Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / May 11, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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v - - - " - ' - - - - ' - " 1 1 ' . " X - V - - """ ' ' '"-" ' ' - ' -- -,"' ". " ; - i -. . . , - , . . -. . v- , - -,., . . . - . . County Democratic -J C3UED WEEELYy PHINCIPIXS, NOT MEN $2.00 A YEAR IN AD VAN CD VOLUMEXLVJI AAelwwt Nacth CmoQm. TkaTily May 11,' lttt NUMBER 20 .is A CiKoxDERATE VETERS mm BiTERTAESD BY ililtl IL It C YESTERDAY The. ConfederaU - yeterant ' clolph xountyr jrere, ntertanet-to AsheboTO : Wdnelay,;jEitli UW.Bnr i.dolnh Chapter U,i Dj; CsluMtease, xeoraemorative of the eourageoua aer r j i vices pt the Confederate aoMiere, w, ."'in and dead,,The meeting wa held M E hnrch.v At lL-fl'dock, 5 ? the Confederate Camp held the annual ' ing, and Carip Comftande MrvP Morrii iervingi ja ?ereSaTyi ' jrieeting provedxibe ne -tiwuai Jnteresrd as wiattiratflmwH ijzGSnin Vw.m. iJanrB. Jmttiber.oi the UvK'will-al8; neakJ,r After, the :'on; ine Teterans if th county- wr pre- enfe" Mtr the jneetmrjPJ.tnj;7W ns,' the Daughters f.1the Confederacy hail'i sliAvf. nrnrrai(L. 1 After the - votional exerciMVnducted: by?Mj, Myrick1, rthyffl.' Rtof fitt, vice" prsidehtvet he chsjnweV- cornea, me -veweranB. m enniutAri ta W DrEV. E. Asbury: Fol- i lowing, this5 Mirt J6dn Carson,, grand iiitir)ifar nf A. CL McAlister. w. ii'was weU known an4 loved by alt, the veterans;? and. jwh aboutyWght rMA a., most ADDroi)riat ";;., jrw., ejEw. ww t--- - y ' mm for the occasion: about ? the tat tered old uiworm. jot. -e. . iuuu.v then made a short talk of the achlve ments of these heroes of. the sixties. Mr. Moffltt is a citizeft of Asheboro and tine son' of the late E. A. Moffltt who is ' another, beloved veteran who died a few years ago," After, the ad- rMr&ft Wa sang "uia Lang, syne". Ue ne uung on j. program was five minute talks of rem uiiscences in which several ef the vet- erans took pan nu jb-uivi' : joyable. " Patriotic songs interspersed tne program.; ., .. f; .cv-... ' At 16 a sumptuous luncheonT was Served by the Daughters to the veterr ans-and tiieir;families.l During "lunch hour tales of the heroic deeds, i and many pleasant dotft you remem j.ber" stories made this one of the most -' enjoyable occasions in thV history of thtk nnnurf tnestinfi-s. - After lunch, the veterans (together with the, daughters, '' decoratedhe . graves oi toie aeaa yet- 'erans.-- , ...; . RANDOLPflMEDlCAL SOCJETTf .. , ir-TS-ii i i -?5 J' - T v at 10:80 a. m. ana nstenea wn o-.- dress by Dr. J.. W.:tong, of. Greens- .pura, wiMWi.w, Z."li' wn """I'Rainseur, is the only sister. V ihg the subject, cancer. A number ot M cDer np unta 8ix s V -physiciamr In the county and a. good ,. ; J1Xblv strone physicians inth county and KOd. , j crow oi we crazeng w w rl-Z i , ?1T ' i ..j .i handled 2 1 Juit ;boro feels highly teuiored ?f. htving man so talented to meet with the phy- "- sicians of this, county to discuss the Dest means of curing .cancer. . The physicians then left for Memo - L rial hospital where a splendid lunch- eon was served on.the-law It was i ! folloVed" byVf paper by Dr. Hubbard V" ( Pn the uses or ."loainr numoer j ' . joinmg in, tne, uiuMon ' v - neaitn,' tne ieeinmny.oi wnicn wa ggDjy piay XU a Mistake," whieh , ;vra then wad by T. ,Craven on the stroke of paralysis, answered the call. wiU u pven on Friday night, May relation of eonstltntional .diseases to she is survived by her husband, one 2g at 8'IIT ' t . the eye, earoBe amfl throat and was daughter; Mrs. Blanche Covington, of .'q- Sunday (May 28, at 11:00 a. m. ;. also discussed JiaHy-r Both -papers ..Florida,, Mr. ClydeCapel, of Candor. john jordan DoUgias wiU deliv i were good showing thought and hard, Md (J-eon Capel, of Troy. Funeral n tha Jmnual sermon to the graduat ! -work, Dr.'Hayworth bad some inter , services will be conducted at Troy to-aaB. Mr - rout-ias is nas- esting elinlcal casea lor study.; vr, 6 J. W, Long" and others made several i vain.' ex mvareafca,:-.vviy.