Newspapers / Greenville News (Greenville, N.C.) / Feb. 3, 1920, edition 1 / Page 1
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jjje Weather Report BnatE2E3i -if A 4 ,v'it ami probably Wednes-.;-!Iv strong Northeast IX PAGEc c TELEGRAPHIC REPORTS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS :rV, ; Greenville, N. C. Tuesday Afternoon, February 3, 1920. 1191 mmsmm m m easfsscaH I I jg -rmmm . - . -r - - m r1 tr n -"- - - i iii. i ii r. i k -m - r , " a " . a r fc i . m i -m -j - x 11 - y- Fill m SEVER RELATIOPSS f mis m m iK Mm Mimmmn a-, a Tress) c' rcplv t the r?.r 1. i ; o ::ccide to tht1 -Iv rxtradition of is imminent, Tarlsieii. .p s :hnt whiie thr i.".y conciliating to will consider. io:u-al by Holland. far as breaking ? :v a naval block-T-r:. .-. r n C!.. relative to the b tween France, progressed ma ;.r recent confer- ;! B:u;sels dispatch said that Bel :. : -ent t the :.: general outline eo.r.mon defense in German attack. Er: A v::.':. F: ..eh : : v. case C m a ! 1 By Associated Press) L-:; :.-;::. Mary's Army Auq- 3.7 ::;. vn as the "Waaes" ttr . ;;..; i-f intrepid woii- various cipaeitus - th- wirrr renserT'" :irary o-mizatloji j : :!ie year. The. i nfriM.i c-ivfn ---v 1 mi.- 'i a fevv of them U l in service. MX v?S F0T . VI) DEVJ IN HOTEL i'Ev ' "t". Press) .nei: were found Xe-. i:i a small hotel ! All were , IPS! H News.) 'r-: anient has .';-:--).y of North : 'Nil I Fish School ar 'it hapoi :i ii:n several ' L'irls anil boys ''hapel Hill to i' lnl thc final eon ioI drhate, the !!ii'i-r, an(", the in- t t"urnament. ., ,.. -,t:! yi-nr that the 1 . . . 1 'ang and track, ''"i- I'niversity and 'emiis. All .three fi .-tttraet more ;! in ever before i riuii- are being t.!iri;i:cnt . : iif- ' hicb schools .''1 -'clio'i di'bating i" tary R;mkin said a'-'u-s the largest la ever had. In -'icols and in S:.f.n.fa,.y I ik- y -iv to run r tlie t ite' rA of March, i teams, one1 eiratlvc. and debates - ' Chapel ;!::'ti'i!i contests " it,, for the ilii' snliyjects narration. H i "'- ' -t'Hey lla5 returned .fi- ;''n(lin; several an-,'. iter Mrs. R. H. T R. Xj.;, V '"'Jf'i- of Arthur, was is mm 1 1 MORE tmm T IJMVER DRAFT OF NOTE TO BE SENT GERMANY APPROVED TODAY. (By Associated Press.) - Paris. Draft of the note to be sent Germany with list of persons whose extradition is demanded by the Allfop was approved by the Council of Am bassadors today. Note and list will be handed immediately to the German representatives. Neither the note nor the list will be made public here. Council also discussed the re ply to Holland regarding sur render of the former Emperor. The terms proposed and the Allied response will be consid ered and further taken up Friday. MAY ASK FOR RESIGNATION OF ARCHDUKE (By Associated Press) Budapest. The resignation of Arch duke Joseph asked by the Hungarian n-iti5:!..J asstmbiy seems pr-;.ib!e as the result of l- royalist tendency in the country. This movt-:uc:it persists 1 'sp te th obje- tiou it, JIai '.;brrj; by the A'. lies ani: 1 he Hungarian socia'4? - '. - ' PEACE IS CONCLUDED London. Feace va.s definitely con- - i . 1 i T71 a.1- ' ciud:d tn:s morning Decwetu tsinon , ia -id the Ru-ian soviet government,1 it is announced m a wireless dispatcn from Matjow received this afternoon. Several German Merchants Arrive New York Several Germans were i amony the merchants who arrived to i day on the Scandinavian-American I liner Hellig Olav from Copenhagen i and Christiania. The ship encounter- j ed unusually severe weather j 00L DEBATE TY NEXT APRIL SEVERAL SICK NOW IN CITY The following citizens are reported I to be indisposed and suffering from flu, pneumonia, etc. Mr E. B. Ficklin of the Fiekliu Tobacco Co., is quite sick at his home . with pneumonia. 