Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / April 29, 1915, edition 1 / Page 1
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gVSlfa&,-y.l 1 LAE0S3T CISCTJLATION j of any ADVERTISING MEDIUM Establislied 1832, IN EASTERN CAROLINA L. HIL.L3 KITCHIN, Editor caul Proprietor, EXCELSIOR," IS OUR MOTTO SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1.00 PER YEAR. VOL. XXXI SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1915. NUMBER 15. X i Effect cf Satisfied Customers on .business is . . J. W V- W ondcrful My xi i i i I I njc ('Hurts to pj. ;!.- 4 !:'." customers at all limes liavo icon re warded by a continued increasae of patronage. fnvi '-IimcL- full rf - I i l ALITY Groceries, a (- ( ) m 1 e t e assortment ili.it would bo a- creel it; to a town considerably than Scotland ! i .V -s me to- pVhao I o a chin g tr' : d t ve i ; t KYK1U daw tr--f .4 or 1 T,-r p fH V f 7 'n .n rs llr -J ..1 i iansler ei.j N,-i-k, Norih Carolina 5 for hirr. Of r rmfiliv'! Po- C: Quick ?ervice. T eni-f h". Oilier? C;. Allcii Aliiiliroclt House Mover and Neck, North Carolina. vti are thinking of havirig1 i; of any kind mnved see me a ;-o. Priced r isonakk - i ' 1 4 1 f 3 AUome'y at Ltn ciiami Nc;rk. North Ciro!in;; : i Attorney at Law md Neck, North Caroiinj. n:y to loan on r!i'rove i''-vsie;-'r: hvA K.t:r:'cen .:! Neck, North Caroklnu in K.stofiu'S EuHdinj? over ivid Druu'St.-.re. Teief.hone? e 10, UvS!lHn.:v.- lit. ?)r. A., 1). Morgan Pk.ysleian and Surereon ian- Neck, North Carolina - ia IniihJin ft.rmorly usud J P. WiiTih-rk-v. !:.-. . c rant, North Car-dina 'V'i! be in Scotland Neck on Hie I 'kir 1 Wednesday of e:ch tnon'h ati standing the tact that German mcr k"'ei t o treat the di-e:e.s of the j chant and German war ships virtually '"'yv. Kar, Nose, Throat and fit plasp? ; Yii dis.-ppcared trcm the waters. li'm A, G. Iivc ran 011 - Dentist L; im Neck, North Caralina ! ! '.' up-.'iirs in the Whitehead j ; vr. O.'iice hours from v to 1 j I U Li 0 o'clock. ! Willie II- Allsbrcok Life Insurance oi-And Neck, North Carolina h' trir-'-mtiner tne Mrtronolitan N-,w York'. ,1 -i ranee d . of iHZrg:' Cles.-.iv. cnu k-xitie Us halt 4"v ' fcvz 'ro:not3 lu:c-:at growth. sh."--TW Pf lievvt Tii to S-sstor Or; fAs"' Jgpg&l'rwnia hair f.-iili'j-.r- FMRI IMP It l 1 3 fc- !' U Ls, Si ii s 6 a j 1 iis? 9-i 4 H Face and Pac-3 cf Griton Indi- li- O LilXt l:iCl' Oil tiihlU II i O ;-!.. I TENSENESS. GUT NO ALARM Edward D. Clark, Fresh From Ship Pasesss Through Mine-Strewn St. George's Channel, Gives His Impressions cf Trip. By EDWARD 3. CLARK. London. The American sliip Phila delphia, rnr.dc LiYorrcol safe, for all tho pre-sallir.s' pcr.rc. St. George's chc-nnci and 1 1-1 Irish sea may have as' rasny submar iaos hi tlicia as they I;avc P.di v. kicli in CTiceedholy doubtful, b.;t they arc pleasant places with a su Indent kali-moon shining down upon their Yratcrs. Was there danger as the American liner made its way through these salt 'ocas toward Liverpool? Perhaps, but, it kg, r.o pa?5cnger on hoard gave expression to it in word or face. There was a tenseness among the men and women on the chip, hut it was an inward 'thins. No one with sc as .3 believed for a moment that a subsr.ariae would sink an American pasfctnger tin;). Thought dwelt on thu possibility, but it seemed to be oi'o v.hkh could coma only as the ohYiiring of an awful mistake. Other American ships unquestion ably will continue to go through the amei and the d. There was ieoser sea unir.e li the spico of a sense o the trip exhilarat- E'.l' r.g or depressing as spice affects the ire man irarae jtud in..id ao one spoKe -.f danger srvo rarely, and then the speakers were men. The w ii said liOllihlg. those cf T . 