' ■' ' ' i. ASSOCIATED t PRESS Dispatches VOLUME XXVI ANOTHEA DEATH HI CHICIOO IS RESULT OF GANG JESLOUSV John Dano, Lesser Light in Liquor Traffic Warfare, “Taken for Ride” by a Gang in Chicago. WAS MEMBER OF THE GENNA GANG \ Police Are Still Trying to Roundup Gang Leaders But the Warfare lias Not Ceased. Chicago, 111., express thanks to all who made the event 'such a success," . ! ! GOVERNOR McLEAN AT THE | JACKSON TRAINING SCHOOL j Will Probably Spcalt in Cotiro, d Next j Thursday Night. t By J. C. BASKEIiVILLE, (Staff Correspondent) Concord, X. ('., October 18.— j "Isn't it funny what these newspa- \ j tomorrow afternoon in Hendersonville j instead of in Burnßville. an at first I announced, he said today after con- j ferr'ng over long distance telephone' with John G. Dawsonj. Chairman of i the State Democratic/committee in- Raleigh. Through some error, the j State Democratic committee 'n Rah' eigh had not been advised that Max I Gardner was to make att address in j Burnsville tonight, and had scheduled Governor McLean to go there Tues day afternoon. But when this er-! ror was discovered today, it was de- j cidcd to have the Governor go to Hen-1 dersonville. Several other changes -n the Cover n ' r'i> schedule also hove been made, fnstend of speaking ia I.iucolnton on Thursday night, as had been planned, he will speak there at 2 :30 in the af ternoon. owing to the fpet that a big revival is in progress there and it was not desired to interfere in any way with this. Thursday night the Gov ernor will make an address in either Concord or Marion. At notn today the Governor stop ped to visit the Stonewall Jackson Training School, the State reform school for boys, and had lunch with the boys in the main dining hall. He was introduced to the students by Chnrges E. -Roger, superintendent of tlie school, and addressed them briefly, calling upon them to make the best of their opportunities while in the school so that they might become use ful citizens when they left it. The Governor left soon after lunch , for Hickory, where he will make a np litical address tonight. TOnliS Mencken’s Rentalk* a Jobe : j said Governor A. W. McLean, laugh ingly, here this morning when asked what he thought of the. story from H. L. Mencken of the Baltimore Sun, who in an interview in Chapel Hill, carried in all the Sunday newspapers, declared that Governor McLean, was the logical “dark horse” candidate for the Democratic party for President. Mencken declared that there was no chance of either nominating or elect ing A1 Smith or McAdoo, nnd that hence the candidate must be a “dark horse," and that Governor McLean ; was well fitted both ;n ability and past j experience. Bnt Governor McLean seemed to | take it nil as a good joke, having a hearty laugh obi of the incident—and that was all. "WET” RESORT TO , BE PLANNED SOON "Grand Bahama,” qf Florida Coast ] ] to Cater to Booze Thirst. Washington, Oct. 16.—A prohibi- j tiou oasis just off the Southern I cost of the United States is to be ( created with the sanction of prohibi tion officiate. It will consist of an island known | as the Grand Bahama. 00 miles off the Florida eoast. British and Amer- ] iean interests have obtained a lease for 150 yenra on the island from j Gret Britain. , Those interested in the grant have pledged themselves not to violaate , the laws of any other country nnd | it is understood that under these j conditions Assistant Secretary An drews has given his unofficial ap- , proval. A sort of restricted colony will | be set up in the islnd and those liv- ; ing there will be expected to ad- ' here rigld'y to the rules laid down J by the promoters. Xo smuggling in- , to the UnPed States will be tolerat- , ed, and as long as the residents stick , to the pledges to “buy and keep" 1 , their stimulants on the island they i have the unofficial promise of the j American dry forces to let them | alone. DANIELS WILL AID IN DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN ~ ' Confers With Campaign Leaders at j Capital; to Start Speaking Tour. > Washington, Oct. 14.