Newspapers / Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, … / Dec. 1, 1922, edition 1 / Page 7
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A i X GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1922 German Chancellor Does Not View With Alarm Reported Threat Of French WILL FOLLOW UP NOTE iierliu, Nov. 30. (By Associated Tress.) An early resumption be tween the Tftrls und Berlin govern iiienis of pourparlei-B on the repara tions question is considered a cer tainty for the near tuture, U politi cal circles here as an outcome ,t in formal steps taken by tho Cuno gov ernment. While official quarters decline to admit' that such steps are In prog ress members of the forelyn relp.tiona committee of the reichstag have been Informally advised that the govern ment Is determined to follow up the German iite of November 13 by seeking to promote an early resump tion of the negotiations on the bawls or the proposal contained In the note, especially as the recent pour parlers between the late Wlrlh prov crnmnt and M. Barthou, chairman of the reparations commission, failed of any tangible arrangement. As a prelude to its present Initia tive, the German government is re ported to Iluve add refused a formal note to the reparations commis.H'.orv which will he presented through Vr. Frischer of the German war .'ebt commission In Paris. Strict secrecy is being observed with respect to the contents of the communication. Reports that the German govern ment has been planning a "world ap peal" In connection with the reported threatened advance of the Kreneh toward the lihlne and Into the KuUr region, are said to be wholly un founded. It Is asserted the new chan cellor and his colleagues have viewed " a program as both futile and idealistic. Neither was serious con sideration given to the proposal to ration out blocks of stock in German Industrial enterprises as part of repa rations payment. The American government's deci sion trt retain its forces on the Rh'lne, as reported here today from Wash ington, has been viewed here with undisguised pleasure. It is inter preted i-n some quarters as a merited rebuke to the plans of the French, alleged to have been formulated at a council of ministers Attended by, President Millerand, Marshal Foch and Premier Polncare. "America's announcement that It 1 does' not propose to withdraw Its troops from the Rhine, despite the nurrjed official denial from Paris, merely proves that the state depart ment officials In Washington have be come quite skilled in reading official denials from abroad," says the Lokal Anzelger.. The newspaper adds that in present Instance the Washington officials were quite convinced that the word of the French statesmen was wholly untrustworthy, and that the so-called political reasons advanced by Wash ington may probably be found in the threatened French advance to ward the Rhine and into the Ruhr. JAMES MANN, VETERAN MEMBER OF CONGRESS IS CLAIMED BY DEATH (Continued From Page Onei i rani ntm. Ha had attempted too much. Stricken In body, he waa rorced to leave, and for months lie lay 111. It has been said that his re covery would have been speedy ex cepthat he could not keep his mind off his work. But Anally he returned. apparently In good health, and Jump ed again Into the thick of the fray. Ills Intimate friends have said, how ever, that the lone and severe Btraln culminating In his Illness, sapped his strength to a greater degree than he might have been willing to admit. In later years he worked less arduously, but the thing was in him and he slaved, because he loved It. Outranked by Three Men. Only three members of the 7th Congress had served longer than Mann. Cannon and Olllett topped him. and so did Henry Allen Cooper, of Wisconsin, though Coopers 14 terms were not continuous. Mann came before the Spanish war and stayed. Mann's ability Is best summed, up. perhaps, in this brief sentence by Representative