The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, April 21, 1922, Page TWO, Image 2
RUSSO-GERMAN
TREATY SIGNED
(Continued From Pace I) |
lowing' basis: I
The German government and the
Soviet republic reciprocally renounce
reimbursement of war expenses as
well as reimbursement of war damages
and also damages suffered ii>y
their subjects in the war territories
because of military measures, includparried
out in the en- J
Jiig 1
emy's country. Likewise the two
contracting parties renounnce reimbursement
of civil damages caused
by the socalled exceptional laws or
by coercive measures by state authorities.
(b) All legal relations concerning
questions of public or private law resulting
from the state of war, including
the question of merchant shops j
1si/^a fjnvino- the I
acquired uy eimci & ?
war, shall be settled on a basis of I
reciprocity.
(c) Germany and Russia mutually
renounce the repayment of expenses
caused by prisoners of war in the
same way as the reich renounce^ repayment
of expepnses caused by the
internment of soldiers by the Russian j
army. The Russian government re- j
nounces payment of the sum Germany
has derived from the sale of Russ'an
army material transported into
Germany.
Article 2. Germany renounces all
claims resulting from the enforcement
of the laws and measures of the
Soviet republic as they have affected
German nationals or their private
rights or the rights of the German
reich itself as well as claims resulting
from measures taken by the Soviet
republic or its authorities in any
- * / xl
way against the subjects 01 ine u?man
reich or their private rights,
provided the Soviet government shall
not satisfy similar claims made by
third state.
Article 3. Consular and diplomatic
relations between the reich and the
federal republic of Soviets shall be
resumed immediately, the admission
of consuls to both countries to be
arranged by special agreement.
Article 4. Both governments agree
further that the rights of the nationals:
of either of the two parties on
the other's terriory as well as the
i-i ?l - j. : I
regulation ol commercial reiauun?
aliall be based on the most favored
national principle. This principle
does not ificlude the rights and faciliV
ties granted by the Soviet government
^ to another Soviet state or to any state
fe th?t formerly formed part of the
HHt Russian empire.
A * Article 5 The two governments un^^^^-dertake
to give each other mutual assistance
for the alleviation of their
Economic difficulties in the most benevolent
spirit. In the event of a general
.settlement of this question on an
international basis they shall undertake
to have a preliminary exchange
of views. The German government j
declares itself ready to facilitate as
far as possible the conclusion and execution
of economic contracts between
private enterprises in the two
countries.
Article 6. Clause 1. Paragraph B
OMOO A nf !i(*roowiorif cVtnli I
ailU V/iOUOV -X Vi. Uliw VV**1W?* v
come into force after ratification of
this document; the other clauses will
come into force immediately.
Genoa, April 17 (By the Associated
Press).?George Chicherin, head
of the Russian delegation, discussing
tonifht the Russo-German treaty,
said negotiations for a full resumption
of diplomatic relations between
Germany and Russia had been in progress
several months.
'"the place and the time of the signatures,"
M. Chicerin added, "must
not be interpreted as indicating that
the two governments intended special
significance in concluding the
treaty at the Genoa conference rather
than elsewhere. The treaty was
contemplated long ago.
?T?v vu;? j t>
aii iiuo w a v vici niai:%v anu ivuc5:m<3 |
have wiped out the past and replaced
the Bfest-iLitovsk treaty jy new relations,
granting 'both peoples the same
rights and establishingg a secure basis
for peaceful, common work, the
two governments thus place themselves
on a firm basis.''
The German foreign minister, Dr.
Rathenau, calmly discussed the Russo-German
treaty, which has created
such excitement among t^e allies,
1. J TT? T-l
Liv;uiai ly me r xencii anu n.ng'iisn
delegations. He explained that the
negotiations between Ruisia and Germany
for the conclusion of the present
treaty were conducted for several
months and happened to be finished
Easter Sunday, which we considered
a good omen not only for the contracting
parties, but the entire
Europe; indeed, the world at large.
The French delegation in an official
statement denounnced the treaty
bitterly and declared that France
would not change her attitude and
would exact from the Soviet government
recognition of debts and restitution
of confiscated property.
The spokesman of the Italian delegation
discussing the Russo-Geiman
treaty tonight, said he was convinced
that it would not bring about a happy
result in the conference but he considered
it deplorable from the Gerand
commerce, early in February and
ened the thesis of those who main-j
tain that it is impossible to treat with
the Germans. Nothing better could
be invented to support the Frencn
viewpoint, in his opinion, he said.
ANNOUNCE DATES
FOR CROP REPORTS
t
Government Authorities Have Fixed
Schedule
i
Washington, April 17.?Dates for
the issuance of crop reports during
the coming season are nanounnced by
the department of agriculture as follows
:
May 9. Winter wheat, rye, hay,1
pasture, plowing and planting.
