Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / April 14, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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TOT n . - . y - - " 0- . " - ... "' TTTiiirrian A K FOUR O'CLOCK J ON """"SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. .-'FRIDAY, AJPRIL 14, 1922. TELEGRAPHIC SERVICE 5c PER COPTr f- PREMIER BQYHQOO L,il ; O'fflOl CLAIM Efllii GLIGKSTEIH' WiQO STRIKE NOTYETRT LEAPS 3 FLIGHTS FULL 'STREMCTH iB IS KILLED I " - ' .'! " -V- . iuuwi mm ml s y ; dsli five children hi tain m ! BEFRIENDS EISTER 1 YET - PROVIDED FOR K SIPS 1 , . i nnil ! IIIPR'VHT'n n n " . u OF II :u flapper pmoe itrdm ebgecombe r -m stdrie f TOKIO. April 11. Tokio, with its in full blossom, was ap- . . .v., iiUl-.inr touches to its fes- 1 INDIANAPOLIS, April 14. The opinion in- union circles is that -the coal strike has not yet reached the f 1 f A J t I 1 1 t-v today, prepawng to wei? peas oi its strengin as tne ena oi " . i. it- 1 1.) I i' .. -1 1. a! J . . Ktlwar.i, Trince of Wales, who the second week of nationwide . sus- ,ot i-QW, for a week's visit to j pension draws near ni.tui and a tour of Japan until) i a-, sraest of the Japanese na- Gains scored in the Penna coke i he battleship Renown steam . a temp ,;, liama with its royal passen- districts are most significant devel opment from the union viewpoint, while the only reverse seemed to be orary injunction, attectingi, trial charged with murder. I two important West Virginia fields, 1 , Dr. Glickstein's mother, fell NEW YORK, April 14. Mrs. Anna Glickstein, widow of Dr. Abraham Glickstein, who was shot and killed by Mrs. Lillian Raizen last December, ended her life today by leaping from the third story window of her home in Brooklyn. Mrs. Raizen; who confessed to shooting the doctor, is awaiting ; WASHINGTON, April 14'. The much criticised flapper has found a friend today in the wea ther bureau, which predicted she might go forth on Easter wear ing her bright-colored tweed suit and periwinkle hat without fear of rain. r ,.' ko mn;f pawr of the ' '' " " I which are hamoered bv union activ-1 dead at thp fimp.ral rf her an-n t welcomers will be Princ !. . N ' " s- . - - itiev P.egent of Japan, whse visit. v London last year brought a'oo u th" exchange of courtesies cul niiniiti'.'C in Prince Edward's visit to the Orient. The .seven days fehe British royal visitor will spend in Tokio will be ,ibLot'e( largely by court and offi cial vi.sit.-s as well as by numerous i state banquets. There will be short periods, however, in which Prince Edward may see the interesting sight of the city. The program has been jilaiiri'. d in such a way that it will j allow fhe visitor too see as much as j Pan sti11 at Whiting, Ind., today. . i possible of the ancient customs and L i of Obi Janan. , " Five Firemen Injured. SEESC. HIGHER QUARTERS WHEN ILLINOIS RIVER RISES BEARDSfoWN, 111., April 14. Over s;x thousand persons are either homeless or living on second floors as a result of the Illinois river rise. 1 Killed, 3 Injured, in. Explosion CHICAGO, April 14. One man was killed and three wounded in the explosion of a Standard Oil Corr- M1P La 1 3 W S TINGLE B S F MM! III BOUGHT ilElJEF iiEISUIE.i for Mrs ih ; S UI2 ilLUHULU i! li! nrnii rv nnr a I K I , I K H i u OLRiXLLI riOL Forty-nine little children entrust-,; CRIGCIETH, WALES, April 14. ed to the sacred care of North Card- "Premier Lloyd George is never so lina are dependent on Edgecombe j happy as when swapping -stories a county for their lives and to date ' bout his boyhood days with old cron only five of them have been provided ies of his native Wales. for. ' ' j During his last visit here he gave This is the message sent to the j a tea party to 19 ancients who were good people of Edgecombe county at his father's pupils at Troedyrallt Eastertide by Rev. B. B. Slaughter, j school more than 60 years ago. The of Tarbpro, chairman of the Edge- senior "old boy" was John Jones, 91, combe county committee of the Near East Relief. who still works as a carpenter. Next J to Jones was William Davies, an Ed-ecombe is asked to raise $3040'! sistanuteacher under the Premier's ! 