VOL. XIV. PINAL EDITION ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA* SATURDAY EVEN 1 NO. SKI'! KM HER la, 1924. .7. 7 . _ EOUK l'AOES NO. 218. A1 Smith Seems Only If Eire lion Day Were Tomorrow liidieatinu* Nil* ur?' that Nrw Vurli Would (?? Itopiilili ran liv brp' Majority J ? ny DAVID l-UVRRMf: IW*. Br Thi A?jiific?> t Till ? >* (ho m-?iin a iml.- )uumm-y fium "-iiau l?i ?H?a?t tliio-.uti unuallt all llu' .NarUtifik claim in ax-main i-OIH-al ?utuurni i "* Syracuse, NT. Y., Sept." 12. ? No bottcr~opportunity is us-" ually afforded to get a line oil Kfnpire Stale politics than the -state fair, especially on- Governor's Day. Democrats The writer found the New: York state political problem wrapped up in Governor A1 Smith. On whether he runs or not depends the fate of the ? 'Utional ticket of the Demo cratic party. ( So the natural tiling to do *a? to find out if poaalble from lh< Kovernor himself what ho Intend ? H? wan olwim in n,^. Krand -stand Iire.umably watclilut; the trotting rac.-a but alonfc.ldc of him were Norman K. Mack, na tional committeeman, and Wil liam H. K,e Kovernor forcefully ar gued in t lie negative. Norman Mack beckoned and the writer wan Invited to join the discussion. It wouldn't be proper to d fo rlorn- what was nald but even ho a solution of the perplexing prob lem would be no nearer. The leaden, especially' those to whom it meana much to have ih? "?f ,'c,lu'' 1,u" lh">unh, know At Smith can help them. They fear no other candidate can. They do not protest! incidenlaiiy to know how much Al Smith cnuld help the national ticket hut they think he would help It some. Now hh for the governor, lie owes much to IiIh party and want* to continue to lie of service to it. But he has had two terms and en gaged in three vigorous cam paigns*. There is no glory in the governorship which he lian not al ? ready enjoyed. And there in a ?^prospect of much more toil and tudlum with a legislature not en tirely Democratic. Beside*, tin governor is anxious to got hack to Private business. Public ser Yli?> in not remunerative to the honest official? It |H usually a burdensome expense. it s no secret that the governor doesu't want to run i?Kaln. He has told many people that. He |H sin cere a hunt It. If he has his way. he will make speeches for Davis and retire from the governorship. Hut will he have lils way? Tin practical politicians are pleading with him. Would he put himself In the position of refusing aid to the state and county tickets all along the line in an hour of dis tress? If he hopes for political advancement later on, will he re ceive the ?anie wholehearted sup port from the organization that he now enjoys or will there be re sentment because he did not make the fight thl^ year? Could he hope to b?- leader of a party which might harbor the thought that it would b<- In power but for his re tirement? Al Smith is a creature of al most unparalleled popularity In politics. The people who are for lilfD love him and those who nre against him are numerlcally smaller than any Democrat In New Yf*k state has had in gen eration* Hut this In a Presiden tial year when straight ticket* are voted. And New York is normal ly a Republican state. Four years ago Al Smith made a remarkable run. He was only GO. 000 behind Harding who carried the state by # million votes. Hut he was Just behind Just the same. Some Re publican* well Informed and un prejudiced. conceded today Al Smith's strength to be so great that he might even win the gov ernorship this time, even though Coolidge carried the state. And there's the rub. Would the politicians of other states accuse Al Smith and Tammany Hall of bad faith If the stats ticket won and the national ticket lost? It's a risk for any one to take who may want to be In the good graces of his party. If. on the other