1 Mr. II. G. Moore is ill with influenza at the home of Mr. C. W. Harvey Mrs. E. B.; Ferguson is confined to her home with the Flu Judg. Frank Wooten is a flu victim at his home on Third Street. Miss Ward Moore is indisposed at her home with the Flu. Mrs. J. F. Davenport is sick with bronchitis. Editor Utley of the Reflector is 111- flisPosecL Mr. Roy Flanagan is suffering from an attack of bronchitis. Everv precaution is being taken by the county health doctor and the local physicians to combat the spread of f,n in city and .county. NURSES WANTED. The Pitt County Chapter A. R. C is anxious to get in touch with nurses. paid or voluntary, white or colored, whose services may oesecurea suuuiu the influenza situation make it neces sary. Thoset whe are willing to h'lp in tliis work ile.se uotify Miss Eloist! Ellington, Se ; -o iry of tlie Chapter, -" phone A campaign to enlist school girls in the, dressmaking traders to Be inau- the, dressmaking traae is ro ue IOLSHEVIST ROY HE DECLARES Sunderland, Eng. Winston Chufch- ! ill, British Secretary of State for War, declared in an address he delivered here that while no one can tell what ; will emerge from Russia " it will be something Aery menacing to eiviliza- . tion and especially dangerous to the British Empire." j "Bolshevist fanatics are determined , to destroy civilization, democratic par- iiuuiems, ana the liberties of freti peo ples," declared the Minister. "Europe and Asia are in a desner- ( ate condition. The Allies .may abandon, ' Tl 9 . ' . . itussia DUt Kussla Will not abandon them. The ghost of the bear will cross "Xew forces are springing up in Asia Minor, and if Russian Bolshe vism and Turkish Mahometan! szm should join hands the situation for Great Britain would be grafe. Kol chak and Denikens have protected British interests in the past, but the armies of Kolchak are almost gone, the armies of Denikine are in jeopardy and if they were to disappear serious danger would imediately arise. "It is possible that there may be a combination between Kaiser mili tarism and German Bolshevism to de stroy the German republic. We must see that that does not happen. We are continually being told that we should not trade with Germany again, but how are we to get our indemnities un less we trade with her? France and America are taking all steps to trade with Germany, and we should not be called o nto stand saide." GLOBE WALKER IN BUENOSilRES (By Associated Press) Buenos Aires. Carel Dericks, a Dutch "globe-walker," who is travell afoot from RiG de Janeiro, Brazil, fco gjn Francisco x:. S. A., as reffre- sentative of the Handelsblad, of Am- I ;tim. arrived here todav from the Brazilian capital, which he left on Oct. 20. Fiom here, Dericks crosses the con tinent over the Andes mountains to Santiago, Chile, whence he will make his way north through that country and the other . west coast countries, Central America, Mexico and thence into California. He hopes to arrive in San Francisco before June 1, complet ing on foot a journey of about 12, 400 miles. TYir defense while travelling i.o PnrriPs a hoi-! low cane containing a rapier. While journeying through Santa Catarina province in Brazil, he was threatened by Botokude Indians, but their hos- tility was changed to curiosity, he said, by tlie sudden transformation of his stick into a sword. WILL DES1 UEA VOLCANO PRESENTS ANOTHER MAGNIFICENT SIG (By Associated Press.) Hilo, Island of Hawaii. Kilauea Volcano, which during the closing months of 1019 produced an eruption surpassing anything of its kind in recent years, opened 1020 with another magnificent 'spectacle which had not been 'paralleled since 1868. On December 22, lava from Kilauea forced its way up through the floor of the Kau desert, six miles distant from the firepit of the crater, and by New Year's Day observers were watching a flow of molten lava, six miles long artrt 100 yards wide, travell ing southward through the forest of ohia trees at a rate of three miles ner dav. An inner channel of the flow was making as high speed as 12 miles an hour at the Source, and welling from springs twelve feet across. As the molten liava cut into the forest the trees were set afire, many of them being quickly burned through nt their bases nad carried , along up- rfcrht in the flow like ranks of giant torches. The Ideation of Kilauea 'sr most re cent outbreak Js along, the rift-lme .K - go leby the errc . Htfb, DE SEATED IN DEM. HALL (By Associated Press) San Francisco. The main hall of the Exposition Memorial Auditorium, where the national Democratic con vention will be held June 28, will ac commodate about 10,000 persons. Forty-five hundred can be seated on the floor of the hall, 4,410 in the balcony and there will be standing room for 1,."500 others. The our story auditorium of con crete and granite, erected in 1915, at CAN a cost of $2,000,000 is said by the hospital office