—lt. wAs at the Palace of I-neken, near Brussels, which during the late war was re quisitioned by the Germans, that the betrothal of the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII.) and Princess Alexandra of Denmark took place. Queen Victoria was visiting Laekt-n 'As the guest of her uncle Leopold. King of the Belgians, at the time, and the Prince and the Dauleh Princess also were fellow-guests of the Belgian King. The first meeting of King Edward and Queen Alex andra was in Cologne Cathedral. HUNDRED FAMILIES 1 DRIVEN TO STREET DUfIiNGBIG BLAZE Eight Buildings in Newark, ; N. J., Burned by a Fire Which Raged For More Than Two Hours Today. $750,000 LOSS _ IS REPORTED ißoofs of Eight Buildings Crushed In, Completing Destruction of All of the j Structures. ! Newark, X. J., Nov. l\o. —Fire ! sweeping through eight combination 1 tenement ami business .buildings on j Springfield avem»e between Boston and j Beaeon streets early today drovoo 100 J oeeupants to the streets and caused i damage estimated at $750,000. The llames were brought under control at 4 a. m. after a two-hour fight in which the entire block in the thickly populated section was threatened. The fire was discovered in a store room at 58 Beacon street, and spread rapMly to other of the build ing occupied by a furniture company. Three persons, two men and a woman, were led to safety by the jioliee—as the blaze spread to the apartments above the stores. Before the fire was controlled the roofs of all eight buildings crushed 1 in, completing tbe destruction. i GANG SUPERINTENDENT ENTERTAINS CONVICTS E. E. Beaver Arrested With Quantity of Whiskey and Two Trusties. Thunasville, Nov. 29.—8. E. Beav er, superintendent of the ehain gang in Rowan eounty, was taken this nf ternoon here, wit’ll bis new Dodge; roadster, in whieh was found a gallon : i and a pint of liquor. In eompany with Beaver were two I Rowan eounty white convicts. These! two were locked up in the local jail,! Beaver, while remaining under nr- i rest, was seeking bondsmen in Salis bury tonight over thf telephone. It was supposed that (lie parties were en route to Randolph County when they were arrested here by Policemen \V. S. Kay and C. T. Younts. It j seemed Beaver ' was taking i!/e "two j convicts on a pleasure ride, they be- j ing trusties Os the Rowan eounty road i forfA according to reports. ! The espisodc created quite a little; | Harry of interest locally. | LONDON GIRLS GET SMOKES } University Students Enjoy Puffs Be tween Their Classes. j London, Nov. 39.—The news that Bryn Muwr College, is to provide j smoking rooms for its students is sea ! tured in the English papers, but not I as a radical idea, for tile reason that I women’s colleges and schools here [ have permitted smoking for years, i At the University of London sev ; eral thousand women have their own clubs where they puff away at will j during recesses and at tea time. J The London county council, conduct ing night classes attended by 26,000 ! women, permits smoking in odd nooks 1 and coAiers, but not during classes. ANOTHER DELAY IN THE CHAPMAN CASE Writ of Habeas Corpus Hearing Is | Postponed Until Court Meets Again Wednesday. State Prison, Wethersfield. Conn..! 30*—04*) —After the State of: Connecticut, through State’s Attorney j Hugh M. Alcorn, had offered its an i swer to the petition of Gerald C’hap j man. twied reprieved murderer, for a | writ of habeas corpus at a ’hearing be i fore Federal .lodge E. S. Thomas to-, day. the defense asked for an adjourn- i ment because of its “unpreparedness” and the request was grunted. The next session of the court was set for \ Wednesday morning. Percy Newsom Arrested. Winston-Salem, November 30. —OP); - —Percy Newsom, automobile thief, j who escaped from the State prison j some months ago, was arrested by local police here last midnight. When ; arrested, Newsom attempted to draw } his pistol but was overpowered by officers. Italian Cutter Goes Down. I j Missina. Sicily, Nov. 30.