-.,:.;,'i I i"The day was pleasaofly ipent by the ; doctors present in stndylng and dJb-;-, cussing together what should be done for the benefit of the sick. -The doe i tors1 present were: J. Long, F: E. I Asbury, C ,C Hubbard, C A Hay worthi T. 1. Fox, A H. Redding, C. S. i Tate, a t WSlkersoiV F. A Shep pard,F.. C Craven, A C Whltaker, ' W. Jf. Mbore W.' L' Sumner and Mil lard "Fox, of .Guilford College.? " The next -meeting of this society will be in Randleman on the 2nd Tues day in June. :'..'' : :;!. , ; ' - - " ' I." i,;t'X-',;i.' HONi. 2. V. LONG WILL SPEAK -t . c ' IN ASHEBORO SATURDAY Hon. Zeb Vance Long", of States i!Ie, who Is a candidate for solicitor i this district, will address th citi ns of the county at the .maga meet- Saturday. Mr. Long announced i candidacy some time ago and has n in the county severnl times look C after Ms Interest, lie is a fluent uker and will please the people, hers will speak upon this occasion s which the Democrats will express ir choice for. the various ofllcel In i county. ' Ir. C. C Crahford, chairman of the rutlve commltt, urges tliat every i intereRtM In future ripmocracy in county be present nFolves. and exprii f Work In Flood Pinlrict 1 MHi'i'.inpl flood r")icf commlt- -, nt i I a r-"nlui !m to rri'ir. t I .'-i-J'arlii n i me an ipr..l fr ri.t,,;iif ions f r r ' ' to the n I n V.. m :!"- pru! (. -i I P I to 1; .- - l i i - M 1 - DEIOCRAUC t ""VEN-M I HON AliD UAb. MEET- gfiKG mm. ipAY G. Q. Cranord, chfrmo eU c-th Democratic txacotiTe cominiti-:. Ua f JUndoJphi county; : hMis- .H ctiued notices of -the eonvenUoxnd ' I in ilshtboro Satwday JiTsy 13, , Aad rg& vwyroterjw th jcoun- -. ty UT atUixL - Th1: toeetinsr uto -?i called lor :; olock, Safajrfay i aftfnxm,nilid thifc- tim, the r onty . ticket be nosalnated;'? U Mr. J 0. J5eddfaifv wfll-make ' w short hrik' en '?rfirahisation I and r : rjTrentioar Hon. Zen Vane. Long f Statesville, will make an jaddress t Mr. Long w well, known tnrouga-v iout th county having een jtose ly assoelate4. with many of the : .: , people , .iiuiuTCc .k- ; i"i-i tnntr candidate" for . so- . who is not a candidates The brass ? band from "Albemarle will furnish "'music, for 'the ocdasxoh, and a general: good time is anticipated. KMithinen;"andi women of the t nnrtv. are 'urited tocome and ac nnint thehiselves. with the poli- tics. and conditions of the county.. A ' . Mr. Arthur Boss Improves. -, The many friends of Mr. Arthur Hrss 'will be giaa to near 01 ms .'"impVi nvement at Memorial hospit al;' Mri Boss has both iegs ana a shoulder bone " broken and slight ' internal injuries; ? He has buffered; intensely but while -j Ms in juries are, pairifttl thejr are riot serious. , MRS. A.. W. E. CAPEL DIES , AX -UOJUJti . ikwi -kwii of 'the: death of Mrs Nannie SmfthermanCanel. -wife of A W. E. rrl. of Troy, reached-Asheboro yes - terday, a telegram .to friends convey - inw 4Ji. intelliirenee. Mrs... Caoel was well and favorably known throughout the county. r iyor manv-years she and her. idistinguished, husband ed at' Jtammme: whero Miw1 Caoel was con nected with; the Columbia Manufac- cro axu, wu . .'Xioei took cnarirc -r.tuT innle eharire of "the Smitherman CapeL was -a daughter of the' late Noah-. Braither- maifci Her onlv brother. &. !. emitn erman died at his home in Troy four T vears ago;" Mrs. w..-n. wi Mrs. W..-n. WatKins, oi vears aaro. hBB een remarkably strong and vig- keenest interest 1 m DUSiness, educaaonai ana reugiuus She was-one of Montgomery county foremost women, a leader of , movement, for the promotion of rfghteolsness, justice and morality. young pp M well as those ad- fvanced, - in years, regarded her as a friend. Her life has meant much in the community in which she has lived I ftnd served At the age of sixty-seven , she has, , after several veapr 01 in- day, " " . ; , , . , MRS. JOSEPH PARKIN DIES AT HER BOMB in i . ' , . 