iv&sm • PRESS « • DISPATCHES • VOLUME XXIV TBECOHIITTEEK ABOUT d $3,000,000 LOU 10 Toon As Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee of the Republican National Committe in 1919. THOMPSON WAS TOO ILL TO APPEAR His Attorney Stud the Loan Was Secured by Oil Stock But Had Nothing to Do With Campaign Funds. (By the Amuwlttod Press.) Washington, April 11.—Returning to its inquiry into possible oil company eou tributjions to national political cam paign funds, the Senate oil committee to day sought information about a $:!,000,- 000 loan made by the C'lmse National Rank in New York in 1019 to Wm. Boyce Thompson, formerly chairman of the ways and means committee of the Republican National Committee. Declaring his client was too ill to ap pear, Win. Wallace, .Tr., attorney for Thompson, testified that the $3,000,000 loan was secured by 50.154 shares of Sinclair oil stocks, but insisted it had nothing to do with campaign funds. He said Thompson had no part in the re publican financing until after the 1920 campaign, and that the chase Bank loan was repaid in full in 1919. The lawyer also read into the record a telegram from Thompson, who has been sought by the committee subpoena servers for more than two weeks, saying he had been “wholly out of the Sinclair interests since 1921." Thompson was said to have failed to respond to the committee summons because he is con fined to a sanatorium in Arizona. Aityearing voluntarily and speaking for his client, Wallace also denied that Thompson had borrowed large sums to wipe out the republican national com mittee deficit after 1920. More Testimony About the Fight Film. Washington, vApril 11.—(More testi inoney about the Dempsey-Carpentier fight film, the Old Hickory Power Case, nnd the Miller Brothers land fraud pros ecutions in Oklahoma was hoard Unlay 'KsSiSi, wbMe Chairman Brookhart nnd llffiafor Wheeler were inquiring into the affairs 1 of tlie Midland National Bank, at Wash ington Courthouse, Ohio. J. J. MeOraw. an Oklahoma republican lender, denied some of the previous tes timony connecting him with the Miller case; William Tiighman, of Oklahoma City, told Ik>w he contracted for “pro tected" exbibitiod of the fight films iu that state; and J. M. Towler, a depart ment of Justice agent, further developed stories told to the committee about the ■■ department’s delay in prosecuting the Old Hickory case. Dismissal of Bill of Complaint Issued. Cheyenne, Wyo., April 11.—Dismissal of the bill of complaint of the United States of America against the Sinclair Crude Oil Purchasing Company, and the Sinclair Pipe Line Company is sought in a petition filed by the two corporations in Federal Conrt in answer to the gov ernment’s suit against the Mammoth Oil Company and these corporations, for annulment of the Teapot Dome naval oil reserve lease. The answer of the Mammoth Com pany, the chief defendant, has not been filed. The thirty day time limit, set Efor its tiling, will expire April 14tfc. Air Pilots Bomb Tegucigalpa. Washington, April 11. —Air pilots of Honduran rebel forces have begun mak ing bombing raids on Tegucigalpa. The National League of Girls’ Clubs will hold its biennini meeting at Smith College this year June 18 to 22. ; A WORK The wife who helps her man to get somewhere is entitled to a whole lot more credit than she usually gets. Often, she is the one who starts tbe man on the rood to success by leading "the way in matters of thrift. Handicaps there may be, but you can trust tbe earnest woman to "get over them, through them or around them — anyway to leave them behind." There are a lot of fine women who c6me here regularly to invest their fam ily savings. To them all we extend a heartfelt wel come. Our 53rd series is now open. Running shares cost you 25 cents per share per week. Prepaid shares $72,125 per share. In vest your family savings wHt us. All stock is non-taxable. CABARRUS COUNTY B. L. A SAV. ASSOCIATION Office In the Concord National Bank The Concord Daily Tribune Mannington B(*s t . ■ Howard Mannington, whose name nas continuously popped up In the • Benate Investigation In connection with the now famous "little green bouse In K street," snapped upon his return from Paris. He was wel corned by subpoena servers. ■ : i COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE APPEAL. Previously reported $1025.00 i J. T. Honeycutt : 150.00 . J. A. Cline „ 150.00 i Mrs. Zeb Moore 150.00 Miscellaneous 525.00 i Total $2,000.00 J DRIVER FATALLY INJURED Southern Train No. 38 Strikes Bus at Kings Mountain. Gastonia, April 10. —Paul