A PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE OPBUILDJNC OF AMERICAN VOL. VI. HOMES AND AMERICAN INDUSTRIES. BURLINGTON. N. C.. DEC. 5.1918 23 inq CompIeti6n, Ite beautiful jyl New Store Near- 3,000 Thrown Into Idleness .T. 1). immediately after inven- taken after the holi- By New Tariff. Phoenixville, Dec. 2.—Probably no Add New Safe Deposit Boxes. The Alamance Loan & Trust Co., better example of the effect of the has recently added a new series of new tariff law can be found in the safe depoi^it boxes, to be used by their country than in this town of more ; many customers for protection. The than 10,000 inhabitants. The force large number of deposit boxes which and truth of the prediction of Chas. i they had were all in use making it M. Schwab and other business men i necessary to ad another series. & h. B- Whitted, which has 05 '''■ construction for the past finonths, is nearing completion. Nvill arrange to move into ‘ . ». • V,? - has been _ _ The building and lot cost ov~ , condition of the iron! The new system is the Yale sys- '■'Viionn The large spacious first - - ^ building will be used for ^-oodp, shoes, notions, while the will he divided, the front ied as a coat suit depart.ment ^ar as the millinery’ depart- "'l; the average building by the use tiio orison glass, which give an ..a.uH'e of light, and makes the iioor as light as the first. The f.nain^ is also provided with rear which will be used largely for rhe civing of goods. This enter- iirni is to be congratulated on jrei^ction of this excellent building adds much to the appearance >iain Street, and gives the block 3 soliil frontage of nice buildings. ^orth Ciirolina Red Cross Seals Com mittee. Chr-rlotle, Dec. 4.—“Buy Red Cross ?ea!s ar.d Kelp Stamp Out Tubercu- •' This is the slogan on 45,000 i,.vdov.- cards that have been sent ♦0 various parts of the state by the ir-.tc Red Cross Seal Committee. Tht' seals were placed on sale on De- ^en.ber 1. in nearly all the cities and ir.'a large number of the larger towns Oi the State. Stroi'i!? committees of leading cii- izen? ate at the head of the work in Usl of these places. Hundreds of |.astor.s of the state will preach Dec. Tin, on tuberculosis and the need of preventative work, and other hun dreds of talks will be given in the public schools on the same theme during the first weeks in December. The State Committee has Iready sent out -100 sermon and lecture outlines and has ordered 200 more. In many f.',ii.;tio5 the County Superintendent of Schoo!.=. has taken up the work and speak on tuberculosis in the schools and place the seals on sale. Hundreds of thousands of Christ- ifias packages and letters sent out oy X'arth Carolinians this year v/ill I'ssr J^C'd Cross Seals as a marker of ihe sender’s interest in this, the great er of all humanitarian movements. It snay take years to ccomplish it, biic the time is cominag when tu- bercuiosis v/Ul be conquered as yellow fever has been and its terrible rav- ?j!es on theh uman race cease. The Red Gross Seal is a powerful educa tor that is helping to bring that Good Dav. and steel industry under the Under-jtem of locking which is known the brought home with more force than j world around as the most sturdy sys- wood free trade measure, is nowhere tem to be secured. There are only it is here. itwo ways of securing entrance into ' j these boxes the one by the key of the th. rear a« ^ i™7r Jved Pennsylvania Railroad Cuts Hours of f „t The rear is much improveu , . by the key of the person who rents • Work m Shops. ; it. These Ws ate kept in the large Altoona, Pa., Dec. 2.—Ihe predic- : vault of the bank which gives double tion in today's ^‘Press” that the'safety to the valuables entrusted in Pennsylvania Railroad would begin a ; them. If you use one of these you policy of retrenchment was fulfilled may rest assured that you are safe, here today when orders were issued ; not only from fire, but theft also. reducing the shop forces at all its j — ■ plants here and cutting the working | Prevent Colds, hours at two plants. The .machine’ Many elderly persons shut them- shops, employing five thousand men, selves into their homes with the be- will go on a schedule of forty hours »ginning of winter and do not go out a week to-morrow. They have been | of doors again until warm weather working fifty-five. The time will be : comes again for fear of taking cold, apportioned to four days of ten Just as regularly they develop a cough hours each. A total of 175 men was which stays by them all through the suspended indefinitely. cold weather. They take fresh cold At the car shops, employing three ^ from time to time and when the spring thousand men, the same hours also'arrives they are weak and anemic will go into effect tomorrow, while 125 and it takes a good deal of outdoor men W'ere laid off. exercise in the warm summer weath- bing...N etaoin Bhrd shrd hrdlurdll, er to restsre