Newspapers / Salisbury Evening Post (Salisbury, … / Sept. 23, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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I WEATHER TODAY WT7 : TnTT J7TnT MS .xiiiixiy vm r.ii ll III y i X Falrtonlght and Bandar j mod,. Tf g erate temperature. . ' ' ' r 1A s A il lVi Vol.l9,No..53. DAUGHERTY M the mini Affects . 270 Officers arid ioO.OOO Members , of ' Railway Shop 'Unions ; A lengthy Review. . (By Aeaoctated Preaa) Chicago, Sept 23. Judge Jamea H. Wilkereon today granted At torney General Daugherty's netl tion lor a nation-wide temporary injunction againVt the striking rail way ahopmen. . . Judge Wilkerson in a lertgthv re view of the case aaid the defend' ante could not deny . knowledge and responsibility for the wide Dread variations that marked the . strike. A partial settlement o( the strike, he held, did-not affect the riirht of the government to obtain a nation-wide injunction. The court gave the attorneys for the defense until Monday morning at 10 o'clock to study the decision and prepare to argue the text oM the injunction order wntcn ne aimed. Attorney General DaugheTty Thursday presented the govern ment's proposed draft, which . is even more drastic than that of the restraining order. The order affectaabout 270 of ficers and 400,000 members of the six crafts belonging to the rail way employes department of the 'American f ederation oi LanorN ARE TURKEY AND RUSSIA . IN COMPLETE AGREEMENT - (By Associated Prees) ' Berlin, " September 23. For eign Minister TcMtcherin of Soviet Russia in aa interview printed by the Tageblatt. today de clared that Turkey and Russia are in complete agreement regarding the question of the straits of the . Dardanelles. 1 , '. According to the Russian agree ment with Turkey, he said, the nations bordering on the Black sea alone have the right to draft final settlement of the issue. Of the six Black sea states, he adds, Rus- , sia, the Ukraine, Georgia and Turkey already have adopted this .standpoint. M. Tchitcherin de- , clared : himself convinced.' that Turkey eventually would achieve her aim in reuniting all territories inhabited by Turks., - , CHAPEL HILL IS v NO LONGER A SMALL TOWN VILLAGE SOIIIIIIIIIJRI - Chapel Hill,, Sept 23. The last cruel blow is now about to be de- . ' livered to the old guard who want Chapel .Hill to remain a village. For the houses 'are going to be numbered. ' . For some time' the municipality has been impatiently shaking , off Mts village garments and trying to dress like a city. Brick stores came; then, at intervals, dropped down 'as if haphazard along Frank liir street rectangular patches of cement sidewalk; an . imposing . postofflce; and a year ago a eon- ' crete pavement through the mid dle of town, forming the " final stretch of the state highway .from Durham. .' , -.-- . Last month came the news that a city manager had been em ; ployed, and then the wise knew 1 that the end of old times was truly at hand. . This warning served to eoiten tne present blow. - According to Secretary Comer, or tne . i . u. . A., he and his helpers had last year 6,0p0 ap plications for guidance from per sons wno couidn t nnd the homes they were looking for.' This test! many had a great deal to do with the decision to use numbers. . Will Mayor Roberson have two electric lights set up flanking, the entrance of his residence? , This is the-Jionor that, in compliance with ancient customv Derails 'the reitrn ing .mayor of New York city, and some of the progressives hers are reputed to be of the opinion that Uhapel Hill should not lag behind. WEEKLY PASS ON . V THE CHICX "L" ' Chicago, Sept" 23. A voluntary experiment in famishing unlimit ed elevated transportation on a weekly pass is being tried out by ; Mie vducigo eieviLea rsiiroaas. The plan . was announced-after the roads had filed a voluntary pe tition with the Illinois Commerce Commission for a downward ,. re . vision of rates, X y-'. It provides for the sale of a weekly unlimited ride transferable pass for $1.25 good on all points "south of Howard street Another which sells for $2 is good for any points between Chicago and Evans ton. - ,' - J ; ' 'v 'V -": Briton I. Budd, president of the elevated, says, ,I have Ion; wish ed to see the -quantity user given the benefit of alower rate.".