Newspapers / The Wilson Times (Wilson, … / May 1, 1923, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE PRICE: $1.50 PER YEAR WILSON, N. C, TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1923 Vol. 27; No. 22 POLITICAL DANGER iBAPTIST PASTOR IN CALLING NAVY IS LIBERAL WITH IN LIQUOR FIGHT VARIOUS CREEDS; MAY The Coast Guard and Customs, Service Cannot Cope with the Violations of the Federal Law in Liquor Traffic; Ques-j tion is Whether National Emergency Exists (lly David Lawrence) (Copyright 1.12,! by Tim Daily Times). Washington, April 28. Sliall Hi" Army of the United Slates as well us I lie Navy lie subject to tall for the enforcement of prohibition? President Harding is wrestling at the moment with the. legal problem of whether he has the authority to order (lie uavy into action to slop rn in running hut already it is ap parent thiit whatever precedent is established with respect to the. use of the navy may he equally applied to the army on shore. The President litis found, of course, that the coast guard and customs service Is unable to cope with the violations of federal law in tlie litiior traffic mid the A lit i- j Saloon League and dry organizations j geiicrallv have been pressing the Ad-t ininistrntion to go 1 lie limit in iisin E 1 the full force of the. United Stales government to sec that the statutes; are upheld. Mr. Harding has asked the De liarimeiil of Jnstico to look up (ho precedents that is whether money appropriated by Congress originally for military and iihvuI defence can be utilized to enforce civil and crini iunl laws. The lawyers have found plenty of preiiKlenls with respect to the army, as for instance the sending of troops lo quell thy famous liquor rebellion in Pennsylvania in the ear ly days of the American republic when the first revenue, laws were passed and Ihero was difficulty in i-nlb-cling tuxes. The military forces hmvp hIso been used to enforce sta tutes relating to restraint, of inter state commerce as for instance in the shopmen's railway Blrik"o a year ami. I'! very governor has the right to call upon tin; federal government at any limn 10 furnish troops lo up hold slate government and quell dis turbance. lint, the wuterR within the Ihree mile limit do not belong lo any par ticular state and the question is whether a national emergency ex ists which permits tlio navy to be diverted from ils lask of protecting v the nation against foreign Invasion into enforcement of domestic laws. ISroiidly ipeaking, the navy can be used in an emergency to put down civil war and has been used in that connection so thai if I he emergency were great enough there would be no doubt of the power of Executive to order the Navy into action. Sim- ilarly If any huge plot to break ' down the. tariff wall and smuggle goods into America were under way, the navy iiiuld be used to put down wlni I. would be interpreted as rebel lion agiiinsl Ihe authority of the fed ( Continued on Page 8.) Mr- O. E. Fox of Farmville, a Junior at the College, Won Third Prize in State Contest Mr. (). K. Kox of Karmvllle, a junior in Aliunde: Christian College reiireseiited A. C. ('. ill thu Slate Peace Oralorical at Riirlington I'ri-1 nay uigtit. Mr. f ox was awarded ttie third, twenty-live: dollars in gold. Tin- subject of his oration was "World Peace Through Christian Idealism." Wake Forest College! won lirst prize and Trinity's representative was given second prize. Six colleges look part in the cein tesl including Elon College, Guilford College, and the: University of North Carolina in addition to the three prize winners. This was A. C. C.'s debut In the stale contest and Mr. Fox's success in our initial effort is an indication of even greuler laurels for the fu ture. We are proud of him and of our college. GOT CI.A US MIXED In Ihe tobacco article published in Salurilny afternoou'H Times, the copy not mixed with reference to the places as to the proposed changes in Ku rm villi; anil Fremont. Them are as far as we can learn no changes to he made in the man iigemenl of the Co-opera live ware houses in Farmville and Mr. Charles Towiisend will still mtiuago for them there. In Farmville!, however, Mr. Cole! takes the place! of Mr. J. W. Wil liams. The amount of tobacco re ceived on tho Farmville market was around 2,U00,0U0 pounds auel the average price advanced is around f trenty cents according to