The News-&irMf TUE UtAtUES Partly t)as ' tassjkt tkoxrt MSsy tkt TlH4jr; little caasge la teaiaratar. Rtiiu? lacll en jour jr. fend rsnewtl n Safe kfore xrirtlO in Wf W avoid mutts ft stagle eopr. yoLGXitk Nans, " ..,.V. i k i" in iijjnr mi-. ..iiuia-, lj REPUBLICAHTALK L RESULTS People Of Country Finding They Bought "Gold Brick" In Electing Harding PRESIDENT NODS FIRST ONE WAY, THEN ANOTHER foreign Policy Of Administra tion Remaim Undefined and Nothing Attempted To Limit Armament; "Peace Resolu tion" Still Up la Air; Tariff Act Oivci No Relief The Nfcws tod Obserr Bureau, 603 Pitrict National Bank Bl!g. By EDWARD E. BRITTOX (By Hppfial Iascd Wir?) Wtirirington, Jt 26. That the un try is finding that it bought a "gold brick" with its return to power of the Republican party at the Iit election ia steadily working it way into the mindi of the people of the different sections. The glittering promisea of the Republicans, and the wonderful things that the Harding administration . was going, to d lava sot the. roseate hue today that they had when there was the d : r 'i of March jubilation of toe. Riv !' a i i t:king office. It I i xii- iiumths since that time, and it has been "tomorrow' that has been the answer to the query to the Republicans when were they going to make good. Business has slumped straight along, and the famous normalcy of President Harding has become hard times in the business life of the nation. In an effort to stop the down grade procession of events the Republican leaders are running around in eirelea talking big talk, but accompliahing little. Little Progreu Anywhere. The heralded "peace resolution' that was to send the Tilaliring blood into the business arteries of th coon try is still the battle-dore and shuttle cock performance of the House and Senate with the man in the White House first reported a nodding one way then th other, and steadily play ing golf. No one has yet beea able to find out with certainty what is the foreign policy of the administration We have got nowhere in tlte matter of the limitation of armament The "emergency tariff bill" so far as known here has done nothing to aid the coun try. The Republican leaders are in tangle over the proposed protective tariff, with open revolt aa to the- tariff on lumber. Excessive, freight rates are paralysing the industries, and pro dueera. Nothing that Congress hasdone jtvei a promise of lower Jaiea a Ro- publican promise". Is it any wonder tl.at evidences throughout th; country point to the fact that ti.i people are getting in a safe and anna frame of mind toward tbi democracy and are recalling ' to mind what it did to prove of real service to the nation f Just one illustra tion of the steady trend back to the party of the people, an illustration that I have straight from Senator 3. Thomas Heflin. A few days ago he was in Galena, 111., famed as the home of Abraham Lincoln. It has been a Republican stronghold, the whole dis trict has been Republican. And yet Senator Heflin found on his visit there that a Democratic mayor had been in office two weeks, that Galena has bo come a Democratic town. Tha, people had awakened to the fact that they had been buncoed by Republican promises, that prosperity has failed to arrive, and that affairs were on the toboggan. Oa Hone Back Bat Not Moving. Yet R publicans sing a song of the "achiever-cnts" of .the Republican party in the 114 days it has been in complete charge, plus the two years that it has had control of Congress. Tai ng note of the preposterous claims of achieve ments" of Republicans made by a- party organ, and exposing the falsity of the claims made by that paper, the Wash ington" organ ' of the adniiniatraiioa, aator Pat - Harrison, of Mississippi, Wat interrupted by another Democrat, Senator Wolcott, of Delaware, the Con gressional Record giving the following account of the query and reply: Mr. Wolcott: Does the article say that these things which are not yet finished are achievements of the Repub lican party! Mr. Harrison: Yes, they claim these as achievements. Mr. Wolcott: I am very much remind ed of something I read. I think it was something that old Benjamin Franklin said about delay with which he was meeting in not being permitted to sail. The governor of the province had con stantly told him the ship would tail the next day, and old Hen said Lc was very much reminded of the sign of King George en the tavern always on horse back but never moving on. Thus fittingly hat Senator Wolcott designated the Republican party today. It it on horseback, but the horse it ridei it on a merry-go-round and it la getting nowhere at yet Executive Sessions Hantbaga Of all the humbugs