Davie, of Gastonia, is in a dying condition and three others are more or less injured as the result of an accident at Kings Moun tain tonight at o'clock when train No. 3 hit an nuto bus plying between hero and Spartanburg. The injured are Charles Pease, of Augusta. Ga., J. D. Baldwin, of Mt. Gilead, nnd Monroe Jones, of Piedmont, S. C. Baldwin is badly cut about the head and shoulders, Jones and Pease have superficial in juries. Itavis, the driver of the jitney, has a fractured skull, a broken leg and in ternal injuries. He can hardly recover nnd is In an unconscious condition. jialn. A wet windshield obscured the Silver’s vision. The injured were* brought to Gastonia on the train nnd taken to a local hospital. The automobile was owned by H. L. Bass, who operated a jitney line between here and Spartanburg. Due other oc cupant of the car, Barrett Jones, was uninjured. GASTON JURY ACQUITS KILLIAN AND JOE ORR They Are Found Not Guilty of Ford’s Death—Crowder. Who Has Confess ed. Not -Yet Sentenced. Gastonia, April 10. —A verdict of not guilty asto both defendants was return ed late tonight in the case of Joe Oi'r nnd Ransom Killian, on trial sincp Tuesday for murder in connection with the killing of John Ford in November, 1920. TLe' jury was out more than nine hours. Orr and Killian were arrested a few weeks ago after they hnd been implicat ed in the slaying of Ford by Arthur Crowder, n prisoner at Decatur, Ala bama. in a confession, said to have been made first to a minister who visited him during a serious illness nnd Inter reiterated to officers. Crowder this week pleaded guilty of mttnslauhter and be came the star witness for the state against Orr and Killian. Crowder was brought here from Alnbnma to stand trial. He has not been sentenced. With Our Advertisers. Buy bn the pTan of payments a little at a time, and pay as you wear, at Far ley’s. Men’s suits, women's coats and suits, women's dresses nud millinery, boys’ sluits, ladies blouses, skirts, sweat ers, etc.. The prices are right too. Get your home-made cakes at C. H. Barrier & Co.’s aud help the ladies of Epworth Church. The Concord and Kannapolis Gas Co. has many styles in gas ranges. See them.' The Standard Buick Co. has a num ber of used cars for sale or exchange. See list in the new ad. today. You will always find many bargains at the Piggly Wiggly. The service of the Citizens Bank and Trust Co. is certain to please you. Qet double cream for whipping at the Co-operative Dairy Co. Don’t forget the big Easter Sale of new spring footwear at very low prices at Parker’s Shoe Store. Fisher’s will have a sale Saturday and Monday of special house, porch and street dresses at 95 cents, $1.29 and : $1,50. You can’t buy the material for : that. Thousand Chinese Converts Baptized at Same Ceremony. Peking, April (10.—Tty* iw'liolesale conversion to Christianity of the troops , of General Feng Yu-hsiang, which re . suited last February in the baptism of 3,700. has beeii further signalized by nc . ceptßnce of the faith by another 1,100 soldiers. , Eight clergymen, natives and foreign, 1 officiated in an impressive ceremony on the drill ground at Tnngchow, a suburb . of Peking, when these latest converts [ were baptized recently. General Feng, who is known throngh out China as the Christian general, ad dressed the men. It Is that 13.000 of the 30,- 000 troops under Gen. Feng’s eommand now have embraced tjie Christian faith. CONCORD, N. C.,' FRiDAY, APRIL 11, 1924 AGREEMENT WITH JAPAN IS REDUCED TO CONCRETE TERMS “Gentlemen’s Agreement” Under Which Japanese Immigration Into United State Was Curtailed. IS NOW REDUCED TO PRECISE TERMS Is Calculated to Clarify the Issue Over Japanese Ex clusion Which Has Been Raised in Congress. (By the Associated Press.) Washington, April 11. —The famous "gentleman's agreement" under whieh Japanese immigration into the United States was curtailed, has been reduced to concrete terms for the first time in an exchange of correspondence between Secretary Hughes and Ambassador Hani harn. The diplomatic exchange calculated to clarify the issue over Jnpanese exclusion which lias been raised In Congress dur ing discussion of the new immigration | legislation, was forwarded by Mr. Hughes today to Chairman Colt, of the senate immigration committee. Heretofore the international under standing between Washington and Tokio on the subject has been based on a long succession of exchanges nnd precedents, and the exact terms of the agreement never have been reduced to precise form. FLOATING HOTELS FOR . ÜBE AT CONVENTION