them to some sort of No change has been made in the | vigor again, working time at the Juanita. shops, j Now is the time to prevent these where locomotives are built, or at the ^ colds, by taking daily exercise all South Altoona foundries, but a num- ' through the winter. The windows of ber of men have been suspended at the sleeping room should be open sirf- both places. ficiently to get fresh air to breath all All told, between four hundred and night, five hundred men have been dropped, j A positive preventive of colds is to Not since the 1907 panic has the bathe down to the waist is cold water company cut its working force or the every morning and then rub with a hours in Altoona. coarse towel until you arfe in a fine : glow. Have someone close the win- Monumejit to Sir Walter Raleigh, dows fifteen to thirty minutes before ^ 4 A ’ the bath so that the air of the Rchmond, Va., Dec. 4.—A meetng tt xut • ^ . , -T ^ f J 1 4. +« IS modified. Have the basm of water, of the North Carolma delegates to t. • , ^ J. XX. A • ^ he wash rag and towel on a chair be- the Conference o - e raerica ' side the bed, sit up in bed while wash- mittee in .the Kjljrest of celebatwn ^4 « limis warm. of the 100 years of peace between the more than three minutes English speaking peop e, for the sponge and riib and then treaty of Ghent was held at the Jef- J* T T _ J 1 'fi u ^ V. II ■* w ferson Hotel, Richmond, Va., Decem- This plan has the recommendation -Other Elon Dean Lawrence Lectures Items. Eion College, Dec. 5.—Elon College ^il have thi'ee representatives at the Intsrnational Student Volunteer Con- veniion of College Y. JI. C. A. Men to be held t Kansas City, Mo., Dee. iy-Jan. 4. The famUty will be repre- ?ented by Prof. E. A. Campbell. The stiifJent body wH sent Messrs. W. C. I'urcuil and W. T. Scaxboro. The college is to have a Japanese tu'ter the holidays. Miss Tasio >. a graduate of the Girl's School ' i Mvo Christian Church; Utsunamiya, is the young lady in question. L'xr,r-nc5e;; ia this country are to Mr, J. Beale Johnson and ber 3 and 4, ^tnd a op e e . o ow being tried many times under var- ing resolution: , , ^ ious conditions, always with success '‘Whereas, is was recommen e y proper precautions are taken, the conference ohat eac s ® ® ® With the outdoor exercise and the Union should adopt some suitble me- careful of the diet. Eat only morial to mark this grea • nourishing foods, meat only once a ■^‘Therefore, to illustrate the glory of the English race, bo in is coun ^ strain upon the stomaclu Many try and the mother and, we a cold has been taken after a too exceedingly fit to commemorate the giving the system more landing of Sir Walter Ralei^ s co^ readily dispose of. ony on Roanoke Island, in No There is no limit to the good a nurse olina, being the first settlement of the districts if she is English on the American continen in fj. ^orl: and has tact 1585; and, “Pereas, it was suggested by the North Carolina delegation, through the committee on patriotic, organiza- i tions, that in furtherance of this idea j ' and good judgment in carrying it out. The Modern Politician. “The Biggei Job,” an article by -c mot .K-th.er, Rev. J. Lee Johnson, both ■ > (.'ar.le;)as. After studying in Amsr- Sato is to return to Japan u rrilsiionary to her own people. The executive board of the College ''''"■'il I'iioet here tomorrow evening in ihe rrc-udent's office. Many matters a routine character will be attend- su lo oy thein. One item of especial jjynt-icu interest will be the decision to hov/ best to house and equip re.viy created Domestic Science ^’epa-trnent. The schedule of fall term examina- tioas has already been posted and P'fcpaiation in earnest for them has W. P. Lawrence, Dean of Men, head of the English Department, gave ifist evening a wonderfully inter- locture on the Bronte family, portrayed the eccentricities and Peculiar traits of each member and ■'*'>'atly pleased his auditors. committees having same in have recently met here to ar- ■an^e for a new Christian Church in ‘‘iRh Point, Rev. J. F. Morgan, pas- > iinU in Reidgvilie, Rev. L. I. Cox, ^stor. The Reidsville Church is to a brick structui-e and will cost $5,000. TKl^t In High Point is ^ be a frame building to cost about ?2,000. :ro5.*rv' .