What Do You Think? By A. B. O'Brtont Gentlemen of the decision com mittee. Our subject for discussion tonight is the sales tax, of which or to which you have already been . seemingly introduced, a fact which to most people would be a matter of fact within itself, as there is nothing so full of i tense human in terest and romance as the study of taxes during all the centuries. My opponents under these circum stances it appears to me, are trying to impress upon you the idea that it is -untried and a new experiment. So I am going to tell you what the science of taxes is. The science of levying and collecting taxes is the science of getitng the most feathers with the least squawking of the goose. That is all there is to It. Nevertheless, our lawmaking body has seen fit to pick the pockets of the poor in order to have a downy feed for a favored few. There is no trouble about that. They do not care, because they are not acutely conscious of it. There are only two older taxes in this world than the sales tax. The tariff dates back 2,500 years before the birth of Christ. It is a tax which you do not feel because you do not know you are paying it. The next tax imposed in the order of tax development in the world was the estate tax. In the old days they called it death dues. Ancient Egypt Rmposed it 1,000 years before Christ. We have just got to it a few years igo. Babylon imposed it, Rome im posed it, and Anally we come to it. That is a favorite method of taxing from the standpoint of the tax maker. Because it is paid by a man who cannot object. He is dead. That is the reason. The next in order 01 development we come to the sales tax. Some of you people think It is new. The Greek cities imposed it 500 years before the birth of Christ and un der those circumstances it does not Impress me as a new tax. It did not soon disappear from Greece. They clung to it until the city states of Greece collapsed and chaos came. Then they did not have much taxes of any kind in the civilization they had after the collapse of their city states. Now then. If we are to theorize at all we all of us can very readily see the path we are speeding upon. The taril Is blazed and there are pla cards and signboards of abundance all along the way. History truly re peats itself. Where are the great and mighty nations of ancient Egypt, Babylon, Rome and Greece? It simply shows that 3,500 years be fore the birth of Christ and in all of the centuries which have follow ed men felt about taxes just as we do now. They adopted the same methods we prefer to adopt at the present day. What are those na tions today? Only a page in his tory, so to speak. Which is our destination the way we are going. Lost as a sob in the midst of cheer ing, Like a flame of songs high burning, Carries a world of flesh and bone. The first and cmel reason wny a oppose the sales tax is that it is contrary to or sins against every sound principle of taxation. It is a tax on consumption, a tax on what we spend for the necessities of life. It is a tax imposed with out any regard or consideration whatever for the prinlcple or ability to pay. The effect of this sales tax legislation upon 24.000 mer chants in North Carolina and its ef ^Ject upon the whole business of Merchandising in the state in wor BBiy of serious consideration. There is a very important sense in which It is i^apessary that responsible gov ernment should consider the politi cal consequences of its act. The tax commission did not reach its con clusions with respect to the sales tax field upon superficial thought. The whole subject was analyzed in its conseqeunces and incidents and the conclusions represented mature consideration of the subject in all its phase. Tomorrow will be a repetition of today. Whether it will be rewarded the mean of a day's subsistence, is as the fates may decide and all the others who come into the market to buy range in estate and condition between these two. Your consumer tax levies upon them all impar tially. I must humbly ask the de cision committee is there any Jus tice or even a spirit of sovereign Christianity shown in such an act? I shall have to abide by your find ings and continually show allegiance to mV state. But I emphatically say there is something putrid in Peru or our tax commission has gone nuts. So, In conclusion business needs encouragement, not more taxes. I offer the following reasons for my opposion: 1st. It is a tax on poverty. It has made the cost of living higher to the man who was barely able to make both ends mftet. That is finance and necessities. 2nd. It tends to take business away from North Carolina to the mail order houses whose sales can not be taxed. 