—Josephus j Daniels, editor of The News and Ob server who was here this week in 1 conference with Senator Peter Gerry, Chairman of the Democratic Sena torial committee. Senator Swanson, Chairman of the Speakers' Bureau, and Representative Oldfield. Chair man jtf the Democratic Congressional 1 Committee, has Returned to Raleigh. Mr- Daniels will go to the Central west to begin a wook’s speaking for a Democratic Congress. He will 1 make his first speech on Monday at Youngstown. He found strong faith in democratic circles that Governor Donahy will be re-elected in Ohio and Senator Pomerene will also be elected to succeed Senator Willis. Debs Now fat Sanatorium. Chicago, Oct. 18.—MP)—Eugene V. Debs, socialist, has been a patient nt a sanatorium In Elmhurst, a suburb, for a week, it became known today. Physicians said he was suffering from a nervous breakdown. 1.7 7..-- ,v ; - 4 concord, n. c., Monday, October is, 1926 T ,.... .. - ~ Carol and Marie United f ’ ■ ‘ ■,, ■ ■ ■ r- "'iJi ||L*- ‘ Jr 4 Hr v H 9 K \jt 1 ml mX3 r ■ Bjaa^PMSi 1 •'''' Hi, 1 < "W* . • i 7 • «... »* rhis radioed photograph from Paris shows Prince Carol (left) and Queen Marie at their meeting at which the errant prince was reconciled with his mother. He bid her farewell as she left for America. . ITudimiall„,llttam-s.ll ... THE COTTON MARKET Opened Easy Today at Decline of 11 r to 20 Points, But Later Rallied. New 'fork, Oet. 18.—M®>—Tne cot ton market opened easy today at a decline II to 29 points, active net losses of 20 isanls dueing the first few m'mites' na iler renewed Southern he)—A period I of intensive first hand study i>f Amer- | 1 ira at werk and play began today for i Queen Marie, of Rumania. The Leviathan, queen of the seas, j brought to American waters Europe’s j most fascinating and talented queen, | accompanied b.v her son Prince Nich olas and daughter Princess Ilenna. On a trip from coast to coast they Mope to learn something of the secret of America’s prosperity and content ment that will help Rumania. Nation, state and city were glad to welcome the visitors as they were to come. Gunners of Governor's island had orders for a 21-gun salute to be j fired as the municipal tug boat Macon ; bearing the Queen and official retire- \ sentntives of the state, city ami nn- \ ticu, drew near tile battery, after tak- j ing the visitors' off the finer at Quar-! alpine. Hundreds of troops and del- J egations including 300 Ruineniaps in native dress were assigned along Broadway to the City Hall. The day’s seuedule allowed only a , few hours in New York as a special train to.carry r.fe Queen to Washing- j tou was waiting at the Pennsylvania ! Nation under orders to start shortly j after noon—immediately after grand ing the freedom of the city at City Hall by Mayor Walker. President Cooliuge ova* represented on the welcoming party b.v J. Butler Wright, assistant secretary of the treasury, wliiie General Charles P. Summernll was on hand to present the President’s greetings as cominand- Uer-in-ehief of the army, and Admiral Charles D. Plunkett his greetings as commander-in-chief of rae navy. A coast guard cutter was called into service to earry the American official delegations. The Rumanian official delegation beaded by Radu T. Djuvera, charge d’affairs at Washington, were assigned to the cutter. Arrived in the Rain. New York v Oct. 18.—04*)—Queen Marie, of Rumania, and her royal party stepped on to American soil at the battery today in a drizzling rain which dampened everything but the spirits of tlie smiling visitors and t’ae cheering hundreds who crowded the great square for a glimpse of the first queen to visit American in seven years. In her first message voiced in Amer ican territory given to newspaper men and women aboard the steamship Le viathan this morning, at Quarantine, she said: "I love ail Americans and I want all to love me and .take me to your hearts.” Off for Washington. New York. Oct. 18.—(A 1 )—Queen j Marie, of Rumaina, was whisked | ('.trough the city so quickly today that I New Yorkers as a whole were hardly I aware of her passing. She stepped; ashore with her party at the -battery shortly before noon and hardly an j hour later was on her way in a spe-; • cial train to Washington, ceremonies at City Hall having occupied the in terim. Jerusalem Becoming a Business Man’s Town. Jerusalem. Oct. 16. —In contrast to the recent disturbed and dismal con ditions in Syria is Hie activity, pros perity and penee obtaining in Pales tine. Jerusalem, formerly a city exclu sively for pilgrims and tourists, is rapidly becoming a center for mer chants and business men. Under the firm, just and impartial rule of the British, the