YEATHUrt Fair to: Aght and Sun- day. Moderate tempera- ture. Gentle to moderate N. and N. E. winds. CIRCULATION Friday 1,726 Copies VOL. XII. FINAL EDITION ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 4, 1922 FOUR PAGES NO. 2G3 N - : rv : 7 'ft Thus Lloyd Geor Characterizes Bonar Law's Tranquility Be fore An Audience Of Three Thousand London, Nov. 4 (By The As sociated Press) A rousing re ception was given Lloyd George's speech by three thou sand today, when he answered Bonar Law's description of him as a drummer boy by declaring he was not ashamed of the characterization, asserting that Germany lost the war because she had no drummer boy. He declared Bonar Law's -watchword of "tranquility" 'was not policy but a yawn. London, Nov. 4 (By The As sociated Press) All London waited today to see if Lloyd George at the eleventh hour -would release a host of candi dates to fulfill his threat to spread war against the Con - servatives who overthrew him Lloyd George is said to have thirty new candidates ready, putting the total in the field nearly two hundred. The for mer premier is to speak here today, at which time he is ex pected to make his position dear. Bonar Law Speaks Leeds, Eng., Nov. 4 (By The Associated 'Press) Premier Bonar Law addressing an audi ence of three thousand here to- lay said the government and party supporting it are not hostile. to the Irish treaty. He declared 'that the view of the Unionist- .party was that the treaty be" given a fair trial. PROHIBITION IN ICELAND IS CALLED MERE SHAM Copenhagen, Nov. 4 (By The As sociated Press) Prohibition In Ice land has gradually come to be a mere sham, according to the Lord Mayor Zimsen, of Reykjavik, the chief city of the Island. In an Interview the Lord Mayor Is quoted as saying: "Iceland is no longer a prohibition country. Wines of 21 per cent alco liol may now be brought In. Al though the Spanish commercial treaty, which provides for the Im portation of wines, is unpopular with many people as having killed prohi bition, It Is only fair to mention that the prohibition, act worked satisfac torily only the first two years. Af terwards smuggling and home-brew-. Ing practically made the law non xistent." VENI2ELOS HAD VERY MYSTERIOUS SECRETARY London, Nov. 4 (By The Associ ated Press) M. Venlzelos, former Greek premier, who is Just now very much in the public eye and Is some thing of a mystery to the British pub lic, has an equally mysterious young secretary, a tall dark youth named Andrea Constantino Mlchelopoulos. He was an undergraduate at Orhl College, Oxford, until a few montlis ago, always Immaculately dressed and a brilliant scholar. His studies, "however, did not prevent his partici pation In politics, and he frequently obtained permission to spend a night away from college ostensibly on do mestic affairs. It has since transpir ed, however, that such trips included flying to Paris by aeroplane and re turning the following day. Mlchelopoulos left Oxford a few weeks before the Tlno coup, but ar rived in Greece only In timo to es cape on board Venlzelos private yacht. Before coming to Oxford he had been civil governor of Lemnos, prefect of Eastern Macedonl, and had served in the Creek Army. NEW P.VTO'l I.IVKRKIDK ! v. i , new pantor of r'u'rrh, ,nn ar- r ! i r John K. Shields 1 Senator John K. Shields of Ten nessee has been mentioned by Pre ident Harding as Associate Judge of the United States Supreme Court; to succed Justice William R. Day. who has resigned. Senator Shields is a Democrat and the first southerner to be appointed to the Supreme Court. SELBV HARXEY WINS IX DRAWING CONTEST Selby Harney of Edenton, son of Mrs. T. S. Harney of Elizabeth City, won the first prize in the Virginia Pilot's "Uncle Josh" drawing con test, with over 800 contestants In the race. .Mr. Harney's drawing, it is said, was so excellent that It won In stantaneously and unanimously. t Is to appear In Sunday's Virginia Pilot. Elizabeth City High Defeats Great Bridge The game was a one-sided affair, and interest could not be maintained inter-scholastic game of the season by the score of 48 to 0. The game was a one-sided affair. and interest could not be maintained after the first few minutes of play, The visitors lacked spirit, and made only two or three first downs in the whole game. The main feature of interest was the way Elizabeth City walked over the visiting aggregation. Prospects seem bright for a highly successful season. From one standpoint Elizabeth City had hard luck. Despite the one Bidedness of the game and the ease with which Elizabeth City carried everything its own way, one of the players, Zack Owens, suffered a broken collar bone. Uibingten Beys Stranded At Chicago Chicago, Nov. 4 (By The Associ ated Press) Samuel Reeves, aged twenty, and R. P. McClammy, of Wil mington, North Carolina, are strand ed here today after they said they had hiked from Wilmington to Los Angeles and back to Chicago. They said they had telegraphed their par ents for funds to return