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S LETTERS r tk ALT 1V A Family Newspaper: For the Promotion of the Political, Social, Agricultural and Commercial Interests of the People VOLUME XXXIV. TWICE-A-WEEK SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, FRIDAY, DEC. 1st., 1916. READ IT FIRST IN THIS PAPER NUMBER 5. CHILDREN! SEND IN YOUR SANTA CLAU ens ix.T3rcy. ft UNITED PRESS SERVICE There is no more fitting time to show our appreciation of the loy alty of our subscribers and adver tisers than to announce in this is sue that we have completed ar rangements with the United Press Associations to furnish THE COM MONWEALTH with telegraphic news of all the foreign happen ings on the days we go to press so that on Tuesday and Friday this news will come to us from Wash ington, D. C, by telegraph and contain in condensed form, the same foreign news that appear in the large afternoon dailies, but with the advantage that The Com monwealth will be issued at four o'clock in the afternoon, whereas the city afternoon daily papers do not reach here until after seven o'clock at night. We trust our subscribers will appreciate this added service and realize that THE COMMON WEALTH is issued for the bene fit of the public, so that, at any time, if there can be any further improvement made in the paper, upon the suggestion of any sub scriber, that will be of material benefit to all, it will be the pur pose of THE COMMONWEALTH to make such additions from time to time. AMERICA'S ONLY FEMALE SHERIFF (Ex.) WANTS JOB BACK vN THNKSGIVTNG PRAISE f' Lord of the rast, Thee, we hail! Thine ancient promise doth not fail; r3 ffJjf The varying seasons haste their round; XfV- llLU Witn goodness all our years are V -Jjl Our thanks we pay, TjpVJ,. , 0n let our hearts in tune be found. ' A '" Lord of the harvest, all is thine: iL"" lO Tfle rains that fall, the suns that "7 V-A The seed once hidden in the ground, fftA Tne skiu that makes our fruits New Pulses from our lips shall sound. yV (By United Press) Hackensaek, N. J., Nov. 29. Miss Constance Kopp, the demon midersherilf (ex) who, when in office was a four time winner on anything she undertook, is still :i loser in the battle for her job back. Miss Kopp was fired when John W. Courter, Republican; slid into the sheriff's berth on the G. O. P. landslide in New Jersey Nov. 7. He take it from himself, couldn't find a thing for Miss Kopp, Demo crat, to do and so bounced her Miss Kopp, however, claims that the new civil service law, adopted just as the Republicans glided up to the fleshpots, guarantees her her job. She is still off the pay roll, how ever, but has not given up the fight. SANTA CLAUS PRIZES The tricycle in the window of the Josey Hardware Co., will be given to the little boy under eight years of age who sends in to The Commonwealth the best Santa Claus letter. Mr. Jim Pittman, who is an hospital in Richmond, Va., is re ported to be somewhat improved and expects to return home in the next two weeks. CORONATION OF NEW EMPEROR THIS WEEK Ceremony Will Follow the Funeral of Francis Joseph Thursday London, Nov. 29. The corona tion of the new Austrian Emper or as King of Hungary under the name of Charles IV., says the Budapest paper, Villag, accord ing to a dispatch from Vienna, will take place directly after the funeral of Emperor Francis Jo seph. The Hungarian parliament will fix the date and hour for the coronation. On coronation day the royal couple, in accordance with cus tom, proceeds to the church of St. Matthews in procession head ed by the Hungarian Premier. It is a part of the ceremony that the new king, on reaching a hill, must point with his sword to the cardinal points of the compass, thus signifying his intention to defend the territory against all enemies. It is expected that this intresting symbolical act will take place on a mound, made of earth brought for the purpose fr0m each of the Hungarian provinces and built in front of the parlia ment hall. After the ceremony the king will ride to the castle, while the Hungarian Minister of Finance also on horseback, distributes gold and silver coins to the popu lace. It is expected that the corona tion present to be made by the royal couple, which at the last coronation consisted of 100,000 crowns, will go to the war inva lids, as at the last coronation the present went to the invalids of the War of 1848. Funeral of Late Emperor Today. FINDS STOCKHOLM GREAT EST CENTER OF INTRIGUE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN By WM. PHILIP SIMMS (United Press Staff Correspondent) Stockholm, Nov. 28. (By Mail) This is the spy-centre of the world. Here foe meets foe but with his fingers erossed. It is neutral ground and the spy plays his ungrateful game in perfect safety. "See the chap over there? a friend asked, pointing across the lobby of one of the prettiest ho WARNING BANKERS ON FOREIGN INVESTMENTS "Washington, Nov. 29. Ameri can bankers were warned by the Federal reserve board to avoid locking up their funds by pur chasing treasury bills of foreign governments involving long term obligations. While specifically dis claiming "any intenton of re flecting upon the financial stabil ity of any nation," the board of advises all investors to proceed with caution and formally an nounces to member banks of the Federal Reserve system that with the liquid funds