Newspapers / Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, … / Dec. 29, 1922, edition 1 / Page 8
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s British Government May Seek iPay For Capt. Coleman's Booze ' 1 t 1 Collector Grissom's Office Flooded By Inquiries Concerning His ' Intention to Levy On Property of Those Guilty of the v Illicit Manufacture of Whisky Dellr Km I k Wwevent HUOn. lUlelgh. Pe. SI. CUlm (or Mee itn ot Pmm boot riointly otit into ths Cap Fear rtvsr at Wllmlng to ar about le b mad againat th In Had States government, and th. Mrttlsh comul at Savannah is aatA by Individual! connected with tht recent trial or tha ablp orw hara, to ba conducting negotiation. How much mora tha British lion ran do to tha American sagl than to roar at tha rare old bird. Intarna tlonal legalists do not fel fraa to aay; but tha Message of Peae haan't ult. Tha Urltlshar teal that In destroying th cargo ot a elttian of tha ampin, tha American wara a littla too nasty and th damand for payment of tha bill will ehortly b read. It th repreaeotatlvea on thl aid remain of tha preatnt mind. 10 It V. aft learned today. Tha Meesage of Peace whan taken Into North Carolina water had on board mora than t.OlM gallon ot liquor. But tha British navy at tha vroret ot th treat conflict a fw years age suffered no such attention ' a Hie biltish boos did down then '. i . . ..... . .It.. h.kW Thj 1 111 ine -," 1 11 v.r""" "- i amount of boose poured out was far below that amount towed In. What became at so many cases "nobody Is testifying. mA' few were accounted T-r, hut many wero nut. Tha theory i of Hi lr:tlhers t that mis wnitnj vit uuk'Uy lUsttoyed for a very I noo'l reason liiat as inventory of i Mould have rhowH conditio!. iiff i rult ta explain.. In th custody of the government much of this boose Is believed to have been ta.ii. Of mum there are no : accusations airslnst any custodians. The government had no altenatlve, officials here say, when one tho case w.-s nettled and b why fell Into An-ertcan bands. There w.tu no causes offered for dlve.tlng the liquor to 'omesti use. It la iinnos Kittle whisky legally in North t'erolln But th British covern Intents view Is that no Brlion is to h lobbed of his property legally held anJ thl cargo belong! to Capt. Arthur Coleman. The Brl'aaa con tend that the New Bern tr:al aciittit I -d the .hip owner of an. illegal lmin. He was merely convicted nf welling illegally.- He aervet his lime for vast, but th boa was bia. ha raptati. c.. tends, and . to bej .i i a t - u . E. T-W .. J ..... ..I In prohibition territory i j-..t too Brest tor S'in. '-: In Collector Gilliam Grissom's of fice all sort and conditions of mall are being received In protest of the collector's purpose to try in a tern and western district court two typi cal cue each affecting th assess menta against certain. North Caro linians alleged ta have violated the revenue law. District Attorney Frank Llnney In CRYSTAL CAFE BIXUB BTJU.DIW8 EQUIPPED FOR BEST QUALITY REASONABLE PRICES Try stark M Wearer Vwiaa BASKETBALL Y. M. C. A. VS. Wake Forest College Tonight 8:15 P.M. Admission 35c Start the New Year With New DRESS CLOTHES Years ago, the man who bought one evening suit was fixed for life but now that the evening clothes makers are keeping pace with the dress makers a chap has a pretty hard time keeping a 1910 suit a secret at a 1923 party. These suits were received by us this week they have the new backs the new fronts the new waist line effects and we can fit you inside of one hour if you say so. Priced at $35 and $50 makes it easy to swap a "has been" for a winner. Evening Vests Ties Shirts Studs and Links. N. H. Silver Co. 231 S. Greensboro th wt and' District Attorney Jrvln B. Tucker ot th ast have van asked to take a pair ot the case, sir. arlsaom'a mall la uluttered up with proteit. Th protestanta have been the bnflclary ot Injunction against th oolleotlon ot penalties. They think they have bn absolved from all blame. But tha collector reads tha dealalona to mean that the collector la restrained from collect ing these olalma without "due process of law." which Is to say. tha Mr. Oris son oannut take man's property without giving him a . hearing In court. To Illustrate th point: Th gov ernment arreats a man on whoa lan.V Is found a dlatillary. H Is charged with