hand. Coolidge carries New England and other neighboring territory hy a uni formly heavy vote and New York shows a lesser margin as between the state ticket and the Dsvls llryan ticket It would be apparent that Al Smith had helped the na tional cause by making the race. ?? ,h"t ** elected. And that mean, two 1' h*rli work wllh 'he IKMMdhlllly that two year, hence the chieftain, of the party mar be after him again to make the raee for United state. Senator or Mometblng elaa to balp the local CO-OPERATE EOR COAST HIGHWAY llitirs Hope- tu llavc It Kept ill (IihiiI (ondilion for Tourist Travel l)ur iiijt Vi'int<>r. Klizubfth City. South Mills nnd E d o n l o ii u r e co-operating, through tli** State Highway Corn-! mission. with Wilmington. Savan-i nail, Georgia, and Jacksonville, Ftorlda. with a view of havtnir the South Atlantic Coastal Highway k?t?t hi Kimd condition through out the cumiuK winter, so that j tourist* from the East anil North I thin winter can be advised through the various automobile eluhs that this highway, while not hard sur faced an yet throughout lis .length, will he at least passable in all kinds of weather every day through the coming winter seas on. The most serious inconvenience that motorists over this route are now having to contend with in that part of the Coastal Highway between the Virginia line and the Albemarle Sound is the ferry de tour at Hertford which Is being maintained until the paved cause way leading to the .. I'enjliimanH River on the shore opposite Hert ford can be opened to traffic. This Inconvenience will be obviated within the ne*t tbrr?* week*, with {good weather, according to Secre tary Job of tho Elizabeth City ; Chamber of Commerce, who was in touch with tin- engineer in ; charge of tho work Friday. "Work is now being pressed on this causeway night, and day." | says Mr. Job, "and the paving, unless interrupt d by bad weath jer, will be completed within u week. Two weeks after the pnv !lng i.< completed the/ road will be open to traffic." With the opening of the cause way to tralTie. Coastal Hiuliway motorists will have a paved road all the way from the point on the Newtand brick road where it joins the South Mills spur to Edenton, with the exception of a four mile detour between Hertfoid nnd Woodvilb' which will be kept in good condition by the North Car olina Highway Commission. The dirt section of the Norfolk to Eliz abeth City highway, via Mouth Mills, Is kept open to trafTIc all the year 'round. Between Emperor ami Eden house, near Ed en ton. dependable ferry service across the Chowun River is maintained, leaving Em peror, on the Chowan side of the liver, at 8. in, 12, II, and f? o'clock, and leaving Edenhouse, on the llertie side, at 9, 11, 1. 4, and f? o'clock, dally except Mun ]day. nnd on Sunday the same schedule Is maintained except that 12 and 1 o'clock trips are omitted. Though finding the reports en couraging nil along the Coastal Hivhway. Secretary Job can not say so much for the outlook for opening up the road across the Dismal Swamp between Tadmore In Pasquotank and Acorn Hill in Gates County. This road was be gun with the hope of hnvlng It I open by the spring of 1924. In the spring, the date for comple tion was set forward until the autumn, snd now It appears that traffic across the swamp will not .begin to any appreciable extent until the spring of 1925. STATE TOOK PAKT IN DEFENSE DAY Raleigh. Sept. 13. ? Many ci ties and towns throughout North Carolina yesterday observed De fense Day with parades of veteraus and with speeches. tickets. So Al Smith hopes to escape from It all. Hut will he? The state convention meets In a fortnight. The Democrats have ' not agreed on any one to run If SmUh does not. If he Is drafted, he Will run ahead of Davis with out doubt. It's too early to say how much. The I,aPollcttc