Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 16, 1921, edition 1 / Page 3
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f THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C, bPSERVE system PREVENTS PANIC fchmild be No Political Med- tion's Credit Men. Sar! Francisco, June 16. Declaring t thP Feieral Reserve system pre .i o nnnic in this countrv. t ,,-;ttre 'n ' banking :-!""r, rnins presented s ana currencv nt rift rvanona. a ccrw.-. . LnVPlUl"1' - .-sjv ,,j J!) Lilt w"vv; ul jjx tSV3!!- ,niitical meddling or any other P A. 1 0f ir tpriereriL-t; huil woum o.i- fi: tl-.f powers of the present effi- can -.e P vpe 7 .1.,- i,nc t a; mum"' ;tration of the act. The rep nnrt. reacts m pari: 1 T CI X .-p-, i-vaonn nt't-ei ve oystem has V-pn fM:i"'"" u. ciiiu I..nn0rl -M '" " fi IVU8 .-, nml stress even ereater thon k qTf'.lii v.---- w . ""Wit - . tt' tUll rAl iM km.A f vi ! deflation is inevHo. tfi the ft r v5te ri haw most violent deflation in the Federal Reserve ten commerce suppps. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 16, 1921. J - . - i , great national Without tna would most rirtoV ankmS system we period in the n' - m.8t disastrous tory ThVrfV , X?n s industrial his- b?asnhif laf & Sgjffi claVfnavor or ?hePefe5CehiieasCtti0n dcISk to serviJIhas1 ofofVe J"0?1 factors in i the assurioc usCtSe5ogrzedfhSsd FrSrbankiL Tatio o? Po fnflTenSltSTha? T fere with Ytc, T , that would inter- pftelttatSStr,wnded devotion to SEEK SUPPORT OF BANKERS. sysm of60 the par collection Enc l he Federal Reserve Banks S? iSSi m6014? oblition rest! cSdS- J 6 Nailonal Association of SatutP ail6?- The North Carolina n?r in aiminST a direct blow at-the serve Si0n Plan of the Fedral Re b t'(Wf9ielt by the committee .st lnJudicious and certain to lltion ft !f I f -the State- Such legis of Jn and, a?ainst the interests v,r k.jl- tr what i.wii.i. " ; "".""'J mzens. ine ;;y piouv... tcxc .oCS Oi our legislative committep i. a similar measure in ' Lrooncpn m that state, and th. iisea success of the Wisconsin Leffis'a I tive committee to defeat a bill oft. I ! uar irport are here noted with r.r.i,; , i VJBnsm members shows conclusively how necessary it is to ; nave an organization equipped at ail . times for emergency service. studies of your committee . have led to the conclusion that tiio : trade acceptance has not come irto that general use which would be ex pected in view of. the advantages the acceptance affords. This i should receive the endorsement and support of sellers and buyers of mer chandise and bankers." Cellar Attached SfIlR.XS For Hot Summer Days White Oxfords White Soisette Tan Soisette Colored Percals Colored Madras Etc. Upwards The Men's Store 34 So. Tryon JUL WW letter raB h$ 'LacpJe&mePrice wmm ew York, June 16. Greenwich Vil lage accused of being unlawful as well as artistic, has ceased defending itself on the side of what it doesn't do and it is putting foirth its claims to merit on the side of positive achievement. 'They saye we are just 'near artists' and 'hobohemians,' do they? chorused the Washington and Sheridan Square section of Manhattan. "Well, what do they make of this? Here's a list of just a few of the writers who have lived and worked among us and of us in the last few years. Where do the smug precincts of the upper half of this island get anybody to stack against them? Edna St. Vincent Millay, Floyd Dell. Sinclair Lewis, Susan Claspell, Mary Heaton Vorse, Eugene Q'Neil the most successful playwright in the country this, season Theodore Dreiser, .Nina Wilcox Putnam and dozens of others. Come on, you objectors, tell us who the "real" artists are who scorn connection with our Village?" Young Theodore Roosevelt and Doug las Robinson have sought to solve the problem of those members of the Art Students League who can't afford pri vate exhibitions of their work, to dis play it on the walls of their new coffee house, free of charge. The invitation has been accepted. FIND MANY GUNS ON U. S.JTTEAMER Suspected by Government Officials to Have Been Headed for Ireland. i" New York, 'June 16. By The Asso ciated Press) More than 500 modern machine guns with hundreds of spare parts, suspected by government offi cials to