the state ment from that place. APPLY TO ARMY DEFENDS SIR A. CTCOLLEGEWINS ORATORY HONORS i OLIVER Rockefeller; Pastor Church Asks if John Calvin, John Knox and Charles Wes-i ley Will be Denied Privilege of Sitting with Baptists in Heaven. i New York, April '.'). -The, Iter. Cornelius Woellkin, pastor of the wealthy Park Avenue Baptist church often called the Rockefeller church, aroused much discussion among his pnrishoncrs yesterday as a result id' his sermon in which lie criticized some long standing liniidst doc trines as reactionary and urged his congregation to vote to abandon them. lie also defended I he stage anil had a good word for Sir Oliver Dodge, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle anil Christian Science. John D. Rocke feller, Jr., hoard (he sermon. 'Our practise of excluding mem bers of other denominations unless they are baptized again in our rite is out of harmony Willi the spirit which is growing in the churches." Dr. Woolfkin said. "We have al ready opened our communion table 1 1 other Christians and this ropos- ed step follows that, logically. Do vou suppose in Heaven when communion is celebrated John Cal-I of the vin, John Knox, John and Charles j work. Wesley and other great leaders in, Mr. I'M. Capps said that he saw the non Haplist world will bo denied! Hie slorm coming and that il missed the privilege of silling with Ihejbis placn near Ducama about filly Kaplists? We need a greater toler-'yards. He saw the two clouds come niico for Hie various sects, isms and ! loge'lier and heard the roar, us it fads thai are springing- up ahoul j swept by his place. jib" friends of Ihe older churches, j 1 do not. regard them as heretical, i They are the result of a spiritual urge on the, part of people who arc j seeking what lliev think the church ! cannot furnish Diem. "Sir Oliver Dodge is one of the outstanding phsychisls of his gener ation and he is Irving to sincerely and earnestly to lift Ihe veil. So also is ('email Doyle, eminent and high minded man. The healing movement, Christian science and others are practising a function of the church." DAUGHERTY IS BACK AT WORK Washington. April "n. -Returning lo his desk today afler an absence of nearly two mouths in l-'lorii:i and North Carolina recuperating from an illness, Attorney Cene-ral Daitgherty was lire-pared lo take up a number of important mailers at the ih'parliiient of justice upon which be has kepi informed during his abse-nce. TRYING TO ITT MAV I.I I'll IN I ITS'I'IIY Moscow, April "11.--TI10 work of putting into elf eel the- decisions of the- ( 'diii in 11 11 i st Congress- - in sub stance, that Russia endeavor lo ri' habililali' he rself without III" slight est surrender of proletarian dictator ship, and enforce more, vigorous Communistic! control of Industrial end economic life was begun to day. Though Leon Trolzky's thesis the- suhjei'l. of ive-onstruclion heavy industries was approvi'il on of it is not yet certain whether Trol.ky. himself will lake over this work.' It may be left lo ihe present State; machinery, which, will be closely in-; spec te'd by Ihe new Stat" Control ' Commission. i At its lirst. in'.'i-ling today lie com-; mission eli'i led Valerian Kiibicholl' : Chairman nnil propose-d lhai he hoi appointed lo tin- nll-iuiporlanl postj of Commissar of Slate Control. Ku- biehoff, n former cadet in the Czar's Army, is 'il years to Siberia in his old. lie was exiled vou Hi for re-volu-i tionary activities, lie has taken prominent part in the Communist! iind Takes-; Parly and won liokhnra tan to the Soviet Fed era tion. He is noted for bis stern efficiency. Filly ardent Communist.i were elected members of the commission. which will have Ihe right to investi - tato all deiiarlments of the Govern - inent ill an endeavor to bring about what is described as Renin's ideal ism. These commissioners were re lieved of all oilier duties. As dellned in a re-solution printed today the dudes of the Slate Con trol Commission include! merciless punishment of Soviet employes lorjconnly chairman for every case: of snobbishness, no mat-'drive this year of the tor how small, or lions of workers disregarding que - and peasants: in- vesligaling bribery or bureaucracy and selecting Ihe personnel for im portant posts. This plan Premier Lenin dictated from his sick bed months ago in an ieffort us hi! put it, "to save; tin: So- viet Stale from on llu; one hand los- SOU human lives next winter. Till ing communism entirely and on the unfortunate Christian sufferers of other hand from further ruination by the Ilihle lands have nothing but hur inefficiout management of affairs." lap hags and Hour sinks lo keep Tlie resolution embodying M.iout the cold of a winter closely ap Slalin's plan for welding Russia's j proxliuating dial of our New ling (io.lHill.linii non-Russian inhahilau(slu!iil slates. into a United Stales of Russia with- Last winter many women, eliihl otit racial jealousies was printed lo- ren and old men were found who dav. M. St ut in is Commissar for Na tional Minorities and one of the most prominent men of tlie Soviet Government. In addition to proposing a sort of Senate in which all the small re publics and even the national mi Russia Demands Full l erms Lausanne, April 30. An official dispnlth protesting against Russia being arbitrarily kept out of the confer ence was sent to the Near East peace conteronce by M. Vrovasky, the Soviet representative here. He declared such a decision was in direct violation of the torms sent to Russia by Great Britain, France ar.d Italy preceding the first Lausanne conference in 1922. Mr. Vrovasky says Russia cannot rs;cept the ultima tum of the conference that she must sipn the convention fixing the status of the Turkish straits before being ad mitted to the conference. Russia must enter the conference 'on full terms of equality" the Soviet representative inoisia. PEOPLE BUSY REBUILDING HOUSES DESTROYED IN STORM Spectacular Scene as Tw o Clouds Came Together vilh Onrush and Started the Twisting Cyclone Which Started Near the Wayne County Line Southwestern Port cf Wilson Couny, and Dipped Down in Three Pluca.-. Dcsfrjyiivj Property. Thi; people who suffered in Sat urday afternoon's cyclone that sinn ed in the Southwest, corner of Wil son county near Hie Wayne county line and went in a" norlhcrly dir ection Ks'Uiling ils force somewhere in the head of Contentnca Creek are this morning rapidly repairing their homes. .Messrs. .1. W. W. .Matthew and Tomniic I .ii in in were at work this morning, and Mr. Mi-Ran lioyetl, W. R. Davis and others are also at The first sign of deslructioil by Hie. elements was at Ihe home ol .Mr. 1 lenry Davis w ho lives on this side of the big pocosiu just beyond Mr. William Itarn.s who resides about three miles south of Lucamii. Here II look an acre of big pine trees and twisted them ofi the slump and blew lliem down. Not morn than llirco of the trees were left slanding. II next struck Hie premises of Mr. Henry Davis who resides on the farm of Mr. William Haines, and I torn down his dwelling house and I smoke house. Mr. Capps is of Hie I opinion that if thn force of the wind I had nut b'eeu broken by the big uorilies within those- republics, would he equally representee!, (he plan nuiki'H i-oncessions lo thu national feelings of the! Georgians and other peoples In the Southern Mivb'l I i piiblle-s. It is proposed that State business the work of the schools and all Ihe departments of these repub lics ho conducted in the-ir own lan guage anil that the Slate officials he cliosi'ti by I heir own people. II is expected that i-onsiderahle- liln rly will be allowed tln-se Governiuenl., in working out Hn-lr own economic politics ami I'onstituling I heir nation al mililary units. Till! si'henie! for taxing Ihe pea.c ants has not yc-l been worked out delinilely but generally if provide-! for three-lifihs payment in cash and the balance- in produce, with Un likelihood cif the lax amounting to about lib per cent. Kduealional work among the peasants will ho broad ened. Trolley's industrial plan propo.es Ihe cnmpb'lc shutting down of non prolilabli! factories, with concentra tion of work on the productive ones, and the substitution of responsible individual managers for the work men's committees. M A YOI'.'S COI RT Cliflon Oneal was lined for being drunk on Ihe street lo. George! Tanney charged with being j drunk on I whiskey in le street and for having his possession, sentenced n;lo nerve b months on Ihe roads. r run k hdwards was nncit ?;i. for being drunk on Ihe street. ( m;a.n OC T Vol K ( i,ociii-;s CI.OSKTS Housew ives, clean out your clothes 1 closets. Send all availabl warm ! clot hing to Ihe Near East Relief. the battle of Mohammedan-. Save human lives iu