= ■ ' there should be erected in the City ; j^mes Hay, Jr., will be one of the of Raleigh, a monument to Sir Wal- ^jjg Philadelphia .Snsday ter Raleigh and his colony; and, | “Press” for December 7th. It tells “Whereas, it as adopted and en- story of a modern jiolitician, an dorsed by the General Conference ^itra-politician in fact, no longer that ws should erect this monument vules of his district leader, to that brave soldier and sailor, that (pjjg primary and the new at- brilliant statesman and diplomat, that tjtude of the people tov/ards their bold explorer and generous coloniz- j-epresentatives have relegated the old er, that leamed scholar and knightly type to the scrap heap. The man who cavalier, who after the lapse of cen- succeeds in Congress is the man who turias shines forth as one of the specializes, for a few ("an hope to great men of our race-«Sir Walter , amount to much in all the rnuloifari- Raleigh; therefore ^ | ous interests over v/hich the govern- “Resolved, that these resolutions | sway. Mr. Hay’s hero be sent to the Raleigh News and Ob- done hi.s work well and faces the server, the Wilmington Star and the renomination with confidence. Charlotte Observer, v/ith request that; ^ all state papers copy the same. j “Resolved that we hereby request j Sellars Returns From North. General Julian S. Carr and Col. Bene- j ^ Sellars, of B. A. Sellars ban Cameron to perfect an organiza- ^ Clothing Department, has re- tion for the purpose of carrying out ^eek from the northern the above resolutions.” ; market where he has been buying ' suits and overcoats for his firm. He OiiUo » Job to Pour Out ail the Liquor tells us that he succeeded in securing Collected | some big values it being the end of „ , ’ , .p ' the season mth the manufacturers. Asheville, Dec. S. Mem ers o Sellars is always on the alert for sheriff’s department were kept busy i today pouring whiskey into a bath , tub in fte county jail, J “ | jjn,. Dollie Pickar, of Saxapah»w, flower into the sewer. That portion ^ ■ ' -4. , v of the intoxicants seized during the earned to Bex Hospital Eale.gh, recent investigation which is suitable j Thursday for an operation, for hospital uses has been turned ov-1 Mr. and Mrs. George Williamson, er to the Mission Hospital. Other in- | of Saxapahaw, were shopping visi- toxicants, %nfit for use as medicine, tors in town Thursday, are being destroyed. In view of tlie fact that a larp part of the whiskey comes in half-pint bot- iDtroduces Two Bills in Tile Senate. Washington, Dec. 3.—For 15 years bills introduced in Congress by Dem ocrats did not count for more than the paper they were printed on. The tablies turned when President Wil- si>n took the Oath of office. Bills put in the till by Republicans now do not mean much. Undet the new regime North Car olina statesmen expect to be instru mental ia enacting some Democratic legislation. Senator Overman has in troduced at this session two import ant bills that he expects to get through. One provides for the con struction of good roads and the other authorizes the Supreme Court to pre scribe forms and rules and generally to regulate pleadings, procedure, and practice on the common-law side of federal courts. Senator Pverman’s bill to provide for the construction, maintenance and improvement of postroads and rural delivery routes, through the co-oper ation and joint action of the National Government and the several States in which postroads may be establish ed, would put the states and the Fed- erar government on an equal footing as far the money goes. The bill provides: “That there shall be appropriated out of money in the treasury of each state for the build ing and repairing of good roads for 'star '.arid rural routes the sum of $500,COO for the year ending June 30, 1915, and to annual increase of the amount Of such appropriation there after for 10 years by an additional sum of $25,000 over the preceding year. No state shall receive any of the benefits of this act unless such state shall appropriate a sum at least equial to the amount herein appropri ated for a similar purpose.”. The Postmaster General and the Secretary of Agiiculture are to be charged with the proper administra tion of this law. The Overman bill would give North Caroli.na in the course of a few years about $1,000,000. The^6ther Overmaii bill j* which may become a. law at this session, provides that the Supreme Court shall have power to prescribe the forms and manner of service of v/rits and all other processes; the mode and man ner of framing and filing proceedings and pleadings; of giving notice and serving process of all kinds; of taking and obtaining evidence, drawing up, entering and enrolling orders and generally to regulate and prescrib'e by rule the forms for the entire pleading practice, and procedure to be used in ail actions, motions, and pro ceedings at law of whatever nature by the District Courts of the United States, i' The Clayton bill provides for com pensation of clerks of United .States District Courts was reported from the House Judiciary Committee today. It provides that on and after the first day of July, 1914, all fees and. «imolu- ments authorized by law to be paid to clerks of United States District Courts shall be charged as heretofore, and shall be collected by said clerks and covered into the Treasury of the United States; that it ;;hall be the duty of all clerks to acc;;ur,t quarter ly for ail he fees and e-aoulments earned by them. The clerk of the Unted T r.'