home. :3 r.!:ryr.!cSvincy fcsngThs Arrested Dublin, Nov. 4 (By The Associated Press) Miss Mary MacSwiney was among several arrested in her home here today after a pitched battle be- tween opponents and national army li f " I ii v ,-4 troops who presumably were seeking ji have noticed that I don't remem to arrest Eamon De Valera, reported , ber having seen in any other city of to be hiding in this city. A search this size is the absence of a play- failed leader. to reveal the Republican Insurrcctirn On The Iclwiid Of S Paris, Nov. 4 (By The Associated Press) Insurrection has broken out in the island of Samoa, off Smyrna coast of Asia Minor, according to ad vices. The rebels are demanding an autonomous government for lalanri CrppV trnnni fiava YiAOn called out to suppress the outbreak. vim. nir.v ri, ini.t. ariirwYi. HAS HALLOWE'EN PARTY Kitty Hawk, Nov. 1. On Tuesday night, October 31, a Hallowe'en party was given at Kill Devil Hill FrV,ool. Games were played, fortunes t ' 1, r-1 refreshments were sold, tn dollars, will " the school. i ; - (, t T-2 Fcrccd To f,l:ke Step . Dayton, Ohio, Nov. 4 (By Associated Press) Major Bans, commandant at McCook Field, at ten o'clock this morning re ceived a telegram from Lieutenant Kelly, one of the pilots cn the mono-pkne.T-2, attempting to cross the continent with out a rtop, saying that the plane landed near Indian apolis. The telegram said the radiator sprung a leak four hundred miles out of San Diego and that the tanks were drained of gasoline when the plane was fciced to land. Kiwanians Enjoy ll?llove'cn Banquet Dr. Tom plenum, Speaker Of Evening, Urges Need Of Playground In Elizabeth City The regular luncheon on Friday night of the Kiwanis Club turned out to be their celebration of the Hal lowe'en season as well. The banquet room of the Southern Hotel was very tastefully decorated with a myriad of paper pumpkins and black cats. The lights were sub dued by paper coverings. In the center of the floor stood the caldron of the witches, a very large kettle hung on plow chains from a tripod of weather beaten boughs appearing to simmer over a glowing fire of wood coals. Placed upon the top of the tripod was the large illum inated insigna of the Ktwanls Club, the big drumwlth the "K" in It. The meeting was opened with a vociferous rendition of the hymn, "America," followed by the invoca tion by a special guest, Dr. Temple man. The evening was filled with stunts and music, most of the music being furnished by the quartet com posed of Fatty Blades, Harry Kra mer, Roy Simmons and "Long Dis tance" Woodley. Two new members were admitted to the Kiwanis Club, E. L. Sawyer, clerk of the court, and A. B. Combs, principal of the High School. E. L. Sawyer was presented by the club with a beautiful basket with a hinged lid that he was instructed to open before dinner proceeded and when he did there emerged from that basket an artificial snake about six feet long and three inches in diameter. It was one of the times In his life when Mr. Sawyer was startled. The most enjoyable stunt of the evening was the depleting of the witches caldron scene from Shakes peare's Macbeth. The actors swath ed in sheets marched mournfully around the caldron while they chanted Shakespeare's never forgot ten "Bubble, Bubble, Boiling Trouble." The president, upon notifying the membership that election of officers , jngs secured a yield per acre of 1618 would take place on December 8th, pounds of seed cotton from the dust was given a rising ovation when Cam ed area and 1281 from the undusted. Melick proposed a motion that It be j This Is an increase of 337 pounds unlawful for anyone to vote for presi-j with a value of $23.59. McLauren dent, any other than Parson Myers. Gibson secured 377 pounds more of Dr. Templeman, the speaker of the8eed cotton from his dusted plots evening, said In part, "I have be- ( than from the undusted with only come very fond of Elizabeth City but j the first picking reported. This has there Is one thing that I hold agalnsj I a value of $26.39. Honeysucker it, and that is her attitude towards , gained 206 pounds of seed cotton her boys and girls. One thing that i per acre by dusting with only two ground. Only today I saw a car piled no aeainst a telegraph pole because the driver took that method rather than strike several children that were playing in the street with their toy wagon. The effort to secure a playground for the child In Elizabeth City would be a noble manner of ex pending some of the energies of the Kiwanis Club." At the end of the meeting the Weatherly Candy Company's factory, the sweetest place in Elizabeth City, the,was visited by the club, where they were shown macmnes inai mane me ! maous amount of candy that the I Weatherly company turns out. The I entire working force of the factory ; Ben KePt on ln onle,r l u strate to the Kiwanis Club the ( method by which the candy was made and many expressions were heard of '. the courtesy of the hosts. Feeling ; that a good Kiwanian