Newspapers / Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, … / Nov. 1, 1922, edition 1 / Page 4
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i 1 r GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 192 J GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS ASD TELEGRAM Pafcllakr Krrty Day la Teu Bj fimukm Nwi Caiaar R. 1. JFnenajss,..-! Maaacee EARLR CODPKT. ,( . Ealtoe A- Mm STOCKTON.. Maaac'ac EaUUr Dallr am aa.ar. aa.Mt r wi Br wrkl Oil? aaly. T.M yrmr, 15 awr mrk. . Stac tmpj, mUr, Set Saaa7, fa. Mea-ker ( Aaaorlate4 Prvaa. Ha SaartiM Tnm a irhHt mtltlad a Ma a) far nraMmilai ar .It nwa dhwriM malt - OW-W mAltrf la UUa war u4 .laj a naai ana ritnsM amis. Ml nctu ar i-anMinUai af WhBnSEIy. NOVEMBER 1. " ! 1 - borrowed Biiir.KS. j The bright nlde of the near east Ituitlon is the outside Anaheim Fiain Dealer. ' JtiB?&& Baltim,- e Sun. When a man makes his mark In Naw York Evening Mall. . nr. m. ,),- i the ex-kaiser's woodpile, any- i war, Wall Street Journal . A inan-i deflnltlon of a liring wafre : vepenas on wnfiner ne Bluing n -,-.- . r s-tvlns it.-AoClated Editor.. ! because he hasn't done a real day's fusal ,0 Bccept the Armenlan man On. re.eon why Europe can t solve j work. When union rules require date that ,eft that lucklcss C0UntT & 'butvT.UnT new "oneV-Blr-'ithe employment - of four different . at the merc5" of the Turk' mlnsham Sewa mechanics to make repairs on a lo- - So far his atement is altogether " ..... . . .. ! lhtrinl oven flmnfyl if n,av K. nn. To a man up a tree It appears that i tht mora peace oonferences there are : ! ina more wars mere i-e. tiooik-u i Shoe and Leather Reporter. n.mA f thraii European countries wold make up e.cn otnei 'r i ..'j, other -Wa.hfngton ro.t. I PARAGRAPHICS. At any rate, the pig woman is not j fe, pnblicity-hunter. The weather: Clear and cool, light easterly wind. ' Lausanne may run St. Moriti a close race this year in the matter of winter sports. The fascisti theories of govem tnent may be all wrong, but in Italy their arguments are powerfully per suasive. It remains to be seen whether or not preaching to a Georgia jury wilaTbe regarded as prima facie evi dence of insanity. Firing birdshot at newspaper re porters is no doubt a dreadful crime ; but then the lady might have passed the buck. It is hard to get at the truth of anything, these days. For instance, it is not known for certain whether the famous mule of the famous Mrs. Jane Gibson really bears the name of Jennie, or that if June. Georgia is one oftha slowest states in the union to gTant women ; their rights. Down there, men are j till murdering their wives, instead I of vie vena, as seems to be tht i prevailing fashion elsewhere. -- , j President Harding's coal commis-j 4rtn moVat tKo MneiM en (riTAtinn i oiLii aa.o ku4v. "ft(S-'" I that the country ought to have coal Rtnraci' for the same reason that it I 0 - V. . i j ,,n. n pnntin ' has cold storage to insure contm- ( COUS supply Of a necessity which is; .w1.a4 Mmnta fim a In w mnJ jority of the consumers. Now if the commission will devise a prac tical way of securing coal storage for the people, the big end of its task will have been accomplished. Tf" says Lloyd George, "am very good with the niblick. I am excel lent at getting the Ijall out of the rough. But oiTthe greens I am too energetic. They wanted someone with a feebler putting stroke." Yes, David. They also allege that yon were generally either in a trap or In the roush, and they wanted somebody who can hit 'em straight down the fairway as a general thing, and not occasionally. Hitting 'em straight down the fairway a a general thing, you know, David. is the universal dream. Wonder if the Englishwoman who turned over the interest on Sl, 000,000 to the workers in her father's plant because she believe: that capitalism is at the bottom of all the troubles of the world thinks for a moment that the workmen .are going to use the money for the demolition of capitalism? The trouble with mjr?t of these vision aries is that they do no stop to consider that the average workman Is so well satisfied with capitalism that he would cheerfully lynch any one who threatened it seriously. The Bat,i!cgrpund to Summerfield road is soon to he put out of com mission in onier to be widened and rebuilt as a rirst-class, black-top highway. Except where it has given way, and where a better lo cation is 'necessary, the county will simply add to the old Macadam on the sides, smooth it out and put on asphalt ic top of the Watrenite type. Thus will another of the old Macad am roads, built