1 1 "' - f Tha nasslnr of Mrs. Joseph Parkin, on of Trinity's most progressive and forward looking women jias cast a on Monuay night, at 8:16 Ur. wn gloom upon her. many friends in this Uam Louis Potest will deliver the an section of North Carolina.- Mrs, Par- nual-address, to the . graduating class, kin had-been an' invalid for the past Dr. Potest is president of Wake For seventeen years, having suffered, from est College, and is known nationally rheumatism in its most severe form.- aa a "Scientist-sneaker of the highest She was 62 years of age.' She was tne aaugnter wL.'rt uw, situ, wmu roe opportunity i nnn( umu Hines, of Campson county; ' She spent ., Immediately after the address the her early life in' Falson, later grad- diplomas, certificates,- medals .and all uatlng from the Baptist Female Col' other honors won during the year" will lege la Raleigh' at the ago of 18 be awarded ' A report by the super years. For ten years Mra.r Parkin intendent of the- year's work will close taughtf school in different sections of the commencement season. ' i '. ' North Carolina, " She came " to Ran-f ' i- v k , .-., , , n-. dolph county and taught one year and INGRAM'S FILLING STATION the Hoover hill mine.' To this unlonf nine children were born, Ight ; of ( whom survive, MrsE. F, Pepper, of Thomasville, and Mrs. T. J. Coving ton, of Trlnityj Charles, of Evergreen; Joseph, of North :Wilkesboro;Mises'namber of riUs from Asheboro in the Nell and jewel, Annrora anu win iwy, various direction, ims win no ooudi St home. She is slso survived bv her.be profitable to Ingram's Filling SU htinband. six brothers and one sister. Mrs. Parkin, although almost help 1pm over her entire body eopt her mind, has been able to keep In touch with every phs of religious end educational life as well as that In her own home and her own community. Her Milendid Judgment, ' her' unconv lug dUpnultlnn, her abiding faith . . . . - . .... it . , . II,. ! .11 'i w"V's l-u9 of the Mfinfffitn - . r- .. i 1 " p--n'i!iif! n. t of - i . ' ! unstinted inenciiinip ana Dautiiui iiiWB uynamueu. ner w?r ikui ov mwit thoroughly imprexsed everyone jhopprs in the store at the time of wi;h whom he has come In contact(Oie ntploaion, and the fact that no and hfr Itiu'-nc will live long ateone was injured was considered little hrr. the r'viete(l that no eulogies short of a mlracl. Upon - nvtlga be pronounred at her funeral, tion. It was found that some fiend had . . , , . ' placed a charge of dynamite under the MKS. C, A. ARMSTRONG A rear end of tli itor. When the blast CANDIDATU I OK SENATE went off a lanri hole waa blown i .- ithrourh the buildln. eaulng th THE REPUBLICAN PRESS"; GONDOLNS PROPOSED SENATE TARIFF. BILL Here are some -aMtional :editbrial opinions on the ortoeyiMcCunjbejr; tariff bill from" leadmg!?Eepubliean papers: ' ' ' ' -ifc .;The St. Louis . Globe Democrat,' the leading ' Republican organ f the SouUiwest, saytf tjhii- bill. 4sms have , applied the -princfyle f proteel tion to eveithmg, without regard te preset jorld:nd1tipn8a regara ll -our aiierea position, in illa tion to the world's trade. . If jour "tar iff does not permit lair- competition wJtn other-countries, mw,-are we xo njaintain the world trade that is now so essential to. our UroBperity'?- ": ' . .The, JBoston ; , Transcript, the arand- mother of the New England" .SepubUi can press, expresses tne opinion that party guidance is tnrown to tne winas with resDect to the tariff and savs this is undoubtedly ' due- to the "prevalent cnaotic ' conoitionsei interest ana oi views. It then adds: "There may be some consolation: in the fact that it will take a long , time . to straighten out this chaos of views and that the delay will- jrive an opportunity to get rid of some of the injustices involved in the senate bill. But in the mean time, the manufacturers of th coun try are carrying alt or most of the exDenses involved by the war with' out the market which the war created and are consequently pretty nearly paralyzed. In this situation they are to some' extent prepared to -regard strikes as a blessing and are Content to let the tariff repose at the" switch." Syracuse, N. Y., Post Standard, Re publican, says: "The senate must give er tn th(! chanced conditions of world trade due to our change" frbm a' debtor to a creditor nation, pit must give ear also to a 'demand that - the rates on foodstuffs shall not be the highest ever ,ievied." 