• ASSOCIATED • • PRESS O • DISPATCHES • VOLUME XXV “CELL SHOCK" WILL BE NEW TERM PUT INTO LEGALVOCABUURY If Sanitary Hearing Begin ning Today Before Judge David in Chicago Saves Scott From Gallows. TERM TO DESCRIBE MENTAL DEBILITY Scott Has Suffered Since His Conviction Ten Months Ago for Murder of Drug Clerk Maurer. (By 111* AmocIUM P»u) Chicago. Aug. 3.—A new term, “pell shock," will be put into American legal and scientific vocabularies if the sanitary hearing beginning today before .Tudge Joseph B. David saves Russell Scott from the gallows. “Cell shock” is the term Scott's at torneys have usell to describe the mental debility they say he has suffered since his conviction ten months ago for the murder of Joseph Maurer, drug clerk, s'ain in a holdup in April. 11)24. Ten months in the Cook county jail always beneath the ominous and depres sive shadow of the gallows are held re sponsible for Scott’s condition which his attorneys characterize as insanity of a degree pla'cirtg him beyond legal reach of the hangman's noose. A snecial venire of 1(K) men was sum moned by Judge David. If his wishes are met, selection of a jury to determine the condition of the condemned man will be completed in a day and the defense and State alienists will begin immediate il the presentation of conclusions reached in intensive examinations of th* prisoner last week. Scott, once a millionaire business man of Ontario, and anchor of books on busi ness ethics, later an actor, and finally principal in the most dramatic effort in the history of American jurisprudence to stay the execution, may not be permit ted to appear in the court in which his life is at stake. The State presented a list of twenty witnesses including fifteen laymen and fivs fl'» lli st^ M Jsil attaches; guards, and drpniy slietmMafiiwMrte.iwcn of "ScoTt since nis rncerwraroii were the lay witnesses. The defense presented n list of nine ; alienists and a dozen lay Witnesses in cluding relatives, former business asso ciates and witnesses at the Scott mut-der 1 trial. Jacob Maurer, father of the ninteen ‘ year old boy far whose murder Scott wasji convicted, was in court half an hour be- i fore the trial was to begin. .i Judge David announced that the jury < would be selected by lot and the panels I would be sworn in today if it required a 1 night session. 1 The court declared nlienists would be limited to five minutes for each side. i Thomas Scott, aged father of the pris- I oner, came into c girt with the defense i la.vwers, and took a seat in the press i section. Despite prefactions of state’s attorneys < that Scott would not be permitted in the ' court rooui. he was brought in as the • first panel was drawn. He was pale ondfj nervous, but well groomed. The court ' advised the veniremen that the qnly ques ti n at issue was Scott's sanity. 1 _, • I CUBAN VOLUNTEERS GET ENOUGH OF WARFARE ' Started Mutiny In Ranks of Soldiers < Fighting Against The Riffian Tribes- ' men. ' (By the Associated Press.! ! New York, Aug. 3.—-The glamor worn off the pros]>ect of fighting Abdel Krim ' and his Riffian cohorts in Morocco 1 where they have been causing the Spun- 1 ish and French no end of trouble, seven 1 of 121 t volunteers recruited in Cuba were 1 in the brig of the steamship Antonio Lo pez today for participating in a whole- 1 sale mutiny. One volunteer id missing and is beiiev- 1 ed to have escaped. The liner arrived , from Havana several days ago and- is due to sail for Spain tomorrow. Burned to Death in Fire When Store ! Was Destroyed. (By It i Associated Press I Roanoke. Va., Aug. 3.—Edwin L. Moir, president of the Moir & Trout, Ine., wholesale grocers was killed, and three firemen slightly hurt when their grocery . p’.ant waa swept by fire today. Mr. Moir was taken from the ruins of the building in the downtown district an hour after i the fire started and died soon afterward at a hospital. Virtually every piece of fire fighting apparatus in city, includ ing two fire engines of the North and Western railway was called out to fight the fire. ,'p.. uu'x-aa T—niiTHi iTn-iT,raanm»n I Concord Theatre 1 : (THE.COOL SPOT) 1 ; < Special Attraction Today and Tuesday “School For Wives” I With Conway Tearle Sigrid 4 ! Holmquist and Peggy Kelly 1 . Also Aesops Fables and _ H | Pathe News No. 68 1:30 to 11:00 P. M. | ~ 4': 1 .As*-’::* The Concord Daily Tribune I**************** .