- ; PLOT IN FAVOR, VENIZELOS (By Associated Press) Athens, Sept 23. Announce ment was made here today of the discovery of a plot to return for me? premier Venizelos to power. Several persons have been arrest ed and the authorities are condnct- . ing house to house searches. . ' '1 V. NEW BARRIER IN, WAY BOUNDARY BOOTLEGGERS V IN NEW TARIFF,-LAW . (By 'Associated Press)' Buffalo) N. Y Sept 23. The new tariff law threatens to put an other barrier in the path of the bootlegger for as interpreted here, where the prevention of smuggling of liquor across the border is one pf the chief tasks of prohibition officers, section 681, part 5 of the new law, means search warrant are no longer necessary. Officials Express Opinion Washington, Sept. 23. Treasury officials- today expressed an infor mal opinion that there was noth ing in the new tariff law that could be construed as giving prohibition agents the right to make search without warrants. E MORE FAITH III BOOTLEGS THAN IH WIVES This is Condition of Many. Mr. Kohloss Says; "liz ards, Frogs, Rats jand Maggot in Rum." . "Many men," said Fecferal Pro hibition Director Kohloss today, as he looked over the reports sent in by the agents in the field, "have more confidence in their bootleg gers than they have in their own wives, ll the ordinary man finds a bit, of dirt in his food, he will storm around and talk about leav ing home and getting a divorce, and yet he will drink the stuff that the bootlegger sells him without ques tioning its cleanliness or purity." "Chicago and Paris are much in terested in monkey glands, but here in North Carolina our interest is largely in monkey rum. Monkey glands may do some good," Mr. Kohloss added, "but I am certain that monkey rum will kill any one in time ,if one persists in drinking . Mr. Kohloss explained that mon key rum is the term generally ap pnea to eastern North Carolina illicit liquor, but at the present time can be used , to describe the "Hooch" being manufactured, all AVA fka afafa wva wiv awkCi "Monkey rum is filthy and vol sonous," Mr. Kohloss continued, "It is maae in til sorts or places under the most unsanitary conditions. Stills have been constructed of tin cans, old wash boilers, tine ket tles and other receptacles unfit for such mrrposes. Stuff cooked in thesevessels is poisonous beyond doubt And one would not believe. without seeing It, the kinds Tf stuff out oi wnicn tne liquor is, made. Watermelon and muskmeUon rinds, grapes, potatoes, meal and other things usually gathered from gar bage cans, - are used for making mash, and into this is dumped con centrated lye, and even the refuse from horse stables, to aid in the lermentation. now any one can drink the liquor made from this kind of mash and live, I cannot un derstand." , , The .belief prevails that the ill cit 'liquor made in the mountains of Western North Carolina is pure, but federal' asrents declare thev Jiave xound just as lilthy conditions there as elsewhere. "In the old davs." concluded Mr. Slomoss,' "men frequently saw snakes after indulging in -liquor, but now they have them both be fore and after, for in the mash from which this illicit liquor is made we have found not only snakes, but lizards, frogs, roaches. rats, mice,. maggots and,, all sorts oz vermin, in Missouri some time ago a pig was found in the mash from which moonshine liquor was being made. How men Van chtink the stuff is almost beyond, com prehension. . 21? INDICTED Returned 58 More Indict t merits for Conspiracy to Commit Murder; 54 fori Assault. , . I rW - W J "'. '-J-- ' ' .--."J'"'. . (By Associated Press)' . Marion, 111.. Sept 23. The see cial grand jury investigating the Hemn mine killing made, its final report today with a number of additional-indictments, lirineine the total to Z12. . ' , . r v, -."..V"'- The jury- returned 68 more in dictments for .conspiracy to com mit murder' and 54 for an assault to commit murder. . t- The jury previously had returned 88 murder indictments and (8 for conspiracy and rioting.' Today's returns included four murder indictments and arraigment of certain authorities . charging them with "failure, to protect life and property" in not sending troops when mine trouble seemed immin ent .. " --v.