1 The Ohio State Journal, soundly . Ramihlirjin. but with a ense of. humor constantly-stimulated and aroused by this administration,' says: "Economic conditions in the world hav changed so muchince th war that the tariff broblem is vastly altered': We are the creditor ,nationnow 4iad the-only-w in wmcir uui ucuwn im hj-.w. I . 1. 1 -LA I -LI- a. . . la- fa. , their nmdUcta. Oui agricultural sad mahUfacturing interests need, as nev- er before,. aiaer free foreign marxet, no: .on apparently. exce;t tne nara- shelled old high protectionists, who is wrong-anout it, nas a ciear laea.oi just what ought to be done, lms is . one of tne cases-wnere it is oetter to do nothing than to do the wrong thing. COMMENCEMENT tin SCHOOLS TO BEGIN ON FRIDAYNIGHT, MAY 26 The commencement season will be UBhered in by the presentation of the tor of the '.First Presbyterian church 'of Wadesboro," and is widely known as one of Carolina's best poets. . nt class day exercises will be held Monday at 8:30 p. m. These will be featured this year bv an extra good program. ' Tank. Asheboro is fortunate to have- s. ; , ,.' :-::.x:. Ingram's- Filling Btation has'jrotten tip a large number . of sign boards which will be placed along the high- ways leading to Asheboro giving the tion but it will also be of Interest and benefit to travelers.' t v , STORE DYNAMITED AT "V . WILSON LAST WEEK Last Saturday night about 11 o'clock the rmceryi store of W..n. Bnxter, I .. ... i i. - I mi . - L . on Urf kasr of a lanre rr frigrtr, and -!,;, r,;f A t' '''" of tlmlfr l.urting ' it'"! 1'-rf i f.i !: crTiifno-cf in :0T3' - 4DEFEAT 0F-SEN. KEW - ' FOURTEEN POGfTS ON CALAIITTY TARIFF -N - ?k (Special Correspondence.)) 's. tthington;. MayiThe, fourteen poi which Senator immeut made aiinsf the calamity tariff bfllpt totmiied the .main objections to :i the measure jmd formed tb basis.for the masterly disenssion.oz ,th;;prindpal f enures of tite bill aod .the eonDiBie situation by -the senator frtm North SaroPni fortai;taliTiMofl-j!j at, Inance ommitt, which follow- neenator Simmons' fourteen r points htarn may be epitomized as follows: v-.iu km r ,1 of maintaining orasent srieee and to enabKi protected industries to further advance high price without the risk of Jfanign competition. , - ; SUrir-SLeLads to . higher prices, higher cOetuOJ hnng and further monopoliza tion oi American industries. '-8.T Many rates are absolutely pro hibitive, especially on highly special ized ' products -which constitute the bulkj.0f dotiable imports. i,lhe,ujoposed rates applied to presenj import prices expressed, in terms ; of equivalent ad valorem average from 40 to O per cent higher than the average .PayBe-Aldrich rates. i Sf lhe volume of imports have sow reached almost a normal basis and are hot exeessive, and compared with our exports are relatively low. , ' If a reduction of imports under the much lower rates of the nresent law.'have taken place, it is obvious that the drastic increases of the pend ing bill will reduce them to a point where it will be utterly impossible to sell, our large, exportable surplus of manufactured and'acrrioultural prod ucts in foreijm markets, because our I ivmgn eusiomera wilt-; continue to oe unable to purchase except through the exchange of merchandise. . 7 .