»*n n today, mopping up the last hinese defending the Shanghai sc tor along the Nantao water. Watching the spectatular battle •om the French concession side nes, a few yards away, Cambrook tephens, reporter for the London aily Telegram was killed by a lil of Japanese machine gun bul its. Tw< French tramway employees id two French police and a num *r of Chinese were wounded by ild bullets. Tonight blazing fires battled antao and PootUlig A Japanese attack with tanks, rtillery fire and shock troops roke Chinese resistance along the estern bounderies of the sector fter three days of day and night mflict. Stephens was killed and the two ’rcnch poucc wounded when the apancse attacked Chinese sand agged machine gun nests out Armistice Day Is Ibserved At Chapel !. 0. Schaefer, Senior Warden Of Good Shepherd Church, Conducts Service. fill Make Series of Talks For Carolina Orpkapagre Asso ciation; 3:30 Sunday. Raleigh, Nov. 11.—Governor yde R. Hoey will deliver a 16 tnute radio address over station PTF, Raleigh, beginning at 3:30 slock Sunday afternoon, Novem ir 14, under lie auspices of the prth Carolina Orphanage Asao iments have been te-wide radio hi At noon today, several citizens athered at Pugh’s chapel for the Armistice Day service held by the ood Shepherd church. The group s composed of members of the nl Legion, Auxiliary, War Moth and others who participated in ms service. The service itself was brief but host impressive, being a combined Memorial to the dead and a prayer r future peace. E. O. Schaefer, aior warden, and lay-reader, in jic absence of the rector, Rev. R. Shannonhouse, conducted the rice in an impressive manner, was assisted by Ogbura Yates, a layreadcr. The service was appropriate combination of the siyer Book and a special leaflet spared by the Episcopal church this occasion. One hymn, a syer for peace, concluded the ser chapel was decorated for is occasion with large American white crosses, symbolic of sacrifice made by American bldiers, and red and white flowers, fhich added further to the ef ctiveness and spirituality of the rice. This was the only religious rice held in the town and ed the program at pi buildings and the iich attracted many visitors and townfolk, as well. :> iovernor To Make made nook-up the Charlptte, Greensboro, alem and Asheville radio Hoey will appeal to of North Carolina in f the annual Thanksgiving for the orphanges of the introduced ionev land * Washington! Where the War Ended Slowly and with measured tread a sentry paces before the simple tomb on the heights of Arlinj where "... rests in honored glory an American soldi ;r known but to God.” Liitlp pomp or ceremony turbs the quiet and peaceful spot across the river from Washington where others carry on the Repub! which the, Unknown Soldier died. Only on Armistice Day, November 31, does the steady stream of paying tribute to his memory rise to a flood. ■J£4 Newly-risen among the green trees of the Forest of Ouapeigne. a marble figure oi Ferdinand Foch today maiks the spot where 19 year.-, ago stood his railway car when, as Allied commander-in-chief, he re ceived the German delegation which came with' their petition that the fighting cease. o Honors World War Dea ■■l'Minutes at 11 O’Clo Stilled Church Service Speakers In Local Schools Invasion Of China Supported By Jap Envoy Guest Speaker At Group Meeting at Chapel Hill; Raps Communists. Chapel Hill, Nov. 11.—“(TP)— Yakichiro Suma, cousclor of the Japanese embassy in Washington, said in an address last night that Japan’s present program in China “is a determined effort to quaran tine’ war in the east.* He said “misgovemment in China is fo be corrected. Our ends arc peace and order, not territory or concessions.” His appearance here was sponsored by the Car olina Political Union, a student non-partisan orgahization which has asked the Chinese legation to send a speaker to present Chi nese case at a later date. Mr. Suma spoke before a large audience of faculty, Students and townspeople in Memorial hall. A native Japanese and active in his country’s diplomatic service for the last 18 years, he was intro duced by Dr. D. H. Buchanan member of the University Eco nomics department wbo spent sev eral years in the Far East. The presiding officer was Alexander Heat'd of Savannah, Ga., president of the Political union. The Japanese diplomat declared that most of the recent anti-for eign agitation in China has been financed and encouraged by the Nanking government and has not been a spontaneous outburst by the people themselves. Exempt Bonds May Face Tax Penalty Incomes From Federal And State Securities Being Considered For Taxes. Washington, Nov. 11.