Newspapers / The Daily Southerner (Tarboro, … / Oct. 19, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
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READ SOUTHERNER WANT ADS FOR A BARGAINUSE SOUTHERNER WANT ADS FOE QUICK RETURNS. LOCAL COTTON 22 CENTS VOL. 43. NO. 200 ASSOCIATED PRESS TARBORO, N. C THURSDAY, OCT. 19. 1922. ALL THE LOCAL NEWS . Injunctions FIRST ROUND TO CO-OPS Judge Daniels Cive His Decision at Plymouth Yesterday Afternoon. Association Members Elated. PREMIER The Co-ops Win Out L L O Y ll.rr.ll and Jone, Perma- I ) II J R 1 1 ITflTinM flfjG E OR GE nently Restraned 1-rom Sell- 1 1 L. I lil U I L. I I It I lUEa Ul p T I AT ing Their Tobacco Outside .-.-.-.p nn 10111 TP K ll b I Kj IN 5 1 ne Association. SITE'S CRIPPLES By NELL BATTLE LEWIS Raleigh, Oct. 19. so (Special to the Southerner) Raleigh, N. C, Oct. 18. The in junction restraining the two mem bers of the Tri-State Tobacco Grow ers Cooperative Association from selling to outsiders were Wednesday afternoon ordered continued by Judge. Frank Daniels in substantially the same form as the temporary in junctions, which were secured by . the Cooperatives several weeks ago. Although 4 badly crippled in both lees from par alysis that he is obliged to crawl or ie pushed about in a wheel chair, and with partial paralysis of the lefi, band and arm, young mountin eer of his state is, never! leloss, at present an intrusted and :inrd-work-ing cobbler, makinggood at his vo cation. This is the fortunate result of re habilitation accomplished by the Department of Vocational Rehabili tation o fthe State Board of Educa tion. Clippie Census Week, to be The order was signed by Judge , D!!,.,.vod October 30th through No- , Daniels at Plymouth, where he is j .vpmue, 4th has been instituted by holding court this week. Me heard Rehabilitation Department in the cases argue at length by oppos- j conjllnctirm with the Bureau of Child ' ing counsel at a hearing in Nash -Welfare in order that many other County last week, but withheld his (Hs-bU"l persons in North Carolina may be equally benefitted and may be rendered productive units of so-1 ely rr.ther than drags upon their communities. On the records of the department of oVcational eRhabiulation there are many cases similar to that of the young paralytic who became a: decision until today. Z. A. Harrell, an Edgecombe coun ty farmer and W. T. .Tones, a Xash county farmer, both of whom sold tobacco outside of the association, under the order are permanently re strained from selling their tobacco outside of the association. The suits were instituted by the oCopcratives 'cobbler. From guarding convicts on London, Oct. 19. The Lloyd George Coalition received its death blow at the hands of the Conservative Partj', When the Conservative Members of the House of Commons and the gov ernment ministers votei! 1S6 o 87 to appeal to the country as a Conservative Party. This creates a situation, the greatest political confusion and uncertainty the country has known fcr many years. Th'' next mov now certain to V mndc wi't ;he rcsigna ton of Ausl-;n C' mberlain ard bis p'.oti'ites and the re movals of Lords Balfour and Birkenhead from the Cabinet. It is expected that Premier Lloy! George will then present bis resignation to the King and will r.dvise his Majesty to sum mon the Conservative leader to form a government. i mmmm rniiRTi nay of thf Mammu rk ua s i uuisnu uiu ;u j u iuuiii.il ui.j ui t m-i a" jl Hjr&&Vv UCUWO TO STAND .TRMPERIGAN . LEGIBB'SjAt Both The Warehouse IS (By The Associated Press) Xew Orleans, Oct. I'.l. Today, the fouri flay of the National Con vention of the American Legion, was marked by the arrival of the com mander of Hie American Kxpodi- (By The Associated Press) St. Joseph, Mich., Oct. Hi. Twenty-one alleged Communists, arrested as a 'Vesult of a raid on a meeting j held in the sand hills twenty miles! south of here last August, will be arranged here tomorrow, charged with violating the Michigan anti-syndicalism law.' Among the prisoners are W. Z. 