against Chrislianily a ism. This is lb jrcreivoil here Irom Colib-ii.. niesage sent to all; - . homes in North Carolina on Ihe eve of the Near East Relief "I'unille Day" by Mrs. E. T. Ramos, Wilson the e-lothing Near East lie - j lief. Those who haven I already sen llicir cusl-off winter clothing lo llu Near East Rellel are as Keel to do si at once. Mrs. Raines Is asking Wilson conn 'key. Jtuh-e tains to contribute' l.lilili pounds of jdelive i ed Hi warm, usable cast-off clothing at this; only regret time. This, it is estimated, will save had drugged themselves lor miles, suffering froc acute rheumatism or pneumonia, simply from lack of clothing. Others whose lives could have been saved by sufficient warm clothing, just froze to death. Dr. IS. C. lirooks, Btato clothing of Equality ll-ecs v.iiii! p,::i' ' of a house i .Mr. Davis' ne also gave been b .Air. : -. an i or i!. : ..tin;! id 'il in w sol iccounl oi' the III: I sign of Ho le neighborhood slorm. slorm of .Mr. is Ilea The 'rimes ar .Morroe (ledum's place which .Mr. Harms. damage is about what staled in ils aflernoou the cdi- tion. Mr. Malillov.'s' less is esl i 11)11 1 '-d at $L',,'iUu.'iu. II t ii r-M-il the southern end of bis dwelling house around from ils former position about ten feet and the northern end of it I liree fe I . anil unroofed il, and look Ihe roof from his tobacco barn. Mr. Toiumie l.ainui lout about SL'.OIHI.iiii. liis stoic was moved eastward three feet 1'rom its former pillars, and bin slock of goods were throw n on 111" Hot. II lore his lo liacco barn all lo pieces and ruined his iniiip' on Iriril. Mr. W. K. Davis lost tobacco oveiiurn- $51)0. nl about was t il l ii- barn alel In ; ; laid" i 1 1 is loss w ii , 1 1 r t wen i dr. .Mi' Lao Do $."ilMi.iio. His tobacco barn esl upside ilown. M r. A lolirose I, uric; lost a barn, and hisfil. linage was ?.'.IHi.mi. Just above Wiggins mill tobacco around Ihe e v clone crossed I r negro woman not il, and injured a rioiisly however. iiri.iaii. .ml He- stale committee, llv anxious lo obtain as are c: lle'ci many a dresses, bl-inkil; garment clot hing wear. I. e-lol h'-s, lllllllTWi sloe-kin:.- pus: i hi" ol coal:', trousers, swinl'is. wool gloves, boots and shoe!;, shopworn . and any heavy warm in which Ihere is still some i i -s , silks. veils, evening high lu-el, -,l shoes,, muslin if, sine,' huts, and silk w i; vi iii:r l-'e.r North and 'I'm- ul.iy, Carolina, fair loliight niilcl b inpi.Tut.iiro, gen- t le w i si' i iy w inil cm';; SON IKH (.11 HI AII Chb-iigo. April .",u. Kmcrson iliiiit'.ii. author, died iu a hospital in Kvnnsloi! to-lay. Mr. Hough was lii: years old mid was taken to tin .hospital last Tli'irsday siitfcrilig from an intestinal obstruction. An opera tion was pe-rforni'-cl Saturday. Ib-arl ami respiratory i (implications cans- rd death. SAYS IX DITNG SIHM I.D AYSVVMK IIARGDS Raleigh. April ,:u. The Wake Count'.- giiiiul jury ought lo investi gate the (har.'S made against ' ( In State I'risim by K. I). Dudding, and if lln-y are found without foundation oimhl. lo Una to i of being Iiiiii him to North Ciiro- wcr charges of slander, public niieaiH '-, declares Caplaiu S. A. A. Cnileil Slates His lollor to the News ic, ( lerk of t he lid Court iu a and Observer. i t:i;n hmi;n iu:as l IU ( I PI 111 AKF.A lle-rlm. April llu. Ihree l-r-ncli railway otiieials hav been killed in ia dynamite out r;igc against a French pa: senge-r train, according to reports M ik.i: i on nor si:vci:n i s JONES ( III VI V ItOOCI.EGGER New Horn, April Ml.- II. Clay Wood. Jones County while man in ; Fedora I Court for his second time as a cl -t'i'MiLi 11 1 this week was given a scud-in c oi IJ in c ti I lis in jail iiikII ord: re-el lo pay a hue of II.imiii when ; found guilly of luaii nine I u ring whis-j ll- nry G. Connor who sentence said thill bis was that be couldn't make the' plllli-lllllellt severer. Woo-l's chances laileel swiftly when il bevy of prohibition eliforceiuenl officers look llu- stand in cession v il 11 details of til rapid sue - complete - toss of his mammoth mnuufaclory neai- his Jones County home, and brought out evidence of his eiwner- hip of the on I tit . His lawyer ad mitted the weakness of Ihe ease be fore the jury took it; nobody was surprised id Hie ve-rdicl. The Jones County man's lirst ap pearance on Ihe distilling charge: was some: six years ago, and Willi his