- To keep a larsrs niece i of cut cheese, wrap it in a cloth dampen ed with vinegar. HAV Brnw F 1 922 IS THE TARIFF Says International Ques tion Important Bu Work of Present Con gross Must Be Undone, (By Associated Press) Cleveland. Ohio, Sept 23Ask ed what the issue would be in 1922 former governor James M. Cox, of Ohio, and Democratic nominee for president in 1920, declared hers to day in his first address since he returned from an extensive tour of Europe, mads before the City Club, that "the people this year will be asked to elect a congress to undo the present tariff monstrosity. "But We will not lose sight of an. other great question the interna tional one," Governor Cox added. "It will be mors pertinent for discission, however,- in the, great national forum of 1924. "When a surgeon finds an in jured man suffering from a severed artery and a broken leg ne ssws up the artery first In the present Instance, bad as the international wound is, the domestic injury in dieted , by the most imcompetent congress in all history, is even worse, ha said. dull thud or Kicxorr IS-HEAED IN DIXIE "' ' i (Br Associated Press) Atlanta, Ga., Sept 23. The dull thud of the kickoff, true harbinger of autumn as the robin is of spring, was heard on Dixie gridi rons as the opening' games of 1922 got under way with half a doxen or more major elevens engaging In preliminary contests. , Center College which ranged above all Southern elevens lsst year by virtue of her clean record during the season, defeating every rival she met in local and interna- kisvft.al jnfAafs an1 a mklnlt sa vt.as ft vwiitivovaj uu vcvi tsB w im.u held Harvard to a 10-7 score, were among the leaders who divided oh the earl v start Two North Carolina teams also were early starters. Davidson. which "played early in the season's games last year against heavier elevens, faced 16n College at Davidson. Wake Forest was an other North Carolina team, march ing against Atlantic Christian College, the opening contest being played at Wake Forest WORLD WAE HERO IS MADE GOVERNOR J OF S. AUSTRALIA London, Sept 23Major-Gener- al Sir George Molesworth Bridgss has been appointed Governor of South Australia, succeeding' Lieu tenant-Colonel. Sir William Weir ell. The latter resigned the posi tion becaustriie said he could not live on his salary and had; not sufficient private means to afford the luxury of maintaining such a position. - , His -successor, Sir " George, is known in the British army as the "Toy Dpim Hero," That term has been applied, to him in de rision, but in recognition of a mem orable incident of the war in which he displayed great gallantry. , . After the action at Le Cateau. in 1914, the British army started on its great Ighting retreat, and men were dropping out from sheer ex haustion. Major Bridges, as he men was, went oacK to sc. yuen tin to round up 250 stragglers. He found them in a state of col. lapse. At a -little village shop he bought a toy drum, and falling the men into line with tha toy, drum and a penny whistle to serve as a band, he marched them off, laugh ing in spite of their weariness. They kept on marching for ,28 miles. Sir George was the , militarv member f the Balfour mission to the United States in 1917, and head of the British' War Mission to the United States in the succeeding year.:4.,-;;c;:a QUININE TREATMENT WILL HALT MALARIA New Orleans, Sept 23. Malaria can be controlled by quinine treat ment alone In any area of the world if there is sufficient quinine available and the people are sin cerely desireus of being rid of the disease. This declaration-is made hv Dr. C. C. Bass, professor of experimen tal medicine in Tulane University. as a result of malaria control work in the Mississippi delt under the supervision of the Mississippi board of health and the interna tional health board of the Rocke feller foundation. r The dose recommended for adults is ten grains of quinine sul phate taken at bedtime each night during the mosquito season. Where - geographical - conditions made the elimination