Phone 357 For Space In The National Publicity Edition *???????? - _ -v m **???? * * THE WEATHER * ^5 * Fair tonight and Satur- * V^y^QfllnlL^. ^/y *" * day. Warmer Saturday. * III |l||lll?Wfi3K^ (ffl * Moderate uesterly triads * VOL. XIV. FINAL EDITION. ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 16, 1924. EIGHT PAGES. NO. lrT Working On Substitute McNary-Haugen Measure Coolidge and Cabinet (imsidering Plan for Relief ?if Farm er Which Would Pay Export Equalization Fee When Foreign Market on Farm Ry DAVID I^AWItKVCK (C?p>rrf|hU 1924, By Thi Adnnctl Washington, May 15.?President Coolidge and his Cabinet are considering a new plan for agricultural relief proposed by the International Farm Congress and suggested by W. I. Drum mond, chairman of its board of governors. It may prove a sub stitute for the McNary-Haugen bill. Although it is not politics for them to say so at this tinse some of the proponents of the Mc N.vy-IIaugen bill are ready tb accept the new plan. Informally some members of the: administration have approved it. | For, briefly, it involves no excessive Government appropriation, no mar keting machinery of a Governmental kind, no interference by the Govern ment In private business, no r?quire i;?".it t. merchandise any portion ??f farm products or any disturbance ? t e>'Mint channels of trade. But it does involve the use of the principle of the protective tariff. Here are the essential points In the acheme: "Whenever . the President finds that there is a surplus for export of a principle agricultural or live stock product, together world price basis of such a product so low as to cause distress to American pro ducers thereof by reason of the price received for the exportable portion controlling and depressing the domestic price, he shall declare an emergency in respect to the pro duct concerned. Whenever an emergency has been so declared, an export equalisation fee shall be paid upon each portion of the product concerned as Is ex ported. Such fee shall be approx imately equivalent to the tariff upon Imports into the United States of the product concerned, per unit : of each product, less a sufficient percentage to prevent excessive im ports. "An excise tax shall be levied upon all of the product concerned which is sol during the emergency period. The excise tax shall be calculated to produce an amount sufficient to pay the export equaliza tion fee as nearly as may be estima ted together with all expenses of operating the plan. "An Emergency Export Corpora tion shall be created. Its directors shall consist of the Secretary of Agriculture, the Secretary of Com merce, the Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of the Treasury and one other, appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The director so appointed shall be chair man and managing director. The corporation shall have no capital stock. It shall be empowered to levy and collect the excise tax. pay the equalization fee and conduct all other business In connection there with." In order to operate while getting under way. the corporation would be authorized to borrow not to ex ceed $5,000,000. Also it would be empowered to borrow- as against fu ture tax collections in case they did not arrive in sufficient volume at times to meet administration expen ses but the borrowing would be done In the open market, certificates of indebtedness being Issued the same as In any other business . They -would bear interest at current rates and be payable on or bofore the close of the emergency period. The excise tax would be collected either in the form of certificates or the levying of stamp tax** on e??ch barrel or sack of flour or they would be aatached to exporters' bills of lading. In the case of animal pro ducts. It has been suggested that they be taxed at the packing plant. Regardless of whore It Is paid, It would be charged bark to ... paid by the producer or grower. An Illustration worked out by Mr. Drtimmond Is as follows: "Domestic price of wheat Is liased on a world price which Is $1.00 per bushel. The tariff Is about 46 cents. The crop Is about 700,000,000 bushels above seed re quirement*. The exportable sur plus Is 100.000.000 bushels. Levy an excess tax of six cents per bushel on 700,000,000 bushels and It would yield a revenue of $42,100, 000. Then an export equalization fee of 40 cotrts would be paid at the noit of export amounting to about $40. 