Newspapers / The New Bernian (New … / Sept. 21, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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'pip ifW St i - ITS F3v n R -if .A NEW SI Ir $ THE WEATHER FAIR TONIGHT AND FRIDAY EXCEPT RAIN OX COAST STRONG N. WINDS 1 1 i FOUNDED 1876. An Hundred Thousand Men Will Ele AbleTo Re turn Tq Works on ; .; " Friday. l -rW ORDER ENTiOUT Eds el For d Issuesr Or der jFor ? the - Reopen ingof jThree, ; of Big Plants. t u.j ' h :- " (Bys 'Associate d'- Press) 1 !l :: DETROIT, SeiJt.c':21. The plants 6f f the . ' Fotd ;,fotor Company in the Detroit dis trict, closed last Saturday be cause of the. coal situation, thereby thro.wing. 100,000 Ford workers out of employ ment in different' .parts . of the country, will be reopened tomorrow morning, it was an- nounced today.- .'. ' Orders1 fox the reopening of the plants were telegraph ed here -today by Edsel Ford,' president of the company who is in" Cincinnati.- Mr.'FVjfd said cancellation of the Interstate Commerce- Commission's 'ser vice order No. , 23, had "made it possible again to obtain coal.. ' SPECIAL SHOWING BEING MADE AT COPLON'S STORE Announcement of the arrival of a special showing, of Kuppenheimer fall suits for men Is , being made in today's paper by S. Coplon . & Sons. This showing is one of the largest at the store ever has had on display and it includes a full range of models and sizes at very reasonable prices. : kn r ' ; - . -- -. i '. " ' C " i I ojiLi fflii SlMiiB MMJli . ffifrK.. Grade Liauor Seizm At m - SERVICE HELD THIS ORM MAUt ldMl 1 Governor Makes Reatmoint- I iiur4ur,uunL Turks Determined To Gain (Edntrol of Thrace , (By A4ciated Treyi 'SMYRNA; H5ept. ' l.Although eight days " have passed since' lire ob literated. Smyrna, 75,000 stiiivors re mained exposed on the" quays, desti tute, distracted "and abandoned. No allied vessel has offei-f.J to salvage . their last wreck of human-vlife in the greatest disaster in Apia's history. t Almost .a dozen wahliips remain in the harbor, but nonje shows disposi tion to aid the wrteiie.I population execept the American destroyers. De portations continue! k id Turkish sol diers are beginning to ari-y .iff the Greek and Armenian girls, leaving their parents in a 'frantic state. Sporad'e shoo.ting and thefts con tinue. Smoke is still emerging from the ruin The; Turkish authorities explain that thin is due to the burn ing oft hitman. . bodies; ' I m ; Interesting Points Brought Out In Splendid Sermon- Delivered By Evangelist at the Tabernacle Today.- The blustery . and threatening his fast .of forty days and nights said, weather failed to intimidate the New 'IF you are the Son of God, why don't fi"ern people and a large crowd greeted you turn these stones Into bread?' Evangelist Ham at the big' tent this Now 'you will note that Jesus did not morning and heard his sermon on the resort to the .use ; of His own divine "Tests.of Discipleship." The sermon power In resisiting the devil, but re followed a short song service and the sisted him as a man and defeated him evangelist set -out to discuss seven ; by the power of His own inherent tests which, the Christian is subject- ed to. However, the time slipped by , tnis insu.ting challenge should be a rapidly and Mr. Ham dismissed the lesson to all Christians. 'Man does not audience promptly at X0:5& o'clock, live 'by bread alone. Oh, how this despite the fact that he had not comr town needs to know that truth. We are pleted his discussion: He is carefully too busy; with other things, the, mak avoiding 'detaining the business men' ing' of V bread, and the care of these from their-business houses for more .earthly bodies,and are paying too lit than an hour.1 -V ' ,v 5! I tie attention to the soul. How stupid "There were at least seven different it is in man, who begins dying the day tests to whsch Jesus was suh3eTctd,"e-is:bornv to strive and work to make said Mr, Ham, -after reading a selec- bread for' his4 tempo Afbv6dy''arii yet tion from thcSecond chapter f First let hid soul starve, for; lacik ptattenT fetex-; "and .we , are.- itQ'd .u that i&3 tion. No; Ood permits famine and suf Christians ws 4nust,ojliow In the jstepserings to come nupjomluavto- test'usJ of Christ In ;mVeting j overcoming Now God could have led the Children ourr-ternptatAnsand, testinga.VWe xe of Israel by another and easier route therefore interested to know. just how to the Land, of Canaan : and spared Christ was 'tested, and: h,(W he met the them' the' hardships andsufferings ot testing, i ' - , ? : j their perilous journey; through the "iW remember, of couse,the temp Wilderness, but;wbat good is a soldier tationa-, to which .Christ was sub jectr j ed by the Devil. This was a part of God's plan. A, little boy once asked met; 'Mr. "Ham, why doesn't God kill the'Devil?' and perhaps many of us have often wondered that God would permit the Devil to exist at all, but' it is a part of His plan that His chil- drcn should be sifted and tested by this false accuser. Man, in the time of ; Adarh deliberately chose to serve the Devil rather than od and nowit is God's plan that no man should be forced to serve Hkm against his own wjH , .