* CITV SCHOOLS TO * OPEN SEPTEMBER 7TH * ' * Announcement is made by Prof, if iK A. S. Webb, superintendent of the * * public schools of Concord, that work * in the schools for the 11)25-211 N usuallv intelligent. She escaped from the school hv cutting through a screen door with a knife nnd then lowering herself to the ground by the aids of sheets. The girl assigned her downfall to the dance. “Before 1 was married.” she told Sheriff Fry. “I had never taken a drink. Mv husband always took in the rianct* and it wn« there with the so-called ‘best people’ that I began taking aocinl drinks.” Wild living followed culminat ing in the series of disasters, nnd then a divorce. She is now back in the Meck lenburg institution serving her time. KLr KLUX PROTESTS FORT WORTH Rt'LF Fortv Fiery Crosses Burn Near City in Denunciation of New Government. Fort Worth. Tex., August I—Fortv crosses, each twenty feet high and sur an a protest of Klu Klux Klansuieo against policies of the present Munici pal Administration. While the crowes blazed nnd flared resulting in the calling out of the Fin- Department in two districts, Klau ora tors criticised the Government in [ speeches nt the Klavern. Klnnsmen de e'ared the City Administration, a new one sponsored by business men. lmd dis charged Klansmcn from municipal posi tions anil brought heads of departments ifroni other cities when Fort Worth men were applicants. The new regime is presided over by a Council of nine business men and a , City Manager. The latter was secured in Dubuque. la. The hend of the Tex. and the Superintendent of the Water Department is from Fort Smith, Ark. | One of those who passed out of power with the old government was Chester Jones, a leader in the Klan. His posi tion of Finance Commissioner was abol ished. The fiery crosses were made of wood and covered witli oil-soaked cloth- They towered high above the street. One of them was planted in front of a Catholic college, another near the home of one of the sponsors of the new government. The guards, despatched from the Klavern. were ordered to prevent the crosses starting fires or otherwise dnmnging property. Policies of the Aministrntion will not be changed, nor have men been discharg ed from city positions because of be cause of belonging to the Klan, it whs announced by the City Manager after the demonstration. However, employees who think more of their fraternal affiliations than they do of their job* will be discharged, be added. Mr*. Bryan WiU Make Home In Florida Balance of Life. Washington. Aug. I.—North Carolina friends of Mrs. William Jennings Bryan Invited her to make her home in the mountains of the state. It is said she is very fond of Asheville and the country round about, but. today, on leaving here for Coeoanut Grove, where she has a home, she said she would spend the rest of her days in Florida. Mrs. Bryan, who has been an invalid for months, rested well last night, nnd seemed refreshed today. She is a favorite here. While in the cabinet she paid but little attention to social functions, but devoted her time to her family- Roek Spring* Camp Meeting Win Begin Tueodny. Gastonia, Aug. 3.—The annual Rock Springs camp meeting will begin Tues day. August 4th. at the camp grounds in Lincoln county, the Rev. W. L. C. Kil lian announced here this week. Friday. August 7th, at 2 o’clock there will be a reunion of former students of the Old Rock Springs Seminary. A memorial service in honor of the late Prof. D. Matt Thompson will be held in connection with this gathering. Tfce memorial addresses will be delivered by Kemp B. Nixon. Tfil former students are being urged to attend the reunion. The Greater Movie Season at the Con cord Theatre opens August 10. Three prises will be given for the best essay of not over 300 word* on “What the Movies Mean to Me.” Contest open today and closes August 15. See ad elsewhere. One theater in Germany employs women M scene shifter* and stage handfc . CONCORD, N. C„ MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1925 ■ y ’ jj' He Started New Monkey War m Bfia IHa"- am If iMSSiggLr Son is Loren Wlttnor, who stirred up what promisee tome another “evo tntlon trial” at Washington by filing suit to withhold pgjy from teachers > «ho “teach disrespect to the Bible” by giving inatructionjln various acien- BOg. He Is show- ' -re talking It hver with Jocko, Os thgmonkey tribe. I i ————————-j L———-———- DIXIE Bl’B LINE FIGHTS TO KEEP PLACE ON ROADS Was First ta Make Through Runs and Introduced Large Cars in Service Here. Raleigh, Aug. I.