—(A s )—The j j Italian cutter Kan Antonio has gone | ■ down in a storm with her entire crew, i Details are lacking. PROGRAM WEEK OF NOVUM j BER SO-DBCEMBER 5 Star Theatre ‘‘Home of Paramount Pictures” Monday and Tuesday . “THE ANCIENT HIGHWAY ’ With Jack Holt, Billie Dove and Moutago Ixive. Lt’s n Paramount Wednesday and Tltnrsday. •SHE WOLVES” With an all star Cast. A tremendous story of life’s tragedies in the night clubs of New York, Paris ard Lon don. It’s a Fox special! Friday and Saturday TOM MIX in “THE LAST OF THE DUANES” By Zone Grey. A tale of the Texas rangers In the early West. It’s a Fox Special; Thank Him J Jm ' A Roy M Finley, attorney for a Texas i poultry association, is the man who prevented tt.btm.uut) turkeys from be j jng lost to the Thanksgiving market j us the east Eastern states banned shipments ot poultry trom Texas ta raUse of an outbreak ot the hoof and mouth disease but Finley went east j snd induced them tu modlty the em- j Outgo sufficiently to penult the sale I ut iprkeys rtom counties that were | not affected oy the epidemic in Fin NOT SO NUMEROUS Slight Decrease in Number of Deaths From Auto Ac cidents Reported in the South This Week. Atlanta, (la.. Nov. 30.—(tPl—A : slight d ; creasc in the number of I deaths, and a small increase in the ! number of injuries from traffic aeci i dents in the south from the week i previous are shown in a survey made for the past week by the Associated Press today. There were 33 deaths in the past week, as compared with 3(5 for the week before, and 212 Injuries us eom : pared with 170 the prior week. Tbe imports came from eleven, fltjjes, I North Carolina took the lead in i the number of dentils, with eight, and ; 2N injuries; South Carolina. 2 deatjis, j 5 injuries. TIIE COTTON MARKET Opened Easy at Decline of 15 to 3# Points. Showing Net Lt-sses of 27 to 44 Points. New York, Nov. 30.—04 s )—The cot ton market opened easy today at a de cline of 15 to 39 points in response to Lower Liverpool cables and' showed I net losses of about 27 to 44 points ! shortly after the call under foreign, j Southern and local selling. Commis- j sion house and trade buying on the j decline, however, steadied prices; around 19.4(1 for January and caus ed rallies of 8 to 10 points from the j lowest toward the end of the first • hour. The early market also was influent- j ed by the belief that'the better weath er in the last fortnight might lead to an increase in the government's crop estimate early next week, but the j main factors appeared to bo the weak- I ness abroad and unfavorable reports ! from the Manchester goods market, j Cotton futures opened easy. Dee. 20.40: Jan. 19.04; March 18.48; May | 19.05 : July 18.78. With Onr Advertisers. ; Loath’s hot: blast heaters will keep you warm this cold weather. See ! ad. today of the Yorke & Wadsworth | Co. ! Attractive winter bolivia and ve- I lour coats at Efird’s. This store is ! the exclusive dealer here for the sane I ous Irene Castle dresses, j Buck's circulating parlor heater lieuts from two to four rooms with ; less fuel than one grate uses. At the Concord Furniture Company. The Parish Guild of the Episcopal ! Church will have a bazaar from 3 to 0 o'clock December 3rd at the Y. M. C. A. , Don't miss it. You will get something good to eat. _ At tbe Star Theater today and to morrow "The Ancient Highway" will be produced with Jack Holt, Billie | Dove nnd Montago Love. This is a ! Paramount. Wednesday and Thurs j day, "She Wolves" wit'll an all-star 1 east. Friday and Saturday, “The ; Last of the Duanes" by Zane Grey'. I What will be more appreciated ns I a Christmas gift than a Hoosier kitchen cabinetV Ab H. B. Wilkin i son's. Scotch plaid mufflers, $1.49 ahd $1.98 at J. C. Penney Co's. D'Orsay’s toujours fidele can now be had in single or double compacts at Gibson Drug Store. One of this week's specials at S. W. Preslar’s is a white gold Elkin wrist watch for $10.75. 1 Marshal Chang Tco-Lln Preparing for Battle. Peking. Nov. 30.