« ASSOCIATED $ ® PRESS H* ® DISPATCHES « VOLUME XXV IMOUESTSHE BE MIOWED TO GO to pnnmoicE Surrenders to the District of Columbia Supreme Court, and Says He Is Ready For His Sentence. MATTER IS NOT YET AGREED ON May Be Thatlle Will Be Held In Washington and Tried on Charges of Forg ing Name of Senator. Washington, May 10 (By the Associ ated Press). —Gaston B. Means, storm center in the Daugherty investigation, and outstanding figure in many court ac tions, surrendered to the District of Co lumbia Supreme Court today and re quested that he be allowed to begin n two year prison term immediately. Menns was convicted on a conspiracy charge in New York. He was also under indictment here charged with forgery in connection with handling of papers in the Daugherty investigation. Defense attorneys yesterday asked that his trial be postponed while he asked a stay of the mandate of the New York courts. The mandate reached here today, however, and Menns at once that lie be sent direct to the Atlanta peniten tiary without the necessity of having to return to New York. District Attorney Gordon referred the question to the Department of Justice, which will decide whether Means must be tried here at once on the forgery charge in which it is alleged the name of Chairman Brookhart of the Daugherty committee, was unlawfully used. YOUNG MAN KILLED BY PROHIBITION AGENT «J. Reeves Pearson Says Young Mooney 1 Had Drawn His Pigrol- Lenoir, May. 18.—J. Reeves Pearson. Federal prohibition agent, killed Fred ' Mooney, 19 year old youth, who inter fered late last night when Pearson had his brother under arrest. According to the officer. Mooney, had drawn his pistol and had ordered him to - release his brother. Sunday afternoon Pearson searched , the Mooney home and found evidences j of whiskey there. Last night he visited the home again and waited nearby until j n darkey came up. Robert Mooney came out with a fruit jar andthe officer rush- j ed up, seized the par and placed Mooney | under arrest. He then started with his prisoner up the road to the automobile j which had-been parked about half a mile from the house, enroute they met Fred Mooney, who threw a flash light on the , officer. Officer Pearson asked the man j to give hie name, but the only answer he . received was a demand that he turn his brother loose. When this demand was made the officer says that the unknown | brought his hams from behind him and ! drew a pistol on him. At the name time, he cursed and demanded again that his brother he turned loose. Mr. Pearson tired nt this point, the bullet taking es- ' feet just under the right arm. The officer then brought his prisoner into town where he was lodged in jail, and secured Chief of Police Walsh and officer Thompson and returned to the scene of the shooting. They found Fred Mooney dead with a pistol and a pair of ' knocks on him. Officer Pearson was placed under arrest and held in custody until today when bond was allowed in the sum of $5.000.. 1 This is the second man to be killed by Officer Pearson within the past month. About three weeks ago while making an arrest near Danville, Va., he shot and killed a man by the name of .Tesse Martin, being later exonerated of blame on the ground of self-defense. Few Rum Row Ships Left of the Big Fleet. New York, May 18.—Rum row, once so populous, had dwindled to seven ships in capitulation to the little vessels of the United States coast guard which started it sfamous mid-Atlantac blockade thirteen days ago. This information was received by -wire less today fro mthe blockading fleet to Commander Stephen S. Yenudle, aide to Rear Admiral Billard, commandant of the coast guard. Five of the ships weighed anchor and slipped out of the blockade zone Satur day and Sunday, Yeandle was informed by the officers in charge of the const guard offensive. One of the quintet sailed Bermuda-ward, a coast guard pa trol bobbing along in 'its wake until it had gotten 10C miles out to sea. The others are believed to have joined the other floating liquor warehouses which have anchored at various points IQO to 200 miles off shore, in the apparent be lief that the blockading forces will re lax their vigilance as time goes on. Earthquake Registered at Washington. (By (he Associated Press) Washington, May 19.