with which the Washington newspaper correspondents run uo against the oxeentive session bnsinesf takes the cake. The Blair and lanney hearings are first-rate illnstra tiont of this, as it alto the present hear ing in the ease of Capt Edmund O, Chamberlain, of Texas, Marine Corps aviator, whose story ef a sensational battle with German planet en the went era front wat held to be faUt by the- Navy Department The inveatigatioB now being held he been obtained by ' the Texts Senators, who declare, their 1 faith la Captain Chamberlain's ttory and yesterday the newspaper men were excluded from the hearing before the " Senate naval committee. Yet-despite thai the papers thit morning had an ceonnt of the testimony given, just at . many paper had aeeounta of the Blair and iinney "executive hearings. At the Iinney "executive" hearing a sum bet of members ef the House -and va ' ,(Centiae4 m Pn GETS NOWHERE IN AGTUA TfflPAGESTQDAY, THE SHIR AND THE re::,:, ult , L .r.-; V.'; 4:.i-; '.:VU.vr " - V j;v i. r. -v': 1 J wif itm i itmHmm" W f .. w i; . ' ' ... kE3ZSS3 Capt. R. T, Crowley, superintendent of the seventh district of the Coast Gnard with headquarters in ElirabetU City, scouts the theory that pirates borded the schooner Carroll A. Dcaring, which wont ashore off Cape Loukout with all hands missing several months ago, but Mini Laura Wormcil (insert) thinks differently. H!ie is the daugh ter of W. B. Woruiell, of Portland, captain of the" ill fated ship, and is responsible for the world wide intestigation instituted bv the Government to ascertain the eauses of the disappearance of some twenty ships in the last twelve months. Whea the schooner Deering was found at sails were tet but there was not a soul on board. Army and Navy Airmen ta Try Another Bombing Test Tomorrow Battleship Iowa Will Be Taken To Sea and Movements Con trolled By, Radio FIRST EFFORT WILL BE TO LOCATE THE VESSEL Bombing Squadron Will Then Be Summoned From Naval Bases Off Hampton Roads Washington, June 26. Tho oil bat tleship Iowa, operated and maneuvered by radio MBjulset, will attempt s to elude the navy and army airmen off the Atlantic Coast Tuesday in an ef fort to deMoSsrrft that aviation has not reached the point where the defense f the coast may be left entirely in the hands of the new branch of the national defense system. The fliers, .for their part, will pend every effort to find the Iowa, wftile the Teasel it stili well off the coast and having found her, to raia a shower of , dummy bumbt on her decki. T - . The Iowa experiment will be the Second of a series of testa conducted jointly by. the Navy and War depart menu to test the usefulness of aviation I against naval vessels under various con ditiont and to provide both airmen and naval constructors with data otherwise unobtainable on which to base innova tiona in the design of aircraft and sur faco vessels. Jn the first tests, con ducted last week, one former German submarine was sent to the bottom by aerial bombs in 16 minutes asid two others were sunk by destroyer gunfire Ohio to Control Movement The Iowa and tho battleship Ohio, control ship, will station more than 100 miles off the coast between Hat- teras and Delaware Cape tomorrow At dawn Tuesday Capt. 1". L. Chadwick, of the Ohio, will break the seal of an envelope containing secret instructions from the Navy Department and at "zero hour" the Iowa will be headed in the general direction of the mainland. For the purposes of the experiment the Iowa will represent an enemy fleet, the Ohio, exercising complete control over the Iowa by radio, will be about five miles away. At the instant the Iowa heads for the beach, squadrons of fast scouting seaplanes, manned by naval and army personnel, will take off from the waters of Hampton Roads and. form long scouting lines parallel to the coast sweeping for miles out to sea in search of . the "enemy . fleet. -At Hampton Roads and at the naval air base, at Yorktown, Vs., squadrons of light and heavy bombardment planes, including number of huge marine corps Martin bombers, will be tuned up ready to hop off the instant contact with the enemy t reported by the aerial scouting forces. No Reatrlctioaa Placed No restrictions will be placed on Captain Chadwaek at to the manner in which he may maneuver the Iowa dur ing the test except that he must keep the ship within one hundred miles of shore between Hatteraa and Cape Hen lopen and headed in the direction of the mainland. He will be allowed to ttop, btek and tig xag the vessel aa he pleattt with the dea at simulating as far at possible the probable moves of aa enemy approaching the coast in time of war in the face of an aerial