000,000 to cover expenses or to be rebated to those upon whom a tax had been levied The result would be that the domestic price would bo $1.00 less six cents excite tax plus 40 cents In export fee or a total of 91.34 as the final {Trice of wheat. If desired a higher or lower s^ale could be used. Illustration: pay an export fee of 60 cents a bushel This would require an excise fax of 4.6 cents and result In a n?t Increase of 61.4 cents per bushel." The Internationa) Farm .Congress It one of the conservative farm bo dies and la opposed to the Govern BOX EXPLODES SERVANTS HURT (By Til* AMMfitid PrtM) Peking, May 16.?A box which an unknown messenger brought as a gift to Dr. Wel lington Koo, Chinese foreign minister, today exploded and critically Injured the three ser vants whom the minister had ordered to open It. Dr. Koo was In another room of hid residence and was not hurt. SURRENDERS PERMIT HANDLE NARCOTICS Wilmington. May 16? Dr. Harry Robinson of Chadburn was yester day forced to surrender his permit to handle narcotics after pleading guilty of violation of the Harrison antl-narcatlc act. LANGLEY IN STATE NERVOUS COLLAPSE Washington, May 16.?The condi tion of Representative Langley of ? Kentucky is described today as Be-I rlous. He is in a state of nervous - collapse and has displayed symptoms of Blight cerebral hemorrhage. Re turning here from Kentucky where he was convicted In connection with the Issuance of liquor permits Lang ley became 111 almoat immediately. GEORGE REMUS CLAIMS HE BOUGHT IMMUNITY Washington. May 16.?A detailed atory of payments of "protection money" aggregating more than a quarter of a million dollars to Jess Smith, friend and constant compan ion of former Attorney General Daugherty waa told to the Senate Daugherty committee today by George Remus of Ohio, who said that he made a fortune out of Illicit liquor traffic sales before he was convicted and sent to the Atlantu penitentiary. HURT VIRGINIA ROADS COUNTED HALF MILLION Richmond. Va., May If?Damage to Virginia roads by recent floods waa tentatively estimated at half a million dollars by Chairman Shirley of the 8tate Highway Commission today. CLOSING LAST GAP ON WOODVILLE ROAD Construction forces moved In on the last unpaved segment of the con i crete road to Woodvllle Friday, and 'Indications arc that this 1075 footl ,ltap In the pavement about three' miles from Rllxabeth City will bei 'closed up within the next two weeks.' { But for a threatened material shortage), It would be reasonably 'safe to predict that the gap would be closed next week, weather per I milling. i METHODISTS REFUSE ? TO INCREASE BISHOPS| Sprlngfleld, Mass., May 12.?A| motion to Increase the number of bl-1 shops waa defeated at the Methodist j I Episcopal Conference here today by |a vote of 4 61 to 84 4. The report of the committee on episcopacy reduc ing the Kplscnpal areas by one wss adopted by a large majority. ? COTTON MAHKET iNew York, May It?Cotton fu-. tares opened this morning at the I following levels: May 21.78; July' 29.25; October 25.SO; December' { 24.72; January 24.42. At two o'clock thla afternoon fti ,tures were quoted as follows: May! 21.40; July 22.07; October 25 22;, 'December 24.20; January 24.42. New York, May 12?Spot cotton closed quiet thla afternoon, declining KS points. Middling 21.12. Fa-] tnrea closed at the following levels: I j May 31: it; July 22.2?; October |2R.1I; December 24.50; January 24.14; March 24.22; August 27.12.1 mastic price* are protected by the < tariff In other commodities. If the MeNary-Haugen bill Is beaten as, seems likely. thU nlan will be j ;Wry Commentaries on Rye Question Dr. Nicholas Murray'Butler, president of Columbia University, shown In his office surrounded by one-half of one per cent of the mall that has showered upon him since he opened lire on prohibition. Hundreds of them, from all Darts of the nation, take the educator to task whlls hundreds more pat him on the hip, ns it were. CATHOLIC SISTERS TAKE OVER HOSPITAL; That the mana':?ment of tho Eliz abeth City Ilnppital would bo taken over by a Kenan Catholic sisterhood became generally definitely known Friday when the Independent of that date carried a newt) item to that effect. Members of the sliterhood are styled Sisters of Humility of Mary and seven of them are to assume charge of the hospital on June 1, when the directors of the Chamber 1 of Commerce, who some weeks ago I agreed to surrender their lease to Dr. John