BijME ii Justice Day Sermons Focal Churches Are L r d By Legionnaires I , . K onwan and Rev. ■ieblood Deliv- Hy Morning ■'.Legations Be l aud » ei; " ho itandFredicThat Bian Principles ( an ■. Brin? Peate ..r UK - M win I^Hbr l,l i ■C'.w.ir-i in A rims- ( IK:, iiHHini/g. > ,ib.i«T(unr ■ s() f.:, l !valia’ r kin;l. 1 do I K anv man .-an .-m-rtain . ■ w rCi-j >n whi.-h ; ■ evH i .-iiff-i- ;i ’> » b ;'7 b ,d|,Ml ; ■ f „j nv in, iini'iirf icipating , H. r j |H ' liberty aiid fr« * d«*m | K: ti , b- light with other j. m J,r. Kuwait c tit! iini*"l. j R> was h -an' 'fully simple; K r nm- of the urns, .inpnv«-| in t';< 1 hi-for.v of j Kvorv o‘:it in fin main . (icfiijiieil wiili maiiv , ■ tt/tr :I,ld Leg- J members pr* Kof tin* |*u I!*it hung a \ Hj;i;' with a star for each ; M, cinsreh who enlisted. 1 B, all hi daily large Am |fl Standing h'twivn these I IHpai-ae.! iris sermon of | wlm offered their Bi principles of liberty Hill th-if only through the Jm Jnis (’hri'-t can th'-re iiermanent peace. Sam (ioodmsn. an j eaii'; Kipling's “Re- 1 KiktHliaieiy after t!ie| tod with bowed j Hi c- its the notes of; »ati£."«l It.inner" tilled i H|«»v." ww. the sub.jis't^ SHfar raking his text i H'rsr' the 2nd chaptert *rm. so Ilo\v s : —iiitke 2 14. |Hkisnirr and patriotism! and since Jesus j H»if trn> a patriot, I j He amiss to observe on 1 and in this sacred j This day is not j H*f'-ti. ar this time and; HI think it is possible! f tlie store of infor-! ’natty of you already | I would keep I iii my own memory. I you keep fresit and i H like a sweet, un wit her- I tinwer, tlie principles! many fought and bled | with the service! ■ wiilfrwl. the sacrifices | the victory which . speaking to yoft today the grave of in any land —the the fairest, the most the ,1m, S f complete trib- L*s*n paid to patriot- K fbya( 1,ll ,ll 'ri"" :md gfate uncovering his n silent prayer to B7J f»r that- which others mankiml. 1 have an HJ 11 in’ my heart for ev- B sr '''tent 11, known or ftr dead who p. rform did his part and ■ , "kitlimit regrets. IB*' 1 ' dl, ‘ lv sliotild be any K of freed.,,,, and liberty ■'Pmtectiijjj aegis of the t,,r any man—na tt'ieii who does not ■?'“ lus '"‘art and will not Bs :iri| f regardless’ ■ objections’’ . H* flt any other kind. • I ? y 1! ‘ :UI < all enter- H/i. n even a religion KJ, It ftr ' v ~ ' llfb ! ’ l ' «‘in able- HL.i " in unpartici* H|L* P . lu ' dl, ‘ liberty and bought with Artnistie,. day, and. Bn ,'~' u l M ' a 'e which we. a:, ‘ hopin ? B<«i t i a pern;anent-»-I ■ the power to |,c. ,n — which 1 •‘“ft. “ •• • \- r, t j * " !l will not ob ph ! 111,1 of «athe L aV - j " st made in W«n e^: ! ' ,Un T- Xow if I*a,, • an - v *asting and I*a(* jj' 1 ' , . :i , and or hou- ' l ”' " ur ideal, » f fllit a ' 1(! /' ur dream, it honor• " in? Anv "ther peace ther L |M ' nn;i,l, ‘"t; neith okto^rv- b " ,iesir«i °wards n B l ,' h ° stp l* which ten. 'tiiig and per n,.an" ~t i>pa ° p - iet ■a* hj„i ls notr f iie fruit abu,idantly hour ( . u , •• iavp had war *t of a A - Ui «. it is "tits of ( ‘ s !ll ‘d navies, 'ifld | liK 11 ' *he greatest ”, natVo.rr k,lown was P Uru t., j , g was amputated but complications set in and resulted in his death to night. ' f m, ” Thomasville Hi School * Students Being Punished- Thomasville, Nov. 12. —The boys and girls from the city high schoo’ I who on Armistice day left school without permission, and took holiday which they spent in celebrating, this morning on returning to the school were faced by the management with the utterance, “you are suspended from this school for the period of one week.” Involves Willie 1 W - tjk, § it iHi IfLJBBggB BBBpB BBr tJKbI WMMMH^ “Do they suspect me?” Willie 1 Stevens, one of the Hall-Mills 1 ease defendants asked shortly after the murders, Detective George Totten, shown on the ! witness stand, testified at the 1 trial at Somerville, N. J. Jus tice Parker listened attentively. Xlnlaraaliimal Jiewsreel.) ! , THE COTTON MARKET i Opened Steady at Decline of 2 to 51 i Points — January Off to 12..»0. |, New York, Nov. 15.