i "'■■■» ' . ASSOCIATED -' PRESS DISPATCHES -r VOLUME XXVI The Imperial Valley Os California Rocked By Fifty Earthquakes Tremors Started Shortly After Midnight and Con tinued for the Next Sev eral Hours. $1,000,000 LOSS NOW REPORTED Calexico ajwl Mexicali Suf fered Greatest Damage. No One Known to Have Perished. Oalixieo, Cnlif., .Tnn. I.—OP) —i Earthquakes numbering over half :i J ll i[wired rocked 1 [it* Imperial Valley at intervals of about two minutes be ginning at 12:18 o'clock this t morn ing. and still continued at 4:15 a. in., badly damaging Calexico and Mex icnla, adjacent border cities, causing damage whi<4i it is estimated wilt approximate over $1,000,000. El Centro, eleven miles north of city, and Heber. a town of,approxi mately 400 population, lying between El Centro and the Mexican border, also suffered from the continuation bf ipinkes. but the dnmnge reported in those localities appeared to be little. Calexico, .lying on tne American side of the international boundary line, and Mexicali, on' the Mexican to bear the "brunt of the tremors, which were accompanied by a heavy rumbling. Hardly a business house in Calexico was left sound by the quakes the walls of many falling while the walls of others were badly cracked. Ainjost every plate glass window in the busi ness section was shattered, and in many instances the window casings were torn loose. A survey of Calexico’s business sec tion revealed that tlie* rear wall of tie post office, two garages and a store, were demolished. A portion of the rear wall of the Overland -Hotel was tottering. The upper |M>rtionof the front of the Melborn Hotel, the Glenwood Hotel, and jxirt ions of the city and tire and police stations tum bled into the streets. No one was known to have been killed, hut several persons were slight ly injured when struck by fnlling ..^piaster. X’ine of 1 the shocks were severe, the first hetn% rl*s sbtiV}« { st. Vfn ( T*l’*KfftflF the loligesl. fully ihrec minutes. Damage in Mexicali so far as could be ascertained, was principally the lo s by lire of a brewery and the col lapse of a number of adobe houses. The cases ami resorts in Mexicali were crowded with New Year merry maters, and they stampeded into the streets at the first shocks. The gates at the international line which close nightly at 0 o’clock were opened by customs officers to permit the people to cross to the American side. At Heber. Which was first reported to have been badly dnmaged, the post office was found to be damaged, and windows of other buildings broken. Centro apparently ausfferod only * minor dnmnge, broken windows and rrokery only being reported. Fearing to return to their shaking homes, residents of Calexico and Heb er gathered around huge bonfires in vacant lots. A number of the resi dents of Calexico reported that the first three quakes were of such in tensity that they were shaken out of their beds. •Several Tremors Were Heavy. Itrawley, Cnlif., .Jan. I.— (A 3 )— About thirteen earthquakes, four of them particularly heavy, were felt here beginning shortly after, midnight. The quakes were described ns not of the rocking variety, but as long drawn out and sharp. They were said to be of greater intensity than any felt here in the past. Residents (hither in Streets. Eos Angeles, Jan. I.— UP) —A re port to the Southern Pacific Company here from Mexicali, Lower California, stated that the Inst of a series of rnrthqunke shocks beginning shortly after midnight, occurred at 7:10 a. m. The Overinnd and Calexico ho tels were the buildings most seriously damaged, the report said. Considerable damage was done by water when pipe lines were broken by the shock. Basements in some buildings were flooded. The reports stated that residents of Mexicali were gathered in the streets and vacant lots, fearing to ent,cr dam aged buildings. Shocks Felt in Ariiona. Yuma, Ariz., Jan. I.— (A 3 )—Eight earthquake shocks, the first at 1:01 o'clock and the last at 0:10 o'clock, mountain time, were felt here this The Progressive Fanner FREE for ■ whole year to every sub scriber of The Concord Tribune Who Pays his. Subscription a Full Tear in advance This offer nay be withdrawn at The Concord jl * Tribune North Carolina’s Leading Small City Daily ELECTRICAL INDUSTRY ' SEES PROSPEROI’S 1927 By (JERALD SWOPE (Written fur International News i Service) New York. Dee. 51.