of tha AnOOheleS ; mOMuitoe ' Imnrafl. cable by the usual methods of draining' breeding nonds and ditches and the stocking waters witn larvae consuming top onin nows, it is expected thaTthe steri lization of malria carriers by quin ine treatment will be effectively used. ' , FOBSTISSUEO SAYS JAMESM. COX SALISBURY, N. C, gATimDAYEMjIL CONGRESSMEN SPEEDING HOME FOR ELECTIONS; SPECIAL SESSION NOV. 15 ' (By Associated Press) . Washington, Sept 23 Members of congress generally were speed ing to their home districts today to look out for the fall election, following the sins die adjournment, Many of the leaders expressed the opinion that President Harding would call ' a apecial session . for November lo, preceding the next regular session which will start December.- The only measure to get thru the last day was the deficiency an ropriation bill, the administra tions Liberian loan bill and the Dyer antl-lynching measure going over. Opinion as to what the ' 67th congress accomplished was dlvid ed.' Caudle Hull, of Tennessee, chairman of the Democratic con gressional, committee, issued statement 'asserting that "no other congress had ever so signally fail, sd to grasp great opportunities or meet Important responsibilities.' but John T. Adams, chairman of the Republican national commit tee, took exactly the opposite view, declaring that "no congress 'in time of peace ever mads such splendid record. CAN'T RE-MARRY This is Verdict of Leaders ( r of Protestant Episcopal Church;. Infidelity Ex- cepted. v ; (By Associated Press) Portland, Ore- Sept 23. Com municants of the Protestant Epis copal church in the United States are forbidden to marry ivorced persons except in cases where ths divorce has been granted on grounds of infidelity. it was me result oz tne action taken, last night of the House pf Deimttea at ths bi-nnil ninnn. ftlon, confirming a measure passed previously by tha house ox bishops. Ths tormer lav of "The church merely forbade ministers from performing a marriags eersmony where either party had bean, given a divorce lor jnnaeiity. , The new canon doea not provide fothe punishment for members who disobey it but there was pend ing Deiors uie committee toaay a resolution by Bishop .Mann, of the diocese of South FloVida, providing ex-communication of persons mar rying contrary to the divorce canont BONDED LIQUOR TO , BE CONCENTRATED '"V 2' -,-' Cincinnati, Sept 23 Approxi mately one and a half million gal' lpns of bonded liquor will be con centrated at a point near here if plans of federal prohibition com, missioners are carried out Ths 11 quor will be assembled from points in inaiana ana southern unio. un der the plans. The internal revenue depart mentor the first Ohio district re ported a toUl of 861.855.7 eallons or liquor m warehouses on Sep tember 1., This district is com prised of a small section of south western Ohio.) The prohibition commissioner for Ohio was unable to state the approximate irallons of bonded liquor in the south Ohio territory, but ths revenue office at Cleveland stated there was ' ; be tween 2,000 and 3,000 gallons in storage in his district . There was a.bout 605,000 gal lona stored in the four , bonded warehouses in Indiana, according to the revenue office at Indianapo lis. The ware houses are located at Lawrenceburg, Vincennes, Terrs Haute and Hammond., OF LEAGUE IS UP Present Assembly Passes it On to Next Assembly; Berthelemey -U r g e s Slow Action. ' (By Associated Press) Geneva. Sept 23. The question of revising Article A of the league of nations covenant or eliminating ft altogether was passed on to the assembly by the present assembly today without observation or rec ommendation that the subject be considered in all its bearings. The . Canadian delegation show a no disposition to rush Charles Daugherty's amendment eliminat ing Article JL j M. Berthelemey, of France, said Article X ought not to have been changed in -the hops of bringing the United States into ths league. There was no assurance that a changs would have this effect he declared, and in any, case Article X should not be changed until the lUnlted States was on the scene to deliberate on It with the rest of the world T. DIVORCED PERSONS 8 HOUR DAY IS FH EUROPE TO STAY OFFICIALS ?AY Washington Conference Brought About Good; Labor in Europe is Sat isfied. ' . (By piUtoa Bronncr) London, Sept . 