lime LI HIM ,Blocks in (he Ten e Capital Covered bv Overflow From 'umberland River. ,gS OF LIFE pORTEO SO FAR Flood Area Were ted in Time and \ re Occupying All 3 of Homes. r, r , I :»*.-<#>— - % r . i,r -: ti»‘ ■•u.nb.'rilnd L 4 swept through the Vashville's lowlands. *port«l !*»- '*■ *>»e n uit.ee of the ei r tad to whatever hom* they » anil private W- >■*« « ppm ■» *««*'*"• w . aß ,i mow th-n.vs carry urnitvrf ,0 niaki*-.iiu places auiber’.unl jikiDjr the ls s 2 watermark rjj fee:, and early today [families were hurriedly pre i abandon their homes, iteheiis have been opened for jnd charity organizations i r in relief work. North s waterbouml. as well as [d section, ami South Nash- 1 ih,;. Water menaced the Irtn-k section near the state [ I k 1.700 persons from the bve Ik*cii deprived of t’lieir L rising waters. Guesses prejoity damage are un- UviiT throughout Tonnes ppi and Kentucky showed improvement in the flood ri,v iany of the smaller! breached their flood crest. j|an conference with ® e exurissed the opinion, the citizens’ play jury fben further trial before j ■i in favor of political Fs only comment to P 1 yesterday when be if he believed the pluy 'ailiiif was •‘tigure it out This was just after he Mo ((inference'with pro r“'°h he had said political was inevitable unlews the ® f ‘ n themselves i minedi . W several 01 -MUs Ruth Ben- THE CONCORD TIMES >Jr , ~ - $2.00 a Year, Strictly in Advance. SAfS HL PHARR IS EXPRESSING RIS OWN OPINION I , . Did Not Speak for Com mission in Saying Time ! Is Not Ripe for Action \ for Longer School Term. I THE COMMISSION TO MEET JANUARY 3RD . Then the Report of Dr. Morrison as to His In vestigations Will Be Heard by Commission. I I Tribune Bureau, * / Sir Walter Hole’. ] / By J. ('. Baskervill. | IfaVigh. Dec. MO.—Consternation I [hast been thrown into the ranks of those, who are hoping that the iegiw-1 lature will submit the question of | an eight months school term to a | vote of the people, by the published i statement of Edgar AY. Pharr, a t member of the Educational Com mission could not recommend this missiion ould not recummeud this action, on the grounds that the mem bers of the eommi&sion felt that ”the time is not ripe” for such action. That Mr. Pharr must have' been expressing his on opinion, rather than speaking for the commission its a whole, is the interpretation general ly placed on his statement here, es pecially in view of the announee j ment made a few days ago. after the | Inst, meeting of the commission here, [that the commission had- not yet taken a formal vote on any of the i I matters before it and that the qties [tion of the eight months school term' I had not yet been considered by the | entire commission, pending the re-1 l>ort of Dr. Fred M. Morrison, who lias been compiling the special re pot for the consideration of the comm ission. “The commission has taken no of ficial nction on anything, as I an nounced last week in a written statement detailing the work of the commission,” said J. O- Carr, of Wilmington, chairman of the com mission, .when called over long dis tance and asked if Mr. Pharr nad been given authority to speak for the commission on the question of the eight months school term. lie stated that the (fttestioo of the eight Term had not as vet been taken up I formally by the commission In the formal statement Issued by I Mr. Carr last week at the close of a! two days session of the commission here, it was announced that the com mission had gone exhaustively into the qurstion of school financing and possible sources of reveuue. with a view to developing better methods of financing the present six months school term and with a view to ue ve’oping avenues for additional reve nue “should the eight months term become a rea’ity.” But it was made very clear that all the discussion was purely tentative and speculative, and that no vote bad been taken, .and [ would not be until the commission I holds what it hopes will be its final session here on Monday. January ,3. At this session, the report of lsr. Morrison dealing with the results of his investigations into the advisabi lity of the eight months term will be heard and acted upon, as will the re port of Dr. M. C. S. Noble. Jr., dea’ing with the training of teacners in tbc schools of the state, past, pres- j ent and future. Rut until these re ports are submitted and studied, it F impossible for the mmmission to take any action. Thus it is believed that the state ment by Mr. Pharr was evidently j misinterpreted, and that although lie j may have given it as his opinion that i the “lime was not ripe” for the eight months school term, that he in no sense was intending to speak for the commission as a whole, since