Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / March 10, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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fSI L4 VObTxy. NUMBER 17. FOUR O'CLOCK EDITION SOOTIAHP NECK, K. p., FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1922- TELEGRAPHIC SERVICE 6c PER COP WILL CAUSE THE INDIA SHOWERS OF ROCKS RAIIt ,'By Associated Press.) LOXUON, March 10. The removal r Lord Reading as Viceroy of India DOWN F 01 II II M ipraxy association Elected Officers Yesterday THE SKY tJy Associated Press. Chieo, Cal., March 10. Police are baffled by showers of rocks which are MRS. HAYWOOD H. HYMAN RE-ELECTED PRESIDENT. TREASURER REPORTS $236.78 ON HAND. believed in some quarters will re 'reported to be falling on a warehouse is suit from the publication, of the rn di:in government 's note. The effect of the affair will have on here for three weeks. ' Spectators de clared that apparently they came from the clouds. Howards have been of ihe position of Lloyd George is consid-Jfered for an explanation. i ..iniiu ntil cnm.i lirl!trA tfinf. i ere.ti itiuiiii .i n'uo iu .-.wv- ........ . . , ilu- elinuces that he will resign have been Iacreased. ' Delhi. India, March 10. The Goverc-1 merit h:s ..lefinitely decided to arres 'Mohandas K. i.-rauum, tne non-coupera- lumist lender. I iu d nrninnino u. J. ULIVIHNUJ n i in n phi n PATMt H Hffl TOOK MONEY TO IKE MOTHER HAPPY EXPENSES OF By Associated Press.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa., March 10. Walter A. Unger, former assistant treasurer of the Thomas W. Evans Dental Institute and Museum Fund, is held for fifty thousand dollar Bail COPT RRINELN flv Associated Press.) Paris, March 10. The United States buis demanded payment of two hundred and forty-one million dollars for ex- tpenses in connection with the oecupa- iarged with stealing The regular annual meeting of the Library Association was held yester day afternoon at the Softool building a very few members being present. The treasurer reported receipts from all sources for the year as $85.95, prin cipally from dues and fines. The bal ance on hand at beginning of the year was $208.09 and end of year $236.78. The disbursments for the year amounted to $129.26, practically all being for books and book-eases. The librarian reported a total of 747 books iu the library not including a large' number of reference books which they have not spaec to display or use. Only one book was lost during tua ' year. One gratifying and encouraging statement by the librarian wTas that s a large ifvopor.ion of the patrons were children who had no access to books at a home library. It is;for these prliw cipally that a public library is pro vided. Mrs. Haywood H. Hyman was reelec ted president; Mrs. W. E. Smith, vice president succeeding Mrs. Stuart Smith, Mrs. E. H. Leggett, Secretary, succeeding Mrs. Norfleet S. Smith and Mrs. J. il. Hall was continued as Treas urer. A drive for members is going to be made immediately and an effort made to collect the annual dues of $1.00 from old members, as this is the only source T ' Ashley Jones Mrs. Carey Weeks -Mrs.-Bernard Allsbrook Mr. Bernard Allsbrook. LeEoy Allsbrook Mrs. Annie Ha acock Mrs. Carlton Waist on ",Airs. P.en Weaver . "Claude Paramore ; C. P. Burroughs fAIrs. C. F. Burroughs T. P.. Wheeler Mrs. T. B. Wheeler J. A. 1 ittman" I W. Tf. McDowell Mrs. W. H. McDowell J. A. McDowell .. Mrs. J? A. McDowell Miss Olivia Berry B. P. liracey Lewis Bailej FOUR CALIFORNIA FIVE WE DAYS EARTHQUAKE INCOME TAX SHOCKS RETURNS a hundred and J , tion of the Bhineland before any rep- f innAmn nrViTfili ft 1 1 Tr tin Q TIl I a rations are paid, at a meeting of A1-' J ninety thousand dollars of funds and securities. He said he took the money t; make his mother happy.' Egyptian Nationalist Leader Is lied Finance Ministers. In Employment Delported fair j, Egypt, March 8. The hither to scattered torce-3 of opposition to British rule in India were consolidat ed by the arrest and deiortation of ISnirJ Zaghloul Pasha, Egyptian Nat ionalist leader. Egyptians men, women and child ren seem to be determined this tima to win their independence or die. There are signs that their patriotic spirit h:is grown stronger. The I'ountry remained without a raliiihi afte Zaghloul's deportation because there was not to be found in i-syj.t n leader who dared to assume t ho responsibility of forming a new ministry so long as Lord, Curzon's M-liome to maintain Great Britain's grip on Egypt remained hanging over j 5 -- TOJ?f3 1 1 hwtl of the country, as one paper '"t it, i'iiu: the sword of Damocles. Most of the schools, elementary, see-1 tsiMlary, as well as those of higher