in the early days j6t Jhe- century, be presertfd in all Upvalue for future generations. hntTtt tffVBt 1 VrX-SPrVi't, J MR. GOMPERS RESORTS TO ! TRICKERY. I Mr. GompcCs betrays the lack of thinking that has afflicted labor ! leadership in the past year or two i when he asWls the labor board for having put a "stigma on -the Intel j ligenee of Congress" in attaching ! the "living wage" demand. Congress i has directed the board to find what is a "just and .reasonable", wage, and Mr. Gompers immediately ; vaults over the difficulty by assert i ing innocently, "surely anything be low a living wage is not just and reasonable." And right there Mr. Gompers re sorts to trickery. From the word- i ing of rtie sentence one would think ; that h Mi thSt Under 1,0 I cumstances could anything less j than a living wage be also a just ""J reasonivflie wage. jet ne is t(lil int(.lir,.nt a man tn K l.w i j lnc under anv .,iii'h ilplnirtn Mr ' Gompers knows perfectly well that many and many a labor organiza- tion has cut the efficiency of its members so low that they are not justIv and reasonably entitled to a living wage. When a brickmason I calls laying 300 bricks a day's work, h . entitied to a livin wk comotive that one man could easily ! . ;,v,, .-;, .i,- - - - bers of those unions are not en. j titled to a livine waire. because thov I are needlessly multiolvine iobs. A man is not entitled to a living wage until he has earned a living I wasre. and he cannot earn it bv rack-: jng his brains to devise ways and means of soldiering on the job. Some American labor unions and labor leaders have recently fallen into the error of believing 'that the i prosperity of labor can be advanced j by limitation of production. That error has been the curse of England . try by force- We had the PPor these many years; yet, although I tunity once- but U exists no longer England was for decades a richer j We have lost our chales to obtain country, per capita, than the United the deliverance of Armenia peace States, limitation of production ab'y and the 0,ll' Possible rescue never raised the English workman's i now is b-v force of arms- which tne standard of living to the American,! American PC0Ple would nt counte level. It never will. On the otheT ! n"". K-,r,,i i;;tt;n t rj-; and will drag down the Standard of living of American labdr to the English level. If the American workman draws ! twice as much dsv as the Fno-lish workman, it is because he rlne uviause uues twice as much work as the English man and consequently is worth the j extra pay. And that is the only j way in which he can make himself worth it. i If there is a difference between ' a "just and reasonable wage and a living wage. the labor board didn't create the difference, nor did Congress; it was created b'y inef- ricient and lazy workmen, and by nobody clpe. i . . AS TO LIIERAL INSPIRATION. ! The ftev j Buckner, w , l!of hnrtut cirs thnt tn art nr.sn r. i savs that on an occasion of his paj!torate when "we were i : sLuuyiriK i ne connucs; or lancan. ai 1 fiskcd me if ;t were rijfht for he . n0Lru. Cf,i-;QT.0 tU . . .. . .... ! and children," and he repiied that j it was not. Another gil aked, "rw a;a c,.a fi i a then?" He replied "God never told them to do it. The writer was mis-! taken" i vivcu. For 25 vears, savs the minister, I "I tried to fix it up, but always ! - tailed a satisfy the people or mv-s p'f until I l,a,l the ronmcr,, to el,- Go,l never did it. My God 'js ' before the people, and will be adopt frnod.' " I ed lln'es- there should be more Avoiding a hvw trial tho vv. ! "apaint" than "for" ballots cast- hraska conference induced Rev. Mr. Buckr.er to quit the ministrf of the Methodist church, in which he had SJode f.r near 4u years, i lie ., sue seems to have been purely dof trinal; a sharp presentation of some of th. pha-es of the growing "fu'-dAm-ntaiist" schism. The rler gyn.ari a- 4 its that his offending is ready trat of candid statement of hi iiefs not essentially different from those of his fellows. On the score of convielion let the Kev. Mr. Buck ner speak for i,:m.-clf: 1 .(,. n,.t b.-li hut . ! Ins; II t ;r.n . ! I 1 l.s M.: 'd t"ppe.: Illblr Wii. iil,l.u 1,1:11 M'MI i ' lit "II I i, s in tl. w.ll and - rji'her ej.t It'll Of at llli;e : . r,,.