to get into touch with bureau of memorial buildings of the Internal Revenue Collector J. W. Bai War Camps Community Service to be ' ley, at Raleigh, and consult with Uni "the finest and most costly structure ted States Attorney W.. C. Hammer, of its kind in America." It is one of a group of public buildings in the civic center. j There are tvo large supplementary er Roper is concerned the Greensboro halls in the building. Om. will seat hospital can purchase their "medicine 000 persons and the other 750. In liquor" anywhere thefcr iesire, pnd addition thrre are eight other halls it may be 'that the authorities will and 10 rooms that might be used for take the matter up with Kentucky committee meetings. j warehouses as it has been reported Through the 37 Separate exits it is that North Carolina medical institu estimated, the building, though tions have secured liquor from the crowded to capacity, could be emptied "Blue Grass" country. The North Caro in six or seven minutes. j lina state law forbids the importation San Francisco residents consider of liquor, although it is said that the big organ in .the auditorium the whiskey 'has been brought into the finest in the country. ; state under permit. Sfveral other municipal auditoriums, Of course the necessary precaution have main halls somewhat larger than ary measures will be taken against in the cue here. Denver's seats 12.300. truding on liquid goods containing The cue at Oakland, Cal., seats 12.000 wod daleohol and those who discussed and St. Paul's accommodates a like the situation insist that confiscated number. liquor has its dangers. NORTH AMERICAN -WP0f1ltATI0N (By Associated Press.) Washington. Despite popular be- by discoverers and early lief that the civilization forced upon him by the white man means his ul- timate extinction the North American Indian, reviving from a long period of decadence, he probatly is scarcely uumerous today than when Columbus sidering its latitude, coud have sup discovered America. ported more than severa hundred Startling as this assertion may be thousand of his race," . , to those who have pictured American n the other hand Dr. White con forests in the discoverer's time as tinued, the Indian in the present day, swarming with red men, it is freely tef Priods of sharP decrea-e follow advanced by experts of .the govern- as 11 natural reaction to sudiy ot'- TnHinn hnrpn. who maintain . contact with the civilization of the 4.,. t; ..o;i,r r,A exceedingly scant popuation which probabiy at no period materially ex ceeded the total of 33., 702 Indians re- ported by the bureau for last year "The Indian no longer is to be 000 te 400.000. the fir?t reliable cen thought of as a dying raca." declar- ;..J3 vas made by the Indian bureau in cd Dr. Lawrence W. White, an Indian 1870. when the population was p'acs:' authority of the bureau "In"-' support ; at 313.712. So figures demonstrate of this .statement it is necessary, in the first place to disabuse the public ( mind of the tradition handed down j. quakes which .rocked the island ofj Hawaii in that year. The rift, clearly defined, runs from the southern rim of Halemaumau, the "house of fire," or firepit of Kilauea, through the south wall of the main orater an 1 thence to the sea, twenty miles away in a series of wide, parallel vrevasses. The new flow, however, fas not made its appearance along the rift at .1 point closer to the firepit than six miles, where it has welled up through the thickly lava-coated desert floor of Kau. From the rift line many molten fountains could be seen Spouting thir ty feet in the air. Heavy fumes were emanating from the -earth along the entire line of therrift. Kilauea 's latent outbreak is t'.ie culmination of a long period of tre mendous activity, caused, say the .vol cano observers, by underground pres sure of lava which was not relieved by the recent discharges from the crater proper. ' As the desert flow, increased, th lava level in Halelmatfrnnu continued to sink,, until volcanologists prophesied thta the r pit miht dramefl, . , . . HT ITALIN GREENSBORO Tl AVI (By Associated Press). Washington. The Greensboro em ergency hospital was granted permis sion yesterday to buy liquor a one additional measure in thet fight t guivst influenza. The permit x's is sued by Commissioner Daniel C Roper