Newspapers / The New Bernian (New … / Nov. 25, 1922, edition 1 / Page 4
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;THE BERlsBSUN-JOURN AL , Saturday Afternoon, November 25, 1922 lCtL Every Afternoon Ea- Memle6f TheBsoctatea- Prw "Thr,,As"ociate'iHPrws is-excltf give? ly entitled to use . tor republica tion of all news dispatches cred ited to it or not otherwise cred ited iu this paper and also the local news publisher herein. Period One year . . . Six Months . . Three Months One Month ... By Carrier By Han .$7.00,, - 56.00 f JEntercd isa second class matter , 'at the posloftee at New Bern, K. 3.00 ... 1.75 1.60 .50 .IS fcC, under artoC March 3, 1879. lCatI Gocrch . i . . ..... .Editor One Week . w .15' i FOOTBALL AND ACCIDENTS.. 4i Last week Everett Nelson, a local boy tvho is s member of the local junior foot- ' $all team,.-2iadvthe misfortune to break pteleg in: av football game in Goldsborb. tn! commenting1 upon the accident, his; father expxe.aJe& himself as'ifaTIaws'i f u tne )0ivt:is,aDie, tq.pinyv tomorrow J'd give my si&nt; to, 35is';gettingllntathe J ,gime. .-. If! ure ill at'the benefits &-oy.re4 S' id ice'ives from plavi hp- 'f ootbalP more than make up for the occasional,, accidents that occur- fci ru V J 5 .fc,s y Jr? lf;'l; J J Mr. NfenLh4 thi rlghtfide. There '.'are many parents who wiil .not permit ilheir boys to plaj football because "the : same isjJtftgtrough.C , t It is true that; there is plenty of action ; in. the game' and that it doesn't' cater to v weaklings, or sissies. It requires consider y.able physical prowess to turn a boy into a ; i good player. In addilaon, .he must under- j 1 6 1 a p epo! d :;f strict training and :must: .')learn to pbey orders aiid move when he ' ' is?- told '.0moVe.V; 'Ke game ; teaches hirn. j courage and inspires in .him a determma--$6n to do-.his litmost, rgardlesspf what,' ,V. JjChe odd,agam.imm ?,.,;., f-y H I Yes, there are aecidonts' from time ' 'to : lime. You. read in the papers of players y ' getting their coilaf-bohes broken or a rib - v cracked.dyknom Doy can qa vwnicn aoes r&Q irencierinim "j f j jiaoie to an acciaent ot some, sort or pther?;;j s'0tiitVa;Arji-- yfe Parents who refuse to let. the?rn ys . v ) play because of the ''danger," are doing ; the youths an injustice. Take ten boys at ; random in the fourth grade and" they are & ',, pretty much 'alike, as far as their physi-- ;cal conditiOTi ' ist conrnedLet ' five ,'of St those boys; play football while the other ; five stayoutof the game and by;'. ' th -( ( ;time they . are in high" school you willi, ; notice a marked-difference in them. This . ,i tamerence grow even vmore nQticeable as ;r:; v to -his "spechesand if he '. they grow older. ,Tbe? m6ntalripral - nd at .length withthose . who 'Physical traimng Wch y Ire to ttijs ; -wiine yiayiug iiiv game remain Wltn mm jdunng his whole life f CLEMENCEAU'S TAsCTICS. I America has a warm feeling for M. Clemenceau, former French premier, who is mow making a visit to this country for the purpose1 of bringing about a closer (Vunderstandtngetween America and v'v Ml (emenceauHs a great man. UefM "' one' oi'the greatest" men. France ever SrnHnhpd ,;knd' h'e rendered ..hi. counted noble service during th'effld.VWiSfl America isreaayj 10 pay uua. reewgwua. Jnlhis aifejoiant. ':f- But it would seem that the gre'atrc-;.; ' leader is pursuing the ' wrong tactics'vi,ndj-i;:; ;? is in danger; ol .doing more harm th?H "I" good for his country!.. V :r:-ltM Our people, are always complaining fa ""k't - bout Congress. We enjoy iindijig fault 5- with our senators and representatives.; Ye doi't hesitate to criticise them severely when we feeL.that,vtheoccasion demands f it.. 