Jews are rebuilding their 1 Promised Land, making it, instead of a shrine where pilgrims admired holy ruins and dwelt in the glorious past, j an up-to-date and enterprising coun try. Jerusalem now consists of two - the old and the new. The new, ! sprung up within the last few yeurs, 1 consists of residential, shopping and business quarters, Jewish settlements, sch Sols, churches and targe religious institutions. It is entirely modern. The old city, flanked on three sides by deep valleys, is made up of narrow, crooked streets, filled with loaded don keys and camels and lined with . ro mantic and historical buildings. Charges Against James E. Ferguson. Austin, Tex.,-Om. 18. — Of)—Char ges that James E. Ferguson, husband of Governor Miriam A. Ferguson, had offered to obtain road maintenance con tracts for a money consideration were made here today before the legislative committee' Investigating state deport ments-" W. A. Press Klßed la Accident. Chicago, Oct. 18.— Of)— W. A. Press, 55, wealthy manufacturer of automobile bodies, is dead as a result of injuries suffered when he was thrown from a horse in Lincoln park. The stormy petrel is so named in allusion to St. Peter as it seems to walk on the sea. She Spied i |' gpp I : jfl . WL^ i |gHa§js|;. y. I ■BBBPsr |p fimm j§ Mm lira - ■ (gw ■* % ■ fpplqu m J;\ ■ 1 I j .\gnes Callahan, maid at a Los Angeles hotel, said she saw Kenneth G. Ormiston, radio operator, enter the room of Aimee Semple Mc- Pherson, evangelist, who was accused of conspiracy in con nection with her disappear ! ance. flnternational Sewsreelt | “PEACHES” WANTS MOTHER TO BE HER GUARDIAN Will Seek Separation From Husband. Who Has Entered Suit Against Her. New York, Oct. 18.— Of)— Mrs. Frances Heenan "Peat'jes” Brown ing, through her attorneys, today asked the Supreme Court to appoint I her mother as her guardian for the j purpose of suing her wealthy husband, • Eoward W. Btownin, for separation, j This was the first legal step takeu j by the school girl bride to fight (Me j court action started by Browning at Poughkeepsie on Saturday when ho | obtained appointment of a guardian | for his wife, who left him rfstently j and went away with--her mother. ■ In an affidavit •‘Peaches’’ sais she j will' base 1 her separation actltmnn I Browning’s “cruel and inhuman treat-j inent and Mis conduct toward her j which rendered It Unsafe, improper j and dangerous" for her to be his wife.| TROTSKY AND FOLLOWERS j GIVE UP THE FIGHT Faced With Punishment They Give in to Central Executive Committee. Moscow, Oct. 18.—(A I )—Leon Trot zky and his followers comprising the opposition to the Central Executive Committee of the Communist party have unconditionally capitulated in the face of a threat of political pun ishment. The danger of open warfare in the party has been averted but it is fear ed the peace between the opposition and the majority will be only tempo rary : that the expressions of regret b.v j i Trotzky and followers for the denun-1 j ciation of the executive committee in l I realitv only amounts to an armistice. ' 1 I 1 High School for All Boys and Girts in j Vance County. | Henderson. N. C„ Oct. 15.—(A s ) |An accredited high school is now | available for every boy ami girl of proper age in Vance county, if has been announced by County Superin tendent E. M- Rollins. The list, was completed with the repent notice from the State Depart ment of Education that the Zeb Vance and Dabney schools had been admitted to the accredited rating. This gives the county five schools in the seieet class—all available by motor Bus to every school child. The Vance -county sehoohi are operated under the county-wide plan, which places both county and city sehoohi under the same administra tion. i i Scientists state- that a flowering plant extracts from the soil two hundred times its own weight in ' water during its life. STAR THEATRE TODAY—TUESDAY “Hell’s Four. Hu ndred” With Margaret Livingston and Harrison Ford | Also a Comedy “TWO LIPS IN HOLLAND” WEDNBSDAY-THURSDAY Richard Dix and Lois Wilson in— “LET’S GET MARRIED” This' Picture has been playing to crowded houses and for weeks at a time, all claiming , it’s his very best. It’s a Para- Paramount. THE TRIBUNE { ■" agfaH TODAY’S NEWS TOD&f} 'MW! no. ml WOMAN CONFIDANTE J tTr IM IS £kfflߥ JURORS {Mildred Meade Presents . i Pacers and Documents 1 Taken From Safety tlf|l posit Box. j VVOMANjCAIvLED^^^^ Her Testimony Expected ! to Be Important in the Charges Brought by T. | H. Adams. , Indianapolis, Oct N 18.