—A pronounced earthquake was registered early today at the Georgetown University seismo graph. It began at 12:43 this morning and lasted until 2:34 a. m. Director Tondorff estimated its loca tion at 8,000 miles from Washington. The definite direction was not determin ed. Two French Aviators Killed. Tours France, May 19 (By the Asso ciated Press). —Adjutant Foiny, a war aivator, and his mechanic, Jean Fouch er, were killed today when their plane crashed soon after they had hopped off in the airplane race in military cup com petition. The Concord Daily Tribune Y? ’ GRAY OF SOUTH AND BLUE OF NORTH ARE - TOGETHER!TEXAS Heroes of Confederate Army Mingle as Friends With Men Who Fought Them n the Civil War. HOLD REUNIONS IN TEXAS CITY Not Known Until Confeder ates Gathered That G. A. R< Reunion Was In Session at the Same Time. (By the Associated Press) Dallas, Texas, May 19. —The gray of the South and the blue of the North mingled again today, this time as friends, when the United Confederate veterans here for their thirty-fifth reunion begin ning today discovered a meeting of the Texas branch of the Grand Army of the Republic in session. The fact that the Texas G. A. R. was to meet today did not become generally known until last night when a few of the boys in blue began to arrive and were teeeived by members of the woman's re lief corps. About 100 men who fought for the Union are attending their meet ing in down-town Dallas, while the Con federate veterans are at the State Fair Park several miles away. The G. A. R. members planned on making a visit to the camp of the Confederates to pay their respects and swap yarns "across the lines.” There were numerous incidents of meetings on streets between veterans of the opposite camps. Registration of Confederate Veterans far beyond expec tations were in progress yesterday. Fight special trains yesterday brought ip al most 2,000 and fourteen special tra’ns arc due to arrive today. Beside those coming by traiu a great army is converg ing on the city by automobile. Sons of | Confederate Veterans also are eoming by thousands, the early registrations indicat ing the reunion will be one of the larg est in recent years. REGARD FOR ARREST OF PUNCTURE MANIAC ! Many Complaints of Nails and Glass Being Planted on Clayton Road- Greensboro, May 18. —A reward of 1 -$25.00 is offered by the Carolina Motor I- Club for the arrest and conviction of parties guilty of “maliciously planting 1 nails on the asphalt highway between Raleigh and Clayton.” it is announced in a bulletin issued by that organization today. The reward is .offered through re ports from several members of the club i that “nnils, taeks, and glass are being planted on Route Nol 10, fifteen miles from Raleigh toward Clayton.” Motor- Ists are warned to avoid the section of highway where the obstructions are ! being placed. Several rewards have been offered by the club for the prevention of this de structive meanness. J. Early Mnlpnss. white farmer of near Goldsboro, was recently convicted and sentenced for planting an iron and nail combination device on the highways. It was not brought out as to the purpose. R. C. Young, of Greensboro, a vic tim of the Raleigh-Clnyton trap, picked up a dozen nnils in a few hundred feet. A filling station nearby, according to Mr. Young, cited n number of similar eases. BILLY SUNDAY SCORES MODERNIST PREACHERS Evangelist Calls Them “Liars,** Cut- Throats and Religions Bootleggers’. Charlotte. May 18. Denouncing “modernist” ministers who deny the virgin birth of Christ and the infalli bility of the Bible as “liars, cut-throats and religious bootleggers,” Billy Sun day delivered one of hie characteristic sermons before a great audience Monday in the exposition hall. “If Mary was not the virgin mother of Jesus, then she wae a bad woman and Christ an illegitimate son; if Christ is not all that He claims He was and that other writers in the Bible Claim that He was then He is the big gest impostor in the world's history and well deserved to have been killed by the Jews,” declared the evangelist. “What Think Ye of Christ?” was Mr. Sunday’s subject. He declared that Christianity stands or falls on the miraculous birth of Christ. “Denial of the virgin birth,” de clared Mr. Sunday, “undermines all the Christian religion.” Learn to Swim in Winter. Greensboro. May 18. —Stressing the importance of using the vacation period j to gain a new perspective, L. E. Blauch, i professor of education at North Caro lina college, gave a very helpful talk to students and faculty in the auditorium at assembly hour this week. “According to William James,” said Dr. Blaueh, 1 “we learn to swim in winter and to sknte in summer.” The value of a complete rest during vacation was also brought out by the speaker. Miss Marie Wilkins, of Henderson ville, and Miss Elizabeth Hannaman, of ■ Asheville, gave a very entertaining ■ violin duet nt the exercises. Miss Her ■ mene Warlick, of Hickory, p'.ayed .the piano. f New Belgian Cabinet May Be Defeated. ■ . Brussels. May 19 (By the Associated ? Press). —The Belgian Chamber of Depu - ties which was elected'April 5, convened i today. The new premier Aloys de f Vyvere will ask for a vote of confidence ■ but, it now seems doubtful whether he can