vote is going to be heavy. Al Smith would recapture many of the Democrats who favor LaFollettc for In their anxiety to make sure of a vote for Al Smith they would forget EaFollette. Unless John W. Davis can make a whirlwind cam paign. he will be badly beaten In Central New York by President Cool Id ge for there seems little I doubt even In the minds of some 1 well informed Democrats that were the election held tomorrow I the regular . Republican ticket , would win overwhelmingly. PERSHING ENDS ACTIVE SERVICE Last Signal Honor I'aitl (irral (ii'iicrul I- An m mi iH't'ii i fill Mailt* l?y_|.l|t* President. Washington. 8ept. 13. ? Gener | .?! John .1 'Pershing euded hl*_A^ . yearn of active service at noon today with a last signal honor j paid him in the issuance of an executive announcement by Pre* t ion's indebtedness to him (or the service which won him the leader ship of the American forces in the World WiMJ. Only in -rare instances in his tory in which a retiring officer has reached the highest rank has there been precedent for the honor con ferred upon General Pershing In the executive order in which thi President extended him "anew the thanks of a nation for hU eminent services." The President added that h?sl felt "certain that I voice the sen timent of the entire cltlienry of the Republic in wishing him long life, happiness and prosperity in" the retirement he has so richly earned." Washington Sept. 13. ? With a1 speech of farewell, John J. Per?h Ing. general of tho Armies of the l*nited States retired at mid night last night from activu duty-.-' JUDGE DAVIS AT BLACK WELL SUNDAY Judge John Warren Davis, of the New Jersey Federal Court o* Appeals, whose home Is at Tren ton. but who for the last week, with his brother, Rev. Q. C. l)a* is. Daptist pastor at Albemarlt has been assisting Kev. Romulus Hull in an old fashioned revival at llerea, the uld home church of the Davis brothers, four and a halt miles from Elizabeth City, will speak Sunday nt Dlackwell Mem orial Haptlst church at the ev ening service. Crowds that have been overflowing the church au ditorium at llerea have been at tending the revival, and many ; others who would have been glad H**-hettr Jwdg? -Davis have beett ' prevented from doing so because ?they fe.lt thorn would bo no room for them at Uerea. Many of these will doubtless avail themselves of the opportunity to hear Judge Davis at Black well Memorial Sunday night. Tho annex and gallery at Ulack well Memorial will bo opened Sunday night, If necessary, so jthat all who attend may find ! seats. NEW MACHINE SHOP KEROKING CYLINDERS j No longnr is it necessary for owners of gas engine* in Kliza j belli City av f? t points dewn tho sound to aO/?i* their engm*'* t > Norfolk or a ?*.iore distant city to have the cylinders reground. This work is now done here at Clark's Machine Shop and Gas Kngln" Works on Riverside Drive on the site occupied by the old Jet DftVh machine shop for many years. Equipped with a modern cylind er regrinding machine, thin shop claims to put cylinders in such good condition that they actually do their work better than when new. General repair work Is done by this new shop but the regrlnd of cylinder* Is Its specialty, th* proprietor, C. H. Clark, with sev tral years experience in repair ing marine and automobile en gines. having made a particular study of making as good as or better than new out of old ones Mr. Cla?rk not only knows his business but is abreast of tli" times in realising the value of newspaper advertising. He has }>ii advertisement In tills Issue of The Advance. OX MOTOR TRIP Leaving Saturday afternoon for a tour by motor car of Western North Carolina, Mr. and Mrs. Hcrscy L. Williams. 223 West Fearing street, were Accompanied as far as Chapel 11111 by Mrs. Wil liams' brother, Johnnie Williams, who will matriculate at the Fnl vorslty of North Carolina for a degree. Johnnie Williams Is a sou of John T. Williams. 