*???????? * THE WEATHER * * Fair tonight and Sun ? * day. Xot much change * in tern prrature. Diniin * ishing .V. n". tcinds. *****??? VOL. XIV. FINAL EDITION. ? ???????? m 1 ? C1RC.UL 4TIO\ ? * Friday * 2.343 Copies * * ? ? SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 2. 1924. EIGHT PAGES. NO. 29 DEATH HELD AT BAY BY NATION'S WAR PRESIDENT No Change Is Still Word From Wilson's Bedside Iron Will All That's Unbroken of War-Scarred Leader at Whose Voice Whole World Once Stopped to Listen and Pay Homage (By Th? Attocialrd PrtM) Washington, February 2 ? At three' o'clock this afternoon there was no evidence of any material change In the condition of Woodrow Wilson. Washington, Feb. 2. ? An official statement issued at 11:30 this morn ing by physicians attending Wood row Wilson said "the former Presi dent is growing steadily weaker" and "is too exhausted to talk." "It looks as though Mr. Wilson would pull through the day," Dr. Grayson stated, "but that is subject to the hazard of a sudden change/ , "He has been able to take very little nourishment. He has had some sleep and no pain. He recog nizes those about him but is too ex hausted to talk," tho bulletin said. 4,Our efforts in the main are directed toward keeping him comfortable." Steadily losing ground lie contin ues to grow weaker and weaker, but having lasted through a -night whicu.j his physicians had feared would I bring the end, tbey cannot predict > how long his remarkable vitality will hold out.* Although he had tak en no nourishment in almost 24 \ hours and was disinclined to take , even sips of water, his pulse, respir ation and temperature were practi cally normal, hut he was Bteadilv j growing weaker. Dr. Grayson said] at three o'clock Saturday afternoon j that the sick man's condition had shown no material change except for a slow and very certain advance to ward complete exhaustion and that his lifo wa.s simply ebbing, ebbing away. Moriiinu llullctin Washington, Feb. 2. ? President WilHOti had a fairly restful night but continues to gradually lose ground. Day break llullctin Washington, Feb. 2. ? Daybreak found the silence at the Wilson home unbroken since late last night when Dr. Grayson, the former Presi dent's physician, said that 'Wilson was gravely ill and growing weaker. There was comfort in the lack of any official statement, however, because of the promise of Dr. Grayson that if any development warranted dur ing the night an announcement would be made. Washington, Feb. 2.-*- With llf? slowing ebbing away, Woodrow Wil son, American war President, was reported at o'clock this morning a-* just about the same as earlier In the morning when It was reported that his condition was gradually getting worse and that there was apparently no hope of recovery. McADOO DENIES WAS ON DOHENV PAYROLL I-os Angeles, Feb. 2. ? William G. McAdoo yesterday vixorousiy denied that ho was on the Doheny payroll, as Doheny testified, except for IiIh law concern being retained to liandte certain Interests for Doheny in Mex ico. COOPEKS INDICTED ON CIUM1NA1. CHAHOKS (Br The A?w|i?'.rd If***.' Wilmington, Feb. 2. ? Lieutenant Covernor W. n. Cooper. Thomas Cooper,, his brother, Horace Cooper, liis son. and- Clyde Lasslter were to day indicted by the Cnited States grand Jury here on criminal charges growing out of iho failure of the Commercial Hank of Wilmington a year ago. The Coopers were officials of the bank and Lasslter was a customer. They are expected to go on trial Monday. hPKCIAL MKKTIXd Tt'KHIKW Ki ItKKA IX)IK>K MRMIIKKH A special program will be given at Eureka Lodge Tuesday night at 7:30. and TTON MARK FT -New York. Feb. 2. ? Spot cotton, closed , steady ."Middling4 3 4.35 an ad vance of 35 points. Futures, closing hid. March 34.03, May 34.33. July 33.00, Ort 28.33, Der. 27.80. Neir York, February 2 ? Cotton futures opened this mornng at the following levels: Mtrch 38:80; May 34:14; July 32:85; October *8:20; December none. Divorce Figures ITorc arc i?hotnrrnj?hs of M-. nr<1 Mrs. Albert i:. Lt-lnnd, i?;r:vln?nt fisurts In, ChSr:mo'.s lat^t sensa tional Ulvorcc tvinl. Lt '.antl is Kuintj his wifo for divorc?\ nnmitii? Rev. Carl J>. Cu: Chicago j?a lor, uf corespondent. AUDIENCE ENJOYS LECTURE ON PARKS Eli/.uhelh Oily People De lighted With I)r. C. D. Wil limn mhi's Comprehensive De*eriptions anil I'ieliiren. Killing till' Court lltrtiso to capn city, a thouroughly interested aud ience was hold enthralled by_tho en^ TPTtatning locTiTro given by Dr. ChasT D. Williamson, representative of the National Park Service which is a branch of the 1 ? n 11 ???! EUntos Popart* ment of the Interior. Friday night at 8 o'clock. About a hundred colored sliders were used, giving clear and beauti ful views of the 13 National Parks in tho United States. With each pic ture Dr. Williamson explained and described* the scenes in a Comprehen sive and Interesting manner. The object - DAVID IiAWItKM'K Copyright. 