secure it. CONCORD, N. C., TUESDAY, MAY 19, 1925 Monkey Business | EHfTAPWncfcg hw? war. i'~ OFCOOBSeThETC AEfe EXCEPToRS EDUCAIio.M HAS iFS EHSAPVAN&CSES — . / < THE COTTON MARKET Showed Renewed Steadiness at Opening, With First Prices Up 16 to 20 Points. (By the Associated Press) New York, May 19. —The cotton mar ket showed renewed steadiness at the opening today owing to relatively steady cables, further trade buying and covering. '■ First prices were firm at an advance of 10 to 20 points, active mouths showing ad- ,i vancea of 22 to 28 points before the end of the first hour, with July selling up to 22.72 and October to 22.43. Early weather advices were consider ed generally favorable, but offerings here 1 were comparatively light and trade sell ing seeled to be restricted by uncertainty whether the end-May condition figures 1 would meet the mor eextreme views of recent sellers. Private cables reported the advance in Liverpool was due to trade calling and Manchester buying. Clotton futures opened firm. May 22.55; July 22.65; Oct. 22.33; Dec. 22.55; Jan. 22.17. AMERICA GAINS HER POINT AT CONFERENCE Ships Suspected of Carrying Arms Illeg aly Cannot Be Searched Under Agree ment. Geneva.' May 19 (By the Associated Press). —The amendment to establish the right to search ships suspected of con veying arms illegally was eliminated to day from the proposhed convention of the international conference for the con trol of traffic in arms and munitions. The I American delegation led the opposition' to the amendment. Representative Theodore E. Burton, head of the American delegation, said the Upited States objected particularly to j the indiscriminate search of ships which I was implied under the provision. He asserted The proposed searching of ships would probably result in misunderstand-1 ing and abuse. Because of this, the con fernece decided to delete the amendment. With Our Advertisers. Twenty hams will be given free to the people attending the auction sale of the lands of C. H. Peek and others on the Kannapolis road next Saturday, May 23, at 2 o’clock p. m. Have your winter garments cleaned before storing them away. See new ad. of Bob’s Dry Cleaning Co. Read Patt Covington’s} new ad. today, “Us Is Old Timers.” Yon get $1.45 worth of soap all this week for only 95 cents at Cabarrus Cash Grocery Co. Sample free with three cakes of Coleo Sonp at Cline’s Pharmacy. See ad. Champagne Kid is fashion’s latest child 'n pumps. Sizes AA to C, per pair $lO, at Ivey’s. Vacuum bottles, 69 cents, and 7-piece water set cut gIaRS, only $1.48 are among I the Wednesday specials at the Charles | Stores Co. Effective next Monday, the prices at the New Concord Theatre will be, lower floor, 30 cents; balcony, 20 cents; chil dren 10 cents. Get Q. It. S. Player Rolls at Kidd- Frix Music and Stationery Co. Normandy Voile Frocks for warm | weather at J. C. Penney Co.’s for $4.98. Bride Killed 1 in Her Weddliqt Gown. ! Just nn hour after her marriage ,in ; Chicago Mrs. -A'dele Kailfman .was kill - ed, her husband injured and his beet > man nt. the wedding killed in an auto mobile crash. The bride was pitched from the ear and lay dead in her white • and veil. Will Sell 200 Vessels For Scrapping. i Washington, May 19.—A program of e • selling 200 government vessels for scrap -8 ping has been tentatively agreed upon by b the sub-committete on scrapping of the shipping board. PAY HOMAGE TO GENERAL MILES IN WASHINGTON | President Coolidge and Other High Os- ] floials Present at the Funeral Serv ices. (By the Associated Press) i Washington, May 19.—Washington ( stood with bowed head today to express i the nation’s tribute to one of its great 1 military heroes, Lieutenant General Nel- I son A. Miles. > President Coolidge arranged his as- 1 fairs so that he might occupy a place in the funeral cortege signifying the i country’s reverence for the memory and achievements of the famous campaigner. , The military service loved and served , so faithfully by him was the general's ; body entrusted for the last march to the , Arlington national cemetery, there to re- , pose beside the body of his wife, and , among the comrades of three wars now , sleeping beneath the grassy slopes. , A troop of United States calvary, an arm-of the service which the general , used so well in wrestling the western frontier from the Indians, assembled at , the residence to escort the body to St. Johns Episcopal Church where the simple rites of that faith were prepared by Rev. Dr. Robert Johnson. Tile solemn inarch ending at the Mausoleum constructed un- ( der the general's direction, followed on the program of ceremonies. Six glistening black horses were select- ' ed to draw the laden caisson and officers of the army, navy and marine corps were designated to pace beside them. Sur rounding the group battalions of soldiers. sailors and marines led by Brigadier | General Samuel I). Roekenbaek. com mander of the District of Washing! on, formed the escort of honor. DENY FORD ENTERING WALL STREET BANKING I New Company in New York Does Not Mean Ford Is Entering Wall Street. • (By the Associated Press) New York, May 19.