THE SANFORD EXPRESS 49th Year of Publicatlon. ES'CA BLISHED IN !**«. 1 MibLisflbfts: 1 ' I*. H. St. Clair D, L. St. Clair ft M. St. Clair. Managtni Editor THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2ft 1WS SUBSCRIPTION RATES j On# year, *160;- Six Months, 75c! Airertiibit Rate* .oMAppiication. Entered at the Post Office in Sanford, M. C., as Neil Matter of the Second Class., ‘ DIVORCE RATE IN LEE COUNTY. • -- For several years after Lee County was created one seldom heard of a divorce case being' heard in the county courts, but for the past few years divorce cases have come up for a hear ing in almost every court. How ever, according to statistics fur nished by the current issue of the University News' Letter, the number of divorce cases are not so great as they were a few years ago. The table published by the University News Letter shows that Lee County ranks 17th in the list of counties of the State on marriages and di vorces for 1932. There were 6 > marirages per 1,000 population and 0.30 divorces per 1,000 pop ulation. It looks like the young people in Lee County are too poor to get married since the de pression set in and too poor to \ separate and get divorces after they have married. There are a large number of odd bachelors and old widowers in Sanford and Lee County that seem to be on tihe anxious seat. It seems like! it is up to the young women who j would like to take some man’s j name and help make life toter able for him, select one from; among this number, as the j young men seem unwilling to; make the venture. i Many of the young women of Sanford are about as independ ent as the young men and seem to be satisfied with living a sin -gle life. They are engaged in r many of the activities open to the men, but for acme reason the business world has never been willing to pay them as much for their labor. We see no rea son why a woman who can ren . der the service of a man, should hot get equally as good salary, j A WISE DECISION. , We hear some criticism of the board of County Commissioners and School Board for deciding to inake a loan of $35,000 to in crease the facilities of the schools of Lee County so that all children can have the privi lege of attending school. It •would seem foolish for the state ito have a compulsory school law, tax the people for the support .of the schools, and then not pro vide the facilities for keeping ithe children in school. * The Express is informed that mi number of schools ift thS •county are entirely too small to accommodate the children now in attendance and on account of the crowded conditions of the rooms it is impossible for the teachers to give the children the attention they should have. Rooms need to^be added to sev eral schools in the county. Un less this is done some of the children, of the county will have . to remain out at school. Mr. Tax Payer, how would you Hite the Idea of ram: children re hiaiiring out of sehool 60 that other children could be educated at the cott of your pocketbook ? & children were to be deprived of the privilege of attending school, they had just as well be your children as any other par ent’s children. Give this thing a personal ap plication and we think you will be slow to censure the Commis sioners and School Board for pro Tiding means of furnishing ad ditional facilities for the schools. The Express is informed that the amount of the loan will not , cal for more than a dollar or two from the average tax pay er. We are told that the sanitary condition of one of the consoli dated schools of the county is - bad. If this |s not promptly look ed after the Commissioners are liable to prosecution i by the State. If this matter is thoroughly explained to the tax payers of the county we are persuaded to believe that t they will approve instead o? disapprove the action of the Commissioners and School Board. The schools have been ‘‘hard hit,” and this'blow would do much to destroy the very ef ficiency of the schools if not remedied. They have already been greatly impaired by the appropriations being cut to the bone and a few more blows woufld about put them out of commission. It is strange how some people will antagonize the schools when they know they are organized and maintained to educate their children. They should be ready at aU times to make the necessary sacrifice to educate their children and pre pare them for citizenship. CLYDE R. HOEY ; ON PROHIBITION. " ^ It is to be regretted that every voter in North Carolina could not have heard the speech of for mer Congressman Clyde R. Hoey of Shelby, in Memorial Auditor ium, Raleigh, last Sunday after