of: the internal revenue bureau, who is charged with the national enforce- ment of the prohibition law under the eighteenth amendment. Commis sioner Roper advised the Greensboro of the western district as it may be possible to secure confiscated liquor, g0 far as the permit of Commisr.on- IN colonists that American forests in their day -warmed with the dttsky figure of the red man As the Indian neglected ag- riculture almost completely it is high- ly improbable that this country, con- white man is seen to be mr.kin- sub stantial gams in J V, "Whle many estimates or guesses of ''the Indian population were mad' during the past century." s-iid Dr Whit "ranging from less than 100,- that in the last fifty years the Indian population lias made a 'substantial T." ' gain. Pointing to statistics wd-ich show an excess of births over deaths cf 1. 522 in 1916 and amost as. great an excess in 1917, normal years which wpr not affected bv the of '.influenza, Dr. White declared these j figures -"fully reflected the generosity of a government that has increased its Iidian health appropriation alone from $40,000 in lOly to $350,000 in iyi ana suusequxiu ypi. WOMEN BEEN APPREHENDEI (By Associated Press). f Honolulu. Many Korean women, members of the Korean Women's Pa triotic Society, recently have been ar rested by the Japanese authorities in Seoul and throughout Korea on charges of implication in an "inde pendence plot.'' Advices to this effect have btcu received by Y. W. Seung, editor of the Korean National Herald 'a K- rean language newsp-ip r publish f td here. - .'. An epitaph is a mixture of the wit of the living and the virtues-of the HOSP E LIQUOR MANY KOREAN CRETARY DAW BEFORE Kill THE SENA BE VISING MEANS - FOR REDUCING CLOTHING COST; ; (By Associated Press.) i Washington. Further efforts : are being made today by the officials of the Department of Justice and the representat jives ot. the men's clothing induslry to cteiise means for reducing the cost of clothing. The confer- once is being held behind closed doors and the officials decline to r f.ke any comment on the pro- 'fwsahi that have been presented 'rntil a definite program has been outlined. ;' BEST MOTHERS ' LONDON CITY IS - London The best mothers in Lon don's East Side, the poor district, are Jewish, in the opinion of Dr. C. W. Saieeby, Chairman of the National Birth-rate Commission, as expressed in an address as University College. Dr; Saieeby added that Irish mothers I were not . a bad second, . and that the English ranked as a very bad third. He explained that in the case of the Jewish and Irish mother this yeas a i' .' . . . i ' - ni.lt ARE E cirecc result qi rnrp f rei 'jJ".LjPilgir ;U tijiTPBH-rgwnr then arrd therer was a . minimum of that dreaded disease arising from im morality. He declared that infant mor tality was not really a medical prob lem of motherhood and a question of racial morals. During his address Dr. Saieeby quoted figures that despite bad hous ing, bad sanitation and virtually no child welfare efforts, infantile mor: tality in Western Ireland was only about 35 per thousand, as compared with l'io in 1,000 in Bradford, Eng land which has the best equipment for infant welfare, in the world. STATE TRAV (By Associated Press) Raleigh. Reports of cases of in fluenza in tShe state received by the . J. 1 i - 1 III. 1 3 1 1. 4.1, 4. state ooaru 01 ueaivu muicatc the disease is decidedly decreasing and ; that the peak of the trouble probably has passed. The total number of new ea ses reported for the two days was Two rails for aid wptp. rpr.i vph to- day. Boistie, in Rutherford county, asked for a physician for relief work there, and - Marsh ville, in Union coun- ty -asked for a physician and three nurses. As a means of protection a-, gainst the spreading of the disease the state health department is urging that all soft drinks dispensaries be requir- paper cups. instead of glasses, power to F . . . ; , ao wnicn is vesieu in iocai ueaibu boards. The continued avoidance of crowds is further urged. V -' The foilowinz is the rpoort of cases . 1 . , 1 r i . 