Two Steamboats to Be Made Available to House Several Hundred. (By the Associated Press.) Cleveland. April 11. —Floating hotels on the cool waters of Lake Erie are a possibility contemplated iu case the throngs attending the Republican nat ional convention here in June should ex ceed present calculations. Alva Brad ley, chairman of the convention enter tainment committee, haN notified commit tee officials in charge of housing that two steamboats can be made available to house several hundred people in case of need. The housing bureau reprirts that there IBMMBrtilJlz *’ nif) rooms iit hotels avail able rtHd'iNlir rddm* in residential apart ment hotels which will be available when their regular occupants are away for the summer. In addition, several new apart ment houses, the largest to have 500 to 600 rooms, are under construction and expected to be completed in time for the convention. The housing bureau will en deavor also to arrange for rooms in pri vate dwellings to serve last-minute ar rivals. "This is the first convention for which a housing bureau has been organized," said George B. Harris, chairman of the hotel committee. . "Cleveland means to treat every person here for the conven tion as a guest, and to provide for their reception in a thorough-goiug. system atic way never before’ attempted." GASTON COURT’S THIRD MURDER TRIAL TAKEN UP Carl Mitchum Charged With Slaying His Mother-In-Law. Mrs. Rena Lay. (By the Associated Press.) Gastonia, April 11.—With Joe Orr and Ransom Killian acquitted, and Philip Wynneberger sentenced to from 15 years to 25 years in the state prison, the Gas ton County Superior Court today took up the third murder case of the term, Carl Mitchum being put on trial on the charge of slaying his mother-in-law, Mrs. Rena Lay, at her home in South Gas tonia, several weeks ago. /The slaying occurred following a quarrel between Mitchum nud hit) wife, from Whom he was separated. Mitchum surrendered, claiming self defense. Orr and Killian were acquitted late last night by a jury whieh was out near ly ten hours. Wynneberger pleaded guilty to a charge of second degree murder for kill ing Claude Cook, of Cleveland County. AVIATORS WARNED OF APPROACHING STORM Flight Around the World Is Arrested on This Account. Sitka. Alaska, April 11 (By the As sociated Press). —Warned of an ap proaching storm off the Gulf of Alaska, the four U. S. Army aviators on flight around the world, rested here to day after their 300-mile flight yesterday from Prince Rupert, British Columbia. The aviators originally were scheduled to leave here today for Cordova, Alaska. Brilliant European Swindler Booked as Habitual Criminal. (Correspondence of the Associated Press) Berlin, March 24. —Stephan Otto, born near Brussels, who posed as a major in the Belgian army in 1019 and decorat ed Major General Henry T. Allen, com mander of the American tones at Co blenz, with the Belgian military medal of honor, and who has since been arrest ed as a swindler in. half a dozen Euro pean cities, has been classed by Berlin i detectives as a' “habitual criminal.’’ De spite this, the young man may soon slip from the German prison because no spe i cific charge has been filed against him. i His last exploit was an attempt to ob i tain a high priced car on the pretense that he was a member of the Inter-Al ■ lied Commission of Control in Germany. Otto has associated with high officials in Paris, Vienna, Constantinople and oth er cities, gad the story is even toll) that | on one occasion he actually slept a night . in Buckingham Palace. President Coolidge Sends Message to Senate Today on Heney Appointment (By the Associated Press.) Washington, April 11.—President Coolidge in a message to the Senate to day advised that body to maintain its ‘•constitutional and legal rights” in eon durting investigations. The message, couched in direCT lan guage, was pecaoioped by action of the Senate committee investigating the In ternal Revenue Bureau iu employing Francis J. Hency, of California, m spe cial prosecutor at the instance nnd at the expense of Senator Cousens, of Michigan, a Republican member of the committee. The President supplemented his mes sage with a letter from Secretary Mellon DETECTIVES CONVINCED THAT WOMAN TOLD TRUTH | When She Confessed to tbe Killing of Charlie Blair la Connecticut!. (By the Associated Pram.) New York. April lj. —Detectives arc convinced that Mrs. 4 0,la * lna Tell told the truth yesterday yritbn she gave a cir cumstantial account of her slaying of ('has. Blair on a little, farm near Kil lingworth. Conn., left today to seek Blair’s body. They hnve bpen seupplied with dia grams hy Mrs. Tell. She said she shot Blair, hacked his body with nn axe, and secreted it in the cellar overnight, and then buried it in a pit, because he in sisted that she marry him. o Later—Blair's Rady Found. Killingworth, Conn.. April 11.