noon on prohibition and the re peal of the 18th Amendment. It was about" the ablest speech heard on the subject in this State since the campaign on the question of the repeal of the 18th Amendment was started. It was broadcast and many throughout the State heard it. Mr. Hoey has the reputation of being about the greatest living orator in the State and many who heard him were of the opin ion that he sustained his repu tation for oratory on this occa sion. He handled the subject in a masterly way and gave many facts and figures that should convince any fair minded man or woman that it would be a mis take to vote for the repeal of the 18th Amendment. He dis cussed the subject on its merits and said nothing that should .wound the feelings of the most jsrdent wet. He did. not deal in personalities but, confined him-;, self to showing up the evils of the use of alcohoi. * In discussing the question as to whether or not the country would have bar rooms, as liquor was handled through them be fore the 18th Amendment be came a part of the Constitution, the speaker wondered what they would be called as the wend “saloon” seemed obnoxious to wets as well as drys. He suggest ed the appellations “Personal li berty Filling Stations,” or “State’s Rights Laboratory.” But he added, liquor will make you just as drunk, and just as much wreckage of human char acter as if it were so»d in a plain old bar room.” Mr. Hoey stated that "liquor never has in all the tides of time reduced taxes and it never will.” He stated that it [levied a greater penalty on hu man blood and character than any license that could be put on. | liquor could possibly compen sate for. ‘‘Three-fourths of all ; the cases in Federal courts be ifore this State adopted prohibi J tion were for selling and distill ing liquor without licenses or paying taxes for that privilege.” When the government goes in to tile liquor business is it go ing to urge people to drink and cut down their taxes, Mr. Hoey wanted to know. He wondered if such signs as this would be dis played on sure*? grog shop: “Be patriotic; Don’t be a slacker; Buy liquor and help the govern ment.” "If liquor is to be soM fa ra ther have it sold in the back al leys than to hare it stalk open ly up and down main streets bidding for patronage,” he as serted. “When others stack arms, let the pure white banner of tern perasee float triumphantly in at least one part of the dominion of these United States, and let that part be North Carolina.” Claims that drunkenness had increased since the advent of prohibition were refuted by the speaker, who said those asser tions wehe made by folks who “either had forgotten or had not seen conditions before prohibi tion in this State." Anti-liquor tews had’nt stopped consumption . of whiskey, he declared, but they 'had cut it down to a great ex tent. , "Prohibition has been a fail ure, in a measure, but it has hot been the egregious failure that barrooms) have been. It is a failure as other prohibitory mea sures are failures. They don’t prohibit entirely. And in that sense our laws against * murder and burglary and arson are fail ures. * ■ -i: “Why 'shouM the liquor law be repealed because somebody dares violate it?” queried Mr. Hoey. Nobody is clamoring to repeal the Harrison Anti-Narco tic Act, he pointed out, even though that law is being broken by bootleggers, nor wifl repeal stop Haw violations. He ridiculed the idea that li quor would wash revenue into governmental coffers, saying it would hardly pay for enforcing the law after repeal. PAYS TRIBUTE TJO ROBERT NEWTON PAGE The following tribute to the late Robert N. Pagee is from "Red Buck” Bryant, veteran Washington newspa per correspondent, and published in Red Bock’s column of the Charlotte News of October 8: “Hie death of Robert Newton Page, of Abereeen, takes from the State one of its finest citizens. He had character, ability and fine judg ment. He quit Congress in 1917 of his own accord, after serving four teen years. ( “Hr. Page’s record here was a credit to the state. Far above the average present-day congressman he climbed steadily and became one of the leading members of the House, holding an important position on the appropriations committee. During the World War he disagreed with some of the policies of thee Wilson ad ministration, and had the courage to say so. He could have remained in Congress indefinitely, for he was hot only popular here but at home, but saw fit to drop out- and resume bis private business. The convnetion that nominated Mr. page for his first term in the Hotise of Representatives was a remarkbble one for its lenfth