'Homy forces, Ceneral John J. res Foster, leader of the 191!) steel strike! filing-, who' reached here from Wash Charles Kuthenberg, executive sec- ingtnn after a day spent in Atlanta, rotary of the Workers Party, legal Tomorrow the Legion will select branch of the underground Commun- a siiocc --sspr to Han ford ist organisation in this cou'-try an I Alvin M. Owsley of Texas, appear William F. Dunn, Worker's party t obe the outstanding candidate. candidate for governor of New York Foster has denied that he attended the meeting. Bar-el ; of Communist literature d.icumer.ts end maru ripis will be Tfl 111 II H H fl R fl t by O. I.. Smith. F T ? K . ...... S W 1 3 5EUII assistant auorney gencn: 11 me!twe1BoI El S I i Thousands of Pounds of the Golden Weed Rolling in all Thts Morning. Probably the Biggest Breaks of the Season. who have won a complete victory in the first round of the legal battle establishing the forcibility of the membership contract. I WAR MEWiQRiAL IS A USEFUL HIGHWAY IS a county read to keens books for one of the largest power cmpanies in the south is a big step, but K is one which has been successfully taken by cue Forest with the aid of the Department. The accidental discharge of the shot gun with which he herded men in ; ' striped uniforms deprived .BV,r- est of his left rm and his means of livelihood. - Five, months after the (By Thcf Associated Press) Pittsburgh, Oct. : 9. Pittsburgh ! accident with the aid of the Depart- I ment of Vocational Rehabilitation, F7.re.st entered a business college, has' officially dedicated a $2,200,000 ; where, at tne bead of n:s r!a.., ne memorial to its sons and daughters ,,... , , ' , successfully completed a course r.. who served in the world war. : . , , . fii.ir : ooo,;KeeMo. iiiimi'in'i i.y .....p. LATER London, Oct. 19. The Cov ernment of Premier Lloyd George resigned this afternoon. King George, who has been on a holiday at Sandringham has returned to London. It is expected that Lloyd King late today. Austen Cham Gecre will be received by the berlain and other Cabinet Mem bers conferred with the Pre mier immediately after ' the Unionist meeting. educe I in cour of Miehi gan. who is in charge of the 'prose cution. Wb"n PiheriiT Bridgeman, his dep uties and federal agents swooped hours of August, 22, all of the para d'iw,i on the meeting i-i the early phenalia of the alleged national Communist convention had disappear od, .but .-. cGiinti-y boy who saw some men buiying several barrels in the and four typewriters, a duplicating woods led the raiders to the spot. 1.11 FHES I ! IVi EI ("Speci.-"d Correspondence) Chapel Hill. Oct. lib -There is a lot of unusually good football ma terial in the eleven which is to rep resent the University when thr Car olina freshmen go up against- the Maryland freshmen in Wash'ngton next Saturday. Despite, the fact that the main in terest here now is centered in the Carolina-State College game on ! machh-e, a halfdozen leather brief j Thursday, thee is considerable in-l jcases, between seventy and eighty , tercst remaining for the freshmen i -portfolios of papers, piles of print-, team. And after Thursday it will of the stage, for the has no game Saturday. i .-si-in.-ni team head coach is ITARBOROHIGHSTO PLIIIISI1 HE GROUMDSr: The memorila is a municipal high way called The Boulevard of the Allie. It extends from the business section to the Oakland district. proximately two miles. j the completion of his course He se I cured Employment with a large light land nown company. Today he is a '''"j. happy, self-supporting c?;izen, fill ed matter and stationery and other alleged Communist property were re covered. Federal agents, specialists in rad- j ieal matters, have been working for weeks at the jail here classifying the documents and questioning elev er. of 4-hr prisoners who were unable to raise the $10,000 bonds required, j The oChimunUt Party of America. according to its program and con stitution, -dozens of copies of which I j were -ei'ed, is an. "underground, il l legal organization," officially repre-i sen ting, the Russian Soviets in. this) ountry, nd formed for tithe pur-1 I pose of "systematically and pe rsist-! hold th-' cente var. l Th Alexander, who was an all-Amori-can en when he pl.i i I or: Washing ton and Jefferson and who coacln-d I Bingham lastyear. eil is much ploai-Al with-' the quaiily of men he is working with. They showed good rapr.i'it.v in a scrimmage with the scrubs the other day. A number, of the men on the squad ! themselves. Xor'h Carolinians. It is! are from .Virginia' schools, though no secret- that the presence here 'of Boh Fcii.cr, formerly a coach at the-e schools, has had something -to do with drawing players here. They . . . i . - 1. : i . e . 