THE WEATHER
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11. Portent
for North Carollnai Ruin and warmer
Tuttdiy; Wedne.di cloudy and much
coidar.
THE ASHE VILLE CITIZEN
ESTABLISHED 1868.
.nrr,,,-rrn TrtTtir hp ni Ml niNf. OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA
UCAJlr 1 ZAJ n- w -uw -
aTheVILLE, N. TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 12. 1922.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
WATCH THE LABEL
On your ..par. It will tall yaw "",.!
...... rintlen easlrea. "anew nv i
day. afore aspiration, and yau wr
miaa an laaua.
v n ir
rjaLCtf,ftJftU M IX fa IS II LZ Jl I M
anwr ouege un owe
TIME TO WAKE UP AND GET BUSY
J
BY BILLY- BORNE
sti
NEW
GREATLY N
BY
II
EEDED
DENOMINATION
Offered By New Bern
. - :
Invention Locates
, lost Vessels With
Their Treasures
Allows Ships to Proceed
J Safeif Through Fogs
1 Or Mine i4rcas.
' PARIS. Dec. 11. (By The A
i si.ciated Press.) Ships may nit
i eed safely through fosrs or stn.l
ov channels, lost vessels loaded
with treasure may be discovert I
and floating mines located by the
electric depth tinder, the Inventi ,
or which has Just heen announce'!.
! according to Professor lJingevm.
Ithe inventor. Professor I.ange in
Z . ihclds the chair of general and ex
EleCt BflV. H. T. StevenS, ( P,.itnentnt physics in the College
f TJ-loirrri Prpsirlpnt l"r rran,p . ... .
A of Conference. ' - yJ? i
1 wINSTON-sTtm". N. C. I'ld'K .vioT
l.Wll the Baptist 1 ,r ,n tblii field had been rathe,
State Baptist Convention
Opens Today Spill
man to Preside.
S ALKS CHANGE OF
1 CONVENTION DATE :
ention. n session ncre insiru. i ,.n.lv. ilt not altogether
the Board of Education to pi oteto condu
uiuiun win.
and further favors a he se
of NeS5! aa t. Joe"
with tha establishment or a new
junior college located In the
cistern section of the Mate is Ihc
intention that is absorbing atten
tion in hotel lobblaa tonight.
At a meeting of the. board '
r duration, held this afternoon,
s- rious consideration was given the
matter. Another Junior college is
badly needed and especially in the
eastern part of the ftate. A veri
table avalanche of telegrams came
down on the board practlcal'y
flooding thern and all telegrams
favor the location of such a col
lege in New Bern.
Durlna- the year a committee
fiom the board have been qmet.y
investigating sites for an iristiit -tion
similar to that at Mars Hill
in the western section, and Ne v
Bern has responded with a gen
erous offer. It is understood that
this offer includes one of the mos'
Kdvantageous gites in addition to
the sum of " $50,000. It is ex
pected that it will take in tho
nr tirhhnrhood Of S230.000 to build
and equip such an institution. I it -
hiding the value of a site. New
Bern's offer will leave approxi
niately JtOO.OOO to be contribute.
by the denomination.
Board flavors Plan Also
New Hera Location
Leadinz NBaptist sttUe tonight
tnat there isSio question of the
reed and In every instance the men
wem to think that Hew Bern Is
I' lie H'Hi(.ai. B. .... -
its stated on very good authority
ithar everv 'member of the Board
nf Education fa vora the new insti
tution a
Motion
t'on. , i
The- matter win come befor the
invention to i report of the
1. ard anil it la not expected that
thtrewHl'b any opposition.
Arriving messengers to the Bap
tist State Convention enjoyed to
re, y a prjllminary evangelistic con
ference and tonight Rev. Dr. M. L.
Dodd, of Sh.rev.port, La., deliv
ered the chief address. Other
speakers during the afternoon and
night wer, Rov. Ben Wall, Greensboro-
Rev. E. N. Johnson, Dunn.
Itev. Hurh lAtimer, Winston -Salem.
. and 'Rev. J. A. Mclvrr.
i.oulsburg.
The local committees have com
liieted their arrangements for the
upening session of the convention
tomorrow afternoon and every
iKissihlo convenience greets the
visitors. Rev. Dr. B. W. Spill
man, of Kinston, the president of
:hr Convention, is here, arriving
this afternoon. Rev. Dr.. Bpi.llman
ims been ill and thia morning it
as reported here that he wontd
ie unable to attend, biit he will
all the convention to order at the
usual hour. .
