16 PAGES TODAY GHARL nnrrnr AND EVENING CHRONICLE "GREAT RR P 14 A D I HTTP f C ttv..m ' i I a m wr -m. mm -m w ar w m m r w , 1NKWSPAPFP" - i i i .. . - 1 1 n a m. mv m m m mv m m - i I - , r ' i ii t rlMni.OTTE NEWS Establlhpd, Dailv tese c ;: l-VMNi; CHUO.MCLE EstablisLeiar 1903. $ Snnd- NIGHT EDITION i - SAW ACOR SHOOT an: A SICK CHARLOTTE, N. C, HAH HY Itt h iwv.. i ruKAL n AKU1NG FORCED RULE OF PEOPI. D KILL TO CHANGE MIND G01 IF SENATE WWW V m. rnirn Was Granted a Thirty-Day Fu rloush and Then Made Serjeant As Reward HEARING IS HELD UP Four Witnesses Failed To Answer Present When Names Were Called WEDNESDAY EVENTNft ' fHE KrasiSc Sh'S??. "mW IPDTPP TCTirn xwiKt, iaay s, 114, f J. xtxvJLJ J? 1 V Hj villi IN 1q DAIL CONTINUES ITS MSfllSSinN B APHI'OT SEATSNEWBERRY OF PEACE PACT VT;:b;'c-.cTi. Dec. 21. Failure of a t.;n-'M 1- o: witnesses to appear led today i t i.'.c :iljournnient until January 4 of puhlio hearings being: conducted ,v a ffiiMo committee into charges . by Senator Watson, of Georgia, ihfit .Arr,---rioan soldiers were hanged v!hri.:t ti ial in France. A ft or adjourning, the committee went ".'n executive session to determine wh.' firiinn. snouia oe lanen in the rjf of several witnesses who. when -rmr.T. nan teiegrapnea tnat they uiiew(v ower Pacific Treaty Conference Wltr c DpWot nor. respond. ; n'hliefc-n. Dec. 21. Called today a i ' frit in a second list of witnesses I Vi ti'.p Ser.ate committee investifation I r charges by Senator Watson, Demo ! rvi. Oeergia. that American soldiers I , vieari hanged without trial in 1 rnr.ee. Clarion J. T allis. of Athens, Ga. I reared he was a corporal shoot and j I,:!! a. private so.dier at Camp Wheel I fr. Oorpfa. j The witness said he did not serve I fvrr'fis and had no evidence bearing crs cxe-utions on roreign soil. The con- I J-..T31. he said, was named Crawford I nri the man shot, he thought, Private I a:iey. of Tampa, Fla. j Wn; !? read a letter from one of his j r'tr.rad'.?? at Sandusky. Ohio, attackin I ( r? of a f teorgia regiment and in- I air.? r.e would get even some day "Some of these Georgia officers were ? rrotry pad rrom that?" TVallis 65ked. was I "Yes. indeed." he replied. J "This seems to be a Georgia family I row." said Senator Ernst. Republican I Kentucky, and Senator Watson joined i in tr.e laugnter. At this point. Senator Watson offered i a :p'ram received today from James Milton, of Chattanooga. Tenn., say- j in? he had witnessed the killing of Ha'!ey by Crawford and would come to Washington to testify to that effect j nther tlfgram from W. F. Brock, of j !-:,'',a'B. a said the soldier was killed j ..use he was iil and unable to work I i ti t Crawfnrd was not tried by I :r;--::art:a!. Wallis. however, had an- i ' 'rsion. saying that Crawford v - by court-martial, given a . . tvnoueh and-then MM3-a sar- : :. To the host of his recollection, t ..; .,n?r was in May or June 1918. -!-::.; rf the telegrams rcferrprt tn 1 n-yiord as a captain, but Wallis stuck ' ' '.v. story that he was a corporal at :Jr.e of the shooting. n-r.r,rts published at the time of the .-.eek-r "oting. Wallis said s;owed that Halley was shot while re---.m? f.rret. i,!ir ho added such re-n;-t,- wf-fe not true. "Did h. the corporal provocation Miwur.g mm.'" '-'AD 0 PROVOCATION" ,i;u1;;;:'t!' At the time he was Senator Watson DOES . PLYTO JAPAN President HasNo "Objec tion" To The Construc tion Already Agreed To Y,Sh?gton- Dec- 21. (By the Asso ciated PressV-The British delegation ;UT cancelled reservations i! ha3 made on a stpam.r ,;i.- "rta v,i. uihS irom ivew oik on December 31. It was state upmhflra r . . L WAS stated is little u "gation think there i? wn?S of ? eir bei"S able to i-ne miaaie of January. Washington. Dec. "1 m a ?l?MbDePnt of he cE m;;'".ww .tween President oToT I. lne,.Am arms dele- iu application of the new n fCTi,:":1 treaty and a break 1 '-""ie-Japanese negotiations nfUfUnS had thrown naS side of the arms conference program otSmeThat into the backgrouno? Acceptance by France of the Ameri can tirnnnodl t -1 -- , . "leu V r. -iiu.uuu tons in caD- al ships had placed the naval negotia nons on a comparativelv again although the French reserva tions tor a higher ratio in small de fensive craft still remained to be treat- tion"ntnntln: that he had 'ino objee- lion to the con5?tnintirv e t cific treaty agreed to by the American delegates, that it shall anniv t i ' principal islands of the foiP?8?der:t HardinS: declared in a tormal statement, issued after t, expressed the opinion in an interview with newsnaner men vos(dot ,-i ; , , . . - ; - ' virv nidi JL aid not anDlv to thro icio the difference i n view in nricj in be permitted to embarrass the confer- CnCe. r he ratification of the agree ment." The President's Rtnt sued after a two-h benato.