-.,.,. "Satan, in approaching Jesus after L BSERVE ROSHISHAIM Orthodox. Jews of New Bern Will Arrange Special Pro gram of Services . Here The Jewish holiday season, com mencing with the eve of Rosh Has hanah, or New Year's-.Eve, begins this year on Friday evening, Sept. 22. Ser vices will be held that evening at 8 o'clock at. Temple Chester B'nai Sho lom. The New Tear morning services will begin . at 10 o'clock Saturday 1 morning. The services will be conduct j ed ths yiear by Sidney L. Regner, a student at the Hebrew Union College. Professor Bourdelais has charge of - the choir LONDON, Sept. 2.1. While the allied powers are feverishly endeav oring to arrange a , peace conference to clean the slate between Turkey and Greece and prevent more fight ing in the Near East, rumbles of im pending hostilities continue to con:e from Constantinople and the Darda nelles. A relatively small force of Rritish troops is holding Chanak, the kpy position on the southern shore of the" straits, while the Turkish Nationalists eager for further conquest af tor their! overwhelming defeat of the Greek3, are concentrated "outside the neutral zone at Ismid and Chanak, impatiently awaiting the word from Mustapba Kemal PasTTa To advance. The Kemalists. official French dis patches say, have available for use (Continued on page eight). WILL OPEN TUESDAY AND CONTINUES FOR FOUR DAYS. DON'T MISS IT! EVER BEFORE. FINE EXHIBITS NEW BERN, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, goodness. The. quiet reply of Christ to that has been fed on fudge and. m: irmgue ana- Knows noining 01 me r-hardships of the camp ? God want: . soldiers who can endure hardships ! and testings. T ' ' j "Then Christ was tested as to His Aiessiahsnip. tie was asKea to go ic the top of the temple and hurl him self down in the midst of the people m a spectacular manner so that the people wouia nau jtiim as jving ana 'in order to Induce Christ, the devi quoted scripture to Him, incorrectly I of course, as he always does. Now protner, aon i mum mm bvbijuuuj : (Continued no page eight). END FIGHT FOR R. R.INJUNCT Attorneys ; For. Strikers Closed Their Final Arguments In Court This Morning (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Sept. 21. Attorneys for the railroad strikers closed their final argument against Attorney Gen eral Daugherty's bill for a nation wide strike injunction at 11:30 this morning affd Assistant GeneralA.. A. McLaughlin began ithe summiif' up for the government. Attorney General Daugherty had not arrivedin court when Mr. Mc Laughlin began his argument and the government's attorney said he had not quite completed the draft of the injunction which they will ask the . court to sign. Q w Asheville Man Takes An Ap peal. Was Found Guilty of Second Degree Murder ASHEVILLE, N. C, Sept. 21.- Walter Brooks, special deputy cheriff employed by the Eiltmore estate, found guilty yesterday in superior court of -second degree murder for filling Laurens West and Emory Lance on July 15, was sentenced by Judge O-eorge IT. Brown 'today to serve 4 0 years at hard labor in the state penitentiary. Brooks appealed from the sen tence find Judge Rrown fixed bond at ?4l),0un. The defendant drew a term of 30 years for killing Lance and 10 years for slaying West. 01 WALTER BROOKS i GETS 4Q YEAR i Governor Makes- Reappoint ments As Members of Board of Dental - Examiners (By Associat&d Press) RALEIGH, N. C, SepU 21 Gover nor Morriso ntoday announced the re-appointment, of Dr. J.. S. Spurgeon of Hillsboro, and Dr. J? II. Wheeler, of .Greensboro, as members of the State Board of Dental Examiners. . - The re-appo:ntment of W. H. Lord of Asheville, and William C. North rup, of Winston-Salem.T and(i the ap pointment of James C . Lynch, of Wilmington, as members -.'.of ; the BoarM. of Architectuat Examiners, also were announced. Mr, Lynch was appointed to fill a vacancy on the board' : ' . . i SOUTHERN POWER CO. LETTING CONTRACTS , ' (By Associated Press) CHARLOTTE, N. C., Sept. 21. Contracts, ,for 50,000 horsepower of the total of 80,000 which is expected to be developed at its plant at Moun tain Island,, already have been sign ed' officials of the Southern ':- Power Company said today. . ' ' The plant is not to be completed for 18 months or 2 years and officials commented on the demand for- hydro-electric power as indicating . a period of exceptional industrial growth. "The ; plant was planned to cost $8,000,000. ', Hendersonville Man Shot His Neighbor While in Alleged Intoxicated Condition .