1'i opONOs Change In
Convention Date.
Tonight Rev. Dr. Spillman stat
ed that he believed the convention
should make a change In the time
uf meeting and for the beat inter
ests of the demonatrational work,
Instead of holding a convention in
December, said Rev. Dr. Spillman,
lha Mnirintlnn thrill Id be held ttl
latter irt of September, thus
. providing an impetua for the Fall
.amnafam Miner trran "ti".
gathering In December to receive
,-.r.nt. f . wnrk done.
Dr. Rnlllman said further that tha
Winter weather in December waa
always a barrier to attendance
and thia would oe remove
meeting data waa cnangea 10 v
When the fuse at Salem Baptist
fhurch blear out tonight, only
few minute, after ReV. J. A. MC-
lon nf Tmlsburg. began hie ad
dress, the audience waa given an
r nrfict control of botn
mind and voice on the part of a
nenlcer TfeV. Dr. MC1AUI
tinued his addreea without even a
pnime and the' audience aot aou-
lutely : quiet, listening
hiiyjaddresa a ths Hhta flaahed
i. 1 1.. avansrelistiC COn
i ir.nuiL v i .... - " .
feience waa tha reorganiaa.ion ol
,i.. K'....k PaMiinA Hanust
ference. OfBcera were chosen and
a program committee eelected with
;;.,r.i. nrnvide a program
for the season to be held the day
before the meeting or
. v ,.rnr. The ofneere are
l!ev. if T Stevens, Raleigh, prea-
. -. t vt Mercer.
r.re.iHnt' nnrl ' ReV. J. C. CanlpO,
Mebane, secretao'-
notahlv bv the Englishmen. Kicn - !
nrdson. who began his work after
the Titanic disaster. His ideas wet
tin proved by C'onstantlne I'hilowsl'i
who came to me to find the appli
cation. I have been able to do so
and this is my only merit.
"However, my work was no:
completed until arter the war. M
apparatus has been successfully
tried on an extensive scale by the
French navy."
V- i o til n crs
. .v.z-c --V . kf?T-ia A.
London Reparations Confer
Collapses and Allied Powers
Look to U. S. to Prevent Break
PREMIERS WIEE
. 2 IN EFFDH
.
New Bern Fire Relief Fund Reaches
$40,000 Mark as Contributions From
Cities and Big Organizations Come In
flfrrlal (Vtiwi r lik-w ri i
XKW RKI'.X. Dec. I I -With
I SI O.0CO re. ited oxer Hie week
end It N. Scolt, Treasurer or me
?'ev u n I'. re P.clief. n ntnulni ed
tulay that Ihf fund had reached
appromnialely $40,000.
Tt.. c.r.-ii conrrinui inn?. n..-
liecun i i i mm in now riont cuu
aid ei-ic organlr.allona all ner
I hi State. Olllllals term tne itn-
eral response to Mayor i i.irn b
call "slmplv gratifying.-'
Isadore W. Menoeinnn. or um
Federal Itnard of liealtli, teacnea
here today to make a survey of
the eanltutlon situation prelim
inary to making nia rpnn in
'Federal board in which a requl
will be made for additional health
JAN
men. As w.n given out by Pr.
W. . Itankln. the altuation as to
sanitation has heen handled ex
ceedlngly well and no fear of an
epidemic amonc the billeted ne
groes is entertained.
A hundred laborers were nut to
work tod iv clearing ground ami
creeling tents for the tent city J
which is to house tha homeless i
negroes temporarily and Major
Kvaus. who Is In ciiari!" or hi
work, stated tonight that lie would
have twenty-nve tenia ready for
occnnaiii v hv tomorrow night.
The prejudice of the iieirroes
against living In tents has been
practnallv overcome. Major I'.v
ans said, anil already he lias ap
nii.iinna for the number of tenia
i ' , 4
hn erpect
to have up tomorrow.
RUSSELL
WINS
SUIT AGAINST
BY STEI
HAP
All
Efi
Farm Credit Legislation Given
Impetus Which Insures Action
By Present Session Congress
Two Senate Committees
Arrange for Immedi
ate Hearings.
a4a.-r , uivmn WORKS
IS IN PATH OF t'LAMfcb
PONTIAC. Mich.. Dec. 11 -A
l:,rs. ,.inn of Pontioc a buainesa
and industrial district was endan
gered bv fire late tonight.
