ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES VOLUME 3QCVI « A Believe Arrests Made In State Have Halted Work of Robber Gang Police and? Postal Inspec tors Think Recent Ar rests hr Charlotte and 1 Raleigh Broke Up Gang IVEY ROBBERY THOUGHT SOLVED First Word of Roundup Came When E. J. Mc- Carthey Was Bound Ov er to Court. Charlotte, Sept. 2—o4=o—The po lice today revealed what they believe to. be the roundup of a countrywide i gang of yeggs, witjj arrests having been made here and at Raleigh of al leged members of the band. i . Three of those under arrest are ; charged with the robbery of the de- I partnient store of .1. B. Ivey & Co. i here some time ago at which time i *B,OOO worth of loot was secured. 1 Although postal inspectors and the i police have been trac ng the “gang” fur several months nil along the sea- i board, first word of the round-up i came this morning when E. J. Me- i i art hey of Charlotte, was bound over i to Mecklenburg Superior Court on i • charge of second degree robbery. Two of the accused men are now i in jail at Kaleigh. both of them .clini-g- i cd directly by the postal authorities ] with being directly responsible for the c Ivey robbery. i L. I). Yarbrough at Raleigh, postal i inspeetor. said here today that 02 in- i sp<>ctors in various parts of-the eoun- ’ try had been working in an effort -to I “round up this gang for some time." I He declared the government had al- < ready spent $8,200,000 in an effort to I h-ing members of the “gang" to jus tice. i Two members of the alleged ring i are in custody at Richmond, it was i added in the announcement of the au- 1 thorit’es. < A woman. Mrs. Clyde Earnhardt, is I declared to linve implicated McCarthy i nnd brought about the arrests that' « have been made. Mrs. Earnhardt lives > about 8 miles from Gastonia, and says i that McCarthy admitted to her that I he "was in on the Ivey job." At the , time, she said, she resided here. 1 Another woman is being sought in I connection wish the ease. Mr. Yarborough sa’d that a number I of post office robberies and bank hold- < ups were to be charged against the ' prisoners. The inspector said that 1 while “McCarthy is not a full fledged 1 member of the gang, he was familial' with the operations, nnd wired head- i quarters from which two men and a 1 woman were sent to assist in the Ivey 1 robbery.” i - ! i MAZER FILES ANSWER 1 TO MRS. MELLETT’S SHIT ] Denim He Conspired With Any One 1 to Murder Husband or That He ' Committed Murder. Cleveland, 0., Sept. 2.— OP) —Louis Mazer, Clinton, charged with first de gree mnrder in connection with the s'nying of Don R. Mellet, Canton pub lisher, today filed an answer in fed eral court to the SIOO,OOO-. damage suit brought: by Airs. Florence Melfett, Indianapolis, widow of the slain pub lisher against him, Ben Rudner, Ma sillon. and Patrick Eugene McDer mott. Nantyg'o, Pa, Mazer’s answer, filed by his attor ney, .T. A. .Fettermnn, denied be had conspired with Red Rudner, or Pat rick Eugene McDermott, the fugitive reiAwad, now the subject of a nation wide hunt in Connection with the mur der. . The denials in the answer were not confined to the question of conspiracy anil complicity in the murder of the Canton publisher. It represented a denial of “every and all statements” contained in the petition. Strikers Accent Peace Plan. I Providence, R. 1., Sept. 2. — -W) —A tentative agreement for settlement of tlie str : ke in the , Manville-Jenckes Company's textile mill in Manville,. which led to a battle between the strikers and state police Tuesday night and the call ug otft of a national guard | detachment, was renehed at a confer ence between Governor Pothier and labor leaders this afternoon. The agreement now a waits.approval by the mill management which previously had authorized Governor I*6thier to pre sent its case to the strikers. Western Vnlon Employees An For bidden to Tell the Time. Charlotte. Sept. 2.—Beginning to morrow employees bf the AVestern Union Telegraph CWnpany will refuse to tell the time to inquirers over Hie telephone. - , M. I. Hholar. Jr., Charlotte night manager of the company, stated that the new practice will apply not only to the local office but to the entire system. Air. Sholar stated that the change had been made because It took too much of tfie employees’ time. $1,000,000,000 Invested In Cotton In dustry In South. (By International News Service) Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 2.