'But in thii' coneetion weiare like; jiie i father who fcad three jiboys" and ho ; ' whipped "them wheneveFthe got Vintd i ..' : mischiefs One; dayf the'.', boys annoydUS Tiivs latter proceeded t0df fy-a little wlupBff $3&xp w ecountfK father witnessed the incident' andhev- rushed into the fracas and mauled;; the Ivnlighbor uiftil he wa black and bluei5' 1 1 is WdMU isidetB to find&fault . with the mem whom we nave selected to represent us.. M." Clemenceau, in arguing with Senators ''IlitQhcock,, Borah ." and " others, is liable to defeat the very pur Vpose he, is ..trying to achieve. America ; ; loves France.and, is ready to! do everything xfor her, and the "Tiger", should recognize , ; 'this fact; Insstead of stirring Mp argument . he should pay.jno attention to those .who . ; iare trying to bait him nand ause him to ; fose his tempeH If h ihtendsreplying to - . " ' '" -f ': . i ' it ' i s2 ' j . It j ' every criticism mat is expressea . relative , intends to deal . : oppose the ,pur- . country; hert,wiU i- accomplish nothing. In fact, it-would have WITH OTHEH EDITORS JH THE T'OTJH. GOSSIP t I . .a - . - Ijuri-the "ast thirty days, com meciaiH'd'C industrial activitv .has reflect6ty,itsiuai, stimulation of all and iAtN'-deaiatid. Retail trade in the-.' iargfpi?cities is Triors nfti7f ' thiiTi at ihH iebrt-espnoding period o last jfcaiy .?uia.';-seaaonap acceleration is evidentlVthi-oti¬ the countryj Un oeftintias to -'itho volume of nfir- :?fe!Bie?eaimers of the .erain ' Ja 'SiJiA ..1. . . 'f'vt' nas not been ais- jrueu, .npwevert, vv nolesale traqe Jias .l?eeii; j4ithcfcghout the current , tjieripd tclcV '-C many kinds of good I in nhejharida both of wholesale iandl t,hi ay;. nor; threats of higher prices have been sufficient to induce buyers to ; tnake f substantial" forward pur chases. tThe1 conservation shown jus- tifles the belief that the catastrophe or ivzv . fias. .;not been forgotten. The woolenVand .worsted industry is at betjWeenrSO ' and 85 per cent of capacity. Boot ' and : shoe manufac turers range from 80 per cent in New England to capacity at St. Louis. Cot ton: consumption In October was 533. 950".bales, compared with 494,745 and 401,325 bales in October 1921 and 1920 respectively. October output of automobiles made a new high rec ord for that' month. Building iss ex ceptionally active for the season,"this condition being reflected in the. Var ious industries . producing building materials. Oastonia Gazette. K TIic Changing Charlotte View The Observer has "been glancing out its port . window watching th)& steal frame'w61'KB'of the rrfew, -hotel rising m the air and felicitating itself that in time to some it Vbuld have anjalways "tins,Riririg spectacll, to gaze upon and o draw inspiration from, when, be hold! from' a low-lying roof in the foreground across the street pops up theseteel beamsVof a'n intervening of fice. .building. 6ra.'pidly does the out 109 ;f rom i any '.opce window , in the town feharigeT that we do not i know one, day; what change another day may . develop. Charlotte Observer. Till -'PHONE'" began .' ringing, SHOKTLTJaI-'TER 'three1 o'clock. AND IT seemed. AS THOUGH everybody $A town. TO know.;: .- . .' Uver eighty miners killed in an explo- on in Alabama. That sort of thing seems I 'b e'lgelrtftTraltogetheTo 'A1 ab"amTOBent'4is: ft' oeen rar Detter ior r ranee n &ne naa Kept :him;$Jat 'immtib New Bern stores are begnning to dis-T)isyhTi8tmasgift:ggestions toiaf !yoiigizcoiirJshimp farm "find the-lt)ealr.establishmentswll l stocked. WANTED -.i:v HOW" THE football, game, OVER IN Goldsboro. t v WAS COMING along.' ' , EVERY time,, f . AND I PICKED up the receiver I WOULD be greeted. . '. Vv "WITH THE same inquiry:7 v- V m . ''CAN YOU 'te e the -score?' AND THE SEARCHING ; FOR BODY, OF MISSING PROMOTER WHEELING,, TV. i Va:, Nov..'-24. While JSfrs. t-Ni-na Heppler aided in ardgging titer jvef jit aiartm'fe i Ferry near here for the body of her hus-, brfaflnAjiE Heixpler, whom hfei re po?ted; had been drowned whn 'their automotfle left the road and' tlunged ftlTOthg waterr3hief Edward Hi- land,, of the Martin's Ferry i police, expressed doubt that the man V (had met death in the river. Both Heppler which netted a fortune, are under in- dfctmefiF "kt Builer',rrla.