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- NEWS 'AND OBSERVER. .RALEIGH. N. C. TUESDAY MORNING JULY C. 1 92 J The News and Observer FnUkM lf Day I Ua) gate B . TEI MVI AXD OBSXBTEft PUBLISHING ; COMPANY. - joasracs bahid rrtstimi. ' , Officii , tews an onnm annuiifo. ' . t , UWlt Vat afartia Hurt. Uitartal Bill M AaWttstaa: D,....UT LmI Km DapC...t CtowtaMan &. ....UT MDIIII Or TBI AS100UTXO fKZSS. . Tfcs toMWrf Pit la bUbmbw aatttJat t the ass tar Milwlia aU am snistiSis araMa t t) ae aot aiaarawa mSita la taa mp at aaC ate taa total am evaUiaaS lamta. ' AH ticat at lapalillai ton at aaarial swsiis lamia ra aja inrtsd. WVUU ASSOCIATED PltSS XCPOKTS , auascmtrnoN wuci rwaUa la Aavaat 4 tmtw Dally Oaky Oa Taar Sa.M a Tv f?.H Hia llaatfts ....... . Bis llMtas IM Tina HaatjM ...... - Tkiat Moatas .... 1.7 Oa Maata M Oa Moat 4 ... . .. , v Oa Tax '.. IU M Maath .......tlM Ta Mm Bad Ofeaarrar b) iilUnat a aairtara la Juan aa4 urb at wW mb eat was 1Mb a Suaaar. Ml aalr V aw II. aftaea ants pat Katcta at ta trtaBia at kakwa. Marts OaraUaa. M aacana1 laa malt. - MORNING TONIC V (Mr. Humphrey Ward.) fear of death doe mot tiltt for the man who ha led a rood aid honest life. Xon unit diaeip lia your bodice tad your mind your bodies by keeping them healthy and strong your mind by prayer and thought. For a soldier, soldisr's UNCLE WALT MASON THE PELICAN. .' '.JU.M .M..J a. aalf. -aa f ariaa 11 my lyre, that I may earn a slle f hale, t,by a rubber tin. Th pelieaa la moat aboard. It baa warbllag aUllt It'la a boaehead aort of bird that largely maa to Mil. It eatrbaa fish befar my deer, by every artfal mean, iaatcad of golag to tba tar aad baylag cbbo4 aardlaea. It haags araaad la bit front yard, cloaa by It faedlag place, aad aeabtleea thieka old fat bard sheald aing Ita rbarm and grace. IV wltaesaed maay tinhorn fowl ia my Wag. aad career; IV gaaed oa bas tards, ctewe aad w!a la eaaBtrles far aad Bear; IV looked oa rooatora largo aad email, oa mad beaa aad. math thiag! tho pelican utelaaaeo all. for komallBoaa, by Jiage. Aad " yet It thlnka It' ratty la, aa gracefal a bridal It ataada be fore tble bat of ml, aad --eeeme to point with pride. Along th beach, and to aad fro, I watch lla vain aarada; aa allly aa an aadcat boaa who glca bwomlat malda. It tblaka It la a ahlalag Mar. oara radlaac to opill; bat. Uka th chap who Cx my car. U maatly raaa ta bill. THI CUBISWATOSUL CONTEST. , ThDort of th BUU eat of thre mea, tath with a strong and deToted foUowiag. bar ehosea aa th leader of- th ticket ia th coming eleetloa Ho. Cameroa JlorrUon of Mecklenburg. E will proy popular eandidaU for ha baa the magnanimity of spirit aad th tact1 to win th complete support and derotloa of thoao Democrat wh fcoswstly thought that on or th other of hi tw eompetitors should bar been nominated, . Th Btate ha produced few mea as strong oa th buttings as Cameroa MorrUoa. Aa orator of th rugged type, aa incisive thinker, a inUnse bu intelligent partisan, of rare resourcefulness, bluff and fcaarty la Us bearing and manner, h it just tba typ to Appeal to th folk and make them rejoice to. bear Aim. . Ia th contest he had foemen worthy of i stL Differing ia their type, each bad bis ttrong sad attractive charaeterlsties. His tloaoat eompetl- tor, Mr. Gardner, ia on of th moat attractive per aoaalitiea that tba Suta has known. There is ao man In. the State wbe his so great a number of personal friends.. As a platform orator be baa woa a great reputation. Bis personal popularity waa ta immense factor la tba three-cornered contest Be- caas of his youth and his rapid advance in poll tleal prestige be waa deservedly popular with the young men of the State. MrPage appealed powerfully to tho business Interest of th State. Bis record of efficiency in Congress was a great factor in bis favor. Be is a worthy member of a family noted for ita high character aad high mentality. A thorough-going type of tb high eteaa, highly trained and capable business maa, he appealed to that large section of the thought of th Stat which feels thst th duties of a governor demand first of all an eiecu tjei-ind-admlnhtrator of Troea "bility-;7 Tb Democrsti party is rich la good guberna torial material. It ia natural that it should be so, It la the parry of nigh honor, of lofty ideals, of altrusiatia purpose. Its record and principles afford Insplrstioa of the highest aort. It can always be depended, oa to offer candidates of such pro- aouuesd traits and