Tk. ki... uiTiated in a hard
ware store, burned three bua neaa
. hinb. it,. residencea. a lum
ber yard and a coal yard and waa
atill spreading at midnight A ac
tion of the oaklana Motor Worka
and a concrete manufacturing
.v.. mtti of the
flamea vhlcli were being awepi
niuiiK ny . mill " T- lt
Fire apparatua from ,Detroi
Ferndale ana
i i ..i. tha Pontiac ni'
i. . . i. Mmhitt nc the
Jury Reaches Decision in
1 Case Against uovernor
in 23 Minutes.
j OXFORD. Miss., Dec. 11. -(By
! The Associated Press.) A verdict
i for the defendant was returned
tonight in the suit for damages in
stituted by Miss Frances Birk
head, stenographer, against . Gov
ernor Iee M. 'Russell for damages
based on charges of seduction and
other allegations. j
i Tha rferalct merely aald:'
the Jury find for the defendant."
The verdict the climax of on
of the most a-jnsational lawsuitat
ever filed in a Mississippi court1
was returned at 6:08 o'clock, Just
28 minutes after the argument
were concluded, instructions gl'ep
and the case submitted.
Neither of the principals were.
In the court room when the Jury
presented the verdict. Governor
Russell with Mrs. Russell, went
to the home of his broth imme
diately after tha Jury retired.
Members of his counsel also had
left the court room. Miss Birk-
head and her attorneys left at tne
same time for their hotel. And
the crowd which for a week had
packed the court room to its ca
r.,.itr horl naased from the build
ing, evidently in the belief that no
Immediate verdict waa in pm"ii-.
several newSDaoermen. i-uuu
i . lmnntu or i ii i J i ' "
ui.,m n.t tnrtflft wno niro iw
lowed the trial during its week of
sensational developments. n o i
more than a score or mc... -
. 4.. Al.i1 In wltn
rnainea wnen m"
its verdict.
Submission or the case to mr
ntr fAiinweu iuui in""" .
guments in which plebrilliant
and abounding with dramatic and
ntense suppncaxions '"-r-
to the Jury on one nana ior
eronoratton of the governor and
on the other fcr a verdict upn-
ing the contention ui i-
woman that she had
by the state executive and deserv-
ng of reareaa.
nirVheatl naa a--nou iv.
SKea on . the
oiner iii'i""" .. .r,tlon
P..ittt . or an is""
which she declared Mr. t.uss
had connived at. .
. ji waa ramrneu vj
i ne ''". "'; . in
jury .V..
age rrom c-.all
s. ..,nnr and Mrs. KJSaeu
"-5 h. .niirt house
HSnr - tnV w; advlaed that a
verdict had been returnee, a..-
.n ttinnKi 1110 ju;w..
' . - ..1.1
"At the end or tne iin-s "
am deeply grateful to , w. i Jury
netV-anceinth.
na tiiu .,K,:;r, verdict,
, ana ,. be
which I trust anu
complex, .MV state."
name ana in " . formal
Kiimeii i w
. . 4-nnl.rnt.
nit MrNe II. cniei pi.
for Mla 'c"V.Vnt to make
Wholesale Robbery
Of Graves Subject
For Investigation
SUPPORT FEATURES
TO EXPAND CREDIT j charge Undertaker Employ-
-ni J ed Men to Disinter Bodies
Simmons Favors Plan to coffins Re-Sold.
Set up Distinct rarm
Credit Agency.
-The
WA9HI.VGTOX. Dec.
11. Farm
credit legislation received in Con
gress today an impetua which both
Republican ana ocin..."- L T if
inaureri leeisiawiill "
aid-
of. agriculturists during the pres
ent session.
Arrangeiiterits wure made for
immediate hearings by two Senate
committees and tonight the un
wiioi SAnata farm bloc met and
made plana to press the credit ex
tension legislation.
Bi-partisan support for major
features of administration recom
mendations to expand credit of
farmers was indicated. Bloc en
dorsement meaning that of Demo
cratic as well as Republican mem
bers for important features of the
Lenroot-Anderson bill, which had
the approval of administration
officials, was said to be promised.
Democratic members of the mloe
said that President Harding and
the administration had "coma
around," and given their support
to the credit legislation previously
urged by the bi-partisan agricul
tural group.
The senate banking and agri
cultural committees will proceed
tomorrow with "double header"
hearings on farm credit affairs.
The banking committee is to begin
hearings on Lenroot-Anderson ana
other credit bills and the Agricul
ture Committee is to proceed with
hearings on other ttredtt phases.