- I , Us ill',' .1 a i 1'', thai How would you answer the same estionias those put to this elderly I the girls? you react rrvslaugh nnnp TfifTL any the story of the bears devouring the children? It would be interesting, mayhap profitable, to have symposium of experienced Sunday school teachers on the reaction of scholars of vari ous ages to such narratives as that of the bears and the children. There would be no difficulty in the in fants' class; and youngsters liable at any moment to commit some such deadly sin as calling "baldhead!" at a holy prophet would readily accept of wine for the use of crews and the penalty of death therefor as be-; passengers, and American law for ing no less reasonable than most bids the dispensing if not, indeed, grown-ups' notions. But how are the possession of wine by anybody boys ' and girls a few years older within an American port. There held on the orthodox reservation in j fore French and Italian vessels can a case like that? MR. GERARD'S BAD LOGIC. Mr. Gerard, former ambassador to Germany, starts out boldly enough m nis statement as cnair- man of the American committee for the independence of Armenia by de- manding that this country accept "its plain responsibility to Armenia" at the coming conference on peace in the near east. He reminds the world that the President of the United States traced the boundaries of Armenia, and that it was our re- " ' . palatable to Americans. But what iouows mis ringing cnauenge ( "uur government, by identic notes to the powers, should insist that they car- ry out the Provisions of the Sevres lrea launK Armenia. But '"PPe the powers retort, "You w-rote the Armenian provisions 01 tne Bevre3 treaty carry tnem out I "ourselves; wf wil1 not. interfere" fwhat wi" Mr- Gerard sa-v then? TiinKs have one so far now that 1 tne ArJenians can De saved only Dy , , nurung tne iuiks out 01 tneir coun Mr. Gerard mieht as well come down off nis hiCh horse- America isn,t Bing to "scue the Armenians, an' or ner demand that the hard-P"!ssed nations of western Europe deliver them because inciiva t'luiiuat-u uiciu urinciaiice U'nulil Kp n littln tnn tinieh Mr.1 Gerard Proposes to make us appear more foolish and more cowardly than we now appear to Europe; an( Heaven knows, our appearance is bad enough now. AN AMENDMENT PROPOSAL. The opinion has been expressed that no more than a third of North Carolina voters know that a con (stitutional amendment that would increase the pay of members of the i .11 , , fcnerai assemoiy irom lour dollars a da to ten dollars a day will be k.- u t j 1 - oerore them next luesday for rati UtlUIC 11CJLL HIT riT. . fication or rejection. It mnnnt H tWof manv u ' t.,v VA mo i campaign speakers are presenting this referendum to the voters' ron- iAi t u ; . sideration. It comes to them, in a sense unUer the auspices of the Democratic nartv of thp. stntp. sinro a democratic general assembly pass-1 cd the act Providing for its submis- sion. But no special committee or r organization of any sort has been directin public attention to it, -.1 t . . au ur uppusiuon. n 15 tne only amenilmpnt reierendum regardless of the proportion of all the voters who may manifest inter est in the question by voting on it. i The- limitation of $4 per day was 1 fixed by the constitutional conven- tion of '1ST."': when a dollar was ' worth a grcr.t deal mor than it is I today. 1: that was then a reason- able rate i.f pay fur leei.-latorr, it i- much h ss than reasonable now'. North Carolina by paying $600 ,ir sl'SM'ih of : days hjh not at tract men of high ability to this service for t'ie monetary reward, I for a man of high ability cannot profitably take that much time from J his usual occupation for that I amount of money, when the expense I uf a temporary residence at Raleigh i t consult red. It may he, in. Iced, ! that the general average of intelli " gence anil ability will not be appre ciably ra:.-id by increasing the leg : slative sa:ary; but certainly men of ! ability will be less reluctant to serve if they can do -o without real i monty sacrifice. And there are al ! ways some men of outstanding " ability, of real vision and hitch in ,'i , telligenee, aciiiattd by high motives, in the general assembly. The state "I ought to pay these men for their serviee, jf only a :.,,.',. h.al sun,. At .;! , pr r.t they .n o not paid. Kouir 1 1 :ol!ais a i;;,v i;i r1(J jnore than ex ,r :'e: --.e iipi-.i ;. , ,' that. IT WOULD SIMPLIFY MATTERS. An American ship will not be Hermirttjil to clear from a British port unless it carries at least one 3on oi brandy for pv..Tvhundrcd this .iteerage. It ing liquor is in violation of the American constitution, nd 'brandy is, by definition of the Volstead act, an intoxicating liquor. It is, Vol stead act or no Volstead act, for that matter. Ergo, an American ship, cannot clear from a British port with British subjects in, the