operating tha still. He Is tried and found not guilty. But he la not free. Porhapa he has been discovered with six gallon of liquor in hla possession. He haa not taken out wholesale license r retail privilege He must pay the tax. And he muat put. up more money tor each gallon of boose ao found than It once coat him ta buy a half dosen gallons of food liquor. ' When a "distillery Is found on such a man's land It Is welt for him to have proof that he Isn't making liquor. And h generally can do so. It never waa necetsary: for former District Attorney II. F. Seawell to "prove out of It" when a distillery waa found on hi landa during his official life. Commissioner U Blair's lands have been found with three distilleries on them, so the . port cornea to Raleigh, but the com missioner won't have to sottl with Grlssom or the government. A still waa found oa Kalelgh'a -vateraupply lards, but the municipality is sate. 811113 and boos may be npWned. Uut explanation must b msde. Judges have been apprised of the official costs of Mr. Grlssom who Isn't excited over It. He Is execut ing Washington's orders and these assessments amounting to il.oOv.vM in bulk ar demanded at Wasnlnsion. The collector Is sending cut letters urging "offer tn compromise.? And some of these ar being made. In all hla official Hf th new collector has had nothing quit so touchoua. ays Need ta Haapltahh -Dr. Charles O'H. Auglng house ot Greenville today talked on th pro posed medical school now in th gov ernor's mind and before th univer sity trustees, and whll the Green ville physician favors the medical school, he unhesitatingly aays the great need In North Carolina la not a medical college t omake new doc tors, but community hospitals In which they maw diagnose and treat disease. "Virginia had medical schools, but Virginia has Just th asm trouble with her country doctors aa w have." Dr. Laughtnghonse said. "Kentucky BAST SYCAMORE STREET QUICK SERVICE U. "Y"Gym Elm St. High Point and other Southern tata have them. but their rural condition ar not better than our Th thing thst kseps our physicians from locating and remaining . In rural practloe. Isn't the pay they get. Tak my oounty, Pitt, for Instance, and Jet m tell you th financial oobdtttons. it Is a rich odunty, thr I n pauper problem titer. W have a county horn .coating, about 110.00. w hav In that home alght paupers. The maintenance for th year was (li.OOO. Vat thr I no hesitancy It getting endorsement of that policy. ''But a county hospital, a plao .available for ail the practitioner to Itake their cases and glvs thm the benefit of th best treatment Is a much mora necessary thing. In th natur of things th oounty home deals with senility, with failures, with th flotsam and Jetsam ot IK. ' Th community hospital would deal with tha vary best of lit. An aver age practitioner haan't any show without It. Let a country doctor start on a diagnosis and lmagin what in terruption will com to him In hi own offlc whr he Is th solitary phyalclan 1n small town or village. "Thar ar not half a dosen com munity or tr hospltala In th atat. and thin ar very few privately owned. The private Institutions In th vary natur of things' mut cattr to pay patient they could not run otherwise. Another thing; too, a doctor of mediocr ability but with plenty of money, might erect a hos pital, whll his" mora skillful neigh bor without money Is debarred from this best equipment and I allowed to wear himself out ia his work until his enthusiasm Is gone, before he be comes able to finance tha hospital." Dr. Laughlnghous says, too, that the equipment whlcli a modern doctor must privately own, will break the physician -unless " he haa a great amount ot money; but h haa small opportunity to us It In a practice which keeps him constantly on the run. He unhesitatingly-declares that the community hospital in which there is every facility for th diag nosis and treatment ot disease is the need tn the state, not a great central "clearing aquas" hospital. "What would a great central clearing house bank mean to a community in which there were no other bank?" he asked. The Greenville physician he been president of th atat medical so ciety. Ha haa mad a. urvy of the state's hospital needs and haa studied the migratory lit of th country phy sician. Given a chnace to treat pa tients he