YOL. XXIII. NO. 20 AI'RIL 28, 1920 PRICE 10 CENTS BANKERS' CONVENTION OPENED HONDAY fee. -S A " a. The Last Week of the Pinehurst season finds the Executive Committee of the American Bankers' Association hold ing its annual Spring convention at the Carolina Hotel. There are now more than three hundred bankers convened in Pinehurst from every state in the Union; . their present meeting combines business ;and recreation the mornings are given over to committee meetings and the af ternoon to golf, racing, riding, shooting, ' etc. The weather so far has tended to enforce the strictly business end of the program. Council sessions and head quarters are in charge of General Secre tary Guy E. Bowerman, of New York, and detailed arrangements are in the hands of Mr. Fitzwilson, assistant secre tary, also of New York. Among many committee meetings held on Monday and Tuesday the sessions of the Committee on Federal Legislation, the Committee on Commerce and Marine, and the Agricultural Committee aroused the livliest interest. Mr. Lowrie, who is economist for the .American Mining Congress, appeared before the Federal Legislation Committee in behalf of fed eral legislation known as the McFadden Bill. In his plea for this bill, which proposes to tax gold used in the gold smith's trade, Mr. Lowrie pointed out that the tax will not only stimulate gold production but will also, as a result, remedy the existing depletion of the J be taken not to excite unrest among the who are elected be bound by no pledge ffold reserve e . , ,. . . . i people. The present inflation of monies or promise to any class or kind of citi- At the meeting of the Agricultural 1 .. 1 1 J . . m , , and prices should be gradually reduced zens, and that honest, clear-headed, m Committee Dr. H. C. Taylor, who as . , & , , , ... , , , ' , . . ' , ' ... ,.,, , , ' and a more normal standard established telligent men should represent the citi chief of the Department of Farm Man- . 6 1 . A . n roliAvfi flip afrmnpH promts cit our zpns as a wnn p. in an iinmasprl. fair and .agement of the U. S. Department of Agriculture represented Mr. E. T. Mere dith, Secretary of Agriculture, urged the committee to continue its work in be half of rural education and the estab lishment of a larger number of farm owners to take the place of farm- tenants. 4 4 7A? f I I, ki Hint. Mrs. De Forest Candee and Miss Phyllis Walsh, tenders in the April Tennis Tournament. Both were prominent con- banks. just manner. "Certain classes of our people are de- "We should further demand that our man ding that prior to their election, country be put on a business basis that candidates shall pledge themselves to unnecessary employees be discharged support preferential legislation in be- that wild extravagancies cease, that the half of their particular interest. An ag- budget system be inaugurated, that gressive minority frequently accomplish taxes be adjusted based on sound eco- , , results out of all proportion to its num- nomy, and that the expense of the gov In his address to the members of the v n.-,miA v. JLi. . , uers, aiiu iuc present la yKvuuaiiy n iiuiu eiiiiiiciiu uc ttumnuoicicu uj cuincuv Wednesday, Mr uia t Mr. John McIIugh, vice-president of "As bankers and citizens we shrink the Mechanics and Metals Bank of New Pi.iyv Vvk irl no r-f rirantir an fori nor ha "VnrV P!ltv SllVtlltfp(l rn TllParlav QQ were cioseiy louowea auu uu utical arena but we should demand Chairman of the Commerce and Marine his address were his hearers more atten- r ntativeg of the le Commlttee, a report on foreign trade tive than when he said, among other things: M"MM7!TTr"TTTM"TrTTTT!rrTT!!TTTTr,M. "We are confronted with many diffi- rpHE pINEHURST uutlook is published weekly from November to May by The ult problems, such as the somewhat Qutlook Publishing Co., Pinehurst, N. C. Executive Committee on It. S. .Hawes, of of the Association, confirmed his repu tation as a rmblic soeaker. His remarks . . whAn thp npnnlp as n. whnlp shnuld St. Louis, . President r bci l Liiemseivco. chaotic condition in our industrial world, cost of living and prices out of propor tion to income, credits inflated, labor dissatisfied, and our foreign trade de r.rpflsinor. Careful, iudicious and calm judgement must be exercised by the to the contrary. bankers of this country, but care must Entered as second-class matter at the post office at PiDbt, N. C. HERBERT W. SUGDFN Editor Subscription Price, $2.00. Ten cents a copy. Subscriptions will be continued on expiration unless tue editor receives notice financing in which he said the committee is very confidently of the opinion that a nationwide organization to finance our foreign trade "can bo readily brought into existence by the uniform effort of the bankers, exporters, manufacturers and others of the country who appear to us to await only leadership." The report, which was concurred in . by the Committee related especially to the replies received from bankers in practically every state in the union to whom there had been sent by the Com mittee a tentative plan, formulated by Mr. McIIugh, as Chairman of the Com merce and Marine Committee, for the possible formation of a corporation un der the Edge Act by the co-operation on a nation-wide -basis of the bankers, ex porters, manufacturers and others thru the medium of a committee made up by selection from the committees represent ing their respective organizations. Regarding this plan, Mr. McHugh said in the report: "We fully realize the consequences that would come of bringing such a cor poration into existence and have it fail to function satisfactorily. Every pos sible contingency should be thought out and anticipated. The hope of those (i. e., the European peoples) looking to us for aid should not be encouraged if they arc to bo doomed to disappoint ment. Full co-operation on the part of all who should be interested would, we believe, insure its success." Mr. McIIugh stated in the report that he wished "to lay particular em phasis on the fact that neither the Chair man of the Committee, nor any member thereof, has any intention to undertake on his own or the Committee's initiative to organize a corporation to finance our foreign trade, for the reason that we be lieve it is not within the province or proper scope of the Committee to do so." The report continued: "We believe that the bankers of the country with the co-operation of others, if that co-operation can be had, and, if not, without it, have a wonderful oppor tunity not alone to contribute to the financing of our foreign trade, but through the educational means which would necessarily be employed, to pro mote production and economy which would have untold beneficial influence upon the social and moral as well as the material future condition of the people of this country. In those vital matters the continuous and effectively directed co-operation of sections 6f the Accocia tion should prove most helpful. "The plan which was sent out by the Committee was accompanied by a letter (Continued on Page Ten)