steerage. The laws of France and those of Italy require ships of the respective nations to carry a certain amount not trade with America except in violation of their own laws. Brother Bryan confidently ex pects the whole world to be as dry as America which is to say, very, very dry indeed within a few years. That would greatly simplify mgtters that under prejent condi tions, are becoming daily more com plex. WARNING. One McKenzie, held in police court for obtaining money under false pretense, confessed yesterday that his claim of having served in the French and American armies was false from the ground up, al though on the strength of the story he had obtained financial aid from the Red Cross, and the assistance of the American legion in various ways. This sort of faking should be rig orously suppressed, not only be cause it is criminal in itself, but because it is making the path of the real service man more difficult. In deed, such gentry as this McKenzie if that indeed is his real name have become so numerous in this country since th war that it has: come to tne point at wnicn me real service man applying for a job hesi-' change that has come over the wo- ' L .-li. .1.-. i u-- ' men of the "old agricultural slate i tates to mention the fact that he has , o( North Carona... pollUcaliy by re- j ser'ed, lest he be suspected oflferrfng to your neat editorial men-j faking. So the Daily News takes occasion; pass the warning to towns in ; to this neighborhood look out for ajo( the confederate officers In Con-! man who called himself in this town ! gress." The Major, mindful of his, , v it l Inborn courtesy to woma-n and In- "Capt. Billy McKenzie, and who na((, aUntr,, cyould lwvrr harW claims to have served with the French ana Americans in r ranee. He is a fake and a pannancuer, anu all North Carolinians how with re ontitleH tr. no consideration what-1 spect threw his cloak on a muddy j ever But the really sound advice at - . ,, . . ; i nP0..ni wnnlH seem to be. when in 1 1 ... Rome do as the fascisti do. PUBLIC PULSE ! THE MF.W WAV REPl'BLW AS j . ARK TREATED, i Editor of the Daily News: Would vnti eTnlaln to the publlo how it is that the Democrats call fort a new rpistration in Republican ; counties. lf course a man with horse !80nd out the men to registrar, he will ; "Ster every Democrat and skip every Jienunucan ne can. n u" u don(1 It eml( my 8tranRe that the Democratic party accuses you of leanlnn to the Keoubllcan party, of . course any man that reads the 'Greensboro News and reads your edi- iMriat can tell that you lean to the , - . - . JB,. ' Democratic party Trom sran to nnian Bnd a-ree with them n every crocked move thev make, they say in the! Tiemnrratic handbook that your-wr the greatest independent patfer in : if the United States leaning toward the Republican party hut I say and -ii ..i u l . 1 I It thai grpat(,st pap,r in ,he Unltwl states' , loaning tow.nl the Democratic party , pf cur.. Mr. r,ditrou print . mlKhtv Rood j.aper. I am proud tot hand it down t you. you print-th. ; b..t dally paper In Nortfc Carolina. I ' nnJ nfvfi nrru -jui ,., . what you th'"iRhl about the ballot 'box that wai rmind in the wood. wlt'h 210 marked ballota In It in Hobe ? .n enunty Von know as $oot1 as I do. Mr. Editor, that the Republican party In North Carolina Is treated p.ichly r""i'ii when the laws of N-,ith Carolina wijn't allow the elee tin t.nard to kh behind any of the ,'leition returns. They can throw out a whole roonty If they see fit and the-re Is r," w a' to help It. The Re- publican party n treated miphty nn pvcry eictlon lrr every county. 1 'emnerat ic party looks around arfl I'iks out the rrookedest on he La: fl -1 1 and appoints him over thp !:p,,Mi.lirn, th.it Ih elected hv thn mJT-iy of the people. 1. that rlsrlu Mr Ivlltor" I knew a I'ernorrat thai wns appoint' '! to offlee one time that was accused of eatlni? so many bal-: 1'tfl they hail to take a pump pun, ami pump them out of him !. W. IIIN'NANT. j rrK''ille. I'OOR OLD A (i II If" I.' I,Tl !l A L STATF, ivlltor uf th'1 I.tafly Nww t liH'"1 clipped th1 fnHi-wftiK Hfni fr.'ni thp pdttf.rial page nf th Iailyj Nmvs of October 16: , "T!i-- poor old agriculturnl state -f I North Carolina Is now manufjic t ti i Itik ! more a (food dea more than .Ti , mil! I on du liars worth of f u rn i t u i e PM' year. And It hasn't Ih-h Iomk , sltwe th" g-e"i;raphles tUKht that thnl rhit'f products of the stale were tar, pitch and turp'-ntlne." i To npor-wlatc t10 f"5' f'-r.-- i.f that nL'cst t c ii'-iti. It should hr r.