June 2. Cotton.
i
June 8. Winter wheat, spring
wheat, oats, barley, rve, apples,!
peaches, hay and pasture.
July 3. Cotton.
July 10. Corn, wheat on farms,
winter wheat, sprir.g wheat, oats,
oats, barley, rye, potatoes, sweet potatoes,
tobacco, flax, rice, apples,
peaches, sugar beets and hay.
August 1. Cotton.
August 8. Corn, winter wheat,'
rpring wheat, oats, .barley, rye, buckwheat,
potatoes, sweet potatoes, tobacco,
flax, rice, apples, peaches, su-,
gar beets and hay. !
September 1. Cotton.
~ ^ ?1 4- i
September tf. corn, spring wueai, i
oats, barley, buckwheat, potatoes, to
bacc, flax, rice, apples, peaches, sug- j
ar beets, kafirs and hay.
October 3. Cotton.
October 9. Corn, spring wheat,'
oats, barley, buckwheat, potatoes,
s,weeT potatoes, tobacco, flax, rice, ap-j
pies, pears, kafirs, beans and sugar
beets. j
November 8. Corn, buckwheat, po- >
tatoes. sweet potatoes, tobacco, flaxseed,
app ?s, pears, cranberries, ka-j
firs, peanuts, clover seed, sorghum!
syrup, onions, vaobage and sugar!
beets.
December 12. Cotton.
December 15. Corn, winter wheat,!
spring whehat,, oats, barley, rye, buck
wheat, flaxseed, rice, potatoes, sweet
potatoes, hay, clover seed, tobacco, i
apples, peaches, pears, oranges, cran- j
berries, sorghum, sugar beets, beans, <
kafirs, broom corn, onions, cabbage, j
peanuts, cowpeas, soy beans and hops. \
December 18. Winter wheat and
rye.
The personnel of the crop reporting
board for the year is as follows:
Leon M. Estabrok, chairman; Nat C.
Murray, acting chairman in the absence
of the chairman; S. A. Jones,
secretary of the board; George K.
Holmes, W. F. Callander and one or
more agricultural statisticians called
in from the field.
Death of Mrs. Mary Shealy
Mrs. Mary Jane Shealy, beloved
wife of Earle Shealy, was stricken
with apoplexy on Saturday, April 8th.
She was formrely in good health and
her suddei: illness was a severe shock
to her family and many friends. Every
effort of medical skill and kindly
attention was made in her behalf. She
lived only until Thursday morning,
April 13. Her age was 66 years, 10
months and 23 days.
She is survived by five children,
Mrs. Oscar Wood, Mrs. Frank Cul
r>
L" 1 iX>U I t", Jlld. u UU. IV. > Kf
and Bachman Shealy; also four grand
children, four brothers, and two sisters,
one half-brother and one
half-sister. The following are her
brothers and sisters: Messrs. James,
Elmore and Walter Shealy, and Mrs.
Geo. Anna Steel of Lexington counr\
m 1., _ ?
tv; ivir. i>?avis oiieaiy ui i\c*vuniy,|
Mr. Geo. Fortney of Batesburg, and j
Mrs. Dora Derrick of Columbia.
The funeral service was conducted 1
at the home one mile east of Newberry
on last Friday afternoon at 4
o'clock by Pastor W. H. Dutton and
Dr. C. A. Freed. The interment was
in Rosemont cemetery.
Mrs. Shealy was a member of the
Summer Memorial Lutheran church,
to which she remained faithful until
death. She set an example of Christian
and nipfv. She was a kind
'mother, rot only to her own but to
many others who enjoyed the benevolence
of her heart; even the servants
o:a the farm mourn the loss of \
their dearest friend. The hospitality
of her home was always the same,
kind and true: She was a devoted
wife, a true friend, an obliging neighbor.
Her memroy is made fragrant
bv the wholesome influence and beauty
of a God-fearing and loving he^irt.
Its kind is precious and enduring.
D.
in a
| Sometimes a woman kisses anothl
er woman as if sh'e would like to bite
I her instead.
_
Some of these days, says an exchange,
the English people may start
a movement for home rule. They are
tired of being ruled by the Welsh and
the Scotch.
I
NOT ALL BEER AND SKilTLES
Englishman Has Somewhat Lengthy
List of Drawbacks to Life in
the Turkish Capital.