-The two- greatest" economic prob- lems' of the American people today are (1) foreign markets for our sur plus, products, and (2) the question of .unemployment, which unless the first problem is wisely solved, . will Rapidly grow. ; Labor can only be em 0ojAHiterfAieb 'emxig ptoyer can nna a;inarxet ioj- nis proo uctSi Jjr " ' 8. Duties on agricultural -roducts will mostly be inoperative or inef fective because of (1) practically no importations or (p) such meagre im portations as could not affect the do mestic price or (8) on account of Our large exportable surplus, the domestic price of the particular article is based upon and fixed by the world selling price. 9. The effective duties will tend to advance the price of agricultural and manufactured "products in the domes tic market, but the benefits to the farmer through such increases will be almost inconsequential by reason of the increases in the prices of the things he must buy and consume. 10. The rule followejLby the com mittee in ascertaining, t measure of protection violates -every theory or principle' of protection heretofore ad vocated bf the Republican party. The superadded, rate-making powers con ferred -upon the president makes tariff rate fixing almost as much a matter of political and personal pat ronage as the distribution of federal offices., 11. The rates of the hill are based upon the export price of imports ai compared -with the American selling great mass of the American people to the opportunity of purchasing new price, an unstable and constantly ! develop an international political con- goods at reduced prices. He expects fluctuating"-' factor. The American sciousness and that explains why to make an announcement of his op price for making the comparison Is ' Senator McCormick tried to revive the enlng and of some of his values in predicated upon nd definite basis, with league of nations issue. Underwood next week's Courier, ' ' all the advantages in favor of the in answer to McCormick, said: "Let tarifl seeker, the White House send the league with PROF. LINDEMAN WARNED 12. The Reynolds . report, (upon the Versailles treaty to the senate for, TO LEAVE THE STATE which prices of imports are based) is" ratification and we Democrats will based on foreign prices of August,! answer your question. But without Prof. E. C. Lindeman, of the chair 1921, mainly imports from Germany',! that action on the part of the presi- of economics at the North Carolina which seem to have been accented as dent, your question is not germane for College for Women, has resigned, to the standard. Since then German the league of nations is not an issue." take effect September 1. It is alleged prices hve largely Increased, so that I "You senators across the aisle there that Prof. Lindeman concluded to re the ratek have been already thrown .have made the issues," went on Un- sign after being warned by the local out of balance and will be still further I derwood, "and you can not dodare them Klu Klux Klan to leave .the state, thrown eat of balance. . : I by raising this false cry. It is you It Is rumored that a negro woman, 18. The uprising i against the rand not we who must undergo the employed by the professor as cook. Payne-Aldriek bill forced the Republl- can party to adopt a fixed rule for measuring the protection to be accord .ed, which this bill ignores, and repu diates. . w . . ; , 14.- Adoption, ef this bill with Its . prohibitive rates based on an iincer- tain and dangerous principle of meas uring -differences in 'competitive con ditions here and abroad will mean, (n addition to higher price, higher eost of living and the further monopolisa tion of; Amerkary industries, ; also radical redactions In production, un employment of labor, and the general demoralisation and underminings of our past and present economic stand ard and conditions. -- All 6t these points Senator, 81 m mons, clearly demonstrated by facts and arguments. . ' V :: f n ' - : HIGH pOIVT.ASnEBOnO - ''" . 'ROAD L'NDbK CONSTRUCTION . The state highway-eommUsioa has begun work on the road from- Ashe boro to lliirh Folnt They are puttlnf In mkrliinory for making road mate rial npnr t!ntla and Will work north and ' i-'. from I her. T)i mad Is VA DEFEAT FOR HARD- KGADLIIMSTRATiON (By David F. St. CUir.) 1 .. . . Washington," May Not.