—The body of Charles Blair, who was slain by Mm. Johanna Tell, according to her iconfession made in New York, was found by the searchers at the Blair farm here today. REPARATION COMMISSION APPROVES DAWES’ REPORT Approval Was Unanimous,—Official Dec laration Issued. Paris, April 11 (By the Associated Press).- —The reparations commission to day officially approved the report sub mitted to it by the experts committee on Wednesday, on the German reparations question. The recommendation of the commission is that the report be approved condi tional upon the acceptance of it. by Ger many. The commission was unanimous in its approval. The reparations commission will hear the German representatives regarding ihe report on Thursday, April 17th. An official declaration by the commis sion signed by its President, accepting the report, was issued this evening. STATUTE OF GOHJiAA MAN GIVEN PLACE IN CHURCH Unitarians Accept Bronze Rejected by New York Academy. New York, April 11.—Carl E. Akeley’s bronze statue, "The Chrysalis,” which depicts a young man emerging from the form of a gorilla, and which recently wa« rejected by the New York Academy of Design as lacking in merit, will be solemnly unveiled • Sunday in the West Side Unitarian Church, according to Rev. Charles Frames Potter, the rector. Akeley will address the congregation on "Personality in Animals.” Potter said that exhibition of the statue would be the first step in an anti fundnidCntalist campaign. The unveil ing will take place as a part of tbe cele bration of "Evolution Day.” UNDERWOOD’S NAME IS TO BE FILED THIS WEEK 1 According to Walter Murphy,- of Salis bury, His Campaign Manager. I (By the Associated Press.) Salisbury, April 11.—Senator Under wood’s name will be filed with the State election board this week, according to Walter Murphy, his campaign manager, today in discussing the entry of William G. McAdoo in the North Carolina Demo cratic Presidential preference primary. In Raleigh on Wednesday Mr. Murphy had expressed the hope that North Car olina would instruct its delegation for Josephus Daniels. I Burglars Get In Two Clever Pieces of Work at Spencer. Spencer, April 10.—Burglars got in two clever pieces of work Wednesday night, entering the homes of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. McCarn on Yadkin Avenue, and of Mr. and Mrs. E. P.* Deal on | Salisbury Avenue. In each instance an entrance was effected by raising a window. At the home of Mr. McCarn the burglars ransacked the place with the exception of the room where he was j sleeping. They got a quantity of money j in the room of Claude Cochrane and also I took a fountain pen nnd some clothing. ! At the home of Mr. Deal they stole j some money, a suit of clothes spectacles . and other things and went to the dining I room where they apparently ate a hear ty meal . They made their escape with- j out detection and left no clue. Charlotte Attorney Announces Candi dacy for State Senate. , Charlotte, April 10.—Hamilton C. Jones, attorney-at-law and chairman of the Mecklenburg County Democratic ex- 1 ecutive committee for many years, has 1 announced his purpose to run for the State Senate from Mecklenburg. Mr. I Jones becomes the first avowed new can- > didate for the race for representation in ’ the next General Assembly from Meek- j 1 lenburg county. Mr. Jones is a son' ' of the late Colonel Hamilton C. Jones, ’ ’ many years chairman of the county 1 Democratic executive committee, also a ■ representative of this county in the 1 State Senate for several years. - McAdoo May Make One Speech in State, Says Judge Brock. * Winston-Salem, April 10.—sludge W. - E. Brock, state campaign manager for - William G. McAdoo in North Carolina, i stated this afternoon that plans are • under way for Mr- McAdoo to visit t North Carolina for one' oe more speech t (* before the date of the 'primary. Hi* coming will likely be daring May. in which the treasury head declared that should "unnecessary interference" with the proper exercise of his duty be con tinued "neither I nor any other man of character can longer take the responsi bility for the Treasury.” Employment of Heney was declared by the President to be in conflict with the law, and a procedure likely to throw the government into disorder. “It is time that we return to a gov ernment under and in accordance with the usual forms of the law of the land." the President said. “The state of the Union requires the immediate adoption of such a course." j HEAD OF FEDERAL FARM | EXTENSION WORK IN IREDELL Will Come to This Section to Inspect Agricultural Conditions Statesville. April 11.