should know his home town's Industries, the club bei'ans to visit systematically th va - i' ' "-y plants of t' f "v. The Humble Youpon Rising In Society In li(U;i-rs l.oukh Like A 1 1 ijli -brow And Spells lis Name For First Time "Youpon, packed by the American i"e i t'oip. ny of Avon, X. (V is the imposing label on a sum pie package of this product which Pat and Ray Twiddy found at the store of J. B. Flora & Company, wholesalers, one day, and took to their store on l'o 11 dextrr street us a curiosity. The pound package is supposed to sell for 25 cents, but Twiddy's Gro cery has sold "Youpon" for years in bulk at ten cents a pound. Those who weren't boin and bred here perhaps do not know what Youpon is. Mr. Twiddy says that he never saw the word spelled l.jfore mrt has no idea whether it is spelled right or wrong. Supposedly it Is an Indian name and the white people learned the use of this tea from the Indians long ago. Many drink it in stead of tea, because they say it cheers as well as the regular kind without inebriating; others drink it because it Is supposed to possess medicinal qualities. It is the dried leaf from a small tree, and Youpon is much coarser than the tea leaf. Brewed and Berved to one not fa miliar with the beverage, it would appear a kind of inferior tea, that's all. After all, why not pack "Youpon" and sell it for a profit? Other goods are retailed the same way. But Mr. Twiddy wonders who will buy it. He doesn't think the North ern people are well enough acquaint ed with it, and he knows the local trade will prefer it In bulk at ten cents a pound. ' The Advance has not yet been able to learn who the American Tea Com pany of Avon is, but it's an Inter-1 esting story, of which there doubtless be more to tell later. will Cottcn Dusting Will Control Boll Weevil Raleigh, Nov. 4 Demonstrations conducted in Scotland County by the Division of Entomology of theAgri cultural Experiment Station show that the boll weevil can be controlled by dusting with calcium arsenate, reports Mr. Franklin Sherman, Mr. Sherman finds that where instruc tions given by the field members of his organization were closely follow ed good yields of seed cotton were secured. One of the cooperating farmers making the test was Z. V. Pate who dusted b!x times. From these pickings, Mr. Pate secured 1883 pounds of seed cotton per acre against 1481 pounds from the acre not dusted. This was a gain of 402 pounds per acre with a value of $40.20 for the long staple cotton grown. J. M. Gibson dusted his cotton four times and the result of his first packing showed 424 pounds from the dusted area against 260 pounds from the undust ed. Mr. Gibson has not made his final report but this gain of 162 pounds from the first picking of his short staple cotton has a value of $11.48. William McKenzIe dusted his cotton five times and from three pick- pickings reported. IN POLICE COURT J. H. Whaley was taxed with the costs Saturday morning in police court on a charge of exceeding the speed limit in the school zone. Alex Johnson drew a like penalty for the same offense. Willie Johnson, for failure to park his car at the approach of the fire truck was fined $5 and costs. On Verge Of C!::!i Paris, Nov. 4 (By The Associated Press) Conflict between the Fas clstl and the Soviet government is feared as the result of a raid re ported yesterday on the Rome bureau of the Russian commercial delega tion. A band of raiders Is said to have dragged an alien employe from jthe o wn!. fires and shot him against the Magnate At Play I hu rH! . -s - t X i' i .( 1 i I XX Judge Elbert H. Cary with dogs on his beautiful estate Jericho, Long Island. his at HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS DEFEATED EDEIITOII The Elizabeth City High School girls defeated Edenton at Edenton Friday night, according to reports received here Saturday morning prior to the return of the home team, in a close game with a spectacular finish by the score of 14 to 13. According to such meager reports as are at hand Elizabeth City tossed the winning goal in the last second of play, the referee's whistle sound ing as the ball settled into the bas ket. This is said to be the first time the Elizabeth City girls have won from Edenton at Edenton since the teams of the two schools have been meet ing in basketball contests, and bas ketball fans here are Jubilant over the victory. Fourth Victim Of Factory Fire Dead New York, Nov. 4 (By The Asso ciated Press) The fourth victim of the fire which yesterday destroyed a celluloid factory have died today She was a girl who was trapped with eleven others on the third floor of the building. Two women fell to death during the fire, and a third died last night. OPEJf AIR GOLF SCHOOL IS POPULAR IN LONDON London, Nov. 4 (By The Associ ated Press) Just off the busy shop ping center of Kensington in the spa cious grounds of the Holland House, retired admirals and generals, gov ernment officials, American visitors, actresses, clergymen and just ordin ary