—The South has a billion dollars. invested in the cotton industry and over half of the active spindles in the country. In the past three years the North has sent *150,000,000 South for invest ment in this industry. Those staistics are compiled by the Association Cotton Textile Merchants Association. * ffV KKMy . ’ • 1 ’ ‘ i.. f ! *__ - V. 1- The Concord Daily Tribune ' North Carolina's Leading Small City Daily ♦ « \ NORTH CAROLINA IS ' APVANCING IN EDUCATION Those Who Da Net Think So Are Either Blind cr Will Not See. Raleigh, Sept. 2.—Despite some! wou’il-be iconoclasts and imitators of H. L. Mencken, whi .would have the I public believe that. North Carolina not only is at the bottom of the educa tional ladder but is willing to remain Ihere, cold figures and hard facts, while indicating that there undoubted ly is ruom for improvenaent. show that North Carolina' is advancing ■ educa tionally ami that those who do not think so are either b’.ind or do not want to see. For according to math ematically correct figures, based on co’d. unprejudiced facts, and utterly without the factor' of enthusiasm or partisanism. a comparison of the school efficiency in the various cities and counties of the State is given in the current issue of School Facts, just off the press today, which indicates the restive standing of the schoo’s in the various sections and shows the increase in rating'over previous years. ' Two indices are taken, the ticndem ic Index nnd the financial index. The academic index is arrived at by tak ing the average of five factors that enter into the academic side, namely, percentage of enrollment in average daily attendance, average length of term in days, scholarship of teachers, percentage of total enrollment and the percentage of normal and under-age enrollment. The average of al! these is taken, and the academic index es tab’ished ns being 06.7 for all the schools, city and rural, in 1024-25. The financial index for the same period is established as being 52.3 nnd ’ the general index, taken from the av erage of the aendemie and financial is fixed ns being 50.5. Using the same indices, the rela tive rating of the schools in 1023-24 nnd 1024-25, show that rural schools increased from 501 per cent, to 53.1 per cent, in that one-year period, while city schools showed an improvement from 81.1 per cent, to 83.0 per cent, in the same period. During this same one-year period the index of the schools for the entire State as a whole increased from 50.0 to 50.5, or 2.0 per cent. „ By referring to the table which is printed in connection with the ex planatory matter in School Facts, it is noted that thrive was an increase in the rating of both rural and city schools In every factor but one. that which was the valuation of school property per child, in the case of city schools, according to School Facts. “The significant featnre is not so much the improvement nnd growth beii% made as is the wide difference in the size of the scores in the two systems”—rural and city. “Take any factor desired, grid it will be found that the city schools on the average are far superior to the rural schools. There is a difference of more than thirty points in the general index of the rural and city system,” the article states. New Hanover county ranks first among the rural system of schools by having a general index of 75.6. Cur rituck county being a close second with a score of 75.5. with Pamlico and Durham counties, respectively, taking third and fourth places with scores of T 2 9 and 71.0. These four counties are classed as ’’Efficiency Group A” by making a score of 70 or nbove. The yenr previous only two counties were in this group, New Han-1 over and Pamlico. In the next group are fifteen coun ties, led by Wilson county, with a score of 08.1. Last year there were )>Ut fourteen counties in this group. Last year Greensboro led the city systems with a score of 03.1, and ex ceeded its score of the previous year by 1.2 points. Durham, Wilmington, Winston-Salem and Rnleigh, Asheville, Charlotte and High Point come next in order, all being in class A, with nn average score for the entire group of 86.5. In the second group of city schools. Salisbury takes the lead from New Bern, which had it the year be fore. with a scon* of 87.3. the next in order being Elizabeth City. Kinston —which advances from sixth to third place—New Bern, Wilson, Goldsboro, Concord, Rocky Mount and Gastonia. ( Tail-End Electric Signs For the Cres cent Limited. AA’ashington, D. C., Sept. 2.