THE TRI-CITY DAILY GAZETTE LEAK8VILLB. NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1924 VOLUME XLI, NO. 146. PRICE: TWO CENTS McLEARY’S NUDE BODY FOUND WHERE SLAYER KILLED ARMY OFFICER Confessed Skyer Guides The Searchers To Spot Where Dead Alan's Body Lay (By Associated Press) Colombia, S. C., July 18.—A form less^ heap of bones, with a bullst puncturrd skull standing 0ut in high relief, yesterday marked the end of the two weeks’ old trail of official and private investigation that started -When Major Samuel H. McLenry, United States army, disappeared while en route from Raleigh to Columbia. They were pointed out and iden tified not 160 feet from the Raleigh Columbia highway in a densely wood ed region, a dozen miles south of Cheraw, by Mortimer N. King, who, according to officers, confessed Wed nesday that he and a companion, whose name was withheld by official.; because he has not been arrested, kill ed Major McLeary on the afternoon of July 2, after they had accepted the officer’s offer to give them a lift ir. his automobile. Dispatches received from Union, S. C-, yesterday said that Frank Harold, 22 years old construction worker of Lockhart, near Union, was being sought by officers in connection t with the case. Early last night there was no report as to whether or not he had been arrested. King, immediately after he point ed out the scene of the tragedy and led the officers to what remained of the officer’s body, was brought to Columbia,and lodged in the Richland county jail. A coroner’s jury em panelled shortly after the discovery of Major McLeary’s remains, return ed a verdict that the army officer came to his death of gun-shot wounds inflicted by King and “other parties unknown to the jury.” *■ Although once or twice King ap peared on the verge of pointing out other places as the location of the body, according to officers who brought him from Canton, S. C., where he was arrested, when the right spot was reached, he recognized it immediately and led the way to wherehe said he and his companion' had dragged Major McLeary’s body, after they had forced the officer at the point of a pistol to leave his auto mobile and accompany them into the woods, where he was shot. Two bullef holes were fought in the skull, one °n each side near the tkmples. Major S. M. Wiliams, United State army, who testified at the in quest, said King’s confession declared the officer was shot twice, the second shot ending his life. No clothing, save a few scraps, so stained and soiled as to be unrecog nisable, was found with the officer’s jemains. His shoes, however, were intact. Miss Bonnie McLeary, a sister of the dead officer, was reported to have gone to Cheraw yesterday, but it is said she did not visit the scene of the. tragedy. ' The remains will probably be sealed in a casket pending instruct tions from the adjutant general of the army, as to their final disposition, it was indicated. FALSE LABELS LEAD BERLIN STORES INTO SERIOUS TROUBLE (By Associated Press) Berii, July 18.—On the theory that “all that glitters is not gold,” a new city ordinance makes it a misdemeanoi for merchants to mislabel good dis ' played in their Bhop windows. Ii glass or some kind of stone is shown with a tag contending that it is a dia mond, ind it i* discovered -that the article in question is an imitation, then the merchant is subject to a fln> »rwt imprisonment. , * The ordinance applies also to food, and when liverwurst is displayed in stores, it must be liverwurst, and not meat from overseas which has been brought here in refrigerators; JAPANESE RAILWAYS PROFIT (By Associated Press) Tokio, July 18.—The Imperial Gov ernment railways of Japan made a profit of $87,800,000 during the fiscal year ended Ma«h 81, 1824. This was disclosed by official returns recently published. . fe ' i * Lest we forget that over and * * above our own personal in- * * terest and preference, comes com- * * munity interest into which and * * through which individual interest * * must merge. There should come * * no ill feeling as between sections. * * There is no local problem that * * cannot be solved within a short * * time and no good can come by * * opposing constructive ideas ad- * * vanced in good faith by men who * * see things differently to .our- * * selves. Let us be moderate in * * our expressions and considerate * * of the other man’s views. * * _ • ************ AUTHORIZE SHRINE TEMPLE FOR AKRON, OHIO Arkon, Ohio, July 18.—At the an nual convention of the Shrine recently held in Kansas City, authority was se cured for the erection of a Shrine Temple in this city. This will be the sixth Shrine temple in Ohio, and will be known as Tadmore Temple. This is the only petition granted of eight applcations received. PRIZE GIVEN GRADUATING CLASS, PENSACOLA SCHOOL Pensacola, Fla., July 18. — The Omar Lodge 0f Perfection of the Scottish Rite bodies of this city offer ed a prize to the members of the graduating class of the Pensacola High School for the best essay on Americanization. The prize was won by George Westerby Howe. FLORIDA PUSHES , WORK ON STATE-WIDE ROAD SYSTEM (By Associated Press) Tallahassee, Fla., July 18.