defense At toon at the air forces have lighted the Iowa, radio, tignala will be tent to the bombardment planet btck at the base giving the location of the "enemy" and simultaneously the eeouting planet will dash to attack the Iowa and drop small bombs on her deck with the ob jeet of clearing : away all personnel above the protected decks. When, the bombing tquadrous arrive they will hurl .dummy bombs filled with concrete inttead of powder, weigh ing up to halt a ton, at the vessel. At each division of the planet exhausts its bombi it will return to the bate. More than fifty aircraft of various typet wiU be nted in the problem. The only re- ttrietiont placed oa the airmen are that they most at all time maintain maxi mum speed d remain at aa altitude of at least four thousand feet Thit altitude was decided ear at . the safety limit for , planes operating against battleship capable of setting up aa anti aircraft barrage. Two DtetiBct.Prebltms - Tuesday's experiment is of particular interest to arm and navy officers be cause it embodiea two distinct and im portant problems. The first is the ability at the alrmea to find sn enemy . . .(CnttBicd Fw T4 tMf - RALEIGH, N. G, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE .WOMAN THAT STARTED INVESTIGATION 4 ... He Climbs Aboard Another Band Wagon and "Cusses" Henry "Link" Johnson The News and Observer Bureau, 603 District National Bank Bldg. By EDWARD E. BRITTON. Washington, June .26. Marion Butler climbs aboard another band wagon to night and proceeds to Jray his respects Henry ''Link" Johnson in another nterview, in which he manages to keep pretty squarely in the middle of the road. There's nothing new in it save hit "cussing out" of ''Link" John son. Former Senator Butler in hit in terview teniirht laid: "Linney will be confirmed, but it is a pity that it is to be done in a way to eave a brown tste in the mouth, lhe funi'lcil kind of a hearing ia, of comic. much to be regretted. The notorious and discredited negro leader, Henry Lincoln Johuson, whose very name cost us in North Carolina more than 30,000 votes at the last election, was thereby given a frco and nation-wide official stage on which he could strut both as the accuser and also as the self adver tised trial judje of Mr. Linncy. This offensive, discredited Georgia negro leader was thus given an oppor tunity to carry out his publicly pro claimed threat to get Mr. Linney on the stand and cross-examine him. When this notorious character and his secret well-wishers and nssistauts in our State and in other States in the South found that they could not beat Mr. Linney's confirmation, they seemed to have sud denly shifted their tactics; at any rate the "Link' Johnson cross examination was cunningly changed to a grandstand play of relenting, forgiving, and ac cepting Mr. Linney, to be followed by motley love feast. That was a sight for the gods of the nether world. Obviously, it was essential for us to get Mr. Linney confirmed by any means that were fair and honorable, other wise the Republican party in our State and-the-whole South was dead fw a quarter of a century or more. Just to the same degree that this issue was vital to qs, it was equally vital to the un- American machine political leaders of the bouth of both parties and therefore tho tenseness of the political play by each diametrically opposed politico group was equally opposite. Their poljti cul life was at stake it was a political funeral of gigantic proportions was it to be a Democratic funeral or a Rcpubl can funeral! Then Mr. Butler returned to the mat ter of the hearing. ''That small dark cloud which started no larger than a man's hand and which was apparently under cunning Democratic inspiration was ' fast growing into a "black race issue storm of ominous proportion, when it ws fortunately rendered innocuous by a silver lining in the person of Col I. M. Meekins. He promptly came to the bat and proved to be the savlou, and the hero of a most critical aitus tion. He boldly accepted authorship o' the famous Linney campaign white iu premtcy letter and frankly stated that he had no retraction or apology to make therefor. At this point the notorious 'link Johnson (whom I consider the worst enemy of his race in America) arose to interrupt or cross-examine Col. Meekms, beginning in substance as follows: 'Col. Meekms, you and I ars friends,' whereupon Col. Meekms promptly re torted: " Tarn not eonicions that we are, or were, ever friends.' ' "Here the bell rsng upon ths first Republican bull's eye shot It wss the hour's stroke of hope and Inspiration to every honest snd decent man and stomas from the Potomrt to the Rio Grande, who wanted to see the chains of racial and sectional bondage. In ths Bouth broken, so as to make in ei white political slavery in our beautiful and beloved southland. Every patriotic eitixen of the nation who it aow suul deafly veil: Informed as to the. basic existing eonditioni ia the Booth knows that such white slavery in the Bouth it today aa issns more vital to the welfare of all of the people of the South and ,. .