Mondell, who succeed ed him as Republican leader: "Mann was like a general who used his forces in massmack, but he went further and took the slight est advantage of any break." Negroes Start Migration To Big Northern Centers KeeAey U VLGrnsboro.N.C.a HELPING! those who wan to vet rid of the Drug. Liquor and Tobacco Habit. Also treatment of Nerve Rxhaustloir. Correspondence Confidential, tl years Suc cessful .Operation. No 0 Cleveland, .Nov. 30. Another mi gration of negroes from the south to the Industrial cities of the north Is believed to be under way. During the last few weeks many neros from (ieorgla and Alabama have gone to work In Younstown and Pittsburgh steel mills, according to advices received here, while hun dreds have obtained employment in Cleveland. According to tvilllam It. Connors, executive secretary of the IS'eKro Welfare association. 1.387 negro men from outside the city have registered for employment during the last four months. Some of these, he said, re turned to their old homes during ih recent depression but most of them had left the south for the first time. "They are leaving Atlanta for toe north by the carload." Connors said. Hetween 500 and 1.000 obtained employment at the Carnegie St iel company at Youngstown and a small er number at the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company, advices state. Hundreds have gone Into the Con nellsvllle coal field since the Mid dle of the summer. Two Men Killed. Kenova, V. Va., Nov. 30. A loco motive boiler and cab. hurled high into the air by an explosion of steam, parted and dropped two men to their death near the Norfolk and Western roundhouse here today. The men, Albert Saunders and Percy John son, were attempting to All the boiler with water when the blast occurred. Prince To Force Trial. London. Nov. 30 A dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph from Atheni" quotes the Greek newspaper Kleuth eros Typos as saying that the trial of Prince Andrew of Greece will be gin next Monday. Dangrerona StiBsestlon. Boy "Father, do you know that every winter an animal puts on a new fur coat?" , Father "Hush! Not so loud! Your mother's In the next room! "The Rv- stander (London). There were S79 women studying medicine In the medical colleges of the United States last year. At The Vogue Shop! OVERCOATS Of distinctive styles and of the Vogue high standard of work manship. In solid and plaid back fabrics in the wanted colors. ' Raglans and Ulsterettes lead in the demand but many are displayed for the conservative dresser. $25J2 27i2 32 The bhopF or Men Guilfoid Hotel Corner ' IV "l" 111 1 " I ' '" I IMUU I'UI'IJS wn I'Hil'Ji If I I . m B t I I It' .. .-."'I..:. Women's Hats of Present Day Marcel Deplores Ridiculous i Celebrated French Hairdresser Protests Against Decline of Klab ! orate Feminine Coiff ures Paris Policeman Ignores Admirers of His 12-Inch Moustache. ''l. Nov. 3. -"Thev,. ,, i, np really popular mode of f. nunl,,- I,-, r- Iressing so long as the r:.l women's hats of today exist Such was the statement m:,,lr l,y , lie f'i.sfiMissssysi " ' . -WHUAM H.WW 'SUXttl AHot't. QUILTING PARTY Delightful A ITs I r at Home of Mrs. .Iloore In orlh Wllkesbnro. 'Knl ,1 tf, 1-.'.J N-w, I -North Wilkesboro, Dec. J, --Wednesday the members of the Wilkes Valley Guards. 1'. It. ('., met at lh-1 hospitable home of Ills. .1. D. Mooro In North Wilkesboro for "Ye old time flulltlnK." The day was spent In happy conversation as the needles swiftly flew. At 1 o'clock the guests were Invited Into the dining room whr? a tempting box lunch was served ,,n a table artistically decorated in au lumn fruits and flowers. The hostess assisted by Mrs. P. .1 Brame served i hot coffee with the lunch. At the end .of a perfect day, the two beau tiful quilts were finished. fach Daughter contributing a square hear ing a tiny Confederate flag, around which were written the names of gen erous friends, who had made the