Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / Nov. 29, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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D YOUR f AllEL WEATHER Fair and warmer to night and Thursday. Moderate - " Variable ...i .uhsfnhers Tr r t least sh0Ul before their fiv Ln expire. winds. 4 HICKORY, N. C., WEDNESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 29, 1922. PRICE FIVE CENTS America's Food and Medicine May Go for Naught if Russians Cannot Secure Clothing CAROLINA TEAR!) NEGRO QUESTION PRACTICES AT WITH MOSCOW LYNCHBURG CONFERENCE BRITITOIT lj!.SiJll 1 1 111. 11'. North font hall team, one of the K-ft in the south with a Carolina , .. ti'IlHIS L swt'vp f.f victories, "was today be reaily for its game with Virginia rroW mt,! with every man on the Iliad of approximntoly 2; reported .ine physical condition . teiun l"ft hove laat night for ... rin to Charlottesville, Vn., and .fter a litfhf pnu'tioe today at Lynch hiirtr. will ipend tin night there and ' to Charlottesville tomorrow prninp ',l' il -,Uh nnnual Kri(liron match with the old Dominion. The team that represents the Tar jll state thix year is a unique one, for every man on the squad is a resi iM 0f North Carolina, according to idi, records here, and in addition to th3t it in hailed as the greatest eleven that the university has turned out in many years. The players are almost all. veterans of last ycar'f stuad and are regarded hy their followers as favorites over Virginia tomorrow. VI ISO IN I A LEADS flv the Associated Press. .'Charlottesville. Nov. 20. The Uni vnity of Virginia gridiron warriors wit through only light signal prac tice today in preparation for their -.mohere tomorrow with trie univer- P f North Carolina eleven, while By the Associated Press. Moscow, Nov. 29. The negro Ques tion came before an open session of the third internationale today. Pres ident Colaroff proposed that detail ed reports on the negro be submitted for clarifying the subject for Euro pean members who are unfamiliar with the problem in other countries. One negro delegate suagested that the communist party support the ne gro movement everywhere and call a "conference at Moscow of all the rep resentative negro organizations of the world to relaize a united front of all workers against the capitalists and imperialism." The speakers said the political ranks of the negroes in the" United State? were mere scraps of paper and that for a long time capitalists had been spreading propaganda among the ne groes in favor of the white capitalists and against white workers. Until now, he said, the workers had nothing to counteract this. MRS. TIE FIN AN NO. 2 TELLS OF HER BRIEF ROMANCE i . -i' .... ......... .... . , ... . " By the Associated "PressV ' London, -Nov: 29.- Great Britain rwill Sitiai) no r.iore -warships ' under the Washington disarmament treaty un less, the cher nations have taken ac tion and scrapped their qifbta, accord ing to an assurance given' a questioner in the house today, by E. Y. Monsell, financial secretary of the admiralty. 4IN THE LUUClir Marshalltown, Iowa, Nov. 29. Mrs. Blanche Hawn Rash Brimmer Tier nari late yesterday gave out a state ment telling of her romance with Pro fessor John P. Tiernan of South Bend, Ind., and told of having received an other telephone call from him yester day. Mrs. Tiernan's statement disputes . I ...... ! . i t j m; (Whes Cami'bell and Abel watched Kyeii put ?y rroiesso iienwu. VWrt;m. I that mof -. n q vaawi in w ltn a view to g(mth BenJ durin the Tiernan-Pou- Martin? me oi-m nu n. tin paternity case. . ManliN. it was stated, is still suf- "I first met Professor Tiernan early brine from injuries and indication m epiemoer in ne renraj - ' , , j.,,., i w,m,. vania -railroad station m Chicago." t,e that Arnold. alp and Wilson Mrs Tiernan gai(1 will comprise the backfield. Virginia We talked of the Poulin case, and will go into the contest determined I expressed to him my sympathy in . . . ii j- i j? Vila tfritiVilo' to avenge their