—1 n the elec- j I trical industry we are looking for- j ward to the year 1927 with eon- ! fidence that tile high rate of bus- ( inesx that has been done this year ! will be continued in the next.. j The electrical industry is fortu- j nate in that new uses and new appliances of electricity are eon- j staidly being made in the homes { , and in the workshipe. I GOVERNMENT JOBS FOR | TAR HEELS GOING BEGGING 1 Stenographers and Typists From This Slxrt Are Wanted. Raleigh. N. C., Jan. I.— UP) —(Jov- I eminent jobs Heels are going 1 begging. _ Stenographers and typhus from North Carolina are wanted in Wash ington.-and they will have until Jan uary 28. 1927. to get in their np lieatioins. The situation was brought about by the Federal civil service law which .requires insofar as possible that positions in departmental ser vice lie appointed* among state and territories on a population basis. North CarolimT is among the states in arrears on this basis. The next typist and stenographer examinations will he held only in ' states in arrears, in an effort to ] equalize the lists. Examinations will be held nt een- ' trnll.v located cities ten days after ' the c'ose of receipt of applications. ' J- 15. Martin, secretary of the local . hoard of civil service examiners, is in charge of receiving applications j from the Raleigh district. Funeral of Albert S. Adams. Atlanta, Jan. I.— (A*) —Funeral ser-1' vices for Albert S. Adams, 47 years I j old, Atlanta real estate man, and the j only southerner to serve as president!] of Hotary International, were iGO. (or j | today. He died yesterday, Adams was elected president nfefMawfc tary .International in 1919, and served , JWC other- jwm has been president since foundation*! or the organization in 1005 is living.)] Bishop O'Connell Dead. i i Richmond, Vn , .lan. 1.- —C4*>—The |i Rt. Rev. Dennis J. O’Connell, former j] bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Richmond, and titular head of the] diocese of Mirinina, Syria, died at the I episcopal residence of the Rt. Rev. | Andrew J. Rrannnn, present bishop j of Richmond, shortly after noon to day. Union county up to December 13th ' had ginned 31,304 bales of cotton. If 1 cotton in the fields in Union couuty is picked there will be easily 85,000 ba'es of the 1926 crop. It is said many farmers are now offering one half the cotton to get it picked. morning. No damage was reported. Automobile loads of frightened res idents of El Centro and vicinity be gun arriving here early today after a series of earth shocks were felt through the Imperiul Valley. El Cen tro is approximately sixty miles from Yuma. Accounts of considerable damage at Calexico and Mexicali, towns on the international border, were related by j persons arriving in Yuma from valley j points. Slilp Reports Heavy Tremors. I.c« Angeles. Cal., Jan. 1. —( A 3 )—j Radio reports tq the Federal Tele- 1 graph Coroparty here from the S. S. Emma Alexander at anchor off En senada, Lower California, today stat ed that there was a severe earth dis turbance in the Mexican port town. The radio operator aboard the ship . said heavy swells were running and passengers who spent the night ashore were unable to return to the vessel. No details of possible damage in Ensenada were available to those , on board the Emma Alexander, be cause of inability of small boats to i put out from or leave the steamer. Building Wrecked By Water. Nai*viHe, Term., Jan. I.——Un determined by the current of the monster rivxer beating against its , walls, the four-story building occu- L pied by the American Steam Feed Company collapsed this morning. The ) rear of the Reeves Produce Company nearby collapsed at the same time. The 1 crash of the feed company building dumped thousands of bags of feed in to the flood which had almost covered the first floor of the structure. No one was hurt. WHERE ARE THE DEAD? Pastor’s Sunday Evening Subject at the ! j FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH t* Cordial Welcome To All A HAPPYNEW YEAR ! MEXICO WELCOMES ; 00TSI0E CAPITAL, j PRESIDENT STATES j j New Year Message of Pres ident Calles May Mean ! Oil* Seizure Law Will Be Ineffective. I _. . i WILL PROPERTY | THERE BE SEIZED? I New Law Became Effective { at Midnight But Many Think It Will Not Be En forced Now. Mexico City. Jan. 3.