quilts net $ 1 o8 for Confederate causes. A quilt was sent to the Sol-1 rtler's home In Raleigh and' one tn the Woman's home In Kayettevllle. as a token of the chapter's 'appre ciation o the heroic men and wo men who made many sacrifices for Ihe star and bars. The quilting party will linger pleasantly In Ine memories of the daughter's present. I'BILL'HAYWDODFAILS TdMAkP nnnnMiMiKir! iu mnii uuuu mmmu i i Those Who Went Over Russia To "Clean-up" With I. W. W. Leader Pining. "WANT TO COME HOME" confinement. Nothing wss being ac- compllshed at the plant, for the Americans ha4 not yet the right' to ! work there. The HusstBn workers ! and engineers showed their disap proval of the American rolnnV by continual cabotage. "Men wanted to outt b,- .-.-.v.t -n, tr, I neoause they put all their moner ' ""'-""a. rxAiy-uve per cent of the colonists want to return to the I'nlted States. It Is the same at Kamerovo. Nothing Is being done There Is not a concession. People are forced to live under the worst Chinese Farmers Too Poor To Indulge In Automobiles ' ( rflrowMulenrt AslwIstH Frew, t I Peking. Nov. S.T -The dcuree- of prosperity which enables American farmers to buy automobiles has not yet reached China. An American automobile company Instructed Its Peking agent to report on the pros pects of selling their macnin-s In the rural districts of China. T!i agent, after a careful survey of Chi'.tll prov ince. In which Peking Is located, le plles, "Chances poor. The average gross earalngs for a year's farming In this province Is $60 gold." Added to this difficulty, the arent said, there are. few country roads In China. In Peking the average Income of a man who pulls a rlrklnshaw in hotirs a day seven flays a week is ! n montn. Troops nrmatfn nn Rhine. (Br AJWUtwl Pre, l Washington. Nov. 80 It waa Indi cated Informally ln official circles today that there had been no change In the announced policy of leaving a small body of American troops on the Rhine for tiig present. No new orders had gone forward, It waa as serted, and none were considered nec essary. So far as known here no formal announcement tt the subject ; has been made. Dlsamtrons Factory Fire, Toledo, r Nov. ao. The factories of the Sundjtsky Oonerage and Lumber company. and American Steel Tube company here were de-' stroyrd by fire tonight with a loss estimated at 200,oon. A woman In Turkey Is merely a chattel, without opportunity for edu cation or organisation. E Use Antiseptic Liquid Zemo There isrmerenwdy that seldom falli to stop Itching torture and relieve skin Irritation, and that makes the skin nit, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with Zemo, which generally overcomes Ma diseases. Etzt-ina, 1 tch, Pimples, KasJies, Blackheads, In most casts give way to Zemo. frequently, minor blemishes disappear overnight. Itching usually stops Instantly. Zemo is a safe, anli- I septic liquid, dean, easy to use and neoendable. it costs onlv 35c; an extra large bottle. $1.00. It is positively salt for tMvW. tfua'tjv tkiju. M'orrPMKrtlHi-nn; Avorlllctl I'rrwl I Kkaterinburst. Russia. ,,v 22--Difficulties and dissensions have characterized the slnrtlng of the "Kuzbaz autonomous commune." the American and hyphenated American colony beyond the I'rals. according to members of the community who have mane their way back to ti.ls city. Hundreds of men from the I'nlted States went to the colony to work In the mines which. 