—OP)—Marshal 1 ehang Tso-Lin. is preparing to give battle to his oacmies north of Slian haikwan, 140 miles northeast of i Tienstin, although the appearance of some of the forces of General Kuo Sung-Lien, Chang's former henchman, now leading the revolt against him at Shankhaikwnn, today caused the 1 retirement of the Mukden chieftain's troops about fifteen miles to the north. - ■ a THE TRIBUNE I 1 PRINTS TODAY’S NEWS TODAf f NO. 283 i« n " rn 3FFICIALSII j IN RUSSIA PUT T 0« ' DEATH FOR THEFTi Were Charged With Tak- *j j ing 1,500 Tons of Merchandise Valued at ■ More Than $1,000,000. | hundretTothers 'HI PUT ON TRIAIijI It Is Charged That 129 3 Persons Had Been En-JB gaged in the Practice of m Stealing at the Ports.' | I Leningrad, Russia, Nov. 30.—(A 3 )—---jlB Sentence- of death have been j into effect against six former port ' lieials, and six private traders f or mli)r:|SH | appropriation of 1500 tous of state I merchandise valued at more than *'3* ! million dollars. ■ They were shot to death 1 after tbe Central Executive Commit ! tee of the Soviets had dismissed their , appeal for clemency. ■ | Among those executed were M. I itov. assistant commandant of AMpH i port of Leningrad: M. Linaberg, the JM > chief of the transport j M. Realietkov head of the supply de- Sj jHirtment; M. Kipps, in charge of tbe ; mechanical equipment; M. Cherkasov, * I chief of bureau of stores: and M. Pttt-.-tSjl instev. head of the bluilding depart- » meat. All were formerly officers in tile Imperial Army. I The trial involved 123 persons, all of whom, according to Chairman rich, of the supreme military had been engaged in stealing Rtatct JH property for several years. I UNIVERSITY ELEVEN WON ~1 I STATE CHAMPIONSHIP 3B Won Seven. Games, Tied One and Loot |9i One.—Davidson and Wake Forest IB Second. I Raleigh. N. C-. Nov. 30.— Of) —- JM Winning seven games, tie'ng one an.,, e- t early in the season, 6 to 0, and ,■ the tie game was the anm 1 I’h irks- ffn '"fftrinX finfcp. with f»r FttfUeffP*)--ySM Virginia viftffh ended wi' j a :!-3 "Mm score. Second honors in the State raw '* must In 1 shared by Davidson tmd | Wak" Forest. The Wildcats from the. eittle ei;y on the Smith. Carolina hot-, :l der were able to tie Wake Forest 7-7 - \ and were in turn defeated by Carolina' J 13 to 0. Wake Forest, on the oilier. hand, defeated Carolina 0 to 0 but wmi’Jj tied by Davidson and defeated by State '! 0 to 0. This left the three leaders in J the following position: Carolina, 3 m I victories over state teams, anil one J j defeat : Davidson, four victories, One A i tie and one defeat and Wake Forest five victories, one tie and one defeat. 0 ; The season, generally speaking, wan 3 a successful one for the eight state . i teams. Out of 31 games played vitlf. | opponents from other states, 15 re- C | suited in victories. It) were lost nnd \ j three were tied. In the 35 games t played on home territory, it was es timuted the total attendance reached g 809,000 persons, a new high mark. The Carolina-Virginia game attracted i lO.tKMI persons, the greatest number 1 ever to attend the Tarheel-Cavalier | battle on Carolina soil. Statistics show that Carolina won % tlie most games of any of the elevens i while Elen headed the list in losing, j The Tarheels annexed seven eon- i tests while Elen dropped eight. Wake 1 Forest was tile lrigliest scorer with 185 points and Lenoir came second '. with 150. Elon was seared against | the heaviest, 17(5 points bung regia- _ tercel by that team's opponents. Guil- * ford pressed close with 171 points ou J the wrong side of the count. Strangely enough, it was State Col- cjj lege, which bad struggled tbrqugh a g poor season, which administered the defeat to Wake Forest which knock cd that team off the top round of the champrouship ladder and gave to 3 Carolina the crown which the Demon Deacons had worn since 1924 by vir- ‘j tue of a perfect record that season. 4 Mrs. Rhinelander Not Called to the Stand. White Plains. N. Y., Xov. 30.—(A 1 ) ' —The defense in the Rhinelander an- 3 . milment rested its ease five minute* i , after court convened this morning \ without calling to tbe stand Alice 4 'Beatrice Jones, defendant in the pro- 1 1; . | ceedings. | Alien Ray Horton, little son qf Ml',. *1 I and Mrs. A. J. Horton, died last Fri . day evening. SAT’S BEAR SAYS: j! - 1 Cloudy tonight, probably rain od&B the coast: Tuesday partly cloudy Witnlß rising temperature. Fresh east amtM northeast wind*. |