— UP) —The cot-1 < ton market opened steady today at! i a decline of 2 to 5 points, active ! months showing net losses of 3 to 7 i \ points after the call under southern 11 hedging, liquidation and local selling, I. promoted by relatively easy late ca- i b!es from Liverpool. j January eased off to 12.05, but there j was buying of near months by spot interests and the market steadied up < 4 oe 5 points from the lowest before i the end of the first hour. Governing \ was promoted by reports of furtMer rains in the central belt which were thought like!*’ to cause a. further de- , lay in picking and lower the grades J of open cotton, while reports of a firm 1 basis on the better grades in the south west probaly helped to steady the mar- ' ket after the initial selling orders had * been absorbed. ' , (Wtm; frjttTH'V steady* ' 12 45; Jan. 12.53; March 12.73; May !‘ 12.94; July 13.14. j ( MAN KILLS WIFE AND THEN COMMITS SUICIDE | , John Keeline Also Shot Wife’s Sister |, But She is Still Alive. i | Council Bluffs, la., Nov. 15.—(A 3 ) — John Keeline today shot and killed his ] wife and probably fatally wounded , her sister-in-law, Mrs. Henry Ander- • son. He then committed suicide. s The shooting occurred at the Keeline home. ] Keeline was a member of one of the , oldest and best known families of this ( city. He was known as a financier and sportsman, and at one time was connected with Council Bluffs Sav ings Bank, v of which he was a stock- ( ’holder. Mrs. Anderson had been staying at the Keeline home during the absence , of Keeline on a business trip.. To Hold 57-Year-Okl Cotton as Heirloom. Oiiip'.ey, Ga., Nov. 15. —(A 3 )—A bale of cotton almost 57 years old, is owned t here by heirs of Christopher Columbus .Tones, who in September, 1870, had the bale ginned and then held it year after year for the price he had re- j solved to get for it—22 1-2 cents j per pound. Planter Jones sold his other cotton I but obdurately held to his bale on which he placed a price or $132.07 1-2 for its original 587 pounds.- Even tually the “resolution/ bale” became a family pet, so to speak, and its senti mental value was that in recent years when cotton soared to its 45 cents per pound peak, no offers were entertained. Ginned in the old-fashioned way, the cotton remains in what is left of the original bagging and ties and its quality has not deteriorated. Ex perts have graded the lint as “No. 2” and reported that the fibre pulls one and one-sibeteenth inches. The heirs.have agreed that the bale j never should be sold. A Strange Divorce Case. (By International News Service) New Orleans, Ba., Nov. 12. Man> strange divorce cases have been be fore Judge Cage in civil district cpurt here but the case of Caroline E. Man ning vs. Wallace Messina was the strangest. , . , The young wife testified that she met her husband at a picnic on Au gust 8, 1918, fe’,’ in love at first sight, married him that afternoon and left forever before nightfall, realizing that her love for him was gone For seven years they have lived apart and she asked a divorce on the seven-year law. It was granted. The last troublesome detour on the Annalachian Scenic Highway Be tween Asheville and Atlanta was cut out a few days ago When the las. stretch of hardsurfacing between two cities was completed There are now 264 miles of hardsurfacing be tween Asheville and Atlanta, by v.ay of Bryson City, Buford Lawr^ ville and Decatur, according to a re cent news article carrfed in Asheville Citizen. CONCORD, N. C„ MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1926 i MCCARTER EXPLAINS CONVERSATION WITH JUROR ON SATURDAY (Defense Counsel in Hall-j Mills Case Says the Jur- j ■ or Started the Conversa-) ! tion in Court. OFFICER PRESENT AT THE TIME Lawyer Says Juror Only Told Him Brother Was I Dead and He Wanted to See the Judge. Somerville. N. J., Nov. 15. — UP) — Robert H. McCarter, of defense coun sel in the Hall-Mills case today said that conversation he was reported an (having had with a juuor in the case was in fact a conversation the juror had with him. At the