(By Associated Press) HENDERSONVILLE. N. C, Sept. 21. R. H., Eazes is believed to bo fatally wounded and . Zoro Cagel ia in jail here charged with the shoot ing as a . result of an altercation be tween the two men at Eazes' home last nfght. Officers claim Cagel was intoxicat ed. The trouble is believed to have resulted over Eazes notifying Cagel to leave town. SHOPMEN AT HICKORY NOT ON THEIR JOBS YET (By Associated Press). HICKORY, N. C, Sept. 21. The shopmen who went on strike at the shops here of the Carolina & North western R. R., a subsidiary of the Southern, have not returned to work. ! Officials of the company sadi all but 7 of the 35 jobs of the strikers were filied during the strike. It is under stood a representative of the local shotpcrafts is in Washington today to confer with Southern Railway officials regarding the situation here. II IS HELD FUR FATAL SHOOTING State Education Department w rail A 1 Y T i i Will Aid Vanceboro bchool The committee of New Bern cit izens who yesterday went to Ral eigh for the purpose of conferring with State Department of Edu cation officials concerning the establishment of a junior college at Vanceboro, returned home last night with an optimistic report of their visit. "We saw Dr. Brooks," said ITarry M. Jacobs this morning, "and lie seemed to be greatly in tcrestt'tl in our plans. He said, however, that the time was not ripe just now for inaugurating plans of the scope which we had in mind. He said his department would co-operate in establishing BIG MID-WAY RUNNING RACES WILL BE A 'FEATURE. SEPTEMBER 21, 1922. aetteville 1 ' 'i ' .. v, '.is P-. . : FRUGAL QUEEN - WEARS i LAM." YLAK1) CLUl Htii v -(By 'Associated Press l I Marie of Rumania .has de,ci(ed5 to put off !, her -long-contepliif4 trip to the United States. The chief reason is Rumania's acute finan cial position. "We are very poor", says the Queen, "and it would not be right to ask the government to meet the expenses of Such a long journey. I am trying to set a good example of frugality and economy. I have cancelled the orders for my coronation gowns. , My daugh-' ters and I are wearing last year's clothes, and we are saving every penny. Hence, I must give up the idea of going to the United States.". . Lira BY GOVERNOR Morrison Designates Week of , October 2-9 as Fire Pre vention Week In States (By Associated Press) RALEIGH, N. C, Sept. 21 Before leaving Raleigh for Charlotte, where he delivered the opening speech - in the -4 demoijratlicj carnpajgn in this state, Governor Morrison issued a proclamation designating the week of October 2-9 as Fire Prevention Week in North Carolina, it was an nounced at the executive o.ces this morning. The governor points out the great losses caused each year as the result of fires and urges the citi zenry, to cooperate - in preventing them. Insurance Commissioner Wade is mailing the proclamation to city and county officials ' throughout the state. ' V Si KIKE INJUNCTION IS MADE PERMANENT ' (By Associated Press). s GREENSBORO, N. C, Sept, 21.--The temporary injunction of the Southern Railway against striking shopmen at Spencerj restraining of ficials and members of workers' - or ganizations from Interference with in terstate commerce movement of the U. S. mails and repairs to and work on the equipment of the company, was made permanent by Judge Boyd in Federal court here today. GREENSBORO, N. C, Sept. 21. The injunction secured several weeks ago by the Seaboard against striking employees at Monroe, was dismissed by Judge Boyd in Federal court here today. ASHEVILLE PLANTS ARE REOPENED TODAY ASHEVILLE, N. C, Sept. 21. The larger industries of Asheville ..and vicinity, which had been shut down since last Friday becauseof lack of electrical power, due to the low river stage and dwindling coal supplies, re opened today. A supply of coal, re ceived by the North Carolina Elec trical Power Company, permitted the plants to resume. Nearly 2000 men were effected. laboratories at the school and making the institution of greater practical worth to Craven coun ty. He seemed to be of the im pression that in the past the school had been of the average high school type and had not been featuring agricultural and domes tic science courses. He assured us that he would cooperate in every way possible." "I don't expect any immediate action." continued Mr. Jacobs. "However. I don't believe that the matter is going to die out and I believe that the suggestions made by Dr. Brooks will be car ried out." IMF LIQUOR TAKEN BY OFFICERS High Grade of Rye, Scotch and Gin Was Seized