WATCH YOUK 1,AUUL lifted ubacriber. day th(il. fucriptioni cx firf Dciorv I II II 111 I I t I I I I I A II II 11 ' II KI II I fl 1 I 1 IE I I I I A II II I - I .11 I - -., - W KATHZR Fair and continued cold tonight with frost. Tuesday1 fair and warmer. ESTABLISHED SEPTEMBER 11, 1915 HICKORY, N. C, MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 11, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS EXTRA SESSION CONGRESS ASSEMBLED IN CAPltfl IRISH STAGE FIGHT LOSE OK SOLDIER PrcsMcnt Harding Will Transmit His Views Or? Peace and Other Questions Tomorrow Over Thousand Bills and Resolutions Presented in House Today ttv th" Associated Press. tt.r'rnuton. April 11. The 67th (vriv .ifS"ii"Wt,d promptly at noon i . ! pi ociauiituun. , for th reorganization of the 1 the usual flood of bills meeting was some- By the Associated Press. Dufrlin, pril 11. A battle raged 20 minutes this morning around t Northwostei-n hotel here when civilians armed with bombs 1 and lirearms attacked the hotel in which government officers reside. ,The at tackers lost one killed. A number of auxiliaries are believ ed to have been wounded during the fighting. BURY PR1TGHABD il MILL TUESDdy Indians Call on the President UK'" t!u- tod !i. .!!..' .11. ,i today's ,,i,.,t !i, i fuiK'tory, the congress time until the receipt to- I'residont Harding's first t a. timing his views before ix x i ntrrt's tomorrow. .1 A A.. - i... II 'fnl., oi.'cn-ss is tno nrst comrou ,, by I'.i'i uldicans to nieet under a KtntiWicin administration in a ilciai'ic Tlu. cnnU was organized at the j,,, , .!;;! session called on March .4, hit tin- house was organized formal ly with ?re(Jerick II. Gillett of M?i;uhvsetts speaker and over ('luiu1-' Kitchin hi XCrth Carolina, the IK nun ratio candidate. The vote va along1 strictly partizan lines, nml Mr. (lilUtt received nn over whclming majority. Frank W. Mondell of Wyoming Vi'vl-ntcd I4pub!ican leader, whil.' Ucprcvntative Kitchin became the lu-moeratic lender. He succeeds the late Champ Clark. Nvariy all of the 433 members wire iii their scats when the house was called to order. Crowded house galleries broke in-J t applaud wncn iss Alice Robertson of the second Oklahoma district appeared, on the floor. She curried a bunch of red roses. Nearly a thousand bills, many of which got lost at the regular ses sion, were introduced today. Th re waf no peace resolution in he l )t, thL Iv.dng held back to await the view of President Harding. Right t the top of the list was the Fordney emergency tariff, vetoed by Mr. Wilson, but brought under another name. It will be calbd up Wednesday under a Republican pro gram t pas. it that day. a i mkmWkmsK v-f j If I f-i: i A. V V WAV 'W'VAXi liOD USES I SUPREIIl GGURT , By tho Associated Press. Washingf.n. April 11. The su rirtmi; curt trdav refused to review the conviction of William D. Haywood and 71 other Industrial Workers of th- World charged with conspiracy to volute the espionage act. Refusal of the supreme court to interfere closes the long fight to save Haywood and his associates un less the executive decides on ciem tncy. Thirty-live IndiMiis. some of them in Iril.al costume,' called at mo White IIousu Id recommend t)io appointment of Th.omas I- Sloan of Nebraska as Indian commissioner. Tlu plmtoyraph shews President Harding showing Jane Z. (Jon'.oii, a Wyandotte from Oklahoma, ::l;out the White House grounds I I GUTS iEl Bl'SSES PlEi . HOUSE Tli 1 PITESTEO i'T tho Associated Pre.S3. Cor cord, X. C, April 11. The lo cal bakery i educed a cut in the price of breud clTeutive today. Ten cent caves wive rjfiuced to eight cent3 and crr.t leaves reduced to cents. 20 GREEKS SUSTAIN DISASTROUS DEFEAT II PRESIDENT REVOKED A PERMIT ?,' the Associated Pres. 