4 ; .Lil Ll:t :s that seem -to 'be .i::ioren-?r, even it they r.re men, but 1'e me ii there bt willing to admit tho r.av nt tact As sdc-i as the !!hts:o the Scuth ot Ireland wore sightcti, and the Phihi- deli,hhi en 2co the wliat in truth iz a war ilors rigged two great eb.cti ic lamps and hung them over the shies of the vessel, where their con certratcd beams fell cn great -vt W letters announcing the name cf the fkip and the fact that she was "an American." The name could be read ever a loi;g distance, fcr it was high enough ebove'the tumbling waters to stand in the lino of vision, clear ana bcaeon-iike. Until tim edge of the war zone out lying ireiar.d was reached no flag as chc-.vn by the I Lhartelphia When the waters ol so-called danger were ap prcrchca the Stars mid Stripes were broken out at the p--opcr station. Or dinarily L'h3 Uriiisii flag would have been displayed forward as the ensign ct the pert ct destination, but the American captain was- taking no chances with the British flag, cither forward, aft cr amidships. to or- itive ot America on the Phila- tielpma. and ior cue high seas the Siars a gocd to English eye at least on tne d Stripes lookeii At sunset the hag came down and the blight elec tric lights were turned on to the name Mid nation of the ship, where within certain ssa limits all men might read them. i'ari-ot-War Asks for information.. Seme iorty miies beyond Daunt's rock the lights ot a man-of-war ap peared The vessel v:sb lying in the sea shadow n, not more than three quarters ot a mile away. Nothing but the lights were visible, but their d's tributicn shewed even the unpracticcd eye that the vessel displaying them was a warship ot a greater typo. Sud denly from the starboard side of the clreacr.aught, prcdrcadnaught or cruis- re? whatever she was came a snr.rp Hash of light, which was followed by successive twinkles. The Britisher was signaling the Yankee, and the Yankee instantly paid heed. "What ship 33 that?'' An answer was twinkled back from the bridge. "Where bound?" Back went the answer If the response had not been given quicklv. and res oily a shot would have come across the Philadelphia's bows. The British guardships where St. j George's channel meets the ocean are takinr no chances, and thfcs notwith- Mo Fear Felt by Americans There may have been no submarines in the Irish sea when the Philadel phia made its way toward Liverpool. If there were, let it be said again that 110 American ct seasoned sense on board thought for an instant that tne ship was m danger ot a torpedo from any German craft, unless the missile were bred as tne result ot gross error. Some Americans in America may think differently about the matter. It would so seem to cne who had to take leave "cf some friends more cr less x'earful One American on board said to another when midway Detwe m Quesr.strwn and Liverpool, tho place ot reputed greafer-t danger, that there was more worry en. shore over the ship tTian there v.as cn its deck. He tola the truth. Only one boat was swung cut on its davits by the crew of the Philadel phia; it could not have held by any chance more than a dozen or fifteen people; it was swung cut a long time before the war zone was reached. Why? No one knew. It is as much of a puzzle today as it was the day that the crew swung the lifeboat over the WEter.-"-" tt has been said of other voyages that passengers on ships passing through the Irish sea at night did not go to bed, cr if they did, they turned in with their clothes on. There was only one passenger on the American liner who stayed rip all night through the Irish sea, and he was a jelly, eld retired naval officer who had served his time and who could not get over the habit of staying on wa"teh. This old chap must be seventy-live years old, but he showed up at the breakfast table shining, rosier and more gen erally wide-awake than any compan ion passenger. The night before the Irish sea was entered an Englishman who was jplay-. mg oncige ana Bide talking nbout the matter cf stewards' tips said: "Perhaps the only steward we must tip will be the one waiting on Davy Jones' Enfjland a Solemn Place. This word from tho Britisher was about the only one heard from a man suggestive of any dread possibilities from tho sailing of the war-zone sea. The women, as I have said, kept off the subject cf the war and of danger from start to finish. About an hour before turning-in time fifteen or twen ty cf the woman passengers gathered in a corner of tho so-called social hall and conferred together. There was cne woman in that throng of whom 1 had the presumed right to ask ques tions. I inquired concerning the na ture cf the conference, and my answer was, "No matter." I found cut later, however, that the women in solemn conclave hael agreed that