—Dr. C. B. Smith, head of the Federal farm exten sion work with offices in Washington. D. C., will be in this city on April 18th. He will use Statesville as his headquarters during the time flint he is inspecting the agricultural conditions of the county of Iredell and the work be ing done by the county agent, R. W. Graeber. It was s ated that Dr. Smith would inspect this county because work being don(* here is typical of that carried nn throughout the South and particularly the state of North Carolina. It is prob- 1 able {hat the Federal departmental head will address the people of the county at the county commencement here on April the 19th. Raleigh, April 11.—The next regular meeting of the State Livestock Associa- i tion will be held in Asheville on Novem- 1 be.r 11, 12, 13 and 14 in co-operation i with the Western North Carolina Live- 1 stock and Agricultural Exposition, ac- i cording to announcement by Professor i R. S. Curtis, of North Carolina State i College of Agriculture. The actual meeting place of the association has not yet been determined, but it was stated c that the Buncombe county court house 1 would probably be used. Mr. Curtis states that the decision I of the animal industry workers to hold their next meeting with thi sexposition of the Farmers’ Federation is in line with the policy of the livestock men to select one place in the western part of the state at whieh to gather the live stock men each year, leaving the State farmers’ convention held at the college each August ns the gathering place for tbe livestock men of the lower Pied mont and coastal plain regions of east ern Carolina. - vNarHt- UwoHnfc live stock and Aifriartttnrnl Hxpeeiftion, it was said, win feature corn, potatoes, apples, poultry, and livestock. The live stock features of the exposition will come under the supervision of the State livestock association, it was explained. JOHNSON SAYS HE WILL NOT GIVE UP THE FIGHT Declares His Object Is to Rid G. O. P- of Its tßeactJorau-y" Control. Washington. April 10.—Senator Hiram Johnson, iof California, candi dnte for the Republican Presidential nomination. declared tonight in a formal statement that he is not quitting what he is “attempting to do political , , - v -” This he defined as nil effort to rid I the Republican party of “a corrupt and reactionary control.” ! There was no specific mention of hi? candidacy in his statement, nor was there any reference to persistent reports I that he would at least curtail his acti | vities in the remaining states that are to select delegates to the Republican National convention at Cleveland. Since his return to Washington yes terday, Senator Johnson has conferred with a number of his advisers here. While no formal announcement has been made, it. is known that some of them, at least, have advised him to abandon the contest for the nomina tion. « | The only public answer the Senator has given to questions ns to whether he intended to adopt, that, course is his statement tonight. In that, he declared that, the “unholy alliance between crooked politics” which dominates the Republican party must be smashed and the party “revitalized and regenerated.” “In my humble way I have been try ing to do just this,” he declared, “and I shall continue trying to do it. T am neither discouraged nor despairing. The fight goes on until it shall be won'.” THE COTTON MARKET I Opened Firm Today at an Advance, but Later Reacted. tlr the Associated Press.) ! New York, April 11.—The cotton mar , ket opened firm today at an advance of i one to 17 points in response to relatively firm Liverpool cables and an unfavor- I able weather map. There was a good i deal of realizing at the advance, bowev- I er, and after selling up to 31.55 for May the price soon reacted to 31.05, or about 22 points net lower. 1 Cotton futures opened firm: May 31.55 to 31.40; July 29.85; October | 25.80; December 25.20; January 24.70. Cone Group of Mills to Curtail Opera- I tions- I Greensboro, April 10.