.tes Dis trict Court for each of the following districts shall be paid, in lieu of sal aries, fees, i.er ccntums, other compensatior s now allowed by law, an annual salary as follows: For the Eastern District of M.'^rth Carolina, $3,500; for the Westcr.i District of North Carolina, $4,500: for the dis trict of the State of S'.uth Carolina, $4,000; for cu::h of tbs districts of Virginia, $4 500. WHO EVER HEARD OF HIGII Carr It is announced at .Washington that there is to be a thorough investiga tion into the cause of high. prices," This is almost unbelieyaljle. Why in vestigate something that does not ex ist ? High prices—^why, there is no such thing! They were to persh on the enactment of the nev/ tariff law. The bill Was passed for that purpose. We have Mr. Wilson's word for it, that under the new tariff order of things a high price was to be a thing as rare as the dinasaur or the ptero dactyl or other creature of the dim and distant past. Investigate the cause of high prices Investigate the cause of high prices? Why, the cause was'known to the country. The Democratic par ty told it. In the most fervid words of type and throat they declared that the tariff was the one and only cause. Cut down the tariff and low prices would follow as the iiight the day. Put them in power and the cost of living would have a Humpty Dumpty fall, and, like that fabled gentlemaR, “all the king’s horses and' all the king’s men” could hot restore it to its high wall again. The country listened to the siren song of Democracy which told how prices would fall and the eaimings of labor remain the same. It seem ed to believe that a miracle could be worked, that the manufacturer could be hampered and wages and employ ment keep on just the same. There were those who were rash enough to advise that an investigation into the real cause of high prices be made be fore action was taken. But such the Democrats laughed to scorn. The country dismissed its political phy sicians, the ones who had brought it safely through many a period of dan ger, and put itself under; under the care of a new doctor and his guaran teed remedy of tjariff revision. And now the medicine turns out to be a quack remedy. No cure has been worked, no benefit has been gain- ed. Indeed the patien^ .shows symp toms^, worse thanyhefbre. V ^ ready loss of industrial vitality, there is poor money circulation, the pros perity pulse is weaker and the busi ness heart is in need of artificial stimulant. How great is the difference between promise and performance! How dif ferent the picture from that of a few months ago when with flags fljfing and people cheering the name of Woodrow Wilson was affixed to a bill which was to be a panacea for all cost-of-living ills! Already the plat-; ing has Worn off t his measure of al- h^ged I pure gold(-r-the brasai shows through. Prices are even higher than before. There are dark clouds Where sunshine was scheduled. So now an investigation will be^ made as to the cause. It is apparent even to the Democrats that a high tariff does not make high prices. Some other cause must be found. The new tariff law has failed in its supreme test. And there has been esta.blished the greiat fact that to act first and to investigae aferwards as to the need of action, is the policy of those who are nov.r bur rulers. Mrs. S.. G. Boland has suflSiciently recovered from an operation to be at 01 tne wnissey ... friends are ties, the sheriff's deputies say a i ' ^ see her improving so nicely, will be several days before they can,® finish thfe task of clearing the jail Dr. J. F. Spoon returned a few days “har^oom.” The retrcests of prison-[ago from , near Hartshorn where he ers to a4d in jthe dfeslwctioiiof Ihe w$s the ^uest of his father who was whiskey h»v« ieea.TefuB^. ^ is~ much improved. Mr. FinL;y rn-Estates ;f $185,- 00000. Wa&hi.?g'toii, Dec. 4.—The ir.ta W. W. Finley, presider.t of the Southern Railway Company, left an estate valued at $185,0K) according to his will, made last March and filed today. A life interest is devised t-o his wife, Lillie Davis Finley, and at her death it goes in trust to the five children. Should Mrs. Finley re-marry the trust created becomes effective at once. Mr. Finley explained that this lat ter provision was inserted at the special request of his wife and not on account of any lack of confidence. In proof the testator in the follow ing sentence appointed his wife as executrix. Real estate in this city and a farm in Pftu^ler county, Virginia^ /alued At $125,000 and insurance, scoc&a and bonds, valued at $60,000, comprise the estate. Big Tobacco Break on the Market. One of the bggest tobacco breaks of this season was sold here during the past two or three days. The weather had been out of order for sev eral days so the farmers could not get the weed ready. When the sea son came the farmers were on the job and worked out a load and carried it to market. The warehbusss all had tobacco and the farmers all w'ent home with money. There certainly can be no better place to sell the beautiful golden yellow than On oUr market. We extend a cordial invita tion to all farmers to come and we believe they will be well pleased. In every 1,000, marriages solemniz ed in Great Britain, twenty-one are between first cousins. Among the no bility the rate is much higher, amount ing to forty-five in 1,000. Nation-Wide Search for Girl. New York, Dec. 4.