'it Is said, the soviet government allotted to Wil liam K. Haywood, the American I. W. W. leader, and a number of Hits slan and American associates. Now some of them are beginning to come out. and they bring tales of the tur moil which they say obtains at the two towns where the colonists have settled. Roth at Kamerovo. where the coal fields are located, and at Nadajenskl. where are the steel works, there Is nothing hut confusion, .say the men who have quit. Some hitch has de veloped as to the concession, they de clare, as a result of which the prom ised activity In production has been turned Into wrangling and Jealousies. The leaders of the Kuzbai colony are striving to hold their men to gether, and say they hope for actual production this winter. Rut. accord ing to those who have succeeded In leaving the colony, most of the re maining members would he glsd to get away and heck to the I'nlted States If they had a chance to do so. Many of them, however, are without money. According to one recent arrival here, the first group, enposed of .in persons, lert the I'nlted Srates in March. Another of 78 persons left In April, and three other groups, total ing in all about 500 men. women and children, had arrived up to September 1. Some of these were sent to Nada- jensai, others to Kamerovo. One member of a group which left New York May 13 on the steamship Rotterdam, said the trip was a con tinual row'from the Statue of Liberty to the I'rals. The practical engineers and mechanics, who came largely for the adventure and possible fortune of the thing, found their companions mostly radicals, more Interested In arguments on politics than In real work. "The whole trip was nothing but one dispute after another." this man continued. "Meetings were held every day, but what they amounted to tin ine knew. When the crowd finally reached Petrograd. every one was criticising the other. Haywood spoke to us at Petrograd. after the lied army had welcomed us .and the first thing ho wanted to know was If we hnd brought along any money. "W e 'left PetroB-rsil fm- and Nadajeuskl In hex ears, women! and children and all. Mr. Poyle. a practical engineer from Texas, wss i supposed to be In charge of the' Nndnjcnskl group, b it the theorists I blsckllsled him. and lbs trhnV trip on the train was one sqttahhle after another. "When we reached this city we 1 were divided Into Iwo groups, ,,ne of 'i point to N.'Ul:ijMlMkI. the itther to Kamerovo. At Nad.tJ iiskl we were tv.M by the entlnnr li, eh:ufce. '. list, t Von ll,,ffcr. foriurrly ,,f tlary. Iiiftlatni. We soon f-.un.l tlun cry thlng In NadaJ, iiskl nt r, ,li W cleaned up some Iimu,-k and moved In. Our diet ly and hear.. "Von Hofff r fiirhati, mcci Ititc. our mail a vtwnrixi, iim.I w Ihwl r.,n llnually In an Mlmoriptif r uf foned renditions, und will be cnmr llpfl in j remain until mih tlm hi a ennron- ; s Inn BPtunlly In KranuM Thin may ' cnm aftfr fVtol.fr I J "As for mo. T mid flli my rlotheB I ami nni beat Inn ir.y wav t Mnnrnw. Kuzhnz Innkod 1'K1 a V.fautlfu! dream. I but It la a nlKntmarr- " ; Tlinae wh- .ire allckltiK i) oui Hl ! tho mlotfy ,nik iip.n thus.- who pone ;iw,iy iiilt(cri Tlh v julmil j dllTfiMiMlr-s. hut say m v t h i will I "nii out Hi) i ik h I In Hit- i tu if tli ! i n mi tats only hit Vf ii r;iKi. :, n, pniirneo onouyii lo rt-ma M Mari'fl. tJie (.l,hrated 'Tiiaiit nt hair nvt m or ills depart iif1 for T.otkIom f,r Hip r.n-atlon of ti fiftieth anni versary of his Invention M Man-fl wji emphati.' In his denunciation ,,f the prespiit-dny h.i! aa the nioi-t dan Rerous rival to the lu-auty of w o nien's featurta. "There are many bpuuttful modes of drfMsliiR- the hair," he said, "which, unfort unat elv. can not be uned on aecotint of tlw impossible- head Rear women will in sist on wearing. The very way a wo man puts on her hat nowntlnya makes li obvious that a really elaborate and attractive coiffure- would be out of place. , it n pot at all encouraKlnK w hen one sees I he deplorable man ner in whlh women and Klrla hide t hose pretty curls, when t bey place that inconceivable picture hat or that lausrhahle toque llRhtly on their heads and then, clutchlnc hold of it "iili their two hands pull the crea tion dow :i will, a rush ImaRlnc the off ret inside the hat. The curia ar all d isnrrn nged, some beyond Imme diate repair, and others all crushed at the sides' Although M. Mane! thinUs that there will be no special kind of coiffure hi ven