opening of court today there were rumors that a mis trial might be ordered, that Charlotte! Mill*? had seen Mr. McCarter talking i to a juror and that something would j be done about it officially. McCarter said to the Associated Press: “In the court room Saturday morn ing before court opened I was sitting at counsel’s table talking to Mr. Stu* dor. one of my associates. Mr. Till man, one of the jurors, w : th a court official came up to our tabic and said he was the juror whose brother had died, and that he wanted to speak to one of the presiding judges, and asked if we knew where the judges were. “Both Studer and I expressed re gret at his trouble, and I said I had not yet seen Justice Parker, but that Judge Cleary had just gone out of the room. This was the entire incident, j and it was overheard by the court of-! ficial in charge of the juror.” Edward F. Tillman yesterday, ac- j companied by ba’liffs, attended the i funeral of his brother, Ulysses Till- i man. at Raritan. Sister of Dead Women Testifies. Courthouse, Summerville, N. .T., Nov. 15.— UP) —Mrs. Elsie Barnhardt. sister of Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills, slain with the Rev. Edward W. Hall, said on the witness stand today that h p r sister told her that she loved Mr. Hall’s little finger more than her hus band’s whole body. Testifying slates witness at the trial of Mrs. 1 Frances Stevens Hall and her broth ers, Henry and Willie Stevens, charg-j ed with Mrs. Mills murder/ Mrs. Barnhardt said that Mrs. Mills had taken her into her confidence in tell ing of her love for the' rector of the church where Mrs. Mills was a mem ber of the choir. "Eleanor told me she loved Mr. Hall’s little finger more than Jim’s whole whole body,” the Witness said. “Jim” is James Mills, husband of the slain woman. Later Mrs. Barnhardt added that | her sister repeated the statement ,5n I the presence of Mills and their two children, Charlotte and Daniel. “She said it several times,” Mrs. Barnhardt testified. Her sister met her warning that her friendship with the minister was un-1 wise with the reply, “I don’t care who! knows I love Mr. Hall,” said the wit- j ness. The witness told of the “last bench in Bucoleueh Park” as a place her sis ter told of meeting Mr. Hall “and helping him with his sermons.” “Somewhere on Easton Avenue was another meeting place,” she said, “and another was in New York.” THINKS COAL PRICES WILL DECREASE SOON With British Strike Over Demand For American Coal Will Fall Off. Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 15. — UP) —A decided reaction in the bituminous coal market in this country will fol low the return to work of striking J British miners, in the opinion of Chas. J. Goodyear, spokesman. for the Pitts burg Coal Producers Association. De mand for American coal from foreign countries sent the product as high as $11.50 a ton to householders within the past month, but with the English strike settled Goodyear said prices should drop at least to the level pre vailing before the rise. Most of the coal sold to European buyers was bought on short time con tracts, he said, adding that these con-1 tracts would now be cancelled and surplus coal intended for shipment to foreign ports would be thrown on the American market with a consequent drop in quotations. J. J. McNeill, vice president of the Consolidated Caol & Coke Company, said run of mine coal had dropped on Saturday to $1.85 a ton, after having sold a week ago at $2.25. He said, however, he did not expect the bottom to drop out of the market as a result of the strike settlement. The domestic demand usually is heavy at thisi time, he said, would serve to stiff en prices. He added that large in dustrial consumers would be quick to take advantage of any drop in prices, a fact that would aid in keep ing prices steady. A. J. Mahaley Dies. Salisbury, Nov. 13.