'Paris, April 11. News from Asia Minor received in Paris during the last 24 hou'r3 indicates that the Turks are pressing tha Greeks in the southern sector as well as to the north in the region of Brousa. The losses of the Greek northern army are indicated by the condition of three divisions, which according to reports lost an aggregate of 62, 000 killed and wounded. The first division was virtually annihilated. By the Associated Press. Washington, April 11. The seat ing cf Richard E. Byrd as a Republi can representative from the eighth Kansas district was protested cn the ffocr of .the house today by Repre sentative Flocd cf Virginia. At his cun suggestion Mr. Byrd stood aside until the rest of the representatives were sworn in. LDRDM8RC0RI1 or- S Iff 1 BEflSLEV TO SELL Tie 3y the Associated Press. Washington, April 11.- Under ders issued today by Secretary Davis Donald J. O'Callaghan, lord mayor of Cork, who arrived in this country ss a stowaway last January, may be de ported by immigration officials any time after June 5 should he not leave before thst tfme. The Irish mayor, who came to this country to testify before the com mittee cf the commission of 100 in vestigating conditions m Irelana. This decision, it was disclosed today; was handed down April G. Secretary Davis said he accepted the ruling of his predecessor that O'Caflaghan was n seaman snd that as such wa? entitled to reasonable notice. LLU Ty tho Associated Press. WuMiiritfton, April 11. Permit for the operation and maintenance of the W -.-tr-rti Union cable between Key West, Kin., and Cuba was revoked by President, Wjlsjbn after reports 'h'tt the Western Union would use this line to connect tho Barbadoes S"uth American shores, it was dis-fclos.-il today by n government re-T'ort. Rsleigh. April 11. -In-iuvan e Com missioner Stacev Wad'j3 vvnr on the International Petroleum Company Oi Texas because it undertakes to sell unlicensed stock in North Carolina through the UrWts.d Stares mad con tinues while F.-.J3-H Eeaslev "d f Wiliianw f-vmcr North i','arolinians. send the word back from q 4ntrmr J.hat thev have noi Wnnwino-lv violated any law but they have the federal government knrws where to find them. TVio insnmncp T.mliJS?lOnor t- n1la 'lhat North Carolina folks farmers particularly, were fleeced hi ih hundreds in I ; 1 0 'i'l 1920 IT' hones through puk'L'itv of the Jex tit' compnnv ti enli'Vt'n tp . uMic . . .. Un,l tn save ti-e'r money, j ne uch Wiu.bintfton. Anrll 11. Legislation j , .!f.5f,-. WS(, -id at ihr In WOULD PUT TEETH 1 LABOR VERDICTS t t ut "t .)" in labor department "Torts tr conciliate labor disputes v.; mged today by Secretary Davis, "'-'ii sides should be compelled to v , to agreements and when ar- 'ra'li.ii, ,i3 acccptnl the terms ' h'Milii )r agreed to, he said. ,.-v,nfir.rmi pnmn.nv rather tr.an the officers. Be:ue a'-l Williams DIES IN BALE16 how- to Publicity in 19!1 and 1!)20 n tVio w: !.-?t. sort fai ei keen North Cai o.in j money ?n Tar TIeel poeket.- when pmojth-lonsucM F-i-psmen visit-'. The insurance corn- By the Associated Press. Raleigh, N. C, April 11. Colonel James H. Young, aged 62 for years one of the most prominent negroes in North Carolina, died at his home here today. Colonel Young was deputy revenue collector for the eastern North Caro lina district for many years nd served one term in the legislature. During the Spanish war Young was colonel of the third North Carriina regiment, colored troops. mbsiorer rem i-.brs this but gets after the "-.vil.l because f an earn r de.he :j T??o- t t'Me people ;:f North Carolina against a repeti tion ot the dioastrojs financial re sults, that folkwr-,1 t v. hi tr s'.ck v .lo?tatir.ii camyaU?ni of 1319 a'ul 1920. Rv the A'-.sotpd Press Asheville, N. C, April 11. With a proclamation from Mayor Roberts requesting all businesses in Ashe ville to suspend business tomorrow j afternoon, this city, together with several small towns in western North Carolina and Tennessee, plans to pay its last respect to Judge Jet- er u. i-ritcnara, presiding omcer oi the United States circuit court of appeals, whose death occurred Sun