—The Ihrox ■ imity cotton mills Proximity print works and White Oak mills here, known as the cone group of mills, employing | several thousand operatives, will cur- I tail operations to four days a week, it ' became known here tonight, beginning ; on April 21. | These mills have heretofore kept out of curtailing operations, but the state of ’ the market and the accumulation of , manufactured goods by cotton mills • throughout the state and the smith cousos slackening down. The output of the mills is large, the i Whife Oak mills'being the largest pro duced of denims in the world, C>< - Caught f Lieutenant Ervin Brown, U. 8. naval paymaster, who faces charges of absconding with $120,000 In navy funds. He was found in San Fran cisco, lying by a roadside apparently the victim of amnesia. His wife re turned $75,000 of the missing money to naval authorities about a week before hi* arrest. BUTTON CRAZE YEAR Fashion Experts Say This Is to Be a Button Year. New York. April 11. —Fashion experts tell us that this Is to be a button year. They are to be used in platoons and companies for the trimming of summer frocks—small buttons. large buttons, square buttons, buttons of all shapes and isizes and colors; buttons on sleeves, but- I tons on panels, buttons everywhere. 1 The history of the button in the United States, after the war cut off the chief source of . foreign buttons, drawn principally from Germany and Austria- Hungary, has been one of great activity, both in home production and exporta tion. In the year before the outbreak of the war in Europe in 1914 the value of the button production of the United States was $2fl(.000.000. while in 1919, the year following the close of the war. 1 the figures had* risen to $43,000,000, .and experts in the industry estimated that | the sum paid by the "final consumer” in the United States was about SIOO,- 000.000. The total number of buttons turned out by the factories of the United Sfofre-io-liM) -w -00.883,000 grew*.' nc - equivalent to practically 10,000.000.000 buttons. Besides rhis big total of more than -i $40,000,000 worth of buttons supplied-to the home market by American mannfac- j hirers, they have rapidly expanded their -ales abroad. Prior to the war the value of the buttons exported from the i United States averaged a little more than half a million dollars a year, but with the chief European button manufactur ers, Germany and Austria-Hungary, cut. off from the outside world, the foreign 1 demand upon the United States was greatly stimulated, and the value of , American exports of this class of manu facture jumped from a little over half a million dollars in 1914 to nearly $4,- 000.000 in 1920. Os this big production aud exporta tion, the ouce despised “mussel” exist- ' ing in enormous quantities in the rivers 1 of the United States, and especially the 1 Mississippi, furnishes an important part ! of the material used in the manufacture 1 of pear buttons, and tbe score of button 1 factories whieh line the Mississippi in 1 Illinois and lowa turn out millions of dollars worth of pearl buttons, the ex ports alone of that particular group of "pearl buttons” having mounted to more than $1,000,900. The whole world has apparently learned the attractiveness and value of , the United States button. Os the pearl buttons alone exported in 1920 direct sales were made to no less than 60 coun tries and colonies, and the $3,000,000,- 000 worth of buttons other than pearl distributed went to 80 countries and colonies. To Europe alone the exports of pearl buttons amounted to $300,000, and all other buttons SBOO,OOO, making the exports of buttons to Europe, for merly the great button manufacturer of the world, over v 1,000,000. The capital now invested in the but ton manufacturing industry in the Unit ed States is more than $30,000,000, and the sums paid in wages in the last cen sus year in excess of $10,000,000. Os the approximately 600 button factories in the United States, nearly one-half are located In the state of New York. Japan, alwas alert in recognizing new developments in world needs, has also tremendously increased her button out put in recent years, and especially that of pearl buttons, as is illustrated by the fact that she sent to the United States in 1920 about 5.000,000 gross of pearl buttons, valued at $1,947,000. while the pearl buttons imported into the United States from all other countries amounted to less than $30,000. Fight 801 l Weevil With Poison Gases. Washington. April 10. —An appro priation of $25,000 would be added to the current army bill for carrying on experiment* in the use of poison gasee in boil weevil eradication under pn amendment pro|>osed today by a sub committee of the senate appropriation committee headed by Senator Harris, Democrat, Georgia. The army work . will be independent of the field investi gations now carried on by the geological . surveys. E s I • Wood WO! Not Resign. i Manila, P. I„ April U (By the to i sociated Press).