1924. by The Advance i Washington, Feb. 2. ? Out of de- . fereqce to Secretary of th? Treasury! Mellon, the Republicans on the : House ways and means committee! i have decided to report to the House* I the Mellon tax plan with the changes already made. Mr. Mellon has insisted on a rec-J ( ord vote in the House on his propost-j 1 1 ion which' is taken to mean that he ! will not compromise till He sees the! (necessity for it. Although the bill -as it will be re-1 I ported to the House provides for a ? 25 per cent surtax rate, even the I Republican leaders themselves con cede it cannot pass the House ani they anticipate a compromise at ( I per cent for the maximum surtax for incomes of $100,000 and above. , I A few days auo Representative i T^ong worth. the Republican House I leader, beg An negotiations with the I Democrats In the hope of securing ? .enough pledges to make sure of a j per cent surtax rate. Some of the Democrats insisted that they would : like to be assured that the President i and Secretary of the Treasury woul 1 , agree to 35 per cent before they j I would abandon the Democratic pro-J i gram which provides for 14 per cent. J Mr. Mellon would not budue and the whole negotiation fell through. So ] the only thing left to do was to re-1 'port the bill to the House as Mr. I Mellon wanted it and the rates will I really be doeided by a vote of the ' House instead of committee action. The vote in the Republican con ference among the members of the i ways '-and means committer was 1 1 to H for the Mellon plan. If the ! Democrats had been permitted to bo , present and cast their votes their 11 ballots combined with, the throe jioet J ative Republican votes would have I made the vote 14 to 11 against the . Mellon plan. Rut the threo Republicans have agreed not to vote against the Mel lon plan when formal notion Is taken by the full eomniilteo as they do not wish to bo in the position of prevent I Ins the Mellon plan from getting be fore the House itself for a r*CQr por ront rato either, a^ tho Republican majority Is slim and tho Democrats In tho upper Hon so aro inclined to follow tho Garner plan of 4 4 per cont surtax ratos. Should it become necessary for the administration to compromise on a n r? per cont rato, tho chancos aro an offort will ho made to nut the annli=_ radon or tbo rato as nigh as possible in the upper brarkots. Tho more In - ! co.mes that would bo subject to a 25 , pnr ouut fnrtnv tbo hot toy tlw Tf-n* : ury fools tho business condition of the country will become. Secretary Mellon Is reported to b< disappointed with the 'action of tin1 House ways and moans committoo ir making the 2f> per cont reduction on earned incomes apply only to perrons' with an Incomo of $20,000 or under. | He h said to fool that if tho princi ple of the thing Is sound? and that seems to be rocopnlzod by both pat ties then there should bo no penal ty on brains and no restraint upon individual Initiative. As it stands now many diet or* and , lawyers and others who have inndoi a success In their professions will not | pot tho benefit of tho 2f> por cent r"- , durtion on earned Incomes. They will stand on tho same footln ai other Individuals who do not earn J their Incomes but clip coupons from Investment of funds lnh? i m-il ur hc rumulatod by other persons for them. The professional man has an average of ir> or 20 years within which to build a trust for his fam ily. He cannot pass his practice or: ability on to another generation.! whereas the man with capital ran bequeath that to another. As mat- J tors stand now,- the doctor or lawyer' with an income of $30,000 a year pays exactly tho same tax as the man with an estate of approximately a million dollars whose annual Income from his Investments Is In the neigh borhood of $30,000. Tho Democrats have proposed h J reduction of on*r third on all earned ! Incomes without limit but they vot ed for tho $20,000 maximum in Irom- ! mlttee so that, unless the House it self changes tho bill as reported 1 from the ways and means committee, : that will b? the upper limit for the one-fourth reduction on earned In- < comes. I Bell To Signal Death of Wilson ? Ill tllf event Of the death or of former President Wood row Wilson prior lo 10 o'clock at ni^lit. Chief Klora of