character at to develop a spirited contest similar to that which has Just ended. , ' . "Two platf roma show what divide parties." That Is saying too much for the Chieago excuse. Hn tk. (I CI P. la Virs-inia it ahort oa candidate. Well, why not! England ie ail to have sent th Red of Buatia aa ultimatum. Say what one likes but the.pritith lion doesat hesitate to emit a roar occasionally. f i ; " A Wiaeoaain TJaiveraity profeaaor ha,s discov ered a wsy to fatten cowa a- aawdust. That la, they say he has. if A primary ia troublesome but it get results much mora rapidly thaa a convention like that at Baa Francisco. The convention eould go further and fare worse thaa nominate any one of the men now before it aad probably will. If anybody wants to help the country along aad la la a poeitioa ta do so, let him nalosd a freight car aad put It raek in asrviee. ' The favorite soa business ia being overworked at Saa fraaelaeo. A Fourth oa any other day thaa ths right day never am exactly the asm. The reaction from th gubernatorial light In terfered with the inclination of a considerable amber ef Pentoerata to celebrate Independence Day. Vie Berger aay he will rua for Congress again Be Insist en the-right ef bis district to send aay one It ehooaea to Coagreasn.'vrhst Vie forgets is the rights of Congreaa and th rest f th conn try. 1 "Urge luiury baa to rot living coat." Best way Ia uniul tba aifwaditnra af aa mneh moner en luxnriea Is to go after profiteering a little more vigorously. Big ffrolt means plenty of money for luiurle. Bryan Is right in saying that this il on of the most Important matters before the peo ple. ' , ' The unit rule is sue of the trouble at Saa fraaeisco. lt is thoroughly aafair and that males it thoroughly aadeaocrntie. The only thing that tan lw aaid ta Its favor la that it makes the eal tulstieat easier. TuropO regret' sbteae of United States aa Al lies meet." The same feeling animates th bigger rt of th United Btite at the November voting will shew. TJacle 8am ought to be at the head of the international table instead of waiting at ths tack door.-' Fifty-nine months of prison aenteneea aad eighty Ire thouianokdollart ia fines have been aasessed gainst men ia New York who sold whiskey dis guised at bair tonic, ifew Tork is understood, not m have cared especially for prohibition but pen itties such a th foregoing ahow thai New Tork Iocs not tightly regard, violation of the prohibi toa law. ' Financing themselves. Tba Lexington Dispatch telle that the town of Lexington hss been contemplating street and other improvements for some time, but thst ths fund de sired, over $.100,000, appeared difficult to procure through a bond issue because of money stringency, and it had begun to look aa though tb improve ments must be delayed. - Thea a local pool was formed, aad the banks and the people decided to take the bonds themselves if purchasers could not bo found elsewhere, and the work is to be under taken.' The bonds neeestsry to rsise ths money will be advertised for ssl in August and the local root will take them if they are not sold elsewhere. Lexington is going at this work right. If bids sre offered from outside the county or are not those bonds should be placed ia Leiingfon anyiray. They form a good investment for the people of the com munity, aad it would . be a good business for the town to make a forceful effort to get th bonds in such denominations aa ths people eould absorb to trka them in sums of from fifty dollars up, both to plnce the debt, and also to get the Lexington folks ia the hsbit of gathering up good local se curities. Nothing ia ths world is a better invest- menijfor . malb.tS-Jhe jeenritiet of his own mniclpality. Be knows ths resources of hit town, and th debt paying possibilities and willingness. IT is interested in seeing that the town thrives end keeps up its ability to pay. If he holds it? bonds he ia inspired by that enthusiasm in his community. If th entire lssu thst Lexington is to put out should be -parcelled out all over the town, some' small amount going into every house hold Lexington would have a personal anil aggres sive prido in thst bond issue and in the result of it that would be worth at . much . to the town at the money will be. Thea every time n bond ia paid off, or the in terest is paid the money doe not go out of the community. If the banks and ths cotton mills take the bonds that ia all right for a temporary move, but it i far better for th