3rd. It discriminates. The busi ness man is taxed. The profession al man who sells his service Is ex empt 4th. Like the locust plague, the business man will be harassed by 'swarms of snoopers and spie, other wise known as inspectors, for whose work the public will pay both In the form of salaries and the in creased overhead of the merchant. 5th. The merchant who sells for credit has to pay on sales whether he collects or not. As killing the hen that lays of golden eggs is an ancient figure of speech which never loses value as a guide to conduct under personal or public responsibility. It is true the interest of the mercrant rims along with that of his customers with respect to the payment by the latter of the tax in the last analy sis. The correctness or incorrective ness of the principle is a matter of unimportance Just now. If the merchants succeed in passing it along it cannot hurt them. The law givers expect the merchants to pass the tax along in the first analysis to the satisfaction of everybody. There is no question about this. The merchants are doing their very best. There's no tax relief in the sales tax for those who need it. There's no tax relief in it for the farmer who is caught for more new tax on his purchases than he is relieved of on his property. There's no en couragement for business in it. ; There's no sound political economy j in It. There's no satisfying prece dent of experience by any state or surviving nation in It and there is no germ of state building in it. The politicians hare put the tax on the merchants by preference be cause there are not nearly as many merchant votes as consumer votes. If the marchant cannot stand it let pass it along in such a way that will not stick out and roil the customer voter. The grandest tax in the his tory of the world from the imme mediate standpoint of practical poli tics is the tax that has been levied In this country at the instigation of a combination of the Grand Army cf the Republic and smart business men for the benefit of the latter. The second reason in opposition is: No more oppressive principle of col lecting revenue for the public needs ccultf be devised. The negation of its cardinal doctrine by the party in control in this state is by no means I unknown or even unusual. But there , has never been such an outright sur render to expediency and privilege as this has been. Here is a shopper in the market I with a well filled purse. Behind that is a bank balance, a strong box full of securities yielding regularly a | crop of coupons, a fixed and per Imanent income sufficient for every necessity, every comfort and every whim. Here is another whose wealth consists all told of a few coins suf ficient to buy food for the day. To procure these has required the ut most effort. I confess I have not much of the spirit of poetry. Be cause it is a fire that is enkindled I at the living lamp of nature and ; glows only on a few favored altars. There it is a sublimity of invention and the imaginative faculties are lost in the great ocean of reality and association. There they are sublime and beautiful, like the mountain torrent swollen and im petuous by the sudden bursting of the cloud. Now they are grand and awful like the stormy Galilee when the tempest beat upon the fearful disciples, again they are placid as the calm lake when the Saviour's feet have touched its waters and stilled them into peace. Neverthe less, the little spark I have millions Heads Women's Division of NRA Mary E. Hughes, (seated) of Louisville, Ky., is- the newly appointed head of the Women's Division of the NBA, her job being to organize the women's club* of the country in support of the recovery program. Head quarters are in the Department of Commerce building at Washington. in gold could not procure. Neither can the depths of poverty drown It nor blot It out Because In It we are called upon to cherish with high i veneration and grateful recollections the memory of our fathers. Both the ties of nature and the dictates of nature demand this. In it death loses it terrors and pleasure its charms which brings to my mind one of the most impertinent ques tions ever asked me that I recall: We don't have a Solomon or a Jesus Christ here now do you think? My answer to the question was and is: No, we don't have a Solo mon or a Jesus Christ in the flesh among us at the presention. Ques tion: Why Tou ... .? Answer: I don't want to be a Solomon for two reasons, and I can't be a Jesus Christ. Why? Solomon had 700 wives, princesses and 300 concu bines and his wives turned away his heart. I can't be Christ. So I think we will all have to be just what we are for the time being. Another of my fellowmen wanted to know if I meant to say what I did in my last article. I said yes. He said: That is why you are in the shape you are in. Now I asked what do you mean? He said: You ain't got no sense. I asked: Is that the reason you gave the other man a job? He said, yes, that's it; you ( ain't got sense