— (A 3)—With out specifically mentioning tile petro leum and land laws which went into effect today, President Calles in a ; New Year's message to the Mexican ' people asserts that he has no inten tion of interpreting constitutional law in away that will harm legitimate in teress. “Moral energy and capital from other nations." the message said, “will I always be welcomed in Mexico with the only condition that of fulfilling our laws and the only limiattion that of not absorbing our national inter ests. ilUfieertalrUy prevails now that the laws have gone into effect. They pro vide that the oil lands of foreign own | ed companies which did not apply for | confirmatory concessions before niid j night last night shall revert to the | I Mexican- government. Whether the government will actually go as far ns j seizure, however, remains to be seen. I If it does, the foreign interests will have specific complaints on which to base their future course of action; if 'does not, the situation may continue rto lx* as at present, one of complete uncertainty. f -oft*, pritictpn! foreign . Maapitnit* * I have refused to make required ap- I plication for confirmation of proper • ties acquired prior to 1917. the date lof adoption of the present Mexican | constitution, and the United States j government Ims insisted that the Mcx- I ieau government cannot by retroaet | ive revoke titles lawfully acquired be- I fore 1917. I In addition to the oil situation, j President Calles in his message touch ed on the application of the Mexican religious regulations which have been denounced by the Vatican as “perse out ion.’’ lie had the same sincere re spect, he said, for all manifestations of religious creed or feeling, and he de nied that the government desired the destruction of, or was attempting to destroy any religious faith, ns assert ed by “religious reactionaries.” With Our Advertisers. The Parks-Belk Co. will deliver your packages nt your dooy without extra charge. When you buy a Goodyear tire from the Yorko & Wadsworth Co. they put it on your car, pump it up, inspect your wheels and rims and see that everything is all right. See prices ill new ad. today. Robinson's Usual January Clear nwny has been magnified into a Birth j day and Anniversary Sale. Great re- I duct ions on dresses and coats. The I new ad. today will tell you about tl. The Rug Sale at the Bell & Harris I Furniture Co. began this morning at ! 7 o'clock and will last till Saturday I night, December 31st, 1927. See the new ad. of the Concord Plumbing Company, 174 Kerr street. Phone 576. The Kid-Frix Company has the agency for the new Brunswick phon ographs. Go and see the six new mode's they have just received. The actual cost of administration on an estate by the Citizens Bank and Trust Company is often less than un der individual executorship. The cost is the same ns the law fixes that. Get your Atwater Kent radio. See ad. of the Yorks & Wadsworth Com pany. : i Wrenn at’ Kannapolis ’can help you save your clothes. Judge R. I>ee Wright Wins Com mendation. Salisbury, Dee. 31.—Upon request of the entire bar of Morgantown, Judge It- Lee Wright has been nam ed by Governor McLean to preside over a two-week's term of court nt that place beginning Monday. The Charlotte bar has unanimously peti tioned Governor McLean to appoint. Judge Wright to hold n two-week' term of court there beginning Jan uary 17. Judge Wright has held a number of courts as emergency judge and in each ease the bar passed evolutions I commending bis work. The regular movie program will be given qt the V. M. C. A. tonight, with the first show for the kiddies and the second for adults. WEATHER FORECAST. r Fair tonight and Bunday; colder tonight, alowly rising temperature in west portions Sunday. Moderate to fresh northwest and north winds. CONCORD, N. C., SATURDAY, JANUARY 1, 1927 y try TBiII in * If jj Vi \ | jjjj H ' jrtj ti 'TBfP mi if S : jM.au ■jßß.jL'gii g.j ■■ El Paso Is Only City Possessing But 100 Frame Dwellings ,E1 Paso. Tex., Jan. 1. — No .other, city in Texas and only a few in the ! United Slntes ns large as El Paco can boast n population of 110,000 per sons with only slightly more thnn 190 frame buildings within its limits. And while El Paso, being a resort city, is swarming with npnrtinent houses and fnmily hotels, it contains more than ,17,000 residences. | The reason for the absence of frame houses tu- El Paso is directly due to the inability many years ago to get lumber anil the availability of brick in plenty. The predominance of briiflj buildings further was augmented in 1917 when the city council passed sir ordinance banning the erection of frame structures within the fit.* limits. <». Perha¥“ (hi* rigid.legislation has 1 re-aeted unfavorably on Texas lumber- | men but it certninly has been profit- j lilile to the city in reduction of annual tire losses. SEVEN INMATES NOW IN DEATH ROW AT STATE PRISON j There Were Four KxeeuUom in 1920.! Making Total Number of 87 Since 1909. Raleigh. X. C„ Jan. I.