ted until women's hnts are m;ide suit a 1)1 e to receive a head of hatr without "sufforatlnR" It. ho dev. ribcd a coiffure which he thinks will be very much worn this winter ami which he remarked will probably stay in public favor. "One of the moat fashionable coif fures will be the 'Creek coiffure.' v. liicii la ji n adu ptat Ion of I be nrnde of about 1831. The hair Is all brought to the back of the head and, with the aid of hai r-waiving. Is convert ed Into a mass of rurls. Curls in the '"Jreek style are what you know as 'flapper' curia, w hch. 1 hear, gen erally ha uR over the shoulder, hut much shorter. The whole Is done up at the back, but It ls here that the 1 vital mistake la made. The hair la al way Rat he red much too hlRh n p It should he considerably lower. Therp is no 'bun' in the real sens of the word, but a finishing of small round curls. That Is what I think will he the conilnpr voRue." Just twelve Inches from tip to tip I the measurement of the enormous mustache which la the Rlory of the Paris policeman who m,,y he seeiv on duty any day at the Porte Saint lienla Visitors to the city have, been known to linger around the man tn blue, wrapped In admiration of hia mustache, Its silky aheen a nr". exceptional proportion. But No. 2f-dfl has got nlte used to that and, alt hough at times the cynosure of admiring eyes, he continues to dlrec the busy traffic stream with par feet Indifference and composure. Hli mustache tfl nuld to be the longes' In France. Accordion tf :. de la Fouchard lere. the French vitt, "it In evident that for the Americans, those "dry" babies, of a new world, still to-) yniuiR. the mustache Is a sIri, of the most black perversity. "The role of the men with mus achei, In the American films. Is ul ways a villain mn- We notice In these films that i lie i lea n -sha en men are a I wa ys honest, energet fc. correct jnrt sympathetic Hut th? traitors, the thieves, the si iiRRards, etc.. are always adorned with I a mustache And wlur no- str,ni(fe Is tiiat all These iiti.e-;rabi. we;ir their mustaches 'a la Kran cal-e' " ' cry often in readinR .-n ueat I'apers" stiit.-K ("lem.-nt Vaiit:, "w fle-wtth reKreT the desth ..f M i. Plague. senator from M. wrthe e (Jaronne. f..nnrr rulnister of hk. culture, n i a i' 1 1 1 e dnd public tnnmc tfon.' AtnoliK the ninii'ri,T v ki,. erally find his w bi.-w . M F.-rdm.iri Pniplaque. deputy and l:..t.-t plaque, prefect, bis ,.uw . M Tht-or ib're Unpont, master ..f ;i np! i. ,n i..- at the state counsel. th- C.,t?it P.iou, 1 de .,tiKs j.diUe. tli ctniif. I, :t s..ii In-laws. M I.cm i. pl.-oiu . .it-ei'.tt.r Hi,. Mi'ittiMl rnuseuin f. r nf. art. his n phew; etc, etc "Or, l,t u-' r-ad the marriage no tices. '.-Mt,d.tv has been elebrateJ the nmrri.iRe ..f Mile Huguette Pu rami. ilniiKht-r .-f the Iteputy Purand. to M. Philippe- Auau.st'e-C&urte-manche. boh of the former senator and ambassador. Benediction has been given by Monslgnor Meguln. archbishop In part thus of f'eaare. Noted In the cortege were M, EmIU Durand, chief of the cabinet, min ister of the Interior, and M. Alfrsd Iurand. general secretary of the In ternational commission of the Dan ube, hrothers of the charming bride; M. Saturn In Courtemanche. Inspec tor of Beaux -Arts, brot her of th groom.' "And the enumeration continue. they all have a hand In the pie. "Tt must be Imposing a dinner In a family of this kind, with nothing hut senators. deputies, prefect, secretaries and high f unction nalres I The small cousin. who takes 'his place at the end of the table, t but twenty-two. but be la already at tached to the cabinet of the minister of agriculture. And his neighbor. Mile. Zoe. who is but little older than he, has just been named goddaugh ter of the pater famtllas-inspeotreM of the 'I'ouponnierea' of the city of Purls I can hear the patriarch (senator, former minister, ambassa dor, elc.) saying to his beautiful and numerous brood; Toms, my