brother 5110.00. he paid lines totalling $10, BRULE IS A SERIOUS MENACE SO SAYS MR. BAILEY There is Only One Way to En- force Order, Declared Mr.; Bailey in an Address at Pitta-, boro today, and that is by Law; If Officers Fail Turn Them Out. Pittsboro, April 3U, "When men singly or in groups lake the law into their own bands they at once be come enemies of the government," declared J. W. llailey of Raleigh in an address at the Pillshoro high hool today. "Putting hoods on their heads and going in groups makes the ! : mailer all the worse. I "No matter what the provocation 'they cannot justify themselves, " said ! .Mr. llailey. "There is but one way to I enforce order and I hat is by law. I If officers fail the only course is lo turn them out. To undertake to do their duty for them is usurpation of , power---it is lawlessness itself. It is no belter than anarchy. "We have had in this state many manifestations of mob law rather ' mob lawlessness lynchings, whip ; pings, intimidations. Those- are all : iii-ls of anarchy. They are di-st rue-live of law ii ml govern men I. Whenever a group of men take lo themselves the- duty of executinii Ihe law or . mn i ii t ;i i n i n I il l hey are T MIEN order anil get awav with ; received twenty dollars a head. Otli in re-volt, to civilization. I ,'r testimony centered about Judge They are overrunning Hie stale and j the law which is their life. Call this evil Ihing 'one hundred per cent A uieri -an is in' il is one hundred per anti-Ainerii-anisni. II. is Turkcyism it is Russianism; it is anarchy. It is Ihe until De-sis of Americanism. No man in his sense's will tolerate! il. Those' citizens who have joined any organization that stands for this sort of thing ought without delay lo repudiate every feature of the or ganization Hint tends to encourage this freedom destroying business. "No one can be unaware of the I lireats to exercise it in politics. Wo this invisible ,w.rnleaso bring a. basket of cats. Ite- told that can idiiliiles thai, do not. cater to govcrn leii'iil by secrei. assault and intimida tion will be beaten by invisible pow ers. This also is unlawful. Whenever 'we l'e-ach the point that candidates for offuo will he- permitted by the ivotei's to pussyfoot em this subject I all is over so far as free government Is e-oiii-erni'il. Tho issue must be made with this evil thing from the i beginning. Kvery candidate for of ( fi-- must he tested with this lost. ; And his position must, ring clear. If he is afraid of or in league, with -.!-icii't groups of or invisible usurpers jof Ihe function of government he; is unlit for plan; or power, be cannot he trusted. A public: oliicer is a nun 'nsler of Ihe law. He cannot he a niin-1 istor of (he law and fe ir or compro-1 liiise with those who laid lo them- Ki-lvos functions of Hie state, anil tin icdiirls without authority from (in-( pi'opie' aoei wiineiiie io'coei ii t.a Dili i y 10 iihi' peopl, for this authority and ac 1 1 (mutability is indispensible to free 1 government." RliYMTDS TO OPI N ciii;iR sn;.TMi;itv II. ,1. Keynobls ami Co.. (he big lohaci'o manufacturers of Winston Salem are' preparing lo begin stem- tiling he large quantily of tobac co I hey have in their plant which is located on Tarborci street ftn the Nor folk ami Southern railroad. , I.OCAI, J'. I', i A.'S PRIiPARING I I OR CONVENTION ! Tin- local T. P. A.'s are preparing lo lake a big delegation to the stale conveiiliou which moots in Rocky Ml. the I nth, I lib and 1 2 Hi of May, and every T. P. A. is urged Id alu-iid. Mr. Mclvin Rogers the local chair man of the membership committee has been hustling, and the member ship of the organization is now above ' l'.ii. .Mr. J. W. Dailey is president of tin- Wilson camp. Mr. J. Leslie Wolfe of Charlotte is the slale president, and Mr. ). C. Criilcldield of Winston-Salem is state Secretary. Mr. K. I. Fleming of I! v. j Mount is prominently mentioned for i .Slate President. BANK EMPLOYES COMING HERE Mr. W. E. Stublis of P.elhaven will arrive he-re next month to take at. bis dudes ns active vke pn-si-ili-nl of Hie Planters Hank. Mr. Stublis was formerly cashier of the Raul, of lldhaveti mot ha hud much valuable experience in banking. Mr. II. A. Drown, formerly nssisl- aiil cashier of die People's Rank and Trust Company of Solum, has ac cepted a position as bookkeeper id the Planters Hank iu Wilson and will