—Hand some electrically Illuminated signs will be carried on the observation plat forms of the “Crescent Limited,” the famous de luxe train operated be tween New York, Washington, At- lanta and New Orleans by the Penn sylvania railroad, Southern railway system, West Point route and Louis ville A Nashville railroad, beginning ! Sunday, September 20th. The signs will be rectangular in shtiape with dark blue background, showing a gold crescent and a field of ; stars and the nnme. “Crescent Lim ited", in white, the color scheme be -1 ing the same as that adopted for use 1 in printed matter concerning the train ; which has been given wide distribu-. tion. Similar signs ore carried on other • high class trains operated by t'ae Southern, a distinctive color scheme being selected for each train, Up to i this time they have not been carried I on the “Crescent Limited’V due to I restrictive regulations governing the . New York terminal which have now ' been removed. ■ The famous Serpent mound, in s Adams county, Ohio, attributed to the » mound-builders, belongs to Harvard University. Shocks France | j, , mw BastonGuyot, wealthy Frencß broker, was accused of straw gling Marie Louise Deulaguet, a French peasant girl, while motoring with her. The crims , shocked France. i i e—— —‘ ] OTHER INJUNCTIONS Work Stopped on fjfelSfcySftritftfes In- - vwlved THI Matter is Srittiad. 1 Tribune Bureau Sir Walter Hotel 1 Raleigh. Sept. 2.—While attorneys for the State highway commission are * appearing before Judge AY. M. Bond 1 todny in Louisburg asking that the ‘ plaintiffs who obtained the injunction against the commission halting work 1 on the A'arina-Raleigh link of route 21, be required to post sufficient bond ’ to indemnify the contractors who have J been required to cease operations, other attorneys were reported to be ' busy preparing another petition ask ing for another injunction thnt would halt the paving of the streteh of high- 1 way between Zebulon and Middlesex n ong route 01. Though this suit has ' not actually bpcn filed yet, it was said that owing to the success which has attended the filing of petitions seek ing injunctions, based on the recent Newton highway decision of the Su preme Court, that the disgruntled re idents of Wendell who oppose having the starting point of route 01 located at Zebulon instead of Wendell, favor bringing suit. The selection of Zeb ulon as the starting point of the road, instead of Wendril), will save about two miles of construction between Zeb ulon and AA’ilson, according to the highway commission. Despite the claims of the plaintiffs in the A’arina case that the contractor can work on the end of the road not affected by the injunction, riven the transfer of bus outfit would entail much expense, and it is pointed out that as long as the entire route re -1 mains in controversy, it is not pos sible to work on only a small portion of it. All bridge work has been ■ stopped, despite the fact that two carloads of steel and a carload of ce ment just arrived on the ground, and I pouring of the concrete was in prog , ress. • In addition to the halting of • the work on this bridge near Fuquay Springs on route 21, affected by the • injunction, the contractor with his outfit of 100 mules and 150 laborers has been forced to stop work. i It is to cover the loss of money and ■ possible damages as the result of this ’ cessation of work that the highway ■ commission is asking bond to cover. Mrs. Wenrick Entertains. Honoring Miss Helen Marsh, who recently returned to her home in Con cord after spending the summer at Camp Keystone, Brevard, N. C., and Miss Carolyn Dancy, guest of Miss Marsh, Mrs. C. Ross AA’enrick enter tained at a delightful luncheon party in the dining room of Hotel- Concord today at 1 o'clock. Beautiful sum mer flowers decorated the table and attractive place cards designated the places. Guests of Mrs. Wenrick were-: Misses Marsh and Dancy, Mrs. R E. Ridenliour and Mrs. j. A. Good man. t Fire at Home of C. L. Smith. Firemen were called to the home of C. 1,. Smith, 33 North Unjon street, this afternoon shortly after 1 o’clock when a b’.aae was detected near the kitchen flue on the house. The blaie was easily and quickly extin guished with chemicals and only a small hole was burned in the root j. CONCORD, N. C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1926 - - y ■ ' - —afgggflg=? — .■ - - ‘ peggy emm WILL TESTIFY HI HELIFTTHI - . . I - -fff l She Is Erstwhile Sweet-j heart of Patrick McDer mott, Missing ‘Key Man’ | to Murdfer Mystery. i GIRL SOUGHT j . SEVERAL DAYS Another of Trio of Women Sought in Coimedaon With McDermotts Part in Crime, Is Held. Canton. 