it is at present impossible for anyone to do so, inasmuch as the commission has not as yet acted on the eight months term. A. T. Allen, state superintendent of public instruction, declined to make any statement with regard to i the situation, other than to say he i did not see how Mr. Pharr could speak for the entire commission, since the commission had taken no action as yet. Mr. Alien is perhaps the most vigorous supporter of the eight months term, and has been throwing all his .influence toward having the q U stioh submitted Ito a vote of the people in the form of a constitutional amendment. although he has made no effort to influence the educational commission in Its consideration of the question. He with others interested in question have been quite hopeful that the commission, after a careful consid eration of the question and facts presented, would eventually . recom mend the longer school term as one of the vital educational needs of the state. But no one has been certain of what action the commission would take. It is true that one or two mem bers of the commission are known id be friendly toward the longer term and one or two are believed to be opposed to it. But one of the mem bers of the commission frankly told your correspondent Inst week thiSt he had no idea what the attitude of the commission as a whole would be, and that he doubted if any of the members had made up their minds on the question—and that for oite, he . did not yet just how he would vote, until after he had heard the report [ of Dr. Morrison. Thus while there is undoubtedly u (Continued on Page Five) TR \C.EDY REFUSES TO IJISE GRIP ON BANK’S OFFICIALS Memphis, Tenu.. Dec. M 0 Harry Cohn, president of the Amer ican Savings Bank & Trust Com pany which recently e’osed its doors, collapsed in the bank today and died within a few minutes. The bank wns closed two weeko ago after the suicide of Clarence Henochsberg. an assistant cashier, who before firing a bullet into his head, told a friend that his ac counts were $200,000 short. Before Henoohsberg's death. \ Rush Parke, bookkeeper, had dis appeared when examiners found shortages of $105,000 in Parke’s accounts. Two other clerks in ihe closed bank were arrested on embezzlement charges and are now under bond. NORTH CAROLINA WILL KEEP PACE With the Gigantic Expansions of Electric Power Development. Tribune Bureau Sir Walter Hotel Raleigh. Dec. MO. —With expendi tures totalling millions of dollars in e’ectric power development planned for t\ie year 1927, Nohth and South Carolina will keep pace with the gi gantic expansions forecast for the in dustry throughout the United States. According to a statement received here today from R. F. Pack, president of the National Electric Light Asso ciation. new capital to the amount of $900,000,000 will be needed during 3927 for the~expansions contemplated by industry. In North Carolina there are at pres ent under way three major power de velopments which are expected to be completed approximately within the twelve mont'us. They are: The Pigeon River hydro-electric plant of the Carolina Power and Light (.Vimpany. west of Asheville, at a cost that has been estimated at from SIM.- 000.000 to $14.000,000. The Norwood hydro-eleetric plant in Stanly county by the Carolina Power and Light Company at an es timated oo«t of $10,000,000. The High Rock development on the Y’adkin River in Davidson county by the Tallassee Power Company and the Southern Power Company, jointly, at an estimated cost of slf>,ooo,ooo. In South Carolina a new $20,00,- 000 corporation lias been formed to take over the utilities of Charleston and to do business throughout the state. On the Savannah River in McCor mick county. South Carolina, the Southeastern Power and Light Coin jwuiy pbm* an ultimate of $50,000,000 lor hydro dvvolppmenL The year just closed saw the com pletion by the Southern Power Com pany in record time of the 100,(KK) horsepower steam plant at Dukeville, near Salisbury. Mr. Pack, in his statement, calls attention to the completion of three great “super j>ower” interconnections in the west and the northwest. Dur ing 1927, the two Carolinas, wbiclv for four years have been included in the great southeastern "super power" system will see themselves linked with the east and the northwest in an un broken connection! from the Great Lakes to Florida and Texas. From Roxboro, North Carolina, to Danville, Virginia, there is now building the only remaining link of that sectiona. inter-connection. The Carolina Pow er and Light Company will be the medium of connection between North and South Carolina. VAN DYKE PRAISES THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS Worth More Than Forts and Navy Yards, Says Minister. Washington. Dec. 28.