—G4 5 ) —A i last minute addition ran the minuter j of death row inmates nt State's prison to seven.. Six languished there when the last i execution of 1926 took place but re i cently they were joined by Georg ■ | Frank Bnzemore, Greene county lie-1 gro, who came with a January 26 j death sentenee hanging over him. | Robert Lumpkin and Booker Wil- j Hams. Robeson county negroes, are file only other members of the grim colony with’ thi* day of their death | -et. They have-been twice reprieved I and the filial date is now January 21. The other four men hnve appeals pending. They are: W. L. Ross, i white, Warren eounty; Moses Green. Wilson county negro; Ernest I Walker, negro. Durham ; and Charlie Governor’s Message Will Be Delivered Thursday, It Is Said i Tribune Bureau Sir Walter Totel “ Raleigh, Jan. I.—The general mes • sage of Governor A. W. McLean to ' the general assembly will probably be delivered the ila.V after it completes its i organization, which if no difficulties I are encountered,, should he sometime ■ Thursday. However, if the house fails to elect a speaker the first day. as has been intimated in a number ' of quarters, the governor would not ■ be able to deliver his message until Friday or even Saturday. However. i Inasmuch as it usually does not re quire more than one day to get or ganized, it is thought likely 'that the ■ message will be delivered Thursday. But while this message is very t .inclusive, and consists of some 8,900 • words, the second message which he , will deliver to the general assembly t simultaneously with the submission of , the report of the budget commission, the revenue and appropriation billN . toget’.ier with fifteen separate and dis • tinet financial statements and n com plete balance sheet of the state, and which he considers the more import r ant of the two, will be submitted u , few days after the regular message, i perhaps not until Monday or Tuesday. The governor’s statement of trans mittal takes up some 6,000 words, the f report of the advisory budget commis > sion not quite so much. Then there r will bo the revenue bill, which will make somettiing like 200 printed ; pages and n voluminous appropria tions bill. The opening message of the gover r nor, which is expected to review the i accomplishments of-tfie past two years, a is already being printed, as is the first section of his budget message and . | El l‘nso stands seventh in the ! I’nited States in low minimi fire loss. During the Inst nine years annual toll has averaged approximately $150,000. In addition to what it saves pro perty owners, the ordinance has saved the city large sums of money in maintenance of a large fire depart ' meat. Seven fire stations with a per sonnel of 95 employes and 12 appar atus serve El l’aso and the upper and lower Rio Grande valley over an area of probably 20 square miles. And until recently the El Paso department j has answered calls in Juarez, Mexico - across the river. The frame houses now in the city were erected either before the ordin ance was passed or wre (alien into the city by annexation. The small : oiimber of frame st ructures slowly j is dwindling ns fires consume n num ; her of them each year and brick and .stucco edifices replace them in emu- I plinne with the ordinance provisions. I Johnson, negro, Mecklenburg, j There were four executions in j 1926, running tin- total for the death chair to 87. since its establishment in ! 1909. Last year there were also | four commutations, giving life an j even break with enth. i Paralvzed, He Drives His Car Eight Miles. i Lumberton, Dee. 31.—W. H. Phi i fer, prominent (’larkton man and i traveling salesman for the Carolina 1 Mailing Company, of Charlotte, suf | sered a stroke of paralysis at Alleu | town yesterday and drove his ear | eight miles to Lumberton to the ! linker Sanatorium, before letting it !be known. When Mr. Phifer reached I Lumberton he was unable to get out lof hi* car and had to lie removed | from his seat by hospital attendants. ] His condition now is as good as could be expected. Patrick Ferris, a 92-year-old civil I war veteran of lowa, recently made a holiday trip to England. a portion of the revenue hill. All the copy for all these measures is expected to be in the hnuds of the printers by Monday or Tuesday at tlie latest, the governor announced. Advance copies of all these docu ments are expected