heat and conflicts. Several candidates Were in the field, mrindmg Cameron Morrison, then of Rockingham, now of Charlotte, the late J.R. Blair of Troy the late D. E. Mclver ahdether * well known, mCni Mr. Blair came within half a vote of the nomination, but the presiding offi cer held that it required a whole one. Prom the very beginning of the bal loting which lasted a day and a night, it was evident that some master hand was behind the Page candiacy. A clever wire puller guided the spokesman and managers of the Ab erdeen aspirant. Thos who knew Mr. Page here for 14 years realized ♦bat, he could have been the on di recting forces. He did not appear in the convention hail, at Monroe, but stuck to his room in a nearby hotel. Personally, Mr. Page was pure gold. He was a brother of the late Walter Hines Page, ambassador to Great Bri tain under President Wilson, and oth er fine Pages in the State. Congress is composed largely of statesmen, a rare person nowadays. Mr. Page was a railroad man, and a lumberman He was not a slapping handshaking, time, server, but a real representative of the people of las am trict, rich and poor allk. INSTALLATION SERVICE On Sunday morning, October 29th., at eleven o'clock, a commission of Orange Presbytery will meet in the Presbyterian church here tor the pur pose oi installing the iter. A. V. tub son as pastor of that church. - The commission is to consist of the fol lowing ministers of the Presbytery! Rev. J, T. Barham, pastor at the Buf tarn Presbyterian church who will preside over the deliberations; Rev. W. M. Baker, of Mebane, will, charge it, congregation; while the Rev. N, ■N. Fleming, pastor of HaWfields church, and 'Stated Clerk of the Pres bytery, will preach the sermon tat the occasion. Also an tfce commissioii Will be Ruling Eider, J. Hsrvey White, Ot Graham, who at present is Mode rator of Orange Presbytery. Mr. White will charge the newly installed boater. The public If eenhdlly Invit ed to "attend this service, >- / ATtSlW ftnftkAL m Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Cads, of . this place, and Rev. and Mrs. M. A, Cade, of Burlington, awl Mr. and Mrs. J. 1,. Covington, of Jonesboro, went to Fayetteville Monday to attend the funeral services of Mis. Katie, Davis Cade who died at HighsmRh Hospi tal at the noon hour Sunday. The funeral was held at B*.30 Monday afr temoon after which interment was made in the McPherson cemetery near Fayetteville. Mrs. Cade was an aunt of Mr. W. M. Cade and Rev. M. A. rwi. Mr. Ctde died ten years ago and left seven children with Mrs. Cade. She was a member of the Presbyter ian church dfcd a most excellent Christian.Woman, " . , • 3, jjf, ,, , UNDER THE BIG , - WHITE DOME Catchlag Uj^Whh Cotton The Government is to mat* a vig orous effort to control cotton prices i through its new “commodity corpora tion.” While cotton has been selling in the New York tochage for- under 10 cents the government has been plan ning to lend 10c per pound on this year’s cotton in local warehouses. AH this points to a maximum price of 15c I to be achieved through an agreement l by which the government may force | the sale of cotton whenever the price [caches that figure. The producer oh tabling loans (also Will be required to curtail their cotton planting next year . with the expectation that smaller i crops in the United States will main ; tain higher price levels, without fur J ther necessity of leans by the United ' States.. v | Meanwhile the Whole plan is threat f ehed by increased cotton production , abroad. The Washington Post fears ; that in the effort of the United State ( “to raise pricess”we are increasing the number of foreign competitors who will join in the struggle in the world market. ■ ' ; ' ■ ' : . | *tOU, 000,000 , The neat little sura of $406,000,000, i is lying idle in Washington, waiting [for the states to call for, their res pective shares* of it » j | This sum, created as a highway fund under the NRA, usefully could' ; be employed in bottling roads, in put [ ting hundreds of thousands of men to work, and in enlivening business j in many lines of endeavor. But few.[ states have shown a disposition to , put either the available money omen to work on roads.