-s Lodse and TTnriwrH Ao-4 7 "v, ul cue Y ue,t'saiion, was the first of hcial confirmation that an understand. mg existed amonsr the rft oo , 1.- - -o-v.o a. a iu rtiJiJiiciinon 01 the treaty The President's expression of nmr. ion on the matter, nithn,, c,.,; i . p,.. .LilU ATM PI 1 1 C r 1 - . l - , - wiuoc iu mm to nave been made without consultation with his otctte department advisers anrl witv.. out any intention of announcing the Administration's attitude, created at once an evident desire among the -n.ncu iL-ans. tsritlStt. .lananot:n j .,1 diiivt; mat tne attitude of the American Government ho aron Kato, head of the Jananese di0 gation and one of those who showed greatest interest in the President 'a titude. said prior to Mr. Hardino-' mal statement that a nledse of prevented him from divulging whether "-u oeen an agreement as to ao phcation of the treaty. He added that the "meaning adopted at the time of .-mS.,w,s mignt oe cnanged in the fu iuie. &u x can say nothing at this arm had been hroken '. I0.r rrusinff to work and was struck down ig to w-ork and dying the next 1 Wuii;.. ... ... l H h Irr"sstxanunat,on' Pxplain- i i' , i, ''ad Jen rourtmartlaled 1 ' :s' P'V for ten Aava , ; -';' ' and being locked up for ovVtan'-r. thp s-cond' Ho said he n;ari:v "Th returned in each r-aa fi-e are three A U' t "M mv (FI. ' '" ' "'arses "''- papers," ne said f thf' u';'r Department said I ."",r,o tne records to de- J . . V ' ru( n case as that describ- I u ;c t f ' ,-,,1 0:: lad concluded hie to. ''lf' Ilnlrios r.f !. x , -i, ... - me otner I',';; T'T- ::.n!nr'!10fl 10 appear todav o;"fv,i ti 'V none or' the ve re ,, ' 1 lie hearing then went over h.,hJ., with the expectation .......-c.- inignt arriv! :ri,e. s-;, ft' Jr Hierome T,. Opie. -; ;,',.'''!: va- v-'ho commanded the "J. ,'r'i0n' l'Rth infantry. was T'"::V-y l'r'fore the committee ..' j ;:'fying yesterday. Henry L. , . -in, o.-e. Ohio, declared h :. 1 )y" of the third battn f .ntnnti-y. kill two soldiers at .,.. .,." without provocation. . ' ; from his home at Staun .; " categorical -denial charact .?(-'."" n a "skulker". In a let 1 I l .yfi n t f. nr r. n .1 . . y-, . , '' A- Rfcthel, assistant iudrr. ?'-nerni. stated that Colonel ' "'nmand of the unit men- . ' " t. that he had a fine re "' " T'lr" War had titc.r nn I3 a lieutenant rrlnnr7 ..w - u .r i , . A not 'f,! immune;1 :m fh,;';. committee decide to 1 wr..-,. .V, 1 witness," Colonel Beth ' V not see how he could lis ri;,, h 'on of self-incrimination oin army of the ," , '"rminated his amena ( ja court-martial. He ; 'i r,j a cjvjj court of 'aVf j'u--r';;,- s!.,c" court ever did i!-vt..,j ( r .. J" or tfie offenses, it was !" t'--, ' s;t'''f' as I indicated in " u ,.;,"-'t I.. - Hp ("ou'd not be tried -:tf-.. .. "" L ('i the lnitf.d to)no V'' i: . , ' , W"e committed in the. - - J r r the witnoca ci iilfio rf gave ' I'.'r -Vn n(l other Person who v, " to testify in the case. "tr.-s-. ':.'? the only available . ''. " iS desirorl -. ,,v.,.. ir.riv, .... !..' ";Sno explanation as tn th. v.-,'rc. , !' sx witnesses whose mi, r, ,'P( and who had been J !" . h, - ':i-'n3egee directed Colonel '"f a ,h'''lJ0Vt whether it were ' v,Dy that cer .f',,t who were prenared tr Hie prenared to court-martini gcoinst : a jfrd had not been per-!;- - Wore the court. ;an' "this cLVf; il the chair committee wants to know ,?MSril,TKK THERE fi,i-m-'t ('- 21 Major Brt ""juidin oi tne leist Par Eastern matters had assumed added prominence today through the abrupt adjournment vesterdav nf 'tva Shantung conferences between the Chinese and Japanese delegates after the latter had announced that they could proceed no further on the ques tion of restoration of the Kiao Chow Railway to Chinese control without relerring certain points to Tokio for instructions. Although the adjourn ment came with the delegations also still far apart on the question of fi nancial settlement by China for the road, the chief stumbling block, re garded as threatening the entire Shan tung negotiations, was the Japanese i piuouf-ai mat Japanese experts be ap pointed in the service of the