enough to hold It. Let's leave the two of them there \ and consider this statement: For ! maximum benefits and pleasure [ from wholesome social life, sports, [ and recreation, by helping develop, I beautify and ennoble the commun ity we live in. Yet which fact is | imppssible I frankjy admit with ! ignoramouses entirely in charge, i Although now and then one stum bles upon a left over of rustic inno cence. As a gag they tell the handy man he has done badly. But I must say: The sole difference between ruts and the grave lies in their depths as is heard almost every where. All we need is a little front money. And after all this ballyho, we are just a plesimorphous plication as pertaining to our government and ourselves. Since the idle mind is the devil's workshop. I arranged this in order to use my spare moments for amuse ment. LIFE OR DEATH __ By William S. Humphries On Nov. 7th, North Carolinians go to the polls and give the answer to one of the most momentous ques tions that ever faced the citizens f the Old North State. In deciding the prohibition ques tion, all moral training of the past must be brought into play, and mil lions of h uman souls ? HUMAN souls for which the Son of Man gave His blood? must not be ran somed for a few thousand dollars of revenue money. For all admit that strong drink will bring in some revenue. But what is revenue in comparison with the salvation of millions? Over a quarter of a century ago North Carolina decided to try the "noble experiment." Has it been a success? Ask histroy. Do not the pages of history show that the prohibition amendment has greatly curbed the habit of drinking whiskey? I do not say that the prohibition law has caused American to lose their taste for strong drink; no law, no matter how well written or how strictly enforced can do this. What I mean is simply this: By making prohibition a law, America saved many men and boys from taking their first drink and thereby saved- them from becoming a slave of the most harmful, the most dam nable drink that man ever tasted. Not only did it save many millions from taking their first taste of strong drink, but it also stropped many more millions from drinking. And in doing so, America saved the souls of a limitless horde of men. What will strong drink do to a man? Again I say ask history. Is not a great percentage of mur ders, of breaking up of homes, of OUT TO GET 'EM ? ByAtb^T.Reid -rz*dau).\,^nr cases in the courts, and of auto mobile wrecks Caused by strong drink? Isn't every athlete forbidden to touch whiskey or even 3.2 beer? Do railroad companies ever em ploy a man who uses strong drink? And doesn't the doctor tell us that one taste of strong drink calls for another drink, and that the sec ond drink calls for the third, and so on until the man is a slave of his thirst for whiskey, and is an omnious wreck in nerves, in health, in mind, and In morals? Doesn't the physican also tell us that a man who drinks strong drinks is not a man, but a being of the below-brute stage? N Adam and Eve were tempted to eat the forbidden fruit. They did not resist. As a result, they were driven from their Eden to make a living by tolling In the sun. Strong drink is the forbidden fruit of today. That Is stated clear ly In the Holy Writ. Whoever falls will pay the penalty In an everlast ing hell. Why does the anti-prohibitionist want strong drink? It is because he wants it for his ILT&s ' -? ? ? ? i TO RENEW BLANKETS *J*0 keep blankets permanently soft and flufTy as when new, great care ahiull be exercised In their washing. Rubbing, extremes of temperature and harsh soap will cause the sensitive wool fibers to mat down, shrink, and become hard and scratchy. Sever we home made soap. - Washing Suggestions 1. While still dry, shake blan ket well to remove dust. Then put into sudsy water and work up and down with hands, squeezing suds through fabric. Use plenty of suds For one single blanket use about one cup of Ivory snow or flakes to tub or washer about two-thirds full of lukewarm, soft water. A little borax will soften very hard water. 2. If a machine is used, run only two or three minutes in one suds, repeating with fresh suds it blanket Is very dirty. Avoid severe agitation. 