—Our public schoolfj are worth more to the re public than all her forts and navy yards. They ought to cost more, declares Henry van Dyke in Demo cratic i Aristocracy in the Journal of the National Education Association for January. The schools deserve protection from scheming politicians, he believes. They are handicapped, perhaps, by an overload of educational fads and fancies; possiby by a lack of thorough ness in laying mental and moral foun dations ; certainly by the want of a more generous provision for the teacher on whom their life depends. But they have survived; they have improved ; they are doing wonderfully in the world where he would rather well. v Dr. Van Dyke says there is no place have his books read than in the public schools of Am er * ca *‘ Eor it is there that the. children of ,the people get power to conceive, bring, forth, recognize and follow a native aristo cracy of leadership. Barrier-Penninger. On Thursday evening, December 23rd, at 7:30 F. Lewis Barrier, of Rockwell, and Miss Margaret Pen ninger, of near Concord, were, married at the Reformed parsonage. Mt. Pleas ant, Rev. C. W. Warlipk, pastor of St. James Reformed Church, officiat ing. , The ring service of the Reformed Church was used. The young couple motored to Mt. Pleasant accompanied by Glenn Penninger and Miss Annie Walker. Mr. and Mrs. Barrier have many friends who wish them much happiness in their wedded They will be at home to their many friends at an early date in their home in Rockwell. Rev. and Mrs. George H. Lingle, Elizabeth. Rudolph, George, Woodey and John Miles of Moores ville, spent Tuesday with D. B. Cas tor and family. Miss Gladys Downum has return ed to Greensboro aftter visiting Miss Ruth Williams. CONCORD, NIC, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1926 Movement For New Library Here Is Sponsored By Rotary Club Members Club Members at Weekly Meeting Endorse Bond Is sue Proposal as Best Means of Giving City Library Facilities Needed. A movement for n modern public ibrnry in Concord was startl'd Wed nesday by Concord at their weekly meeting and other civic or ganizatinns will be asked to lend their co-operation and support. Following an address by L. T. Hart sell. chairman of the board of trustee* of the library. Rotarians at the meet ing pledged their support to a bond issue which was deemed necessary as a inenns of securing money with which to build and equip such a library us is needed iu Coneord. “Concord people are tired of drives: they have been about driven to death." Mr. Hartsell stated, “And I think the library should be supported by taxa-. Hop, with every one paying his or her proportionate share.” By a unanimous vote the club en dorsed this suggestion, appointed a committee to draw up a bill which would be presented at the next ses sion of the legislature, and named representatives to put the proposition before the Iviwanis and Woman's clubs at early meetings. North Carolinians like to talk about the biggest towel mill in the world being in Kannapolis, about the biggest denim mill in the world being at Greensboro and file biggest aluminum olant in the world being at Badin. Mr. Hartsell said in opening bis ad dress. but they don’t like to talk about public libraries. “They shun this subject.” he said, “because we are not doiug anything for our libraries. North Carolina and Arkansas rank at the bottom of the 48 states in library support and in the number of books per inhabi tant there is no one to dispute the lowest rung on the ladder with North Carolina. “Massachusetts has two and a half hooka per inhabitant in libraries. North Carolina has less than one third of one book per inhabitant. As a matter of fact we woTild have to increase the state's total teu times to be even an average stated Mr. Hartsell stated thrit he dis cussed the library subject 'in general just to load up to his real subject—an adequate library for Conetml. ‘The present library was established thlr* teen years ago,” "lie continued, “and showed a fine growth for many years. We are falling back now because of ’ack of money. There is just ao, much interest as ever on the part of the public. l»Ut Thai public luts Im *l been satisfied because there were no new honks available. In 1922 at the library 51.000 books were' bor rowed. This year the total has fallen to 37,000, not because the public was tired of reading but because there was nothing new to be secured at the libra ry. “All of the money secured from flue city now is needed for small salaries, heat and other necessities. There TURLINGTON DECLINES OFFERED PRESIDENCY Tells North Carolina Bible League He Cannot Head the Organization. Charlotte, Dec. 30.