people to take them in small sums, so thst the banks can hare their money for those other uses that th Innka need to look out for. To scatter thst bond issue ever Lexington will msks a more thrifty . and provident town, and it will be wholesome in every way. HARDING CAN'T DODGE. Th Bepublleaa freaidsatial candidate has reached bis front porch at Marlon aad from that porch h will deUvr his speech' oa July S2ndq accepting th nomination. Thar le not a mas in thi country who eaa fairly at vy the caadidat Li task for th Democrat! platform has mad it Impossible for him to dodf the chief into la th campaign. If Harding were. mneh cleverer ma thaa !ie really la, If be were a legerdemaia artist, in words, be might deceive ths groundling but hi platform ha deceived nobody. On thacon trary it baa awakened the most Intense Interest in ths public mind a to how he will deal with It In the history of Fresideatlal campaigns a eundidate was ever'plaeed in quite o awkward a position. The Republican platform wac aude to mean anything or nothing to prevent a split In th party; But th platform may not hav entirely removed mil a anger uonga Joanson aad Sorah and their friend have so stultified themselveo ia accepting th platform that they are ahora ef most of the strength they onee possessed. Thee lrreeoa- ciltbles still maintain that the platform repudiates all league s of nation while Taft and other Eastern leaden are most emphatic In holding that tb plat form i for a uagne of nations. Herbert Hoover, after conferring with Harding . a .1 ,lf . . . . . . ana xuiiy realizing .me uanger racing the can didate and the party, advised that article X be eliminated from the Leago covenant aad that tba treaty thea be ratified, bnt his suggestion ha woa o favorable rssponss from either faction 1a th party. Th fact ia. an overwhelming majority ef ths -American people want thia country to enter the League of Nations a it aow exists with Am erica's position made dear. Th Democrat have truly sensed thia situation In their platform. Th hearty response that th platform hss evoked from nil that What haa happeacd since the Democrat! plat form was published three day ago must aow be a source of some anxiety to th Republican can didate and th men around him. The caadidat must begin to realise that he most offer th Am erican people a league and that it moat be a real league, that all thia talk of aa "Americanised" ing." Harding can't dodge the istue and get nway with it. His seat oa hit porch will aot save him for th American people are determlasd to know what he doe or doe aot stand for. LIQUOR OUT OF POLITICS. Liquor seems to be prstty well out of politics now. Any one who msy try any; further to get it into politic will meet with little encouragement Liquor need to be in politico when -ths ssloon wss the ward boss and ths ward was th dominat ing Influence in local politics In all of the points of considerable population. But gradually liquor has b thrown out ef politics, snd It will never bo given another hold. Th fight has been stren uous, and th politicians ss well ss ths people know the disadvantages. For a long time In the bigger cities liquor was the en rival of th big boss la politics, aad th boaa waa afraid of John Barleycorn. He would be afraid aow, but the people have not been afraid. They have overthrown the old adverssry, snd boos i ao longer a fsetor any one need dread. Liquor never was a big force in Southern politics, the saloon wse asver the organized and powerful ageat in the rural region. It waa in the citiea that liquor had it big field. So when it eame time to work for prohibition liquor was not a power for or agaiaat any movement in which prohibition figured. Prohibition wis a community question, and not one thst divided psrties. In the war gainst liquor it wss war against liquor, but by all parties, and not of . pjirties against each other for the benefit of liquor, and that being th9 caae it ia Mill a atand of the majority sgslnst liquor, aad th amendment, the supreme court,' business, and th peopl are all still against liquor. It could gala a foothold from cither presidential conven tion, and by thii fiine it realises that its name has been called, and thst it is donsf T i Liquor haa )een aa everlasting and complete rmiaanee, with nerve to break into everything, and tb selfishness to care nothing by whst means, nor on what terms, nor with whst results just so it could continue to be tolerated. That get tiresome