23 The eight hour day for industrial workers is in Europe-to. stay, , This is ths judgment of legisla tors and labor- loaders in spite of attacks in some quarters and ths failure of most nations lo ratify ths action of the international la bor conference. . Next month will see the third anniversary of ths Washington conference, with these results: Only four nations Csscho-Slov-akia, Greece, Rumania and Bul garia have formally ratified the eight hour day aonvsntion, and nons of them propose to put- it into lull street until July 1, 1VZ4. ' America found itself unable - to sign because the federal govern ment could not bind the Individual states to any law regulating la bor. Other nations have remained out because thsy are afraid to bind themselves so long as business rivals do not sign, Ons nation only Germany is planning national legislation em bodying the tenns of the Washing ton conference. I Labor in Europe is satisfied, however, for it is pointed out that 17 nations already have the eight hour day. though not based on the conference convention. Russia and Finland rot It in ths autdtnn of 1917. After the. arm istice Germany proclaimed a maxi mum working day of sight, hours taking effect January I, 1919.' By the end of 1918 similar action had been taken in Austria, - Cseeho Slovakla. Poland and Luxemburg. In 1919 it was extended to France, Holland, Norway, Portugal, ' Swe den and Switzerland, and last year to Belgium. , The eigne hour day prevails widely in England, unolfkially. uenmarK Has a collective agree ment between a federation of em. ployers and the Danish trades un ion. wiiiie in itaiy mere ur a se ries of collective agreements . m various industries. Opponents of labor's new "char ter of liberty exist in several countries. The French parliament has hung up several bills for the extension oz the eisrht hour nrin- eiple. because It is claimed it haa eost railways an additional 1,100 million francs per year, has helped retard recovery of French trade, and has drawn 100,000 men onto railway pay rolls from agricultural ranks. . ' : - Some . Belgian manufacturers elaim tha eight hour day has in creased the "number of workers 40 to 60 per cent and decreased out put is per cent ? Holland is leaning coward an eight and a half hour day and In creased overtime, with suspension oi tne law to protect national in dustries against xorsign eompeu tion. - : 1 1 ,y. . , Switzerland also has this -us pension provision and during the past year the working week was increased from 48 to 52 hours in such trades as wood sawing, car pentry, brick and tile making,' em broidery and linen. : -, A German employers association reports 2,351,000 employes are working lees than 48 hours a week and 4,216,000 have the 48 hour week, the former group including miners, textile workers, and wood ana metai workers. EIWANIANS - VISIT- WOODLEAF FOB A REGULAR ' FEED The Klwanis dub held its r pil lar weekly meeting at - Woodleaf yesterday evening at the home of Ur. -Foster, the luncheon was ser ved by the ladies of ths community to secure funds to buy a church organ. - ,: , . ; The members of the club left Salisbury about five o'clock tester. day evning, and a picnic dinner was served at six o'clock. The members of the club had to find their way to the dinner from Woodleaf by following a trail of yellow ribbons. The ribbon trail led through the truck farm of Bailev brothers one of the most up-to- ue irucK iirmi m uie state witn an elaborate system of irrigation. It also- wound past the development of the Hardaway company which has recently bought a tract of land at Woodleaf to quarry rock for road projects in Rowan and nearby counties.. .v.:.'v-'.y-v Finally the trail ended in Mr. Foster's pasture where the ladies of the community spread a table with the fat of the land and all of the remarks related to the develop ments at Woodleaf ceased. Short talks were made by sev eral after the dinner. The meeting was the second held in the county by the club in line with", its pro gram to