- J The cause of this lethargy is one I of the mysteries of the day. For while I this fund is lying idle, the states are j collecting from motorists something i ‘ like $800,000,000 in taxes for roads— J ‘and diverting much of the money to! 1 other purposes. Some state legisla tors already are suggesting that mo tor vehicle and motor fuel taxes be increased. Still others are promoting the idea that motorists should finance the cause of "farm relief” by sub mitting to laws compelling them to. use tiie more expensive fuels blended with, alcohol made from com. | I The situation would be ludicrous, if it were not so tragic. Here is, $400, ,000,000 available at Washington for roada.The states are collecting $800, 000,000 more in taxes for roods. There was ah unexpended surplus in state road funs of more than $218, 000,000 at the beginning of the year. 1 Additional millions are available from Federal and emergency, aid finals. In I other Words - more* ftim ONE 'MM LION AND A HALF DOLLARS is on hand or in sight—enough to pro- J secute a mammoth highway-building | program providing jobs for more than; a million men—and virtually every i state in the country is restricting its : road activities to the minimum. |, For years the states have been la rr.enting their financial inability to | build all the roads they need. For years they; have been talking of the necessity of building more “farm-to | market” reads, for years they have been talking of widening and improv ing existing highways, of eliminat ing dangerous curves, intersections and grade crossings. And for years they have been building yearly only enough new road mileage to accom modate the new cars manufactured each year. | Today the men, money, and mater ials are available. Why not go ahead now? Woman Win* Arizona elects Mrs. Isabella Green way to occupy the position of lone Representative in Congress front that state. After this women should take t reef in their demands for “equality of sexes.” . > Lurid Tafos The Senate Finance Committee is grinding away, bringing out new facts in reference to the stock market in quiry. Hie Committee has produced evidence of stock market rackets that are almost as unbelievable ns were the weird tales of Chicago gangsters The New York rackets and the Chi cago gangsters soared the height* Your, years ago. i ' Already Chairman Fletcher and his Committee, with the help of Ferifin and Pecora, the whirlwind New York lawyer, have shown the American Pripie that the stock market doesn't fnrMdk half Ss many opportunities to win as a straight old-fashioned poker i game. - j Still there are million-share days in the New York Stock Market. ’ It shews the impossibility of trying to stop people from gambling. The Mind, Hand and Heart. In ail the trying times from which our country is now emerging, one fact : has stood out clearly in the welter of loss and disappointment, and that fact is this: In an emergency the man who ■ ^ trained to do something practical I stands the best chance of coming through. . :‘ j This is not to say that many thou : sands of well educated man have not suffered unemployment and the other hazards of these tinier. They have, but at least each of them who has a true education can look hack on his travail and say to himself, “Weil, at least my schooling never cost me any thing to easy Bt around.”’ ■ Bat with a nil training which in* dudes a round joining of the mind and hand and heart, any youth may certainly look more confidently to the future than the mass who are not so equipped. , Because of its sincere and most* practical sponsorship of ths best ideals) of skilled craftmanship and ad* vanced education in behalf of Urn boys of North America, every, commenda tion is due the generosity and vision shown by Fisher brothers of Detroit, $n founding and'carrying on the Fish er Body Craftsman's Guild. For the past three years this uni que organization has awarded fifteen $5,000 university scholarships to the international award winners in a com ! petition that engrosses the interest of more .than 750/100 boys in the | United States and Canada. There are no fees, no dues, in this organization —only a pledge of fealty to the an cient guild ideals of true workman ship and skill. There is no royal road of ease_or favoritism to its heights—only the scientifically judged, product of the boy’s ambition and perserverence. The prize is a glorious one—four years of one's chosen university, education in one’s favorite science, a career bn life’s most promising path. Surely, even the opportunity to go to West Point or Annapolis is not to be more j coveted than this, -— Bearing .Down Bard Organised labor has beat served with notice that if strikes persist that Tabor will be destroyed. General Johnson, NRA Administrator, has been equally emphatic and plain in telling the heads of the big industries that success of the recovery drive depends upon their allegiance and obedience to the President’s program. But whatever happens, he declares, “the old order is