0.. sept. 2. (A*)-—Testi mony today before t‘ae Starke county | grand jury investigating the murder: of Don R. Mellet. Canton publisher, \ will be featured by the appearance of 1 Peggy Cavanaugh, (’leve'and. erst- j 1 whi'e sweetheart of Patrick Eugene j McDermott, missing -key man” in the! mystery. The girl has been sought for sev- 1 era! days by officers armed with lier: subpoena nnd was located yesterday! by Cleve’and police. Another of the j trio of women sought in connection j with McDermott's part in the alleged ; murder plot testified yesterday. She j is Thelma Davis, who roomed at the ; same address as McDermott after the | murder. The third of the three who were j still missing when the grand jury re-' convened the first of this week, ' is j still being sought. She is Catharine Barnes, landlady at the rooming bouse in Cleveland at which McDermott stayed. Miss Cavanaugh is said to have accompanied McDermott on his trip to Massillon several nights after the murder, when he is alleged to have met a “pay off" man. Accord ing to Steve Ivaseholk, informer, Mc- Dermott was to have received $750 for ■jis alleged part in the conspiracy. With Onr Advertisers. You will find living room furniture most reasonably priced at the Concord Furniture Co. See new ad. You will find the school books nnd ail kinds of school supplies at the Kidd-Frix Company. See full details In our nd. today. Only the best materials used in Cross mattresses. See nextkftnl, oT Bell ft Harris Furniture Co. All kinds of creams and skiu tonics at the Gibson Drug Co. Silk Frocks for junior misses in the newest nutumu styles at J. C. Penney Co.’s, in the new satins and other fashionable fabrics. All the things to fit the young folks for school at Efird’s. The Forest Hill Cleaning Co. las equipped its plant with the very lat est cleaning methods and machines. The Bowers continuous flow system has been established in th's plant. C. H. Barrier & Co. are again shipping chickens rind eggs. They pay 16 cerfts a pound for Leghorn hens, 18 cents for heavy hens. 18 cents for Leghorn fiers, 20 cents for colored friers 36 cents a dozen for fresh eggs up to Thursday. Septem ber the oth. See “The Newton.” another nice lit tle dwelling for which F. C. Niblock has the plans. The Blue Ribbon Mnlt extract is handled here by F. M. Youngblood & Co. Get your retailer to order some. Babe - Ruth Signs SIOO,OOO Contract For Vaudeville. New York, Sept. 2.—Babe Ruth has broken another record. Today he signed a SIOO,OOO contract for a twelve weeks tour over Pa stages western eireut after thei next world series. Pontages' agents here say it is the largest contract of its kind ever signed in vaudeviilefi as the Bambino will make the tour alone—- being his own supporting east. The tours open in Minneapolis and will take the home run king to the Pacific coast returning east be fore the spring training season be gins. Mrs. Manley Husband’s Guardian. Atlanta. fjept. 2.— (A 3 )—Judge Sam uel H. Sibley in United States dis trict court here today appointed A’al era Rankin Manley guardian for her husband, AV. D. Manley, president of the defunct Bankers Trust Company, in ttie bankruptcy proceedings against him. Immediately after Mrs. Manley filed a statement which also was signed by Mauley's attorneys, agreeing to an injunction of her husband's es tate ns a bankrupt because of his in ability to pay hiH debts. Says Spain AVI 11 Withdraw From the I League. i Paris, Sept. 2.—o4*) —The Hnvaa ■ agency’s Geneva correspondent says - Spain will withdraw from the league l of nations without Rwaiting the deci ■ sion of the council regarding her de- I mand for a permanent council seat. » Official notification to this effect, he adds, will be given the league with : in 24 hours. - First Bale of Cotton For Richmond County. Rockingham, Aug. 31.—The first cotton of the 1020 crop gin mil in Richmond courity wan ginned at the f Dockery gin here this morning, and * brought in by J. T. Latham, of the 1 eastern part of Richmond county, f Hi* two bales were sold to AV. T. * Covington and Company for 17 - cents, the first bale in 1925 *'«* i sold here ten day* earlier than was the case this year on August 21. TIGHT GEMS HIDE BE OMITTED EGoramr Former Senator Threatens to Bring Suit Against the Publishers of New Novel by Edna Ferber. NAME MENTIONED •With gambling The New York World Says Taggart Demands That Three Paragraphs in the Book Be Omitted. New York. Sept. 2.