tile Kllz abeth City fire department will be communicated with and the fire bell will toll as an expres sion or reaper! and honor due the War President at lii.s pass ing. The hell will not toll atter Hi o'clock at nlitht. hut The Advance will notify Ciller Klora Sunday mornltiK should ' Mr. Wilson die between 10 ? o'clock --and morning. WANTED REGAIN FORMER HOME Mrs. Ida Ferelice of (lunxlrn County Olijertrd Violently l? Occupancy l?y Those Now Living There. An- -Wfort on-thn- --part of- Mr*. Ida Fere bee, widow of the late T. C. Ferebee, who died at his liome in I the Sawyer's Creek section of Cam-' den County about three years ago.! to regain possession or her home J which was sold under a mortgage! following Mr. Ferehee's ?|cath. U> force ended in Mrs. Ferebe-e's Itolni; put under a suspended judgment in the Camden County recorder's court Friday by the terms of which Mrs. Ferebee- will be dealt with by the courts in case she returns, to Cam den County within the next 1 2 months. According to apparently authentic reports received here Mrs. IVrebe-o got off the train at Helcross Thurs day morning and went at once to her former home, now occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Philip H urges*, armed with a revolver. Finding no one at home bul Mrs. Hurgess,. Mrs. Ferebee Is re ported to have fired her revolver in to the air or the ground a number of times and to have walked in. tell ing Mrs. Hurgess that she had com? to stay. Mrs. Hurgess went for her husband, and they notified Alfred Sawyer, present owner of the resl ?lenw. f Mrs. Ferebee's presence' and actions. Oscar HofNer. son-in law of Mr. Sawyer, went over to the Hurgess home to try to reason witn Mrs. Ferebee. but she emphatically declared that she would remain i ? the home, which was hers by right", and would resist by force and arms any efforts to remove her from if. When Mr. Hoffier left to get legal papers to serve on Mrs. Ferebee. sin went down to the swamp with her revolver for a bit of practice. Deputy Sheriff Kirk Tarkinglon of Camden with a posse, in which were Oscar Hofflcr and John Harnnrd. ar rived at the Hurgess home at. about 0:30. Mrs. Ferebee saw them com ing and ran up Into the attic where, with her gun on Deputy Tarkington. she dared them to dislodge her at their peril. When Mr. HofNer made some remark to the effect that h m'1 not believe the gun was loaded. 'hat she was in earnest, apparently, but with no Intention of hitting any body. She held- the posse at bay for tbmn lif.nr> until ? ? Hanmi'd, entering the attic as a friend who wanted to talk f n TT7 taking her off her guard and dis arming her. Mrs. Sal lie Kvans of Helcross asked Mrs. Ferebee to j.'o home with her and she was permitted to accept, the invitation with a guard about the house. Following the hearing In the re corder's court Friday. Mrs. Ferebee was taken to Norfolk bv her half brother. John Wliltehurvf of that city, who with Cooper Ferebee- of Elizabeth City, a son, gave- assurance that the provisions eif the court's judgment would be compiled with. TIIIIEE AUK kll.IKi) IN 0\S EXPLOSION Kansas City, Mo.. Fob. 2 . ? Three person* wtrrn' KHIfi'iT 1TR1I" "sever'al in jured In a gas explosion which shook the downtown district today. COURT OF APPEALS UPHOLDS ACTION I KK Cleveland. K? b. 2 Th?> action of President Leo of the Rrotherttood of Railway Trainmen In ousting: H*1 member* of the organization for their, participation In an unauthor ized strike of 1-020 was today upheld by the court of appeal*, a if judges eoneurrln?. A suit filed avaln Lee and other Officer* in behalf of the suspended member* a*ked for the appointment of a reeelVer to take over the prop erty and benefit fa ry fund* of the brotherhood and al*o requested the Insurance department to M declared unlawful and made a trust fund to be distributed to present and former members. First Action Will Be To Recognize Russian Soviet England'* New l.alior Ministry Will Doubtless Muke Its First Definite Move in Tliis Direction, Action Will Ef fect All Europe ami Extend Influence Into America lly Frank II. SIMONDS (opyriulit. 1fh!4. lly McClniv \e\v?