4.i.: -u KT-W'-r- father, who testified to the latter's i Lina ,vil;cix, a its aiii.c ui nuiiii uui- ONT TDBA' NORFOLK, Va., April 14. With 'the' break of day this city is prepar ing relief measures for the ,1500 ne- i olina's $200,000 for this great child- sav'mg work. To date, barely $300 j has been received for this work from Edgecombe county, which will just take care of five of these children. handiness, wiith the cane on occas- ions. Another gtiest was John Will iams, now blind, who used to carry love messages tJ&tween the Premiier's father and mother. : Unless the remainder is "forthcom- groes rendered. hoijieless by a fire in j before 'June - 30th, Col. George Berkley, a suhtiA, last night, which H Bellamy, of Raleigh, state chair wiped out approximately 300 homes. man"' in a message to the Southerner - today declared, many of these chil- to the front in the economic confer-. . & dlen wm nave to be turned out 0l i wiree-quarters. oi a million aonars. oar orphanages totarve on July 1. GENOA, Italy, April 14. Europ ean financial tangles will be brought ! ence here today. -- .. Further discussion of the Russian affairs have btfen postponed until to- With this in view, 'a visit has-been a tranced to the Meiji shrine, where the prince will see the people's loy- ;1 morrow. j Tents from the navy yard were set j up in" "St ': Helen . reservation to shel i ter the victims. PORTSMOUTH, April 14. Five firemen were injured, three of them seriously, when fire apparatus and .i ! n ii vi f 1 -v s t - s-- -v s v r s v-y n s-itn A- ievei"uct AUi WiC. kM an automo'bile collided enroute to a Japanese of modern times. Ate a sp'- fire which destroyed four homes'.'; lul Sir Basill Blackett, controller, of the British treasury, called a special' consultative committee of file experts 'to evolve a,-5asis for a preliminary . i ijepp.rt to theinancial commi?sio.n in j eonferenee, tbmorrow. ' :- Boys, playing baseball, are believ ed to have started the fire by smok- S ing cigarettes. ; The "old boy" told their host many stories of his father he had never he never heard befdre and alll were in the best spirits. Old John Jones made the premier roar with laughter by the quaint way he told a story of the local indigation many years ago, when a minister preached from a text another minister had used the pre vious Sunday. Mr. Lloyd George always tries to 'take tings easy while here,, but injem- , bers of his cabinet and newspapers men seldom let. a dav co hr witbont I FoxhaIl,: "mayor of Tarfeoro, and R. ) appropriating part of hi a time. : E. Sentelle, superintendent of schools ! Gettine ud 'late in the morninc , ; i i A. r 0"vr overseas workers will have no ! other alternative but to pronounce t t'-iis death sentence, he said. Mr. Slaughter has as members of lr.s committee some of the foremost citizens of Edgetombe county. H. P. . i t! e leading1 theater, he will see a j . STORMY EASTER IN IRELAND. spectacle of-: Old-Japan,;; : RRT.PAfi- A 1 . A 7. r i --f AX- -i - -- JL ": . OVliliV . ' . i Vhi;n the royal gardens hewijl Vvm VTStecte, as a rfe- h '-ASi. iKu-ouuceu 10 mat curious oiena oi .u, , a,i A.i.1 - - , f W ASH INfi Tl ) iT. Anril 1.4 jMrs. NP Rf llQr IM D ET l -'Edffe&mbe,.-ar?.--.yice chairmen.. workia- jn' te garden, and listcn UnLflflL ! m. F LiV" M'anftJ vfcie-'iresident of .. the I in- to 'Welsh music are his chief GflEftGE ML art a;:d nature landscape in min.ia jure. His week in Tokio ended, Prince of Waits will start for Nikko, the1, -anion-; imperial mountain resort and ) jJlec-a of the devout the whole' vear rur: j. Next will be a visit to Hakone, ne oi ihe most beautiful spots in all Japan. Prom there he wll journev to Kyot'.s perhaps, the onlv citv in the empire that still retains mostrof its oid tt'orlrl atniosnliPTP. -a u, ancient capital of the coun-j try, A -II be the next stopping place, j ioiiowc-a oy a visit to Osaka, center of tb- manufacturing industry. This HclSr'n of the royal tour will end at Ivol'j, i:u miles from Osaka, where tao prinire will embark on a specially qu:p;;c.-! steamer for a' trip through I the picturesque Inland Sea. - I Ai'tor a short visit to Takamatsu, island of Mavajima and the j ?iaval f-nl'oo-d n TTnii-,.. al Ti i '----te- J-Jictjiuici, Lilt; JTIHI-Ct; on the Renown for KJago hima. southernmost city of the cru cial -constables last night, in which I four were wounded. N. Y.-Chicago Air Service. CHICAGO, April 14. Daily flight va ' ,Neldest son uetweeii i-sew xoik ana Cnicago Dy UiTTin: t - j j ' ! vv iiiiiiX'ir xjawrenee ana iour cniiaren j were drowned today in a capsized I . ! 