1... ri.,. ..l-...,! i d,n einiv propagaung tne inea hi ,oc ol. f 'inevitability of and necessity for vio-1 oecame auacneu to n.in aou ;o,eo , afternoon, !1nfc "-volution." - game Bi-yn of football l be Park next Friday a nine hhigiier sphere of use- j between the Tarboro Hi, School I 'By the use of forse," the program Vhe.i city officials discussed Ultm fueP8 in bis community than he , ),oys :lnf! the team from Warsaw. j says, the proletariat will destroy "the for a suitable memorial,, public opin-j pH(ir to hjs ' help from the Re-' r,.m what we are able to learn j machinery of the bourgeois State and ion was accepted as favoring a fvn- hai,nitation eDpartment. ; the home team hs been greatly cstablUhproletarian dictatorship bas- erous appropriation for any monu- plu.j,ur Cripple Census Week this strengthened and will put up a game j oil on. Soviet power." ment which might perform valuable j dpojirtmcnt will seek out the disabled ; Wfn .lVfrt!i the price of admission Under the sub-head-of mass actio:; public service, and in this way Per- j ,,,.,1, Carolina in order that with j The home boys say that cannot petuate the effort of Pittsburgh's ; ai,j of training and necessary I pay f 00tball to empty seats, and service men and women. I the idc.i of being Where he was. i llraswcdl. of Hocky Mount, a tackle. At the time the city faced a ser ious problem. A, tremendous amount of automobile traffic between the residential sections and the business district was compelled to use a sin gle boulevard. Insistent demand for a second ar tery of 'ravel, punctuated by hun dreds of accidents minor and fatal woman may overome the handicap caused the city council to decide' 0f his disability, and is thus usually Aip the boulevard-memorial. ( transferred from a helpless, deject- v ThB bi,rhwav built chieflv of con- ed, and discouraged person, depend- Bppliances they j may be restored to ; thoy ar'" asking the home people to usefulness and content. The De- j,jve them a good audience, partment of Vocational Rehabilita- ; : tion not only provides training, but helps the physically hndicapped per son to- find suitable employment. By being launched into a vocation for which he has been fitted and at which he can succeed the disabled man or "The revolutionary epoch crcte, is forty feet wide. Construc tion was begun in September, 1921. Starting at Grant street and Second Avenu, the boulevarc) stretches up a hill to the Bluff and follows the Bluff to Forbes street and Craft Ave nue. An extensive system of re taining wall construction was neces sary. ; There are no streets crossing; the Boulevard proper, and officials expect that early morning and late affer ent upon friends or society for a living, to a self-supporting, self-re-spictinjt citizen, happy in the know ledge that he is busy and useful in the affairs of life. Eligibility for the benefits of the Vocational Rehabilitation Act is bas ed on disability, vocational handicap, feasibility of training, age and res idence. Those eligible must be to tally o partially incapacitated for remunerative occupation. The pro LIFE FOR A LIFE II! TO BE DEMANDED noon traffic problems in the down- visions of the act do not apply to aged, blind or helpless persons re quiring permanent custodial care, to the epileptic or feeble-minded. The town sections, will be eased consid erably. Last month 32 persons were killed in traffic accidents in Pittsburgh and the fatality record during the sum mer averaged 25 per cent. Baseball and tennis are the nation al sports of Japan. upon ; which the world has now entered forces the proletariat to resort to militant "methods mass action, lead ing to direct collision with the bour geois sUte. Mass action culminates in armed- insurrection and .civil "war. Mass action is the proletarian revolt against the oppression of the capital ist class It develops from spon- ' taneous activities of the workers (By The Associated Press) massed in large industries. Among - Los Angeles, Oct; 19. Life for a its initial manifestations are ms life, it was learned from the riis- strikes and mass "demonstrations-," trict attorney's office, will be de- While the federal agents have- de manded by the State at the trial of - c;ner t0-make, public the entire list Mi's. Clara Phillips for the murder. 