100 Kant Cypress street, and was a member of the class of 1923 at the Kllxa beth City High School. WRITES TELEGRAM THEN ENDS HIS LIFE New York. Sept. 13. ? After writing * telegram formally an | nounclng hi, death to frlendn. M. Wachsteln, aaleaman of Slpllbenvllle, Ohio, drank polaon In hla room at the Hotel MrAI plno today and waa dead when the the amliulanre surgeon arrived. COURT MARTIAL ON ACCOUNT OF BARON Norfolk. Si.pt. 13.? The Atlan tic fleet arrived here yesterday afternoon and a court martial will tie held on the Texan at once to determine how the Dutch h?T lon. Von WeaterhoH fame to thin | country aereral weeks afo Kmiig | Kled In on that veuel in defiant" of the immlgrition laws. CHINESE FIGHT IN SPITE OK KA1N <11. Tt?? Aur.llnl 1'rmu.l Shanghai. Sept. 13. ? Rival for ces of the warring China military , governors battling fur the possea Dion of Shanghai disregarded the traditional rule against fighting in ihn rain today when ririu-g wait' resumed at Ht.uikhi, 15 miles west of Iter*' while that area wu.-t Wing soaked by n new storm. Canton. Sept. ,13. ? l)r. Sun < Vai Sun, head, of the South Chi na government, accompanied by a regiment of troops departed for Schluchow today In the northern part of Kwangtuug Province, th control. GAH HER BACK FROM ALASKA Spent Five Yearn in Mi? ?i<>n Work in Fur North, Acquiring Title und Fam ily While Away. Back from five yuiws of mission : work iu Alaska, bringing Jiomc the wife who four years ago" met ' him at Seattle for their marriage , and (wo children born above the Arctic circle. Rev. Burgess Woqu Galther, who acquired his title as well as his .family after entering mixalon work in the Far North. [ was" greeting old friends on the streets Friday and Saturday, j * Hl'V. Mr. OBtther tir spending a short vacation with his mother, i Mrs. Gailher at Hertford, be fore leaving for the seminary of his church at Alexandria. Vir ginia. for a year's study, lie was here Friday aftornoon and Satur day morning for a visit to his brother, W. C._Galther. and fam ily. returning to Hertford Friday morning. So far as he now knows he will return to mlsnlon work In Alaska when he has completed ills ; course at the seminary. | .Mrs. B. W. Gaithor, before her marriage was Miss Penelope Wed dell or Tarboro. The Gaither Weddell wedding took placo tt the home of Hlshop Ilowe, Bishop | of Alaska, and an Interesting co incidence is the fact Archdeacon i Fred B. Drane of Alaska is now on ! i i h way to Seattle where nt the home of Bishop Howe he In f > wed Miss Rebecca Wood, dnughter ' of Frank Wood of Edenton, who with Mrs. Wood will accompany Ills daughter to Seattle for Hie wedding. DAWSON NAMES AN ADVISORY STAFF Raleigh. Sept. 13. ? John O. . Iiawson yeuterday named an ad jvlsory committee of the Demo crat* In the State campslgn here. W. H. Dall of Greenville will re ' present the first district. M Its. \VI M.I AMS DKAI> Mrs. John Williams died Sat urday. 3:45 a. m.. nt her home on ? Halls Creek road about six mile* from HiIh city after several weeks illness. Mrs. Williams was about 1 30 years old and Is survived by her husband, two children. Fran res ml Carroll, her parents. Mr. ,i till Mrs. Oscar Seymour of IhU city, and a number of brothers und sisters. The funeral will be at the home Sunday afternoon ill two o'clock conducted by Rev Daniel Lane of the City Road Methodist Church and Interment will be made at Hollywood Ceme tery. FINKRAL MltM. M1M.KH The funeral of Mrs. H. F. Mil ler, who died at the home of her son. Zeb Miller, fid Hunter streer Thursday morning, was conducted at the home Friday morning at 10 o'clock by Rev. C. fl. Culbretfc und Interment made at Hollywood Cemetery. The pallbearers were: Messrs J. n. Leigh. Charles Son I der?. C. L Lister. J. L. Prltchard L. II. Twlford and John Wells 'Among those from out of town hero to attend the funeral were her husband, H. F. Miller of Bux ton; her sons. Fred. Erskine and A l *o n Miller of New York City. Mrs. Rebecca J?