children, have some cheese.' "Tills Is not a republic of com rades; It is a republic of aona, nephews, sons-in-law, cousins, etc And they say that the family ptrit Is disappearing. "Under the old regime, the places, the grades, the favors were given exclusively, or nearly so, to a cer tain clique the well-born. Under the welt-born. 1'nder the new regime tt Is exactly the same thing. And If we should retake the Bastille well!" Interested. .rad "This university certainly takes an Interest In a fellow, doesn't If" Tad "How a that?" Crnd. "Well. I read In the grad uate magazine that they will be very glad to hear of the death of any of their alumni." Siren. Jjm lif Home. "i't'ii't you ever get homesick?" "No," replied Senator Sorghum. "After being heckled a few times by u i y const it u ants I'm perfect ly satis fied to reside in Washington, l), J." Washington K enlng Star. ( rop N hooting (Life ) Motion for farmers: Weed 'em and , - " ' 1 u- , vie, ui e a i ways adorned wit h rcn p Bring the Kiddie to Toy Town Today Santa Claus $ fa tf V tf tit & tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf y tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tft tf i:vr i.n.iti u s dm Tint: mt 10-07.. i.oup tc, 20-oz. i.oaf in,. I FTV3 MjJQ ?i,yN From g V W J I FROM MILLS DIRECT TO YOU I W A JSJ P-t"' ,,'yi 8:15 to 6:00 5 I vmy i ruin . im i i " ii.TO.-r-x'mr - " - n l.b n u. j, mm f ii- ... 41 ;.. We have the largest stm to select from. 6 tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf tf Mofttlv evprv IfinH nt thit ia ,,n,l ia k.. r I . ,.,U, ... I.-, Ll, I,,- ,WUIIU III UUI VMBt assortment; loo, at prices thit arc incomparable. Come to our opening and find the one that you like Unbreakable Dolls 49c to $1.50 In a wide selection of sizes and dress Some have real hair Kid Body Dolls $1.79 to $6.00 With real curly hair, all sleeping dolls. These dolls are jointed so they will sit upriRht. In sizes from 12 to 24 inches. Mama Dolls $1.98 to $3.98 Century walking, talking and crying dolls, all completely dressed in hats or bonnets, dresses and shoes. Little Sister Dolls 98c to $1.49 With curly locks, dressed in white material with lace trimmed col lars. These are also sleeping dolls. All China Dolls 39c to $9-00 Sleeping dnlh all r!respH. ready for tho kiddie. wuh im. fW.njr hllir. in nmt nnv ci?a Vrtii pmiU ur.aU Pansy Dolls $5.00 to $12.00 Large I'ansv sleeping ilolls. in sizes from 10 to 30 inch' all niuitly dressed and ready fur play. Cupie Dolls 98c to $1.49 Daintily dressed in silken material, with lorn- ilnu III llex'llt. Toy Pianos $1.98 to $3.98 These pianos are ideal for little Kirls, and arc really musical, fanci ly ornamented, in three different sizes. Games of All Kinds 10c to $1.19 Building blocks picture blocks, art work designing outliU, and in fact most anything that you would want for the vounester in games. Tenpin Sets 10c to $1.00 Made from hard wood, an ideal set for the boy, something that is not so easily destroyed. Drums 40c to $1.98 The best line of toy drums ever shown in Greensboro. Most of these drums have sheepskin heads and are adj .jtable, some arc picture decorated, others plain. Pure Aluminum Cooking Sets $1.98 pieces of pure aluminum cooking utensils, line for the little Electric Trains $7.50 to $25.00 The trains come in different sizes: the track i m,-, I ; tl, chase. These trains are stoutly made bv the best ty manufac turers Transformers for the train, froni $3.98 to $8.00. All kinds of mechanical toys, autotmobile. lire trucks li re t.)ifin,ti express wagons, shooflies, rocking horses and in fact most any thing in the toy line that you could desire. Don't fail to bring the niiiuK- io our loviown opening on one oi the opening day: 15 girl fa t fa fa fa fa fa i fa fa tf fa fa s If tf fa tf tf fa tf fa tf fa tf fa
Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 1, 1922, edition 1
7
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