— Andrew J. Mahaley, 57, farmer of the Union church neighborhood was found dead , in bed. th : s morning. Death having occurred during the night and sup posedly been caused by heart trouble. Thre men killed every hour is the * toll taken by modern industry in America. IQUEEN MARIE WILL BE WITH HER KING OH CHRISTMAS DAY | i 1 She Plans to Return Home I Sooner Than Expected ! Upon Receipt of Request 1 | From Husband. \ PLANS TOSAIL DECEMBER lITHf Part of Contemplated Trip j to the Southern States / Will Have to Be Aban doned by the Queen. Chicago, Nov. 15.—(A 3 )—Christmas day the Christian holiday that brings thoughts of home to millions, from queens to the humblest commoner, will find Queen Marie under her own roof in Bucharest, instead of on the Atlantic. At the request of King Ferdinand iof Roumania, his royal consort has ; cancelled a portion of her American trip so that she and her children, Princess Ilenna a\id Prince Nicholas, may be with their own people on De cember 25th. They will sail from New York on December II th instead of December 24th as originally planned. Part of a contemplated southern trip will be ! abandoned to meet the earlier sailing date. “Her Majesty received word from His Majesty that lie wanted to have her home for Christmas,” explained a member of the royal enourage. He said too that the people throughout ; Rumania were so anxious for their be-1 loved queen to be back at the holiday j season. “And Her Majesty was touched at j ! the wish. She was anxious to see ! more of America. She is looking for j ward to a brief southern trip, but she j wants most of all to obey the wishes lof her people.” The revised itinerary for Queen Marie cancels a Florida trip and calls for a two days stop at Washington, beginning November 24th, and a visit to Atlantic City on November 27th, and to White Sulphur Srings, W. Va.. the following day. After being joined by her children who will attend the Army-Navy game here, the royal party will go to Richmond Va., i ttnys to New York*.- • A visit to Bos- { I ton may be added to the schedule. j 1 BARBARA TOUGH IS AGAIN ON THE STAND Asked About Girls Who Had Gossip ped About the Mtnister and Choir Singer. Court House. Somerville, N. J., Nov. 12. — UP) —Barbara Tough, Scotch, and with a conscience, was sorely troubled when she was recalled today as a witness in the Hall-Mills j case. The former maid in the Hall | home was made to “feel mean" when she was asked to give the names of “girls of the Guild” who gossiped About the “friendliness” between the Rev. Edward W. Hall and Mrs. Elea nor Mills several years before they were slain together. Instructed by the ! court to give the names of the gossip ! ers after she had protested, riie declar ed with manifest emotion that she felt “like a sneak.” At that, the Scotch lassy’s revelation of gossipping girls did not hurt their reputation as of to day to any extent, for she knew few of their married names, she declared after adding that most of them “have married well.” Their maiden names were given in a disgusted tone, and with so much of the “bonnie brogue” of old Scotland, that only the few fellow countrymen of the witness present could identify them. The description “friendliness” used by tlie defense counsel on cross examination referring to Mr. Hall and Mrs. Mills drew a protest from the State’s representatives that the word • did not fit the case. It remained cn the record when -previous testimony showed the witness had used it. The Scotch woman said that while she was not a member of the church of which. Mr. Hall was reetdr. she was a member of the Guild. She heard the Guild members “mostly girls” gos sipping of the “friendliness.” SAY RUSSIANS WOULD BUY CROWN JEWELS^ Jewels Being Brought to America For Sale by Norman C. Weiss. Jeweler. New York. Nov. 15.