learn ways to perfect a closer - co-operation between ;. the county and city,' ' V WXLKZSB0E0 CHIZT SAYS HE HAS NEW CLUE TO JENKINS HOLDUP (By AocIated Press) Winston-Salem, Sept. 23. Chief Of Police Baugess. of North Wilkes boro, says hs has information that several men, one of, whom was S. L. Jenkins, of this city, arrived there Friday morning September 15, between 12 and 1 'clock, com inar from Tavlorsville; Jenkins is reported to have left North Wllkesboro that morning for Winston-Salem. The men with him. one of whom was a relative of Jenkins, all left for their homes in Aiiegnsny coun ty Friday about noon ths chief re sorts, who talked with the chief of ponce. He is in possession oi tneir names, it is stated. i t i Nos. 1$ and 16 Go Back on j Western; 45 and 46 Re- ' sume, on Main Line; Yadkin Cnanged. 1 Several important passenger train changes will go into effect on the Southern Kauway tomor row, thess affecting ths main line, ths Western division -out or salts- bury and the Yadkin, Salisbury to, Norwood, and by these changes four trains taken off soma time sgo are to be restored and the Yadkin placed back on its former schedule, except the incoming evening train from Norwood, which will run on ths present schedule. Nos. 15 ana 16. Salisbury to Aisheville: and Nos. 45 and 46, Danville to West minster,' S. G, are to be restored and the outgoing afternoon Yadkin will be put on the old time. ' The taking off of a part of the curtailment and rearrangement of trains out of and through Salisbury during the railroad shopmen's strike and because 'the engines were needed for" more important service. Their restoration means t great advantage to this city and community and the territory thru which all .of the above trains oper ate and the announcement that the old schedules are to again be main tained will be good news to every body along the lines affected. , No. IS on the Western division will leave Salisbury for Asheville at 6:10 a. m., and its sister train, No. 16, will arrive hers from Ashe ville ax 9:45 p. m, thus restoring normal service on the Western dl vision out of Salisbury. , . No. 45, local through Salisbury from Danville, Va- to Westmin star, S. C, will arrive here at 2:30 p. nu, as formerly, and lesvs at 2:40 n. m. and wo. 4tt, from Westminster to Danville,- wiU -arrive in Salisbury afr4:80 p. m., and leave at 4:ao p. m. t The restoration of Nos. 45 and 46 brings the return of the out going Yadkin train to its old sched ule. It will leave Salisbury as No, 3 at 4:35 p. m.. instead of 2:30 p, m. which has been its schedule since the change a week ago. No. 4, from Norwood, will arrive In Sails bury at 6 p.m., the same as the present schedule, snd being a little earlier than the old schedule, but this, will not. work an inconven ience on the traveling public using the Yadkin line. , The Badin-Hall's Ferry Junction train' will make close connection at Hall's ferry junction with the Yad kin as heretofore. The new time tables for the Yad' kin will not be ready for distribu tion for several days but this will not interfere with the placing of the trains on that line on the old schedules. Official announcement as to all of these chsnges was mads here today. 49 DENOMINATIONS FAILED TO RECEIVE . SENATE'S OKEH (By Associated Press) Washington. Sept 23. Forty. nine nominations, including 43 postmasters according to a com plets record, failed to receive sen ate confirmation before adjourn ment yesterday and died with the end of the session. ' Postmasters included: , W. M. Rouse, New Bern, N. (X, opposed by Senator Simmons, Democrat whose home is in New Bern. ' C0N0VER CITIZEN IS KILLED BY TRAIN COMING FROM CIRCUS ' (By the Associated Press.) Hickory, Sept 23. Roby Mur phy, aged 25, was struck and killed by a Southern train near his home at Conover, Catawba county, about midnight last night He wsa either walking along the cross ties or had sat down on the track and had fall en asleep when the train struck him.. ; ,' Hs had been to Newton to attend a circus and was , returning home when the tragedy occurred. i PASSEBMS TO BE BED ON SOUTHERN SUNDAY isl EsiABiisIrai of i ; ' DARDANELLES TO KEEPWAR DUT OF EUROPE, LLOYDGEORGE