believes th doctors' prob lem will b easily met. But he does aot think a medical school will do It, however deelrable auch an Institu tion might be. MeCakMas Earalllag Clerk. Secretary Bryan Grimes of the department ot atat today announced the appointment of Ben D. McCub- bins, of Salisbury, enrolling clerk to succeed S. B. Norvell tor the 1SU session of th general assembly. Mr. Norvell, who haa been 10 year with tha atat did not apply for th place again owing to busi ness . calls on his time. Colonel Grime pays th highest praise to th retiring clerk whose efficiency has been th brag of tha Democrats, in young McCnbblns th secretary of state gets a prise, fee feel Mr. Mc Cnbblns Is a Trinity alumnus who worked th telegrapher's key at night and studied by day at college. NEWS OF PITTSBORO Mis Alton baauke Is Seriswaly Hart la Aata Wreck, tsseasl ta Delft ntn.1 nttsooro. Dec-; 21. what came near being a fatal accident waa nar rowly averted Wednesday morning when AUn. Kubanks. tha 14 -year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. - Rom Eubank on north Hlllsboro atreet, was run over and dragged aeveral feet by a Ford ear driven by Bud Guuter. Tbe child was approaching the street in her front yard aa the itr was nearlng her, just at th time a car attempted to pass Mr. Guntar and It Is thought struck on of his wheels causing him to lose control of his car, which dashed from the street, running over th child drag ging her several ' feet and ran through a board fence befpr stop ping. The child was attended by Dr. Chaplin, who found her badly braised but no bones broken. Last reports sh was doing as well as could b expected. Mrs, H. 'A. London, cf thl place, president of the Wlnni Davla chap ter U. D. C. was presented Wednes day morning1 with a handsom gold wrist watch, a Chrlstmss gift from th veterans ot Chatham, who hold her -in tha highest esteem. The gift waa praaented by R. L. Sutphln, of Plttaboro. M. L. Harris, of this place, waa shot, he alleges, by an unknown ne gro while paaalng through Apex on tha National highway Tuesday night. Harris states that his assailant shot him from- within a house aa ha was passing In his Ford. Several shot taking effect In his face, nsck and ear. A negro boy who waa In the car with Harris at the time waa hit by aeveral ot the ahot. About two dosen ot th shot struck th door of his car. Harris is under the car of Dr. W. B. Chapln who found aeveral of the shot too deeply embedded to be removed. Sheriff O. W. Blair and hi faith ful deputies are making it vary un comfortable for tha blocklders of the county. Nine stills hav been cap tured within the last 10 day, some streets have been mad and others sre pending. A still of unusual large capacity was captured In Hick ory mountain townahip last Tuesday. being a 130 gallon outfit. The Inmatea of th county home three mile southwest of town have recently been moved In to their new home one mile east of town which Is a handsome, convenient, modern brick building just completed. The new home hss electric lights, run ning water and srasm heated and Is in charge of the newly appointed superintendent. John W. Johnson. WafredCCarr OptussevrM Eyes gSsamlae Guisaea fitted 118H West Market Street (Over HaTWurth' Jewelry Morel Ph.. SUM. Reduced Round Trip Fares rls Southern Railway System On alm aallv to iswrt points Kttu.-n limit Jun ICth. 1121. 'In autre ticket agents for further la formation. L 4. PEACOCK, C, 1. A. Dr. H. A. Schiffman I Optometrist Ken Located At CHirFMAM JEWELRY CO. , Fasae lad GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29. 1922 THE DAY)N WASHINGTON The annual postal aupply bill, car rying itl4.IW,ll, waa r-jpornd to the house. - Th senate adopted a resolution x presslng "pleasure and Joy" over th improvement . In forbier President Wilson's health. , Senior fdral circuit, Judgss wet umler the presidency ot Chio! Jus t!et Taft to oonsldsr steps to expe dite litigation pending In district and circuit court throughout th coun try. f President Harding wrote a loiter to Senator Lodg bppoalng the Uorah International cunfaranc plan and eaylng It adoption would embarrass Shipbuilding Plant Goes to Group of Atlanta Men Savannah. Ga , Dec. II. Th plant of tha Terry Shrpbulldlng corpora tion at Port Wentworth today passed from ths handa . of th ship con structing