—OP)—Report has it that a group of Russians here has been organized to attempt to ob tain by legal process jewels of the for mer Imperial household in Russia which Norman C. Weiss, a jeweler, is bringing from Moscow to sell. Anti-( soviet Russians desire to obtain con trol of these jewels, which are valued at a fabulous sum, to satisfy claims against Red Russia. The jewels run the gamut from the famous nuptial crown of Catharine the Great which contains 1,529 dia monds and is valued at $52,000,000, to a gegaw in the shape of a baby’s rat tle of solid gold and ivory, upon which the late Czar Nicholas cut his teeth. Included in the purchase is the his toric diamond-studded three-edged sword of the “Mad Monarch” Paul I, which he carried in the military re views of his day, and the pointing of which at a regiment which had gained his displeasure through poor maneu vers meant that the entire regumment was to be sent to bleak Siberia in ex-, ile. *r Spain is said to have more than a quarter of a million beggars. Premier Mussolini at Bologna i i ——-———- —1 —— —__ _.—.j Benito Mussolini is shown pinning a medal on a faithful Fascisti aid at Bologna, Italy, where the sixth attempt on the Premier’s life was made. (lutamtlimul Nawarectl.) BAPTIST STATE CONVENTION Will Meet in Wilmington Tuesday Afternoon at 2:30 O r cloek. 1 Wilmington, Nov. 15.—0 P) —The] ninety-sixth annual session of the Baptist state convention opens here] next Tuesday at 2:30 o’clock and. continues through Thursday evening. | i The sessions will be held in the First i I Baptist Church. The pastor’ con i forenee begins Monday evening at | 7 :30 and continues through Tuesday [ morning. A' number of prominent out-of-state speakers are on the program and sev eral questions on which there is known to be a division of opinion are ex pected to come up, which make the conference of great interest, not only to Baptists, "but to the public gen erally. For the past several years Wake Forest college has furnished the storm center of dissension. Fireworks have been furnished in fight on qpllege fra ternities at-the .institution -and upon the religious attitude of the college’s : liberal president, Dr. W. L. Po- [ teat..... ■, .... | The rank and file of Baptists ap ] pear to have become pretty well recon t ciled to the Greek letter fraternity, ! now that it has been out in the open for two years and has brought on none of the dire evils its opponents charged up to it. The question is not expected to create any disturb ance at the conference. The Poteat question is also believed to be settled. After weathering op position for years, the president an nounced last summer that he intended to resign next year when he reached his seventieth anniversary. The fight on Dr. Poteat was due to his leaning toward scientific theories of biology rather than strict adherence to the teachings of fundamentalism demand ed by straight-faced Baptist church men. “While there is nothing spectacular or sensational scheduled, yet "no seer is wise enough to forecast what may happen in a Baptist meeting. Sev eral important questions, about which there is a division of opinion, will be presented and it would be easy enough for some one to ‘start something’ if he had a mind to do so, but usually the conservative element prevails in these meetings,” declared Walter M. Gilmore, of Raleigh, secretary to the convention.” _ SIX DROWN TRYING TO ESCAPE THE LAW Were Members of Party of Merry makers on Houseboat on the Mis sissippi River. St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 15. —04 s ) — A party aboard a houseboat on the Mississippi River here ended in trag edy last night when six of the merry makers, attempting to escape from the law, were drowned in the river when a small duck boat sank. Three other persons were rescued from the water and were recovering today at the city hospital. % Two bodies were found. They were* those of Michael Hogan, 25, and an uniden tified woman. Others believed drowned \yere Chas. Randall, owner of the houseboat; Nick Berger and an unidentified man and an unidentified woman. The tragedy occurred when those on the houseboat tried to flee as two policemen appeared in response to a call from a neighboring boat, which reported that a dcunken fight was in progress on the Randall craft. With Our Advertisers. Frocks from Paris at J. C. Penney Co.’s —charming and surprisingly low priced, only $24.75. See illustrations and descriptions in new ad. today. The