—Reports emanating from the United States that he «on ■ templated resigning were denied emphat - ieally by Governor-General Leonard Wood today. • ••••••• • TODAY’S « • NEWS « • TODAY * NO. 84 ISPECUUTIOH RIFE M EFFECT OF DEATH OF SUES On the German Internal Sit* uation and the Reparations Settlement.—His Interests Fall to Sons. ! FULLY CONSCIOUS TILL THE END CAME Even in His Final Hour He Asked for Details 'of the Dawes’ Report on the Rep arations Problem. Berlin. April 11 (By the Associated Press). —Germany's “strong limn" of •industry is gone with the passing of Hugo Stinnes, and speculation is rife today as to the ultimate effect of his death, on the interna] situation and in the repara tion settlement. Weakened by the effects of three major operations within 4 weeks, the man who Would admit no defeat in the marts of trade, bowed last night to the ravages of disease. He was fully conscious to the end, and during the day talked constant ly with members of bis family, gathered at the bedside. • It was characteristic of him that even in the final hours he asked for details of ; tbe Dawes report on the reparation prob lem, and expressed gratification at recog nizing what he professed were some of his own ideas among the recommenda ■ tions made by the experts. Next to the loss of his leadership over the industrial group, which wields such important influence in determination of ' German reparation policy, interest cen- L ters in the policy to be followed with 1 regard to his vast business interests, the ' main details of which he continued to • supervise until the last. •The administration of *these interests will fall on his sons, Edmund and Hugo [ Jr., both of whom have been in close : touch with their father's enterprises dur -1 ing the last five years. HONDURAN AIR PILOTS BEGIN BOMBING RAIDS The Rebels Have killed * Number of Women and Children in the Capital. (By the Associated Press.) Washington. April IX. —Air pilots of the Hoailnmu- rebel • ■ fowet. have -begun bombing raids on Tegucigalpa, the cap ital. and have killed a number of wom teu and children. Four bombs were dropped near tbe grounds where members of the American landing force from the cmiser Milwau kee at Amapala were exercising, but dis patches to the Navy Department today from Rear Admiral Dayton, made no mention of any casualties among the American forces. CHARLOTTE PLASTER MEN WANT INCREASE They Ask For $2 Per Day Increase, Making Total 914- Charlotte, April 10.—Plasters em ployed on the Johnson building. Char lotte’s newest skyscraper now in pro cess of construction, have filed an ulti matum with the contractors demanding an increase in wages from sl2 to sl4 per day. The plasterers have beeu mak ing sl2 per day for several months and this morning notified tbe contractors of their decision to ask an increase of $2- per day. Medals for Best- Spellers. Raleigh, April 11, —The medals to be ■presented to the school children that won the best spellers contest in this city during the recent meeting of the Teachers’ Association have been sent to the engraver and will be delivered to the •winners within a week or ten days, it has been announced at the office of Jule B. Warren, secretary of the North Caro lina Educational Association, which or ganization fostered the contest and do nated the medals. The first prizes goes to Charles B. Livengoed, Jr., of -the city schools of Durham; second, to Elizabeth Keyes, Oak Hill School, New Hanover county; and third, Ruth E. Cobb. at Stearns High School, Columbus, Polk county. Raoners which were awarded to the schools that, the winners represented have been forwarded already, it was stated. ! *\ Daugherty Rides ih Same Car With Wheeler and Brookhart. W ashington. April JO. —Former At torney General Daugherty left tonight for Washington Court House, 0., nnd found himself in the same ear, with Senators Brookhart and Wheeler, who were bound for the same, destination ns chairman and prosecutor, respectively, of the Daugherty investigating com mittee. Mr. Daugherty said the meeting was merely accidental, as he was going to bis mother’s home in accordance with plans made several days ago. The two senators are to conduct' an examina tion of witness in the Ohio town. WHAT SAT’S BEAR SATS. Rain tonight and Saturday, continued cool. ••••.$!