The Agriculture committee toaay
heard Senator-Elect Frazier, re
publican. North Dakota, who told
of the need of farmers for credit
and other aid. and for several days
Western delegations representing
agricultural interests are to give
testimony.
Amonr ithe bill to be taken up
by the senate banking committee
A A VT A Ga... DeC. 11.'
Fulton County Grand Jury will be
; gin an investigation tomorrow into
B. ' . .iioirnri wholesale rob
ber yof graves at South View Cem
etery bv F. S. Ware, proprietor of
an undertaking establishment and
Claude " Maddox ad Thurman
Jones whom h, is alleged 1 to have
JT:..a . rt.ainter the bodies of
the dead and turn the coflna overt
to hla company i
The graves of many negroes
were opened today under upervl-
- -i anri county oincers.
and several were found to contain
bodies that had been shifted irom
the coffins into the pine boxes that
-jr.ii nntnlned the coffins.
In one instance the officers
found the body of Solomon Jack
son who was buried October 1.
nil ir.inprl in a casket origi-
nallV sold to relatives of Nancy
Tovce and in which she was bur
fed September 9. 1S3S. according
1. .uJ rm. Ware Is at liberty
under 15,000 bond, while Maddox
fault of bond of $2,000 each
REFUSE TO SEAT
DELEGATES FROM
IRKERiPARTY
Conference for Progres
sive Political Action Is
Getting Under Way,
OLiKVEIAND. Ohio. Dec. II.
(Bv The Associated Tress.) The
question of. seating representatives
of the workers' party of America
precipitated a heated ana pro-
onireil discussion ai mis ii"i-
noon's session of the first day's
meeting of the second conference
for progresive political action and
.aimed an early adjournment wnen
the Question was reicrren oacn i
the credentials committee ror
further consideration. This com-
mittBtt honed to renort to the con-
tomorrow. Unofficially. It
was reported the committee won'd
refuse to seat
Avers Russia Will Never Sign
Straits Settlement Upon Lines
Contained In Allied Propsals
Husband Who Wife
Will Refuse Any Nation
as Many Warships mere
as Has Russia. x
nANDHISTS AGAIN
ATTACKING ENGLISH
Pftjpose Economic Boy
m Pact by All of .the
Oppressed Nations.
LAUSANNE. Dec. 11. (By The
Associated Press) Russia has not
abandoned hope of forcing her
position on the Lausanne confer
ence concerning the closing of the
Dardanelles and the Bosporus, or
at least of reducing to a" minimum
the number of foreign vessels
which will be permitted to pass
through these waterways to the
Black Sea.
M. Tchilcherin called on Ismet
t.... fnriav with counter-pro-
posals. He Informed Ismet that
Russia would surely never elgn a
.,...11. aatHemnnt which followed
v. unea nf tha Allied project. , The
.),. nrUvra uarlVa Allied project is mm iu..,...u.
rviUBC in .-."rat .. ' " ' 1 ' . ... a ... . .
repreaentatives on the ground jney
nn-Ameriean a .im-'-
n RUNK
E
N DRIVERS
wish
ork
rtTbtim with reference to the
suit- . T will pur-
.... in the future m.
have not yet
...... ....I
Mr. MCieiii
taken.
vv' -
1..-OTOU.RALEM, Dee. 11 At
a meeting oi
knard of educa-
7, of the Bapusi f
MUST
JAIL
TO
SAYS WILL NEAL
Thinks Ship Line Pro
posal Sure of Passage
in General Assembly.
erniM eeBB
T-oiiocoH B'rrai.
, mnnrr MWLBt
t at.f.iGH. Dec. 11. "Jail the
possibly for Incorporation tn an arunken driver" will be Kepresen-
t measure, is inwi i . .ative Will .eai s biukh "..
Amnlhlll credit
Senator Borah. Republican. Idaho,
to limit the profits of Joint stock
land banks to per cent. im
committee also has before It other
bills to repeal tax exemption priv
ileges of such 'banks, whose con
tinuance has been questioned by
Secretary Mellon as or aouui.u.
value.
While the trend at tonight's
meeting of the farm bloc waa said
to be toward the nroot' Ander
son bill, which would utilize the
Federal farm loan y"m -baais
for extending agricultural
credits, division of opinion pre
vented final action and "i""1"
meeting ot tne pioo win
tomorrow night. Senators ieni-ooi,
Republican. Wisconsin; "re
publican. North Dakota; Blmmona
. . tTr,rth Carolina: and
Norbeck. Republican, South Da
kota, addreaaed the bloc In be
half of their rMpective bills. The
farm credits sub-committee of the
bloc presented a report ""PPpr
Ing the Lenroot-Anderson blll.