(Cea timed ia rag Two.)., dry7!.i &'Hwjfli- i'vvl BUTLER v: s j p.:. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Hamilton Holt Head Nation Wide Movement tt New York, June" 25. Plans ,for the nation wide movement for tho estab lishment of the fund to endow an award which will bear the name of Woodrow Wilson were announced yesterday by Franklin Roosevelt, chairman of the National committee. ,'Tliis award will bo known as the Woodrow Wilson foundation," Mr. Roosovelt said. "Its purpose will bo to recognize and further ideal for which Mr. Wilson stood. In raising a fund for tho permanent endowmei.t of this award the American peoplo will he given nn opportunity to ejpress their apprecia tion of Mr. Wilson's services to hu nianitv. "Hamilton Holt, the editor ef The Independent, has beaa imnUA Atwact a executive director of the fund, and he has assumed active charge of tho work The Central 1'nion Trust Company of New York is to act as (repository and treasurer. - Head4uaitcrs havo been es tabhshed at lfio Nassau street. 'Cleveland H. Dodgo has been named as chairman or tne temporary rxecu tive committee. Other members of this committee are Frank 1. Cobji, Mrs. J Malcolm Forbes, Edwin F. Gay, Mrs. J Borden Ilarriraan, Edward M. House Adolnh 8. Ochs. Frank L. Polk, Miss Virginia Potter and Mrs. H. Otto Witt penn. The movement had its origin last March in a meeting attended by mem bers of Mr. Wilson s former ouicial family and several hundred men and women who wished to honor Mr. Wilson for his service to the world. At this time it was decided to ask friends and admirers of Mr. Wilson in this country and abroad to subscribe to a fund as memorial to his work. A committee was formed to decide on the means o carrying out this i.lea and they hav adopted a plan for the rnisinc of a fund. TWO MILLION MORE MEN THAN WOMEjy IN AMERICA Women Outnumber In North Carolina, Censvs Figures Show Waaiiiutrtno, Juno " 5ftV There" w'or 2,090,132 more males than females n the United States in 1920 making th ratio 104 to 100 as compared with lOfi to every hundred females in the period of 11H)0-10; tho census bureau an nounced tonight. A preponderance of males 1ms bt ahown in every census due primarily tho announcement said to the consider able number of foreign born resident among whom the males greatly out number tho opposite sex. Thirteen per cent of tho country s total populatio iri 1920 was foreign born. Every 8tato except Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York, North Caro lina, South Carolina, Georgia and Alt bnma had excess of males over females These seven states had ratios ranging from 9C.3 to 100 for Masaachusettes, to 99.9 for North Carolina. HOCKSTERS MIST TAY TAX Hendersonville, June 26. Hereafter produce ' p 'dlors in Hendersonville who do not raise the vegetables they sell, will have to pa a city lieense tax of $3. This wss decided on Wednesday night at the meeting of the Board of Aldermen. Surely Found . No matter how particular you may be, there's some reader of the Want Ads who has vacant - the identical room you've moat panted sad in the locality you' have' always preferred. Not one, but dosens of readers of the Want Ads, are anxious to secure tenants, and they prefer ths "par ticular class for many reasons. 8o, to secure the very best and moat prompt results, put - a little "room wanted" adli thft effecttvo want , directory the Want - Ad Columns-rand you'll be sure to find the room too want - ' ' Phone 127 our Want'Ad Maa wilt gladly call for your ad. 27,1921, TEN G0LDSB0R0 WONIAN Mrs. Ellis H. Massie, Former North Carolina Heiress, Suc cessful In Suit "SPOILED CHILDREN OF RICH" JUDGE STATES Court Refuse To Grant Ali mony To Wife But Signs Or der For Husband To Return $8,000 Which Mrs. Massie Spent Out Of Her Own Funds After HerMarriage (Special to Thet News and Observer.! Owensboro, Ky., June '.'(!.- AU that I can say is that I think the plaintiff in this case is entitled to a divorce. 