—Work ng under provisions of an act of the legislature designating a system of roads to provide highways reaching from one end of the state to the other, the Florida State Road Department is making steady progress toward com pletion of the network of roads that have a total mileage of 3,506. In ad dition to work being done by the state, counties are bonding themselves and spending millions of dollars yearly in order to expedite construction of the roads. The state road department has only about $4,500,000 a year to operate on, in addition to labor of a thousand or more state convicts who are assigned to road-building work, but is going ahead with its program""constructing highways that cost from $20,000 tc $40,000 for the hard-surfaced type, and around $2,000 a mile for sand clay surface. The system provides for a road into Florida from Waycross, Ga., ex tended along_ the east coast to Miamt that will eventually extend to Key West when the contemplated Over seas Highway is completed; tw* roads through the central part of the state from north to south; one across the northern border from Jackson ville to Pensacola, and a number of others crossing the peninsula and western wing at different intervals. Another, the Tamiami trail, extend ing along the west coast from Tampa through the Everglades to Miami, is also under construction. FIRE DESTROYS LODGE ROOMS Wilmington, July 18.—A fire start ing in the property rooms of the Ma sonic lodge on the third floor of the Masonic temple caused damage which may exceed $100,000, Jodge property and property and equipment of pro fessional men occupying offices in tht building being destroyed. TOKIO UNIVERSITY TO BE REBUILT t'By Associated Press) Tokio, July 18.—A budget of $24, 240,000 has been drawn up for the reconstruction of the Imperial Uni versity of Tokio. The building ware largely destroyed by the earthquake md fire of September 1. SAI£ OF NEWSPAPERS IN U. S. AVERAGES ONE COPY FOR EACH HOME The Associated Press Is Part Of The Development Of American Newspapers (By Associated Press) London, July 18.—Reviewing the development of the American news- j paper before the convention of the! Associated Advertising Clubs of the World today, Louis Wiley, business manager of the New York Times, em-' phasized the importance of the part The Associated Press has played in that development. One agency in the United States which has contributed in large meas ure to the development of our strong newspaper press,” he said, “and whose value in every way can scarce ly be estimated, is The Associated Press, the great mutual new* gather ing and distributing organization. Its reports of daily happenigs are im partial and cannot be influenced. The Associated Press takes issue with no side in any controversy—its purpose is merely present the news.” After telling briefly of the diversity of its membership Mr. Wiley added: “The Associated Press is a part of the development of American news-! papers. Its efficiency is wonderful.’ America, said Mr. Wiley, owes to England a great debt of the begin nings of journalism. “We believe,] however,” he continued, “that we have not been entirely remiss in our eon- ( tribution to both the business and profession of newspaper making. For some time there has been a reciprocity of ideas between newspaper publishers on tyoth sides of the Atlantic. W«* are "both borrowers and lenders of ideas, testifying to the international cordiality existing between newspapers on all sides.” Mr. Wiley traced the development of American- newspapers from the period prior to the American Revolu tion, when weekly gazettes were con sidered sufficient to carry the scat tered and badly reported news, down to the present time, when, he said, there are in the United States 2,036 da'iiy newspapers, including 426 morn ing and 1,610 evening editios. vThe America newspapers, he declared, now sell an average of 31,450,600 copies a day, which means one copy of a newspaper for every home in the j United States. . j Relative to the exchange of news between American and English news-| papers, Mr. Wiley said: “Our news papers publish quotations from your press to a greater extent than you do | from our columns. A cabled report ^ of British editoral opinion on import ant events is a regular part of The j Associated Press news service.” Touching upon world attairs ana the relation of newspapers to them Mr. Wiley said: “We all recognize that the world stands f aeed today with international, political, social and economic problems of a graver nature than it has ever faced before. The conduct of every nation, of every group in every nation, is being e\ amind in the light of its bearing upon the settlement of our world problems. I make an earnest plea at this time that newspapers of all land understand clearly their obligation toward the promotion of international good will and friendship; that they exercise sober judgment in the pub lication only, of .news that stands the test of truth; that they temper dis cussion of international affairs with wise judgment and forbearance.’’ COUGAR ATTACKS MAN (By Associaied Press) Olympia, Wash., July 18.