day morning. Prominent men from Raleigh, Greensboro, Richnw)ndj,. Charleston, W,. Va., p.nd Washington and New York are en route here to attend the funeral to be held here Tues day afternoon at 3 o'clock at ,the First Baptist church, of which he was a member. , Interment will be in Riverside cemetery, this city, where also rests the remains of another ,distinguish ed North Carolinian, Zebulon H. Vance, war governor and for, 25 years senator from this state. . Judge Pritichard succeeded Mr. Vance as United States senator. Messages of condolence continued today to pour in from all setcions of the country. Judge Pritchard. soil of Wm. H. Pritchard was born in Jonesboro, Tenn., April 12, 1857. his father be ing of Irish and Welsh ancestry, and his mother Elizabeth Browne. of Irish parentage. Facing the problem of obtaining an education during the trying days cf ' reconstruction in the south, and following the death of his father at Mobile, Ai3., his mother instilled in to his mind and heart those stem precepts cf nfprality by which he has ever been governed. Judge Pritchard. yet in his teens, walked 35 mil?s across the mountains of ea-t Tei.n essee and western North Carolina to Bakersville, where he arrived with 10 . cents and nothing more save the clothes he were. Eking out his sub sistence through toil in th? print shop by day, a desire to achieve fame prompted him by night to search such text hooks as were obtainable. Entered Politics in 1885. It was then that he received the attention of statesmen m North Carolina and identifying himself with the Republican party, began a career, the prominence and limit 2-: tions of which were only stopped by his calling: to a leward for services rendered humanity. Entering politics he was elected to the Ncrth Carolina house of repre sentatives frrm Madison county in 1885 and again in. 1887. Pursuing his method cf home study until master of Elackstone and legal procedure he obtained Izrx license in 1887. In 1888 he was nominated as Re publican candidate' for lieutenant gov ernor cf this state. He then became the caucus nminee of his party for the senate of the United States, anrt was re-Elected to ths legislature m 1S91. He was elected for a two yes.r term to the United States senate in 1895. which he served and was elected to the six year term in 1897 which he also served. The establishment cf the farmers alliance at this time and its coalition with the populist party brought about a change in the political situ--I ation and he succeeded in consoli dating the faction into a cooperative campaign and the state went Re publican. . , On April 1. 1903, he was appouue.i by President Theodore Roosevelt rc the Surreme court bench of the Dis trict of Columbia. Upon the death ot Judge imonton, the president ad vanced Judee Pritchard to the iuag cihm of the United States circuit court for the fourth district, April 9, 190 r ... -j i l U , , . -S 1 loath Which position lie neui unm mo -uv-w. As national committeeman and 'as federal iudge the jurist received na tional note and in the campaign Ism fall 'A as prominently mentioned for vice-president of the United State?, and at the Republican national con vention was given a complimentary vote. ' . . He is survived by his wtdow. n daughter, wife of Thomas A. Ro-ms-three sons. Dr. Arthur T.. Solicitor rorrc M., and Attorney MeKmley Pritchard, and a sister. Mrs. J. T. Harris, all of Asheville. STATES ARE ABLE to mm. laws By the Associated Press. Washington, April 11. State laws dealing with illegal traffic in drugs are inforcible, even in conflict with the national narcotic act, the supreme court he'd tcdav. Refusal cf the supreme court of Minnesota to release a violator cf the state statutes because the offense was not in violation of the national set was sustained FORMER GERMAN EMPRESS AUGUSTA VICTORIA PASSES End Came at Doom Castle Early Today Exactly One Year After First Affliction With