edu- j cfition have been forced to close their oi-tals because their students have I (By U. S. Press) Washington, March 10. The Wom an's Bureau of the United States De psrtmeiit of Labor, has been investiga ting th;i conditions under which Ne gro women are working in industry. j Four-fifths of the employers of Ne gro women whose establishments were investigated by the Women's Bureau said that Negro women in industry had no faults which were not common to all ether labor. About 90 per cent of the employers interviewed said they expected to continue to employ Negro women, and many of them stat ed that there was no difference in toe quantity and quality of the product of their Negro and white women em ployees and that Negro women caused no greater loss of material in the pro cesses of production. Still Losing following are listed as members: W. E. Butterworth ' Mrs. W. F. Butterworth C. W. Albertson Mrs. C. W. Albertson Mrs. W. R. Albertson Mrs. W. O. Lawrence Mrs. H. I. Clark Miss Virginia Tillery Mrs. W. K. Bond Mrs. J. A. Pittman Ennis Bryan ; Miss Laura Clark Mrs. W. E. Smith Mrs. Norfleet S. Smith Mrs. Stuart Smith Miss Annie Dunn W. E. Smith Miss Vada Jacson C. H. Smith Mrs. J. D. Smith L. B. Mills Mrs. L. R. Mills Mrs. P. F. Waters E. J. Proctor E. L. Brown Mrs. E. M. Lowe ' Mrs. A. L. ' Purrington Miss Lizzie Leggett. Dr. Chas. Anderson Mrs Aitderson Mrs. A. O. Livermaif Mrs. Hi T. Clark II. T. Clark Mrs. Gid Lamb N. S. Hubbard Mrs. M. A. Shields Mrs. li. M. Johnson Dant'Oivl Josev Mrs. Danford Josey Robert Johnson Mrs. Bob "Jones Miss Irene Hardy Mrs. Auther Roberson R. C. Josey, Jr. 1). Allen Harrell Mrs. Russell Arthur Robertson Miss Maggie Lewis Mrs. O. F. Smith, Mrs. Geo. Bryan M iss Susie Shields J. P. Futrell Mrs. Kate Dunn Miss E. O. Taylor II. II. Billiard Mrs. Paul Tillery -Mr." Ben Hancock Carey Knight N. O. McDowell Clee Vaughan Joe Allsbrook R. S. Shaw Miss Bessie Futiell N. A. Riddick Mrs. J. C. Riddick Miss .Katherine Hancock E. H. Leggett ' Mrs. E. H. Leggett R. J. Madry Mrs. R. J. Madry J. B. Hall ' Mrs. J. B. Hall A. P. Kitchin MVs A. P. Kitchin Mrs. Loimie Dunn B. B. Everett Mrs. B. B. Everett L. L. Cherry Mrs. L. L. Cherry Hugh Johnson Mrs. Hugh Johnson Mrs. C. II. Herring J. IT. Alexander, Jr. "Mrs. J. n. Alexander, Jr. C. J. Shields Mrs. C. J. Shields Mrs. F. P. Shields Mrs. H. H. Hyman " M. A. Huggins. (By Associated Press.; LOS ANGELES, Cal., Tklarck 10. Earthquake shocks were felt at liOS I Angeles, Fresno and Porter ville, California, early today but Ho damag? was reported. Furniture was thrown around bv tTie Both State and Federal Income I Tax ret ai ns are: required to be made by the 15th of March, so there remains only five days. The exemption allowed by the state for married men is $2,000.00 and $200,- 00 fnv fr-1i hil1 wTiilo iU V.l I quake at Porterville and people rusheJ . Al lexemptio.i is $2,500.00 and $400.00 for to the streets. ' j ' i each child. . Corpora ti on s,V. Quired to maie a jtOT not thoy actual- P0LICE1AKE BIG HAUL OF 1LL1C! I statement. -l ' !y ha.rf, ' ' os to pav or not. DRUGS By The a asperated Presa l-fiUirvH should be mailed to ft -VJrsstate "Department- of Revenue Raleigh, X. (., and the Feileral re turns to The Collector of Internal Rev enue, Raleigh, N. C. The penalty for-failur . to make re turns is ,000.00 fine and 2T5 per eent of tax evaded, and imprisonment un der certain conditions additional for ! making f fraudulent returns. " New 1 ork, March 10. Police selz- : WEATHER REFOUT of) ed half a million dollars worth drugs in a raid on a drag peddling j For North Carolina: Rain this af gang. One man arrested had a sav- jternoon and probably tonight. Warm- jings deposit of a- hundred and sixty-J or in extreme ""ortli portion tonight. I . . . . 1. . , .1 .1 . 1 I . . ......... 1 . i , J ! tl. ! r-. . I . , n UJ!l I'luusuiiu uuurtis .u-'.-uiiumuwi caTiini.iv- ueiu-raiiv rair antt coole. in the past year. Fresh' to strong south, shifting west winds. to Crime Cure Discussed A Drop in The Government Revenues (By U S. Press, Washington, March 10. Govefn- (By U. S. Press) n Washi'igton.Marc-h 10. Letermina- : tion of the cause of criminal tenden-1 cies and deciding treatment that Is ' in fluent i:i I at the formative perioi j of life is "vastly more important"! .! -i - i . . , nient evenues collected durinir Jan- than decision in a criminal case tuat , " i. . . . narv the first month of operating may ta tee week 3 in court, accoruing j ' h - . , , , i t i .-i, 1 of the revised tax law showed .a do- to a report ,ptst made public by the j i j. Tv 4. . iioase iu receipts of nearly $65,000.