by Fay etteville Policemen RAID- WAS MADE IN HEART OF THE CITY Liquor Fouqd In A Rooming House. Closely Guarded at - Police Station Today j - (By Associated Press). FAYKTTEVIIXE,; Jf.; 3.x Sept. . Dry laws and v Mr.,- Volstead to the contrary notwithstanding, this city - will have its "wee drop o' -As evidence of thLs fact over $500 worth of bottled in bond rye, Scotch and gine was confiscated hj local officials last night in a raid on a rooming' house inthe heart ": of the business district. In all, there was 57 quars of liquor tak en. - Today the city police station, where the liquor Is stored, Is a popular' place. "Dry" citizens arte ; endeavoring to catch a glimpse of the "vile staff." Others eagerly sniff the atmosphere in the hope of getting a whiff of it. The police, however, nave it under lock and key and behind bars, so there is little hope for the parched' ones. SMALL NUMBER IN 1ST 1 Superintendent H. B. Smith -Urge Parents Send Child 1 ren. to Schools I By II. B. Smith (Superintendent of City Schools) The number of children in the first" grade, especially at the Academy Green, is smaller than had been- ex pected.'! am inclined to think that there are numerous parents in two who did not understand the new reg ulations regarding admission of be ginners into the first grade. All children who are now six years old, or who will be six years old by January 1, should enter school now. We shall accept beginners until Oc tober 15, but after that date no more beginners can be accepted until Sep tember, 1923. I hope parents who have children to enter the first grade will start them to school now, rather than to wait un til October, as they will get behind those who enter at the first of the session. 11 urnui ommunitv r air Proves A With a splendid display of exhibits and with a large crowd of persons from all sections of Craven county in attendance, the Ernul Community Fair, held today at Ernul, proved a success from every point of view. Visitors at the fair were hearty in their expressions of praise over the progressive spirit which the people of Ernul and vicinity had displayed in staging such a splendid event. The farm and live stock exhibits were of a comprehensive range and were of high quality. There were disC plays of cotton, corn, potatoes and other crops. The poultry exhibit at tracted much favorable attention. The woman had not permitted the men to get ahead of them. There was BETTER . 8 PAGES -ran. PRICE: FIVE CENTS New Tariff SWiirlB Midnight Tonight S PRESIDENTS SIGNS HMOlif ESDIIIi mm SayTlieMekiwr Be Real CoritriKicxi i. . Toward' ':Prbew?Sl;l u W ASHINGT ON SeL j 2 Lx-' v President Harding Wajffl- t , ed'the bi22Q ing th'tiVwjratecftt midnight, tonight. : J tSi: ii fi; ; The bill was signed. :inthe;r:: presence of Chairmaii .:Mc- Cumb er of the sen if e J flilance committee, Chairman ordi- ney, off the house ; wayflv;: means ;committee.pa.Cti4 of house members;; andioihers.';. Remarking that the ne asure had been "long in thijmakl; ., , ing," President Hardifigfif. .: ter he had affixed isUfgnaV: ture, said that "if succeed, ,; as 1 hope we will; succeed m; ; making , effective the .-elastic V r; provisions of this bill;jt rill: proved the greatest jcoAtrtbu tion toward progreitfarjji : V i making in the ;hist0plthfi ;:i -$ country." WHh: NAVAL BA1XOON iWA I FIRED ON AT MONROE 1 (By Associated tiitAJ' :'. ROCK HILL, S. C, Sept) 2i-A"tr.? S. naval balloon, - which ; ; Jt officers . were reported to. have.; Maid to .have . been fired upon at Monroe,: jf. .irland- . ed here late yesterday; because i los of gas. The firing presumably-' ,'w9.s done by. moonshiners,, it was said, "but non of the five occupants W iniir ed. I ffe: f hTe balloon was said W have .be eh en route from Norfolk to ttipoiftt on ': the Gulf coast. A dollar goes far (knou jh'aOwiidayl, to forget the way backr-vv'v . Big Success rr" a full line of exhibits on;- display in the culinary department;., including" , bread, cakes, pies, preserves,- Canqei! . fruits and vegetables, ete.,Th,-show-ing of antiques also attracted hiueh in terest. There were guns, clocks, gravy bowls, etc., which were close to. ?00 ' years old. Refreshments were served on the grounds for all who eated t partake of them. - . -' .-, j The fair was staged tn the School grounds. It was Ernul'S'Srst-cOmmuri- ity fair but so successful ;'was ..It that ' ,: ; it unquestionably will be' Stage an- : . nually hereafter. - !; - The community fair at CovdiCVt - will take place tomorrow.'' . A": labgA " '. - ' crowd also is expected to W itt- at tendance there, A- I
The New Bernian (New Bern, N.C.)
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Sept. 21, 1922, edition 1
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