-—The connection | of associates of Henry Ford with a New York bond house was generally hailed in financial circles today as meaning the manufacturer’s entrauce into Wall Street. Yet from Detroit came a denial that it had any such significance. The newly organized Guardian Detroit Company opened for business yesterday in the Equitable Building on Broadway, near Wall Street. One of the directors is Ernest Kanzler, vice president of the , Ford Motor Co. The Guardian Detroit Co., is announc ed as an investment branch of the Guard ian Trust Co., of Detroit, of which Edsel Ford, Henry’s son. is a director. The Guardian Detroit Co. is taken over the municipal bond business of Keane Higbie & Co., of Detroit and New York, who will continue in business as under writers. EDOUARD BENES NAMED HEAD OF CONFERENCE Chosen President of Annual International Labor Conference at Geneva. Geneva. May 19 (By the Associated Press). —Edouard Bones, foreign minis ter of Czeclio-Slovakia, was unanimously elected president today of the seventy annual international labor conference at its session here. ' XI The delegates at the opening session qf the labor conference applauded and eulogized the youthful Czeeho-Slovakian foreign minister jas one of the greatest peacemakers of Europe who they said is sincerely attempting to put Europe’s house in order. Approve Bill Against Secret Societies. Rome, Ma.V 19 (By the Associated I Press). —The Chamber of Deputies today . approved a bill agaiast secret societies I I by a vote of 394 to 0. ’I ’ 1 Ths year’s attendance at the home ! I games of the Chicago White Sox have {broken a’l early season records. THE STONE MOUNTAIN MONUMENTAL ASSOCIATION - 1 Leading Citizens of Various Sections on 1 Board of Directors. i Atlanta, Ga.. May 19. —Announcement 1 of the election of governors from south- i crn states and leading citizens from va- t rious sections of the country as mem- t bers of the board of directors of the Stone Mountain Confederate Monument- < al Association, has'been made by Hoi- • lins N. Randolph, president. In an- » nouncing the new directorate, Mr. Ran- 1 dolph said': 1 “With the new directorate, including 1 the governors of the original confederate * states and distinguished citizens from the South and other parts of the country, the Stone "Mountain Memorial now be- 1 comes wlrtkf those who have directed its destiny from the beginning have desired, j a truly national undertaking. If any ( evidence were needed as to how com- ’ pletely the entire South has taken this great memorial to the Confederacy to 1 its heart, it can be found in the enthu- 1 siastic repsonse now being accorded to . the distribution of Confederate memo- ■ rial half dollar to be released over the 1 nation ou July 3rd. Proceeds from the ' premium on these coins are to go the 1 completion of the monument.” Southern governors announced as ac- j cepting election include Clifford Walker. | Georgia; John W. Martin, Florida; | W. W. Brandon, Alabama; Thomas G. McLeod, South Carolina; William J. , Fields, Kentuck; E. Lee Trinkle, Vir- , ginia; Henry Whitfield, Mississippi; , Henry L. Fuqua, Louisiana; Miriam A. ] Ferguson, Texas; M. F. Trapp, Okla- , homa; Thomas J. Terral, Arkansas. Southern men added to the Stone Mountain board are: I)r. Hugh W. Young, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Balti more : Herbert W. Jackson, banker, of Richmond, Va.: Cameron Morrison, for- i mer governor of North Carolina: Leroy i Springs, cotton manufacture, Lancaster, i S. C.; Duncan U. Fletcher, T’nited States senator from Florida; Victor 1 Hinson, newspaper publisher. Birming ham, Ala.; Oscar Wells, banker, Bir mingham ; Thomas R. Preston, banker. 