even with a good business. It get worse with a bad on. So all hinds hsvs put on th war paint, and th whisky swan song hss been sung. Liquor ia out of politics, as it haa bfen, only the liquor men would not let themselves know thst they were whipped, dead and buried long ago. A aess story from England aay the rich woml en there are practicing eeenomy. But the fact re mains that thoae who most need to practice econ omy are those who have but little to hoy with, The rich do not buy all th luxuries. A MAKTELOTJ8 SOLDIER. Hundred of book hav beea written about Na poleon, who was m warrior. War.waa hit page ia history. Other thing are but detail when hi ctory is told. All of th attendant woe, and ruin that wnr brlnga were Napoleon' contribution to human experience. Caetar, Alexander, Hobenzollern. the a hole list of there baae their fame en the number of the slain, and the chorus of agony. William CvGorgas-was a soldier. But his achieve ment ha not consisted in killing men. He haa anked the Napoleons and the Bannibals and the Ohengis-Khant in ilia victories, but they have been the vlctorle that tare th lives of mea rather tltn those that destroy. Forty years ago he cam into the army a a aurgeon, and modern miracles all stand aaid at th one great succession of miracle- performed " by thi Alabama doctor in ttfose forty year. Climate deadly to th human race hevebeen. made Elysiums. Panama, th home of yellow fever, found its denth rst brought down by th wixardry of thi man to annual figure of flv in a thousand, a rate practically nnparallel- cd. In the war with ..Spain William Gorges waa a major in th service. He gainsd a greater vietory in Cuba than Schley and Sampson won, 'for Gorges routed an enemy that had never been- defeated ince the morning c-frrreation, and which haa slain more haman being than any other conqueror that commanders have led their men against, old TelIewJachrifaJor Grorgas floored that old mar sudor, and the army mad him a -major-general, Oxford gave him a degree and th one thing that (guides, the world gav him credit. Up and down th continent of North and South America he chased disease out into ths open and vanquished it, and be was on bis way to( Africa en a fresh campaign wjien'the one invincible foe assailed him, and on of tb greatest warrior of history waa overcome. Once before be had made an Afri can campaign, and come out with honors, and he was honored by those titles and decorations that king confer. But hit patent of nobility was that which ia written in the story of sanitary and med ical advaneemsnt of the world through hit effort, and th appreciation of th people who know what he ha don to defend aoldier and civilian alike from th assaults of a foe more to be feared than any that ever gathered under a bsnner. -A ttrang accomplishment, to rob war of it greatest terror and. to tav lifs as those in his trad or arma have destroyed it But that was Wil liam C. Gorges, one of the really great aoTdirre of the generations known to history. . THE FABTT CBEED, Boston FoV'- ' . t " ' r The platfrom adopted by the Democratic con vention at Saa Fraaeieee haa the ,distinguiahd merit of aaying something. On almost all ef the grant aad vital issue that coafroat the country today it sx presses the 'party creed ia word that can be naderatood by everybody. It doe dodg th prohibition question entirely; bnt so did the Bepubliean platform; loaora are easy ia that ailent treatment. Those who deslr a liberalising of the draatie Volstead act will have to make choice ef candidates for Congress ia the coming election. As, pertie the two great rganiaatioa are ailent oa the matter ef alcoholic beverage. But ia almost every ether regard the Saa Fran cisco platform put th Chicago platform to ehame in the matter ef definite aad eonrageoaa etate- ment. If there it any virtue la political frank ness, aad if the people appreciate that quality, thi declaration of principle wiy at wast hav more respect from the country than the ether.' It is entirely possible that a maa who. doe not be lieve la aU the tenet of a platform may be In clined to, the party that 'put it forth if he sees that it i unequivocal and doe not "pussy foot" on the toplee ia which he is Interested, a plat form described a "oae npoa which everybody ia thia broad land can atand" ia a poor specimen, be east that meana that it evade and quibbles on the issuse that de aad mast divide mea a ooinionst ; : Take the plana oa the treaty and