concern to th Georgia Wool Stock company and th Ameri can Mill International company, both of Atlanta. Th details ot th sal were completed In Washington. Th plant Is understood to hav been sold for 1401.00. Ths sals of th plant may mean that It will be used for fabricating and manufacturing ateel railway car, according to S. Lovett. Mr. Lovctt and Harry Koplln. of lanta ar members of one of At the concerns that bought the plant.. Marked Reduction In the Shortage of Freight Cars Washington, Dec, 2. Marked re duction tn th car shortage which haa existed on the country's rail- roada during recent month waa evi denced today on the face of latcat reports to the car service division of the American Railway association. The total number of freight car which roada were ahort on December It, aa compared with th shipper' damand for car that day, waa 105,- 018. A week previous the shortage amounted to 11161 cars. Volam of traffic moving over roada continued high, the car service division also found, and during the week ending December II. 8I.OS2 carloads of rcvenn freight - war handled. This waa 1C1.00I carloads greater than th number handled during th same week one year ago. CBrratalate Waodrww 'WUaaa, Lynchburg. Vs., Dec 28. A birth day telegram sent to Woodrow Wil son today by Mrs. Norvel Otsy Scott, president ot the Virginia division, United Daughters of tha Confederacy rejoiced "in th restoration" of tha former Prealdent'a health. "We thank God that through your tenac ity of will and purpose every tra dition of noble people haa been up held," tha messsge said. Clark Gets New M. New York, Dec. 28. E. A. a Clarke, former president of th Lackawanna Steel corporation and th Consoli dated Steel corporation haa been luted secretary of th American Iron and 8tel Institute. It wss an nounced today by President E. H. Gary. Mr. Clarke, who is also a director of th institute, will assume his new duties January second. SILEXT SCI BOOR. Girl Wltk Bawerieaew th "Perreef Ben. (Kw Xork Sun." f "Deliver me." said th girl with ex pertence. "from any more of these strong, silent men.. They make very good fiction heroes, but personally I prefer a man whos chief claim to strength does not It In his breaking all records for silence. I like the man who knows the value of a pause or a moment In which no one says any thing, but In which unutterable things sre felt. "A man who shatters a time like that or doean't even know It when It comes along, is, aa we aay, 'Impossi ble.' If there's anything worse than a female ehatterbcoi. it's a male chatterbox, but that's no reason: why a man can't answer "Tea' when you say, 'Isn't it a lovely dayT without thinking that he Is violating a aecret. "Writera areito blame. I believe, for. building up th fictionally per fect but realistically terrible type of man whose, stock In trade Is an enigmatical amUe. Consequently, vary man- who 1 shy, bashful or stupid feels that he baa an excellent alibi. A girt who ir not vsrsed In tha ways of men but who knows her story books backward and forward Is led to believe that the man who listens alike to her prattling, her small talk and her profoundeat re marks with a mere quirk to th left aid of hi mouth. I a fiction hero come to life. . After a season or two, depending on her personality, she knows, alas, that he la generally Just a vsry dull man. Of course, If ha la dull It's much better that he should be dumb as well. The only pity is that he appears, at first, to be what he decidedly Is not. "Girl realli that most' conversa tion must fall to them, and they are perfectly willing to carry on under that' eondltton. Tat, even s. they have a right to expect a little assist ance now and then, If It's only a Tes.' a "Go on.' or a That's inter esting.' After all, a every one knows. It len t so much whst Is ssid as the way It la ssld. The strong silences snd the enigmatical smiles Intrlgus only until a girl finds out that there's nothing bshlnd them. "If she Is so foolhardy as to ask, 'Whst sre you thinking about? or Why are you emlllngT' eh really de- serves Just whst she Invariably gets. For In the first esse she comes up against a amtle: and In the aecond caae, against a silence. There's thst muoh to be said for these men. any way; If they can do both, they vary their acts, applying the on to ex plain the other with a remarkable facility. "Modesty, reticence, reserve these sre commendable. But a men who thinks thst silences and smiles Indis criminately ued ' can carry him through the world, must be "not only etupld, btit a boor." Ot ARMY OF SBRVAJtTg. I'. . Government Greatest Employer of Labor la World. (Roscoe C. E. Drown, In North Amer ican Review.) The United States government is today probably the largest employer of labor In the world. With a 'civil personnel of more than 5S0.000 per sons and an annual payroll of clearly f 760,000. 