DECLARES Great Britain Not Affiliated With Turks or Greeks, Prime Minister Asserts ; Closing: of Straits Pro longed World War Two Years. , . (By Associated Press) London, Sept 23. The policy of Great Britain in the Near East is to establish the freedom of the Dardanelles under the supervision of the League of Nations, Prime Minister Llod George declared in a statement to newspaper men this afternoon. Mr, George said that whatever steps the government sd taken with military and naval forces In the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, had been distinguished by two su preme considerations: First Our anxiety as to the freedom of admission between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. Second. To prevent this excep tionally horrible war f ron spread ing into Europe. The prims minister declared at the outset that he would like to make it clear that any action that ths government had taken did not Was Suing City for $1000; Lizzie - Rosebro's Sen . ; tencejChanged to 3 Tears in Workhouse. The September term of Rowan superior court came to a close last night shortly before 10 o'clock, the night session being held in order to finish up toe business before the court and immediately after its conclusion Judge T. B. Flnley, who presided over the court left on the western train on his way, to his horns at Wilkesboro. ' - , , The last case disposed of was of Mrs. Annie Cotton against the city of Salisbury and ths Salisbury Water Works company in which ho , was seeking damages in the sura of $1,000 for injuries alleged to hsvs been sustained when , shs stepped into an open water meter at -a point on North Main street Tha- jury awarded the plaintiff, Mrs. Cotton, $450. ' ' ' The 1 term of court just closed was one of the few terms from which no one was sent to ths peni tentiary. There was 'one prisoner sentenced to the pen, Lizzie Rose brTJ, the Cleveland regress, who was implicated in the killing of Co lumbus Nicolson another Cleveland negro, she being given three years there but before closing court for the term Judge Flnley changed this sentence to three years in the Row an county workhouse. Robert Rose bro, who was also implicated in the killing, wai sentenced to 12 months on the chain gang, a recommenda tion for mercy having been pre sorted by the jury in his case. . In the case of Mrs. Lemly against Ralph Orr and John Robinson, in which the plaintiff was suing for damages in the sum of $25,000 for injuries received when thrown from a busrrr when the horse became frightened at a motorcycle the de- fendants were riding and in which the jury awarded -only $250, Judge Flnley intimated that the judgment was not satisfactory to the court and an agreement was reached whereby the defendants convey four building lots in Spencer to ths plaintiff, Mrs. Lemly, thus taking the place of the $250 awarded by the jury. NEW YORK WTLLJ . SHIFT TIMEFD2CE v -AT 2 A. M. SUNDAY New York, Sept. 23. .Daylight savinsr time, observed in New York city since April 30, ends tomorrow. The official hour lor snuting tne clock is 2 a. m. CAPTAIN COLEMAN IS RELEASED FROM JAIL New Bern, Sept. 23c-Captain Arthur Coleman, of the British Auxiliary Schooner Message of Peace, which was seized by prohi bition officers last December when she came into Ocracoke Inlet with 1,000 cases of liquor aboard, will be released from the county jail tonight after serving six months sentence on conviction of violating the prohibition laws. . . Captain Coleman was . notified several days ago by government authorities that he would be ar rested immediately after his re lease on a charge of perjury grow-' ing out of the liquor case and would be required to furnish $L- 000 bond tor bis release. The cap tain said today that he would fur nish the bond and expected to leave Sunday morning for Wilmington, where he will enter a claim for his ship and cargo of lienor now in custody of customs officials there. MRS COIN GIVEN DAMAGES DF $450 PRICE TWO CENTS have to do with the merits or de merits' of the wsr between the, Turks and the Greeks. . The British government, he de clared, had been Impartial as be- - tween ths Greeks and tha Turks. Hs pointed out that