*nnette and Mrs Euxella Felton of Washington and Mlaa Olga Miller of Buxton. CAKIi BLADES IN HOSPITAL L. Carl niades, ?07 Pennsyi vanla Avenue, 4s In a .Norfolk hospital, where he was operated ' on f cj ir appendicitis upon his ar rival there from Philadelphia on a Bay line boat Saturday morning. Mr. Blade*, It Is reported, wha taken with appendicitis on the trl^ down tho bay and was rushed t . the hospital as soon as the boa: docked. CONVICTS HOLDING OFFICERS AT BAY Sumter, fl. C., Sept. 13.- ? Six escaped convicts, reported to be provided with arms and ammuni tion, are surrounded In a clump of woods a few miles from Sum ter by rural policeman. The of ficers have asked for reinforce ments from here. HTIDIO Opnw MONDAY Mlas Elizabeth Baker'a music ; studio will open Monday. S*pt. 1ft. Pupils please register at once for I hours. ? P.ast Main "N?*t door to Southern Hotel. ad ; rRAINING SCHOOL COMES TO A CI OSE Suriu?Mil in lnl.-rot, Al IfiitluiK')', and Uu:ilit> Work Done AII K lion* of !Muiia^?*rs . Tli" Elizabeth City District Standaid Training School for Sun day school workers clowd its flfl aiinual session at the First Melh , odist Church Friday night. This -ncUuul, -wlilch. m ^.ni -SiituUti Jihjkt . na?l a most "?iiccmTiil Week." "sur parsin^ in interest, m tempore and quality of work done, the ex pectations oL the^Local board, of niHDaKvn, under whose direction' the school wax held. It was at tended by workers from the Meth-__ 'odist Sunday schools of tli>> city and from schools over tlx district. , jsoiue coining r.u miles in order to [take advantage of thi-i truiiilnu opportunity. made possible by the I Methodist churches o'f th?'s-oard of niunuu ! CI S. at whicll I.. I.. Cohhet, of Durham, conference superintend Jent of Sunday school work and di rector of this training school, an nounced the number of eertitl ? cuI. k of credit tun iu'd aud <1 hi ? (interesting facts concerniiiu tin* | week's work. Short talks were I made by Mr. Culbreth, Judge J. It. I^'iuh. J. I.. Outlaw, and J. A. Hooper, expressing gratification at the results of the school, thank jlug th>' faculty tor their work, jand requesting that a similar | school he hi-ld next year. Ily a ris ing vote I lie school asked tlliaui imously that such a school be In hi iln 1!?25. Following the com i niencenient program. refresh tmenls were served In the recrea jtlonal rooms of the church. I Knro|le nor, "which lie is fininlliin nn ! rat to r Mrongly," says vouiik Meekiu# soberly but with a siis ?jiicion of a twinkle In his eye, to return to Klizaheth City in No- 1 veinber and resume tlie practice of luw. William Meek Inn was graduat ed from Yale with the degree cf bachelor of arts In the class of 1 H20. following which he took the law course at Harvard and, was admitted To Hie bar in North Car olina last January, Last June lie married Miss Marcia Kathertne Cliuplu. daughter of Mrs. Freder ick Emmons Cliapin of Washing ton, and the offices of Mocking &. Meeklns were opened her.* upon The return of Mr. nnil^Mrs. WIT-" I ia in Me?-kinn from their honey JUUUIL ? YOUNG TKACHEK IS IIKI.ll FOR CIUMK Waynesvllle, Sept. 11. ? Motile Teagne. young sehool teacher, Is in custody here today on charge of strangling to death her Infant child soon after it was born Tues day hy tying a cord around its throat. She then proceeded tu the schoolhousc ai ml taught as us ual. .. Haywood county officials said she confessed the crime. She is now seriously ill at a hoarding house with a guard stationed a; Imr bedsld'}. OlMMNlZKItS SKNT 11) CAROLINA MILLS INew York, Sept. 13.