enter upon bis duties the lirst of the month. Mr. Crown, who ! comes highly recommended, lakes ' Ihe position left vacant by the resig nation ol Mrs. John Gardner, whin before her recent marriagu wus Miss Louise Curtis. RAN AWAY Will I Tltl' CARNIVAL I. eon rainier, 1.. years of ag son of Mr. Oscar I). Farmer of Nashville, I has disappeared from his home. IfJ is stated that he ran away with West's Bhows which recently visited Wilson. American Ships. May L Sell HE VI Sheriff of Leon County Admits He Received Twenty Dollars .. , ...j for Every Persqn Sent to the Lumber Camp ! Tallaliasso, Pla. April oil. (iov. j lo recommend ! moval from office j rnor Hardy plans lo the senate tin: n oi ( ounty Judge Willis ol I, eon county named in testimony before the joint legislative investigating committee a having- agreed with Sheriff ,l. It. .luii'-a to send vagrants "J the convict lease camp of the Putnam Lumber Co., ut Clara, Flu. it was learned today in an authorita tive quarter. Sheriff Jones was removed by the .senate' last week on recommendation of the (loverni'i' anil as a l'i'suit, of Ihe; investigation into the death at Ihe Clara camp of .Martin of North Dakota. Testimony hi'fore the committee was to tlie effect that the train riders were arrestee! in wholesale numbers and brought before the judge after having bei'ii coerced into pending guilly an?l llieu without formality being sente-iie-i'd to $25 I'm - or three months at the fur which She privale logging camp iff Jones admitted be Willis' alleged excessive.', drinking COMMUNITY DAY NEXT TUESDAY Tuesday will be community work day at. Rock Ridge. Everybody iuter-e-sti-d in the school, is invited to be on hand with a mind to work. The object of the meeting is to clear up a play ground. Speaking will be furnished some lime during the day. Picnic dinner v.-ill bo served, so nii-mber I! e ciate, anu lie present, is invited. Everybody HI III, l A I, SCHOLAR IINHS (TIMOR ti;.t OF SCltll'Tl lll-:s New York, April ".7. An Spanish manuscript, known as the Codex Iluiiliugtonianus Palimpsea-tus-. to a few scholars who saw it, be I'oie: it was locked up in the vaults of the Hispanic: Society of America, lalitli Street and Rroadway, is the subject of it controversy which threatens to break out afresh among biblical scholars who either affirm or deny that the manuscript is one of the earli"st versions of the Hibln and that ii differs radically from the accepted versions of tho scriptures. D was brought here in l'.H)7 alter having been stolen from a monastery in Spain Access lo the ancient, parchment for many months was afforded to Dr. !',. S. Duchanaii, decipherer of many old Latin mnnuscripis whoso work attracted Use attention of officials of Ihe llrilisli Museum us well US stll-(h-nts of old nianuscriplii In tho Uni ted Slii.er. Afler poring over the old volume I for many days. Dr. Buchanan, who i is now teaching at Hie Ardsley Tow i cis preparatory school for boys at j Ardsley, said he discovered that, the i biblical (ext was written em parc-h-i iin-iii from which mole ancient writ ings had been erased. He advanced the claim that tho volume was a genuine palimpsest, anil proceeded to unravel the obliterated text. Another biblical student who slild ied llu- oid Latin manuscript was tin: Rev. Dr. Milo II. Gales, Vicar of tlie Chapd of the- Intercession, on the opposite side of Hroudway from the Hispanic Museum. Dr. Gales is a gnat student of Latin biblical texts, bill made no i nch discovery as that claimed by Dr. Huchanan. At lirst, according to admissions made to friends, he was inclined to feel chargrilled because such un import- (Kscoveiy naei ueen overtooKed ir. nniiseii. nut laier no cuiingen his mind when a group of ecclesias - lu-al scholars made it plain that I hey took no slock in (he. alleged discovery by Dr. ISiichannn. "The manuscript of tin: Western le-xl l of Hie Ilihle) thai have: come lo light have all been corrected, more or less thoroughly, into agreement with the Vulgale and Alexandrian (ext.:," said Dr. Ruehunnn. in an nr - tide cm liis discovery contributed to the llihliolhoca Sacra iu l!il7. "The Codex IliintimUoiiianus, on the oilier hand, contains in ils tirst copies a text altogether independent of the: Vulgale. This constitutes ils su- preme value, and gives it the eminence over all oilier texts prc thal have yet been discovered." According to Dr. Riichanaii, the obliterated text was inscribed pro bably iu die Sixlh Century'. From cer tain peculiarities of the older tcxl, which Wits not entirely erased and which is called the underscriiil , he explained that he was able to trace llio source! of the text lo a Biblical i version of die First or Seco. d Cen tury. COUNTY IUDGE IS XT TO LOSE JO Japan's tetxilo exports in wero valued al more than 000,000. 