seven to inree acieat oi ; I"1 J'a,' were started in the Tiernan case I It will ho the 2tUh annual contest wrote to. Mr. and Mrs. Tiernan and Irtwn th two tiniwrsUies, .Virjrinja tr-Id them J thouy htJIwy wera foolish s and the Tar Heels it to separate. Mr. Tiernan answerea men. The pome in 1902 ended in a ,.. , hia Kwifef and for me to write to him again. Further corre spondence between us followed. "About the middle of uctooer Mr. Tiernan asked me to meet him in Chicago. I did so. "We continued our correspoudencc. After he had been granted his decree for divorce, he wired me Thursday, November 23 to meet him in Chicago the next morning on Friday at 7 a. m., which I did. ' "Curing our visit in Chicago, Mr. Frederick Fair of Oil-City, Pa., Tiernan proposed marriage to me b won another step in his fight for ami, i a.Dl"l"-lv''11 w ,i . , ' ... . be married at that time. the ownership of the Watauga and tilQ insiste(l and i finally consented. Tadkin River Railroad, sold a few j SUpp0sed at that time that all legal wars u?o in the bankruptcy court, impediments had been removed and Indue James E. Boyd in federal court JJJJ free to be married lf t Greensboro yesterday holding' his .s. Tiernan No.' 2 said she did not title t. tho property valid. Mrs. Eve- know Whether Professor Tiernan was ljnR. Pool and others, holders of sc- coming to Iowa for her. "Mr. Tier nan is a man oi emotions, she IH1RSTEP 1 RAILROAD SUIT adding that "he doesn't know what turities in the old company, were con- .i . ... ... i- ht rainztne icgniity or tne saie to u Wot tn do." Fair. Judge W. Ii. Council represented nnp thine is sure, she said, and Sir. Fair in the case. Unless Mrs. Pool that is if hedoes come here it must and her associates appeal to the cir- be with the understanding that 1 am I . . ...I flI.e 'I'lflVTinTl ' ' wit court at Richmond, Mr. Fair will "Z wable to make some disposition of VETERAN- AT RALEIGH too property, which includes a railroad 'iw from North Wilkesboro into Wa wcacountv. OVER 100 YEARS OLD MISS KINAKD DEAD By the Associated Press. . Raleigh, N. C, Nov. 29. Captain George Cathey of the dien.' home here has t-elebratea nis ivisi uuu,u, 4j., 5a ohlo to hear with much "ar"::i nouirh to read W-ury. X. C. Nov. 29,-Miss Ma- w " ': Kinard, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. 'The confederate veteran is the old- of tVOld Soldiers' home and Pital today following an operation Wof whkh were f" ippendicitw. She was their only W hh f comrades and of- ld,was educated at the State Nor,Ucials Gf the home. He probably will a leacner in me n ms w- oe nuin - Mem puhlic schools. Rev. Mr. Kinard stated. w Pastor Of thp T.iithovnn f burrh there, 1. nnm.PPTV Tn Win, . : ei:, rr TO,1Tsni.n TOMORROW ' y?ars. . The invesunK - t I . . i? :n tomorrow anci i urn . . thi section win t. i v...- . , i i u Qiirr nn iic innnn at 2 O'ClOCK W "V,..,, i "If Russia's children, and adults as well, are to be saved from death this winter from exposure alter the charity of America has brought them through the famine of last winter, they must be' supplied -with clothing." This is a concensus of opinion of the American Relief Ad ministration staff in Russia, from Colonel Haskell down to the in spectors, according to their reports to Herbert 7'oover, head of the A. R: A. - From every part of Russia where the A. R. A. has been feeding children and adults, and has been instituting sanitation and medical service and inoculations to save literally millions of !ives, the story is the same that the children lack even the barest essentials of under wear, shoes,, stockings or outer wear, with which to protect them- . elves against the rigors of the Russian winter. And the-need--of -aid in this direction tor adults, too, is indicated by . statements - -Of - ,re-: cently-returned workers, Who' state that in cases where Russian em ployes have been given a blanket for extra services the, blankets have almost invariably been made , into overcoats. Literally millions of children, say reports, have no shoes