Raliba, owner of the hos pital property, terminate their threa years' management of the institu tion. The hospital property had been converted into an apartment houso three years ago when the Chamber of Commerce sponsored a movement to re-open it. The movement achieved its object and the hospltp.l was opened as a community enter prise and has been kept open ever since. However, the directors of the Chamber of Commerce, who as sumed the management of the hos pital. were not able to operate it without a deficit and elected to sur render their lease this spring rather than go through the mill of another campaign for funds for current ex pensed and outstanding obligations when Dr. Saliba agreed to take It over. QUAKES DESTROY ENTIRE VILLAGES Constantinople, May 16. ? Dispatches today report furth er earthquakes have been fe)t at Serzrom, Hassankale, anri Kars. and entire villages In the neighborhood of Hansau kale are reported to have been destroyed. The number of ad ditional victims Is given as 120. FIRMLY AGAINST INFIDELIC THEORIES Austin, Tex., May 16.?Questions 'of Darwinism and Modernism wero placed squarely before the National General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church here today in the first business session of tho ninety-fourth convention. The problem came to the front In the resolution that the church take a stand "squarely, fixedly and Im movably against there Infldellc theo ries." CAROLINA MINISTER INJURED IN ATLANTA Atlanta, May 16?Rev. R. L. Byrd of St. I'aul, North Carolina, while attending the Southern Baptist Con vention her?? was run down yester day and seriously Injured by an au- I i tomoblle. Movement To Favor More Dignity In U. S. Courts Lawyer Who Favor* Black Kobe* While Pleading Caitei lie lieve* Thousand lawyers Now Planning Visit England Will Come Back Converted to His Viewpoint Ily iUJBEHT T. HMAM, (Ofyriaht 1024. Bv Th. Now York, May 16.?A New York | judge returning from - Europe h? come out In favor of compelling all I lawyers to wear black gowns whIK* | pleading a cane or representing * client In all but the most Inferior of the Federal, state and county courts Thin Judge wan greatly Impressed by the dignity of the courts In Kurope. especially thoae In Great Britain and he la confident that added dignity and authority would be lent to Am erican courts If the custom of gown ing not alone the bench hut the bar-ji rlsters as well were followed in thli ? country. The opinion of a single judge on a revolutionary proposal of this sort j might or might not be regarded a4 < significant hv the great mass of at torneys and Jurists. Ilut the move gains Immense Importance In view of; the fact that a thousand or mon members of the American Bar Asso- j elation are going to England this! summer to bo the guests of the Brlt-j Ish bar and to study the methods | and customs of the British courts. Many-of the American lawrera will] continue their Journey to the contl-i nent and take a peek at the courts of the other nations. It Is the confident belief of the; New York Judge that virtually all of the American nttorneys will come back Imbued with the same Impres- j slons which were made upon him ? and that they may land their support to the suggestion that American! courts be surrounded wljji great for mality. Unquestionably formality makes the reap*et. either conscious ly or unconsciously. Here In the state supreme court when the Judge enters to take his place on the bench, all spectators, lawyers and the Indi viduals at the bar are compelled to the morning when the crier makes ( his call, but unless to any and all In terruptions, recesses and other occs-, slons when the Judge leaves the bensh. In most of the American courts.' even the Judgea are not gowned. In a great many states only the supreme justice appear In the black flowing robes. Kven 7n the lower branches of the Federal courts tho wearing of gowns Is not compulsory. Therefore ft In evident that before the movement tJ compel lawyers to wear gowna can make much headway, there must first be a general application of the rule to the Judges of the various courts. Leading member* of the Ameri can bar have contended for som! lime that thin country could learn much from a study of British meth ods of Jurisprudence. Chief Justice) Taft of the United Htatea Supreme! Court has himself made ? personal! itudy of the Rrl'lah courts and Is) counted among those who believe' that every vantage