Bell & Harris Furniture Co. has everything you need for your home, from clothespins room furniture. Belk’s is headquartdks for Cooper’s night shirts, underwear and pajamas. Latest styles now on display. Also suits and overcoats from $9.95 to $29.95. See new ad. today. Ireland has the fewest suicides in proportion to population of any coun try in the world. Visa fees will be waived for -mem bers of the American Legion visiting England next year. J. B. SHERRILL, Editor and Publisher SENATOR COPELAND TO* WORK FOR MODIFICATION ' Has Bipen Long Silent on the Ques tion of Prohibition. Washington, Nov. 14.—One of the ] first tantible results of the wet vie j tory in t’Je New York state referen- I dum is an announcement by Senator I Royal S. Copeland that-he regards the j vote in that referendum as a mandate to him to do all he can to bring about modification of the Volstead act. This is the first time since he was elected to the Senate in 1922 -that Senator Copeland lias indicated his position on the liquor question. In that election, Ue defeated-* Senator Calder, a wet Republican, and in do ing so received the support of many dry Republicans. By many persons it was assumed that Senator Copeland was inclined to be dry, if he was not actually dry. During liis service in the Senate he :ias not been called upon to vote wet or dry. But he has not hitherto joined with the wet group in > the Senate demanding modification of the Volstead acL Ilia preseat statement, ’however, shows that hi fcbe-coining session of Congress he will be aligned with the senators who have been lead ing the fight for a revision of the Volstead act. Aside from that, Senator Copeland announced that one of his main tasks in the next two years will be to bring about the nomination on the Demo cratic ticket and election of Governor Alfred E. Smith as President of the United States. The senator says the result of the gubernatorial vote in the state puts Smith into the preferred position for this office and Ms claims cannot be denied. ■ " ■■■ - —■ PAPERS MERGED Memphis News Scimitar Purchased by Scripps-Howard Publishing Inter ests. Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 15.— -UP) — The Memphis News Scimitar, after noon newspaper, has been sold to the Scripps-Howard publishing interests, according to an announcement here today by Bernard Cohn, publisher of the News Scimitar. The News Scimitar, a member of the Associated Press, will be taken over by the Memphis Press, a Scripps- Howard daily, Mr. Cohn said. Paul Block, of New York, was owner of the News Scimitar. The transfer is ex pected to be made within a few days, and the combined edition of the two newspapers will be published tomor row. The consideration was not made known. Baptist Preacher Kills His Family. .Southern Turrington, Wyo., Nov. 14. —The Rev. J. B. Minort, 45, pastor of the Baptist church here, early today shot and killed liis wife, 40, and four of his vve children, ranging in age from four to 15 years- He then committed suicide. One son, John, 18, survives. He is attending school at Liberty. Mo. Mrs. Minort was shot to death with a shot gun while she lay in bed, the children were slain with a re volver as they slept, with the excep tion of Hubert who was shot to death in his mother's bedroom. The motive for the deed has not been established but it is supposed that gossip and domestic troubles are responsible. Originally a scandal was a trap to catch wild animals. Beautiful Engraved Christmas Cards The Tribune-Times is now prepared to deliver on short notice beautifully engraved Christmas cards at unusual ly low prices. Call at the office and make your selec tion, as the stock is now ready for you 3 MINERS KILLED, ? ..'HERSHURT IN AN EXPLOSION Explosion Occurred in the ! Glendale Gas Coal Com -1 Pany Mine Near Wheel ing, West Virginia. FOUR MEN WERE CAUGHT IN MINE It Is Believed - They Will Be Reached Soon, and Are Thought to Be Safe at Present Time. i ' ; Wheeling, W. V., Nov. 15.