railway. The naval situation remained mnr or less at a standstill today while the French delegates were understood to be preparing a definite proposal as ta tne amount ot auxiliary naval ton nage, including submarines, desired as aconamon to their acceptance of the -io.uuu proportion ior capital shiDs. to oe presented at the meetine of the committee of the whole on limitation of armammts. President Harding's statement, is sued last night after he had announced in the afternoon statement that "the treaty no more applies to' the island constituting Japan proner than it does to the mainland of the United states, touows: "When the President was respond ing to press inquiries at the afternoon intervisw today (Tuesday), he express ed the opinion that the homeland of Japan did not come within the words 'insular possessions and insular domin ions' under the four-power agreement except as territory proper of any other nation which is a party to the agree ment. "This expression," the statement continued, "has been emphasized as a division betveen the President and the delegates to the conference in con struing the four-power agreement. "The President announces that the difference in view in no wise will be permitted to embarrass the conference or the ratification of the agreement. He had assumed all along that the spirit of the conference contemplates a conndence which pledges respect of territory in every way which tends to promote lasting peace. He has learned from the United States delegates to the conference that they have agreed to the construction which includes the homeland of Janan in tne term "insular possessions and insular dominions and has no objection to that construction. Entire Election Was Taint ed, Senator Kenyon, of Iowa, Tells Senate. STATUTES VIOLATED. Foundations of This Gov ernment Will be Under mined if He is Seated. Washington, Dec. 21. Declaring the money spent in Senator Newberry's campaign for election to the Senate irom Michigan, "regardless of anv t. .'lf :?ntire eIlctin to be. . .T. ivenyon, Kepublican, a?rVa sserted i a speech in the Sen ate today on the Ford-Xewberry elec- seTt nnt- at if that bod' vted to -nn M 6 .Mlchisan Senator, it would be undermining the foundations of this 2Tonnen?'eSen,tP''rU,e f the eo is gone Senator Kenyon said, if ihe Senate "justifies the expenditure of hundreds of thousands of dollars to se cure a seat here." .awu snows an expenditure of at. ast $23.000. Senator Kenyon "rom athSnf V?at "the Plain inence from the testimony is that a much larger sum was expended." trefJh re-?vrd snored 'the expendi tuie of a million dmiavo r - S?' tor Iven5ron continued. "I Put nn "t 8tl" WUld 8Wlt iut no senator who will stuir v,,- with an open mind and forget that he Amemb?r f any Political party can oo otherwise than arrive Qt v, elusion that the statutes' nfuJz: ' were flagrantly violated; that such sums of money were snent in tho fif Jf 1 a 8 to, shock public conscience, and lent election is tainted and fraudu- STRICTLY PARTY VOTE. X0 argument here ic 4- change any votes. The' Jfa pushed at a time when the country can jvnuvv uut mue about it. If Mr New berry were a Democrat, he would be promptly voted out under this record ftf, fwe :?.emocrata would be found stoutly defending him. It is unfortun rim,rakn ai)y tluestion of public mo rahty there slotdd be a dividing line of polities in the chamber. 4. 1-' e -ewoerry case is any test of Republicanism. I deny the seven million maloritv nf iv. Dn!,i: Question of Ratification or Rejection Still is Very Much in Doubt ALTERNATIVE IS WAR Lloyd-George Gave Ireland Choice of Signing or Else Going to War Dublin, Dec. 21.-Bv the Associated t ress.) The Dail Eireann today enter ed fh thivrl rlov Jt , . v,!. puollc discussion of the Irish peace treaty, with the outcome of the vote on the question of ratincation still in doubt. Claims of the opposing factions rang ed from a majority of two against th treaty to ten in its favor. George Gavan Duffy, one of the Irish, plenipotentiaries was the first speaker before the Dail. He explained his rea sons for signing - the document, afvl aoded: "I will recommend the treatv re luctantly, but sincerely, because I sr0 no alternative." Duffy's speech indicated that assumed the treaty would be 'ratified' He said it would be the dutv of framers of the. Irish constitution to P ace the foreign King at a con Rid---' able distance from the Irish people " He contended that