— UP)— Z. \ r . Turlington, of Mooresville, veteran legislator, today threw the meeting of the North Carolina Bible League, for merly the committee of 100, into a quandary when after calling the ses sion to order he announced that he could not accept the presidency of the organization. Mr. Turlington was elected at the meeting of the organization here on December 9th and it had been believ ed he would accept. The North Carolina Bible League has as its aim the combatting of mod ernism in the schools of the state, and the meeting today was called for the purpose of completing plans looking to the laying before the legislature again the question of a law barring the teaching of the theory of evolu tion as it relates to the origin of man, in the public schools. Charlotte, Dec. 30.— 0 P) —Dr. Me- Kendrick Long, of Mooresville, today was elected president of the North Carolina Bible League, fundamental ist organization. He was chosen after Z. \\ Tur lington, of Mooresville,, veteran legis lator, had ealled the meeting to order and; announced that he could not ; ac cept the presidency. Mrj Turlington was fleeted at a meeting here De cember ftflh. 1 ' ! Today’s meeting, like : previous ses;- sionsi, Wjas hejd behind closed doors. •V !j' ; .• < . <-■* - Killed in Freight Wreck. Summerfield, Pn., Dec. 30. An engineer was killed and his fire man is believed to be dead under the wreckage, the result of one freight train running into the rear of an other on flue Legihgh'A T alley railroad here today. The engineer was John Johnson, of Swyre, Pa. His fireman i* Michael Langan. of Pittston, a junior at La fayette College. With Our Advertisers. The J. C. Penney Co. led all other chain stores in flue amount of soles. Read about this in their new gd. to day. . Thrifty women are -taking advant age of the pre-inventory sale at Fish er’s. The banks of the city will be clos ed Saturday, January Ist. Fliers Leaye for Vera Crux. Galveston, Texas, Dec. 30. —W*) — The Pan-American fliers hopped off from Tampico at 11 a. m., Tampico time, to Vera Cruz, a message re ceived here from Tampico by the All- American Cable office here said. has been no money to be spent sos books. Did you know that during the past year not a single new ehild’s boqk has been purchased for the li brary? Yet despite the fact that new books have been scarce the li brary has loaned books at the rate of 320 a day. That shows the pub lic wants to read if the library can furnish the proper reading material. Had we enough lawks the total would hnve been twice, yjea thrice, as large. “Not only do we 'need money for books. We need a new home. The present building is wholly inadequate. It is impossible to get light except through the front and unsatisfactory skylights. “We need $50,000 for a new home, SIO,OOO for new books and an income ( of about__s6.ooo a year for salaries and other necessities. To get this money we should have a bond issue and let the people decide for themselves what they will have. “In Cabarrus county we are spend ing 93 cents on the SIOO for educa tion. For the library, a necessary adjunct to the schools, wo are spend ing one cent on the SIOO. The li brary should carry parallel reading books and other material needed by school With an income of $1,200 it cannot do this. “I think the people of Coneord want their library. Certainly textile work er* and members of their families find the li|»fary of greatest pleasure and' benefit and wo should provide for them. lam confident that they would vote for a measure that would provide for them an .adequate library without excessive cost. By giving- the library five Cents on the SIOO it would receive about $6,000 a year, and the increase in 'taxes would be negligible to flue average taxpayer.” Mr. Hartsell suggested that the mat ter be presented to the next legisla ture so it can be voted on in the mayor's election in the spring. Mr. Hartsell was asked to draw a bill and deliver it to F. J. Haywood, state senator from Cabarrus, for pres entation Sin the new General Assem bly. 7 11. E. Ridenhour, Jr., was named to present the matter to the Kiwanis Club and S. Kay Patterson was ap pointed representative to appear be fore the Woman’s Club. Several members discussed the .movement, all offering their\.enrae tTtiont and support. W. R. Odell, head of the Kerr Bleachery and Fin ishing Works, paid he had always been interested in flue library and thought d bond issue was the proper way to handle the matter. “My company will gladly pay its proportionate part of the taxes needed for such a pro ject." he said. AY. W. Morris, trustee of the li brary, was the guest of Mr. Hart sell, and said he thought Mr. Ilnrt r' (Continued on Page Five) WANTS MORE HOSPITALS FOR DISABLED VETERANS Bill Carrying fclfi,ooo,ooo Appropria tion Drawn Up For Congressional Action. A\ r ashington. Dec. 30.