-.iHin In r'd that that m:iniifar ur: fe rn..r- 1 .ii furniture a!' ,.t b . ri 1 t ' i k -1 " ahout witliin t i" lit :irn- f m -i now liiiiff and atiid hj.i cri in effei'tiiif? other wonderful manu- ; fV'urinK developments In the "poor old rmricultural state of North Cam. :m. for . i H h I ;i n c e , tlie p..kt- ;c d ,te liaridh1 Industry, in yir own hi!-rl'T:ir cilv of llrretiyl.or... the I ;uii i :k;i retle f a'loi j. . ;d i: r - I..,.:, ai.-l. noi- i.. " ..rth ; II. 1 1 t. j,i,I,' produclM aud cotton iniliti hi I, ,. h-.?tMi! - whi. h luive sh-Tii M;.:--si' iiuv.'tn ,,f nnich of Its tlmchi.ni i.t ! Mh.i y in t he pn;-t AnI this v l;di fill :iccoinplishmen t U.1H to. ''II effect I'd wit hin a hrlef mi in her of y.'irs, hy man's eatierprlHe. Mjpple nV nt e( I . y the li dro-elect rlc riT'irv deriw d trom utilizintf the ntro;ims of ."Mj th ("arolina- w hi' li but a fe, V-ars auo were "runnnlnn waste." If all this has been brought about, within tu Kcnerat i,os. or Inn little more what may he expeetj-d of t he fiol carry nyPrTtnirjHiiii)R ",fwtl'. in and utlllied (or all sorts of manufacturing- purpoies, and publlo utilities. But. In the llht of what Is about to take place on the Coosa riYer,ln Ton neMee, and the projaot on foot for utilising the Tenneeaee river for hy-dro-electrlo purposes, It behooves the people of North Carolina to think seriously, whether their legislative policy In taxing- hydro-electrjo enter prise! Is a wis one. In oorriparlaon with the policy of the Tenneeeee law making power, which exempts from taxation all such enterprise, Inau gurated within 10 years to com,. Under that tax exemption polloy, within n few months, over 170,000 horsepower will become available on the Cooaa river. . The streams 'that are made thus serviceable ar "run ning waate" no longer, There Is no matter on which the power ,o( the proas can be exerolaed more effect ively than In fostering and forming 's publlo sentiment strong enough to influence w'se legislation for the fu ture In the matter of encouraging hydro -electrlo enterprises. That ac complishment means manufacturing prosperity In bounds for the "old ag ricultural state of North Carolina." 1 now recall that It "hasn't been long since" that a certain paper, re- ferrlng to the splendid Dunday Issue of the Dally Jsewa. In the early part of last August, sarcastically said of th mention of many of Its features, that North Carolinians had abundant reason to feel gratified now that "44.OP0 wcnieit who veled at the last primary election were unable to write their own names." The author of that unpleasant reminder did not seem to realise that this hick of edu cation rn the part of these 44,000 mothers of North Carolina, was the unhappy result of educational con ditions which no longer' exist, and' can never exist again In a state that appropriates millions of dlolars an nually to your state university, and the betterment of educational re quirements, from the grade school to the high school. Not iRnorlng the claims of the colored people, who have In the past, proved a sublllzinfr force In tho labor contributions, which have proved such a disturbing aud detrimental element In labor controversies In so many other states. It may be that there were 41.000 North Carolina women who could not write their names, as alleged. If so 'tis sad. Tliey w :,' not laden with book lore. But think of the noble sons they Their fin iters, forsooth! Knew not the use of pen. But th.y hmdbabea. who grew And now we may emphasise the i tlm of 'Mrs. Lindsay Fattersqn, riinnlnir s thp Rpnuhltnan randldflt f0r Congress, In the 5th ;ongrejln,n-j fll district, ajalnst the time honored, j ti...ue.ht .if unsheathing his trem-hant '".","'.' " . , .' ' place that his queen might pass on her way dryshod with fnntwear , i! n sol ted. Not a whit less courteous. the gallant Stedman. would make tne way clean and dry for his antago nist's ascent to his seat In Con gress. If that wre possible. Long I.ve Mrs 1'nttersoji. oes;u!p she is worthy daughter of the new North Carolina. lut live forever his memory and honor untarnished while he livos to ttie gal tan t Major Stedmnn. T. T. DUFFY, Omaha, Neb. Two Sea one. i Know i ara but summer to yonr heart And not the full f-iur seasons of the year; And you must welcome from another part Such noble moods as are not mine, my dear. No gracious weight of golden fruits to sell Have I. nor any wise and wintry thing; - 1 - , , . tl Ana i iiHe iuvcu n and well To carry still the hjgh sweet, breast "I" spring j Wherefore I say: "O love, as summer! goes I must be pone, steal forth with silent 111 