Senatora Ladd and Simmons. . how
ever, favored legislation to set, up
a distinct farm credit agency and
opposed tW
plan of eataDiisnius -----the
farm loan D0'h Jlr SJ
beck plan of using the War Fi
nance Corporation as a credit
agency also had. soma support. A
Sumber of Democrat, wer. . said to
favor th Lenroot-Andereon plan.
Desplt the differences of opinion
within the bloc, it waa aald there
were prospects for an agreement
at tomorrow night's meeting.
-rrrtim AXD
I,r""IW HOTKL 1 IR JX5LLOW3
locating JU"'"L. -st.te. was dis-
Eastern P"f i. I. , stated, the board
JU"e"thelocatiooV.uch a col
favored theJV Bapttota here
-Firt.r-dh:
sition and It s I"Tuh taken and
rh. "eCwiU nob:pPosition
STREETMAN, Texas. Dec. 11.
A negro hotel was destroyed by
flr. here tonight following the
lynching this afternoon of "eorge
Gray, aged so. negro,
tion with an alleged attack upon
a white girl. Another negro, ar
rested with Gay waa later releaa
d from Jail.
...,. Will
crusades In the next L'".
. . r tikhf the discre
tionary power In tntn,cin.fr0,n.
the Judiciary and rnklng It the
ior that a man convicted of diiv-
i- . n automobile while
cated shall be sentenced to Jail or
the roads.
The McDowell County Legislator
has settled on this bill as one of
the chief measures for which he
will fight. He wants to introduce
it the first day and rush It through
before the maw of bills over
whelmn the session. He believes
public sentiment demands more
Vigorous dealing with the fellow
who tries to mix liquor and gaso
line. "I've mentioned the proposal to
a number of the Judges andf they
a severe penalty for reckless driv
ing is Imperative aa
human 1 fa," h said today. The
Sroed bill would take the tna
of such a ease out of the hands of
tha Justlca of the peace and throw
it. Into tne eupenu.
Mr Neal thinks It belongs.
"fhe McDowell Countian. who is
coming back for his third term,
hears a lot about what the Legls
latur. will and will not do. For
some month, before each -es-ion
he has made it a hobby to dig Into
th. prospective legislative program
and feel about a bit" to se. how
legislative eentiment stands.
Hot. On Pas"S Q .
. T laa
While not committing himself
Jurt yet s to support for the Mor-ti-n
ahta Una project, he s plac
ing hla bet on its successful pas.
saa-e. The aolons are anxious t
.ii th. details about th(
proposition, but Mr.
majority is favorable to h".""de'"
taking as mus ii f
the Governor.
If the co-operative marketing
. V. . nnn... 11 1, this time. I look
for our Wetern representatives to
have
in
bor," and had not been invuea io
sit in the conference.
Debate waa' started when C. E.
Ruthenberg, of Cleveland, national
executive secretary of the party,
following leading of the report of
the credentials committee asked
whv credentials presented by him
and three others Ludwig Lore. New
ork editor of the Volks Zeitung. of
v..l. . tvm. Dunn, of Butte.
KXn.,t anil Caleb Harrison of
Cleveland, had not heen acted on.
Edward Keating or -Washington,
former congressman from Colo
rado, took leh floor and declared:
'The workers' party has no place
where honest trade unions are rep
resented and It was brazen af
fonterv t? nresent credentials to
convention that does not
attendance of the so-called
era' party.
The question of the formation
0f a third party did not reach the
conference today.
Over 200 Labor
Leaders Present
The two day conference 'r Prog
ressive political action "P'""d ,nhr
todav with representatives of labor,
the Farmer-Labor and National Non
partisan I-eague Group. Progressives
and Socialists In attendance to map
out a policy for present and future
political action.
Most of the opening Session waa
devoted to the reading of reports, ap
pointment of committees, and the an -?
' , r.i WHIIam H. .lohnston,
International president of the Machinists-
Union, and president of the
conferece.
Approximately 5no delegates from
earlv every Slate in the I nlon, maln
Iv accredited delegates of Interna lon
, ,i nP.ttni.fltinna and national
auenoen. in.,..a
Sought to Kill to
Finance Defense
Legal Obligation to Protect
Her liegaraiess vi
the Charge.