— OP) —Tom (Taggart. Democratic leader of In diana. has threatened a SIOO,OOO libel against Doubleday Page ft Go., pub lishers of Edna Ferber’s novel, "Show Boat." unless three paragraphs re ferring to himself and gambling are deleted from the book, the New York | World says today More than 135,000 copies of this j novel, Miss Ferber's twelfth, have j been sold already. Her last novel, j "So Big”, was awarded the Pulitzer | r.rize ns the best American novel iu 11025. I Tlie former T'llited States senator, | nnd owner of French Lick Springs, j'lias. demanded, says The AA'orld, that | three paragraphs mentioning "Tom j Taggart”, "AA’est Baden” nnd “roui j ette" be removed from ail unsold j copies in the hands of book dealers, nnd from future editions. The offending matter was printed in the August number of the Woman's Home Companion, The AA'orld says, but there is no mention of a threat against the Crowell Publishing Co., tlie magazine's publisher. The World says reports of t'ae libel suit threat were confirmed by Mr. Taggart, Tom Taggart, Jr., and Fred A’an Nuys. of the ludiaqapo'.s firm of Ra'ston, Gates, Lairy ft A’an Nuys. “It has been proved time and again,” The AA’orld quotes Mr. A’an Nuys as saying, “that Mr. Taggart and the French Lick company have not a penny's interest in gambling, either at AA'est Baden or French Lick. There has been litigation on this point in which the charter of. the French Lick company was attacked lon such grounds. . Mr. Taggart and the company have been acquitted in all these cases, and we regaril this unexplainable reference of Miss Fer ber's novel as damaging and libelous. Unless Doubleday Page & Co. com ply with our request immediately we will bring suit for $100,000.” At the office of Doubleday Page ft Co. it was declared that nothing was known of the matter. Miss Ferber admitted receiving a letter but said “as far as I know there is no intention at the present time to stop sale of the book or to delete or amend it in any way.” AIRSHIP TC-5 LANDS TO GET MORE FUEL Ship Making Trip From Langley Field. Va., to Scott Field, IHfciols. AA'ashington Courthouse, Ohio, Sept. 2.— OP) —Tlie army semi-rigid airship TC-5. bound from Langley Field, A’a.. to Scott Field, 111., landed near here at 11 :T5 Eastern Standard Time today to re-fuel. The ship had encountered no trou ble at all. but had simply exhausted its gasoline. Members of the crew said the ship ran into bad weather in the early flight and in bucking the elements used up more fuel than had been an ticipated. They said they were blown 150 miles out of their course in AA'est Virginia and Virginia. Tlie unweildy airship was landed publicly in a field a mile south of here. QUEEN MARIE HOPES TO VISIT MRS. B. F. MEBANE She Replies to Invitation Extended By Prominent Woman of Spray. Reidaville. Sept. 1. —Several weeks ago Mrs. B. Frank Mebane, of Spray, cabled an invitation to Queen Marie, of Rumania, asking her to visit her in her home at Spray. She received an immediate response most grac iously saying that she hoped to ac cept. Mrs. Mebane hopes to have the pleasure and honor of arranging a motor trip to Asheville ami Blow ing Rock, and if time allows. Roar ing Gap, as Mrs. Mebane says, “our mountains are our chief glories." Mrs. Mebane has been twice a guest of Queen Marie, one formal visit and one made directly on Queen Marie's invitation at her palace at Buch-j arest and her summer palace in the Carpathian mountains. Lieut. Bettis Will Be Buried at His Home Town. Washington. Sept. 2. —14*1—Lieut. Cyrus K. Bettis, army air pilot and Puljtxer aviation prize winner, who died yesterday from injuries received in a crash in Pennsylvania, will be buried at Fort Huron, Mich., bis home city. Decision to have the interment in Michigan was reached at a conference between army air officers here, and the. former aviator’s mother, Mrs. John Bettis, who arrived here early today. A foreman in a lumber camp in the Cascade Mountains, Washing ton, Mapped into a hole and found that he was standing on a bear en joying ita winter sleep. In the News Spotlight I ■r . ■ .t ■; /M j a y m ■■■ 11 j iKTEO7TOKr D BAKER, L-t/ R, VOo£> 1 ™ ™ 1 11 WB PRINCE RUPRECHT AI*EK f 1924. when it made its closest ape proach to the earth in over a cen tury. It is already a splendid object in the eastern heavens just after mid night. and astronomers all over the world are making arrangements to photograph it and its stupendous system of lines that, look like canals, wnioh many are now convinced the Martians have constructed to aug ment their limited water supplies by utilizing those which flow from the melting snow 1 round the poles in the Martian summer. On October 27, a week before Mars is actually in opposition to the sun, the earth will make its r.enrest ap proach at a distance of 42,000,000 miles. The automobile in which Arch duke Ferdinand and his wife were murdered in 1914 has been offered 1 for sale for the twenty-fifth time since the tragedy, but there are no buyers. Superstitious persons believe that the car. blood ml in color, ia I bedeviled, inasmuch as four of its ! owners have died in it and it has killed and injured several others- THE TRIBUNE PRINTS , TODAY’S NEWS TODAf NO-207 ; vulweuiii FOR POISON WHICH* Wilt* Persons Stricken . W «*i Present at Christian jEa- 1 deavor Picnic Hel4 4§a Peoria, 111. 