UII1B. That yn may hall anew the bird and F,s t'1'm" ' """" n "",a"t v.n y.m?' .uminr In another dime. l IT Say what you will and .cratch rr.y heart to find The roots of lust year', rosea In my t , breast, i I am stiri ly riper In my mind ! As if (he fruit stood In th. Btalls ; confessi'd. I.auRh ai lh- unstied leaf, .ay what you will. fall n-e in all things "what I was be. ; for,-. ! A llutli r in the wind, a woman still;! I I' ll you 1 am v lint I was and more. Mv brnni'hes welt;h .me down, frost' rkans the air, . My sky I". I'lio'k with small birds liHaiieK south; Sr.' what yoi will, confuse me with. line cary 'in by my word as but - truth April Autumn Is no less on me than a rose link's liie hrown bouh and -sighs li"f"re It Koes. ' K'ln.i St, Vlneent Millay, Vanity Fair. WHITEHEAD CHARGES DIGEST IS PRO-WET Virginia Prohibition Man Declares Liquor Poll Was Propaganda For the Weti. (Spcrlut io Pullt Newt I lan ville. 'n Oct. ,11. Thomas' Whitehead, at t ornwy for the state pri.hl hit ion depart mnt. who H'ftde a Me-eh villi Hov liavtd Hepburn be- for- 7" persons ga'beri-d at I'hatham1 en 1 1 house on Sunday aflerno(,u and; v. ' . -n.ole the dire, l cliartfc that th--! i ' - e:it Lit era ry Mvest 1 iquor poll ! u r- "wit propngand:" confirmed hin j Htatt-nifnt 'when () u est nm ed nboiii Inn nn .-r.-i tiers at h is bono- in Am lu.-rst ! I'.. ;Mi(t dKl ince ti 'ephoi:.-' There i re ilfT' f it eiV of opinion i s whn , lie -nd til and some .f the nicre -I" of t'o audi- ri. e utated I Mr . lM',.i . :i.i t.n.i r"fi '-n -l to Th- ': I w of i:. . , u Mr. h.leheau :j. ' pl- .n: v thts a:d that h. mader i t'-ot - n a no d i ) w rniK paper, but iiistaiitly corrected himself and nmned j I'tc-.'-i, Hi" r-feren.-e drawn from his remaths hcina thai the n , -i i.::i i:i ne hio4 her ii subsidized by "wet" )nt'r ests in r,.,er "tn pound a wet note l from the country."' While prohibition papers h;ie lion strongly inttrnntiiiK ihis. Mr Whitehead's fnnk ehrp i- the tlvst pnldii' nnd direct at:ek on tlie integrity of that paper record ed, far as can be learned Kev Mr. Hepburn lauded Governor Trinkle handsomely in his speech aeserttng that he la doing hin full ah ar j1 n - u PpjQit I rj g the state liquor '1 .'M- H TRYING IT OUT IN A NOBODY GETS Sr hwtoran- w - . THiNC, THEY'LL T LET HIM PLM L- "r' CI D ROMANS WEEPING WITH GREAT JOY GIVE I FASCISTI BIG WELCOME! t 'on tinned from I'aen One 1HUM h- nigrhtfall on his way home before ' be j Cut her fltron abhirt Whatever the outcome may when the new Mussolini cabinet gots before the chamber of deputies, there '. is general agreement that the new j premier has gathered about him a cabinet exceptionally strong from ; "rock-ribbed," It lias been regarded tho nationalist standpoint, eompris- j incurably Hepubllran. Hut somehow Ing a body of men who were leaders j ,,r other Sheriff Haynes believes the of Italy in the great war and the j Democrats will carry It and the He outstanding protagonists for Italy's j pilH jrans admit lit.-,' reasons for tho territorial claims In the peace. hope that is In him. juustniini nnngs wuu nia ministry a well-dpflned foreign polhy, the cornerstone of whlh la rx pans ton. The fascisti party, evr since Its In ception a year aito. has always preached the extension of Italy's ter ritorial claims. MusBolini himself has declared Mint the Mediterranean Is an Italian ak and he advocate! complete control of th.t waterway by Italy. The laim of Greece for the Dodecanez islands was always bitterly contested in fas cisti councils. Total repudiation of ail Soviets has been a constant cry amonit fa.se iti. - , nen tne Kussmn commercial nns- Bion arrived In Home in 1921 their : rooms were broken into and their j baRgaRe ransacked by fascisti. who! contended' for no negotiations in any form with the Soviets. In their domestic policy the alms of the fascisti have not been so clearly deflned. Indeed, ft has been constantly maintained by their op ponents that they had no domestic policy. On. thlriKs. however, has stootl pre-eminent in' all their domes tie actions, namely, tlhelr hostility to the exlreme socialists and commun ists. OPPOSE ABANDONMENT OF C. AND YLR. . ROAD High Point Businfraa Men Plan Protest to Inter tate Com merce Commission. I Br AtMciiurt rrm.i K alt-igh, "ct . .11 , - uinm iKnlf.ner A J. Maxwell, of lhn state cm p orat ion conimlfHtnn dated lar to.iy that he had been advised that thti business and coin me re la I oi KanizaUonfi of (Huh l'"inl were piarnillK tn protest before th Intrsta.e Commerce -oni- ( mission aKainsi t'm proposed ahan ! donment of the Cnrelina and Yudkin l:iver railroad, nt-w in tht imnds of a receiver. . A dispatch from Washington i--tfiJ;iy HtuniuiK that the luilmiud had appliJ to n,.i Int.?rwtate 1'oni meiee comnilHs en f..r author;:;,- ro nbnndnn th is mile line running from High I'.drt to lih Kt-lc in Ia-vidsoi- counlv. on r .,s grnuiid.