—CP)—A house-packed sub-committee dis closed toady the possibility of in creasing taxes oh those who re ceive incomes from tax exempt sec urities. Chairman Vinson (D-Ky.) said, HO decision was made on any item." iropoBal on tax exempt would bring revenue from ^6,006,000,000 of Federal, Jtate and municipal securities in ;he tax picture. Th2 City of Asheboro honored its world war dead in its annual ob servance of Armistice Day today. Members of Dixon Post, Ameri can Legion, and its Auxiliary con tinued their military observance during the day by attending a church service in Pugh’s chapel at noon, get-together meetings dur ing the evening and, the annual ex-service men’t dinner in the Bap tist church tonight. The day’s program opened at 9 o’clock this morning in both city schools. Students of the elemen tary grades in the Fayetteville street school met at Chapel ser vice and listened to an address by A. I. Ferree a member of the local Legion post. State Senator Henry Ingram, a World War veteran, addressed the High students at 10 o’clock and Mi's. George Burkhead, one of the Auxiliary leaders, spoke to the students in the Park street school. At the conclusion of Senator Ingrain’s address, the students as sembled on the parade ground in rear of the Fayetteville school and, led by the high school band, parad ed through the streets of the city. The parade was headed by Wal ter Craven, grand marshall, his aides and members of the police department. Detachments of the American Legion, The Legion Auxiliary, Sons of the Legion and Boy and Girl scouts also participated. The Fay etteville street school group met the student body from the Park street school out Sunset avenue and from there the combined units marched tnrough the main sections of the city. Randolph’s War Mothers, aged in years, but still young in thought were given an honor position in the parade — in gaily decked automo biles, these women who gave their sons in the World War—brought up in rear of the school children division. There they rode, with mothers’ watchful eyes over the little boys ahd girls who proceeded them in the marching. Spectators hushed their cheers as these cars appeared—thinking perhaps of a few short years back —when these same mothers watch ed another parade—their sons marching as these boys and girls may some day march. Hats were doffed, business still ed at this moment for it seemed fate that these cars, carrying these Mothers., turned into the square at Fayetteville street und Sunset avenue at precisely IT o’clock. In rear of the Mothers’ cars came a. float representing the Red - c utJrinj(,f «Jy The Associated Tress.)—Under the Wide and starry sides of his own home-land America’s unknown dead from France sleeps tonight, a sol dier home from the wars. Alone, he lies in the narrow cell that guards his body; but his soul has entered into the spirit that is America.- Wherever liberty is held close in men’s hearts, the honor and the glory and the pledge of high endeavor poured out over name less one of fame, will be told and sung by Americans for all time. Scrolled across the marble area of the memorial raised to American soldier and sailor dead, everywhere, which stands like a monument be hind his tomb, runs this legend: “We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain.” The words were spoken by the martyred Lincoln over the dead at. Gettysburg. And today with voice strong with determination and rin ging with deep emotion, another President echoed that high resolve over the coffin of the soldier who died for the flag in France. Great men in the world’s affairs heard that high purpose reiterated by the man who stands at the head of the American people. Tomor row they will gather in the city that stands almost in the shadow of the new American shrine of liberty dedicated today. They will talk of peace; of the curbing of the havoc of war. x They will speak of the war in France, that robbed this soldier of life and name and brought death to comrades