— Of) —Pafieto Jt and documents obtained from a safety deposit box in a local bank werff laid before the Marion county grand jury today b.v Mildred Meade. 23-.veay - I confidante of D. ('. Stephenson, fpf- ; nier Indiana Ku Klux Klan grand dragon. Miss Meade is regarded by invents A gators of the (Marges of conspiracy between Stephenson and state ofljcitlls : us a "key” witness, and it is believe# her information will have an impnrt j ant bearing on allegations jna'jlf fig, Thos. H. Adams, publisher of the ViH irennes Commercial and other mpt#- • : hers of the Indiana Republican Edi i torial Association. ST'fP'S ! Shortly after Miss Meade appeared i before the grand jury she went with Mh. H. lieiny. prosecuting attttraMKq j to an Indianapolis bank, procured fais *: pers from a safety deposit box. and returned to the grand jury chilpjber, ! SENATE COMMITTEE “.'.’’daßl RESUMES HEARING ;: I Campaign Funds Committee Renggffij’i Work After Three Months’ RgpSg; ’ j Chicago. Oct. 18.—C4>)—i ' j ment of the candidacy of FrffijS L. A j Smith, republican senatorial nopiine* Iby the national and state airti-mUdffil a I league likely will form one of the sub jject matters of inquiry by the fcenafe ! campaign funds committee which. | sumed its sessions here today afthr a 'M j recess of more than three m nntlis. I j This action by the dry organization || has caused a split in the ranks of MUSS • dry advocates and has stirred np a \ sharp controversy in and out of Illfr .1 inois. Tlie national and utate leagues j l»ve. been jissaUetUmaxitjgt I timony before the Senate .'last summer that public utilities 1 rials largely film need Smith's priinat^y I campaign at a time when he was flljg: a j chairman of the II inois £oo|fjioliff’ifg j Commerce Commission. HATTIESBURG EDITOR *4 ADMITS HIS GUILT , Dr. G. E. Hannon Says in Sighed Editorial That He Used Naan si Two Men Fraudulently. Hattiesburg. Miss.. Oct. 14.-—A#- ”fj mission that he used the names rsf two prominent men without, author- ; ity as indorsement on papers. by which he obtained $35,000 to finance % the purchase of the Hattiesburg iff American is contained in an editorial over the signature of Dr. G. E. moil, editor and publisher of tl* | j American, appearing in te Hatties- m burg paper tonight. | Dr. Harmon, in his statement to -’j | the readers of the American- and the j public, says he will go before the ] Forrest county grand jury tomorrow morning, lay before that body the ' facts of liis act and place himself at the disposal of the law. ■»vj The editorial further states that Dr. Harmon, finding he could not meet his obligations, was confronted with the enormity of his offense and that he made a clean breast of’ the whole matter to the two men Involv ed and by the use of every asset he could command, made full restitu tion. Dr. Harmon, in his public state ment. further announced that -he hah severed his connection with the {fj|t- ' tiesburg American, which ’is’ ppr- I chased from Howard S. Williams three years and eight months ago. Dr. Harmon was formerly engaged in evangelistic work, being n Methodist 1 preacher. He is widely known in the % south and especially in, Mississippi , and is connected with some of the : foremost families of the state; lj DAVIS DID NOT MEAN ,>1 TO COMMIT SUICIDE I I Was Vlct'm of Desire for Performing Athletic Feats. Friends Say. Steiurtstiip Majestic. Oct. 13.— 0 f) —Friends of D. P. Davis, Florida • realtor, who was drowned several da.VS ago when he fell from the deck of the | Majestic into the sea. say he was tjk>\* accidental victim of his own rashnerf/5 in his love for performing athletic c feats. Friends made this statement today at the official inquiry held by the rap- : tain of Cue Majestic into the dro'ttAe f ing. These friends declared MK.nw* • , was straddling n window of his du|tikls9 in a ’‘foo’hardy” balancing fegt, andr'a that he lost his balance and fell jsMi| the sea. '* ” • ' . ' « r ' i Jews and Quakers are said to ho , more subject to color-blindne«H ths»t|| 1 people of other religions. THE WEATHER ’ . r Fair and warmer tonifUt, TnesdfjlJ r increasing cloudiness followed by aj|3| > era in west and warmer on the (WMfej j " Moderate to fresh south and souths ? west winds. j