1 1 .1 t . l)y COUniies: AiamilUCL', lt , riautru, o , . Cabarrus, 106 : Caldwell 30; Cafteret 25: Chatham 23; . Cherokee, 36; Cleve- land 30; Cumberland, 12 ; Dare ,9 ; t Durham, including city 20; Forsyth 11; Guilford 34; Halifax 9; Haywood 3; Lee 11"; Lenoir 3; Martin 341 New j Hanover 1 Pitt 1; Pxik 2; Richmond iwinT 1' Siirrv 3: ltanlev 1H: 'Wash- '. tnwan .u; lvuuieauni . . ksciji --. ingtbn 1; Wilson 36;: Yancey; Ry bides 'Asheville, 2T7; Winston, IMFHuVeMeN I i FLU SITUATION inipgto r vv- v -f; h:fyjmm&0r& TSUB-MiwMEIl abb coiRDf mm "sningxon ; sa-.:::.yiA9.; tS'f of Rsgir Admiral Sims; nlpllf .lavawards, Secretary of the-jKavjA ''," Josephus Daniels today "before. J.th Senate invejtigiatng sub : eomrnittej? -: k cck direct issue "with "the " admirai; tf- PMi Thc Secretary wet..'tiifdceta-8 ?:.V planning tfee changes he :made :-con ' lv'- by the knight board. He. outlined I the j 'yi tvo chief differences, between V hfs 1 views and the views held by -Admiral Sims in the awarding of the m-ed These were at variance as 'to Ji f. ; portanre cf eea service as:;compareh 'r to f'-icre service and the differencs--'''fi" on whether the distinguished service .; :,';.3V medal b? Warded under any circum- ' 'v -i'' ' stances to commander of ships tmk 'V or d?-""nfjed .by submarines or mines,' ?;"'t asserting that Admiral ,Sims Wh;'s Mil Miiixe uuiy uuin in me: opaiusH".;:. American and the world "war "demon strated ability of high ordar.". . . -Secretary Daniels said the position ;1 of Sims in placing, shore- duty in ' t':' danger zone was no doubt ihfiuciicedk : . : J4 by his own record. .Figures were pre- -v,Vl:V seated by the f.ecretary. showing that , . 0 C ; during the last 25 years. Admiral Sims ' ; served about 16 years on shore duty .'jX and 9 years at sea. c ... ' , - "So rarely did he take a sea trip," ! said Secretaary Daniels, tef erring td Admiral Sims' "'York as commander -M-C'j' of the United States naval foc? " in European) water,, "that in his book he tels a story of one of the. few' times he was afloat going with the: :v' British admiral who had been, platanij" by Rear.' -Admiral Sim .in command . .l'": 'JLi!--- t ."V niuuivfill -uraw vvi !' -rips TOWN OF LAEGEK, XV. VAC WAS PESTROl'ED B 1TIEE SUNbiV Roanoke, Va. vThe town of laeger, W. Va., was destroyed by Are Sunday, which ' originated in a dwelling and. So fajailies are' homeless, according to a report reaching here today. laeger is said to have about 600 population.: The damage has not been estimated. SUFFERING FROM FLU. It is reported that Messrs. F. D. Foxhall and L. A. Randolph are con fined to. their homes suffering from influenza. I: U "TV."" ;-- .7-. iift.:--r f:V "Si The free traveling libraries sent.oiit - from Raleigh by the North ' Carolina 3, Library; Combmission: - in- January .-of V :: -v this year showed an increase of over ; ''Xy v.Vv: . ' '' ri,y . one hundred per cent ovor the number f sSi?C' . shipped in January, 1919, 80 countle H:ffif:$: are receiving this service reaching ' , C ;' from Northampton to Richmond, and 'hk- from Dare to Jackson. i ... Special collections have : been ar ranged for industrial , cbmpjunities. This has been done in response ' to demands from welfare workers: who urge that special atentibn be given the. needs of mill people. The Library Corn mission now has 300' traveling libra r- B5- There is a marked increase in the number of requests reaching the di rector, Miss ' Mary B. Palmey, not only for- traveling and package libr aries but for information on various . . - : ' subjects including current events and social problems. There are such questions as world ! democracy, forest reservations, Mex- -Hi ,Ty-? t inrr jyrtet fioliiBinl.tlir Af l aoflat1 Tlrll ' , '!-.r . . . ..-' . ' America, Heroism, woman and religlm?;:W; etc One woman wrote for material on:i' child training saying that her. boy of ;h v stuDDorn. 'rnis request was met irom,-.::, . -f.Mt rt nni 1 j amnr; . oycviai cuuvuuu Vu r 'ftW.'Wi' j.' Recent requests for material ite;$:MA. come from. South Carolina rennsyl- ; van and Saskachewan, Canada yfyMfly -Immigration restriction, . the' mteiypf ?V', high ' HChool query, leads amohgtbe; debate " subjfex jixiu vviiiinieaw-i uo -vw-. i .. .. .... . aries oii the restriction df immigration r-,-1 Ty . . , ., 'y .',:; v..: ; r COTTOS jE,pg "v3 .' ! 3i"rV.'-'.. f : -'if n h ;m:yM i'J1,i.;7
Greenville News (Greenville, N.C.)
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Feb. 3, 1920, edition 1
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