Hertford County Herald 1' * Published Every Friday by VINSON * PARKER Owners JAMES S. VINSON, Editor snd Manner Subscription Price One Year $1.60 Six Months .76 Three Months ? .40 Advertising Rates Very reasonable and made known on request. ? Entered as second-class mail matter February 26, 1910, at the posoffice at Ahoskie, North Carolina, under the Act of March 3, 1878. Forafi Advrtmot RiprwiiMiw THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION Friday, Sept. 1,1922 About the time a fellow thinks he's a "big gun," someone comee along and fires him. Ap optimist is a fellow who loans a guy $10 when said guy already ewes him $20. Looks as if a lot of the girls were actively participating in the "paint up" campaign. Maybe the reason the ocean is blue is because it has so many things thrown up to it. When a man is so cheap he wont buy a pair of glasses he makes a ? spectacle of himself. The fellow who watches the clock can hardly expect to be anything but one of the hands. A fellow's best girl may not care much about the future, but it seems as if she is always ready for the present. The skirts won't be much longer as long as they have good reasons for wearing 'em short. Some times a fellow gets pretty well along in yaers before he realises that brains were given him not solely for hair fertiliser. What has become of the old fash ioned boy who used to take pride in telling how many cords of stovewood he could saw in a week? The brilliant man without a heart keeps his brains in cold storage. 0? Are yon an educated man? A?k yourself. You won't be able to answer, but ask the question any way. Whether you are college presi dent or day laborer, minister in a pulpit, or tiller of the soil, seller of boots and shoes, or buyer of farm products, you won't be able to answer truthfully, because you don't know just what is meant here by the term "educated." Is a man educated who knows books, and only books? If a profes sor of Sanskrit tried to make his liv ing pitching hay, he would be as badly off as the farm hand who essayed to teach a dead language. Education must fit for a paritcular job, or it isn't education. So the question must be asked if asked intelligently, "are you educated for your work?" The United States as a whole is passing through a formative period in education. To the piodleer "book learning*' represented all that he did n't know and wanted to know. But today mere "book learning" does not mean education in the true sense, un less for a bookish career. Education must ftt a man for his work in life, or H is not real educa tion. A college teaching farming edu cates a man to be a farmer, but would be poor training for a doctor. The farmer who tried to learn rota tion of crops and the ehemistry of fer tlisers by studying in a medical school would not receive an education which was of use to him. So ft is with too many of out school?they teach, but what they teach is not what many of the stu dents need most to know. 0 The Federal Government has noti fled all the states that unless a neu emergency arises there will be nc Federal control of the distribution ol coal this winter. As about 70 pel cent of the mines tied up on account of the strike have commenced opera tfons again it eras not thought necea aery for the Federal Government tc act in the matter insofar as distribu tion goes. This however, does no* effect tiie state distribution bodiai yrkich are expected to function ai IMMIGRATION PROBLEM PRESENTS NEW PHASES Washington, August 31.?(Capital News Service).?A survey of immi gration statistics just made in the De partment of Labor, presents some puzzling figures for those who have thought the immigration problem en tirely one of exclusion of undesirable aliens from the United States. Under the 3 per cent quota law the following countries have sent to the United States all the immigrants which could be admitted: Belgium, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Luxemburg, Poland, Roumania, Jugoslavia, Pales tine, Turkey, Syria, the miscellaneous European and Asiatic countries, Afri ca, Australia, and New England: But Germany sent us only 28 per cent of the possible number which might have come; Sweden 43 per cent; Norway, 48 per cent; Nether lands, 66 per cent; France, 75 per cent; and England, less than 20 per cent. Secretary Davis of the Departmet of Labor reads from these figures that the 3 per cent quota suffices to hold back the horde of immigrants from the south and east of Europe, while working no hardships on the count ries of the north and west of Europe, since they didn't send us as many as they could. But he does not explain why they sent us so few, nor has any one advanced any good reason why the countries which used to send us their thousands now offer us so Jew desirable immigrants. Fpes of pro hibition find in the eighteenth amend ment the reason why the wine and beer loving people of north and west ern Europe do not come in greater numbers; others see a deeper reason and look to economic conditions and labor troubles as the explanation. * Inasmuch as