1 hink it would bo better for both iar to the suit. Surh was 'he brief lecisinn of Judge 11. W. Shell, lato esterday afternoon in the cue of Mrs. rdie Grantham Massie, forncr (lold- oro, IN. ., heiress, against r.ms IL Massie, son of an Owensboro millionaire, oth called "spoiled children of the rich." Judge SWk tlwchncJ to grant to Mrs, Musie any alimony, saying that it had eon shown by the -record that her estate in North Carolina is worth from 50,000 to :,0OO and that her in come ranges from 110,000 to 120,000 i ear. "The Kentucky statutes are plain o he point of alimony," said Judge Stack. "Where a woman "haT air income f her own and is not dependent on nycne tho law dots not intend that she shall receive-alimony." Ellis Massie is the only son of R K, Massie, whom the wife's attorneys eclnred to be a millionaire. Judge Slack said the defendant might inher his father's fortune but that he could not enter into the young man's future expectations. Previous to ruling oil the ilitutir and alimony questions, Judge Slack ren red a decision in the cusn against Ellis 11. Masiio as guardian of his wifa n which he sought a settlement of heri estate when they were married nt Gold oro, N. ('., in May, 1!H, after a speedy courtship, Mrs. Massie wns not of age and her brother in law was restored is her guardian and her husband ap pointed. She inherited her estate from her father when they came to Owensboro to reside, tl7,0f0 of Mrs. Massie s funds was deposited In an Owensvoro bank. In the suit for a settlement of the estate it was nlleged that Mrs. Massie was allowed to spend t8,000 during the time she Hred with her husband and restitu tion of this amount was asked. Attorneys for Mr. Ma9Sie declared that Mr. Mas Sio's income was not sufficient to give to his wife all the luxuries she demand ed and that she insisted on using her own funds. ludso Slack ruled that Mr. Massie as his wife's guardian, had no legal right to allow her to waste her estate and ordered that he restore to her an amount of approximately K,000. Mr. 'Massie is under bond ns guardian. Mr. and Mrs. Massie lived together until March, lt20, when she alleged in her petition bIio was forced to leave him on account of his treatment of her. Mr. Massie denied II the allegations made by his wife and contested the suit for divorce. Mrs. Massie was in the swimming pool nt the Owensboro Country Club when informed of Judge Hlack' decision. well, I am certainly glad it is all over, said Mrs. Massie. "I had made up my mind to be satisfied with any do cision and this one certainly does please me." Mrs. Massie said she would remain in Owensboro another month. "PEACE" BY FOURTH AIM OF REPUBLICANS Leaders In Congress To Get Together On Compromise Resolution Washington, June 26. To have the l nited States technically at peace by July 4, Independence day, appeared to be the aim of Republican leaders in Congress in charge of the Knox Por'er peace resolution. . Senator Lodge of Masaehusetts, chair man of the Senate a-nd House conferees on the resolution returned tonight from Massachusetts prepared to renew nego tiations early this week, probably Tues day. Early agreement du differences be tween tho Seiia-to and House resolutions is predicted: by republican conferees who are expected to reach a compro mise basis before calling in the Pe.no eratie conferees for formal action. The compromise most widely discussed would mould a part of ecsrn of the Knox and IV-Vr resolutions inti a new conferees' drnft, taking the Poier plan for declaring a state of peaces in stead of rcpealin,; the war resolutions, as proposed by the Knox resolutions. It is believed that the conferees will' adopt the Knox reservations as o Ainer':.i proper.? rights snd other features of the Kwe.x plan. 8VES RAILROAD UNION BECAUSE HE LOST JOB. Chattanooga, June 26. Wilinrn Fclton, formerly employed by the Southern Railway, has filed suit in circuit court here against the Brotherhood of Railway Traiimsn, asking $5,000 damages, sl bglag that the union caused him to be dismissed from the railroad's service, it became known today, -. The wit involves two questions which have Sever been determined n Tenrrcl- GIVEN DIVORCE IN KENTUCKY COURT se courts. One is wjieeroiLjL average pricirnfr-wheat jumped aon-anion- laborer who hae been dis ehargod nt th) instance of union labor has any remedy at law and the second it whether an incorporated labor organi sation may be cued for monetary dam ages resulting- from the loss of tbsi Wlfoi .... . PAGES TODAY, LIGHTNING STRIKES RADIO -STATION AT ARLINGTON W.hlfto, Jim J. The biff atval radio eiatiea at Arlington was track sad badly damaged by light, lag early tealght. At the Navy IVparUMBt H was said the ylawt aid b sat f eaaamtaalea teveral days, tfcoifk Ike extent f the dam age had not beta determined. Coast. I traffic, Ikrladina broadcast ached b ad tiara signal Mat at twlc aigntly, wilt be taasadd several days. B Foul Play May Have Caused Deaths Of Entire Family On Kentucky Farm Mayfleld, Ky., June 20. The bodies of five adults and ' six children were found in the ruins of the home of Ern est I-awrence, a farmer living about seven mile from here, whi.