-, for alleged came. - - - SO THICK and fast. . THAT AFTER a while. , -. v - , I DIDN?T stop to say Hello." - . r. v..v; ;--1 -v -s ;'; OR .ANYTHING else. v BUT I'D just pick up. THE RECEIVER; " -AND WITHOUT waiting. : FOR THE. party.t ? AT THE other end of the-" line. TO SAY anything. I'D TELL them the score. AND THEN hang up. - AND OCCASIONALLY. ' . 'I WOULD hear a "Thank You.'V BUT THAT was all. AND I imagine. THAT OVER three hundred people: MADE CALLS during the course. OF THE evening. 1 '- ' - AND ABOUT five' o'clock. . ' ' - A MAN came in-. - AND WALKED up. : . ' 0 -. ' " " TO MY desk. - - - - ' AND WANTED to know. IF MR. Dawson. ' . ' ' WAS AROUND the office. . . AND I told him. THAT HE wasn't. AND j THAT . he had gone. EARLIER IN the day. ' ' ' OVER TO Goldsboro. , - , ' -4:v . . . ..a -.t. ....;.- AND HE said. i THAT HE'D -corue-Jn. later; ' . . AND AS he was going out. HE TURNED around and said: - "I TRIED to 'call you up.- "FIVE ' DIFFERENT times. ' . . "THIS AFTERNOON. i. "BUT CENTRAL must have made. "A' "WRONG connection. r' "OR ELSE wires were .crossed..; . ' ? . " t "BECAUSE ' EVERY single time. "THAT I attempted to get you.-. "SOMEBODY- WOULD holler:-; . , ; . -. ' " . 'THIRTY-ON.E ' TO nothing. " 'IN FAVOR of New Bern, .-' , . : ' "AND IT must-have, been,., . ' , . , r" - . "SOME DARNED fool. 0HE T3fJG AFTER AI10TIIER THANKSGIVING ?OSiIXG ' .'Folks are . beginning , to go into training' ton Thanksgiving. That's' one day In the year when the entire coun try pauses to declare 'war on. turkey Pilgrim Fathers were ". responsible for. the custom ' of !ea,ting gobbler on Thanksgiving'. Day.VAIl they had to do was to stand on . the back porch and shoot down a "turkey or two af ter breakfast. - "GIVING " IT THE: football score. ' "OVER THE long distance wire." . - .. .. .. AND I told him. . i PROBABLY was. AND FAILED to enlighten him. AS TO who the darned fool was. .. BECAUSE I figured out. - " i , ' WHAT HE didn't know. V . WOULDN'T DO him. ' f ANY PARTICULAR harm. ' - . I THANK you. . ' C. O. D. AMBUEiAXCES.: LONDON, Nov. 24 Provincial hos pitals now refuse to. send , out am bulances unless payment on their; ar-. rival ia guaranteed. , , Pork ; costs the mast after made into chicken salad? . it is Lots of people like to invite folks to , share, . Thanksgiving dinner . with them. This Is done f-o that- the host can ask the visitor .whether he likes to eat the neck. Naturally, the visi--: tor has to .answer that he . doesn't mind, with the result that it is shov elled on his plate. ' ', If it wasn't for the visitor the host might have to eat it himself, '' 'A dull knife and a tough turkey has,:helped to break, up. more than one happy, home "and send morehan on man to the insane asylum. ';" ' . ' TheC height of "bad' diplbijnacy is to laugh 'when the ,Head of 'the House bears ' down a' little too hard on the knife and squirts "some of the." dress ing into his "eye1:'.. : '" ' . . ' Thanksgiving V V 'aiso recognized as the 'day on which wtf dugr thankful" If ou can't be thankful for the 'things you have,', you ' can at least be thankful 'for' the- things you r Ml m j i Mf! ! i I ; ill-.! f J i t hi Ml m til m hi m m Hi Ml HI Ml f M IN H: iff i ' m m Mi W lit vf1 ; rf jvv-f 7 mm. 'IS .v.--v. wYv .ti.."'t?Vr '''- - S ; fr:M''vfr.':',''-.-'' - - - " 41 1 e d B aptist BEMEVE' l.V Jesus Qhristjsinan's only Saviour. ' ' 1 2 SpirituarlerierkiioKiM Christ, is necessary to salvation.' ' "3. Church membership should-be composed .of : : only converted and baptized - persons. .' 4. The direct persona lapprQacli" of maltfeSodi without any earthly mediator, .a i f.g ; "s c - ;'v v f .- 4- if -' ,5. The supreme sovereignty of- Jesus in all mat- 1- j liT HrCofl jtheoul. 6. Man's direct personal ' responsibility and - ac countability to God. ! ' , &il&l$3olute independence of church1 and state. JS. 