Ireland " could TV, "t6- F"?'s head from the coins of the Irish Free State and could abol ish the Lnion Jack, and that, in fram ing their constitution, the Irish people should put the . King "into exterior darkness" as far as possible. President Merely Stated His Own Personal Opinion No Conflict Between Him And the Secretary of State Since They Had Not Discussed the Matter; Is Satisfied With Either IntprnrAtntinn ither Interpretation fSS8 ith various Parts of the Brit L? EmE?le -as -to whether they are possessions - or whether thev -Py t,heTstatus of "dominions," or nations In order, therefore, not to offend Australia and New Zealand ,iuage "insular dominions" was Si nnfc the American dele gates, when confronted with the su. fo6S ncmdeatTthiS misht be interpreted harm i J3?n' ?aw any Particular in B"ch an interpretation since By DAVID LAWRENCE StafC CorrMliaiida.t f rrii.. 1r Copyright. 19J1, by jew Publishing Co. Washington, Dec. 21. Government is not only a very human institution out an immense organization, and some times one branch of it dr.o . thing which the other knows nnthin. about. "& That's the explanation for the nnin. ion which President Hardin inno cently voiced at his meeting with the newspaper correspondents concerning -..calling ui me iour-power pact, an opinion which was at once sent broadcast as a conflict of view and contradiction of ideals between Secre tary Hughes and the President. 1 In fairness to all sides, the facts or the incident ought to be stated. Mr. Harding submits twice a week to in terrogation by the newspaper corre spondents. They offer their Questions m writing and Mr. Harding can an swer or not as he pleases. One in quiry related to the debate which has been going on in the Senate as to the true -neaning of the preamble of the new our-power treaty which reads: 'With a view to the preservation of the general peace and the maintenance of their rights in relation to their in. fitllar nnceic.oiAnn .-i ; , , . ! an Wflft Qtfnnl.J i ' ioons d.i,u msuiar aomm-it, i" uy a .power other ions in the region of the Pacific ocean." ai on of the other three signers of Tina r,ii,,.i- Tr.c , ... the trpntv n . r.1"11118 ol .. vi-.j o vmcuiti Liie woros "in- aa AUI example. Russia sular dominions" included the home-1 Germany, the United State L?', nftev all i -v-.x .a.uiuii since aitei all, the purpose of the treatv was not to guarantee rights but mn ly an agreement "to respect" eaob other's rights and in the went of a dlXmacv trV -t0 SGttle the matte?fby diplomacy or joint conference The STf riCl? the treaty isCthe Vnt four powers are threatened v lut aggressive action of any other power" nictewUrLT.8 sha -rucate with each other and arrive at an understanding as to the most ef- or'larateivf l be tan, joLtlv or separately, to meet the exigencies of the particular situation." tncies COULD REMAIN NEUTRAL iIfwLdidJa ,th.-efore, that Jap- ULTIMATUM ISSUED. Going over the evente ti-o m London on December 4 and 5, lead mg up to tne reaching of the agree ment. he said that Prime ats,.. Lloyd-George had issued an ultimatum iruuniHS ine signatures to the treatv or all the delegates under the threat Lf1MI-ie(l-ate ,war' They believed that this time he was not bluffing. It i'uuy saio. as the Prime Minis tfr S nffinial nt-ir-i . . .1 i , ... i f "'s"" ueuiiirea, w grim llion majority of the T?ennn can party last Fall was a vindication of any such methods. The day has not et arrived when a few gentlemen in the Senate of the United States cani de-termine-what Republicanism is I so God save the Renub! ican nartv " ( The Iowa Senator declared it was nonsense to say that Senator New berry knew nothing about the en. i-aign, adding that the record fairly iccmcu wilii eviaence snnwine- tViai- ir- - . .. -..g . . L . . . . i'.cnrucny was ine active manager iiici trui anu uie guiding genius." "The people of the countrv dn not n. dorse the large expenditure of money in campaigns. Last year the Renuhli- cans did not dare nominate either Hen eral Wood or Governor Lowden because or tne enormous expenditures in their campaign. ' DAVIDSON STUDENT BODY SUSPENDS 28 Twenty-eight members of the sonho- more class of Davidson Collee-e Viav-e oeen suspended until January 13 fnr in. dulging in hazing, according to infor mation from several members of the scuaent oooy who live in Gharlntto The suspension was bv order nf the stuoens governing council of the ert. lege, to wmcn body disciplinary meas