DETROIT. Mich.. Dec. 11. N'ey
.1 Ford, whoje wife, May Blenn
Ford, is held in the county Jail on
a charge of plotting to kill her
husband, is to be aaked tnava"
money for the woman s trial, ner
attorneys announced ton1'"- "
Is a husband's legal obligation to
protect hi. wife even though she
is charged with an attempt upon
his life, the attorneys con3.'"d
The complaint against Mrs. ora.
It was pointed out, was not signed
bv Ford, but by detectives ahe la
aileged pt have .ougth to engage
to slay him.
The way .waa opened late today
Mr.. Ford on bond,
l III rmna-a-J 11 . , ,. , .
but aha indicated ah. might not
aaat -kee f i dom. '")'
"1 prefer th friandllness of tha
Jail and irMtwrn"".;;),"'
:,i i. i. .ii nvar." sa d Mf-s.ord.
T aafa. but OUtalde,
do not know what might be plotted
aitalnst me." ,
On recommendation of the pros-
ecutor'a office, airs. '"I"" ""
had been reduced from 125 000 to
..tnnn -hi,-h her friends said
!'.:. v.. ,td within 24 hours
Mrs Ford's preliminary hearing
" set for Friday. Hr attorney.
...in ..ir rnev Rain iiinianv. .
shall be d)o ,ta as many warships
of each natloa aa are pswi "
the greatest maritime power ai iji
Black Bea. wmrn win raiMimj
Russia
As a counter measure Tchltcherln
asked that the Turkish delegation
..,,nrt a nlan whereby foreign na
Hons could dispatch through the
straits only one-third as many
warships as Russia maintained in
the Black Sea. This, he argued,
waa only fair to Russia, because the
Entente powers couiu aiway- win " ""' A .missed for lack
amalgamate their forces and thus the ohargo be or ,J.
be as powerful as uHB.a. " Pv indicated, the de-
Tnh !rhr n K i" ---
Stone, president of the Brotherhood
of Locomotive Knglneera: D. B. Rob
ertson, president of the Brotherhood
of Locomotlv Firemen and Engine
men; Sldnev Hillman. N.w York
president of Amalgamated Clothing
Workera; Kdward Keating, of Wash
ington, editor; Morris Illllqult, New
York, mamher nf the National Com
mitea of the Socialist Party: Ben
jamin C. Marsh. Farmers National
Council: J. . Brown, national secre
tary Farmer-Labor Party; Fred C.
Howe New Vork; H. F. Samuels,
representing the National Partisan
League, and representative, of the
United Mine Workers of America,
the Brotherhood of Boiler Maker-.
Order of Railway Telegrapher, and
Womei.'s Trade umn-. m'
Each International organisation will
v. .i.m.a In the case or
nave in,---, " " . . j
. all Vote. nOWBver, uibic.u
i. H.i.-at-B each organl:
tion will be allowed one vote for each
10.100 accredited members.
Prior to tne convmnn m i-
. vi lnhnston ana orner lean-
era aaid the formation of a third po-
ndl min-nn,u.iui
I.met Pasha told M
that the world wanted the straits
opened on a reasonable nasi anu
that Turkey should not combat the
world world.
Near Ka.t Parley i
Makes Little Progress.
The Near Kastern conference
which made little progress today,
is plainly marking time to await
the outcome of the London repara
tlona negotiations. Lord Curzon
and M. Barrere, in dealing with
Turkey, and Russia, have estab
lished an Anglo-French entente at
Lausanne, which they had hoped
would be strengthened by a repar
ations understanding between Eng- ,
land and France at London. There
la an Interlocking of interests In-
volved which Is of great concern
to both Turkey and Russia as well 1
as England and France. If a
Christmas recess Is decided upon. ,
Tsmet Pasha may hasten to An-
gora to consult with the national
assembly.
Russia and the Inviting powers
engaged in an exchange of notes
today relative to Ruasia'a inslat
ance upon having her naval and
military experta admitted to the
informal discussions between the
Turkish and Entente experts on
questions besrlng on the straits
control. These notes were merely
formal atatesments Russia's de
mand to be heard in all Informal,
as well as formal discussions of
subjects elated to the straits and
refusal of this demand framed by
Lord Curson In behalf of the in
viting powers.