-in years has- Washington experfeneea such poUtleaTietisatioa as-the defeat of Senatot.Harry S. "New in the Indiana PTimaxrNewi defeat luaaeniy re veals yawsing chasm m the path of th Harding tjdthinistration. When tit astounding aeWMame JBepublicans high ana -low wnvHt w ln t his address to an- attack on tne.na lost hiseadac "Xj- tional administration,: and delivered "? Senate McCormick. of Illinois, a few shafts at the present interna chairmatf of th:t senate . Itepublican tional policy of the country. cantpaig?mmittee, strode down. the. xhe very thing that has threat aisle of the setut screaming t tne ened u disrupt the conference at MVt';li-;voiee.- ew-.-rt-'UM'-PemojGeBo,, t the outgrowth of our inter- Nations! ?l-demand an answer and l former presidential candidate de will not take for the answer 'no . clared. For the inonMnt this high V strung, result of the arms conference panic stricken senator resemWea an at Washington, he said, is a "regional inmntA of a mad house trying" to es- allam.- n This, h continued, "has cape. There was a look of pity on I the faces on the Democratic side. Wen J Ho?,!! had erea sumcienuy w . - thought on what had happened in In uian, iv Fufc d never en h iTntr&l tfL 3 hrpopS'ff ... . .,..- p f ..,, peaung to our government, tne states- the Harding adllnion But there to is no Itf fold NeW ouse the co-operation of individual ZZZ ftrSSS" Stnd SAcdti Mil Hays. New was the high me-1 The Republican campaign pledge dium between the president and Re- of "reorganization, economy and add publican senators and New's defeat is ed efficiency in government," Mr. Cox uo;nr'c pfnat. declared, "has developed into the ac- The Republicans have been prepar- tuality of spoils in government." . ing themselves for every eventuality He charged that the' "chief opera but this. To them a direct slap in tors of the old Mark Hanna machine the face of the gracious, amiable and is in charge of this work, and the lovable man in the White nouse was inconceivable. They have Deen ao.- control of the Old Guard." He contm mitting to themselves that they ' had . ued: A made a mess of it on capitol hill htf,! "Withanmmost unprecedented op Harding would save them. ' He was portunity to render service to human good for something after all. They Jty, with every facility of political had' to take him as a compromise at control, with a wide - spread ChfesMrn. naver had anv respect for his cnirit of nuhlie eo-oneratinn. the R- head bujt tiien the country seemedtopublicah." party- hue not eucce-sf uily him and bad" grown "to despise congress but now look, he too has We are at peace with the world, been caught in the wreck. and yet the burdens of taxation re- Since last Tuesday this sweet tern- main and a yearly deficit of approxi pered man has looked again and again mately five hundred million dollars at the figures on the beam of the is not denied. Unparalleled condi scales on which his fellow citizens tions call for modem measures of re weigh him as president and he finds uef m vet day by day the coantry that he has lost 40 pounds in a single js drawn back to reactionary policies day, so one oi nis sympaimzers ue- clares. ires. ' is what nas nappenea in inuianu the first of a series of events in re- ( tributive justice ior a party inai ia completely destitute of all principles and ideals except money and oppor-l tUnism? Is it the first red stroke of the lash on the naked back of a party that came into power by the tempor-i ary perversion of the moral sense of the American peoDle? I . It is of course unknown what the hext event will reveal but there are many positive signs that the people are just as eager now for a change as they were two years ago. Many of them have become conscious of having made a great blunder two years ago. The world has