—04 s )—A vet erans hospital construction program calling for appropriations of $16.- 000,000 for new' structures or addi tions to existing ones, is asked in a bill drawn up by chairman Johnson, of the House veterans committee. It would authorize 5.000 additional beds, and with a few exceptions they w’ould be used f6r world war veterans suffering with mental disorders. The measure follows recommendations made at the Philadelphia American Legion convention. “The additional hospital facilities.” Mr. said today, “have been found necessary because the number of former seYvice men suffering from mental diseases attributable to the war has increased at the rate of 1.- 000 a year for the past four years. Under special treatment the govern ment may be able to cure a substan tial number of these, but existing hos pital facilities are not able to meet demands placed upon them.” Flail’s Condition Not So Favorable Today. , El Paso, Texas, Dec. 30.—C^)—Al bert B. Fall, former Secretary of the Interior, who is ill. at his home here with pneumonia,, suddenly took a turn for the worse during the night, eessitating the calling in of Dr. H. T. | Salford at an earlier hour than tjsual this morning. Fall was reported yes terday as being practically out of dan ger. , Mayor of Augusta Dead. ! Augusta. Oa.. Dec. 30.—OP)—Wil liam Penn White, mayor of Augusta, died this morning at 11:30 o’clock.% He became in at the city hall Mon day after having been in failing health since beginning of his second term I as mayor tw*o years ago. Mr. White was 56 years old. He was a descendant of AVilliam Penn. President Back Home. AYashington, Dec. 30.— 04>)_p reß !_ dent and Mrs. Coolidge arrived home early today from Trenton, N. J., w'here the President spoke last night at the Battle of Trenton celebration, and were driven immediately to the | AA’hite House. Mrs. B. S. Templeton and four children, and Miss Janie Kelly, -of near Mooresville. spent Wednesday with Mrs. Roy C. Crooks. Nearly five hundred whales were taken in Alaskan waters laot year. OBJECTS TO POISOH IN DENIMS SO CHANGE IS ORDERED in the Future Government Will Not Use Poisons, Under Order Made by Secretary Mellon. NEW PLAN WILL BE USED SOON Objects to the Practice of Poisoning Persons to Keep Them From Drink ing, Secretary Asserts. AYashington, Dec. 30. 1 —C4*)—On the theory that no effective prohibition enforcement is bound to drive drink drinkers to the use of industrial alco hol, Secretary Mellon announced a determination today to eliminate the use of poisons in the use of denatur ants. The secretary’s attitude, made known today at the treasury, is that he docs not conceive it ns a duty of the government to permit poison ing of in order to enforce the law. He expects government chemists soon will be able to denature alcohol So that it will be too distaste ful to drink jrather flapn too danger ous. When the new government denat uring formula goes into effect Janu ary Ist certain poisonous substances previously included in it will be elim inated. The four per cent, of wood alcohol provided for in the formula will re main, however, as Mr. Mellon does not think that percentage injurious. Under the old formula two per cent, of wood alcohol is used. The decision not to use poisons in dangerous quantities is based on a conviction bn the part of Secretary Mellon that complete prohibition e» *■ foreement is impossible. He thinks that as enforcement grows stronger bootleggers and drinkers will turn to alcohol and other substitutes. He is not willing that the government should poison these substitutes to enforce the lawr and believes that concoctions can be placed in them to prevent their use. Improved prohibition enforcement under the administration of! Assist ant Secretary Andrews is believed by Mr. Mellon lo have resulted in nse of industrial alcohol by bootleggers, and in the consequent poisoning of some drinkers. He does not believe, however, that any portion of the num erous holiday alcoholic deaths result ed from use of poisoned alcohol, and believes excessive drinking was a more likely cause. The secretary declared today that smuggling both along the coast and on the Canadian border had been greatly diminished, if not almost elim iniated. Domestic liquor leaks also have been stopped to a great degree, he said, through the concentration in fewer distilleries of the medicinal li quor stock. As a result bootleggers, he understands, are to use industrial alcohol. THE COTTON MARKET Opened Steady at Advance of 7 to 10 Points. With January Selling Up to 12.95. New York, Dec. 