—An at tack by a cougar, one of very^few on record, has been reported from the "Olympic National Forest, Western Washington, by Glen Merchant, a for mer forest guard? Mr. Merchant said the cougar sprang from some brush and tore off a trousers leg and severely scratched him. He hit the cougar on the nose with a fishing rod, and ran. The beast did not follow. MR. BARKER PLEADS TO KEEP STRAIGHT TOWN’S HISTORY Board Member Point* Out No Petition For Extension Has Been Submitted To The Editor: In reporting an interview with a business man of the Boulevard, rela tive to improving the mail service in that section, the Leaksville News, re ferring to citizens of the Boulevard, states: “They petitioned the town board to take them in or at least have the matter referred to a referendum vote. They were denied the privilege.” In an editorial of the News of the same date, discussion the same ques tion, is found the following statement: “This civic maverick has sought to better its condition in other ways but has been denied the privilege.” The inference would be that this assertion was made with the idea that the board had been petitioned to call an election 0n the proposed extension df the corporate limits, to include the Boulevard, but for the fact that the Editor assures his readers in the same editorial that he does not undertake to express an opinion until he has in formed himself on both sides, or thinks he has done so. The files in the Clerk’s office of the Town of Leaksville should disclose authentic information in this con nection, and if the business man and the News had referred to these files they would have had the privilege of scrutinizing one petition from citizens of the Boulevard section, and one from citizens within the ' corporate limits, each containing about fifty names and both requesting the boari. “not” t0 call an election on the pro posed extension of the corporate limits. No petition, requesting an election to be called was presented from any source. The above facts are furnished in an effort to assist the author of “A Few 'titants on the Boulevard Sub Staton,” who lives within the Leaks vilie limits and suggests that nobody outside the Boulevard should interfere, in “setting history straight.” In these interesting Slants the question is asked: “Does any person know when Leaksvlle will get in the second class?" In this connection it may be stated that sales of stamps determine the advancement of a post office of the class in question. Dui ing the first half of this year sales of stamps 0f the Leaksville office exceed five-eights of the amount required for the entire year. Why not ask, does anybody know whether or not Spray can sell sufficient stamps to permit her to remain in the second class? Reference is made in the Slants to “undue interest by other than Boule vard people,’’ and in the same article considerable interest is evinced in a certain R. F. D. route some miles from the Boulevard, over on the rim of North Spray. Since the Boulevard citizens should be permitted to work out their own problems why not allow the patrons ot the R. F. D. route to take care of theirs? T. H. BARKER. July 18, 1924. UPPER CLASES SHUN THE CLOTH DECLARES BISHOP OF BIRMINGHAM (By Associated Press) Birmingham July 18.—The BishtJp of Birmingham has expressed himself as downcast because there is a de cided dropping off in the number of candidates for ordination from the ripper classes. Writing to his flock in the Diocesan Magazazinc, he say. “We are not getting the sons of out weil-tu-do people to come forward for ordination as we expect.” “It is true that the clergy are pool ly paid,” the bishop adds, “and have not great prospects of worldly ad vancement. But it will be s*>d indeed in the sense of vocation does not run through England as a whole. In olden days it was counted a glory by our best families to give at least one bey to the ministry.” “Our young men only need to be shown,” the bishop concludes, “what a splendid life of adventure for Christ the clerymen may lead in order t° be stirred to the sacrifice of their lives to the. evengelising and edifying of God’s people." Ralston would rather live than be President.—Winston-Salem Journal. Miss Helen WiDs Defeats Madame Golding of France *********** * * • * * The “Great White Way” will * * bloom out in all its- glory tonight * * or tomorrow night, according to * * present plans of those installing * * electric lights on the town’s * * principal street and the new State * * Highway bridge over Dan River. * * * ******.*******!« STUART McLaren has BEEN FOUND * (By Associated Press), Tokio, July 18.—Stuart MacLaren, British aviator on round the world flight, who has been missing since he left Lake Toshimo for Paramashiru early Wednesday, has been found. MacLearen and his companions were found safe in a bay on the south west shore of Uruppu Island. Dense fog forced the .MacLaren and his party to land at Uruppsu Island soon after taking flight, said wireless advices which added that all members of the. party of four were safe and that their air plane was undamaged. BRAZIL REBELS HAVE THE UPPER HAND (By Associated Press) Buenos Aires, July 18. — Trust worthy information received here from Brazil indicates Rebels are getting the upper hand in fighting around Sao Paulo. It is stated that the Federal Gov ernment had proposed to initiate “decisive operations,” but “the mill tary chiefs do not entertain hopes of definite- results.” FORMAL CALL ISSUED FOR GENRAL ASSEMBLY OF N. C. (By Associated Press) Raleigh, July 18.