1 schooner in the Potomac river off i s i First National Bank, and W. C. Dou- j glass," a prominent young attorney, is j chairman'of the speakers jbureau. u . 1 . . . f r- C . . " A J A t, J! AT ! . - , - . OB seiiiieii-i, j- wi worK ..ui tne j gaudy shawl pleasures during 'is visits, and when the weather is threatening he sits on his covered balcony wrapped in a Near Jast Relief that ech. child is clothed,. fed and taken care o-f on $5 a month, or $60 a year. Manv per- "They Say" he remarked on his last visit,- "that I must -go back to school in a few days. They say I am airplanes carrying 200 persons will be inaugurated soon, according to an' announcement by Mrs. Edith Rocke feller McCormick today. Any increase in the peanut acre-j sons are "adopting" one of these j playing truant. Yet they all followed Alexander, while-her husband and Qf Virginia and North Carolina I .children by- signing a p.eage card, ? mej including the newspaper. I wish on were rescued by a Nor-ifor 1922 will be most disastrous," j cal1 e -LUrisiieu y hair- they would 'leave me alone format shinton steamer. , says Manager Birdsong of the Pea-i man Slaughter or the state office-at ieast a fortnight; it would be better folk-Was Z HARDING SIGNS BILL TO ETEND RADIO SERVICE I , -i WASHINGTON, April 14. A bill extending the use of the government ! naval radio facilities for commercial and press purposes till June 30, 1925. was signed todayby the president. MEOIGftl. UNIT PUTS' STlPGHMILill nut Growers Exchange. "So appar- Rale";-h' and areeinS to pay $5 a j for themj and certainly better for, ent is the necessity for the growers.! morth for the Period of one eaT' 1 me." JERUSALEM, April 13. Malaria has been almost stamped out in Pal estine and trachoma has been reduc- e to cut their peanut acreage- that any j ust ICLC1,CU' efforts to get them to increase it t assigned to a specific child and rather than to decrease 'it 'must be ! its life is assured for another 12 ! Al, taken as opposed to the best inter-t v ests of the growers. With a surplus! ' In appealing, to the people of this for 1921 and with prices at a low J county to aid in raising this quota' PRICE OF I level, there is every, reason why the peanut acreage should be cut 20 to j 30 percent to bring it back to nor- Col. Bellamy said: "Many- of these " children are vic- ! tims 'of the .great war when their STATUE d by one-third; W the work of the: . ,, .. a 4a ; fathers' were killed in defense oi the r-r i nir t i -r-r . x American Zionist Medical Unit, says j are that it ! DELHI, 'April 13. One of the spectacular incidents which attended I will be cut that much or more. ! vast Baku oil fields. Military ex- the Prince of Wales' tour in India HARDING ASKS NAVY Dr. I. M. Rubin ov, head of that or-1 " . -h perts agree that-, failure of Germany ganization. The unit has been work! "Accpramg to careiuiiy taomatea to et. this precious oil supply short-! WASHINGTON, April 14. Pres, dent Harding is understood to have sent a letter to the capitoF urging i'M'O :?n"nK. at i a . .. . o iu! tn utduty oi irs : the perSonnel of the navy be not re- ' .-i ? "Jiu LA. Kiar.y (, the birthplace of. fduced below 86,000. the country's- Kiosfc noted : subjects living in the Ori ened the war by many months. Had the var been prolonged, there ares, many North Carolina boys back home today who would other duction, our reports further show, vv;,a v,Q ceepin beneath a wooden . rcss -or 11 years and it is. situated ' that the total production for these ; cross m France. North Carolina' can- ! n a beautiful garden. . i ' wn ' (sive to meet their ff uture nik:- lv;ve rot l)ee overiooked He will -at home" for one entire aft t'iim..n ,m the British embassy where l i-!