--- Organi zers of the United Textile Work ers of America whose executive committee in in session hare have been sent to the mills of the Man vlile JenrkcH Company In Rhode Inland and North Carolina, whera wage reductions were madu re cently. MIIH. NKWIIHRN DEAD Mrs. J. it. 'Newborn of Jarvis . burg died at h*?r home Saturday morning. Mrs. Newbern was th.* wife of Dr. J. M. Newhern and was formerly Miss I.llllan Madura Iturke of Itealton. Virginia. She had been In poor health for some time but recently seemed to bo Improving. The funeral arrange in e nt h have not yet been made. BAKDfM OfBT PAYIIOU< I New York, Sept. 13. ? Two clerks employed by a slaughter house company were kldnspel near their office today by five bandits who robbed them of $10 ? 000 payroll. The dark* wore tak en in a tsxlcab to a building flvo blocks distant where they were relieved of the cash and the ban dits escaped. INKS. MAIJXIKY WINS Philadelphia, Sept. 13. ? Mr Molla Malhvry of iNew York wen the middle state's women's sin tennis championship today defeating Miss Anne Townsond ot Philadelphia ?-l, H O. CAROLINA Mil l s I.VHIKH MOMENTUM Raleigh, Sept. 1 3.? According to reports from cotton man u far turing centers, the curtailment, program which has been effect. ve among cotton mills Is abating and particularly In this true of the Carotins, said T. W. Chambllss, Director of Information of the North Carolina Cottrtn Grower a Cooperative Association last night, "The reports show thnt curtail* merit is a little less than two thirds of whnt it was during the summer months." I'llUTOCIUI'lIKKS TO MEKT IN GOLDSBORO Ooldsboro, Sept. 13.? The Eas* ern Carolina Photographers' As sociation will hold It fifth semi annual con /ent ion here on Sep tember If/ and 16. it has been an nounced here. The territory of the association covers from Dur ham to the sea, but a number of members of the Western Carolina Photographers Association will b 1 n . nt It win said. Speakers for "the meetings were announced as follow*: John J Blalr, director of school houslo* of the State Department of Edu cation; Dr. J. H. Hlghsmlth, in spector of state high schools; and others. tended end for the splendid hos pitality accorded them by the people of Elisabeth City. Tex Rickard Real Winner In Friday Night's Event Promoter Made Nearly Hull' a Million Out of Will? lirpo Match \\ Inch, Tb? AiluD'l ! N?*w York. Sept. 1 3? Tex Kick- ! ard won the "battle of the c?n iturlea" Thurnday night at lloylf'a i 1 Thirty AcroiL The hundre.1 ?l?.i. lar HIIIm rolled Into his coffer* 'like rain has !*???'? falling on th?*j I International polo flelil. Today! ,M*r ' tT?V uudlapuTed "champion ? money Better of all time. He | ? knocked the fight fans of -the! ! Kreiter rlty for a row of Ave cl- ! phera with a big four In front ?f ' I them and la richer at the moment | by aomethlnK nightly has than half a-mlllfon dollars. Tex *oak?d the boya a* high an $27.60 for! . "rlngaide" seats that ntretched 1 from the brilliantly Illuminated i light arena far baek Into the Tftmr" neMH of the night. Without field glaanea many of thone m tin'1 ? rlngnldea" would not have known what wan going on in the aquurod circle. Nor would they have ml sued . ??uch If they had forgot!, n (|i. old glaanen. There Wuh an ex tremely lady-like boxing exhlhl t iuu which wwnt tho of 1 ^ l rounda and might have gone on ? forever If the referee hadn't ! dropped from exhauntion. He nuf fered more punishment tlmn eith er of the flghtcra. They clung to i each other like two loat brother* I -two waif* of the atorm -during most of the evenlng'a program ' and at t linen they defied the moat heroic effort* of the third man In the ring to pry them apart. "Wild liull of raJamaV' There wann't much "panth" to I I the brown panther. Harry Wills. ? And ait for Flrpo, the Wild Hull