ureb oi mis cnaracter are entrusted wilii aie approval of the college, fac ulty. It is stated that the incident result ed irom an episode a few- nights ago wuen niemoers ot tne sophomore, took me mcmoers ot the freshmen class, or some of them, out for a "walk." It is also said that the sophomores admin istered the corrective paddle in one or two cases where the sophomoric wis dom itemed application of the paddle was n.ieaiui. SENTENCE VON JAGOW FOR PART IN REVOLT Leipsic. Dec. 21. (By the Associated Press) Dr. Traugott von Jagow, formet Berlin Police Commissioner, was sen fenced to five-years imprisonment to day bv the Federal Supreme Court for the part he plaved in. the Ka nn rovnl t oe .Mare: ia:u, which temporarily over mrew tne itigoert Government. jcau mini rms mornins's new . me semi-omciai denial from ""'au'' L'xai- treaty nad been sift-nsd u,m auress. irie said the complaint l;oc nAf ll. . u . 1 .mi ma l ine alternative to a treaty was war. but that war was the alter na- TV.eJ, . is Particular treaty, and the jusri ueiegates- had bef iven thr-e hOtirS tO TPBCW .a-deeiol-r iJi i ... ".-.iiuii. uuuui ret- erence to the home government, under ic . penany of "letting loose fresh i..rrors or savages to trample, torture cijju urucuy Ireland. aaaed that the treatv save reil t V . me nrst time, and that iitmnu wouio oe in a better position to xeiaun tnat power and resist aggression than ever before. The treaty, he declared, must be , V 1 In Ine interests of the people or Ireland. Eamonn J. Duggan, the last of the " s" Plenipotentiaries to speak in thh- -f eU..d-eTiied that he llad been Lluffed into signing the treatv. He said he had signed it in calm seclusion and 'with due consideration to the country, the living and the dead." He warmly urged ratification. Opposition to referring the Anglo Irish -reatV tO the THsb e1eero , voiced by George Gavan Duffv, one of its negotiators, in his argument for ratification of the pact delivered in this morning's session. He declared he opposed this eours because of the high feeing a plebiscite campaign would create. Such a cam paign, he asserted, would rend the country from one end to the other tie said he saw no alternative to the i f, fcP".e as it he were con fidently expecting its ratification bv dim oi japan Senator Reed had con tended that it did and that Amprina was in effect guaranteeing the. terri. tonal integrity of Japan, when in fact, the L nited States had refused to guar antee anybody else's territorial in tegrity under Article 10 of the T.eae-e of Na ".ions' covenant. PERSONAL IMPRESSION. ihe .President read the Question carefully and stated his own personal impression. He said at the nntsot he had not consulted the members of ihe American delegation about it for indeed he has left to them the task of working out such problems as these. He did know, however, that it was not the intention of the United States to guarantee the territorial integrity of Japan, and his own superficial reading of the treatv led him tfk er,n- elude that no such meaning was in-' lv"uru iijd&iiii-.cn as japan herself was a signatory to the treaty and that ob viously it was intended only to safe guard external rights of Japan in the Pacific and rot her own domestic do main, any more than the United States was bemg given a guarantee as to continental America. Mr. Harding's views were based upon personal impression and it is vvuilii vvnne recording that when Sen ators Borah and Poind the ,1. ' , e.v utai, Lxiey uoo insisted that the inclusion of the Japanese mainland was not intended. It so hannena hew- ever rhat for several days the corre spondents have been inquiring on this point t-t the Department nf Cfo- where Secretary Hughes frankly told mem uwi nt saw no particular im portance in the point thev ho .,-j He made it clear that the phraseology insular dominions" was used an 1 cover Australia and New Zealand JhiCOhUr1e reca"ed all the delicacy which the London Government has in naturally . ' "-r would what wa ne , f ooa offlces an do " was noKsihie . whether .dieri a war a treatv evicted , '. statement from the White f"8 might include the homeland insular dominions" though he feeio ,"ri'a- ,u Japan, that u 11 aoesn't that the tt.