it was safe to go to bed and to turn in attired as they were ordinarily pass the danger by," and with it all thought cf anything except a sate landing on the morrow. One man I can say who was going te sleep with his trousers on and with his shoes exceedingly bandy, turned Ik wearing the usual habiliments of the night, and tried, not altogether sue cessfully, to banish thoughts cf sub La.3AUiat tvsrh, t3lv.sf:sleep matter : t.Ue -- crdinary ceasing manner. Liverpool was reached early in the mcrnlng the sea and its submarines were behind, tut the war in its othei aspects was 1:1 front, and cne knew ii tho instant that foot was put on laiid England is a solemn place, and show: it in the step and in the faces of the pec. pie. A solemn place and so mi. si be Germany and France and Russia. ADVOCATE OF FEMINISM V 1 Jules Pels, chevalier of the legioi of honor and prophet of feminism ii Trance, is now in this country te make an investigation cf cur foot production ar:d exiiortaticn. , lie wil make a lecture tc of the Unite. States and will study the methods c: teaching French in the schools of Cal ifornia. lie summarized Ills views o: feminism thus: "Yes, women shcuk have the vote, net that we may have more votes, but that a new moral ele meat, the mcther element, may cutei into the political world." THEY DO AS THE ROMANS DIE Gome Lcnceners Knew About thj Ancient Esth in Strand !2ne. i London. The eld Roman bath ir ; Strand lane ;s undergoing a cleansing r i ce ess in preparation for tho advent of summer. The bath is one of the few remains ot ancient times. It is very '.little known even by Londoners anc almost altogether unknown to visit cis. ' Those who plunge into its absolute !y icy water fed from a natural spring have the satisfaction of knowing that they are bathing iu the same spot at their Roman forbears. The bath 13 feet long and about 13 feet across Tabbv Adapts Wildcats. Silver Lake, C're. A pair ot baby bobcats, whose mothejvas killed bj ij. R. Bass, have been adopted by t big tabby cat on the Bass homestead f cuth of Arrow. When the tiny wild cats arrived at the Bass place the feline ct once picked them up, cat fashion, and carried them to her bed t J- L .rp-;'x V. ,. -.w.v.f - r - - - . ' jr s ROOSEVELT TELLS ABOUT THE BOSSES i DID NOT KrJOW WHO CONTRIBU TED TO H!S CAMPAIGN FUND NOT FOR HOPE QF REWARD Prcmpteil By Same Spirit That Would ' Cause Him Donate Similar Sum to a Church Syracuse, N. Y. Theodore Roose velt told on l is cross-examination in William Barges' suit for. 150,000 al leged libel, about his dealings with the 'bosses" his personal relations with Burnes and his ideas about cam- paism funds in millions of dollars. TT mentioned the famous half million dollars which Thomas Fortune Ryan contributed to the presidential cause of Alton B. Parker and swore he never had seen a list of tho names of the persons who helped swell tho $3,000, 000 fund used in his own campaign for the presidency. The list contained iuitals of men whom the Colonel readily identified as being allied with the country's most powerful business and financial interests. In speaking of tbe Ryan contribu tion the witness gave it as his opinion that a leader of big business who con tributes half million dollars to help elect a candidate for President of the United States is prompted by the same spirit which Would cause him to do nate a similar sum to a Church, and tha.t Etch a contributed has no more hope cf reward in one case than he has in the other. Personallly, he said, he would have been very ; much sur prised if many meters of big business had not contributed to the Republi can eampai.-en cf 1904. The.CcIor.el mentioned the Stand ard Gil Co-npany. lie srid that if the report of the Congressional Com mittee which investigated - his cam paign contributions showed that "H. II. R." and "J. D. A." Which the witness thought stood for ' H. " II. contributed to the Republican fund in 1901, he was aetonished. lie said he had given exrlieit instructions against receiving Standard Gil con tributions. Personally he emphatically declar ed, he would regard ju--t as highly a contribution cf $25 from the station agent at Oyster Bay as ho would a contribution of $25,000 from George "Ah Perkins, who iu 1501 was a part ner in the firm of J. P. Morgan & Co. And he expressed the' belief that there was a limit to the amount a cam paign fund should total. Over a cer tain sum, lie did not knov how much, he thought there might be some dan- GtRMAM h f VI HA.