an item which in itself may make it impossible for them to go to Am erican Relief child-feeding kitch ens. Free shoes and stockings have been provided for 250,000 children who are absolutely without foot wear, but the whole problem is beyond the reach of any general funds now available.' The American -Relief Administra tion, to meet this emergency, has PT-t into effect a. Clothing Remit tance, functioning in every way as does the now world famous Hoover j Food Remittance. For twenty dol lars, sent to the A. R. A. at 42 Broadway, New York, the following articles, or their equivalent in val ue, will be delivered to any desig nated person in Russia: 4 2-3 yards lifty-six inch twenty ounce dark blue wool cloth; 4 yards of thirty two inch, black cotton lining; 8 yards of twenty-seven in.ch flannel; 16 yards of unbleached muslin; 8 large black ivory buttons; 16 small black ivory buttons; 16 small white rbone buttons; 2 spools No. 30 black cotton thread; . 2 spools No. 40 white cotton thread. One package will clothe one adult or two children all winter, and re mittances ordered for general relief will be used for neediest cases, thousands of which are heart-breaking. - Snringfield Republican. Clemeheeau toiis only part of the truth in-saying that after the armi stice America left France "in the lurch." America left all Europe In the lurch; and that includes our late enemies,' the- defeated central pow ers. We did not see through to the v im wiil we nan negun By the Associated Press, LansjngV Mieh.,1 Nd'v. 29. Mayor James A. Couzins of Detroit, Mich., today was appointed by Governor Groesbeck as - United States senator from Michigan to "fill the unexpired term of Truman IL.ewberrv, resign ed. Mayor Couzins has accepted the ap pointment, the governor announced. FIRE AT RALEIGH By the Associated' Press. Raleigh, N. C, Nov. 29. Fire de stroyed the store room and, supply shop of the Dillon Supply Company, near the union, station, early today, the loss being estimated at annroximatelv , , .... win- enemies e nangea radically and tff.O.OQO by company officials. The ori- S.1 WtfAM -to? " - .lcurmi,.,. home the settlement of European e loss was covered by insurance. guestions would have been a Ger,' " ... man settlement; but we made it aj . TO SEE FOOTIi T T rAil? " settlement by the victorious "ailie.l ' 1 JUI1AI,L GAME aim associated powers. That was No moral responsibility for it what- . Ca,,na-Virgima ; football ever the constitution of the Unite. fm& AnT tho hf States says about the senate's right p ' n V" i'n, ' n AufW to reject treaties. ; B- C''n(' Jh Shuford, Rasccnn OFFICERS ELECTED Officers of Piedmont council, Junior Order United American Mechanics, were elected at their meeting this week as follows: Councillor, H. G. Miller; vice-coun cillor, J. D. Brooks; recording secre tary, M. G. Crough; assistant record- E BLCHH JSKS Juniors. FOR MODERN TO GIVE CONCERT FO HOI WO Fire Chief Harry Whitencr last night appeared before city council in the interest of a Gamewell fire alarm ing secretary, S. V. Sherrill; financial J system for Hickory and members of secretary, J. H. Sigmon; assistant fin ancial secretary, S. J. Seaboch; treas urer, E. E. Smith; chaplain,' E.. H. Chester; conductor, C. L. Brooks; warden, L. E. White; inside sentinal, D. H. Cordell; outside sentinel, Fred Williams; trustee for, 18 months, M. G. Crouch; .representative to state council meeting, S. V. Sherrill. CREDITORS RECEIVE 24 CENTS ON DOLLAR . Creditors of the R. F. Hendley Fur niture Company, bankrupt, met yes Lerday afternoon and declared their first and final dividend, the 38 cred itors receiving 24 cents on the dollajr. The accounts ranged from $10 to $600 and the total liabilities were about $5,000. H. E. Whitener was trustee. ' POTENTIALITY HOLIDAY THURSDAY AND t FRIDAY mursday and Friday will be observ w holidays by the. Hickory grad schools. A number of the teacher: -'""(mil .the North Carolina Teach- 'l'V vpars. attd of eiht valuable business lots on Elev ofK.3n be offered to the high emn -c,iVA Price. Elsewhere dollar by Dr. K. A. rrice. crj1 IV 4 A v j 9- ! l Cf Tlfllll L It . . . 