- " uuesn i mean Japan's territoHal UJ AuSSi- f Tbracin finitely brth SfirSBi. Xogf teS flrli. whtoL wal deem- j u m Lea states to be a nous menace. In the desire to nlow nA"sttfa . and New Zeland and alo finder raiSG an iSSUe Whic might Of fend Japan and embarrass the whole conference, the American delegation agreed to the French and British Tn ffii'J4,10? that "insular dominions" deluded the mainland of Japan but in doinsr so th TT4f ox.J ' Vut blv felt that TJ; .Laies proba nd if not compelled to reeard than in i a"y more ln that regard than in relation to any other islands of the Pacific. The question of how far the treaty imposes a mora" obligation which mio-hf V1U1. 1 anir e- ""-'"laieiy m any case involve the use of physical onClhTVqUy We" to an attack on the Philippines as any other is lands included in the treaty, so the addition or subtraction of ' Japan's mainland position which ha neeider v , wj- w Vt . an lsiana regarded by the American delegation as simply an incidental affair which does not af fect the merits of the treaty. SOUTHERN RAILWAY'S REQUEST IS GRANTED Washington, Dec. 21 The Interstate Cqmmerce Commission today author ized the Southern Railway to issue $5.- 225,000 in bonds to reimburse its treas ury for expenditures on capital better ments. "I Vnsc Flitecu.) WAR HAS BEEN DECLARn London, Dec. 21.-A report that the crSTm"" SSSt aniJSJS Government of the Far Eastern re- SSStS feTfoodf Abf: hSSS"5 public at Chita has declared war on well parched crains o th' samJ rr the Republic of Vladivostok is carried ried 5S In Docket of Sh in a Central News dispatch from Hel- 'ilTrtllevT hSraffaSSfe tl-f 8 c n The mssae adds short lime. Th' ceilin' o' Melodeon HaU that the Soviet Government of Moscow fell Iat evenin' durin' th' showin' of a is said to be sending troops and war cean film, but fortunately nobuddy material to Lnita. uz untfvr iL ' STANDS BY STATEMENT. I'uuiin, uec. zi. my the Associated i ia.s. i stand DV evervthine- T declared Richard Barton to' the ee,- spondenct today when shown the semi oiuciai statement issued in London nying that Premier Llvod-Georire r.r. 3 t. . t , - njriucu Liie iriSil n fn nntani!ni through a threat of war f, -.,, uy.vn. xsanon in tne Dail Eireann. Mr. DoiLLiii was a member of the S'nn Fein delegation which si sm od i -. .-. treaty. The London statement sriven of yesterday, declared that, if the Irish plenipotentiaries had acted .,. duress, it must have been the duress of their own minds or tha of circumstances. There had been no eleventh-hour declaration on the part ?v th?.. Premier- It added, however, that inasmuch as the well known alternative to acceptance was war there is an element of truth in th statement (by Mr. Barton.)" - A Dublin dispatch to The Associated Press on Monday quoted Mr. Barton as savin? in the Dail tho a-. Onffith had repeatedly sought to have the terms referred to the Dail, but tnat i-remier Lioyd-ueorge had direct'v nauveu mis. xxe said the Premir had danti..J T, x uiumcu uie ojignacure of everv member of the delegation necssa rv or a' vuuia lonow at once, and gave them until ten o'clock that mVht to juaive up men minas. LEE HALLMAN TO SERVE SENTENCE Appeal Dismissed, Will Be gin Serving Sentence After Christmas Monroe, Dec. 21. His aonl hnv. mg been dismissed bv the Sunre COUrt. Vnnn T TT.ii Qiiiiraan, ex-service man. and member of tpnJfl arshville, will go to the peni- 1 "'si week in .lan- uaiy to begin serving the ifr.H n vom: s sentence imposed upon him by Judge t. K. Pinley at the August term of ?,mt o61" a- 3Vry had him ?uilty of a criminal assault it Kin Ms Louise Tolbiit, a Cabarrus count v school teacher. .o, niuLiier tnat her son be permitted to be with lie;- .-luring -hristmas Jimc earned Young Ha'.I-Tan a stav of execution, the solictor win m-csecuted l-.m, havig agreed to allow him this short l'berty when th defen dant s attorneys promised not 'o fieht for a new trial. The dismiss of ,he appeal by the higher court whs purely i matter of formality, the defendant ivtpme- nis promise to the solicitor not even presenting: a sine-le nre-nment in his behalf. "Southern chivalry that has always decreed that in a court of law r,o,-e weight should be attached to the word umaji Limn tu Lie wora or a man OFFICERS CHASE A WRONG NEGRO Reports That Adam Miller Had Been Captured Prove Eroneous Excitement was rife out in the Will grove section of the county on the Norfolk-Southern line, 13 miles from Charlotte, Wednesday morning when word was circulated in that section that Adam Miller, negro, wanted for alleged assault upon Mrs. D. F. Fin ger on the Monroe road Saturdav i they were throwing court cases to a few ---c.., "t'.'i