-c.KS w'-JIVUiC T i ' "NT. Arnoricsn Note and Prssid Ad- Amsterdam, via Londen.- erican answer to Count Bernstorfr's re-cent memoradum drew this com ment from the Berlin newspapers: The Tageiisehe Rudschauke: "America takes all possible trouble over the ammunition requirements of our enemies ostensibly from a love cf neutrality. She does not foible about the possible food requirements of Ger many; this also is done from a love of neutrality." The Yossiche Zeitung: "Washington should recognize that such a,n attitude cn the part cf Ameri ca will not speedily be forgotten in Germany." The Lokal Anzciger: "The German standpoint cn this question is founded on thoroughly es tablished principles and practice of in ternational law. Tho Americanstand point can be explained oniy by tho profits cf the armament firmss." Cannot Restrain Jiin PI-! -: ! Richmond, Va. The Virginia O ti- preme Court of Appeals Mistained the lower court in refusing the petition of the Virginia Railway & Power Co., for an injunction forbidding two jit ney bus companies to operate here without : the city. Fourteen Drowned in 1 lood Austin, Tex. Fourteen persons are known to nave sieen crewmea ;n- tne flood which swept down Shoal and j hours for all employees was made by Waller Creeks on the outskirts of j tho Ford Sic for Company, Limited, of Austin during" rainstorm, washing j Canada. All employes in the coin away mere than 2C0 dwelling houses, j pany's s?--rvice six months or longer Eleven other persons not a ccounted ! will receive a minimum wage cf 50 '"or, are believed to have lost their lives. The property damage is esti- mated at $500,000. Ten inches of rain fell within two hours, tho creeks ris ing rapidly and overflowing their hanks before residents of the lowlands could be warned. Tbir.k 'Exports' Reach Record. Washington Secretary Redfield laid before the cabinet estimate? that the American experts fcr the current fiscal -ear will reach $2,750,000,000. The -ecretary toolc-to the cabinet meeting tables showing that exports of bread stuffs last month amounted to $59,000,--,00 compared with 8,000,000 in March r.n , 911. Breadsiuhs exported since ths war n outbreak have totalled 418,000, ICO. Half of all exports during the edht months ending February 2S vcent 'o British territory as against 45 pev ent a year ago in the same period. ipliiillill h - " V. S- --,:V.- v',:.v.-: :v -S''- -'"'- XV -iI . Zr" SAMUEL L R0DGER3 Samuel L. Rogers, cf Franklin, N. C, recently selected by Preo'dent Wil-on for Director of the Census lias had an eventful and unusual life, both m private and public station. As a I young man, he was elected clerk cf the superior court of the county of which he was a resident in North Caro lina, where he first gave evidence of his fidelity to public trust. Later, dur ing the second administration of Presi dent Cleveland, he was appointed Chief Clerk to the collector of Internal Reve iue fcr the wc-tcrn dis'rie't of North Carolina and when tho collector died, succeeded to the office cf collector. For twelve years Sir. Rogers was a member cf tho corporation commis sion -of North Carolina. This is one of the. Import ant public. . agencies .of. t1XS''1rchUYm'FC!aTToI olFonmTon" carriers, state banks and other public service corporations. The corpora tion commissioners cf Norih Carolina re also a board of state tax commis sioners. Their services in this con nection are of value and far-reaching Importance, both in them effort to aid in preparing laws governing taxation and in the equalization ef the burden Of t w n ' O , His ideals of integrity and loyilty to duty are of the highest. Those who krow him and have followed his wcrk in North Carolina bespeak for the Cen su.3 Bureau a fair and efficient admin istration. n'TI cp. c r a ! :.i rr ' f rr . . i 1 lo.l r-. o lii 1 .'.A 1 Number 750,000 Mar.. Every Place Filled. London. The BrPish expeditionary force in France, which at the begin ning of tho war consisted of six divis ions, has he-on increased to more than 2n, or, roughly speaking, Tc'hOv) rn according to a statement by David Lloyd-George, Chancellor cf the Ex-chene.