—-With strong legal I support and influential eivie packing, the Dixie Motor Stage line, operating a de luxe service between Charlotte nnd Greensboro. gave a vigorous accounting when summoned before the corporation ■ commission today to show cause why its franchise rights should not be revoked. The Dixie aud two other Grecnsboro- Cbarlotte operators hail been picked for sacrifiee in furtherance of the commis sion’s plans to reduce seven unprofitable motor lines to four money-makers. The seven companies now operating are ad mittedly losing money. In the hearing today, the Dixie put up such n light nnd presented so logira' a case that its attorneys were hopeful this afternoon that it would be allowed to continue its franchise. It has tit) odd thousand dollars invested in equipment which it is using between Greensboro! and Charlotte. After four hours spent in the hearing of evidence in su|q>ort of tbe Dixie’s ■laims that it should not have its franchise revoked, the corporation com mission reserved its decision, indicating 1 that it would act next week. By then, it is expected, a new schedule will be work ed out. perhaps changing the half hour service uow in effect between tbe two -4tW. vofcihndps it-wlce in 1 hourly schedule. The two companies cited with the 1 Dixie to appear today and show why 1 their franchises shoti’d not be revoked. 1 >r suspend operntions without appear- * ing, were the Piedmont Stage lines and 1 the White Rus company. Th four com- I ponies favored by the commission for I permanent franchises are the Royal Blue Bus line. Kirk's line. Charlotte- Concord Bus line and Blue Bus com pany, there being the older operating it lines. , ; The White company and the Piedmont I Stage lines were passive in their defense 1 ; ‘oday. although represented by counsel. The Dixie, however, reprented by tour attorneys nnd defended by a group of 1 prominent Charlotte citizen*, put up u eonvinving case in support of it* ] franchise. -—— - ■ i Habits are the only cobwebs that grow < into cables. J- - ... . . J LW Ji Hill ...I — .. American Legion Rendered Service . Unprecedented in Nation’s History ’ i (By the Associated Press) i Natchez, Miss., Aug. 3.—The member-! shq) of the American Legion, nj repre sentative men aud women of the Repub lic of tlie Cnited States during the great Wprld War, rendered a service unprece dented in the history of this nation, Maj or George L. Berry, former national vice commander of the American Legion, de clared in an address before the Mississip pi Department of the American Legion meeting here today. This service was in the form of contribution* to the cause of democracy at home and abroad in the world, he said, and was an act that brought to nu ending the possibility of autocratic control. Tbe efforts of these men and women of the American Exi>edltionary force* were responsible for “the greatest inspira tion for human liberty nnd justice that has been recorded since the formal decla ration of Indeitendence of the Republic | of the United States.” *‘The American Legion is an institu tion proposing the co-ordination of those men and womeu who rendered this groat and far reaching service to humanity and who brought to a conclusion the most gigantic war that had ever been waged. It is. therefore, reasonable to understand the far reaching strength in sentiment and respect in which this body is held by tbe citizenship of our country and the peoples of nil of the nations associated! with the allied cause. "These men and women, who now speak through the American Legion, arc insistent upon making further contribu tions to the well being of America. They bnve manifested their affection for the Republic. They have established their courage and