luiiiuu out to oe raise, i , ""-.' iwa.i uar witn wnom HUNEYCUTT HAD COGNIZANCE OF BE PRESENTED Tells Friends He Would Have Acted If Measure Had Gone Through WAS A STAB AT ORR Bill WritterMBy Charlotte Attorney, Mr. Huney cutt Tells Friends . That he knew the bill to give Pommi.. sioners of Public Safety in North Caro lina towns and Cities nlonarx, their departments, introduced in the cyecmi session or the Legislature and which came near passing and becoming law. was written by a Charlotte attor ney but that he had nothing personally to do with its authorship or pressing its adoption, was the statement which Commissioner of Public Safety J. E Huneycutt made to friends Wednesday morning. i",A?dif the hm had been Passed" he added, I would have acted on the pow er which it would have vested in me as commissioner of public safety here". By this Mr. Hunevetitt stood to mean that he would have exer cised his right to have had Chief Orr removed from the head of the police department here. Mr. Huneycutt has never become reconciled, it is said, to the retention of Chief Orr. which was brought about by Mayor Walker and Commissioner Stancill combining Mr. Huneycutt would not divulge the name of the Charlotte attorney who he said, was author of the bill and took it down to Raleigh, handed it to Repre sentative Fisher, of Transylvania coun ty, and asked him to introduce and pres its passage. The attorney's name. Mr. Huneycutt said, would be withheld bv mm and it was not accounted for from any other sources sought out during the day by many who have beecome verv much interested1 by the friends of Commissioner Huney cutt. The Charlotte commissioner denied foa 6 vv?d PPted the suggestion for the bill to be written, "putting the responsibility upon the shoulders of the attorney whose name he would not tell He professed, however, that he was very much interested in it and that he hoped very much that it might have been passed. NEARLY SLIPPED THROUGH Members of the Legislature, returning home Tuesday night, said they had never heard or seen anything of the bill until they heard of it unnn iheir arrival here. Representative Matthews said Wednesday morning that there were 1,200 bills introduced in the House during the closing session and that lit tle attention was paid by members even to the captions of these measures. The local representatives, he said, had nol been informed of the introduction of this particular bill nor had any of them been asked to champion it. Represen tative Fisher, a Republican memher rf the lower House, engineered the meas ure entirely, Mr. Matthews said. The latter did not know who wrote it, but had heard the name of "Mr. PVani.- Flowers mentioned in connection with its authorship". Representatives Pharr and Person de clared that they had heard nothing of such a measure and expressed e-reat surprise when it was ascertained that iius ,nu actually passed the House on its three readings and would have be come a law of the State had it not been intercepted in the Senate by some mem ber who pricked up his ears when the caption was read and had it immediatelv tabled. The introduction of the measure- a It was interpreted to stab Chief Orr va strongly resented not only by Mayor Walker and Commissioner Stancil, bui by members of the police department who took offense at the furth tion made in connection with the e,T,v,T. sorship of the bill to the effect that' FTFTEEN TAKEN PRISONER. Belfast. Dec. 21. Rv Jress.) Armed gangs operating in the Limavady district of Lon donderrv fir . . . "J j-i men irom tneir nomes yesterday removing them to an unkn nation. The raiders, wh disruised. were stransrers tn tv sk WU'X I1UUU. FORMATION OF BLOCS WOULD BE PROHIBITED Washington. Dec. 21. A ltmg the formation in Congress of blocs," based upon particular pursuits of geographical locations for the pur pose of "in anv wav affotine ino-ia. lation" was introduced today by Rep resentative Ansorsre. Rennbli fn TI Mew York. Senators and Representatives would be subject tc a fine of $5 nnn in case it was -proved they belonged to counsel for the defendant, said yester day '-prompted us to abandon TTan. mans appeal. There were errors com mitted in the trial, we believe rjt would give us a new trial. But what would be the use? That same chiivarv that prevented us from securing a diet of acquital in the first trial wout operate to our disadvantage in a new trial. To secure the acouitai of o,- client it would be -necessarv for ,-, batter down this barrier.