Lord Curxon explains that the
Russian experts are free to talk
matters over aa they wish with the
Turkish experta, but are not Justi
fied In demanding entry to private
conversations concerning questions
which will be taken up later In
sub-commlslons and In the full
commission, which the Russians
are privileged to attend -
The executive board of the In
dia independence party selected a
quiet Monday to give greatest pub
licity to a manifesto It distributed,
attacking English admini'tration
in India and declaring that o
long aa India was not freed from
the British yoke tnere was no pos-
fense would be mm ii."
hv Ford and detective. In his em
ploy, had rendered Mrs. Ford ir
responsible.
RIMED
FOREST SER
RAT. YARNELL
C D
ll
VICE
Is Made Supervisor of the
White Mountain Na
tional Forest. ,
Appointment of Ira T. Yarn ell.
for some years pas connected with
the U. S. Forest Service here as
. oe the White Mountain
National Forest with headquarters
at Oorham. rew niminimj.
h..-. officially received In Ashevlle.
Mr V.irnell. who since Septem
ber. -819. has made hla home on
r,...'... iinniin leaves with Mrs.
Yarnell Saturday and after a brief
vacation spent at tne nome oi
, ....-,4. Hiinhurv. Penn.. will as
sume his new duties as supervisor
by January 1.
Th. white Mountain National
TC-..1 .mt, races 400.000 acres and
constitutes the most intensely used
recreational forest under govern
ment control, as It lies near dense
centers of population.
nr v.irnell succeeds as Super.
visor. J. J. Frits, who Is known in
this territory where some year, ago
he had charge or ino il. iu-iitn
area with headquarters at Marion.
(t'aaliaara a Tirol
TO GET TOGETHER
To Gather in Paris Then
With Fortnight Left
for Agreement.
SPLIT IN ALLIED ,
UNITY INEVITABLE
Year 1922Bids Fair to
End With Allied Discord
as Did 1921.
LONDON. Dec. 11 (By The
Ji.soclateil Press.) The London
conference on German reparation,
g-nerallv described a. the critical
i inference, ended today In agree
ment only on another conference.
The next link In the long chain .
St the Alliea' atruggles to get to
pether will he forged at Paris,
t.iimrv " There will be a fort
night then left for the allies to ,
agree upon some program.
The moratorium granted the
Germans expires January 16 and
I he next payment on account n.
reparations which Germany pro
test, ahe Is unable to meet, will be
due on that date.
Another futlt. round table ses
sion of ne diplomats would seent
to mean only fulfillment of th
French plans for independent e
t on, which British opinion le.
l'eves would apell calamity for r
tottering edifice of European pee
rerlty and sow tha seeds fori
future great war. . '
Tha agreement to disagree -4
only temporarily, the diplomats as
.art waa consummated la thro
days, embracing rour meetings oi
the Allied premier.. Th. rock oa
which harmony foundered was tha
British refuaal formally to court-
temince the French project f'r
rnrtlnl (inclination of th. Ruhr hd
taking charge of Important Ger
man Induatrtes. Tn. arixian cam
net met thia afternoon and regis
tered Its refuaal to co-operate wltli
Franc, in such measures.
Premier Mussonni s proposal iim-
. . .
a .ettiemeni were iroai.au mm-
teously, was au. in naa om
a powerful nation, but war not
taken seriously as a panacea for
tn' German MCK man ox urop.
Th not waa rejected unanlmoun-1-j
with th general comment that
it meant merely sparring to gala
time).' l-'-w..;,,.'
England Off or. to -.).
(' neet FranOo'. Debt .
Th British government submit
ted no general plan to solve th.
deadlock; It practically offered to
cancel France' debt to Great
Britain a. an Inducement for
scaling down the amount of th
monetary demand upon Germany.
Tne French. Italian and Belgian
pitmiers with their staff of x
pert, will embark for hom tomor
row. . ' '
This conference resembles iev.
rral of Its predecessors In that th
conferees insist It has not been u
fillure, that Its dissolution cannot
be described ss a deadlock, and,
1., a-eneral. that there la a better-
nnderatandlng among them than
before they met. certamiy im
attitude plcturea their nope.
rot the realities.
However steadfastly an may
stand aloof and protest ner at
tachment from these European do-
bates, tha United mates cannot
prevent her name from being ln
volved and the poaaibllities of her
participation being made th sub
ject of speculation. tjontin.niai
politicians roniena him ii.i
iinn. and tha adluatment of war
tlht. cannot be separated and that
the United States cannot avoid be
coming party to the solution of
these problems.