11121 $200,- Liquor At Sea UPSETS FORMER RULING Supreme Court Held That American and Foreign Ships Could be Prohibited from Cringing Liquor Stocks Into American Ports, But Bever ages May be Sold Outside the Three Mile Limit; Dis senting Opinion is Handed Down. Washington, April :. 'flip rul- in it of Attorney General Diiugherty against the serving of liquor on American shins cm the high seas was overturned today by the Supremo Court which lichl at the Same tune however that the ban prohibiting both American and foreign ships from bringing liquor storks into Anii-ilcim ports is legal and t-nforc-ible. The court held that they prohibi tion amendment could not legally be applied to prevent American ships i from selling hcvorugos when they jure outside American lerrltoi-lal wa iters. To that extent the ruling re 5 versed the dec ision by Federal Judge) . Maud in New York. Wiilun the three mile limit the court lounil an en tirely different situation obtained. Sustaining the decision taken by Judge Hand the decision declared it illegal for American or foreign ships to lii-liig to American ports or wa ters liquor scaled in bond for the use of passengers cm outgoing voyages. The decision regarded by the fed eral government, as one of the most important yet handed down in re gard to prohibition enforcement was read by Justice! Van Dcveuia. Jus tice Mi-Reynolds and Southerlaud dissented. Justice Southerlaud delivered a dissenting opinion explaining that ho agreed thai American ships can not have aboard intoxicating liquor in American territorial waters but believes prohibition Bhould not be applied to foreign shins. lXDDIt HARDY GOING TO CAX AI.. " ... Kiuston, April So. Elder L. II. Hardy, pastor of the Primitive Bap tist church here, is to start a pll indentlKrimaRe which will absent him from ,nis stam iittio congregation in Kina- lon and elsewhere. In eastern Caro lina until July. Elder Hardy is go ing to Canada. On tho way to and from here will visit, far-flung congre gations of his brethren in the statea. He will "visit around Canada" some weeks. Tho minister is 70 years of age, but liis health amply justifies his undertaking. Kbler Hardy, whose home is at Atlantic, N. ('., will speak at tho Primitive liaptist church iu Wilson Thursday evening. Elder Hardy has a host of friends in Wilson. KENTUCKY WOMAN If Guilty Person is Apprehend ed They Will be Prosecuted on a Double Murder Charge; Unborn Child Perished with Mother. Padin-ah, Ky., April 3n, Mrs. Ito sctla Daugherly Warren, 34, was in stantly killed early today in a dyna- jtnite explosion, which wrecked her home here. Her body was mangled. j Her three children escaped injury. An arrest, in the case is expected mo- ! mentiirily. j A woman is be lieved to have plan ted thu explosive. Authorities attri j bided insane jealously as the cause jof the blast and are working on sev ieral clues pointing to an immediate I arrest. Tho cluirgo was placed at itlie corner of the from room direct- : u- 11li- . t,,i nn which m wr. rcn Kll,,,t- The three children who ; were asleep in an adjoining room miraculously escaped death. Mrs. Warren's husband was at j work at the time of the explosion. i It was saiel the person guilty of the I crime, will be prosecuted on a double j murder charge if apprehended. With ' Mrs- Will tl" l'cnshed her unborn j'1"'1'- i PROGRAM roi: THE LVt.MNOl. The George lluckui-y So ciety of thu l'lrst ChrlsHu.il church will meet lit Mut church this evening ut eight o'clock. I'logi-aiii at Milsoii theater, Constance- Talnuidge ia "Ka-st is West;" The fuiuous Texas duo musical artists; two reel comedy "lluzd from Holly- wood." Program ut l'riucess thea- . lor, Alice- lirudy i" "The Hoi- low of Her lluud;'t "Around the world in Eighteen Days" (eului'iiig Win. Desmond. EXPLOSION KILLED Ii ; K v. :'',1
The Wilson Times (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 1, 1923, edition 1
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