-i thai the i..ad was unal.l-, to maks ' per at ing xpeuse ('oninnsiion' r Maxwell snld V. ex pected that lit !nt rata: t'otmr.erce com mission v. mild direct a heanuK befor the i.rp ra : on commission, which he huIiI h.s lie us'lfll proced ure undty the new t rimerue act. A DINOSAUR'S BONES UNEARTHED IN STATE President Lax ton Believes Re mains of Pre-historic Animal Found Near Enfield. t (By A.rlatn1 PiCW, J el .ulotlc. Oct. "L- - ha,l fire th'O'uht to be the ly ns of h diuoB.iur or oi her pre-hlstoi ic milinal havn in ii uticoered by wurknu n excaat inn at Kntleld in 1h" western portion of .. .;!!. Caroin;i. I'resbbnt l.yVlon of th.. enetneerlnit firm of Tucker and Laxton, announced hero today M r. I .itxton. w Iwi somewhat verseil In geology, snid ho thought enough of the tiiHcovory to write in slat i freoloical department of .the I'lilvernliy of Nonli Carolina ftaking if the department desired to investi-rvat- Mi- mntter aid offerllitf the use of his force or w rknien. i i. i:.,d was ma b- at a depth of 2-"i feet. Mr. Laxton aid, and as en cluftted wi'h what inpeared to I., the remalnfi of sea ) ellsj. He pointed tut that sclentialp beilevo thi- Aiiiin t Ic ooenn at one j I me covered the coastal plain of I nrth Carolina and LITTLE G AME IN HIS PROSPERITY IS SHOWN BY PURCHASE OF BANK j BONDS IN THIS STATE I I ' font inued from 'ag One.) mity control, admonishes "the Demo. crats of the slat to listen to Surry next Tuesday nluhf. '11mjv will hear something. Mr. H.iynes says. The county dui a, mis. amouirt of devilment to the Dtnorrac- lar bark into 190R. It has been h. havtns much the same since It is now called nut not nil tht-se up"'" f-.n- :irt, Detnocraife bhi.- i down The T- puM'tan counties east are ery few and far b-twen Tyrreli is mad at si in -. t h u a ltd pr-p.i rir.K ' " H"P H d'd ihi tii'-k in l?lf. when J .M ilis. I lie's f :it her. c.pt urd t hfl en tin i v fmm the letnucra t s. Pare is also gi vine tmu hr. Tti Fin wan I 'emncrat s had been n tittle miffed. There are five fu mibliciui and three OemoerHtir counties which aren't oheyinn ihr masters worth a cent. ' lo ernor Mrrtsnn tnday broke In half a sentence of fiylit months Im posed on Todd McAllister of Scotland county In June. l'2, and In order to fsive .McAllister a chance to pat her h's crops, ordered th-1 sheriff to parole McAllister for 60 days. At the end of that sentenc tlie prisoner mu.t . eturn , tu the roads and pive himself up (o tho sher.ff. Mi.- offense violating t!ie prohil.i- tion law. ('leniency was denie.il John farter, of Mecklenburg cnimiy. who wert to pris.n in April. 1 f,,r mnrder In the second drgiee to sere a term of I ; 30 year". A. M. Xnide of presented the appeal. Smillfiebi i ' j I Slight j'Hlling "fT In n Rlstratlenn hv the 1'nlteri StHes depiriment of labor wiTft aniifMinced thi w eek, phc ii'iit of 111 of a possible -17: i.nis t ration'.- being the record. nrhste la "Not seitlrri .bout debates be -tweftn ' M i 1 Tl U. Uriels and W. F. Kans. candidates for soiii itor. w en- not de;ii Itely . ar ranged today, but there Is ;i prospect of one for Saturday nlht Mr. Evans did in RieutU like the prospect ast i,j,;ht when h. spoke at Wendell. He s'ii-1 lie had no objec tion to meeting Mr, Ffriijg'B, but did desire to k nf whether Mr. Itrlgrgs will furnish n-- many Rfiuhlicau lis teners as th- Iu mocrats w ill supply iH inorratS. !! ;tn rst ier disliked the plans of Mr. Brings to get him self a. crowd The Itenv-cratlc caiuM date admitted that he had said a few ili.t'us about Mr. lirlgps, but nol bad thin lis. tine of the opinion ft ventur er! Ii Mr Kv.ms wan that th only wa Urigvs cMild reduce tlie fees in 'lie so 1 1 1 n r s office was to "all m eon v let ion v and Evans did not eai e i icduce in that w.iv. This sharp thru- se-n-.K U, fisv o landed some- re. If the l'einoctat sin I" ars will g n:u(ne;it ht IS Mil its he is In tli'1 fit s desire a joint fs Ive it. but for the i-jfct to placv inetit. iuds of his friends. WALLACE PROMISES TO AID THE FARMER I Secretary of Agriculture Declares th . Farmer Must Get Fair Prices For Products. I.iiM i.an.ii,;. Mich., Oct. ;:l.