8. A numhi.r of the teachers """r. . ;nre!Pd in value in me h Carolina Teach- V" r- attd real estate men Mrs. Portly-Rich It must be dread ful to be as hard up as the Bronsons. They never give any thing to charity. Mr. P.-R. Well, for the matter of that, no more do we, m'dear. ' ' Mrs. P.-R. No, but they cant say we haven't got it to give, though. London Mail. , ' , , the board inclined their ears. It will cost about $14,000 to wire the town and put in 34 boxes, Mr. Whitener said, and he agreed to raise interest on this investment, for three years if the board would order the installa tion of the system. It. has to come sooner or later, the chief said, in showing that confusion jn sending in an alarm might result in immense fire damage. People make mistakes and a mistake made when 5 house or plant is on fire is costly. Mr. Whitener said that he was sure the business men of Hickory would contribute the interest on the invest ment in order to get better protection. The manufacturing plants in and just outside the city would install boxes and it would be to their interest to have the" best equipment available. All members of council expressed themselves favorably, but it was' decid ed, to wait; until next Tuesday night before taking final action. Thewater. question was discussed in formally during a comparatively short session. ' '- PHI HIGH CIEM n assembly at Raleigh. WB WEATHER FOR fyjhe Associated Pre'ssf j1 . 7hmgton, Nov" 29. Thanksgiv- rather will be generally fair m ,l 1,1 auntie and cast gulf states, gather bureau indicated today. vine AZ 1 i I,, hnsiness proper- sav tnat au ix- '-j - , Thg js lots having a ucr. OHIOaUplALRELUJION .ASatsmsjiUv- ,yVrcdibletor-; even . jn fbr several days. et"rn5! hnasbtic?of the: Ohio supreme now, - 1--.,..0.riw.ked. lone-waist- lidSe. knife-p ated panels and a cd bodice k'V v Konds. carrying strand 01 ivm -brown suede handbag .v... i " i i t. i. nvlfl vein leiature ioiiikul m rovv in all "rco-ifins east of the ! uMne 'i'ld also U predicted. , a statesman bloc. A NEEDED BLOC- Yl'k EveninB , t ew : Plnns for House vve- -, ---reas needs DEATHS WERE DUE A fitting climax to the Thanksgiv ing festivities will be the band con cert tomorrow evening in the city au ditorium, at 8 o'clock. The band will be assisted in the concert by the Man dolin club under the capable direc tion of Mrs. J. H. Hatcher. Mrs. J. H. Shuford, Mrs. E. B. Menzies, Miss Jes sie Patrick, Mr. Albert C. Hewitt, -Jr., and Mr. Rob Roy Peery, popular Hickory artists, will also feature the program.- -'. . All proceeds from tre tickets which will sell for 35 and 50 cents will go to the band. .This "money will be used to help pay for the instruments for which the band is in debt. A large crowd is expected out to morrow evening to assist in this wor thy cause. PART I Prof. J. E. Barb, Director 1. March "The Stars and Stripes Forever" Sousa. - c" 2. Overture- "American Fera tion" .Skaggs, Op. 54. 3. Clarinet Solo Merriment Polka," Bernard Mr. H. D. Schubert. 4. Overture "Scenes from Opera land,'' Arr. by Hayes. 5. Trombone Solo "Lassus Trom bone," -Fillmore Mr. Earl Leonard. 6. Overture "The Best Loved Southern Metodies" Arr. by Hayes. P.ART II 1: Mandolin Club Mrs. J. H. Hat cher. ; 2. Miss Jessie Patrick Piano Solo Selected. . , 3. Mrs. J. II. Shuford "Without You" By Mr. Rob Roy Peery. 4. Mrs. E. B. Menzies reading "Two Thanksgiving Dances"-r-by Banks. 5. Albert C. Hewitt, Jr., "Vocal Solo" Selected. : 6., Violin Solo "Humoresque,"' "Be- ilieve Me if all Those Endearing Young Charms" Mr. Rob Roy Peery. By. the Associated Pressii 'v .'-'";'- -' . Asheville, N. C, JNov. zv. a. j Hutchins. principal of the Asheville hie-h school, statedlfoday that a plan 0 r i to have the Asheville-Monroe nign school football game played in Char lotte, will not be considered, -because arrangements have already been per fected and also because the attitude taken against the Asheville team by Charlotte sport writers. The game win be played in Salisbury Saturday. vnDMA TAl.M ADRFj lASTIME TODAY Bv the Associated Press.