30.' — G^)—The cot ton market opened steady at an ad vance of 7 to 10 points in response tc| relatively firm Liverpool cables and reports that w’hile the weather was clear in the South it was too cold for much progress in picking. Additional January notices were is sued. causing a little liquidation ami a slight widening of the differenoew between January and later months, but the general market held steady. Tuere appeared to be a little trad* buying here for continental account. January sold up to 12.95 and July to 13.27 and pricer, held within 2 or 3 points of these figures at tin end of the first hour. Cotton futures opened steady; Jan 12.74; March 12.92; May 13.10; July 13.27; Oct. 13.41. Fenner and Beane’s Cotton Letter New' Orleans, Dec. 29.; —The cot ton market was a small affair toda> owing "to the approaching holiday * Sentiment ,was generally reactionary but there w T as, no selling ,of cons** qaence; and the market was steady though a,«hade lower. The weatbei continues bad with rains in the eas! and cold in the west The. forecast i* for fair weather and rising tempera tures but the map indicates anothc: rainy spell is on the w'ay .into ttu belt. Export*; continue to run heavy but spot demand is light and ship ments from interior points ture lost than last season. Sentiment » gen eraliy reactionary bqt the stwplipe'e of the market and cheapness of cot ton is restricting selling for the shori account. Finds Whiskey Still in Publu Square. Charlotte, Dec. 29.—Local poiic< today were endeavoring to figure ou whether some moonshiner took .* New Year resolution to quit makinj “white lightning” or merely lost tb( tools of his trade. Roy Biggere, negro caretaker, wto works on the city hall lawn, walker into police headquarters this morn ing with a five gallon still. He sai< he found it on the city hall squan about a, half block from the potic station.. . r One of every three persons in Nev York City is a Jew. . B. SHERRILL. Editor and Publisher AMERICA KCLtIS-j TO 111 lIICM NOW Standing Pat in Face of Battering Rain of Far- Flung Protests and the I ; Divergent Opinions. SACASA TROOPERS HAVING SUCCESS It Is Said American Forces Will Stay Where They Are to Protect Ameri cans and Property. Washington, Doc. SO.—o4*) —While the Sacasa liberals'continue to forge ahead into the interior of Nicaragua, threatening the vital portions of the conservative forces of President Diaz, American government officials in the face of a battering ram of far-flung protests and widely divergent opin ions are standing pat on their an nounced policy of protection for Am erican lives and 'property. While conferences continu& today between high officials in Washington, late dispatches from the war zone in Nicaragua told of the retreat to El Bluff from' Las Perlfls of the Diaz troop*?, their disarming in the neutral zone, and the dispatch of 200 conser vative soldiers to Monkey Ridge to save that strategic point from falling into the hands of Sac-asa’s army. - President Diaz, who has been rec ognized by the United States, is re ported to have asked the American minister at Managua to have the Es condido River established as a neu tral zone, in view of his inability to guarantee* protection to foreigners. Several neutral zones already have been established on the east coast, and whether additional ones will be cre ated rests with Reart Admiral Julian Latimer. American naval commander in Nicaraguan waters. OLD MAN MOORE PREDICTS 1027 AS “NO BETTER” Famous Astrologer Fears the Coming Year Will Teem With Agitations. By CHARLES A. SMITH International News Service Staff Correspondent London. Dec. 20.—Those who Vrti j agine that 1927 will be a better year Uhsm 1920 are doomed to- dlsappomt- ImenL according to “Old Moote.” H’ho, j through the medium of the famous ! “Old Moore's Almanack,” annually ! brinking the said tidings to a sorrow ing world that ‘‘next year will Jj£jpo better.” “Old Moore,” who bases his pre dictions on the influences exerciWd by the stars, opines that Neptune is going to cause this old world a good deal of trouble next year. He signs his predictions “Francis Moore, physician.” It is only fair to the inhabitants of the various coun tries said to be going to be affected, however, to point out that as this Francis Moore was the original “Old Moore,” the astrologer, his vitality must be enormous, for he lived in the reign of King William the Third of England. Fears Crime Waves The old gent has apparently been bitten with the popular socialist bug bear, and this issue of his almanack literally teems with “bolshevik at tack,” ‘‘crimes against law and or der,” “socialistic agitation.” “strikes.” “unrest, 1* and so on. As a gloomy prophet [ “Old