—-00)—* Three miners were killed and t|TO ) others injured in an explosion early ) today in the First Street mine of the Glendale Gas Coal Co., at Mouuas ville, near here. Four workmen’ in the mine at the time, and possibly a few others, were entombed by the explosion, it was said at the com pany's office. It was expected tbit rescue workers would reach the sec tion where they were trapped within a short time. Some hopes were en tertained that the missing workmen may be found alive. Reports from the mine were that the blast occurred in the south enry. The force was so great that it felt in all sections of the workings. The three miners killed were reported to have been working only a short distance from the point where the ex plosion occurred. * The dead are: Walter Forcal, Ij| years old; Mike Kovachak. 43 y ? ars old; and Rube Kirkhart, 23. Those missing are: Thomas Robin son, J. 1-h Stifel, James Ross, and J. F. Burger. Two men were rescued from the mine and taken to the Glen dale hospital where it was said their condition was serious. Rescue workers from nearby mines were summoned immediately after tfie blast and began the task of digging their way toward the entombed men.' Boy Also Reported Killed. Moundsville, W. Va., Nov. 15.—G4*) —Two miners and a boy met death, two others were seriously injured, and two of their comrades were entombed by a gas explosion early today in the First Street mine of the Glendale Gas Coal Company here. Eleven workmen escaped the blast which occurred in the south efitry about a quarter of a mile from the shaft. Rescue crews were searching for the two entombed men, and held out some hope that they would be found alive, SHOWS NO EMOTION FOR SLAYING MAN Girl Says She Killed Him Bwaqse He Had Caused Her 'Husbgud l« Put Her Out of Home. New York, Nov. 14. —Betraying no emotion when charged with ' kill ing a man here last night Mrs. Cath erine Deni no, lfi-year old Fvanston, 111., girl, was arraigned in police court today and held without bail for homicide court. She had killed the man ~whoso threat to expose an attack he puttie on her when she'was 12 yearn old had caused her husband of a year to put her out of their home, she t >ld police. Homeless she went to Cfiica igo bought a pistol and came tv .Vi” York Friday. She viAited th<* aunt* of the man who had written that he would expose her unless paid 'or h’w silence. Freshly shaved. Louis Fino, a tilo setter, stepped out of a Bronx barber shop last night. Mrs. Denino was waiting. She fired twice, he fed 1q the sidewalk. She stood over him and fired again. A policeman came running up, the girl’s gun still aimed at Fino jamed- She banded it tft the policeman and was arrested. ** * j Ford Raises Pay of Men to OfM Five-Day Week Cut*. Detroit. Mich., Nov. 14. ! -A-liaia*# in pay to offset the reduction* brought about by the five-day-work week have been granted to Q2,4ffs employes of the Ford Motor com pany and are gradually being put in to effect throughout the entire or ganisation, officials of the company announced today. The number to whom the increase so far has been granted represent* about one-third* of the employe* of the motor company branch of the Ford organization. By spring, offi cials indicated, they expect that every employe in the organization will hava been brought under the new work plan. Although not formally announced until a few weeks ago, the Ford five day w-eek plan has been in process of experirentation for more than a year and officia’s indicated they were satisfied of its success. It is the contention of the Ford oe j ganizatjpn that with two day* leisure each week, workers turn out more and better work and in addition point out that this leisure time helps the aotoipobile business. In Northern Siberia some native* are said to practise a form of hiber nation, sleeping daring the winter for days at a time. THE WEATHER Rain tonight and probably Tuesday morning, colder Tuesday and in west portion late tonight, much colder Tues day night. Increaaing southeast and south winds, probably becoming strong and shifting to the west and north* > west Tuesday, NO. 39