-h was de stro.ved by fire !a--t midnight. There were indications that the dead may have been the victims of foul play and at a coroner's inquest held hern today a non committal verdict was returned The dead are Ernest I.arenci, 31 his wife, 2.. and the three children ranging in age from five years to .i lou'U months, Otis Drew, 28, and .wife as, and three children ranging from four years to four months, and DieLmer Drew, 23. Lawrence and Otis Oren were brothers m taw and the Drews were brothers. Neighbors who were attending a nic nic about a mile from" the Lawrence house, a long structure of only two rooms, saw the blaxe about 11:30 o'clock. Two young men, the first to arrive on the scene, were unable to enter the house because of the 'ire, but climbing a tree nearby could s. the bodies lying en the floor. An examination of the bodies, wbi were burned beyond recognition, show ed that one of the women bore wounds thnt seemed to have been made by some sharp instrument. Tho dress of the infant which this woman is thought to have been holding in her arms was drenched with blood. In one of the rooms in uhich several bodies were lying was a revolver run- tainirjf six empty cartridges, a shotgun. i rifle with a curt ridge that had been liseharged and another exploded car tridge nearby, a double bitted axe on the bed springs near the body of one of the men, and a large oil can which had been kept in the yard. Particles of clothing were clinging to the bodies of tho men, showing thnt they had not retired before they nuit death. Screams of women and "hiljreu end several shots are said to have been heard by neighbors shortly before the fir was discovered. ACTIVE STEPS TO SETTLE TROUBLE Ulster Cabinet Meets Tomor row To Consider Premier George's Letter Belfast, June 26. (By the Assiciad Press)--A meeting of tho Lister cabi net has been called for Tuesday bv Sir James Craig, the Premier, to eonsidor the letter of Prime Minister Llovd (ieorge inviting the leaders of North and South Ireland to a conference for the purpose of trying to bring about a reconciliation between the factions in Ireland. The letter reached Sir Jinnes by cour ier this morning simultaneously with the Sunday newspapers commenting on the letter. Sir .lames replied immdi ately informing Mr, Lloyd George that ho was sumoning a meeting of the Ulster cabinet for Tuesday and thrtt he hoped to secure the attendance of ii!l tho members. "Yon rest assured no time will be lost in conveying the result of out de liberations, his message concluded. Today Sir James was in conference with his chief supporters. The gert(ral feeling in Tlfnst is that the Ulster men will demand that the terms to be 'lis cussed at the proposed conference shoil be strictly limited, especially exclul ing the subject of a republic. BAPTISTS MAY ELECT WOMAN AS PRESIDENT lies Moines, Ja., June "(. 1 om;eS' shared genera1! interest with the .id dresses on today's program of the Northern Baptist convention and the possibility' of a woman becoming "be next 1 resident of the convention wis discussed when the name of Mrs. Helen Barrett Montgomery, of Rochester, N Y., was mentioned in this connection. President W. J. McGloethlin, of Fur man University, Cfreenville, 8. C, wa a speaker today, and the convention sermon was delivered by Rev. Dr. W. B. Ilinson, of Portland, Ore. Names of other prominent Baptists who figure as presidential possibilities included James C. Colgate of New York, now treasurer of the New World move ment fund. -Those delegates who have befyi put ting forward Mrs. Montgomery's? name point to her record as one of the ab!rat women lenders smong the Northern Baptists snd to the record made by fite women's American Baptist foreign mis sion society, of which she is President. ADVANCE DURING MAY MADE IN FARM PRICES , , . . o Washington, June S6. Prices of farm crops advanced during May from the general level of prices obtaining aince June, 1920, according to a report is sued today, by the Department of Agri cultures Bureau of crop estimates last month from LH to 11.21 a bushel ; corn rose three cents to a basis of 02 1-8 cents; rye from $1.05 to fl.12, and apples from (1.43 to 1.69. The report snowed a slight decline la prices for hay, eggs and ehiehens aad a drop of 10 eents a pound f Qf buttert ELEVEN BODIES IN BURNED UILDING PRICg FIVE CENTS, CRAZED YOUNG MAN SHOOTS fi!RL THEN FIRES ON HIMSELF Miss Ecklin In Washington ,ln nospitai and