0f 70 or 80 delegates who attended of Mrs. Alberta Tremaine Meadows, 1 tne seCret conference in the woods, a twenty -year-old widow. The trial 1 ;t has been reported that one of opens heTe tomorrow. j the delegates was an emissary from arrived in the ptaved i-,t Wondberry For- ! est -did also DeviM of Oxford and I Gold of Greensboro, both backs, I Highsiiiith of Fay't'eviili , a t ickle, and Griffin of . Goldsboro, a back, (were at 'he Fisbhurne school in Vir ginia. Nash .of Tarboro, an end, was at the Episcopal High School. Five men from the Asheville High School are oil the squad. Char lotte has four, Greensboro three, New Bern two, Fayetteville one be sides Highsmith, Tarboro two besides Nash and Raleigh two. 'Ail but Mrs. Jacksie Daniels Thrash Mor rison handed tn the Southerner cer tain resolutions that were passed by the State V. D. C. Convention la.-l week in Wilmington. Thes" resolutions were presenteil McXiiler. I" ''n(' North Carolina U. D. C. in convention in connection with the rc t port from the Jelfcrson Davis High way Committee of which Mrs. Mor rison is the State director. It is the intention of the IT. I). C. to have the State Highway Commis sion designate the route as the Jef- ferson Davis Highway. The efforts of Airs. Morrison and her committee- are to be commend ed and v.'e hope that this resolution will bear fruit worthy of the nanii that is suggested by I he committee. The following is a opy of the resolutions as passed: Be it resolved: Whereas to further honor the I name ot that great statesman and soldier, whose memory should be en 1 graved on the hearts of all true sons of the south, the N. C. Divsion U. D. C, request sthe State Highway Com- j mission of North Carolina to desig- note the route and officially recom j mend (he name of same to be "The j Jeffersim.. Davis Highway" to the State l egislature. (2). Resolved: That a copy of this resolution be I se?it this honorable body with the ! eirnc t Vittes(t tn;ii'"itf,be acted' upon j at it s t-( Nt r.ie;-ting. (.'SI.. Resolved: Thai the House of Representatives and the cSnate, concurring- here,- ap prove the action ot the Male Itign way Commission in -designating and naming the North Carolina route of the Jei'orson Davis Highway. (41. Resolved: That a copy of these resolutions be sent each chapter of the N. ('. Di vision requesting it to Use its in fluence with its respective county representatives in the Legislature that this may-be accomplished. Eispectfuliy submitted, Jacksie Daniel Thrash Morrison, State Director-Jefferson Davis High way Committee. HOUSES OVERFLOWING Tobacco From All Sections of Edgecombe and Neighbor ing Counties- three men on the squad are North Carolinians. The heaviest- candi-1 date is Shields of Huntersville, who weighs 211 pounds. EMERGEMGT Hi FEHENCEMLED i Moscow who had law. ' Beneficiaries are not limited as to age or sex. Children under applicant must have been a bona! sixteen -are not eligible for rehabil fide resident of the State of North I itation, but their cases will be re- Carolina at the time his disability was incurred or have lived in the State at least one year prior to the time of application for aid. Disa- bility tired not have been incurred j United States only a few days be during or from employment. The . forp the convention, man ,or woman who is injured by an j Kixtpen men WCPe rrwted in the accident occurring in the home or ! niidnight raid. Foster and two other on the street, or the person who has W4.rp erm)ito(1 frohl Chicago, and been crpipled from childhood are j two more were arrested in New York, fully entitled to the benefits of the The defendants, with the exception of Foster, will be represented by Sybrant Wesselims of Grand Rapids. Foster has retained Clarence Dar row. well known Chicago labor at torney, to defend him. ferred to the Bureau of Child WelJ fare which will investigate them in order to secure treatment wherever possible. Every Sunday newspaper in Lon don is owned by peersj (By The Associated Press) v London, Oct. 19. The announce ment made that the National Union ist Association had issued a summons for an emergency conference drop ped with a bang into the troubled arena and made everybody jump. (None seems to have been more troubled than the government min isters