3. When clean, put through loose wringer into clear, lukewarm water and rinse three times in clear water of the same tempera ture. 4. Wring again loosely and hang in open air to dryt Never dry near heat or in intense cold. When partly dry, shake well from four corners. When thoroughly dry, press binding with warm iron, and air in warm room. Professional Cards Dr. ROBT. E. LONG Dentist , Wilburn & Satterfleld Building Main Street - Roxboro, N. C. B. L SATTERFIELD ATTORNEY- AT- LAW Roxboro -Durham, N. C. Roxboro Office: Thomas St Carvei Building. In office Monday and Saturdays. ? - Durham Office: 403 Trust Build ing. In Durham Office Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Frt _ day each week. DR. G. C. V1CKERS Dentist Office at residence, on Route No. 144, near T. H. Street old home. Mill Creek. N. LUNSFORD Attorney -at- Law . Office jver Thomas St Carver Bldg Roxboro, N. O. DR. J. H. HUGHES Dentist Office In Hotel Jones, next door to Dr. Tucker's Office Dr. J. D. BRADSHER DcatM Office over Wlburn Si Satterfleld'i Store Buidlng DR. R. J. PEARCE Optometrist Eyes Examined ? ?Glasses Fitted ntwi * Carver BaJMttng Roxboro, M. C. ? MONDAYS ONLY 10 A. M. to 5 P. M. personal use? Then better, far bet ter, a million times better would It be for him to give It up, for he Is not only sending his own soul to hell but he is also sending others there. Does the "wet" want to abolish prohibtlon because HE THINKS it has proved a failure? Even if prohibition has proved a failure? and it is far from the situation made any betttf by abolishing the law? Should Ameri ca, now in the midst of a great wave of kidnapping, abolish all the laws punishing kidnappers? Open wide the doors of hell, or close them TIGHTER? Give us, then, not abolition of prohibition, but STRICTER ENFORCEMENT. I know of only one other reason why anyone should favor strong drink. That is for revenue ? for the thirty pieces of silver the "wet" would be a Judas, and he a traitor j to Jesus Christ If anyone favors whiskey for the money it will bring in he will not be satisfied with ei ther whiskey or money, but will be like Judas, live in misery, and mental agony the rest of his days. The anti-prohibltionist has no sane christian argument for his cause. Nov. 7th is fast approaching. Citizen kings of the Grand Old North State, I c?t& upon you to awaken to the power of your kingship! And when you go to vote remem ber this: 'A thousand years of Amer- j lea's future look down upon the answer to this question, a thonsand years of anxious future bend low to catch the whispered message of LIfE or death. "Onward Christian Soldiers/' IN MEMORY On August 5, 1932, God saw fit to visit our home and take my dear sister to the home that He has promised to all those that love and serve Him. We cap't under stand why He called her so young. She was 19 years old. The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh, bless ed be the name of the Lord. She was always nice and kind to all she met. She had a sweet smile for every one. All that knew her loved her. She bore her sufferings so pa tiently. She never talked of her suf fering to people. She always talked it with Ood, the one that was able to help her. The blessed thought she left for us to think is the sweet est of all: that she was ready and willing to die. She said she was ready for God to have His way with her. So may we prepare our lives to meet her in the home that God has promised. Her sister. Odell CBriant. To The Public: we can put backs and bot toms in all kinds of chain. Let me fix np that old chair like new. See me under Wil burn A Satterfleld's Store. John Cash ALWAYS SMOKE STEADILY ATA PARTY YOU CAN SMOKE CAMELS ONE AFTER THE OTHER ...THEY TASTE GRAND AND NEVER JANGLE YOUR NERVES CcuaeJ's (toitker'Jcbueos never cjetcn ijowlUrvei . . fHever tire ijtmrTaste BARGAIN FARES SUNDAY, AUGUST 27TH $1.50 Round Trip From Durham Tickets Limited To Date Of Sale SPECIAL TRAIN Leave Durham 2:10 A. M. Arrive Wilmington 8:15 A. M. SPECIAL ELECTRIC TRAINS FROM PASSENGER STATION TO WRIGHTS VILLE BEACH. FARE TO BEACH AND RE TURN INCLUDED IN ABOVE FARE. . Leave Wilmington 6:40 P. M. Arrive Durham 12:40 A.M. PURCHASE TICKETS ^ N ADVANCE J. S. Bloodworth, DPA Raleigh, N. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY Business Directory If 70a are In doubt m to where to find anything look over this Iht The advertisers In this space are all reliable and 70a win make no mis take when yon patronise them. If yen da not And what yon are looklnf for here come to The Cornier Office and we will |he yon the Information deatred. -john'cash FOB TOUR SHOE REPAIRING J. T. BRADSHER Plumbing and Heating Office on Reams Avenue Phone 14 Wilburn & Satterfield Roxboro's Dependable Store "It wni Pit Ton To Trade With C*? Try It" Watkins & Bullock Everything To Build With If you need Lumber ? 94 is your number. G. B. MASTEN Painting and Paperhanging Good Paint Applied By Good Palnton Frodaoot a Good Job Kambrick, Austin & Thomas DRUGGISTS The Roxboro Courier HIGH CLASS JOB PRINTING Roxboro Lumber Co. Boy It From Us And Bank The Difference "Home Of Quality L amber" Sergeant & Clayton The Sta-Klean Store" Phone Us Your Orders. We Deliver Promptly. HARRIS & BURNS BARGAINS Everything from head to foot for men, women and children. GEO. W. KANE BUILDER - CONTRACTOR "No Job Too Big ? None Too SmalL" Carolina Power & Light Co. Home-Life Made Easiet Ask the lady who has an Electric Range.