of dignity ahould be given to the American courts. The! chief Justice hns viewed with a great; deal of satisfaction the pilgrimage; the lawyers of this country are aboutt to make abroad. Committees of the American Tlar Association from time to time have) none on record as saying tbat great- , sr reapeet for the law should flow from greater general respect for tho cburta of the land. It Is perhaps a minor thing to say that gowning the lawyers as well aa the bench would make for respect, but one Judge at least believes the experiment worth trying. When tbe American lawyer* re turn from Europe In late August an* Reform In Court Insanity j Trials Urged By Alienist I From Hank* of IVyohialrwIs Tlifiiisrlvrs Conies Most Se vere Castigatioii c?f So-Called Expert Testimony When Jnrv Is (Called oil to Decide as to Defendant's Sanity WILL JEOPARDIZE SMALL BUSINESS Provision of New Tax Bill for Making 1*111)110 Tax He-' turns Would lie Disastrous, Says Secretary Hoover. Washington, May 16.?Secretary Hoover In a formal statement today declared that the provision of the new tax bill of opening tax returns for Inspection will jeopardize the small business and place It at the mercy of Its largo competitors. The secretary recalled that tho publicity of tax returns during the period of 1867 to 1872 contributed to the "industrial and financial cha os of the time" and charged that the provisions of the new bill would op en new fields for fradulent concerns. SHE LOST COUPLE OF HUSBANDS THAT WAY Loa Angeles, May 16.?Edna Wal lace Hopper, actress and exponent t i the modern theory of rejuvenation, today announced that she will b married to a British army officer In China next month. The Los Angelc: Examiner says she declined to revet! the name of her prospective hut band, explaining that she had 'a'l ready lost a couple" that way. DR. CHAHK IMPROVES Durham, May 16?Dr. Harry W. Chase, president of the North Car olina University, Is recovering from an operation for appendicitis. CiKTS HOAD KKNTKXCK FOR DIUVIXU CAB INTOXICATED A sentence of 30 days on the roade was Imposed on Arthui Miller, col ored, In the recorder's court Thurs day when Trial Justice Spence found him guilty of operating a motor car while under the Influence of liquor. On the night of the preceding Tueo day, Miller driving toward town, ran Into F. W. M. Butler, one of Eliza beth City's most respected negroes, driving toward Weeksvllle, Just this side of Dead Man's Curve. Miller noted an appeal and was required to glvo bond In sum of $7&. Wiley Long was taxed with the costs for operating a motor car wltn defective light* and two negro de fendants. Ed Wilson and Wlllla'ii Walton, were meted out Justice In the same measure. RAILROADS OBTAIN INJUNCTION ON RATE* Wilmington, May 16?The Atlan tic Coast Line and the Seaboard Air Line yesterday obtained obtained a temporary Injunction preventing the Interstate rate on water cargoes panning through the port from being placed in effect, returnable next week at Raleigh. The decrease ordered by the commissioner was about ten per cent in rates. WILL NOT TRY FLOAT ROAI) IN PERQUIMANS Hertford is to have somthlng of Elizabeth City's experience with a forry detour when, probably within the next two weeks, work Is begun preparatory to paving the causeway leading to the Perquimans river bridge at the town limits of Hert ford. A barge used as a ferry when MnXutt was building his "floating concrete" road across Machelhe's Island and the swamps of the Cam iMi mainland will he used and will | be put Into service on the Perquim ans, but the State will not attempt to float the Perquimans road. They will put piling under it, instead. AMENDMENT SEEKS TO DHAW TEETH STRIKES Washington. May 1f?.?A rallro?n| strike or lockout threatening a trans portation emergency would result automatically in nuits bv the Govern ment to throw the rond* affected In to * receivership, under an amend ment to the Howell Oarkley bill ap proved by the Senate subcommittee today. DR. SUN YAT SEN IS ALIVE AND WELL (Bv Th? Hons Kong, May 18. ? Dr. Sun Yat Son, president of thu South China government, whose death waa reported to have occurred Tueaday. la alive and perfectly well, bla confi dential secretary today declar ed emphatically to a represen tative of The Aaaoclated Pre?a aent from Bon$ Kong to Or. By KOHKItT T. SMALL Cof yrl(ht, 1924. ky Th? Adtanc* New York, May lti.?There has been quick resp&nse both in the med ical