sponsorship for justice and it b, therefore, not too much to antici pate that the destiny of our Republic and its many communities will, to h great extent, rest upon the shoulders of these ex-service men and women. "It is unwise for ns to conclude that the world has adjusted itself from the tremendous shock of the World War, for indeed there is turmoil about us at home and it is raging with a more or lese de gree of intensity in moat all of the op tions of the world. The steadying influ ence of the American Legion ha* ex tended itself into all of the nation* that tfiodhsi,..dd idt . THINKS MISSING] MAN HAS NOT BEEN KILLED. District Attorney Doubt* that Henry Schwartz Was Kflfcd in Explosion on Thursday. I (By the Aasotaatrd Press) San Francisco. Cal, Aug. 3.—Henry Schwartz, vice presflleiit and general manager of the Pacific Cellulose Com pany, with was supijpxed to hnve met death in his own Hmratory a t Walnut Creek last Thursday yby an explosion, was sought by SherifEU. It. Veale today. A. .1. Nielson, a lental expert. de clared after a mimiteo in life in sura nee. I Joe Roddiguez, a laborer, has been missiug since the explosion. District At torney Tinning a mump ceil today that lie , had withdrawn permission to Mrs. Schwartz yesterday to proceed with the | funeral of the body which she insists is her husband's. Hairy Vetch Seed for Cnlon Farmers. Monroe. Aug. 3.—Orders for 4.500 pountis of hairy vetch seed have been placed for farmers in Union county, re port T. J. W. Broom. In addition to the vetch seed, much bur clover seed lias been ordered and. Mr. Broom stated that the acreage in tfcis legume would be materially increased. "The drouth,” said Mr. Broom, “lias caused a great reduction in the lespedeza crop but lands formerly planted in this are producing good crop* of corn and cot ton. Tbe failure of the legume this year has not disco urged the farmers as they are now buiying more seed which they will plant next year.” Mouse Jumps Down Cat’s Throat. New York, Aug. 3.—-Some student of 'newspaper psychology onee told a novice: ■ “When a cat kills a house it isn't news, but if the mouse kills the cat, well that 'is a horse of another shade.” But it actually happened yesterday. Mrs. Anna Kieckhoffer's giant Persian lolled ill tbe sitting room of her home. No. 2th inclusive. Efird’s will have a clear ance of all summer apparel. The entire stock of summer dresses in voiles, crepes, and silks of every kind will be offered at less than wholesale prices. Dresses formerly priced at from $4.95 to $35. are now selling for from $1.95 to $22.40. The Bollinger Service Station is mov ing to the Reed building on East Corbin street. A garage for general repair work will be operated nt the old loca tion on Church street. Drop in or phone Yorke & Wadsworth Co. fpr prices on a Goodyear tire your size. Phone 30. Phone 787 and Bob's Dry Cleaning Co. will send a man instantly for your clothes to'clean or press. Don’t fail to visit Efird’s Beauty Shoppe on the second floor. You can cook with Hie gas turned off. See ad. of the Concord and Kannapolis I Gas Co. Lady-Like corsets for the stylish figure, 98 cent to $3.98, at the J. C. Penney Co. Tbe Concord Furniture Co. is closing out at half price all refrigerators and ice boxes, rather than carry them over. See ad. At tlie Concord Theatre today ami Tuesday “School for Wives.” Also Aesop's Fables and Peggy Kelly. Look on first page and see the excel lent program at the Star Theatre this week. The new Victor records are out and Hie Kidd-Frix Music and Stationery Co. hss them. See list in new ad. to day. -ygLTT.n.T. - r i;-j. ■ -■■grr—» STAR THEATRE PROGRAM For week of August 3rd to Bth MONDAY AND Tt'ESDAY “THE SPANIARD” With Ricardo Cortez and Jetta Goudal. It's a special picture WEDNESDAY ONLY “THE TOP OF THE WORLD” With James Kirkwood and Anna Q. Nilsson. Don’t miss it THURSDAY-FRIDAY “RUGGED WATER” With Lois Wilson and Warner Baxter Big Special SATURDAY ONLY “KEITH OF THE BORDER’ (With Roy Stewart and Pete Morrison -.Cctne Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday i and get a free ticket for Thursday or Friday's picture. • TODAY’S 0 • NEWS 0 0 TODAY 0 NO. 185 JMIDGE BEGINS JAY THIRD YEAR OF I PRESIDENTIAL TERM ■ He Seems to Be Satisfied With His Administrative Record, and Quietly Per fecting Future Plans. TOOK OATH JUST TWO YEARS AGO ' In His Summer House He is i Keeping Ip Touch With Government Activities.