which should be tels in the world. "That is an 'available to American merchants, POOD BY MAIL MAY REDUCE PRICES Government Experts Will Experiment With Parcel Post Vienna, Nov. 29. The coffin of Emperor Francis Joseph has been finally closed but the body will remain lying in state until Thurs day the day set for interment. At the burial in the crypt of the Capuchin, a historic ceremony will be carrid out which was an ciently designed to impress the monarch's successor that in spite of all pomp a sovereign is mere- y a mortal. The funeral procession will be halted at the entrance to the vault by a challenge from within: 'Who is there" the reply will be made, "His Most Serene Majes- y, The Emperor Francis Joseph." The challenger will then reply 'I know him not." Responding to a second challenge the an nouncement will be made : The Emperor of Austria and Aposto lic King of Hungary is outside." Again the. challenger will answer : I know him not." When, for the third time, the voice within asks who demands admission, the master of ceremonies will reply: "A sinful man, our brother Fran eis Joseph. The portals will then open and the procession en ter. Austrian military attache. The man he is talking to is a Russian from Petrograd. I know them both." There they are playing their games, iacn trying to tricK me other to LOiie end, only heaven knew what. manufacturers and farmers in danger of being absorbed for oth er purposes it does not regard it in the interest of the country at this time that they invest in for eign treasury bills of this charac ter." The statement is regarded in Never mind about locking your j official circles as one of the most chest of drawers, or your bags or important declarations by the trunks," an acquaintance told niej board since its creation. Officials the aav i lanaea m oiockiiuuu. wuum nut mstuaa humuuu Locks are no good here. I? any body wants to see what you have hidden away they will manage to do so. And they usually want to see. There is perhaps no more tiis eination spot anywhere than a certain hotel here. In the worlds most beautiful dining room under a sort of colonade ranging along side a formal garden where .1 su perb lawn grows under a lofy glass dome, where huge palms and flowers grow in profusion and the tinkle of a fountain in the Vene tian court is not much softer than the musie of a hidden stringed - orchestra, Germans and English, Austrian and French, Russian ai d Bulgars, Italians and Turks, Bel- (Continued on last page) publication, but some of them for mally interpreted the warning as the reserve board's answer to the recent proposal of J. P. Morgan & Co., British fiscal agents in this country, to have American bank ers of the British treasury bills of an indefinite total issue, se cured by gold reserve held in Ot tawa. Such loans would be for Washington, Nov. 29. An nouncement was made that the Federal Government will make extensive experiments with the parcel post for the purpose of trying to develop it into an ef fective weapon for attacking the high cost of living. The first step in this direction were takn yesterday when the parcel post experts of the Post Postoffice Department held a con ference to formulate some com prehensive plan by which the parcel post can be more easily utilized as a food-product convey- and the city consumer. When the plan is approved, it will be tested out in large cities like New York, Baltimore and Washington and in some smaller cities of about 100,000 population If it works well, Congress will be asked for funds to defray the cost of establishing it throughout the country. eel post with the view of devel oping it as a genuine and effect ive transportation agency be tween the farm and the city. Ever since the parcel post was established four years ago there have been sporadic efforts to u tilize the system as a good pro duets vehicle between the produ cer and the consumer. These ef forts were made at the suggestion of Representative David J. Lew is, of Maryland, "the legisla tive father of the parcel post." STORK THAT HOVERS OVER CHICAGO IS SOME STORK (By United Press) ninety days with the privilege of! The Postoffice Department has renewal of five other ninety day now at its command the sum of npriofls. inenses of makiner these tests. t , - : ! $10,000 with which to i -v the ex. SANTA CLAUS PRIZES ;This sum was carried in the last The doll to be given away by j appropriation bill, and in view The Commonwealth to the little girl under eight years of age for the best Santa Claus letter is now exhibited in the window of R. C. Josey and Company. of the acute situation which has arisen in cities over the high prices of food it has been decided that now is the psychological 'time to experiment with the par-1 just below Kehukee church Chicago, Nov. 29. Apartment houses may not be the best places in which to rear children, but Chi cago's 'stork doesn't sniff at them- not on your ironbound statis tics which show that 6,144 fami lies here have seven or more chil dren. School census figures just made public show sixty-two families with eleven children or more the largest family is of fifteen chil dren from 6 months to 17 years old including a pair of twins. Mr. Enoch Simmons, we are ad vised, was in town Wednesday for the purpose of purchasing the property of the late Dave Madry i 9 i llliill ' a Ipfe