Chances For Recovery Slim DOCTORS BEGGED BY MAN TO LET HIM DIE, Leslie Cox Shoots Sweetheart Twice As She Walks Along- Street With Another Youna; Woman and Young Man; Crowd Gathers and Threat ens Perpetrator Of Shooting (Special to tho News and Observer.) Washington, N. C, June 26. Crazed ' with jealousy because ho saw his sweet heart in company with aathr- awn, Leslie Cox, ago 2), shot Miss Lola Eck lin, age IS, twice through the body and then turned tho revolver upon himself, Inflicting a serious wound in the ab domen, this evening shortly after 7 o'clock. Miss Lcklin is at one of the local hospitals at the point of death, while Cox is at the other local hospital begging tho physicians to allow him to die. The girl's chances for recovery were said tonight to be very slim. The shooting occurred on Fifth street, and was witnessed by a score or more persons in the immediate neighborhood. A largo crowd of other people quickly gathered and threats of violence against the crazed young man were beard, but it is not believed that any effort will be made to put them into effect. A special police detail has been stationed -lit the hospital where I'ox is a patient. Well Known In Washington Both Miss Ecklin and Cox are well known here. It is said that they have been going together but that they quar reled about two weeks ago and that Cox had not been to see the girl since. He is reported to have told her that if he ever saw her in company with another man he would kill her. This afternoon Miss Ecklin and a girl friend went out walking with two young men. After taking some pictures in tho outskirts of town, one of the young men left them and the other young mnn accompanied them to the citv. As ithey were wulkimr slowly along Fifth""street about 7 o'clock, footsteps were heard belied but no attention was paid to them until Miss Ecklin wsa suddenly seized by the arm snd swung around. The others in the party turned to see Cox with a revolver ia his hand, which he brandished, his face denthly white and his body quivering with excitement. , Fires Twice Into Body. "Whnt did I tell youf" ho shouted, and before anyono could reach him h thrust the pistol against tho girl and fired. Her body swayed slightly and he fired again, the second bullet Liking effect within four inches of the first. Dropping tho girl he stepped back a paco and placed the revolver against his own body and" pulled the trigger, then falling with his face to the pave ment. Tho young woman was taken te tho Washington hpJtpital while the young man was carnejrto the Fowle Memorial hospital. Miss Ecklin regained consciousness, but at 10 o'clock tonight she was in a critical condition. Cox was operated and the doctors think he will re cover. Miss Ecklin la a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ecklin, of tins city. Cox is employed in a local business establish ment. WANT NO WOMEN ON JURY TO TRY WOMAN Defense In Mrs. Kaber's Case Determined To Challenge Women Cleveland, O., June 26. No women will serve on the jury that is to try Mrs. Eva Catharine Kaber for first de gree murder of her husband, Daniel F. Kaber, when her trial opens Tuesday, if the defense can prevent it, Francis W. Paulson, Mrs. Kaber's attorney, an nounced tonight. He declared they art too cold-blooded, especially with meaV bers of their own sex, and that he will exercise all of his 16 peremptory chal lenges, if necessary, against women. "My cxix rieuce has been that women jurors nro morn cold blooded and merci less than men,'' Mr. Paulson said. "They ars less moved than men by the emo tions that go to decide a case of this kind. "Tho history 6'f the world shows that whenever one woman has sat in judf ment on another she has been hard OS) thst woman. "We will challenge every woman for cai.sf, and if that faiU, are ready to usa every one ef oar M peremptory ehal lengei to get rid of them.' .. . About one-third of the names In the jury lists are those of women. Steamer Abandoned at 8ea.' Savannah, Ga., June 26. The British itermer Bessij Dollar, Savannah for, Vancouver, sends wireless message re-. '. porting a schooner on fire and aban-; doned in latitude 28.35 North, longitude 79.45 West. Biggin j aflame and schooner a total loss. ; ., CHESTNUT COLT WINS - 'GRAND PRIX DE PARIS Parts. Jane ttt-(By the Assoc, stede Prees.) Th Grand Prix da Paris waa won today by J. Wateoa's colt Lemonora. Flecholr was second Harprerate third. .The pars was valued at four haadred tkoaaand frsaee, the largest stske ever pnt ap ea a French race coarse. Ltmolora came a en the aU aids after all the French horses had , tired aad . area - easily by tws) ' ' laifftha, Beveatoesj horses started