1 Chattanooga, Tenn.; Dr. Edwin A. Al derman, president, University of Vir fiinia; R. E. Kennington, capitalist, Jackson. Miss.; R. A. Sneed, secretary , of state of Oklahoma; General K. M. , Van Zadt. banker, fort Worth, Texas; M. B. Welborn. governor Federal Re- , serve Bank of Atlanta. Directors elected outside of the South are as follows: William M. Butler, Unit ed States secantor, Massachusetts; New ton D. Baker, former secretary of war, Cleveland; Edward N, Hurley, former chairman of the shipping board, Chicago; Frank O. Lowden, former governor of Illinois; William F. Zuinbrunn, lawyer, Kansas City; Gavin McNabb, lawyer, San Francisco; Thotnns W. Gregory, former attorney general of the United Sates, Houston, Texas; William G. Mc- Adoo. former secretary of the treasury, Los Angeles. Don’t Want Petticoat Rule. The candidacy of Miss Julia Alex ander, lawyer, for the .Democratic nomi- ( nation for governor of Nbtth Carolina in 1928 struck a tmag when she was defeated by a four-to-otie vtote for mayor of Charlotte in the preferential primary. She is a member of the State legisla ture. There has been some talk of boom ing Mrs. A. Hubbard, a Baltimore Demo crat, for Maryland’s governor but va rious political organizations in that state, including the Baltimore Federation of Democratic Women, have gone on record as being opposed to the nomination c # any women for the governorship. Moving Picture Merger. Melbourne, Australia, May 19. (By the Associated Press). —A merger of Austra i lian and New Zealand moving picture ifi j terests was announced today. HTHER MED THE FESTMIIES IT ■LOTTE illy Pageant Which Was to Have Been Presented at Night Had to Be Called Off On Account of the Rain. PROMINENTMEN i GUESTS IN THE CITY The Delegation of Congress men Entertained During Day—Pageant To Be Giv en When Weather Cleans. (By the Associated Press) Charlotte. May 19.—Another day of low hanging clouds indicated a second postponement in the presentation of the 150th anniversary drama of the signing of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Inde pendence. Last night's pageant was de clared off after drizzling rain had de scended for several hours. The congressional delegation including senators and represenatives was to be given a reception at 9 a. m. today and be entertained throughout the day. The program calls for presentation of' the drama tonight at Independence Park in the specially constructed open air atn pliiteatre. Eight hundred persons in cluding many officials of Charlotte and North Carolina are participating, and will depict the fight for freedom in 1774 and the subsequent signing of the decla ration of liberty from the rule of George 111. EMPLOYMENT BUREAU FOR THE DEAF MUTES Conducted Under Supervision of the De partment of Labor and Priting. (by the Associated Press) Raleigh. May 19.—An employment bu reau for the deaf mutes of North Caro lina is conducted under state supervision, in connection with the department of la bov and printing. It was created by an act of the general assembly of 1923 and hae continued to function since that time. “The labor problem confronting the deaf of North Carolina." said Hugh (!. Miller, chief of the bureau, "has been solved and adjusted on a permanent basis. Before this bureau was estab lished,” he continued, “the State depart ment of labor and printing was unable to aid the deaf in securing employment. This was not due to a. lack of interest but to a lack of understanding as to the needs of the deaf.” f In order to bring about the under standing referred to by Mr. Miller as being lacking, framers of the bill creat ing the employment agency provided that there should be a mute at its head. An appointment was made as soon as the proposed will became law. “A great many deaf persons,” said Mr. Miller, present bureau chief "have found suitable employment and their work lias given entire satifaction. Their efficiency has been demonstrated and many obstacles in the way of their suc cess have been removed. The bureau is trying hard to overcome prejudice on 2 the part of employers against deaf em ployes. "It is a sad sight to’find an ambitious dpaf boy struggling against odds to make good in a position to which he is not suited, when there is some way to get him work that he can do and to correct erroneous ideas concerning the deaf and their ability. The bureau is striving to help the deaf over difficult .places.” Mr. Miller stated that the present commissioner of labor and printing, Frank D. Grist, had given him every as surance that he was heartily in sympa thy with the work and had peldged him the co-operation of the entire department. EXTRA CASH DIVIDEND ORDERED BY A. C. L. Dividend of One Per Cent, on Common Stock Will Be Paid. (By the Associated Press) Richmond, Va., May 19.—An extra cash dividend of 1 per cent, on common capital stock of the company was voted by the Board of directors of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad in annual meeting here today. The Board also declared the regular cash dividend of 3 1-2 per cent. The extra cash dividend is payable out of non-operating income to stoekhold ers of .Tune 15 next. Directors and gen eral officers of the railroad were re-elect ed. No Progress at Shepherd Trial. (By the Associated Press) Chicago. May 19.