je ' V.'.: ' V ESTABLISHED IS 8 0 MOUNT AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY »th. 1922. 11 .»• FBrt YEAR IN ADYANCS. TO SUSPEND WORK ON SHIPS AT ONCE Capital Ships Cumlgitd to Scrap Hm» by Ntml Tntty WmM Mi W Pwlrijad Uatil Pact Hai Bm Ratified Washington, Pek. S.—PriparaUiry la a soepenaion of work on tin - A mm on capital skips la ha scrapped ladtr the naval treaty, hnMni Harding kaa aiM Imilaiy Denby la provide him Immediately with fall tafonaation u to Dm status of Dm skips uadar construction. Although tka President doee not aspect la taka any affirmative (tap toward tcrapping tka skipe unt^ all tka pawara have rati/tod tka traatjr, II la prubakla that tkora any ka a aaapanaion of tka work on all af tka prescribed vessels within a faw dayi It waa laid at tka Wklta Houaa to day that Mr. Harding axpoctad to •rabmit tka naval agreement and tka other treatiea of tka arms conference to tka Senate within a vary few day* after they wet* signed. Ha has not decided whether to taka them to the Capitol ta person. Plana at tka Navy Department, so ! far as is known, are for suspension of j conatruction work on thoae skips to ka scrapped under tka naval limita ' tton treaty pending ratification of the treaty. Contracts for the building of the vessels would not be cancelled, it, was indicated until the limitation pact become effective. "j Included in the skips under con struction and not to be completed under the treaty are the six 40,000-, ton battleships and four of tke six > battle cruisers. One ship of the West Virginia class, now virtually complet ed, also is to bo destroyed aa a fight lag unit, although this will not be done until the limitations treaty is I la effect.' Two of the six battle cruisers are ta be converted Into airplane carriers, a provision ta that effect having been made in the treaty In the aeparate item authorising the retention of not, more than two vessels of 38,000 tons' each for the purpose. final decision has not been mad* by the Navy Department aa yet aa to which two of the three Weat Virginia claaa bsttleships under conatruction are to be retained. The original com mittee agreement in the d I aroma ion be tween the American, British and Japanese delegations mentioned the Colorado and Washington aa the ships t» be retained by the United Statee, aa the equivalent to the retention by Japan of the Mutsu. It ssnwn mora probable, however, that the Weat Vir ginia will be retained and the Waah ington scrapped, aa some naval ex perts have figured that a saving of more than half a million dollar* would be made in the expense of com pletion in that caae. Conversion of the two selected bat tle-cruisers into airplane carrier* pro bably cannot be undertaken until the treaty has been ratified so ths'. work on all six of these vessels probably will be at a standstill until the treaty has been put through the Senate. It has been indicated, however, that the department might seek au thority of Congreaa to transfer sums *»w available for the completion o! new battleahipa and battle cruiser* to the construction of submarines and auxiliary c^aft in the building pro gram which are not affected by the treaty. Among these are the ten scout cruisers for which the depart ment recently sought authority to in creaae the cost due to the failure of building materials to have dropped in price to the extent anticipated when the original estimates were sub mitted. Suspension of work on capital ships rather thsn cancellation of contracts it waa said today at the Navy Depart ment, probably would increase the cost of the government of the settle ment of claims of contractor* when the final' adjustment is made for the breaking up of these vessels. This increase would not be equal, however, it was said to tha expenditures neces sary if work is to be continued on the ships during the time the treaty is under consideration for ratification. The rate of expenditure construction now averagea about |5,000,0M • month. Chamberiain'e Cough Remedy Aids V Nature Medicines that aid nature aM al ways most effectual. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy acts sn this plan. It aOays tha cough, relieves the lungs, aids expectoration, opens ths sscrs tions and aids nature in restoring the system to a healthy condition. Thou sands have Uettfled to its good mM ties. Try H when you have a cough or raid. ~ CREW OF VESSEL PRAY THREE DAYS Pr»y«r» AmwnmI J«at hi Um Nick ml Tlati Wmmb Voted New ToHl, Fik. 4.4—Tit* atmry ef tkiw daya of prayer tn a raging in, and of pngrm uammj to tha nidi of ttiM to mti them fmi i watrry inn, m told by two w»m and il« mm of tit* crew of the Nova Scotian whnonrr. Donald L. Cook, who if rlrtd today on Unkm from Mexico, whm they had bom landrd by the Britiah a teenier Saa Eduardo. Tha battered, jvater-logged balk of th* Cook want down lata than two hoar* after U)n had hoan takan off, tha reacned mariner* declared. The woa*an, Mrr. -.t Oner, wtfe of the aUpper, and Mrs. Bennett Peeler, wife of the cook, were unani mously voted "boodooa" by the crew, and Captain Oner declared they would be returned to their home* in N'>va Scotia and never would ha taken to aea a rain. The achooner aaOed from Lunen berg, N. 8., early In December, and waa coaatiag down toward Jamaica with a cargo of I amber when ehe was •truck on Decedkbcr 14 by a terrific •term. Her aaila and bar maat were carried •way, the cabin wrecked, and the vpaael'i hold filled with water. The food supply waa rained ao that all went fodleaa for three day* before they were picked up by the 8an Eduardo. Mr*. Oxner waa authority for the ■tatement that the crew prayed for three daya for auccor. Just aa they were at the point of abandoning hipe, their prayere were ana we red by the tppearancc of the San Eduardo, aha laid. WELL DRESSED "PARSON" IS FLASHING CHECKS Trave la in Flimr and Get* Money from Banlta Greensboro, Feb. 8.—Police through out thia Motion are on the watch for i check-flaahing "parson" riding about in a ear that ia not his, • slick Individual who marehea up to banks and presents paper, "for revival eer vices" and gats the money. Any way, be got it at Morven from the bank there, with a chock made out to "Rev. Thomas H. Harris," a 9*0 document, signed by "L. E. Paschal, treasurer, St John Baptist church fund." In the lower left hand corner, juat for pretense of receipt were the words, "For revival services, Jan. 10-17, 1922." The chock wss drawn on a bank at Darlington, S. C., and it looked natural, looked like money and the "miniater" got it and rattled away in his flivver. When the chock was returned from the South Carolina bank, with the in formation that that bank'a officials knew no Rev. Thomas H. Harris, no L. E. Paschal and that there ia no St. John'a Baptist church fund on deposit there, the Morven bank men knew that they had entertained a wolf in sheep'a clothing. The South Carolina bank gave the further in formation that they had been troubl ed by aimilar checks. The Morven authorities sent word to the Greensboro chief of police to look out for the "parson." He ia dressed aa much like • reverend aa any reverend and has the proper sober ministerial manner, it is aaid, with Just a dash of the pep of the modem revivalist. Greensboro, Jan. SO.—Being sum moned to police court aa defendants was a new experience for some of the richest and socially prominent per son* in Greensboro today, bat many of them found themselves there taxed with the costs of the action. They forgot to mind the city man ager when he issued a warning that every person must keep the enow cleared frota the sidewalk in front of his property. They were used to soch warnings. Every time it haa saowud before the "wsrnli^r" appeared in the newt papers. They never had bean jacked op in court about 4L Bat C. P. Painter, the city manager, aaid that the snow moat go and policemen went around and took aoaae namea. Rich Haled Into Court MAIL ORDEK HOUSE HAS SEEN BEST DAY Arm into TUr Own; buck Loet $10,000,000 Raleigh, Feb. 2.—Mail order I la the Mat and waet ara finding they Ml ao longer compete wtth town merchants and aa a raaaK tha "country merchant Km recaptured a ((•at autaa of farmer trad* 1* Mm laat 1 year." aajra tha Daily News Record, of Now Yofk City, which haa Just re ceived opinlona on tha mall order busl neaa In general from all (actions of tTie country. From tha resume made public by tha New York retailer's daily paper it ia indicated that North Carolina farmers and farmers in other statea of the south are doing their trading | at home advantageously, the mer I chants having Just recently sought to divert the steady stream of money which in yean pdfct went to mail order honaaa ia the eaat and went. The News Record's opinions .emphasise .the fact that the mail order houses have seen their best days, this being | xeen in the announcement from big departasent stores that have done away with their mail order depart ment*. { Using th* 16 million dollar loas sus tained In 1M1 by Sears, Roebuck and Company, probably the largest mail . «rder house in this country, as a basis the New York publication queried business men and retailers ia all sec tion* of the country and from the response* gives the following reasons for the decline in all mail order busi nesses. "Various causes are aacribed in the decreaaed business of the big mail I order houses in Chicago. The most general opinion is that it was due mainly to the lowered buying power |Of tha farmer. The inability of keep ing up with a declining market with a bulky and expensive catalog*). sup posed to last for months is generally admitted, and the advantagee of the small town merchant in such s market i* pointed oat • ••V WUH»I/ MIV1VIMHIV, IV w or ia Aa Anti- mm Aajrtliiaf Khjontj j May Ph»mi j Waahlnrton. Fab. I.