Moore" easily ranks with Dean Ingle in this issue. For instance, he foresees in next February that: “The position of Nep tune in the sixth square to Mars and opposition to Venus denotes troubles among the workers, bolshevist ten tendies, immorality, and danger of strikes.” Apparently Neptune Is in disgrace with the venerable astrologer, for in. March he tells us that “the position of Neptune in the eleventh house de notes socialistic disorders in the Eng lish House of Commons.” World Politics Then in April we read that “the position of Neptune denotes double dealing among the powers,” and in May “the rising position of Neptune shows unrest among the people of the world.” Neptune# appearance -in Jun? de notes strange deaths, drowning, drug ging and heiirt failure. Indeed, what ever this unfortunate planet does is wrong'. Generally, 1927 will be a bad year for the world, according to this in , curable pessimist. Winston-Salem’s Building Record For Year $5,383,000. . Winston-Salem. Dec. 29. — Win ‘ ston-Salem’s building record for 1929 . is $5,583,000. according to figures ’ compiled today by the city building inspector. This represents an increase of more than a half million dollars over the total for 1925. ! Earthquake Fett in Washington State. , Wenatchee, Wash., Dec. 30.—04*) ; A pronounced earthquake was felt at [ 10.05 a. m. today. Buildings shook , and many occupants ran into the » streets. One old citpzen who has felt them before, aqid it was the most pro , nounced in the seventeen years he has j resided here. I ~ WEATHER FORECAST. i Fair tonight, slightly colder on the coast; Friday fair, rising tempera r ture. Moderate to fresh northwest and west winds. im MATTERS aHI DISCUSSED IT CONFERENCE TOW State Judicial Conference Meets to Discuss Prob lems Confronting Courts of the State. EMERGENCYACT jM NOT ADEQUATE It Is Proposed That Sev eral New Districts Be Created for the Trial of Civil Cases Only. Raleigh. Dec. 30.— (A>)— Creation c f judicial districts for the trial of civil cases only, and new laws cover ing the selection of juries are* among T-'gislative proposals made today, The judicial conference met in the Supreme Court room with Chief jus tice Stacy presiding for hearing re? ports in the judicial system. Associate Justice Adams recom mended an amendment to the state constitution, to permit the forming of the proposed superior court districts. The effect would be to permit the nam ing of Superior court judges, without naming of solicitors in similar propor tion. Appointment of } emergency judges would be done away With. The present emergency judge laws whre termed inadequate. Appeals to the Supreme Court at present may be made only through Jtn perior courts from inferior ones. 1 J The jurist committee headed .#jfi Judge Frank Daniels, proposed a iff#, commission of five members in epifm county to purge the jury of all nonfat except those properly qualified; abfin donmnt of peremptory challenges cept in capital felonies; and placing authority in judges to remove joNHi for cause. ' Each side in a legal action wodld be permitted to strike three TetwjMf men from the panel list of 18, mailing after the judge had passed on objections for cause. The committee on trials headed by Judge Devin a bill to give Superior judges the right to limit ar gument in misdemeanor cases to not less than one hour, and to not less than two hours in felony cases, ex cept for capital offenses. Committees on process and plead j ing. appeals and of practice also reported. $30,000,000 MORE FOR THE STATE HIGHWAYS This is the Amount the State Hi*- way Commission Will Recommend. (By International News Service) Raleigh. Dec. 30. —Thirty million dollars —enough greenbacks for any “Dad” to pay up his Christmas bills! . —is the amount that the North Csr%* lina State highway commission recommend for additional highway&tjw a bond, issue to the January legisla ture. This amount was announced here recently following a session of the commission and a conference with Governor McLean. The amount agreed upon by the j commission was not unexpected-rfls the bond issue had been mentioned variously from $20,000,000 all the way to $40.000,000 —so it was thought the commission would probably “split*’ the two figures. They did. And it is for “additional’’ highway construction, too! Coolidges Will Shake Hands With Thousands. a > 4 I Washington, Dec. 30. —The Whjtp House expects a large crowd for the New Year reception. President M/L Mr. Ceclidge will shake thousands of men, women' and v child ren, 'beginning at 11 o’clock with ffitjt diplomats. After the Diplomatic Corp. 4 has passed out of the White Hopse, Cabinet members, Justices of the Supreme (Spurt, members of £ongr