-,id of tho row! uiviont In pecutitiK for the farn.rr a fair price for farm prodnc.tH wan prouiiHerl today by Sec retary fif Atu-iPuUirre Hallace in an nddt t ms lo students. alunnl and of- ; tU-lahi of tho MluhiKan AKrlcullural ' olb-iro here I "Heretofore," Mr. Wallace declared "Ihe PTtiphMln hnn been vt oiv-vhow-t 1m- farmei liow to produce more, i'lhat is right and proper. Hut we ! propose to put the same f niphii.sts on helping farmer h prt intr pgces for (heir crops by ndjnsttnp productbm tn the probable dema nil, and by bet ter marketing mcthndw." Tho federal Hlinlnlstrnl on believes a prospermia agriculture as well nn a producttvc one Is ensential Secretary Wallace declared. "Trict'S for farm products whirh are below actual cost of production may for a time seem a good ihiug for the people In the cities." ho said. "In tlirt end. however, the result I- hHd. Karmern cannot and will not J continue tu produce at & lose." , ? OWN BACK YARD UNITED STATES MOVES WITH CAUTION IN ALL ITS FOREIGN DEALINGS Continued from Fuse One.) tlu1 sense of helping to organize the world for peace. Mr. Hughes' second Item is the ln- ! v. simeiu (r i"id!"!dnal Americana in ' 1 - uropt'iui i-iit Tprisi'. Tills aifain ia ;-idi i'l and not governmental. Wo ire d .!iK for Kurope what KiiKland did for us after the t'lvil war. fur nishing capital throiiKh individual initiative. No one called the Invcst i n i e iu h of individual K n g 1 1 s li m e n in one railroadN a nil industries the in t f-rnat i'dia 1 co operat Inn of Oreat Britain Keel rry Beevolent. V e f'el benevolent toward Europe but uc do not Intend to ft our bene- oiciicft Involve us iti Kurope. That is liou a I ! that Mi Hutrhes sa.ys ft T.M ",H Tor the adaption of tiiis jMjtud ' tere I.h itniple exi'u"-- Mr llson fa tied at Pa r is beca use t ho tit can iinbitions of tho powers In c.nCer ence t hero made such interna t mnal co-rperatton as he had in mind Im possible. Tho nine ambitions of the same powers nearly wrecked our own con ference In Washington and have probably prevented its full results from bi'lng realized. The same ambition of the sam powern will prevent anything Ilka a settlement at Lausanne which ffi'1 make for permanent peace. KnliKtit'-nefi safe interest warns u to keep hwuv. And Mr. Hughes rays so. j'.ut nin.-e we are not as a hii i- entirely realistic in our htateinent of our attitude towards others. Mr. Hutches di" s not say tn the words co i g uaHiuimion used wnai ;mgn W iishluKtou said about the wiP'iotn ot keeping out of Kuropo. PADRICK PREACHES TO THE JURY THEN FALLS INTO A STATE OF COMA (Continued from I'age One.) the jurv Hint Mr. hlxon bad Insisted upon the n eddntK 1'atrick tolci the alleged Jealous- -ness of Ids mother-in-law, whmh ho admits he killed. W.tiild Heat nUKh(er. 'SIif uoubl often heat her dnuhter because Uilllfl Mae wnn ad in I rod by other nun when she went to town." he said. The defendant's mother testified as to his ninny attacks and said his nieatal condition sometimes threw him Into unconsciousness. "Hp u-'nuhl often fret up In the nijrrht and slndy the MlbM until daylight." she said. "He had jueer Ideas of re ligion Ife doubted other ministers' sincerity In fact, he often declared Bishop Candler was not a religious t n-nn." I The Itev. K. L. Vadrick. Sr. ared l.mlni'ter and father of the defendant, , tosti:ed th.it his ion "has always wept over a 'lo?t world.'" The father went on to tell of Fending his boy to Florida because of his mental con dition. He admittedhat a contribut ing ii-a son for sending: him there was the fact that he was wanted for for: liif; tho name of his employer on a cheek, nud was about to he arrested for wlfe-beatlng. The prosecutor later in the day ph.ced witnesses upon the stand In an effort to prove Fadrlck's sanity. .Tones QnattlebHuni declared he considered htm sane, having' heard him preach. Tom ,1 one's, another witness, said he h'-anl him preach, and considered him above the average In Intelligence. There'll Be Plenty Potatoes For Everyone In United States Madison. Wis., Oof. 31. Every per son In Jhe United States will have Xt eat -IK founds more of potatoes this year If the present crop is to ho con sumed, the Wisconsin department of markets estlrpated todty. Normal consumption of potatoes Is said to be .1.2 bushels per person but the bumper crop of this season has resulted In a supply equal to four bushels for each Individual rrrtflttc tion ts estimated at m.fHiO.000 , bushels. The market price here wiis dow j a new low figure today at 80 cnt i 1 hundred pound. a r f ... m -
Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 1, 1922, edition 1
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