this country wants and needs the higher type of immigrants as greatly as it desires to exclude the poorer and lower class, it seems to many that an impartial and thorough investigation of the immigration prob lem, looked at from all angles, and not merely from the exclusion angle, would serve the United States at this time. NORTH CAROLINA TUBER. CULOSIS ASSOCIATION Aa soon as the schools open this fall the North Carolina Tuberculosis Asso ciation will begin an intensive cam paign in a few selected counties with the State Board of Health to bring the malnourished children up to par. Prom a few surveys that have been conducted by the Association, and also by the llnited States Public Health Service in North Carolina, it has been found that fully thirty per cent of the school children are under weight for their age and height The percentage of underweightk being a little larger among the white children than among the colored. It has been demonstrated that the five chief causes of malnutrition nam ed in order of their importance are: physical defects and disease, lack of home control, over-fatigue, improper diet and faulty health habits. It will be readily seen from this list of causes that a campaign that does not enlist the cooperation of parents and teachers will be only successful in a minor degree. The Association is putting forth a strong appeal to those with children in their care to lend their support in the home and school in order that the program may be car ried out successfully. Arrangements will be made to give proper treatment to those who are handicapped by phy sical defects and disease. By far the large majority of these defects are in connection with tonsils and ade noids and the State Board of Health is already diligently at work correcting these conditions. The children who are below par from other than physical defects will be enrolled in the nutrition crusade which will be conducted under the direction of capable doctors and nur ses. The children will be weighed regularly once each week and theii progress charted on prepared forms. Children who are not making satis . factory improvement will be given ; special instruction in the presence ol parents. ad enorx will de made to estabiist . a rest period of twenty to thirty min utes at midday for all undernourishec i children. The Association has als< authorised the use of funds derive* ' from the sale of Tuberculosis Christ ' mas Seals for the purchase of mill . to be served during the rest period. Dr. K. P. B. Bonner, Director of th< Bureau of Maternity and Infant Hy - giene will inaugurate the nutritior r crusade in Harnett-county as soon ai > the schools open. Dr. L. B. McBray ' er, Managing Director of the Nortl ? Carolina Tuberculosis Association t will direct the work in Buncomb< - county. Work in other counties wil ? be instituted as rapidly as possible. t ? Bead the Herald's great gold offer t You'jn* bound to win in this offer I there is no chance to lose. i 0 Subscribe to the HEKALD?$1.60 ROADS STAND BY LOYALEMPLOYEES TeR President Harding Old and New Meo Must Be Protected in Strike Settlement NOT A MATTER OF CHOICE t ______ Faithful kmployeee Hava Bath Legal and Moral Rlflhta 4a Sanlorlty and Othar Benefits. Now Tort?The keynote of the re ply made by railway executive# repre senting .mora thaa 180 Class I Rail roads of the Ualtad States to the prop osition of President Harding, that "all strikers be isluiaal to their work and their former piiMUiiiis with seniority and ether rights unimpaired," lies la the last paragraph from their reply te the President as follows: "It la subsMttaa mat tha atrix lai former employee# cannot be given preference to eaeploreea at preaent la the servloe without doing violence to every principle ot right and luetic# Involved Id thia natter, and without the groeseet breach of faith on the part of the railroad# to the wen at preaent la their eervtoe. "Under thaee etrcumstaneea. It be eeaeeo apparent that the rallroede cannot ooaalder any aettlemant of the preaent atrike which dqpa not pro vide protection in their preaent em ployment both to the loyal employ era who remained la the aervice and to the new empioyeea entering It" The executives had accepted the first two conditions proposed by the President, namely, that both employ ers and employees accept the decisions of the Labor Board, and that all law suits growing out of the strike be withdrawn; and in relation to the third condition spoke not only as quoted above, bnt also as follows: Agree With the President "The railroad executives and man agers agree entirely with the Presi dent's statement in hit letter that 'It is wholly unthinkable that the Ballread Labor Board can be made a useful agency of the Government in maintain ing Industrial peace in the railway aervice unless employers and workers are both prompt and unquestioning la (hair acceptance of Its decisions.' "Many men In the aervice refused to 1 Join the strike and In ae doing were assured of the seniority rights accru ing to them and of the permanence of their positions. On