to be delivered to newspapermen in Raleig'li within a few days, so they may begin the task of shaping up all this vast amount of material into news form for the newspapers all over the state, to be released when the various messages are delivered. !, No intimation "oAs been given by Governor McLeuu or any members of the budget commission in Raleigh as to any of the definite recommenda tions contained in any of these mes sages or hills. However. Governor McL-an stated that while there were several matters that he thought would prove “highly interesting", there was nothing which be thought would prove in the least “sensational.” Naturally there has been considera ble speculation as to the nature of the new revenue bill, since it seems almost certain that some additional revenue will have to be derived from one source or another. However, the older and sager political heads do not expect that this new act will differ greatly from the present revenue act, except that this new act will differ greatly from the present revenue act. except in the inheritance tax bracket where it is expected that the new bill will increase the rates considerably since the federal government has re duced its tax rate 8(1 per cent on estates. It is hoped that the revenue i of the state enu be increased friim , $500,000 to $700900 from this one > source alone. As to other changes 1 1 there la bat little speculation. 'BfiOMVHETED! IWMW AND USUAL DRINKS Steady Rain Outside and Dry Agents Had Orders Not to Disturb Cabarets,] Night Clubs and Hotels.! PRICES PAID FOR DRINKS WENT UP Never Before Were Such I Prices Demanded and] Paid—All Places Filled! During the Night. Now York, .Tan. I.—Of) —Broadway j gave the New Year a wet welcome. | There was a steady rain ontside, and prohibition agents had orders not to disturb cabarets, night clubs and hotels. The celebration was of a fatuiliur character, but the prices were without precision t. The many deaths from liquor since Christinas seemed to 'have been forgotten. It was a hilarious crowd that wend ed its wny through the great white way to receive the New Year with the din of horns and rattlers. The. rain seemed to have no effect on the celebrators. and from early eve ning until long after 1027 had ar rived men and women continued t'.ieir parade along Broadway. Hawkers, who had been vending noise making devices along the street since early eveuing, were arrested by police shortly before 10 o’clock. By that time, however, they hail disposed of most of their wares and took their arrests in good nature. Fifteen were j found guilty in night court of selling without licenses, and were given sus-! pended sentences. Every available place of entertain- i meat was tilled to capacity. Reser vations in night Hubs bad been ex- j hausted weeks before, and the then- j tres early were sold out. Cover charg- 1 es ranging from sls to ss4o prevailed I in night clubs. Ginger ale was as high was $2 a bottle. Some of the theatres made no. secret of the fact that $6.50 tickets were sll for the night, and at that the demand was greater than the supply. Two sisters were wounded by a stray bullet fired by a celebrant as they leaned from a window of their home in Brooklyn. Scores of extra police, many of them mounted, kept the throngs moving in the roaring 40’s. Churches were crowded as well as night clubs. McDermott Says He’ll Kill When He Heaves Jail. Canton, 0., Dec. SO.—Patrick Mc- Dermott, convicted of murdering l>on Mellett, Canton newspaper publisher, will be sentenced within a week or ten days, according to Judge Diehl, who overruled a motion for a new trial today. McDermott became belligerent, ex pressed hatred for the newspaper of which Mellett had been editor as well as publisher, and repeated threats to "kill somebody up there i when I get nut of this." I Pat also said that he would talk t later, hut would first see what hap ! pens to bis cn defendants, Ben Rud ncr, alleged bootlegger, and Louis Maze i. i Hull nor is believed to he the next ■man to he tried. ' Woman Found Dead in lied at Oak boro. Oakboro, Deo. 28.—Mrs. Lafayette ' Bury was fotiud dead in bed yester day at 4 a. m„ at her home on route ’ 1 after a lingering illness of heart 1 trouble. 