of the I'ampaa, aome one In | the crowd very properly dcMlKiiat ed him an the "Wild Hull of the! ; Pajamas " Harry Will*, giant New Orleuna < n#gro, now renlding In the wilds , of Harlem, claimed that l.uia An gel did by far the greater part of the hugging. Hut the keen ob server within hailing distance of 'that famoua "rlngaide" noticed that Harry hung on to the bull'* wicked right arm Juat about ev ery chance he got. Wllla went In to the ring with one Idea In hi* mind -to keep away from that haymaker. In thla he aucceeded admirably. Flrpo went into the ring with out knowing where he wan going or what he wax going to ilo. Wild , , bulla are alwaya like that. And Flrpo aucceeded. loo He didn't go anywhere, nor did he get any where. Some afternoon when the proverbial camel goea ntrolllng I through the proverbial eye of tin needle. Lula Angel may get New York fkna to pay mouey to aee | : him In another bout. The reat of, his time he m Ik lit juat an well de-| I vote to keepliiK out of Jail. If the I fnn? could only have known the ieicuae the big Argentine waa go |lng to make after the flyht wn? over, the evening would have been i full of Joy for them. I'lmcf Terribly. Angel aald he waa in no mental . condition to fight. I?ooklng at him i in hla rlngalde glower no one would ever think mental trouble ? could ponalbly come hla way. f.uln I aald that all the proceeding* agalnit him. the charges of per I Jury and of violation of the Imml g rat Ion and white Nlave acta, had . upaet him terribly. What really did concern the great open Mpceeaj above the fighter * eyea wax the fact that a one-time ex-manager had attached moat of bin nharo oL the nlght'a recelpta Moral wor riea may be one thing, hut finan cial worrlea, they do make the Wild Hull wild. After all It waan't no much what Irnln Angel had on iiin mind that hurt. It waa the big brown flat of the Panther beating a tat too on Lula' left kidney. Virtually all of the fighting waa done In the cllnchea and except rllnehen there was nothing elne but. The negro known how to handle bin - aelf In tight placea. Life In the colored colony of Harlem ban [ taught him that. Hut he w;m far from ponnenalng anything that ev en remotely reaembled a knockout punch. I The time he floored l.uln In the necond round wan a chance blow Juat after a break. H?- didn't gel another chance after that, for the referee made them break clean An a matter of fact he walked b? ? tween the two big men moat of the time. No wonder he wan hanging on to the ropen at the end. Sullivan The Hero Andjf anybody in that Hoyle'a Thirty Acre* won the right to go In the ring with Jack Dempaey it waa Referee Danny Sullivan There wan no one elne In night at the end of the twelfth round who had the ear mark* of a coming champion. Jack and Danny would get along fine. They could help each other carry the Hull or the i Panther out of the ring after a few moment* of mixing with flatl ana'a newest movie hero. They called the acwlng bee a "battle of the contender* for the contender* for the heavyweight, crown." The only contender who 1 qualllM ro T.a Ul. kar.l That boy wis tlu-l" ? thousand wayo. Tex Itml Winner jl,i CUii "pomntf" f'"" Jack I Dempsev the rest of his lifo- Any mf.n wh" *Str" i a "rif* ' three-quarters of :i million dollars j for a bnxlnc match lik*j Unit of Thursday n lulil ami rake off two ' thirds of The "purs*-" for himself, packs a wallop that ??? l?r": i inotfr ran rearh with a radio set. The "|iri'liinlnarlt'?" ? l?at Tex pro vided for ilo* hlood-llilmty crowd constituted tin* largest assort ment of - bologna ??v?*r H.-1 .Iw'fore 'the willing populace. Some one said they cost T. v $7.&?U>. If they did Tex got iitnim for once in his life. Ho ought to be richer today by at least S l.m.7-0. As a 8|H'Oiaclt' tin- Iklit wan nn -artistic ? H-fmn-pfi. Te