- As it has (Continued on Page Fifteen.) a. negio ot that section, who had been mistaken for the wanted man, was greatly relieved when, after an e;t j jng chase, he was identified by a mem- U1 f- quicsiy-tormed posse as some body else than Miller. Also during the morning the police station received a long-distance tele phone call from the chief of police at adesboro that he was positive that he had Miller locked up. He told Desk Sergeant J. C. May son over the tele phone that the man he held tallied in everv detail with thQ , . . . " ocui, uui as tie- awiptne oi Miller except the overalls the matter with erouns nf h, ALas,said t0 be wearing when and Partisans about the city hall Wed they are particularly friendly, and keep- 'iig vLuer ounger attorneys from get ting their rightful share of such citv court cases. Members of the police de partment did not hesitate to express their discontent at the effort beiii made. Mayor Walker was sick at his home Wednesday, but over the tele phone, he indicated his resentment that such ' "a trick should have been at tempted" and expressed great satisfac tion that the bill had been nailed in the Senate. commissioner nunevcuft dini.c.i o SHOP FOR CKESlSTMfl? J . CUPISTMSI SPECIAL Lv X he left rv.o j, . . . b , "ii'. nu tnat tne over alls had been found hidden in a ne gro restaurant in the town. A Char lotte officer, who will be able to iden- wyiMllier' was sent to Wadesboro Wednesday afternoon to look at the man being held there. Among the many false alarms that have come to the police station v past day or two from sections where Mnler was alleged to have been seen one from Wilgrove early Wednesdav morning seemed to bear the earmarks """tuuui) nm onicers were at once dispatched to the community to run down the reports. Later in ihe morning other messages came from the same neighborhood, seeming to sub stantiate the truthfulness of the first report and it was said there could be little doubt that the right .man had been sighted. He had several times previously been reported probably in that neighborhood and is ;known to have relatives in that part of the county. A messaee came ahn,, 11 o'clock that officers and a number' of ciLiz,enS naa amiost come upon him that several shots had' heen re ' him and that he was apparently sur- luuuueu in a wooas. The aid of vol unteers was also asked to help the of ficers scour the woods and another car with several officers started for the scene. While the last car was enro,,re u . : liic oueiie, witn a number of cars aiong containing citizens of Charlotte word came that the man the crowd had been chasing had been apprehend- eu, uui naa turned out to be a harm less man of the neighborhood instead of the man wanted. There is no clue as to the where abouts of Miller at present, unless the man being hdld at Wadesboro proves to be the man. Fred Ardrey, the negro arrested Saturday night shortly after the crime and stronglj" suspected 6f being one of the two assailants of Mrs. linger, is still out of the city in safekeeping. nesday. FLOWERS DENIES CONNECTION. J. Frank Flowers, one time candi date for mayor of Charlotte and active from time to time in city politics i not the man who wrote the mysterious iisher bill introduced in the special session of the legislature in its dying hours providing for placing the fire and police departments of the city en tirely within the control of the Com missioner of Public Safety without in terference from the other commission ers. Mr. Flowers knew nothing about mo uui, ne says untu he came tc Charlotte, although he was in- Raleigh four days toward the close of the spe cial session. There was no positive statement bv any mtmber of the legislature or any one else that Mr. Flowers was the au thor ot the bill or knew anything of it but because he was in Raleigh sev eral days and no other Charlotte at torney can be found who admits being mcie ii mat time, speculation had arisen as to whether . Mr. Flowers knew anything about the bill. . Mr. Flowers, -when asked about It set all speculation at rest, so far as his connection with it was concerned by saying that not only did he not hear of it when he was in Raleigh, (Continued on Page Fifteen.) 1 Charlotte and vicinitv: G enernllv fain and colder tonight and Thursday. .Mod-' tmto iiuiiimesi 10 nonit winds. 4 North and South Carolina: Generally fair and toldif tonight and Thursday at