00O, It presents a problem nf employment administration far more complicated and far more Imperative ly demanding solution than that of any private industry, to which ex pert attention is given as a matter of ordinary business prudence. The employes of the states, cities. counties, towns snd villages. It Is estlmsted. bring the number of public servants In the United States nearly to J, 000, 000. About one .out of 118 persons is on a public payroll of which the total annual charge Is over 8.000.0OO.0OO, or more than 810 s family on the pockets of the Ameri csn taxpayers. This enormous force, Its proper re cruiting, efficient operation and Just treatment, constitute the problem of the civil service reform movement, which this tvear counts the fortieth anniversary of Its great Initial sue- th administration In (tort to helpful" already underway. ' .. A delegation repreaenting the Woodrow Wtlaon foundation called on the former president to f elicit me hliu on his Hth birthday and inform him that the $1,000,000 fund to ad vance Ideas h advocated was as sured of completion, Th chamber of commsros of th United State announced the receipt ot a request from German bualiuss man for an American cunimlaalon to adjudg Germany' capacity to PX reparation. Th -chamber deferred decision pending th meeting ot al lied premiers next weak. FOOTBALL COACHES TO FIGHT GAMBLING - 11 .1 f New York. Dc. 28 The American Football Coach association at It Mcond annual - meeting yesterday went 011 record aa atrongly bpposd to gambling In connection with college football or commercialisation of their amateur tame, by college gridiron stara who participate in professional gainea after being graduated. Resolutions embodying this atti tude, framed along lines ot th atand taken by the western or "big ten" confidence were adopted, tiy more than 100 gridiron coachea and athletic director representing about 40 col leges and'univeraitlea In all parts of tbe country. The assoclstlon, which closed Its sessions tonight at a dinner address ed by a number of prominent football authoritlea, also adopted a code gov erning fair play, good sportsmanship and coaching ethics as recommended by a committee headed by Alonso Stagg, veteran gridiron mentor. Chief among the features of this cod were demands for strict adherence to ama teur rules, enforcement ot rule pro hibiting sideline ooaching and dis couraging all commerciaMsing Influ ences on the ri-me. Extensive discussion of rule prob lems developed no outstanding rec ommendations, but special Interest kwas mantfeated in two mnnnli advanced to provide a mean for aet- umg gamaa in which tha teams are tied at the end of tha regular play ing period.. No formal action, how eer. waa-taken oa either. Government May Undertake . Education' Choctow Indians Washington; Dee. ? Th. i,... tion of the full-hlooded Choctaw In diana of Mississippi may be placed tn the hands nf the state acnnni au thorities tinder an amendment to th mienor department appropriation hill adopted todav bv th. ine Dill carriea 121,800 for main taining aay schools for th. Indiana Representative Lowrey. Demnnrot Misalaslprl, who offered the amend ment, contended that the Indian chil dren should be absorbed In the pub He school system of the state, and the Item was changed so aa to au thorise the Indian affair bursau to spend the money for "tuition" in pub lic schools. It found advisable. Horticultural Board Will Not Recommend Quarantine Washington. Dec. 21. Th federal horticultural board .haa decided not to recommend a federal quarantine at this time on aocount of the cam phor scaler This decision follows a public hearing held November 20 last and la based In part on the be lief that the Invaded statea. Louisi ana. Alabama and Mississippi, either throughVthe safeguards which