gone forever.” The New Deal is in full operation with all the 52 cards duly shuffled. Now the race is on to get far enough around the corner so that even its shadow will not stick up to scare-any body this Winter. Mrs. Roosevelt Rests. The First lady of the land, after a very busy Summer traveling over the United States and Canada, has been giving her active attention ,{to the affairs of .the White House. Mrs. Roosevelt grows in popularity in Washington jut as ahe has elsewhere where she has been best known. A Jester's Philosophy. Historians teU us in medieval times empires were swayed by the jest of a court buffoon whispered into an imperial ear. Today whed, We’re all striving to do tfte cau^a of the NRA, it is interesting to observe how fellows In other fields of endea vor are "cooperating. Jack Pearl, one of the better comedians of the day, whose business it is to make the na tion laugh, made this pertinent re* mark during* a'Serious moment re cently: . V “Doing my part? Say, Vm in the joke manufacturing field and tho’ Washington hasn’t approved our'code yet we’re still manufacturing new jokes without benefit of an 8 hour day or minimum wage scale, > The sooner we put more really funny stories into circulation, the sooner you’ll see an inflation in the national sense of humor—and let me teU you, it’s a darn sight easier to face the butcher, the baker and the landlord with empty pockets, when they’ve heard the one about Pat and Mike and the walrus.” \ For a comedian, he propounds an interesting philosophy. Let’s think about it. neu i^ounirysioes Motorists frequently comment on! the fact that since the depression! farm residences and buildings, hare taken on more coats of Vresh paint | than usual. As new highways have j spread in web-like fashion Jhe farm-1 Mta have -“furnished up their build ings and grounds, as if to show that they welcome the legions of new visitors passing by their front doors. City ideas and improvements have moved out into the country, and des pite the fact that most everybody is Sow boasting about hard luck and poverty; our great agricultural sec tions never looked mare prosperous. The United Statesi is»>etaally begun- ■ ning to match the magnificence of rural England, the country from which our own Nation received its birthright. Of course there may be plenty of mortgages on our farms end a need fer “farm relief" in the new/scheme ■ of things, but that does not alter cer tain discernible facta which prove thait paint, prosperity aind pride have I revolutionized the appearance of homes and buildings in the country, as well as the farms on which they ape locate^. ' Use. This Laxative Thedford's Blxck-Dbauoht 1» - made from plants that grow In the -ground, like the garden vegetables you eat at every meal. MATURE! • has put l-at<* these plants an active medicine that stimulate* the fcowel* to act — Just a« Nature* put tfte ma terials that sustain your- hody Into ti>e vegetable food*, you eat. la Black-Draught you have a natu ral Jaxattre, free front synthetic druge. Tte i«e db*e not make you. have to depend on cattiartic chemical druse to get the bowel* to act dally.' ‘amtj! /naeh-Draught m XT, firm a# • trmvr^fir BIO WlLDi, ANIMAL CIRCUS HERB SATURDAY Saturday brings World Bros, big animal and Wild West Circus to Sanford for two1 performance, both afternoon and night. Above is a typical scene of the renowned' performers and trained animals. Have you been bitten by the PROCRASTIPOD ? THIS funny looking beast—seldom seen—often heard—is always lurking near when some impor tant decision is about to be made. And how gleefully • he chortles when his soothing cries of “put-it-o£f-put it-off” are successful. Maybe you’ve heard him recently, and have put off doing anything about your roof. Does it need atten tion? If you aren’t sure, call us, and we’ll gladly find out for you—free of charge. If you should need a new roof, we can put on the famous Johns-Man ville Asbestos Shingles—fireproof^' weather-prt>of, permanent — at a price so low you’ll be astonished. Whatever you do, DON’T PUT OFF FINDING OUT, King Roofing & Manufacturing Co > # Sapona Sifted Cotton Seed Heal Made by SAPONA MILLS, Inc., Sanford, N. C. Puts thousands of dollars in circula tion hi this section every month when the nriH is operating. The tag reads like this: ■' . -r ; - —1 100 LBS Sapona Sifted Good Cotton Seed Meat 1 hr Cent Ammonia OtMiattMi a*roNA Muxs, imc. a MR. FARMER, you sell your products locally. Why not demand a local product that provides a payroll for your customers? When you exchange or buy cotton seed to®1* for Sapona Sifted and the Eagle.