— Another Month of Vacation (By the Associated Press) Swampsoott, Macs., Aug. 3. —Calvin Coolidgp started in today on his third year as President, seemingly satisfied ; with his administration's record, and quietly perfecting plans for legislative ; and executive action during the remaind er of ills term. Two years ago, just before dawn on August 3, 1923, in his father's modest home at Plymouth, Vt., Mr. Coolidge took oath as President a few hours af ter the death of Warren G. Harding. Looking back over the White House incumbency, President Coolidge, his friends say, feels satisfied with the turn of events the election results last No vember increasing his confidence that his policies were meeting with approval. lit the isolation of his summer here, since his arrival six weeks ago, the Presi dent has been keeping in touch with gov ernment activities, and from time to time has conferred with men who have a prom inent part in the nation's business. With at least a month more of vacation in prospect, it is expected he will hold con ferences in increasing numbers. To Visit His Father. Swampscott. Mass.. Aug. 3.—President Coolidge is planning to return within 10 days to Plymouth, Vermont, to visit his father. Col. John C. Coolidge. He may leave here before the end of this week. The President intends to spend two or trlu*e days at his father's home, return ing here to resume his vacation which probably will be continued until Labor ,n»y. , v RKSt'ME WORK WITH NON-ITSION BRICK LAYERS Plasterers Want- to Work But Brick Layers Refuse to Arbitrate. (By the Associated Press) Miami, Fla.. Aug. 3.—Delayed two days by a strike of union bricklayers and plas terers on their two construction contracts in the Miami district, the George A. Ful ler Construction Company, of New York and Miami, today resumed work with non-union brick layers. Theodore Crandall, in charge of the Miami company of the Fuller company, declared there had been strife between the bricklayers and plasterers for several weeks. Two months ago Mr. Crandall said James Davis, secretary of labor, called a conference of the leading contractors, including the Fuller company and repre sentatives of the brick layers and plas terers, asking that they arbitrate their difficulties. The plasterers agreed to any arbitration which would allow con tinuation of the building operations, but the brick layers refused to arbitrate. Bricklayers Extend Strike. New York, Aug. 3.—A new phase in the inter-union conflict between brick layers and plasterers developed today when bricklayers employed by the George E. Fuller Construction Co. went on a strike in all building projects in this city, Washington, D. C., and Florida. Offi cials of the company said work was halt ed on approximately $20,000,00 worth of construction. According to Fuller Company officials, construction work on three large apart ment houses in this city, a department store in Washington and three addi tional projects in Florida had been tied up by the strike. Automobile Fatalities. (By the Associated Press) Washington, Aug. 3.—The number of deaths caused by automobiles in fifty seven American cities for which statis tics are being currently collected by the Commerce Department totalled 480 dur ing the four weeks ending July 18th. as compared with 417 in the previous four weeks ending June 20th. The automobile fatalities in the same cities from January Ist to July 18th numbered 2.511, while the total for the year of 1924 was 4.992, and for 1923 it was 4,827. The estimated population of the cities for which figures are given is 20,821,000. Automobile fatalities in the same cities from January Ist to July 18th num bered 2.511. while the total for the year of 1924 was 4,992, and for 1923 it was 4.827. The estimated population of the cities for which figures are given is 26,- 821,000. / WHAT SAT’S BEAR SATE s 1 Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday; probably showers Tuesday In west and central portions. Little change in tem perature.