-, in the House of Commons. The Chancellor added that tho place of every man who had fallen in hat tie had been filled and that the army was adequately cruipped. But he re itera'ed tho need for munitions, de claring that during the battle of used than in tho whole cf the South African war, which lasted nearly ttiren years. The interesting information also was given that the output of the muni tion fa toris had porn ineac'r'd j"otv'i than' nineteenfold since t'-o cuthrealt of the war but th call was still for more, and as Mr. Jjloyd-Gaorge con tinues to bold the opini-m that con sumption ct liquor is interfering with the work, he promi-.?d legislation to ccai witn tr.is 1 lit a r . Mrs. Was: mine- f cd pre, of the A. R. 1 Cum- incrtan. -Mrs. Will iory cf New York, w iters Amor: can Revolution ov George Thatcher Guernsey of Kans by a vote cf PSo to 461. Feed Pecpio Increase Wsges. I Be'. :c:i- A sweeping ad'anco 1 m wages ana reduction, or work j cents an hour or $-1.00 a day, the r; j ing hours being reduced to eight h j a day or 43 hours a week. The 1 nours . com pany employs about 2,400 persons at its factory at Ford, Ontario, and its nine branches in principal Canadian cieies. Geverai Persons Killed. Birmingham, Ala. More the s dczcn pcrsc!ls Were believed to have . . i iu;. L--c:r n t-s iuiu it fccuru were lost tueir lives ana a score known to have been injured in tho wrecking of two stores here by the falling of a liveslory wall of the Steel Smith building 0:1 Second avenue. The ; bear ot a. k. iucieoci, manager ci rue - wrecked Atlantic iz racinc lea btore aud three unidentified bodies hau been recovered from the deb-ric. Many others are known tc be buried in the rums. rtOjEraog CONDITION OF ARMY AND OUT PUT OF MUNITIONS IN CREASES ENTHUSIASM. SUBMARINES ARE ACTIVE British Submarines Found in German Waters Cabinet Ministers Make Frank Statements. London. Glowing accounts of the strength and condition of the British army and of the great increase in the output of munitions, which it is ex pected, next month will amount to 25 times what it was last September, given by David Lloyd-Gecrge, Chan cellor cf the Exchequer and Harold J. Tennant, Parliamentary Secretary of the War Office, in the House of Commons, have increased enthusiasm and confidence of the people of Erg land in the war. Supplementing the Chancellor's statement that Great Britain lias more than SG divisions of troops on the Continent and that the output of munitions has iu creased enormously. Mr. Tennant. speaking on behalf of the Secretary of War, Lord Kitchener, declared that recruiting had been most satisfactory and gratifying; that the health of the troops was splendid, and that the wounded were in the London hospitals? 21 hours after they were stricken in France. He wished to im press on the country the necessity of increasing tne supplies of artillery am munition, .adding: "There is no limit to the amount required." The frankness of the Cabinet Min isters in making known the number of men at the front, and the reports that reach London from various sources have convinced the people that at last the big effort against Ger many and Turkey is about to com mence. Both in the Aogan and North Seas there are signs of increasing act ivity. From today all steamboat com munication with Holland is stopped by order of the British Government. y-a-feTr-in-r on wee . io rt ". ith'"the": news' from Berlin that British submarines have been in the Bight of Helgoland, where the German admiralty lays claim to having sunk one, and per haps more, this is believed to fore shadow some movement ia the North Sea: while there is no longer any endeavor to l ido tho fact that a big Anglo-French force is prepared to go, as General O'Aniamie the French commander, has said, "to any point where it is required." CRUISER W'LHELM REPAIRED. Taken Out of Dry Deck After Small Ho'e 13 StoppcJ. Newport News, Va. After haing her hull below the water-lino cleaned and painted the German auxiliary cruiser Kronprinz Wih.elm wn; taken from the drydock at the local ship yard and is lying at anchor in ti-p harbor. T on repairs made to the ship while