who gathered in Downing street to discuss this sensational development. Ninety per cent of all the mo tion picture films shown in Australia are United States- productions D ARROWHO WELL WEDDING The old historic Calvary Episcopal Church of Tarboro Was the scene of another beautiful wedding last j night at 8 :,'!0 when Mr. William Car ! tor Darrow of Rocky Mount and Miss Hattie Sherrod Howell of Tar boro weie united in the Holy bonds of Matrimony with Rev. Bertram Brown and Rev. Mr. Hale officiating at the ceremony. The bride wore a wedding gown of white duchess satin, embroider ed in pearls, and with train. Adding to the beautiful effect of the gown, she carried an exquisite bouquet of orchids and valley lilies. She was attended by her sister, Miss Maggie Staton Howell, who wore a lovely 'evening gown of electric blue se quins, and who carried an arm full of American Beuty roses. As the bride entered the church with her father, : she was preceded by her nephew, Master Biscoe How ell, Jr., who carried the w-edding ring in the heart of a lily, and who wore a white embroidered suit, of satin.i The bride is the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Britton Brinkley! Howell of Edgecombe county and isj from one of the oldest and best known families iri North Carolina. Miss Howell is a charming and love-! Never before this season lia there been such a crowd of wagons and carts in Tobacco Town as was seen there this morning. Tcifms were coming in late yester day afternoon and all the morning the farmers were crowding to the warehouses to get their products on the floor. Both the Clark's and the Farmers' Houses were scenes of activities and the managers and floor men were kepts as busy as bees getting things ready for the sales. The folks came so thick and fast this morning, that at one time there were as many wogans and carts on the outside of the warehouses as there- were on the inside, and, the busiest place in Tarboro today was down in Tobacco Town. The weather had turned off cool and today was an ideal day for the sales. . '.;':.,' Dan Taylor, Haywood Foxhall, Alphin and Sugg, were in a strain today yet they had a broad smile on their faces, as they were here and there, greeting their patrons with a handshake and hi, Id inn- them- welcome to Tobacco Town. , hti,:i ; ls.' ' ir. , - -. ; inntwm-,v i'tins; ?f;nrr everyooay was in a rush, yet the unloading and weighing and placing on the floors were carried on a most orderly' and businesslike manner. . 150,000 Pounds of Tobacco In conversation with one of the warehousemen, the Southerner was informed that there were on the mar-. Icets here today, 130,0.00 pounds of : tobacc 1. The first sale began' at the Far mers at eleven oVlock and at midday it looked as if it would be late in the day before all the sales would be over. TU.. ..... were satisfactory jt al land today's sales of tobacco will go down in his tory as a record breaker ': ly character and has a host of friends to wish her happiness. The groom, who is the traffic man ager of the Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Company, is the eldest sop of Mr. W. B.. Darrow, for many years a prominent official with the ' Atlantic Coast Line railroad. SincJ- lakeii an acrive. pan in tne religious work of the chprch and in the mu sical wi.rld. Mr. J. Richard Higgles, Jr., of Washington, D. , C., acted as best . man, Mr. Riggles is a member of the Committee on Claims' in the of fice of the Solicitor of Internal Rev enue, Washington. The music was rendered by the full vested choir of the church, with Mrs. George Pennington at the or gan. The ushers were Messrs. Sam Jenkins, Rawls. Howard, Brinkley Howell of Tarboro, and Mr. Frank Spruill, Jr., of Rocky Mount. The wedding ceremony was attended by a large gathering of friends and out-of-town, guesi" .yJIr. and Mrs. IS Darrow left lum ately after the ceremony on a private car for an extended honeymoon in the north. Immediately preceding the cere mony, Mr. and Mrs. Britton Brink ley Howell gave a delightful buffet supper to the members of the wed ding party and their out-of-town guests. ' ' ' . ' ' -, I ---it'l.
The Daily Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
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Oct. 19, 1922, edition 1
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