1 severalTpersonsJ 1 MAY NOT hWm 75 Persons Called Ptwi||l cians and 100 Others fui|9 covered With Thei fJj Home Remedies. ij* I Peoria. 111., Sept. 2. loaf was blamed today for of nearly 200 persons stricken n«B ptomaine poison after the annual DwvJ nio of the city Christian Endeavor afe® cieties. A half dozen of the cases wer&;j*|jß serious as to prohibit the removal $ 8 patients from their home* to aital physicians despai V of the of two girls. vtfjJ Two clergyman were tnnong tbe ferers whom doctors were canwJHj J attend seveni! hours lifter church lead- |1 ers and young people concluded 111 lerday afternoon's outing with It ban* g quet spread henentli the tree*. t*.|-1 was expected that both lit*. J. lncrs, retired, and ■ Rev. Hi. F. pastor of the First xsva n gelicflßj Church, would recover. _ j l'hysicians who attended, the fife j tims agreed that Che poisoning result of tainted veal loaf whiqjjt been prepared in advance for Rtf pic- 1 nio. j Within a few hours of the kM j the munber of seriously ill had ltftelW-; '3 ed to seventy-five, and it was ed that another 100 persons were *$- 1 fected but recovered with the admtflpffl istration of home remedies. J WILL BDBY VALENTINO IN FILMLAND ('APPfif^| Screen Sheik’s Brother Agrees -g|B. | Have Body Taken to Holly FUME! For Burial. New York. Sept. I. —llollywoo42|S where Rudolph Valentino rose t&aJ world-wide fame as the screen’s most lover, will be his final resti3j|g| place. Definite -amvotincement that bnrinfti would be made in the California city j came tonight on, the arrival on tlwgj Homeric of the late star's brottoegA|| Alberto Guglielmi, from Italy. Aix'"ij arrangements for the | al journey have been oompletwJß' j 8. George Ullman, the late manager, and the body will be Bt*Hjj|9 ed on its way west tomornjw, ev«e||m ing. j Two special cars have been * gaged on the Lake Shore UmttStg leaving New A'oVk at 6:30 p. itLwH Chicago the cars will be switched :fjp9 the Southern Pacific route to -)MH| plete the journey to the coast. '/|| Guglielmi at first seemed' '6b 'W undecided as to the place Q< inleri J ment, but after a 45-minute, ow*t' « sulfation in his stateroom i 111 Ullman, he made the that his brother's body wpyld > fthns taken to Hollywood. "Having received the consent of I my sister to act for her in respect iHH the place of burial,” he skid,' after consulting with Mr. JHlmdlifaM decided to give to the American ..pfiSrl pie my dearest poss»-ssion—my bro£S- j er. “It was because ■it was iuHqiMj |to me so clearly that all Amrimpi loves and wants him and' ft lap ’UIMM cause of the affeetion of thr j American people ns well as of all | American friends that made me H j solve to do this. AVe will proceed tp | Hollywood as arranged Coin Negri met Guglielmi on.Jjjjjl kissed him three times *)9| burst into tears. ''•’^SlraH I "Yen. I think he was engaged fjtP Pola Negri,” said Guglielmi, .-■JtMjl my brother did not Jell me ervet**”' thing about it. Certainly, ftyf .MHH each very much." NO SPECIAL RIGHTS FOR UNITED STATM| e That Is Opinion of Delegatee WM ing American Reservations lo the* World Court. Geneva, Sept. 2.— lA>) —The opil&U Hint the United States should liawijj the same rights in the world court asc members of the league of natiopjt: council, but no more was voiced-i|p many delegates at today’s session the international conference convokAl! to discuss American reservation* - fj| membership in the court. .',91 If the opinion weighs in the MM ference. it may be impossible to ac cept the fifth American reservatfjfifi requiring the consent of the Unimpl States to request tile advisory ions from the court on question* which she claims interest. The reason for this is that the Ijnft of the league of natiqps is so otaMtilH that it is uncertain whether mous or only a majority vote i* liecflft aary when tin- league council askgfH court for such opinions. More than $216,000,000 was to unemployed workers in the BTWp tell dole in 1025. THE W'EATHEB -3 , Mostly cloudy tonight atul FridSni I sliowers Friday and in north eawtljg i tion tonight, somewhat cOol*P i*?i* i day. Moderate southwest ably becoming northeast Friday,.fi