she was in deck was the stoppage of a small hole in her port now maae when the; raider rammed ;ar.k one of her prizes at sea Wh en Icated from the dock tho hip- cruiser showed a bad list which is said to be due to faulty construction but which is overcome when the ship is loaded. The new boiler tube 3 ordered by Commander THerf elder' soon after bis arrival here has arrived. They will be installed by workmen from the shipyard and not. by members cf the crew as was tho case when the I'rir.z Eitel Friedrieh was repaired. The work done by the naval survey board has been so closely guarded that the t'me of the survey has not been made known. The armed guard of artillerymen from turned to .quarters. Frank Asks ? Atlanta, Ca. At! or Cle-incy irney. fcr Leo hoii wiih Govern Frank or Statcn and tho Georgia prison com mission asking that the sn'enr" of eleath imnoped son Frank for the 1 1 i nagan no com: cd to life imprisonment. mt- March Exports Increased. Washiagtn. Excess of American exports over inir.crfs in March this ea i orah! ras Si40.f6..,47. the largest fav trai'o balance fcr Mar-b ii tho, liistcry of American commerce. Ilx pcrts for the month, wore ?233.00! "0 and imports 15S,040,216. rOi tio n-ne months en Mr-rch," says a. departmen r-ierce statemon ";-ti.ti- iins wii.n : cf ce ra il a ve rle in 1912- 13 to l:',,?:!z,?7i.'!R ir 131 . 213,071 ,S4.1 in fha current ' 1 ar.' Villa Concent-attn His Forcss. Washington. Consular dispatches from Mexico indicate, that while tem porarily dh-organize.:! by the defeat at Celaya, General Villa's farcos by no means have been r-moved as a for mmable factor in Mexico's civil war. Plans for auother battle with Ohra s?cn's Carran-a ferret are pro-ceeding rav.idly. ViPa's chif difficulty is his hark cf aramuuition. Too, when ht met Gnregon at Celcya, Villa had sent ferces to attack M.Vamoro?., Neuvo Larcho. Tampi-o and Wet coast taw; j greatly depleting his main force. You Like Your Home? The degree of love you have for your home is shown in the care ycu take of it. Beautiful homes make a beau tiful community. Such a community in turn demand stores that give a service in keeping with that community. That's the kind of store we zre operating. It is our aim to give you high quality drug store goods, courteous service and conduct our store in such a way that it will reflect credit on the community in which we live. Whatever trade you give us, co-operates with us and it also helps yourself. Deal at this the home store and we both profit. The North End Drug Store Phones S,torc J6 ( Room r New Ice House -AT Womack's Grist Mill We have equipped a stonigefor ICE and have received our first ship ment. I eo will be delivered from wagon any hour and anywhere in town. Prompt attention giv en to every order for Ire and your patronage will be highly appreciated. Full supply ot he will be kept through the en lire year summer anel winter. Call 1-5-1. WGMACK'S ICC HOUSE S. H. ALEXANDER, Mgr. lee Vaughan, DEALER IN Monuments AND Tombstones Italian, Vermont and Georgia Marble of highest grade, and ti e best grades of granitt. Will save you money and guarantee quality. - I Furs and Hides V ANTED j r Cf Highest Cash Prices paid for all kinds of Furs and Fhdes. CJ See me belore selling as I am in a pociiion to save you money. E. A. ALLSBROOK The Fish Man 0 Notice! It hes teen reported that I had Cjuit the imurancj business. This rerjort is unkind and untrue. Some i.f my xiiratiens hmvj been used and poiiciis dipped ia by some of tny competitors. This is not giner Hi!y cus'omary in the insurance vorhl. It is generally known by he iiisurance agents that the agen cy beiongs to the company and tbe expit?ons and business belong to the agent who produces it. A com ;;:iTiy has the right to withdraw :rom an agency, an ngent also has a i hc to withdraw frum a company. ALL policies w ill be renewed at ex piration unless e-ther wise instructed. I write ail kinds of insurance, rep resenting the strongest and most liberal world. This agei.cy cn write the whole town, !'iy ail losses and won't miss its money. Will H. Josey, General Insurance Agent. - " "l -
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 29, 1915, edition 1
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