The Allied powers tonight seem
in ha look Inn tn the United State
a a last hope of preventing a defi
nite breiK in tne entente over mrj-
a rations, following upon tn. col
lapse of the London reparation,
conference. Despite official explanal
t.nna an tha decision to oonunuo
the discussions in Paris, th Allied!
premiers after three oays conv.r
nations find themselves In what ap
pears to he complete disagreement
over reparations. Adjournment to
-January im an effort to delay a!
little longer th. apparently lnev.
f.Ki. .nil. n Allied unity. -
mr nninVara will return to Paris
Imnnrrnw with the reparatiotMi
problem aa far from an even tm-j
iparv aettlement aa when h ar-i
rived on Friday evening, although!
his determination to aemano. parj
t'al occupation of the Ruhr for
, ,.!,-,. . nlinctions was the eh tell
contribution to the failure of titer
present necotiatione. '
There are many wen imormocj
French observer, who neuevi
fmHawtf 9m Tw
New President of Poland Is Pelted
With Snow Balls and Rioting Marks
The Inaugural Ceremony In Warsaw.
i,i .mi we luted to use our
power in the primaries te nom nate
the right men. regardless of Political
faith .'? It waa said, however, that
file . were
our Western rrr-""""" - ! niarea wnere in. -- - --
" lh. ,,. attitude they did forta should he made to perfai
'ThV-Kjaw Jijh-let rth.!.nrt that effort, o.
bmma aa,V tils TH 71K SS IIU
atronalr la favor of a third party
Demand for tha primary nomina
tion of candidate. Hi States where
there is no primary la made in i the
annual report of the n1 re
mittee of th. conference which atatea
through the primary bsHot Prog
reasiva candidate, can be nomi
nated." The committee declared that
"In those State, where the primary
law oee not elet a demand for the
, .uch a law should be
mad n the Incoming legislature ;
Stale, where th. law fa dfeetlv.. ef-
d
an Taal
Ittlcal party wa. i .v v...K.-.r-: ....,t nnlltlcal and
"d to?bStprin"ple that th primary i economic peace in the world. Af
la a diatlnct Institution and that It ter asserting that the boycott
is Intended as a meana whereby I policy on British good, adopted by
.... ..i.,..-th.lr candfdatea in I . , .. i , r..ai,i in lnHia haa
voirra lau ..-vi , -".i"i v... .., - ,,H. -.-.rnnnv
damaged British trade appreciaDiy. , , '..
th manifesto affirms tnat it an
oppressed natlona would make an.
economic pact with India they
could bring Great Britain to her
sense..
"Remember," says the manifesto,
"that if India was once a land of
culture and proaperity. It la today
a hell of Ignorance and mlaery
through Britlah exploitation and
cruelty, for KJ.000.000 go dally to
sleep on on insufficient meal and
millions die of hunger yearly,
though th harvest often is plenti
ful. Representing one-fifth of the
human race, we ak the aame recognition-and
Justice that haa been
given many of th amaller states
of Euroue. '
WARSAW. Dec. 11 fBy The
Associated P r e a a) Roiting in
which there was loss of life, ami
Injury to many persons, marked
of the swearing in
of.Gabriele Narutowicz as
SHI
to wai
ling be
so badly mauled that h Is not x
necteil to recover.
President NaruwW had to
n.r, hnnra In th. diet bUildin
fore the soldiers were able to cleai
the way so he could get out. J
! counter demonstration umi.ii
'real , . , v. . fr.l.. A r.M
lansia ana 1 -""i"1 1 ' '- 72 I
dent of Poland today. I.wav the crowd so th. Preside
It is estimated tnat yi.voa ivu- ,d ke hls ,xlt. Then a live!
tionalista. mostly students and "7 between th'
school boys, sought to prevent the. . actlon. Bd the polle. li
inaugural ceremony, but beyond J' j?0 fre.yPd an
pelting the new Present with jnui wer. kil,.d and te
.nowballs the demonstrator, ac- ,prjouyiv hurU Qn hundr pet
compllshed nothing. ,on. .offered minor Injuries. -
Narutowics reached the assem- indlm.ntNov
bly chamber and took the oath of, The rad leal, are J"""
Se Nationalists remained a-.y. . '7in T"; bc':.
Meanwhile the Nationalist, and by them on J" "iJ.,,
voutha fell upon and beat aeverai er.. -..-..
radicals and Jewish deputies.
i Social at deouty. Piotroweai,
The chief of th. Poliah army, during I
was1 street meeting tn " - .