some Important lines 50 per cent or more refused to Join the strike. To these old loyal em ployees have been added thousands of new men who were employed and could be secured only upon a deflnltn promise that their services would be raarfned regardless of the settlement of the atrike, with all the rights ap pertaining to such employment, I Delud ing that of seniority under the working rules and regulations previously ap proved by the Ballread LaHbr Board. "Just tha Opposite Effect" "We especially point oat that a re fusal to the old men who remained in the service and to tha now men who accepted service of the rights of senior ity Incident to their employment would have Just the opposite effect to that de> sired by the President, and would moat seriously discredit the Labor Board. "The board Itself prescribed the rules of seniority under which the men referred to hare Secured their senior ity rights, and the railroad companies hare neither the legal nor moral right to deprive these men of those rights. By public utterances rince the strike began the board has recognised and emphasised these rights, and to deny them now would. Instead of upholding the authority of the Labor Board, over throw Its rules and discredit Its au thority. The Chairman 01 the L?nor Boaro ?t the time the strike wn* called made the following public etatemeut: "Upea one question the striking ani ployeee should not he deceive*. Their leader has said that the striken are as longer employees of the rail ways, and they hare thus nutematle ally abandoned all the rights 'they possess under their agreements and under the dedaloas of the board. In cluding their sealertty. This la net the beard's action. It Is their ova. "Many carriers are giving their for mer employees the epportunity to re enter the sendee within n limited Mane. It must he understood now that maa who reaselaiil la the aarv lee and those who are now entering It will have rights of sealertty that the hoard could not Ignore." What the Proposed Plan Means "It must ha undentoed that any pro petal that empleyeee now on etriki , eh ail ha permitted to return to the service, without Impairment to theli seniority. Is merely another way el i suggesting that those men who took . employment in this crisis in good faith, I relying on the promises of the rail , Mads to protect them in their peel tlona, these promises being justified bj the authoritative utterances of th? - Labor Board, and thus have made pea i slble the eontlatpd operation of tb? railroads, shall now he sacrificed is ( favor of men now on strike, whs not . only bought about ths crisis, btft, bj their earn action and declaration, an no laager employee* of the railway* ' under the Juriadlctten of the United State* Railroad Labor Board, or tub t Ject to the appliestlon of the Trass , portatlon act t "In addition to the necessity of up I holding the Labor Board, and main talnlng the pledgee made by the rail road* to the men now at work, then la the practical effect on the super vleery officer* of a violation of th > pledgea they worn authorized to mnkt Their discouragement and demoralise i tion would be far meg* Itaaaiugg thai L or any other strike." m m r? 17 i^l p K m ? ? 1 JLV JL^ Lj ? ? ? ? v".''i ' ??, ? ? v. ? -?? . $5.00 IN GOLD * L Beginning Friday, August 18th, the Hertford County Herald will give absolutely FREE $5.00 in Gold to every person who will send in ten new one- , year subscriptions to the Hertford County Herald. The person who sends in the FIRST ten new subscribers will , receive $10.00 in gold, so get busy and be the first. This Offer Will Close October 1st, 1922. Now is the time to get busy and win $10.00, and if you are not the first you are sure of $5.00. We have lots of these Gold Pieces^ and if you don't get one don't blame us. We are just rear'in to give you one. These ten subscribers must be for one year and PAID in ADVANCE. Don't wait, get busy now. You will be surprised to know bow quick you can get ten subscribers, if you will only get out and start. ? ~ r The Hertford County Herald is one of the best weekly newspapers in the state and is worth anybody's $1.50, so when ydu ask a man to subscribe, yon will be glad to tell him yon are selling the Hertford County Herald. V We will also give yon $$.00 in gold for twenty renewals hi for one year. In other words a renewal counts just half as much as a new one. If you get ten renewals and five new subscribers you will win $5.00 just the same as ten new ones. Remember This Offer Absolutely Closes October 1922. Just as soon as you. get the first subscriber send his name* in so ?vre can start the paper at once. We will give you credit for the number of subscribers you send in and when you get ten we will give you $5.00 in gold. If there is anything about this offer that you do not understand, we will be glad to explain it to you by letter, or in person at this office. ? * i I ? Hertford County Herald Printers and Publishers Ahoskie, - -I - - North Carolina r > ? itt t U' - ? r^=zzr .,, . t '} 'W&t ' ? v ".'V V* , ' ? ' '. .?* ' ? '" ?