of all nations by the hundreds of thousands. And in their ears when they meet must ring President Harding’s declara tion today beside that flag-wrapped honor-laden bier: “There must be, there shall lie, the commanding voice of a consci ous civilization against armed war fare.” Out there in the broad avenue vfaa a simple soldier, dead for hon or of the flag. He was nameless. No man knew what part in the great life of the nation he had filled when last he passed over his home soil. But in France he had died as turn to Page 2) (Local Attorney Adds His Tribute Henry Robins Participates In Eulogies of R. C. Kelly, For j mer Randolph Attorney. I Many attorneys from various parts of North Carolina gathered ; yesterday afternoon at the Guil jford county courthouse to pay trib ute to the memory of a member of j the Greensboro bar who passed i suddenly on May 15th—Richard C. Kelly. The late Mr. Kelly was well known and widely beloved in Ran dolph where he practiced law with the late Wm. C. Hammer for sev eral years. In the language of a lengthy resolution adopted by his profes sional brethren, Richard Cecil Kel ly “loved the truth passionately and sincerely, and he hated, with the vigor of a Carlyle, all sham and | hypocrisy. * * * He was endowed 1 with a magnificent mind and achie ved great learning.” With both civil and criminal di visions of court in recess, the me morial service began at 2:30 o’clock with Judge William F. Harding, Charlotte, presiding. Among the eulogies offered by the late attorney’s friends and as sociates were those of A. Wayland Cooke, clerk of Guilford Superior court; Henry Robins, Asheboro, where Mr. Kelly began practicing law in 1008 at the age of 22; Sidney Alderman, Washington, with whom Mr. Kelly was associated as di vision counsel for the Southern Railway company for North Caro lina; William T. Joyner, formerly of Washington, now of Raleigh, who succeeded Mr. Kelly as division counsel; Charles A. Hines, Greens boro, who was a partner of Mr. Keily for some time in the firm of Hir.es, Kelly and Boren. A portrait of the late Greensboro attorney, which will join those of other eminent legal minds on the walls >f the superior courtroom, was presented by Russell Robinson. Mrs. W. D. Lamar Daughter’s Leader Richmond, Va., Nov. 11.—C/P)— Mrs. Walter D. Lamar, of Macon, Ga., was elected president-general of the U. D. C. today at the gen eral division’s 44th annual con vention. Mrs. R. D. Wright, Newberry, S. C. was re-elected second vice j president and L. B. Newell, Char ! lotte, N. C. was elected custodian of the crosses. II Britan’s Ceremony Called “Hypocrisy” At Cenotapah Rites Winter Weather Is On Our Heels Cold weather is just around the corner. There is no ques tion about this, and the state ment did not come from any Weather Man. It came from wild geese as they passed over Randolph county this morning traveling south. The geese not Slop, but hurried on toward their southern destination. They did give five or six warn ing squawks enroute. to warn Randolph folk to get in their , wood, rover up out-door things, attend to their automobile ra diators, and other winter prep ara tiois. Ezra Cox, a wise farmer of Asheboro route one, heard the geese amt stopped in at The Daily Courier office this morn ing to talk about the' weather. Several other weather-wise folk heard the geese also and recognized the cry of approach ing winter. Roosevelt Leads Nation’s Eulogy Ceremony at Arlington As Pershing Arrives Home Without Celebration. (By The Associated Press) Men who fought in the last war and men who may in the next, led tha^oei&hhtfon t tit Ate 19th «&* niversary of the Armistice in many lands today. In Arlington Cemetery, President Roosevelt paid tribute to the na tion’s world war dead with the traditional observance of two minutes of.:silence before the tomb of the Unknown Soldier. He stood bareheaded before the marble dome while aides placed wreathes of flowers and army bugles sounded taps. The President made no address but Daniel J. Doherty, national commander of the American Legion said the memory of the nation’s world war dead could best be served by the “atonement of enduring peace.” Assistant secretary of war, Louis Johnson, cited the war-like at mosphere and bloody conflict in Spain and China as “who can say in the midst of such international chaos that we may never be called upon again to defend ourselves.” General John J. Pershing ar rived in New York on the liner Washington without ceremony and without fanfare, in strange con trast to his return to this country after the war, when his name was on every lip and his approached to the city was the signal for a wild celebration. Balanced Budget Hits More Snags LaFoIlette Advocates Mors Federal Spending: to Halt Business Loss. Washington, Nov. 11.