citizens meet on common ground. The place is an up-to-date school of golf. A company, recently formed, has acquired the property and made it into an "all weather" practice course with greens, bunkers, and a series of nets which measure the length of the drive. Cumberland turf has been provided for a perfect putting lawn and four professionals are kept busy all the time with their variegated assortment of pupils. The golf school has proved a popu lar institution and there Is a steady stream of pupils from dawn until sundown. It Is even planned to In stall high powered electric lights in order to allow the city men to play after dark. More than 2,400 golf balls are used daily, and so great Is the demand fof the use of the grounds that the Instructors' time is booked for many days ln advance. Further extensions of the school's fa cilities are contemplated. OLD UNCLE JIM lNHl'LTBD Okisko, Oct. 31.-An old colored man took a horse to the Fair and being greatly attached to the horse (owned by J. W. Perry) was highly jiinuneu i UHHUtty unci uuuu iu o the red ribbon on her door. He says, "Boss, dey nan t treeted Bessie fair, don gin her de red Instld o' blue an' she's de purtlest hoss In de stable." And on Friday afternoon he found they bad changed it to a yellow ribbon, being third. He couldn't stand It any longer. He hunted up J. W. Perry and said, "Boss, done you no dey hab took off de red and put yaller on de doe. Less git her way from har. If you dun by tomorer you won't hab no hoss a t ;:i. 00 011 Constantinople, Nov. 4 (By The Associated Press) The whele Near East is anxious to learn what the Sultan is going to do about the unanimous de cree of the Grand National As sembly at Angora, declaring the Sultanate at an end. The heir apparent and other members of the Imperial fam ily conferred last night at the palace and decided that none will accept the throne if strip ped of temporal power. The assembly declared that the member of the Imperial fam ily who is best educated and moct honest and wise will here after be selected as Sultan. American Cranks Arc Greatly In Lead They Tell League Of Nations What To Do KegardlesM Of Nation's Non Menibei'Nhlp Geneva, Nov. 4 (By The Associ ated Press) The general offices of the League of Nations receive daily an enormous number of letters from pretty well all over the world, and In these contributions the crank U well represented. The mail clerks are busy individuals, for theirs is the duty of sorting and redirecting. Countries outside the League pro duce the largest number of corre spondents. The United States is far in the lead, and the cranks in Amer ica who feel called upon to tell the League what it should do are seem ingly without number. But Germany and Soviet Russia also aid generously In keeping the mail clerks occupied. Africans and Asiatics, as well as Europeans and Americans, find the most extraordin ary excuses for communicating with the League, showing there Is a world-wide misconception as to what the League is and what it was set up to do. The secretariat gets a vast amount of mail matter that ought to go to the foreign offices of different gov ernments, and it receives also a greater number of suggestions, ap plications and petitions that ought to go nowhere. Men and women bring to the League in all languages of the world their heart-aches, their head-aches and the aching voids in their pocket books. The secretariat is asked for the addresses of reliable doctors; begged to find lost husbands and appealed to to settle domestic as well as other quarrels. The requests for funds come along in a steady stream. The League has not even been immune from the begullementa of the confidence men, several Am ericans of this species having tried to use the secretariat to help them out with their passport troubIes. Among the most frequent appeals are these: that the League make the world bone dry, that it suppress tobacco as well as all drugs and drinks; that It institute a universal religion; that It reform the calendar; that it adopt a universal language; and that It give votes to women the world over. The suggestions are mostly for the cure of the world's economic and financial Ills, but some correspond ents want to show the League how universal peace can be restored through the general adoption of their particular religion, want to design a new world flag, or make the League all over again after their fashion. The League is often asked to settle strikes and to pacify divided families. The latest curious demand was from a romancer who wanted ma terial to write an exciting novel about the League; he was referred tcv the Near East section. . - - A 1 .,0tt lTC"int UUt D:t:!b Of Ct:iy New Brunswick, No. 4 (By The Associated Press) Action will be delayed ln the Hall-Miim case until after the election Tuesday, when It will be presented, the grand Jury re ported today. Deputy Attorney Gen eral Mott Is working at secret head quarters. It Is sal.!, to Iron out many ef V " (' -' " ' -. Sill