- ;, , . . ' Columbus, ' O.r- Nov. ' 29Alrving - E. Henderson,, his wife, Florence, and their four children, whose bodies were found in their home at Lancaster,, died as the result of carbon monoxide gas from a defective stove and were not poisoned, -as V was ; at first f believed, state chemists reported here today following an analysis of the viscera of the "adult; Hendersons. - " - itOSBOBOWOMI Tho Vo,;i!no uiacKweider, Hugh D'Anna. J. C. Mil. in its its terms for more severe than ler! c,adc Setzer, Geo. Lyerly, Avin many of us had desired or antiei- w V?y IIal-tf. Joe Murphy. Clem pated. Yet, even so, it was less harsh f"A C'c'llr and Andrew Nelson, the than the vociferous Hunhaters of four ,atter of Lonoir- years ago, in France, Britian and r VPac n ' America, demanded. Clemenceau YfcAR OLD successfully opposed Foch's demand! ,T XT T , , for the permanent retention of the lelr'o- Macon Seagle observed his bank of the Rhine. When Lloyd 5tn birthday anniversary yesterday George began compromising on rep- and toda-V was as young as- many men arations at Paris, he was threatened 50 years his junior. He knows how to with overthrow by the British house keep yovmg, and looks to the future of commons. Wilson was assailed instead of the pastMr. Seagle, who is and branded as a m o-German even b&-'one of the best men in this entire state, fore the armistice and as one seeking numbers his friends by the. hundreds a "soft peace.'' ' (and they will congratulate him on Don't you remember that when passing, another mile stone. One of 15 Wilson came back with the peace ' children, he and nine brothers served treaty,, not a single senator of the in the Confederate army, a record that United States criticized its "terms aa,fcannot be matched by any other fam- u.o severe on Germany? Mr. Borah' "y in tne south.-The Record extends Jumself declared:--hiswj-Hmgr.ssS" ti ts-;tjvrhis to this-g.o(hiiian. ratify the treaty at once, if the eov-j " v"- Li: ' ; h. enant of the league of nations was I BSffl II nnnfinill KILLED BY TR N The feature attraction at the Pas- time today - will be- Norma; iaimrgc TY' v ) Hrtm!h Wc in "The WyotseT by; Mar j. r X ;V. A,bio,i attraction Fox News. L ; : v-v - - - ' ----- w - By the Associated Press. , Goldsboro, N. - C., Nov, 29. Struck by Southern passenger train (No. 21 shortly" afternoon today at a grade crossing in the. eastern part of the city, Mrs. Mabel Moran, aged woman, was instantly killed and Dr. John Gold, den tist, 'was; seriously, if not fatally, in jured. ANTIHIBITIONIST? Syracuse Post-Standard. Et vmoloff icalll, , antiprohibitionist is a long way around. - Why not au tihibitionist ? By theway, itmay corn fort the vets to know thatthe Amer ican Sons of Liberty,1 organized in 0 tobcr, 1765, is a-distiliery. ; sine-Ken out. And that covenant was the one redeeming featie of the treaty. . Clemenceau depended upon" the league with America in it ,and also upon the supplementary tripartite agreement with Great Britian and this country, as his justification against the Foch-Poincare schoo which demanded the German Rhine a the eastern frontier. He was left in the lurch when the treaty failed of ratification bv the United States. , America made a complete job of it. After eliminating Wilson, the present administration could hav still ratifies tne peace treaty with the league res ervations which Mr. Lodge had fathered. There was nothing what ever in the Republican platform ot 1920 or in Mr. Harding's campaign policy was concerned. He chose to make a separate peace with Germany, and made a virtue of snatching an the benefits to be derived from tne Versailles treaty while incurring nona of its obligations and responsibilities. Our government has consistently followed this policy, which began with leaving Europe in the lurch and has culminated at Lausanne' with'the glorious role of our unofficial ob servers.; As ex-Gov. Lowden