they are now wgintalning or which they propose to maintain In th future. will control the distribution ot this pest as efficiently under the exist ing status as could be accomplished by a federal quarantine. Relly's Farar Pl.as TTadecMed. Washington, Dee. 28. Secretary Weeks announced today after a pro- Inrged conference with Governor E. Mont Reily. of Porto Rico, that he did not know what the governor'a Intentions were with respect to his continuance I ft office as hesd of the Porto Rican government, although he assumed Mr. Relly would return there as governor. Mr. Relly refused emphatically to comment on hla fu ture plans further than to aay that he would visit his home In Kansaa City, Mo., when hla business tn Wash ington was brought to a close. March Mead f Fraternity Washington, Dec. 28. Ma. Gen. Peyton C. March, retired, war-time chief ot staff, today waa eleoted hon orary president of the Delta Kappa Bpstlon college fraternity, succeed ing John Hessln Clarke, of Ohio, for mer justice of the United States Su preme court. General March I a member of the Lafayette university chapter, snd Mr Clarke of the West ern Reserve chapter. James An derson Haws, of New York, of the Yele chapter, was re-elected general secretary. Mas Left ft0,0O. Chicago, Dee. 28 The late Cof? gressman James R. Mann, who died: In Washington November 80, left an estate of 1250,000. which will go 'to hla widow. It was disclosed today when his will wss filed for probate. The Instrument left the estate to the widow and their son who died p(1or to his father. The entire eatate now goes to Mrs Mann. It consists of 2178. 000 In personal property and real estate valued at 18.000. Steamer Hard Agrawad. Charleston, 8. C, Dec. 21 The Grace line atesmer Ssnta Rosa from Chile was still hard aground by the bow tonight off Morris Island In the open sea. Tomorrow morning con siderable of the cargo of nitrate of. soda will ha placed aboard a lighter In hopes that tha removal will cause the shin to drsw less water and aid In the efforts of the several tugs to float her. Ta Declare Stock Dividend. Snartanburc. H. C Dec 28. Stockholders of Clirton Manufactur ing company at a meeting today In dorsed th recommendation of th board ot directors to declare a stock dividend of 28 per cent and a cash Semi-annual dividend of six per cent. This action will Increase the capital stock of ths mills from 2.00.000 to 82,600,000'. Astoria Was Fired, Astoria, Ore., Dec. 28. Investiga tion by officials of the fire' which wiped out the, business district of As toria December 8. has resulted in the finding that the fire was of Incen diary origin. It wa announced to . It was said clues have been fot....i .which will lead to arrests. B. B. TATUM Motor Trucks Teams Tr&nsfers and Livery We are equipped for all classes of hauling, heavy and light. Moving a specialty. Packing and storage. A big truck for long distanse mov ing, picnic parties or any class of motor transfer. Phone 28, Depot St PI BUILDING FOR STATE With Humanitarian Purposes Theater Owners May Erect Big Auditorium - ' CONVENTION ADJOURNS Motlun Hetur Theater Owner vf North Carolina Juat prlur to adjourn ing the midwinter convention yeetet- day afternoon at th u, llnry hotel named a eummltte tu devl ways and ntsana tor th building of a ultabla auditorium either at Jack- sou Training school, Cabarrua coun ty, or at th Orthopadio hoapltal, at Oastonla. Hutlt institution ar main tained by th atata. , Th committee on the building pro posal will make It rcdmmndatlona whan the organisation of movie man meets In regular annual aeaalon next summer at Wrlghtsvlll Bach at a date to b flxad by th . executive committee. Motion picture theater owners of Virginia and South Care Una will be Invited to attend th next annual meeting of th North Carolina association. , - M,ornlng and afternoon business sessions wsr held yesterday with 80 member of th aaeoclatlon In at tendance. The convention, which was characterised last night by prominent member or th organisa tion as having been the moat auccea ful vr held In th stats, opened on Wednesday evening and was for mally adjourned at 4 o'clock yester day afternoon.