'Full religious liberty for all, Jew and Gentile A ' alike. ' . ' ' : " 9. Self-determination in all religiou' matters, for ;: all individuals and churches; without -any ;6ver- head direction or control. V -ilUl-iv - Ji V J 10. The Bible, without any subtractions' or "amend ' ments, the only authoritative guide ;f or Chris-. tians. . : " V - J -'-" "- V'Vi' K WHAT THEY Sodthern Baptists, 3,284,364 of themi are today seeking to carry out the whole program of Jesus Christ to the whole world in the preaching and application of . the Gospel in 16 foreign countries, representing every side of the globe and having a combined popula tion of 900,000,000. ; . Through their State and Home Mission! operations they are seek ing to evangelize, develop and up-lift alj ihe people in our State and Southland who need it. : r :' . They; are -supporting 119 academies, colleges and seminaries for the training of special Christian workers. , H ? I They own and control 19 hospitals where thousands of patients are treated annually, under Christian auspices, r v ;- In th eir orphanages thousands of fatherless children are being cared for and. trained 'lor Christian citizenship, - " .Through the Relief and Annuity Board over 00 aged ministers and their dependent- loved ones are being Jcheered and aidid in their - old age. - , ,.' - "w .. NORTH CAROLINA BAPTISTS. 313,594 strong, are taking a worthy part in this great program. Through their 2,3i00 churches, with their auxiliary organizations 2,225 Sunday Schools, 2,276 W. M. U. organizations, 1,012 B. Y. P. U. organizations and through their four colleges and' thirteen high schools, the Thomasville, Orphanage and the hospital at Winston Salem, now nearing' completion,, they are co-operating loyally and effectively with their brethren and sisters in other sections of the country in saving and uplifting a lost world from the depths of sin and ruin and eternal death. ; 75 MILLION CAMPAIGN. Three years ago Southern Baptists launched a great forward movement. They pledged to raise within a period of five years over 92 million dollars instead of 75 million, as at first proposed. At the end of the first half of the. campaign last May, over $35,000,000 had been raised, three times as much as any like period. .More than 500, 000 new members had been added to their churches and every institu tion at. Jiome ,and abroad .greatly strengthened. In the past three vears North Carolina Baptists have given for the objects of the cam paign $3,000,000. This is greatly in excess of what they ever did be fore in three years. . A HALF MILLION MORE. Must be raised by North Carolina Baptists by December 3, the vend of the Reinforcement Campaign, to meet the barest needs and save from embarrassment, not to say disaster, the objects; included in the campaign, viz : State, Home and Foreign Missions, " the Or phanage, Christian Education, Old Ministers' Relief and Hospitals. ALL PLEDGES PAID, AND A WORTHY CASH OFFERING AND A PLEDGE FROM EVERY BAPTIST IN THE STATE WHO DID NOT MAKE A PLEDGE IN THE ORIGINAL CAMPAIGN BY DECEMBER 3 WILL SAVE THE DAY. ; A 4' iST.A. rrrv H VENTICW (CHARLEIV. MADDRY, Corresponding Secretary. WALTER M. GILMORE, Publicity Director. Things have - changed 'since those days. When a 'man shoots from his back porch, now-a-days it Is usually ' ta sign that somebody is 1 trying to steals his turkey. . . Crauberries ', are an . essential ' ta.H of .Thanksgiving. .dtnner. '.'lhey , wera " put on the menu to test the temper of the hostess. Jf, she can laugh and tell a ; joke when a. dish of .cranbejrries is . upset on .her best, linen, table-cloth, it's a sign that she is good-natured. ., IS it's her. husband who Is respon sible, for the accident, however, there , is likely to be another chapter added a little later on' when the visitors are ; not within 'hearing-.distance. ' ' . ; - . Father js beginning to practice up '. on his carving. It's always a joy and v a privilege io watch -the Old Man . chase the turkey all over the table, . upsetting the, graveyrdistf and rolling--the potatoes 'on the1 floor. - Adds so much to the pleasures of the day, is t were. - . ' Ax . . :. I V' 7 ( -:1
The New Bernian (New Bern, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 25, 1922, edition 1
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