An English business man backed me LInto
a corner in a Constantinople dub. I
looked at me sternly ov er The top of his j
brandy and soda and addressed me as |
follows: |
"When you write this town. |
old chap, i hope you'll Cell your peo- t $
pie what a beastly place it is, what? ' f
A chap can't make a move, you know, ! |
wiihrmt viiino minslcinir liim rf> have I % t
something. Look here, old chap. In i ?]&
a court of law. you know, a chap is |p
ordinarily supposed to be sober after
9 o'clock at night, what? Here it's |||
the opposite, by Jove! A bit thick, eh, |lf
what? I?
"Look here, make a note of this, |lj
what? They celebrate five Christmase.<
and five New Years in this rotten \M
town. Ob, at least five. On my
honor, old chap! English, Armenian. ?S
Greek, Russian, Turkish, Jewish?real- |||
ly, old chap. I become fearfully in- |
coherent when 1 try to remember J
what they are. By the time the last |
acw l ear js over out? can ju?i iuuu ^
around. Oh, absolutely, I give you |
my word ! And then there is the ft us- i
sinn Easter, which is fearfully nerve |8|
racking. It iasts from one to two Jjj
weeks, and one is obliged to do a fearful
amount of drinking. While it
lasts one goes up to any one and says
4He is risen' and kisses him three ^j01
times. It's done thftt way, old chap. ur<r
I give you my word, everybody does as
it. One hunts for a pretty gin mm i gen
says 'He is risen' and kisses her three | aiR
times, and. by jove. it's considered
quite all right. Oh, quite. In a way,
old chap, it beats egg rolling on a lawn
all hollow, what? A bit thick, by jove, r:
but a bit of all right, what?
"But of course there's a fearful lot
of good feeling and one must everlastingly
be buying a drink for some
one. It cuts into one's work fearfully.
You just tell all that to the chaps at
home, and they'll see that living in
Constantinople isn't all beer and skittles,
by jove! What?"?Chicago Daily
News.
HAD THE LAUGH ON TEACHER
Instructress Called for Examples, and
Tommy Was* the Boy Who
Could Furnish Them.
There has never been any love lost
between Tommy and his teacher. Tommy
thinks the teacher is a severe and
occasionally unjust person, who has
never known what it is to' be you*?jr
while the teacher considers the little
chap both stupid and mischievous. I
"You are not attending to what I j
say, Thomas," said the teacher one day
in rhf midst of ail address to her
class.
"Yes, teacher, I is," said Tommy
with much earnestness.
"You should never say 'I is'" corrected
the teacher. "I have told you
thnt a hundred times. You know the
correct form. There are no exceptions
to its use. Give me two examples
at once!"
"Yes, ma'am." said Tommy, meekly.
"I am one of the letters of the alphabet.
i' am a pronoun."?Philadelphia
Ledger. I|
I )
Keep the Baby Quiet at Night.
Getting up in the night to quiet an
uneasy baby is not the joke that some
comic writers represent it to be. A i
young husband discovered this izi case
hie tivct.hnrn and the means he fj
took ro overcome the difficulty won
him a prize in a contest in new uses j
for electricity.
The only means of quieting this j
baby, who was ailing, was to move j
him up and down; gently. In the low- <
er part of the crib the father fastened
the motor of a discarded electric fan.
From a small pulley on the motor Me J
ran a belt to a larger pulley on a j
short shaft, at the other end of which
he rigged a crank. Then he extended
a connecting rod to the center of the
frame that supported the springs and
mattress.
The motor, when started, mo> ed
springs, mattress and baby up and
'
down about an men, smooiiu.v, gamj
and regularly. It proved entirely satisfactory
to the baby, who is now
one year old. healthy and happy, and
he has never got his parents out of
bed at night since the apparatus was
Installed.
Remarkable Old Beliefs.
Since the age of legend, thunder
and lightning making has always been
made the final proof of the su permit- ;
u:;al. Thor and his huge hammer,
which accounted for the thunder to ^
tbe old Norsemen, and Jove or Jupiter,
who hurled lus ngnrninj; uuu murder
in anger and thus explained this
natural phenomenon to the old Greeks 1
and Ilomans, are only two of the
hundreds of instances in ancient be- *
liVf.
In later times the brand of magician
and evil-doer was put upon many
alchemists, with rumors thai spirting
tongues of hre and crashes of thunder
were seen and heard in their laboratories.
?
A Sufficient Excuse.
There was a wild and frenzied scattering
t. jkien, white-faced and starliig-rytiU.
tleu as if pursued by a pestilence.
They dropped whatever they
in hitnd and stood not upon the
uuu ? __
order of their going, but departed j
like i'rightened roebucks, hitting only
the hitfh places as they went.
"Why are the people fleeiug?" we
asked.