—- A nation wide search was begun today for Helen Bums Whitehead, an eleven-year-old the Masonicetaoin shrdlu cmfwypmf ’ girl whose home is Hunter, N. Y., by the Masonic lodges of the United States. According; to informatidn in the hands of detectives the White-^ head girl is heliey^d to he hiding in this city with her half-brother, dis guised as a boy.. - i- Raleigh, Dec. 4.-—Durham citizens Will ask General Julian S. Carr to al low. them 1^0 carry his name to the next Democrai^ convention as its nominee for Goyernpr of North Car olina. ' _ Sumter C. Brawley, several years chairman of the Democratic Eexcu- tive Committee of Durham, and Par ham’s reprcsentaiiye in the lower House, was in' the city last lught. When asked what about a rumor ‘that came here a day or two ago relative to General Cair’s possible entry into the race, Mr. Brawley said: “The rumor ^11 be reality if Gen-; eral Carr consehts to allow his friends to present his name. I believe such consent would riisUlt; in everybody’s voluntarily stepping aside to illow this long unrewarded and distinguish ed citizen of North Carolina to be made its Governor without opposi tion., ' “Those Who will more than likely make the race are able, young and strong. But they are young and a wait of four years would do good rather than harm. General Carr could be norninated without opposition and it would be a fitting climax to a car^r which Has been marked for its ' public service with reward for that seirvice marked for its absence. “General Carrj so far as I know, is yet unaware thiat outside his home town there are niahy prominent men who feel about this just as we do. All over North Carolina there are people who long ago made up their minds that if General Carr is ever in position to be voted for by them, they will do it. . t believe if his friends will press his claims, he will consent to run. “I know he is ijipt seeking the of fice. But he has never declined ohe when he could do a semce. You remember, three years ago when we nominated him for thie lower House. Thre Was nothing in the legislature that could help him. He was taken from his vast business interests and his siljrvice in the House necessitated his employment of a special secretary to do hi£ work^ but he went. “Julian S. Carr in the Governor’s office would bring back to it the fast receding Old South of fine hospitality and Democratic siniplicity, because he was a Confederate soldier and be longed to the old regime. It would be one of the last oppoitunities for the present generation to see the old way of doing things. “But it is not fo^ these reasons that we are urging him to run, but because his services hayie been so unselfish and so great. He bihnot plead these lest somebody impeach his modesty, but >ye can. The schools and churches all over North Carolina testify to his generosity to them. The University and Trinity; the denominational schools of all faiths, and the fraternal organizations Oif the State have felt his generous gifts whenever there was a need to be supplied. “The Democratic party has found him its largest contributor to its funds when funds were ^^he hardest things to get and campaign expenses raised with great difficulty. These free will offerings have made him preeminent among the philanthropists of North Carolina and he has not had his re ward. “As a business man he has given employment to countless thousands and in the business side he has been one of the very leaders in all welfare work and social uplift. North Car olina has not had a business Governor in niany years. She has an oppor tunity now to nominate and elect one of the biggest ones in the Southern States. “I believethat the very suggestion of this molrement in your paper will start a Carr movement that cannot be stopped J^iid that nobody who holds inmind his great Beryices to the State Will oppose him is ,he is willing to make the race.” Mr. Bradley declares that he has found many fi*ienda who will be glad to malcei a personal canvass of the State in the interest of General Carr. Mrs. j. C. Bttcil^nAn is: BpeniiiR^ few days at .^reensboro, tter of her sister, Mrs. G. A. Hood. Prizes are to he given to girls in the Western College for Women at Oxford, Ohio, who make the greatest improvement during a certain period, jiot only in^lhteleetual growth, but in physical d^yelopment. Her..F'ame.. *‘iai * the Tirbii^ seem to' I^k up' tifcils loMt cotl^Uoii of 'Hrld iiledidiiief in our neighborhood.'’ —LottiaviUt C^nrief-JounwL