*|?a|M?r Symllcflte Washington, Feb. 2. ? Beyond any question now, the first im portant act of the new British ministry will be the recognition of Soviet Russia. This step, moreover, is bound to have important reactions all over Europe and not impossibly add strength to the demand Sen ator Borah is championing in this country for American rec ognition. Examination of the motives of the British. Labor party. however, dis close political rather than cronomir objectives. The British working man has been told for many, many months that a long step toward re ducing unemployment will be taken when Russia Is recognized. Inflt>??H failure to recognize Russia and Trench militarism have been dwell, upon in England for three years as the chief causes of British domestic suffering. As far as the economic phase is concerned the experts, as contrasted with the politicians, are still agreed that little or no change in the trade of the world will result. They do not believe that Russia will for a J long thne be able to huv largely abroad and they do not believe that recognition will change much. Am , erica, which has been on the whole the steadiest In opposition to the 1,enln? regime, last year did nearly 2.r? per cent of Russian import busi ness. as against a little more than 30 per ccnt for Britain. Politically, however, the situation | is different. Labor has steadily cri 1 ticlzed the coalition government, J which assisted the various Russian movements to upset the Soviet. It seeks completely to reverse the for mer policies. To be sure, Ramsay MacDonald and ills associates, after a long and bitter struggle, succeed ed in checking Russian Influence in | their own ranks and have little sym pathy with the extreme Russian theories; but they remain sympathe tic with the Russian situation, a.< they interpret it. ami they mean to recognize Russia as a direct blow to the opponents of Labor in Britain. It Is not to. be doubted that the Laborltes believe th'at by recognizing Russia they will bring another radi cal government back into European : discussions and gain a valuable allv against the French. Having recog nized Russia they will certainly ask admission for the Slav state In the League of Nations. Then they will seek a similar admission for Ger many and expect the support of Rus sia for their pro-flerman and antl Krench policies generally. On the Continent the recognition of Russia is likely to take place with f /lHal . .rapidity. ?owt ? ? rrff states will fear to let any one gain exclusive advantages. Thus the Lit tle Entente, Czecho slovakia, Ttum^ 11 Li .i n it V u _ i j -Elm l;i, lii'hn lo oring the question up at an early confer ' frtrr** In Prague. fmd-^Pohrmf- hrt* al ready recognized the Soviets. Ruma nia is reported to have settled the Ressarablnn dispute, which would re move the only real obstacle to Ru manian recognition. Germany, of course, recognized the Russian reg ime In the famous f.enoa agreement of two years ago. France, alone of the Continental countries, poems at the moment un decided In the matter of Russia, yet she has "sent to Russia' Franklln Botiillon, who negotiated the Angora treaty, and there Is little question that this clever and experienced ne gotiator will Indicate the direction In which French In t < Hen nnd, if it lies in Hip way of nroirnHlrtn, histon ??!Ph artlon. Tin* difficulty for France as ront raxt ed with all other 1 countrh In that ?!?nned to testify before the Teapot Dome inquiry in Washington. Tho I summons directs 'him to bring all recoTtls of transactions through hi* house for the year ending December 1. 1022. central Slav stales, particularly Yu goslavia and Czecbo-Slovakia. To i this end she has already made her [treaty with Yugoslavia over Flume, i which balances the French agree ! luent with C/echo-Slovakla. Slnci tli< < '/e<;hs ii re very sympathetic with I the Russians-. Italy would score over j France ill Prague if France hel l | back on recognition. Hut the larger aspect of the situa tion turns on the balance of power, and It Is odd to see the new Labor _iojviu:u-ment in Hrltain pltrofcing boldly out upon the path of all pre ceding Tory government?, nnd Lib ' rial as well. Short of flfebttn?1 i ranee, which Labor does not even dream of doing, the single resource Is -build up a group ?>f Continen tal stntes to restrain France. Hut I no coalition on the Continent Is pos jjlblo in the present state of Europe until there is some great power like ltu?sin to redress the balance. If, however, Russia comes back, takes a sent in f.enevn nnd a hand in the general game, then the French sit uation will be compromised. In addition Labor is taking a leaf out of Soviet strategy and making an open appeal to the radical ele ments in the various countries, no tably in France. In Italy the cam paign will have to be more circum spect, but it is not disguised that Labor looks with tin utility upon Mil - ?ollnl and would welocnto I. la down f xi 1 1 . That, too. Is why Mussolini will hardly take. ?i completely pro Europe.. Bto kojuo. must hi ? to sook lo nook to ?rnr