—Formal sum mons to the General Assembly o! North Carolina tot con\Vme at 11 o’clock- on the morning of Thursday, August 7th, to rectify certain ambi guities in the wording of the proposed sinking fund amendment to the Con stitution, and to cosider the report ad recommendations of the State Ship and Water Transportation Commis sion, is contained in a proclamation issued by Governor Cameron Morrison at noon yesterday. While these matters.form the basis for the Governor’s call, under the law of North Carolina, the business of the Special Session cannot be re stricted to these declared emergencies. RAMSEY MacDONALD MEETS DEFEAT IN BRITISH COMMONS (By Associated Press) London, July 18.—The MacDonald government was defeated in the House of Commons by a vote of 171 to 140 during consideration of the un employment insurance bill. RAIL CONDUCTORS . UNION ENDORSES LA FOLLETTE (By Associated Press) Cedar Rapids, Iowa, July 18.—The board of director of the Order ol Railway Conductors has formally en worsed.. the candidacy of Senato. Robert M. La Follette for the presi dency, according to a statement giver nit by President L. E. Sheppard. COTTON SEED CRUSHED DURING 11 MONTHS PERIOD (By Associated Press) Washington, July 18.—Cotton seec crushed in the 11 months period'end ing June 20th, amounted to 3,285,10£ tons, the Census Bureau announced today. Cotton seed on hand at the, mills at the same date, totalled 29,286 tons. (By Associated Press) Olympic, Stadium Colonibes, France, July 18.—Miss Helen Wills, American woman tennis champion, reached the final round of . the Olympic singles competition by - • defeating Madame A. G. Golding of France 6-2, 6-1. She will meet.. Mademoiselle Vlasto of France in a final, as the result of the latter’s victory over Miss Kath leen McKane of; Great Britain, 0-6> 6-6, 6-1. , . . Vincent Richards, the only renaain ng American', ire the men’s singles, reached the final round by defeating Baron Demorpurgo of Italy 6-3, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4. TURKS EXPELLING CHRISTIANS (By Associated Press) Beirut, July 17.—Parties of Chris tians are sjijj being expelled from Turkey. Since February 15, 2,566 Christians have arrived in Syria front the district of Urfa, all of whom were destitute. These explusions have been gradually growing since 1919, and to day the total number is estimated to be about 110,000. STILL FISHING AT 101 (By Associated Press) Clarion, Pg., July 18.—Clarion county assessrs usually list men of advanced age. as- “invalids,” but when William Krauzer, of St. Petersburg, aged 101, was granted a fishing license the assessor decided a change in the man’s status was .necessary. Kratzor is now listed as a “retired gentlemen.” The assessor ruled that a man of 101 years who could fish was not an invalid. NEW ROSTER OF YORK TEMPLE Columbus, Ohio, July 18.—The new roster of the York Temple which has just been issued, lists 290 members living in Columbus and 160 living elsewhere, of which 89 reside in Ohio and 71 are soatter’ed over 27 other States. ENFORCEMENT IN U. S. WILL INFLUENCE DRY WORLD, SAYS LEADER (By Associated Press) Winona Lake* Ind., July 18.—By thorough enforcement of prohibition, the United States will influence Great Britain and other nations to dis possess the liquor traffic, according to Dr. F. Scott McBride, of Westerville, O., general superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League of America, who opened a three-day conference of the World League Against Alcoholism here today. William E.' (“Pussyfoot”) Johnson of Westerville; Miss Cora Frances Stoddard of Boston, secretary of the Scientific Temperance Fedeiation; Judge Richard J. Hopkins of the Kan sas Supreme- Court, and the Rev. Sam W. Small of Washington, are leaders in the discussions to be held tomorrow. THAT RAILROAD PLANK Perhaps the least commendable plank in the Democratic platform ii the one leading''with the railroad question. *V The trouble with the position of the Democratic party on this question is that, as far as can be judged from the rather general remarks indulged in, the alteratjons that are being thus propesd would constitute a backward step in railroad legislation, and a serious one at. that. As to the proposal that “railroad rates should be so readjusted as to give the bulky, basic, low-priced .raw commodities such as agricultural products, coal and ores—the lowest rates, placing the higher rates upon more valuable and- less bulky manu factured products,” the less said of it the better. There is little reason to auppose that there would be sny justice in such procedure at the present time, but in any case the issue is one for the Interstate Commerce Commission, * not for the politicians, to decide. In writing the plank the Democrats are dealing a blow' at our accepted methods of rate control.—New York Journal of Commerce. ■ . • .*>!■>■ ■’