- , - .. . By resolution the convention strongly condemned "the Iniquitous graft and robbery" of the muslo tax and the burdensome and unjust In crease In tha state privilege tax and gave hearty lndorsmnt to th bet ter film organisation. Discussing th proposal to con struct an auditorium at on of th atat owned institution a prominent member of the association explained that motion picture men ar taking up th proposition from a purely hu manitarian atandpolnt. It waa sug gested that funds with which to oon atruct th building may be raised by giving a certain amount of re ceipt from ticket sales at movie houses to. the fund at stated Inter vals, but no definite decision ' haa been reached. Th oonventloa Instructed Ha chairman to name a legislative com mittee of exhibitors and film repre sentatives to keep In close touch with proceeding ot th general as sembly when It convenes next month. Th committee will be empowered to act on behalf of the organisation "la regard to all .matters ot interest to the Industry that may be brought to th attention of our law maker." Uh following wer among Im portant resolutions passed: "That the state organisation heartily commands th efforts be ing put forth by th National Theater Owners association to secure fair, equitable and uniform con tract and various other reforms of Interest to the Industry, and espe cially ths efforts ot the national organisation to annul the Iniquitous graft and robbery long practiced by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers under the fala and Iniquitous guise of the music tax, and that we pledge our individual and organised efforts looking toward tha repeal of th fed eral atatute under which th organi sation haa operated and to take such other steps as may - appear necessary and advisable for th pro tection of th industry. "That w approve most heartily the better film organisation and pledge our united support and co operation to th nd that better programs may be secured and objec tionable pictures relegated, by co operation with the publio without in voking th Impractical and Impossi ble scheme of political censorship. "We condemn th burdensome and unjust Increase In thi atat privi lege tax Imposed by the laat general assembly of North Carolina, and that we request th next coming assembly to substitute or repeal the tax. "We extend oar sincere thanks to the press and to the many cltlsens ot Greensboro who hav welcomed us to the city, and especially to the O. Henry hotel for tha hospitable man ner in which It ha provided for th Comfort and pleasure of the member or our organisation while tn attend ance npon the mattera of th conven tion." , Basket ball tealghr. -y vs. Wake Forest. Y. M. C. A. Gym. 8:18. Advt. NOTI OB TO THE CREDITORS Of . THE CAROLINA YADKIN RAILWAY CO. NORTH .CAROLINA, ' GUILFORD COUNTY, North Carolina Publio Service Co. vs. Carolina and Tadkln River Railway Co. Tou and each of you are hereby notified to present your olalm against th Carolina A Yadkin Klver Railway company, to th under signed referee, at his office, 102 North Elm street, Greensbroro, N. C on or before the 12th day of January. 1028, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. This notice is given pursuant to an order of the Superior court In above entitled mat ter. THOMAS C. HOTLE. Referee This th 12th day of December. 1122. 1-11 1 Real Quality At i Price $30 Styleplus OToats $35 Styleplus OToats $25 Styleplus Clothes $30 Styleplus Clones $35 Styleplus Clothes 356 South Elm St. R. C. DU1. OF ENFIELD. Eighty Candidates Initiated Into Shrine; Meet Next In Washington, N. C. LIST OP NEW OFFICERS IHnclll I llelly laMSsl..' ' Nw Bern, Do. 21. Th sUctloo of luymutid C Duun, ot .Enfield, as illustrious suUnlats, th aslsotlsn of Washington for th spring cere monial, which la to be held In May and th Initiation of 80 candidates Into the Shrln Were th high lights In ths annual mldwlnur ceremonial of Sudan tempi, which con cluded her tonight with a grand ball. - Today' aesslon was attsndsd by a thousand Shrlnera, and from 19 o'clock this morning whn th busi ness sssslon opened until the last couple left the ballroom floor at mid night there was nough of amus-. ment to kp th crowds busy. Th divan of Sudan for th nw year, headed by Potentate Dunn, Is oompoed of .th following lcted offlc! : Jak T. LasslUr, of Rocky Mount, chief rabban; Furmaa N. Bridgera, of WlUon, assistant rahr ban; Caleb D. -Bradsham, ot New Barn! high prUat: R. C. Roberson. Jr., of Wilmington, oriental