—Efforts today to obtain a jury for the trial of Wm. D. Shepherd, charged with murdering his wife’s milionaire ward, Wm. N. MeClin toi'k, by administering typhoid germs, netted only lost ground. Veniremen locked up over night as jur ors, tentatively acceptable to both sides, were eliminated this morning and left in the box at noon recess were three men whose availability had been passed upon only by the prosecution. Indictment Against “Baby Farm” Pro prietor. (By the Associated Press) 1 'New York. May 19.—While one grand jury was considering homicide evidence against her, another grand jpry today returned an indictment charging baby substitution against Mrs. Helen Auguste Geisen-Volk, former German red cross nurse, widow of a Prussian officer, and proprietor of the East 68th Street “baby farm.” i Cress’s Pond at Rimer will open for bathing and fishing beginning May 21st. 6 TODAY’S • * NEWS • ft TODAY • No. 118 75 MED DM > ELafiM! Blown Fuse Followed by a Series of Electric Light Bulb Explosions Caused the Accident. SCORES TRAMPLED DURING PANIC Train Was Halted and This Fact Together With Explo sion Threw Occupants of Train Into Mad Frenzy. (By the Associated Press) New York. May 19. —At least 75 per sons were injured, two of them probably fatally, in a mad panic which swept a crowded East Side subway train as it was about to leave the Grand Central Terminal station today. A blown fuse followed by a series of electric light bulb explosions, was reported to have enused the accident. The train, literally jammed with hu manity, came to a sharp stop a block from the terminal. Men. women and children, massed into every one of the cars, were swept off their feet with con fusion which grew to panic proportions when the car began to fill with stifling smoke, caused by burning insulation. A short circuit had occurred causing the motorman to halt the long string of cars. Immediately after he attempted to start it up again with the result that ev ery electric light bulb in the train ex ploded. This was the signal for the panic which sent screaming, fighting men, wom en and children surging towards exits and seeking to escape from their cage like imprisonment by smashing windows. Scores were knocked to the car floors and trampled. The confusion was add ed to when guards prevented opening of emergency cars. The lounge and several saloons of the nearby hotel Vanderbilt were converted into emergency hospitals where 25 per sons received treatment. Thirty others were removed to Bellevue Hospital. BELGIUM TAKES STEPS TO CLEAR UP DEBT Takes Independent Steps in Negotiating Funding Settlement With United States. (By the Associated Press) Washington. May 19.—The first break in the tangle of the inter-allied debts was seen by high government officials here to day in the determination of Belgium to take independent steps in negotiating a funding settlement with the United States. In official quarters the information conveyed from the Belgian foreign office in last night's dispatches was accepted as being highly significant, since Belgium must be classed as one of the major debt ors to which the L'nited States extended financial aid. The Belgian statement to the Associ ated Press created a feeling of optimism at the Treasury. King Edward’s Barber Dead. London. May 19. —Charles Jaschke, the royal barber, of Regent Street, whom King Edward called “Charlie.” and whose shop was known among the elite asthe “House of Lords.” is dead at the age of sixty-five. Jaschke's great est achievement was the shaping of King Edward’s beard, which won ad miration thrughout the courts of Europe, and set a fashion. Nearly fifty years ago he came to London from Czecho-Slovakia with a few dollars in his pocket and started a hairdresser's business in a small room. He first attracted attention by his toilet preparations, which were recommended by the “dandies” of the 'eighties to the highest in the land. Charged Government Swindled Out of Much Money. (By the Associated Press) Newark, N. J., May 19.—A conspiracy in which it is alleged the government has been swindled out of more than a quar ter of a million dollars in taxes in which . this center has been made the center of activities for an alleged bootleg ring . handling thousands of dollars worth of alcohol is alleged to have been revealed , today. It was announced that twenty i individuals and two industrial firms are under indictments charging conspiracy. Deny Government’s Petition. (By the Associated Press) St. Paul, May 19.—Holding that the 1918 decision dissolving the Internation ( al Harvester Company had proven effec tive, a special federal court of equity j today denied the government's petition _ for supplemental provisions to that de cree. The International Typographical Un ion has nearly 2,500 members on its ' pension roll. i WHAT SAT’S BEAR SAYS «he>cd j Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday, farmer Wednesday in west portion.