of Il linois saracastiealiv remarks- "An ofifcal observer is a person who horns in 10 demand consideration for his own interests without accepting any responsibility." Woodrow WHsoirs "too proud to light" never 'aroused among the most inflamed .md crazed people of Britain and France! me contempt that our present policy arouses in Europe today. ; If we , had gone through with the job we undertook when we placed 2,000,'COO soldiers on the western front, our influence should have tempered the- harshness of the Ver sailles treaty as " popular passions cooied and, in . a series of interna tional conferences if necessary, have brought about living : conditions on tne continent within & resonablc tirie. Lloyd Georee tried to do. -it without us, and he went from one taiiure to another until he fell.-. '.We left civilization In the lurch and that is what' will cost us dearly in wie enci, even here m our remote North American stronghold. Eco nomic isolation would mean ruin. If Europe should go down in conflict and misery, the economic roan-inn would break upon bur shores like) tiaai waves for countless g-enerations. ; ; It is not France simply Qe menceauX vision is narrow and" ob lique it is all Europe as an economic and cultural entity that we shouifl try to save, if our help can now avail to steady the old continent which cradled the ancestors of every white person in .this new world. V ; ; i COTTON Lit LY JT wmm J LEGION Miss R. Marguerite Wilson appeared for the first time before tb-recrea- tion group in the Legion hall last ev ening in connection with the Commun ity service program. A very enthus iastic" crowd .was in attendance to greet Miss Wilson who directed tin entire program of games and stunts. It was decided by those present to hold the next community get-together on Thursday of next week. A unique idea is to be initiated by Community service in the foiyn of : "Gift Idea" exchange. This will hi-. held in t,he Chamber of .Commerce rooms on next Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock. The innovation is causing con siderable interest among the . women and their clubs as it will aid everyone to exchange ideas of a helpful nature for . the holiday season. Miss Wilson will on this occasion demonstrate the: "tie and dye" idea that is. in vogue, this season throughout the country. Samples of this work are on display ir several store windows in town. Every body is invited t the idea exchange. In Brookford this afternoon Miss Wilson will have charge of a play pro gram for the school children who have become very interested in recreation because of the "community programs started there by Community service. The regular weekly adult program; will take place there oh Friday evening. , Community service already., ia re ceiving numerous calls for ideas,. plans, material and the personal service of the worker in carrying out various forms of home, club and church pro crams. The office and the director is at the call of all groups and individuals at any time. Please call Miss Wilson at the Chamber of Commerce if her services are needed. .. 1 AGENTS ffiE URGED 'TA I DDK FIMF0 ' f - - '; . -' '-' ' -- - - ' I Washington, Nov. 29. Attention of federal authorities throughout the country has been officially called to. the necessity of cooperating closely with prohibition enforcement. agen cics with a view to curbing illicit "traf- By the Associated Press. Ific ' New York, Nov. 29. The cotton j Federal agents have been instructed market showed renewed steadiness at ( to push all pending liquor cases. Their the opening today. First prices were j attention Was specifically called to re steady at an advance of four to eight ports that some cereal beverage mano points and the market worked 11 to facturers were Vina&rigr'picltir:of 19 points higher. illegal alcoholic content. ' j-'f
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
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Nov. 29, 1922, edition 1
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