tna league ox Nation, for instance. Nobody actually knows what the Republican wtteraaee mean; both bitter endera aad reaervationieta aay that it mean what they mean, which is sufficient condemnation or rt as a publi declaration. The Domasrstie plank soesks Blainry. and eanelr. It ask for toe ran. fieatioa ef the treaty aad the eovejaaat "without reservationa that would impair it essential in. tegrity which ha been the resident s aimuas except rabidly partisan Republicans thowiUort tnild than waa expected from him ''We do it hat voiced the heart of th American pee-faot oppose reservationa which make more clear or specific our obligations to the associated nations does aot impair ita strength la the least. The most earnest friend of the league eould hardly ob ject to that stipulatioa. , Politically, it greatly im prove It, . Tana th Democrats nave at leest made tae great issue clear. - They are for the treaty aad th league. The Kepnblieaa platform waa againet this treaty and thia league, if it meant anything at all. Than at tha Mfinla a the TTaitad 8tatea wha league ia nothing more or less than pumyforftWa.at constitutional peace and the entry ef th United State into the great brotherhood of an ions framed for the keeping of the world' peace will know which party to vote for. LIMITING THE BOODLE. (BySavoyard.) It ia aaid that Soman augurs laughed In each other' faces when they met in th throng of th vulgar herd, aad there must have beea , some grinning exchanged by. Wall Street magnate when they read in the papera that Candidate Harding has "decreed" that no contribution to the Bepubliean campaign fund should exceed the modest sum Of 1,000, and Mr. William Boyce Thompson, of New Tork. head of th O. O. P. ways and means committee, comes and endorse aad ub stantiate th declaration of the candidate with a recrimination hich would be amusing if it were not so contemptible, a follow: "We are not going to raise any great big fund. At the Atlantic City conference of Democrats some day ago, they mid they were going to raise a big sura. We are not looking for aay $20,000,000 campaign funds. Mr. Barueh aaid ome thing like that, didn't he, that he wanted to raise t20fl00r 000 for Mr. MeAdoof That fund to buy the Presidency for Mr. Me Adoo was a characteristic Titus Oatos-iim in a Hesrst "yaller," which put the amount at i0,00V 000. Mr. Thompson haa only doubled it, which ahows that he ia a piker, for he had opportunity to swell the sum in his innuendo to a hundred mil lion, or, better yet, to n thousand millions, which would have been just as true as that 110,000, 000 lie. In the matter of raising boodle with which to corrupt the electorate, the Democrats hare never beea able to compete with the "party of Great Moral .Ideas." Only last spring we had proof of -tbatfaei A senatorial committee wa raised to investigate charges that Leonard Wood and o there were seeking to buy the nomination tf the Bepub liean national convention. Thia investigation., was conducted by Senators a majority of whom were Bepublieane, and what did they find Why, that ths friends of ths Bepubliean candidates' had raised $2457,745 with which to swing the nomina tion, while the friends of Democratic, candidate! bad raiaed but a beggarly I12H297. There was ex pended by General Leonard Wood 1,180,043. He was the highest on the Bepubliean list, aad for Mitchell Palmer there waa raised only $59,610. He was the highest on the Democratic list. Th commit tee, though it searched diligently acd zealously, wss unable to discover that single dollar had bees raiaed for Mr. McAdoo. . , . COD OE GARY 7 Now Tork World. . . . Ths Interchurch Movement,, whose ambitious plan appear to have gone awry, lontenvplated so cial no leas tbsa religious activjtic oa an en larged Male. To thi and an elaborate organiza tion wa affected, and one of its ageneies known aj the Induatrial Relations Department, without awaiting the result of th big drive tet for-last April, began a survey of condition in th steel industry. The operations ef these investigator ami th report which they are known to lasvo pre pared seem to have been accountable to a degree tor tb failure of the money-raising enterprise. When the Interchurch Commission wst found to be in sympathy with this steel striker to ths ex tent ot endorsing their demand fot eollectiv bar gaining, an Ohio organ of th Manufacturers' As sociation denounced th movement a "anarchis tic." Later on, when, it waa discovered