Heart Disease Funeral at Doom and Burial j at Potsdam Goes Back to Live in the Trees This nature-ioving Oregonian 1ms picked out this natural platform in a , big tree on th? edge of a small town and fjlans to build a house ou It ORGAN EXECUTOR TO COLLECT AMOUNT 'v the Associate Press. Washington, April 11. Judgments obtained in a Delaware court by ex ecutors of the estate of the late Pierpont Morgan against Jas. Ownby for more than $200,000 will stand, the supreme court held today. The lower court gave authority to Ownby to issue stock to pay the judgment. WOULD ABOLISH ! r il nnin-niuRn By the Associated Pre3s. Doom, Holland, April 11. Former Empress Augusta Victoria of Ger many died, at 6 o'clock this morning By a Strang coincidence the end came just one year after she suf fered her first serious attack of heart failure. Emperor William and Prince Adel-' bere were at the bedside when the former empress died. The death came as a shock to the dwellers in Docrn castle, as last week the patient's condition seemed less serious. Last night she was semi conscious and stimulants were ad ministered to relieve her pain. As the day broke, breathing came still more difficult for the failing patient and her pulse grew weaker. It was then evident that th eend was near and Dr. Haster werned form er Emperor William that his con sort had not long to live. The ex-empresa became uncon scious and her breathing fainter until b o clock when the end came. The ex-emperor stood at the bedside with bent head as death came to his consort and remained in the room for some time. INFORMED OF DEATH By the Associated Press, i Wierengen, Holland, April 11. Former Crown Prince Frederick Wil liam was informed early today of the death of his mother. He prepared immediately to go to Doorn. fjy the Associated Press. Washington, April 11. A bill to abolish the railroad labor board now functioning under the railroad act and place its duties under- the interstate commerce commission was introduc ed in the house today by Representa tive Tincher, Republican of Kansas. FUNERAL AT DOORN By the Associated Press. lonrtci-i. Aoiil ,11, Funeral servic es over the body of he late former Empress Augusta Victoria of Ger many will be held at the house in Doorn, says a dispatch from Amster dam. The body will be taken to Pots dam, where another service will be held. . - simmer fn nn mm- MM RFPPRTFn JlllE HJIOJliSl! o il 0 lis IILe OH ILL! nirrrnrmnrn in MfidTUti UlrrLnLnbLb TtK INI jl msm nt v Bv the Associated Press. ACREAGE i 3y the Associated Press. Washington, April II. Adjust ment of the dispute between the wasmngtoii, '""-MTnitpH St-atP Grext RritaJn or light rains have fallen during the)g,rcwing cut of San'Remo oil agree last 24 hours in the middle Atlantic ment concerning Mesopotamia has Statps and utoer New England states, 'been suggested to the United States, the weather bureau chart today shows. , Freezing temperatures were re ported as far sotfth as western North Carolina and light frosts as far south as Alabama. Continued low temperatures were forecast for tonight in the states east of the Mississippi and light frosts are forecast as far south as the interior or northern Florida. TH BILL FOUND ST CI AGAIN it was learned today unofficially. The plan was made to the state department, but in a form that would not commit the United States to it. It was proposed that the United States appoint a commissioner to con- j (BY MAX ABERNETHY) r Raleigh, April 11. Uncle . Sam's experts missed North Carolina's to I bacco sales by fifty million pounds for the season, the total 430,000,000 pounus netting an average of about twenty-one cents. March sales likewise exceeded the figures guessed at by the statistic ians cf the government. The total sales reported made by Tar Heel farmers were twenty-one and a half million pounds, averaging $14.17. Aproximately 85,000 pounds were not reported. , The Wilson market is credited