not improv- ed and their eyes have been opened to the fact that America is largely re- sponsible for this want of improve- ment. However, it vet remains for the .test." Here ts a feature or the situation. a ieature oi tne situation. Since the introduction of the Uriff bill This, however, was denied by Linde in the senate thousands of null work- man, who stated that the negro cook ers in the north have, learned that celebrated a birthday party in the . their wages are to be cut on the basement of his homo. None of his ground advanced by the tariff barons family or other white people . were , that the American people will not present. stahd fot an advance in prices m Prof. Lindeman Is a capable'and ex manufactured products. On the other. perienced educator and came to Ms: hand the farmers in the mlddlo west present position. from Illinois.. -and tha wool producers, further west . . . , . ' '.r-i have learned that for the tariff rates : ',., ;' . War la China. '. ' J given there on. farm products they ' ' 'i . . , U , ' . ' must go deeper down in their pocket China, even more than usual, Is torn ta pay the Increased price for the by insurrection and bending under the roods of tho east. . Wages are to go-blood and burdens of war. . . down and prices are U go up. : , . 'The railroad north of Kwangahln It is that shadow more than any- has been cut, and tha governor of thing -else that has begun - to fall Honan province has begun hoot littles athwart the path of the Republican, against the forces of wu Pei-Fu. A The Uriff easts that ominous - shad- state of chaos exists, and both Great ow and the Republicans are almost Britain and the United Stales have frantle is their desperation to hurry landed marines for tho protection of tho bill with H more than Iwp thou- foreigners, who are regarded as In ex and Iniquitous amendment" through tremo peril. the senate but senators like Simmons, '" i "" . ' Jones, of New Mexico, King, of, Utah, ed economic program thnt wat to save And other are' determined that the i quarter of a billion dollar tin vmr American people shall fully under- in the government's ipiie ha lt ptnnd what tbi Worst of all tariff fomplptMy w - V,"!. Tin tanfT nni !.." tiienn to them, lf,.r It has -II - ; ! - 'i " ( '' I i'.iH P I iri OI' T. r.r ( tf ' ( . P- I I ' ; I EUOVERKOR COX 3AYS MINISTRATION IS A BIG FAILURE Former Governor James M. Cox, of , Ohio, who was the Democratic eandi- date for president in 1920, in a speech a-befove the , statewide ', gathering of Democrats at Harrisburg. Pa made. a strong attack upon the Harding aaminisiration ana saw mat it wouia go down in history as an outstanding failure. Mr. Cox devoted the major part of - ,ed to otner alliances, and grave crises have come in consequence." "Not only have we ceased to be ipfui, but in view of recent devel- -t ig apparent that we are a distantly - disturb nir factor in inter- national affairs. Our leaders in "fhsTti0 can Kdi - is, Recognizing the futility .p- ruling objective is to strengthen the met the test of responsibility. of an almost forgotten past. The Old Guard has tied the Republican party to the post of provincialism." CANDIDATES MUST FILE All candidates for the various county offices must file their no tices for candidacy and their pledges on or before May 20 with the chairman of the county board of elections. FORMAL OPENING OF NEW STORE MAY 19TH AND 20TH Mr. F. L. Brooks will formally open his new store in the new building ad- joining Lexington Grocery Co., Friday and Saturday, May 19th and 20th. Mr. Brooks has bought an excellent line of merchandise at rock bottom prices and exnects to n-ive his natrons was honor at a party given in the Lindeman home several Lindeman home several weeks as-o. '-i,i ;."'--T :-j ' '0 'A Si ' ii ''"I : 1 I in tl.nt fprMun pnd tlWe r v -.v i'- h r-i .
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 11, 1922, edition 1
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