and legal professions here to the suggestion of I)r. Carlos P. Mac Donald. who was an alienist for the itate in the first two trials of Harry Kendall Thaw, that a curb be applied in the future to the no-called "ex pert" testimony in criminal cases infc solving a plea of insanity. Dr. MacDonald has held up to public contumely the spectacle of two sets of alienists at a murder trial. The same long rambling hy pothetical question is asked of the apposing alienists. One set avows that from tne details and circum stances set forth in the question there is not the slightest doubt in the world that the defendant was insane at the time the crime was committed. The second set avows that from the details and circumstances set forth in the question there is not th<> slightest doubt in the world that the defendant was of sound and discern ing mind at the time the crime was committed. Then, snys Dr. MacDonald, a poor jury ifi2 l.i} nen is supposed to do c!d? will of experts is right, ft is itmall v- nder, he adds, that a rich man. pc?i aed of murder, should be rblo to keep his case dragging liausc *urly thr ugh the courts of two :;tates for m ?i? than 17 years. No one is better able to speaK with authority as to the so-called ex p< rts ti'jn Dr. MacDonald. He had devoted tli* greater part of his life to psychiatry and has been an ob server If tin* a participant in somo of the most fnwous Insanity canes of his time. He : lso has been connect ed with soin sf the country's lead ing Instil'itlcnr; for the care and study or th<- mentally unbalanced. has seen "brother medical men" go on the witness stand time after time.' and swear Just as they were paid to awear. Ho Intimates very plainly that If by chance they had been employed by the other ' side their testimony would have been di ametrically the opposite of what It was. He also has seen doctors pose as experts when even the most cas ual cross examination by an able dis trict attorney shattered their testi money to the winds. It is time for the evil of conflict ing expert testimony to stop, Dr. MacDonald believes, and his princi pal remedy for a situation which Is a "stench in the nostrils of the peo ple" Is that all questions of Insanity shall be eliminated from the trial of a criminal before the ordinary Jury. If there is to be a plea of Insanity it should be entered after a verdict on the facts and the facts and tho facts alone has been rendered. If the defendant Is found guilty and his at torneys believe he was Insane at th* time of the crime, they might call for a sanity commission at once and have It appointed by the courts, with the experts paid by th?> state to ren der an Impartial verdict and to re ceive certain fixed fees, regardless of what thtff flnnl decision might be. If the defendant were acquitted In a trial and the district attorney be lieved him insane and a menace to the community, the state likewise would be permitted to apply for a lunacy commission. Thus the rights of the Individual and of the people at large would both be protected. Harry Thnw wns acquitted at his second trial for the murder of Stan ford White on the ground that he was Insane at the time the shooting on Madison Square Garden roof oc curred. The Thaw alienists attemp ted to show that while Thaw was In sane and Irresponsible at the exact moment of the shootlnK he was per fectly sane and safe at the time of his trial and should be released. The state's alienists successfully combat ted that contention. Dr. MacDonald has been more un 4paring on his profession than most >f the lay critics who have discussed them from time to time and he bluntly says there are 'experts who think more about enrnln* their fcei than about the ethics of their pro fession or the actual telling of tho truth. The doctor also says It Is not Talr to expect a Judre and J-iry to follow the Intricacies and tho <1 >vloun ways of expert testimony whan they have no means really of distinguish ing the good expert from the unscru pulous one. for sometimes the latter Is Just as plausible if not mire so than the man actually trying to do his duty. The New York Bar Association Is lo be asked to take the matter up and It Is possible entirely new legis lation msy be planned for con ddera tlon at the next sitting of tho legis lature at Albany. BONUS B1LI. VETOED HOUSE WILL OVERRIDE Wellington, May 16? Pri?ld?st Coolidft* ye?t?rd*r vaU>ed the bonu* bill and the mattor wilt come to a