with the 'record of the season's sale with 62,607.026 pounds, surpassing any other market in the state by over two million pounds. During March the Winston-Salem market led with 4,749,086 pounds sold averaging $13.61 per hundred pounds. fc.r with the British netrnlpnrrV com missioner in the belief that such ad- ?f wWch 3.99164 pounds -a, ere sold justment would be more easily reach ed than otherwise Bristol, Va. -Tenn-, April 10 Snow sleet and rain fell in Bristol and nearby sections today, gepprts frcm several towns hear heTe said, that the1 mountain tops were covered with a laver of snow early this morning. At 10 o'clock tonight a heavy snow was falling here. . Richmond. Va.. April 10. Snow fell here for an hour or more this afternoon, but melted 'as fast Els it foil. Todav's snow established a new record locally for the lateness of snow storms. SLUMP IS TAX COLLECTION! Raleigh, April 11. Income tax Bv the Associated Pres3. Fayetteville. N. C, April 11. --The grand jury of Cumberland siJberof court today returned a true bib charging murder in the first degree against Thomas. K Clayton for the killing of Deputy Sheriff Blue in th-s city on January 28. Clayton is in the state prison at Raleigh. His trial is set for Wednesday. i Blue was killed when he attempt ed to arrest Clayton. Cumberland, Md-. April 10. Five inches of snow is reported at Roiwles burg, W. Va., a few miles west of Oakland, with temperature of 28. Snow has been flying in this section all day. MELLON ANNOUNCES CERTIFICATE ISSUE by the farmers themselves. Wilson was second with 3,336.955 pounds. The average price for the Wilson sales was $15.20, two and - one hald I million pounds being first hand sa'es. Rcxboro averaged the highest price at $19.67 on its total of 392,870 pounds. Those figures are compiled by tho Cooperating Crop Reporting Service which reports that one two-tenths cf the sales have failed to be reported. The bordering markets conservatively estimate that sixteen million pounds Wnrtl P.arnliTiii -fariYipr's tfth.ipr-fi . gatherers of the federtl government . is gold in adjoining states in excess are reporting a decided slump in of that bought in and sold. The total their business over last year's fig-! producers' seasons sales reported ures amount to about 414.000,000 pounds. irl- u - I- j xi iMbrch prospective plantings indi Which indicates to tne mind of the nni.a nf tVmn a frtv nPr rent taxation experts and students that decrease in acreage in North Caro revenue raising will bo nothing 'ikejlina, but with the decline in fen.lizer as easy in 1921 at in 1920. The bust ness or lack of it, of course, eomes into the discussion, but there are other features that annoy. It is not prices and gradual looseing of finan cial conditions this decrease is ex pected to prove to be too muc l d -cline. OLDFIELD WHIP FOR DEMOCRATS IN HOUSE Washington. ArrII 11. Secretary Mellon announced the offer of a new issue of treasury certificates to the amount of about 150,000,000 The pew issue will be dated April lo, maturing in six months and bearing interest' at 5 1-2 per cent- that the tax gatherers think there has been a sudden determination ofj the mvino- rmhlic tT.holo out on their Uncle Samuel: but so far the; returns mean the same thing. ' Washington, April 11. Representa Last year North Carolina slowjive William A. Oldfield, of Arkansas illiterate old Tarheella hanging up has been appointed whip and Repre a record in moonshinke liquor mak- ' sentative Box, of Texas, assistant for ing startled the un'on by dumping j the house Democratic organization, into the federal treasury more than j The selections, which were announced one hundred and sixty-two millions in taxes. Tho 1921 receipt:; are go ing to fftll far under, these figures unless all signs fool everybody. by Representative Kitchin, of North Carolina, minority leader,, 'complete the organization cf the party for this session -of congi-ess. V1