1 I She was feeling right badly the night before atid the faintly Sat up watching whet) she told them that if they would *ll go to bed she believed '• she could ,r*st. So they, did a* she said and when they arose lat 4 found ’ her dead., , , ( , t f She leaves her husband and several r children, one brother, Mr. Monroe - Mclntyre, of this place, and one sts - ter, Mrs. Will Burris. t The barn where John Wilkes Booth 1 stabled his horse, and from which he s fled after the assassination of Presi e dent Lincoln, lias recently been pur chased bv the War Department for . $4.1)50. f 8 ‘ . j City Tax Notice r r A penalty of one per cent, t will be added to your City y Tax January Ist, 1927. Pay - today, and save the cost. n e " CHAS. N. FIELD, City Tax Collector. ! Nation Is Faced With Muddled Situation In | International Affairs i ; -css*** 1 ' ! “IN AGAIN. AGAIN, ~ETS f OF PRISON i Franklin. Ind., Jan. 1. —(A 3 )— ; Ralph Lee. notorious jail breaker. 1 awaiting trial here for the murder of Abner Peek, grocer, at Speed way City, an Indianapolis suburb, i several years ago, escaped from i the Johnson County jail last night ! for the third time. The attempt j was the tenth time that Lee has j escaped from various institutions ! of confinement since he was 13 j ' years old. He escaped from the Tennessee penitentiary some time ago. MORE THAN *100.000.000 TAXES IN SIX MONTHS j Collected for Federal Government in I North Carolina First Half of Fiscal] Year. Tribune Bureau, Sir Walter Hotel. I Raleigh, Jan. I.—More than SIOO. | j 000.000 in internal revenue was j looted in North Carolina by the ! United States Government during the last six months of 1026. or the first half of the present fiscal year, according to Gilliam Grissom, col lector of internal revenue, who today made public the figures for the six months period ending December 31. With collections to dilate amounting! roughly to $100,475,000. allowing j $500,000 for the sale of stamps on the final day of December, which had not yet been reported, this is a gain of approximately $8,000,000 over the collections for the first six month,- of 1025, according to Mr. Grissom, the collections from July 1 to December j 31. 1025. amounting to $02,575,000. Thus at the present rate ot | revenue collections—and there is nothing to indicate that they will not keep up at the present rate — | the collection for the present fiscal year should run more than $200,000.- 000, according to Mr. Grissom. During the first 30 days in Decem ber just closed, ami without counting Collections for December 31 which | should total nearly $500,000. the j revenue collected in this state ! amounted to $16,185,000 as com i pared with collect inns of $16,0,38.- jOOO for the entire month of Decem ] her, 1025. approximately $150,000 j more than in the same month last t.rear, with the likelihood that it will j actually amount to at least $500,000 more. Thus the increase in collections for the last six- months of the year just dosed was nearly $8,000,00(1 more than for the corresponding six months of 1025, showing a gain of more than $1,000,000 a month. And of this vast amount of federal tax money collected in this state, more than 75 per cent is from flic tax on tobacco and chiefly cigarettes. And from all indications, the de mand for tobacco anil cigarettes in growing instead of decreasing, ac cording to Mr. Grissom. Thus North Carolina’s c'aitn as the fourth state in the amount of federal taxes paid seems to rest secure for another year at least. Another Victim of the Tennessee Floods. (By International News Service.) Nashville. Tentt., Jan. I—Down the rushing waters of the flood-swol len Cumberland River plunged the victim, hanging frantically to th*! upper side of a log. The waters, swerved and eddied, threatening im- j j mediate destruction at every few! j feet. Still he held on for dear life. I | Spectators gaged in awe, fearing ■ ! every minute would be the last for ■ j the unfortunate river victim. Then ! the log struck a pilar under a] bridge and hurled hint into the mud* d.v waters. A few breathless moments and the victim came up, starting a brave attempt to gain an island near • ] the wharf. But he had miscalculated, j When he was within thirty feet of ' ■ land he swam into another wliirl ' j pool. Twice he eame tip, and each ' time brought exclamations and inur ’ muns of pity from the onlookers, who were now standing breathless.' The ‘ third time he eanie up there was a 1 hush, ami then, after a brilliant 1 struggle, the little bundle of fur I folded into n watery grave, another ‘ victim of the xvrath of the Tennessee l floods. . . ' The victim wait a tiny cotton-tail i mbbit; tho witnesses, passengers on 1 an out-going re'ief train. \ Tar Heel Injured in Grand Rapids. ! Grand Rapids, Mieh., Jan. 1. —(A 