—If rrvry body la agreed on a queation then •nator Tom Wataon will oppoaa tt That la tha conaenaoa of opinion mong national legislator* who hart watched thla fiery Owtilaii during nearly • raar of tumultuous contort, with Indication* that ha will continue '« keep tha Upper House la an upvoa* •hruout tha fWe year* ha attll haa to aatia. , Senator Watson waa elected a mm H»r of Congre* in ISM on tkc wan i of Populist sentiment, earring on* term. In IMC ha waa nominated | for tha vkre-peeeMency by tha St t^oii Popullat convention, which en nyli of the i to pru »ida thru tkair rnlitag of tin twwtiM of the public «et oolaT Ha»e they tha -lght to open to with rellgiooe wiriliai Mnging and paading of thi T Have they tha HfM to teaah to of tha Mbto? courtof tha state of Waah ington has derided that aoder tha mm atKution of that (tato tha paogl pooaaaa no ona af thaaa righto. flu •chool authorities cannot «m aa amine atixianto to Bible study carrto '* out of ichool and give them ol ami nation. What ia tha BMaf It is a condition if tha htotory. to Im and tha literaitor* of an aneiaa people to whom, mora than to «* athar ancient paopk wo ara IndeMa for k>om of tha fnaduaental ilnmiwt in our modern civilisation. It ia a collection of tha htotory pea bably tha flnrt attempt to htotory t put constitutional limits on tha | of aa abaolute monarch; to a national popular ■■■—hl| toe repraaentatives of tha ptoto pas pla; to provide popular. If not unives sal, aoffrage; to guard tha slat against -tha danger of a laadad alia tocracy; to make tha priesthood aha* lotoly dependent on the paopla fa their subsistence; to provide popoto | educatkm for the psaaant claaa; I | create a quasi-federate union of into j pqpdent states united to ona nations organization. To tha anciet,t Hebrew! we are largely indebted for tha geiw of our political institutions. Thort) la not in any literature, a* cient or modern, a better epitome ot , moral rights and moral duties i the Tea CwBj>ntoala and to |tow tha Mount. To tha Ha There to not in any literature I clearer expression of religioua N* erence for a God of Character aa fc tingutohed from a God of power thai the 183rd Psalm. To the Hebmn we are largely indebted for our w liftk>us ideals. There to not hi any literature i life more worthy of our following 01 a character mors worthy of our rerer ent admiration than Jeaua of Mas' areth. Pagan, Jew. and Chrtotiaa unite in tribute* to him. There to no one collection of Bay llsh literature which furnishes tin pupil so many Illustrations of |Kin and elevated English as the Kin| ' James Version of the Bible, now to which references are so frequ—r in all literature since the seventeen!! century. The hooka ot this unique coltectioa were written in different epochs b] authors of different intellectual abO ity and of widely different temper* mentor from the moralist to the my* tic, but all of them inspired by rail g-ious spirit—that to, a spirit of jus tice, mercy, reverswA and humility For this reason the collection . It rightly claaaed as religious liter*tan Why should the state forbid lb youth'from becoming acquainted witl this ancient literature in the onlj school* which the majority of Hi youth will erer attend, the school established, supported and contvoM by the state? An overwhelm!*! majority of the state* encourage M larger liberty. The few who deay M aay to their teachers, you may taad the Vedic hymns but not the Hebcv* the Greek myth* bat not the Hebre* stories, the Pimetba of Rochefow cauld but not the Pimeilia of Sob* on, the law* of Jua^inlaa bat not tbi law* of Moae*. the fable* of A*ao| I but not the parable* of Jeaua. Why) Because the few ecc le*laitic* are an willing that the Ribt* should h< taught aa other colleettaaa of litem ture are taaght and a few reiiftaM enthusiasts fear that their dtiUM will b* contaminated hg th* poblh reading in the *ebool* of the BmI which wa* an Iwaplratte* to Gaofp