- claldren s bureau of the Department i 1 v of I nbo- ' ' " ('I,are with January, 1921, ac cording to reports compiled by the' The report says a much larger pro- j iJltrenal Revenue Bureau. j portion of mental defectives is to be j i fond amousr delinquents as they ap- i pear in court than in the Ordinary pop ulations. perhaps ten times as many. The report is one of a series issued by the bureau designed to further dis- Reeeipti during January aggregat ed $pi,00O,00 against $196,000,000 Sfor the same month last year, the maj i or shrinkage being in the income an-1 ' pi of its taxes, which declined from cussion and development of juv court standards. THE BREAD PRICES. CONTINUE TO RISE ,eniIe '$87,000,000 to $4 .000,000. AN INCREASE IN PERSONS El mm (By U. a Prrss Washington, March 10. A forecast I'm!1 Pasha. lipaTtnients of the government have 'illy rise semblance of running on- (By V. S. Press) Washington March 9. Joseph W. gone out on strike as a sign of pro-, j Powell, who hs retired as president of test against the deportation of Zagh- th.e Emergency Fleet ('ofporation of ithe Shipping Board, declared in a let-j tor to Representative Wood of Indiana a 'member of the. House appropriations ! r;m, since- the natives" employed in j committee, that when he said operating them have walked out in sympathy expenses for "February were $6,400,000 with the great army of strikers com- j as compared with revenues of $6,500, posed of lawyers, educators, merchants ' 000 he meant merely that $100,000 less doctors and cabmen, who have thus j in cash-had been sent the operators, registered their dissatisfaction with It showed he explained, "how we ar-3 the present situation. " I husbanding our cash and keeping (ireat interest is being taken in the ' careful check on outlays by operators." abject of convoking a national con-; "As a alter of fact, Mr. Powell iVrenrv of the representative bodies continued, "the Shipping Board la an dother men of opinion in the coun- losing between $3,000,000 and $4,000 try with the idea of organizing air-tne - 000 per month.' The indications are, 'j.i.:ivois of the nation in the big he added,, that the loss will continue it for freedom. ; at that rate for some time. PRES. FUMING Suls WEEKS VACATION li STATE OF FLA, ;rave Inst. To Appoint Nat. Board Moscow, March 9. Bread prices in of great industrial improvement for Moscow have been risiner for three the month of March as been made j months and there seems to be no lira-, by the United States employment h as it is becoming more and more . service, in connection with its monthly difficult for bagmen to obtain flour! report of employment conditions in and regular commercial shipments are the United States. j'ractbslly nil. "Itenorts from 2."1 of the principal t -White bread has been selling lately industrial centers, with but few x at 2S,00 ) rubles a Russian pound and jceptions, show a general improvement bhick bread at 9,000 rubles. in employment conditions. ' ' TirecTo, I Suga r-josts 90,000 rubles for 2 1 Cones cf the service announced, siau pound and butler is 100,000 rub-i of hoe and confidence in the future." les. Po'atoes are the cheapest article j of diet in North ,nd Central Iiussia, ! COTTON MARKET London, March 0. The Sulgrave Seijil(, or 2,300 rubles for 12 ounces. TODAY'S MAHKET 18.35 . (By Associated Press.) ST. AUGUSTINE, Pla., March 10 members. Golf was first on the program of Pres ident Harding for today, the begin ning of a week's sojourn in Florida This afternoon he will motor to Or mond and board E. . B. McLean's houseboat for a short cruise. Institution, which is primarily concern j rjrjie egai raTe for the ruble is 200-1 ed with fostering friendly relations p;00 to j for January, February an .art1' !irtwppii .this countrv and America. ir &.,r.iiioti,To ;n nvr-hnncrn lisvn May . ' ' ' ' i'lU l II. K-VV UlUHii ' IU V nimv - has decided to appoint a national j r,eeil prosecuted so vigorously that curb July 17.37 board of 50 British and 50 American 'dealings have been stopped. October . 16.f7 immmimmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm December 6)0 - , It has also been decijfd to vest to give to Sulgrave Manor an cliu YJISTEKDA i o the property at Sulgrave Manor, the tree from Mount Vernon, Washington's March - 18-2(5 birthplace of George Washington, In a Jionie in Virginia, and frs. Harding May w 17.9S joint British and American body of has-promised a cutting from Martha Jnly t - ' ft trustees consisting of 18 members. iWashingtons rose tree at Mount Ver- October f . December l?- President Harding had promised non. 1
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
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March 10, 1922, edition 1
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