5 ) .) —G. M. Mitchell, aged 45, president . i of the G. M. Mitchell T.umber Com . I pany, of Lansing, N. 0., was hit by . an automobile ns he was on his way to his hotel here last night, and is in a critical condition in a hospital. " He was here on a business trip. HOLIDAY NOTICE I | ‘SATURDAY, JANUARY Ist, 1927 9 P being a legal holiday the banks of Concord will not fee I open for business. I ‘ CONCORD NATIONAL BANK I CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Jl THE TRIBUNE I PRINTS TODAY’S NEWS TODAY! ' —i. ■ i. ... ■■■■■■■■■.. L-:-=a - NO. 309 1 sm Not Since World War Has United States Faced a More Muddled Interna- | tional Situation. ASKS PRESS TO STAND WITH Httt There Are No Prospects j Now That Mexican and .jj Nicaraguan Questions 1 i Will Be Settled Soon. ! Washington, Jan. I.—(A 3 )—Tim .• ! dawning ot* 1027 finds the United, |j| States facing an international tion inoro muddled perhaps than any -2 since the World War. | Prospects of an early settlement at 4 i tlie Nicaraguan and Mexican ques* * It ions do not appear bright, and Presi- , dent Coolidge lias appealed to the press of the country to show “au I American attitude" and stand behind I the administration's efforts to uphold u I existing standards of international ft i law. \ The civil strife in Nicaragua, where American naval forces have heeii landed to protect American lives- ami property, and the controversy over the new Mexican oil and land laws which took effect last, midnight, re-. 1 maiueil in status quo as far as this country's policy is concerned, but [both questions are developing news ] turns with regnrds to the individual J parties concerned. Adolfo Diaz, conservative prosidtqifc of Nicaragua, who has been rebog* S nized by the United Mtates, is mar* shalling his forces to stay the advnncai A of the liberal army headed by Jugit ' B. Sacasa. former vice president, wnro ! is recognized by Mexico, after having denied charges that he was receiyjttj" aid from American bankers, and res fused a meditation offer by his neigh* | bnr. Costa Rica. VIOLENT DEATHS IN NORTH CAROLINA | Number Last Year Exceeded 1500. Vj Autos Took Largest Toll. a Raleigh. X. C\. Jan. I.—(A*)—Vio lent deaths in X'nrrh Carolina last :<| year exceeded 1.500. State Hoard of Health reports » show 1.313 violent deaths during the v f| first 11 months of the year. This ' number does not include deaths from the violent forms of disease. Automobiles accidents again took the largest toll. In 105 the total was 376, This year it was 352 in Xovcm- ■■■s her with one of the heaviest months to bo added. Burns came next in .fatal results, (j The first eleven months of 1026 saw ’! 245 Tar Heels burned to death.- Di*- camber was expected to run the total J to nearly 300. In 1025 250 died from § this cause. Homicides showed a slight dr-; ; crease. The estimated number in 1026 was 225. based on 1024 for the | first eleven months. In 1025 them were 260. Suicides ran slightly better than ■ even, an estimated 135 against 12)4 in 1025. Geld Dust Twins in State Prison. Raleigh. X. <\. Jan. I.— UP)—' The State's Pri'-ou has its "Gold Dust . i Twins.” They are "Sunshine” (Jake) a Jones and “Evolution" (Junius) -| Poo’.e. Both are negroes. Both wear * 'broad grins, anil neither measures I five feet tnll. i Jake, better known as “Sunshine,r! j| 1 ] is only 13. Welfare workers are now' .attempting to get him out. lie ii | doing five years for shooting a whitd I playmate. ; ] "Evolution” is 23 and tins fotff i years to go lor larceny. Makes Guncotton of Garbage, m J Say*- 3 i Berlin. Jan. I.—Guncotton or art?* 1 ficial silk may be manufactured from garbage of cities, it is claimed, mi-! 1 dor a method evolved by Kurt Oer*. *i son. a Berlin engineer, of sifting anti subjecting all cellulose matter to * ; 1 special treatment. > By distilling such matters as pota* to parings and pieces of wood lie ( claims to produce tar, charcoal an,!. t acetic acid. A large plant is being, constructed here under his specifica* . tions. Take Safe From Bank | I Westforil, Ark., Jan. 1 .—(A*)—Robe ! bers early today backed a truck td the front door of the Bank of West- f ford, loaded the tiaDk’s safe into the car. and drove away. C. C. Stock, ’• cashier, estimated the contents of the ’) safe at $2,500. The last seen of the t truck it was being driven north to* - ward Fayetteville. y . fjiftßm y Willie Hoppe is exhibiting superb s balkline form in’ practice work of I. hi* coming meeting with Erich Hag* fi enlncher for the 18.2 crown.