—(/P>—The administration’s pledge by Secre tary Morganthau to a program of curtailed expenditures to balance the budget ran into today a Con gressional demand for increased spending. Senator LaFoIlette (D-Wis.), a spokesman for the self-styled lib eral bloc and a supporter of Presi dent Roosevelt declared additional spending was “necessary to end the downward spiral” in business. He advocated increased taxes to fin ance it. His suggestion was directly counter to Secretary Morganthau’s speech in New York last night in which the treasury head sought to reasure business. Violet Velvet Favored Paris.—(.P)—Princess Karam of Kapurthala, the young East Indian beauty, wears one of the short bou ffant evening gowns designed of violet velvet. It is lengthened in the back with two long ends falling from a huge puffed bow at the waistline. Chicago, Edward Shuns Day; Was “Insulted” By St. George Pastor Former Monarch Called “Man Who Could Not Defend Himself” m Paris. George VI Disturbed Former Asylum Inmate Yells Down British Service; Threatened King. London, Nov. 11.—(JP)—An es caped asylum inmate fought to the King’s guard today with a cry of “hypocrisy” and shattered the two minutes of silence of Armistice Day’s tribute to the British war dead. King George, standing rigidly at attention before the solemn Ceri otapah ignored the disturber, who shouted: “All this is hypocrisy—you’re deliberately preparing for war.” Queen Mother Mary and Queen Elizabeth, watching from a Home Office window, looked on agast. With hands uplifted and, clad in a raincoat, the middle-aged man 1 dashed through the line of sailor ,| guards a few feet to the right and * rear of the Monarch. Guards scuffled on the pavement If and placed hands over the dis- ijjj turber’s mouth. Apparently un- | conscious, he was carried quickly Jj out of the cx-owd and taken to St. \ Stephen’s hospital for medical oh sei-vance. He was identified as Stanley Storey, who escaped September 21. While the Legions of today marched in London and Paris, : statesmen in Brussels awaited Ja pan’s answer to its plea for peace in the Far East. Italy obsei-ved its own Armistice Day last Wednesday. Germany did not celebrate. The former Kaiser in his Doom exile ignoi-ed the anniversary. The French observed the day with a great military review, cen tering about the Ai-ch de Triumphe, combining modem troops with the World W’ar fighters in a mighty „ display of militax-y power. Duke Insulted | Paris, Nov. 11.—(JP>—A pastor ; appologized today to the Duke of Windsor for “an insult” to a “man who could not defend himself”, but the Duke, nevertheless shunned an Armistice Day service within St. Geoi-ge’s here because his presence was declared unwelcome. The pastor, the Rev. J. L. C. Dark, explained that he expressed wish that the former British King and former head of the Church of England attend and told the Bri tish Legion: “The very last thing I wished to do was to insult a man who couldn’t defend himself. Reporters made me do that. There was nothing further from my intentions. I swear to that.” Dictatorship In Force In Brazil Constitution Thrown Out With Senate; Power Now Centralized. Richmond. Va. Officers of the Ui Rio de Janeiro, Nov. 11.—(Jfy— Brazil today promulgated a new constitution—her second in four years—with the avowed purpose of concentrating authority in the hands of President Getulio Vargas and his cabinet and insuring in ternal peace. >4; The new constitution, replacing the one which inaugurated the sec ond Brazilian republic in 1934, dis solved the senate, chember of depu ties and all state and municipal leg islative bodies. Hosts on Way Here Cannes, France, Nov. 11.—OB— Herman Rodgers and his wife, hosts to the Duchess of Windsor when she first went to France from England during the abdi cation crisis last December, sail ed from Villefranche today New York.