-"rsins will be welcome. It also n;;: d to have him attend spe 1 :Nt;-r services in the English WCBiOlED I URCD INCREASE , PLRSONNL NOT RLDUttDjhere for three years combatting the j reports from over 1,500 growers the j i t - - - . two scourges of Palestine. j total production tor 1921 was about Dr. Eubinov added that the unit! 30 Perc,ei more .than in 1920. How v,o. rHAA oknnAsnn nnn'o v ever,- with all this increase in pro- in this wrk of wrhich about equal ; shares were contributed by the Joint j Distribution committee and the Wo- j two states was not over 3,000,000 , not seo the children of these heroes men's Organization Hadassah, both j bags, which is 1,000.000 bags less j starve to death? thnn the ex-erated estimate of 1 oi America. i " Four hundred thousand persons I 4,000,000 bags, which has been scat- j annually visit the clinics maintained j tered broadcast by certain bearish , by the medical unit, here and all" na-1 inf fences. The exchange itself has' tionalities are welcomed. In addition 800,000 bags either in warehouses or the unit maintains 27a beds in hos- i already reported to be delivered la nitals in Jerusalem, and Jaffa. At ; ter, the reports of the bureau of ! present its main work is in taking! markets up to March 15 showed that i care of Jewish immigrants, conduct-: a total of 900,000 bags, had been SAN FRANCISCO, Calif.; Apriljing campaigns for sanitation among j shipped out of this sectioned 400,- 14.-Miss Delora Angell, age 20, the I the school children and teaching! 000ba?s are estimated to be inthe .-- - - - - - i i 1 1 -a- a:,i e ! heiress of $25,000,000 left her by them, how to be healthy and strong.!11" Wi ' -r , -rrr w-r. . J, a - I , , ! . it.. :a i- vIai. ? ! chanee. and of country merchants. i jonn w. "iseira-AViiiiion jax.es, e-s.-: ine wotk oi me unit as uuiu aam-1 - i ' ; .'': h. - ' i ' " mi. j n ' a j?, was the unveiling here of the eques trian statue erected in memory of his grandfather, King Edward VII, known as the All-India King Edward Memorial. The work of the erection of this memorial has been in prog- lYfl I u siir n it . ER I ! W. HEIRESS SURGE1I ECT HOSPITAL T! Ii i 1 japs mw TUPSi UT NEUTRAL ZONE Great throngs were present when the Prince performed the ceremony of unveiling while a royal salute of 101 guns -was fired. The exercises i were attended by Viceroy and Lady Reading and Lord Sawlinson. At the conclusion, the ' Prince was lustily cheered by the crowd. In his speech here the Prince of Wales pointed out that Delhi had been connected with the crown of i 'pects to marry a young America! i tary and medical. ! surgeon, who intends to establish a j ' - I hospital for the poor, she disclosed j Will Not Release Semenoff. .SIT HINGTON, April 13 Cotton here today. TOKIO, April 13. The Japanese troops have driven the Chita govern- India since tfye' dawn of time and ment forces out of the neutfal zone J that it was now the headquarters of between them and the Vladivostok j the central - government "in which government troops, according to aj Hindus and Mohammedans alike and These figures account for 2,10,000 j Vladivostok dispatch received here indeed all- classes 'nd' communities ' bags. So for there to be a total of today. ;, 3;000,000 bags the tjeaners and the ;- ' 'warehousemen wTould have to have I ! share and take a definite part." Funeral of Rep. Brinson. j NEW YORK, April 14. Efforts j in their factories and warehouses in; NEW BERN, April 14. The fun-j ...i i- i o -v, -t-ip of fnrmo Ctn.-V anri rlpan- era! of Kepresentative .bamuel Bnn- reiea'st; iui ucuciai uciut- i t,nw r - -. - ( McCormick Passes Crisis. it . , ...X ' 1 durino- March fimnnnt.pH n I wrx a rrT ' TT,xrt? ! to Cftt a AlJlAJlAlil vu- i . ' - .1 T , . 1 f J f M XT bales of w s AAir,,, T, , ...r. Hefeated f.odav. when Su- L ed goods asonany peanuts as have I son, te trura aisxncx, .wno aiea xif- ror iomii Carolina: amy . r a , , . ... . . .a, MA' a vwv Hnrmi. ice LelehanV de- already oeen snipped out, or a tozm i , " C0InPad with438,318 bales Cloudy tonigt. Saturday , local J preme Court -Justice NEW YORK, April 14. John de noted tenor, ill with thro3t and 44,647 bales of linters ' ,nw,r, ,han,ft in . temWa-t. wed. application of the general's t- of 000,000. bags. Jf is hardly prob- y ;Jt Lae nsus bureau. announc- tlire. M oderate- Southwest f tomey' to vacate a civil warrant un- able tnat tney. nave any suca iar y- wind4. der which he was arrested. quanuty. i " ... , f aay irom the First Baptist church, i affection,as passed the crisis but nd interment made in Cedar Grovel will net sing again for several ceiete tnonths. v V ' . t .. v , - v 7 '
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
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April 14, 1922, edition 1
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