that the re port was to take a ay m pathetic view of th claims of th workingmen in th Pittsburg district, many wealthy churchmen and possible contributors were suddenly convinced thst ths Interchurch Movement wss devoting too mneh attention to human wel fsre and not enough to true religion as under stood in Wall ijtreet Thereupon Subscriptions fell off or were taatelislngly withheld and a pow erful effort was instituted to prevent th publi cation of the report. - v The World now now learns thst this sordid in fluence haa been defeated and that the Interchurch Executive Committee is toon to issue th docu ment. Whst else eonld it do in. honor and in fsithf The issue haa been sharply drawn between mam mon and ' religion. Big business ha challenged th church, and nnles th church I to retire dis credited it must hold its grousd. If it ia to draw ia inspiration from th Man' ef Galilee it cannot capitulate to Elbert H. Gary. 1 .1 . .... As for the Interchurch Movement, failure ia such circumstances can be only temporary. Prof iting by mistakes aow well understood, one of them being aa undue infusion of commercialism into its councils, there is ae reason why with right stsndsrds the cause should aot altimately be car ried to complete success. - , STRIKE OF PENNSYLVANIA. SHOPMEN IS POSTPONED Philadelphia, 'July fc-The ' atrUie af scheduled for today, has" beea deferred indefinitely, according te aa announce ment made by Harrris 8. Jeffery, lead er ef th ail local allied shop eraf ta. De ciaion to call off tha walk-out was reach ed after eoaferenoe of labor leader with vnwarnmant official and W. W. Attcrbury, vice president of the Penn sylvania raiiroaa. - JUfta ha and other loadsr had arrived at the conclusion that the pnb II is a bigger factor than the principles a lama hatwaaa tha railroad and that they hav placed their canto before Gen eral Atterbury, eoanaent no wui review u n. ami ail tint the trlsvaaes te the eariafaetioa ef aU eoaeerned. The atrike of the yardmen eoaunnee. itatinvaita aialntala that the mea who have taken the place .of the striker are doing their work ae efficiently that the "vacationists" are aot mimed. . I . t I- ADVOCATES THS ABOLITION OF JAPANESE LANGUAGE B-CHOOUI HONOLULU. T. H- Jul fi Tha re port ef the federal school survey eora mltsloa, just made public by Vaughaa MaeCaugaey, superintendent of publis Instruction fo rthe territory, recom mended that the Japanese language eehoole of, Hawaii be abolished. The federal commission was heeded by Dr. Frank T. Bunkar. chief of th eltv school division of the bureaa ef educa tion at Washington. It I suggested that opportunity b npplied ln..th. public aanools, wnerevor ue aeraaaa i no- The following is the stand ing; of the contestants in - My Mother's Bread contest for Pony and other FREE Prizes: . ' Balelgfc, N. C. Grace Bale ........... Howard, Glascock Nancy Cox mieo axuvnu ........... Bettine Parker John Peatross ............ Duncan McLean .......... Charles Bobbin :. Muriel r Bead ...a,......... -Jerry -Vadea ... - riorsnee Young -s . n Margaret Moss Lenoil Swain Gladys Howell Edna Harvertoa 'Charles Steven Gertrude Mitchne ....... Boss Kaplan rrank Maak Hose J oily .......... James Johnson Mrs. John Davia Charles Warren Wendell, N. a Mrs. C. A. Bigg ....... Zebnlon, N. C Paul Humphry Balms, N. C - Carrie Crumptoa Georgianna Aahworth .2350 .2070 .1985 .1500 , 780 838 . 260 .; 240 . 203 , , 145 r 143 .127 . 115 . 103 . 100 .100 . . 83 . 62 ,50 . 42 . 31 25 25 .121 . 90 300 61 Staudt'c Bakery eltat. for th tndy of Oriental mat guage la special alamo after regain school hears, taught by teacher rga larly employed' by the territory. The commission' report declared that "Language schools, which la th aggre gate outnumber -the publi aehoola al tha territory, are eentere of s influ eree which, If not distinctly eati-American, certainly ia anamarieaa. ', "While doubtieee many teacher ar brought from Japan rathsr thaa pro. cured from among Hawaiian-Bora Japa nese because it is sincerely believed they apeak purer Japaneee, aevcrthe less, soms at lsast aharo, the opinion frankly expressed recently before the Japanese education association of Maul by Obata Bhutan, formerly head priest of th Jodo Shu Mission at Puuueae ea the Island ef Maui, fad principal of the Mitoka girls' school, Mr. Sha sta said: " 'Any maa who la te teach in Japa nese language aehoola snocua aot be a maa with democratic ideas. A maa af strong Japan Idea henld