"A candidate who calls himself 'the
Fries d 'A the People' has just con it
to town," replied an innocent bystander
Wiiv li*d uu vote.?Kansas City Star,1 *?
f
Well-Known Collegian Male Quarfef
tfere a$ Chautauqua
J
I
I
Tl'.e well-known C'??lle?riau Male Quartet will be one of the i><?fujlar attracts
at the coming Kcdpath Chautauqua here. The members of ihis notable
anization are exieptiuna! singers, but they are also splendidly accomplished ,
v i ?- ~ - t?? -...1
a brass quarter./ i ney nave huh h?:k f.viifiinn.^ in.-nun mm im-n en- :
lble singing and playing are exceptional. Tlie.v aiv capital entertainers j
1 the programs presented hv them are sure to he a musical and entertain- '
ut treat, which will ht? Ion? remembered hy Chautauqua audiences.
I
SSS^^^SZ2S=S3S:_ ! I I
1 I
p Challenging Lecture ^ ff '
? ? Traitors to Just ice9 9 |
H JUDGE MARCUS KAVANAGH 1 i
jM", XJUiCU JUH31 UKU J
ips Stirring, constructive address on fe:
i[|f the curbing of lawlessness. fgj
a . ; ;; * * g.
? CTCTU MT^Z-inr Hvi
ririii nxvjixx r^J
| Redpath Chautauqua |||
I 18 Splendid SEAS0N TICKETS $2.75 pay^ ijp
Attractions gjg f
Ip ?r?. _ 11 _T?... ?^^?5 <l!
| rnenaiy enemies m i
ip A play which will please and ||
|| deligKt the entire audience. |j |
I NEW YORK CAST gj
1 ' * * Si.
? SIXTH NIGHT jj| i'
| Redpath Chautauqua | :
| 18 Splendid SEASON TICKETS $2.75 l,Blg |j !j
r<W Attfnrfinn?; T Days $j?j I
it ~__j?
w wzmm sb p rdpath chautauqua^^^^i
* i 1111 - --^????
CHAUTAUQUA WEEK HERE !
MAY 4 TO 11 I
? i i pi r. mi Iii?mi lai iimii \ ui i i i i .ninm i
W1TTE GASOLINE AND KEROSENE ENGINES
I Horse Power Gasoline Engine $ T.j.OO
4 Horse Power "Gasoline Eng.'r.e $ 9?>.00
G Horse Power Gasoline Engine $140.OU
5 Horse Power Gasoline Engine SITo.OO
4 Horse Power Kerosene Ens ne $105.00
t) Horse Power Kerosene Engine $150.00
4 Horse Power Portable Saw liig $17|).00
0 Horse Power Portabie Saw K:g $21;_>.00
Log Saw with Gasoline Engine $ 85.00
Add to above prices $11.9") for Bosch Magneto Equipment. *
WITTE ENGINE WORKS
Columbia, S. C.
i
if w*-- r? j&twgsBBt M'
iIIM Wmffls^mk
Iji w
mSr Sparkling ^gp i
|p Lornedy Drama ap
| "TurntotheRight" |
W\ S3
1| ' Fun, Pathos, Thrills. jp
A play you'll thoroughly enjoy. j|
p? ' NEW YORK CAST p
Gal' sM
gi * V S
FOURTH NIGHT |j
p Redpath Chautauqua ?
1 IS Splendid SEASON TICKETS $2.75 IB'g 1
w Attractions Days M
iSgg^ilREDPATH CHAUTAUQUAB^^iSl
2^-, ?t: ii i twi ?>> i it mt? wnnwrr fininiufi ^MiUMIMfc??iMMMMBBtt?ilMMMBW*** ?
[[ ASHEPOO 111
11 Fertilizer Works 11
I i HIGH GRADE f I
FERTILIZERS
I ? f-lB to a standard I |
| bU'L^ HOT Down II
(Reg. U. S. Fat. Off.) g PflCO I B
111 FOR SALi: BY II
I Long & 5a<11 pari I I
^ PA")}p3:*ity, S. C. ^ M:
Street Duty
Street duty of $3.00 for all male persons
from 18 to 51 years of age was due
.1 .i 4 . / ? ci 4 nrtn n
the town the 1st ol April, summons
to work the streets will be served the 1st of
May unless paid by that time. Pay at
city clerk's or chief of police's office.
1 | 1 11
S. C. McCarley
Chief of Police.
? II I III - - " " 1 I r~l TlfWWHrBMWW^MMnMWBWBMMWMi
pi For your I j
111 crops' sake I j
I MORTIMER'S
jjj Quality II '
pi r eruuzdis 111
II GET IT FROM S i
(Summer Bros. Newberry, S. C. II k
8 M. L. Spearman Newberry, S. C.
w