a few weeks ago when the Greeks had threaten' ed to march on Constantinople., that General Harrington, in charge ; of the British troops there, had warned ths Greeks in identically" . ths sams terms as ths warning now given ths Turks by the British government - i In dealing with ths question of t ths straits, Mr. Lloyd George said that what happened in lhe late' world war demontratedhow Vital the freedom of the seas ,was to the protection of humanity , in its broadest aspects. The closing of the straits by the Turksduring ths late war was re sponsible for the disaster "of one ' of our strongest allie" and defeat , of the Rumanians snd prolonged the wsr by at least two years, he ; id. - .. . ' i v War or Peaee In 38 Hoars ' ' Constantinople, Sept 23, Within 86 hours, the world will Srobably know, whether ths Turk- ' th nationalists have chosen peace or war. . ., ,.' . i The Angora cabinet meeting is expected .hourly, to determine whether, the JCemalisti .will Await the peace conference now !& sea- -sion at Smyrna, proposed hf ths powers or take the matter in their' own hands by invading Thrace. ' The French are expected to ex ; ert renewed pressure to keep the . Turks from any hostile action that wUl jeopardize ' their present ex-, tremely favorable, position at the : forthcoming conference but some competent . observers were skepti eel that the.; nationalist cabinet v. would accept at their full value the " promises that ; the conference' would result in a-realization of all ' their claims. '. : -r1' -; t ' - ;i; Ths Turks are fully aware of the weakness of the British land ' forces, now precariously holding points along the4' Asia Minor, shore and are convinced of their ability to defeat them.' French official cir- " Cles hold that the only thing that " ton stave off nationalist attack is ' definite pledge that Great Britain wiU support Francs in guarantee ing that Thrace will be evacuated promptly by the Greeks and re stored to the Turks. y-r ' ' . - It is reported that Z Mustapha Kernel Pasha, the nationalist lead er, Js opposed to iiasty action but . tt remains' to be seen whether he. can triumph over the oppsitibn of , . his colleagues, f - v, . AN EAST SPENCER MAN ' DIES OF BLOOD POISON Mr. Walter L. Wyatt 22 years old, died at his ihome, 1500 Long street East Spencer, this morning at 6 o'clock of blood poison and a t retracted illness. The funeral will take place from the home Sunday : afternoon at 4 o'ciock, cohducted by Rev. R. C Kirk, of the East Spencer Methodist church and the. interment wui be in Chestnut mu cemetery. . - , . - . , Surviving is ths widow, mother, Mrs. C I Wyatt;, two brothers, F. L. and P. L. Wyatt and three sisters. Mrs. M. L. Smith, Mrs. C. C Smith and . Mrs. M. A. Agner. The father, C L. Wyatt met death by i being struck by a street car on the - Salisbury-Spencer line some years ago.-- ' 'Deceased was a native of Provi dence township and was a boiler maker at the Spencer shops. He -wss a member of Yadkin camp, Woodmen of tha World, of East Spencer and the . members of this lodge will attend -the funeral and burial in a body. ' , NAMBJAPANESB DOCTORS TO . VISIT UNITED STATES Tokio, Sept 23. The minister of education, has chosen the - five medical men' who, on the invita- tion of the Rockefeller foundation; are to visit the hospital and medi cal institutions - if the-1 United States. The men are Dr. Kinnosuke Miurs, physician in. ordinary to the court, professor of the. Im periol University, who accompan led the Japanese delegation tt the Versailles conference end who aa a young man studied in America and Germany; Dr. Sabachir Hata, a co-worker with Dr. Erfech the discoverer of Sarvarsan, now of the Kitasato epidemic lahoartory; " Dr. Keinosuke Miyalra, dean of the medical college of the Imperial llirfvemltv of Kvn-.hu: Dr. Mori- shlma of the Kyoto Imperial Uni- vers ty and . Wagsye oi lomo Imperial' University. , Poison Ivy takes on a beac' I.'al reddish hue early in the eut-jmn an ia nicked for ornamental pur poses by some people once ! i S
Salisbury Evening Post (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1922, edition 1
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