guld; W. W. Griffin, of New Brn; tras urer. re-elected, and Dr. Joseph F. Rhm. of Nw Bern, recorder, re flected. Th other lettv offi cer namd this morning wr th reprewntatlve to 'th Imperial council, who ar AIxandr B. An drews, of Raleigh; William A. French, of Wilmington: Jamaa a BrawlL and Dr. J. IV. Rhm. ef Nw Bern. Potentate Dunn eomolet hla a- polntmenta this afternoon and to night gar out th following '1st ot appolntlv fflcrs who oomplt th divan: Fred B. Cnwaon. first ceremonial master; Barry B. Storr, of Raleigh, second ceremonial maa ter; Rev. Frank D. Dean, of Wilson. orator, re-appolnted; Dr.. John B. Griggs, of Bllsabath'Clty, marshal; nurt at. poteat, ef Wak Forest. captain of th guard; Frank Kuglar, of Washington, outer guard; Claud S. Chamberlain, director, ra.el.nt.il! " "m 1. nui, -or new Rem. ess. tain ot patrol, r-eleotd; Barratt D Wilson, of Nw Brn, director f bank, and F. Mercer Gallagher, at Wilmington, drum major. . Hone) or 1AXB Undr and hv virt. v- v.sted In th undrslgnd commls sloner, tn an ordr algnsd by Honor able W. F. Bardlng, Judg. holding court In th Twelfth Judicial Dis trict, in an action entitled North urauna mono ear vie company t al. vs. Carolina aV Tadkln Blvr Rail way company, I wHl sail at publio auotloa on Tosday, January 18. lll. In front of th U. a Post Offlc building. In ths oltv ar wi.h 11.1.1 North Caroline all th, ,w- inir 01 in Carolina at lauam jiiver naiiway company of evrv nature ehitm,., t.m rcelvabl. now owned by It, and all "I" privileges, franchises, heredi tament and appurtenancea there unto annertalninr ana .--,. -i-- i eluding especially all that certaln'llne 01 railway in ana Btwc th city of High Point In "Guilford county, North Carolina, aad th' towns or vil lages of Dsnton and High Rock, In the county of Davidson, North Caro lina, including such portion. If any, of ulll rnail Has In . V. M..,u Randolph, North Carolina, and known aa th Carolina Yadkin River Rail way comnanv.. IncliiillnB ell nA .! gular the tracks, roadbeds, lands way, ran, rixtures, switch, bridges,' culverts,, poles,, wires, ma chinery, boilers, engines, tools, sup- OlieS. lOCOmOtlves. rnlltnat ttnlr nf -11 kinds, wagons, station hohtes, repair nop ana an ana singular real, per sonal and, mixed property of vry nature in law and In equity now owned by th Carolina ft Yadkin River Railway company, ' Th terms of said sal, are na fol lows: J Two hundred thousand (1200, 000.00) dollars 1 fixed as th sum at or in excess of which ths bidding shall commence and no bid for a lest sum shall be cried by the auctioneer conducting said sal. The last and highest bidder to whom said prop erty, franchlaea, etc., ahall be knocked down, shall pay In cash, to th com missioner immediately after such sal and on account of his bid th sum of twenty -five thousand i!36, 000.00) dollars, and the balance of the purchase money shall1 b paid by the bidder or purchaser If such s-ile shell be confirmed by th Superior Court ot Guilford county upon a report of th commissioner ' when and as the count may hereafter direct In the fur ther progrsss of said cause. This, th 12th day ot December, .1922. ,! , , . nm.v. 3W- 1-11. s Commlaalonar. W. McC. Neale, M. E. p. o. Rx SSI 1 Pk.a. 141 lAtNSTJLTING MKCHAIflCAI, BWGIlTEXRt , Maekla aad Mill Uatga WRIGHT'S Get th Facta AkMtsYaar Kr Dr. Paul B. Wysong Optometrist ' tOsis N. Elm St. ' ' Phons lit! , S.lma Lamb Bidg. V'-x Clothes! Always look good -wlifW they are ' Fashion Park,; bat more than that their! wearability, appeals to men who desire long"' service combined with food looks and dressi Mr ness. ;vf- In Fashion Park clothes,' you men will find smarts styles, serviceable fabrics: and skillful tailoring: yet all at fair prices.' -2-1 We. have styles, patterns, v and sizes for young- mea of all proportions. ' ? AND YOUR SHOES Clapp Shoes and Fashion Park clothes make a splendid combination. ' Clapp Shoes are the kind ' that men take pleasure in ' wearingalways giving faithful service and long mileage. Get Them At Doiinell Medearis, ; Incorporated "Caih System Saves." , ; for. $15J1 $y.50 for for for $22i2 for $27a ' Liberty Tailors f uuuSsnsSsajSi . v. u .mm I.. - - 1 - - - - . 1- . - - .n 1
Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 29, 1922, edition 1
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