have been destined for Ireland were seized here Wednesday by United States customs officials. The arms, found abroad the American steamship East Side, were subsequently takn from the customs men as they were being carted away from the pier by Hoboken police, acting on a search and seizure warrant sworn out a man giving the name of Frank Williams. No further information concerning him was avail able at Hoboken police headquarters. He alleged they had been stolen from him June 11. The arms were taken to police headquarters at Hoboken and will be held pending a hearing before the recorder to determine who is en titled to their custody. According to reports reaching govern ment agencies, two changes of crews, brought about by the nation-wide mar ine strike, resulted in discovery of the arms.t It is reported that a number of one of the crews "tipped off" the government investigators. HEADED FOR IRELAND Presence of the arms r,n hnntvl East Side was not known to the owner or tne snip, the United States Shipping- ."Board, or its managing operators until thev were informed of thfir Hie. covery by Federal investigators. The East Side cleared Wednesday for Nor folk, where, according to Chief of Po lice Hayes, of. Hoboken, she was to take a cargo of coal for a port in Ireland. Investigations as to how the. arms came to be aboard, who ra.imerl them J to be placed there, and for whom they .uu-iiucu, c3i c uiiuci way uy oniciais of the customs service, the Department of Justice and the United States Ship ping Board. Government representatives would make no official statements on the mat ter pending- conclusion of the investi gations. Seizure by customs men is said to have been made on the grounds that a shipment of arms was being attempt ed without compliance with maritime regulations which call for manifesting all exports. PUT ON BY "MISTAKE" The government investigators also were informed that, after the second crew had taken charge of the ship, some unidentified persons in a launch hailed the watchman and asked per mission to remove from the vessel some "supplies" which had been delivered aboard the East Side by mistake. The watchman refused to let the strangere aboaid the shin without authority "from the owner. A description of the seized arms and parts, as made by Williams in his appli cation for the warrant, includes 600 Thompson sub-machine guns; thirty ex tra thirty-capacity magazines; five fifty capacity drum magazines; five one-hundred capacity drum magazines; 80 extra thirty capacity magazines and hundreds of parts of machine guns. Williams gave his residence as Hoboken. Rockaway Point is one suburb which is run on-an efficient plan. What one loses - in time by commuting to and from there, he makes up in general economy of space and occasion once he gets there. For instance: the chief Ibutcher shop is also the chief cabaret. Once the day's orders of lamb chops and sirloins are filled, the piano is push ed out from behind the ice-box, the musicians are assembled and the merry whirl is on. The saw dust of the butch er shop floor is perfectly good saw dust for the dance hall floor. Nothing is wasted in Rockaway. Great interest is being displayed this year in Columbia University's prize awards announced at its commence ment exercises. To Edith Wharton goes the $1,000 Pulitzer Prize for her novel "The Age of Innocence," as "the American novel published during the year which has best presented the wholesome atmosphere of American life and the highest standard of American manners and manhood." General satis faction is beinjr expressed ov er the award, for Mrs. Wharton's book has not only been hailed by the critics as among the best novels of the twentieth century, but it has also enjoyed the widest popularity throughout the coun try as one of the best sellers ever since publication. The Pulitzer Prize of $1,000 "for the American original play. Efficiency Plus Silence L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriters THE BEST WRITING MACHINE THAT BRAINS, CAPITAL AND LABOR CAN PRODUCE. This splendid typewriter comes nearer to being an absolutely si tent machine than any other ever produced, without sacrificing any tner essential features, the ele ment of noise is reduced to a xnin- Office workers will welcome the silent running typewriter, because 11 means less annoyance and heater office efficiency. It wfll be J relief to have a writing machine wat will not "get on the nerves," interfere with mental processes PhoneeV6nt hearing over the tele" It's artistic design and general appearance carry conviction that 1 is strong, simple, compact, dur atie, complete and efficient. Let your next typewriter be an L- C. Smith & Bros. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS Manufacturers of Rubber Stamps Notary and Corporation Seals 24 hour service on Stamp and Corporation Seals. . Y. & E. Wood & Steel Fifing Cabinets Typewriter Repairing Phonograph Repairing Office Supplies of All Kinds Commercial 'Job Print ing of all kinds Let us furnish you es timates. Exclusive Agents for The New Edison Phonograph. Brown & Page Co. & Office Supply Co., Inc. 231 So. Tryon St. Phones 1517-3767 MINSTREL BY SCOUTS OF HAWTHORNE LANE The Hawthorne Lane Boy Scouts troups will give the first performance of their minstrel and play, "Coontown Thirteen Club,' along with some spe cial musical numbers, next Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in their club house arena, near Hawthorne Lane and East Eighth street. ' A stage is being erected and will be equipped with the proper scenery and lighting effects. The vocal soloists are Messrs. Bell, Michael, Stokes and Gibson; instrumen tal soloists, Messrs. Alexander, trom bonist; Wright, violinist; Ivey, cor netist and Professor Bartlett, cornetlsc. CATCH ALLEGED MURDERERS Knoxville, Tenn., June 16. Tom Christmas and Otto Stephens, charged with killing of George Lewis, of . Knox ville, near Clinton on the night of May 30, who have eluded pursuit by a num ber of posses, were captured Wednes day night near Harriman. performed in New York which shall best represent the educational value and power of the stage, in raising the standard of good morals, good taste and goofl manners," was awarded to Miss Lulu Bett. by Zona Gale. This play is a dramatization of Miss Gale's novel of the same name, which has made such a stir and started a whole new school of American-life fiction. There's something refreshing about an expression of good red-blooded wrath and an inclination to direct ac tion on the part of a supposedly judi cial minde3 occupant of the judge's bench. The other day, two pert young men amused themselves on the subway by sticking their feet in the door so that it wouldn't rlnsp Thp mechan. ism is such that the train can't start until the doors are closed. They were taken before Judge Jesse Silberman. I had been on that car I would have broken your heads." There may not be very many horses left on Manhattan Island, but there are some remarkably well trained ones, at any rate. They make up in education what they lack in numbers. In conse quence, a rider rjeds a strong hand and a firm seat to ride the hired horses of a big local riding academy when he attempts to go more than an hour's distance" from the stable. The rates are $5 for two hours and the horses have learned to judge the distance so as to go an hour out and one hour back, and if the rider cares to proceed farther he has something of a fight on his hands. "I get so many inexperienced riders," explains the manager, "and they have little sense of direction or of time, and if it were not for the good sense of the horses, the riders would realize too late that they were beyond their time limit and come thundering in with winded horses. These horses manage the ride themselves, and the riders have little to do . with it. In that way, they protect the riders, themselves, and me." LUCY JEANNE PRICE. II I MOTHERS l I For Three Generations III i V) Have Made Chitd-Birthj. fill E,sier By uin9 tfll V All Oftue STOKU SO i i y &HOIU1F W EH' MM NUT 1 Iff mm I ii EBAY ... KAniri n AM MOTHERHOOD AMD THE BABY. PMC F OR3KBEMEH i. you. caiffi- ird to innm rrra Ihmo 9 BE A E LATE Pradfield regulator Co.. Dept.9-D.Atlahta. Ga Q
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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June 16, 1921, edition 1
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