be ite teacher" ..., - ; Taylors "North CaroMna'e - Aeknewl hedged Shop ef the Extlneive ad Aataoatle,1 ' Value- Giving reaches the Pinnacle at Taylor's this week Mr, Taylor is now making all neces sary arrange ments to leave for Northern markets to ptff chase fall winter stocks. In order to make room for the new arrivals we must dispose of bur en tire stock of spring -and summer gar ments; therefore they will be placed on sale at reduc tions ) t h a t are amazing. :v . iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiraiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiinmiimiiininiinui Nobody is going to know th sum of money that will be expended for Mr. Harding. He waa nomi nated by tha Old Guard and ia running on n plat form fashioned by the Old Guard, and the tsutt eut of the Old Guard ia Wall Street. The day af ter the election the books will bo burned, aa they were in 1888 nnd In 1904. It will be recalled that in 1904 the Standard Oil Company contributed 1120,000 te the Bepubliean campaign fund. Colonel Roosevelt, the Bepubliean candidate, asserted that as soon as he heard ef it he ordered, it returned to Standard Oil; but Standard Oil swors that it nsvsr saw the color of any money that waa "re turned." Z.vH. Harriman that year contributed $250,000 to the Bepubliean campaign fund, aad it was charged that Chairman Cortelyon had at his disposal $5,000,000, but the books were promptly burned Ind thus sll tracks were covered up There haa been considerable ingenious' polemic as to whether the G. O. P. got more benefit In 1904 from th speeches of William Jennings Bryan made os tensibly "in behalf" of the Democratic ticket than it did from the enormous boodle fund expended by Chairmaa Cortelyon. E. H. Harriman was loud in his declaration that the f230,000 he gave Cortel yon bought 50,000. votes in New Tork City alone. In thi campaign Candidate Harding will exert no authority for the very good reason that ha will have ao authority te exereiae. He will aay what he ia told to aay aad do what he ie told --to do. Dis credited In his own state in the primary, seem ingly he wss a, derelict a floating oa tho turbid stream of convention possibility; but it waa only seemtei Nobdy' ut Harding vf hoTa efcanee for the nomination at Chicago. The Old Guard se lected him last winter, and after the "innocents" on the roll-call of delegates at Chicago had amuaed themselves ia fruitless ballots, msds fruitless by ths Old Guard, the wink was gives, and the Old Guard's 'previous nomination of Harding 'was pYomptly ratified. No wonder that the nomination extorted less enthusiasm than any .other nomina tion of the Bepublieaa party in ite entire his tory. ; ,':':..- There waa a lot of pouting - by such - men as' Kenyon. and much scoter pouting by Hiram John son? Borah and Company; but they will all come in, a hare Hoover and young Teddy Boosevelt. But how about the rank nad , file of the Bull . Mooters f There's the rub. It will be recalled that Colonel Boosevelt himself wat powerless te hinder j ths Boll Moose privates, who had no offices and wished no office, from re-electing Wood row Wil-j son President of the United 6tatee ia 1916. v ! Will Johnson, .Borah, young TedY Hoover, and; th other be more sueeeasfal this year f Aea "Pre- gretsive" Charles E. Hughes was a TaJiant angel j to a worthless hobo nhea contrasted with Warren G. Harding. ' ' , Here-ia Harding strong suit ha wilt obey . the order of ,the Old Guard, and the, Old Guard will i raise the boodle. - Washington, July t. " l Something to Read ' NEW FICTION The Miser' Money, by Phillpott Woman Triumphant, Ibanes .. Happily Married, Corra Harris' Slayer of Souls, Robert Chambers What' th World Coming To, Hughes Affinities, Mary Einehart Mary Mane, Eleanor Porter , Per Teachers Raadlng Circle Book Send for Write Ue Your Wants. Prompt Service. Alfred Williams & Co. ' ... Raleigh, N. C . f . ' a a Va Ltst!" ..MM ..I1.M ..tun ..tut .MM ..tin ..$u ii Suits - Hats - Shirts 55 Kool Kloth Suits left, to go; .-Jg-gQ 30 fim Beach Suits left, to go --q--' 40 Silk Mohair Suits left, to go - $5.00,' $6.00 and $7.00 Genuine Panama ap Hats .0.40 . 25 Cent Off On The Dollar . : On All Silk Shirt. J Globe .Clothing Co. : , , Corner Wilmington and Exchange Sta. t ".r . :jt;- . '. -- ;r'',. Walk A-Block And Sawe $5.00 to $10.00 On Your Suit
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 6, 1920, edition 1
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