FEFLE * ri:ELK, PriblUhem NtMKRT nut 14, t*. of TV A?iorl?lrd Pre#*. Pr?M U ?atHUtf I* Mm ?( m i n c>t?. *. C-. *? mm (UN aatt*r. Subscription Itaic* By Carrier. fm Wwft it c.m. y i*? (la Mnmi 42 C??l< ((? MnkiI fi *i ** ii?>i (?? Mwm-) ?i ;? MW?i? KmI?i (In atftjiwf i _ }l 00 Ily Midi. Jw ?*. M %* M tarn Twi, a ???nit _ .*$.? ?r Clwwftara UN THURSDAY. NOV. 13. 192 4. arc J.f*\ 4i\?' \ fellrr kin Nrlu'fiio around ttn' out ??' K M'Viii or eight follrriu' ??ni*. Ilainl It fiwful I' i'\i ii imII v rip npi'n a tlHIvrr) Inter only t' find that mir liisiimm-c ln|ws in a few ?|M)N. A Kcurlriwi Jurist Judge Sinclair is evidently a juriut who hewn straight to tip line, let tin- cli ip.i fail when they ?may. view of both the Swindell the Farrlor ense coincides cfc&ly with that which thin news-, paper has tried from the first to Uphold, though tiie cmiri went TSFOiPr than Tin* Advance in eon-( demnation of tin- aged grandfath #fr. While never neeMng to Justi 1y or excuse Farrior'a uct. thin ?ewspuper did feel tliat a d Inline- 1 tioa Bhouid be drawn between the juah violence that wreaks its ven g^nce under a disguise in the ftafk and the act of an outraged, tffthdpurent who openly violates the law and then offers himself a willing sacrifice to what seems to ?him the law'B Inefflcacy to expiate ?uch a crime as that committed by Swindell. "This is said, however, in no ffiirit of criticism of the sentence "flh posed in either case. Judge Sinclair had upon him the re sponsibility of upholding law and order and he met the issue with out fear or favor and as becomes a man In his position of responsi bility. n% This newspaper hopes that the TCBtence imposed in each case may give pauBc to the vicious element anywhere in North Carolina that ?has been inclined to esteem light ly such a crime as Swindell's and -that it may put fear of and respect for the law and the courts In the hearts of any who may have been 'disposed to any form of lawless ness or mob violence. ?v 8t.-Marks-ln-the-||?Miweric will ?utilise psycho-analysis for the so lution of social and economic problems. It Is announced. St. 'foarkn has already tried barefoot dancing. Perhaps it will In time ft around to religion. ? llalelgh Times. "President Coolidge will flnro?*?r ?iah* o! th *e is former liovrrnor Clias. S. Beiiceu. of Illinois; the oth er Ih General T. Coleman l>ul*ont. of the Wilmington Du Pouts. CJov lernor Deneen skidded a bit buck In 1012 when hh one of the "sev Umi little governom" hi- urged Col onel Theodore Roosevelt to con tent the Republican nomination against William Kownrd Tafl. When the Colonel took tlie "call | of the people" Ro seriously an t?? become a third party candidate. Charlie Dentin figured the pro- ' grcMxive water was a little too 'chilly for him and drifted grace fully hut surely back under the protecting earn of the Grand Old Parly elephant. Some or the other "elects" of | last Tuesday are brand new to Washington. There Ih for In stance -Mr. Pine, of Oklahoma? t ho first of the big oil operators to got a chance at n senatorial toga. There Ik llice W. .Means, of Colorado. cited three times for gallantry in the World War" ahd ! recommended for the Congres sional medal of honor. And I hero l< governor MtMaster. of South Dakota, a former new* boy. There was plenty of variety to this | Senatorial election. It illustrate* anew the pnHHlhlllt leu of selecting by the people, rather than the old way of ehoosing Senators In the slate legislatures. Senator-elect Deneen, of Illi nois. Is what might he railed a j quiet worker ? In any event he will seem quiet as tin* successor of Med ill MoCormtek. who wan anything but that. When occa ! Mton demands, however. pencen i can spellbind with the best of them. Ho merely doesn't believe in keeping up a din at all hdurs Me is a icgular of the regulars and although many of IiIk asso ciates followed Iloonevelt out of the parly and then back in again, I Deneen Is glad that his record Is' clear and clean The stalwarts of the Senate have gained a grand prise In the new man from Illinois, one who will go along. General T. Coleman DuPont. of . Delaware, may be termed almost i dllletante in politics, lie llke? to play at the game but doesn't take It too seriously. He has for I some time been the Republican national committeeman from his 1 state, but at the committer ineei ingR lie would rather be showing some of the committee Indies ae founding tricks with cards and other sleight of hand than dis cussing the serious affairs of the Grand Old Party. General Dti Pont's hobby Ih In buying and building big hotels. He owns one lure in Washington and already has his sult?' prepared for the next ?l* years. He occupied It a short time ago. but somebody slipped a cog In Delaware In 1 !? 2 2 and T Colemart got left In the shuffle. There were many predictions that bis defeat had cast him down and out. T. Coleman took no such view of the matter He ran again this year and won In brilliant style. Rice Mean?, of Denver, elected to fill a "short term" and there fore due to take his sest the first Monday in December, was born in Missouri but drifted out to th? Rocky Mountains when a lad of 13. He will add to the new sol dier vole In I he Senate. Ixdng a 1 staunch believer In the American Pilots It Lieutenant HnroU R liarrla chief of McCook Field. !>avton. O.. will tx? in I ho rorkpll of l ho Dorlin^r hellcoptor tht* muntrv i? ~ntfrlng *n lh*> todtf hi Kurnbornugh. Eng.. next MUrtnR Legion He is a veteran of the Philippine h campaign of the Span ish-American war and a survivor of the Metite-Argonne offensive of the World War. In the Span WANT ADS Too Late to Clmify < U*4I\0 OFT HAIJC ? OF ORO tcrle# and fixtures. Savo money on your grocery bill. Main Street Grocery. Phone 635. nov ll-i7np FIJZAllKTH (1TY IRON WOHKH & Supply Company, machinists 1 and founder*, mil] and marine litupplii*. marine railway dry dock, huildorn and repairer* of boata. nov 13-1 ?np. CiOOO IAIMHIFKH. WOt1.ll like curtains or family wash. 1'hone 638. 13-lHp FOIl HAI/F ? FLAT TOI? OAK ranne and n gas waler heater.1 Peed Ichk than one month. Applv Mrs. J. H Harrett. Cor. Fearing I nnd Martin streets. nov 13-l#p Now Soldier of Cross.. ! isli war he was a second and first lieutenant. In the world conflict 1 he rose tu the rank of lieutenant colonel. Although u lawyer. Meanx has been dabbling in poll* jtics for the past twenty-two yearn. His favorite sport U hunting. i Guy D. Ooff. who comes to Washington as a new Senato.' from West Virginia, Is by no means a stranger to the national capital. Ho served for three years under Harry M. Daugherty Hg an assistant attorney general of the United States. t.Mr. Ooff bears a distinguished West Vir ginia uamo. but his political op ponents tried to defeat him on the ground thut he had lived but little if any In the state. He is a son of the late Judge Nathan Ooff. Oovernor W. H. McMaster, who 1 succeeded In winning thf toga in I South Dakota after a bitter strug gle. was once a newsboy in Sioux City, Iowa. Later, however, he went to Belolt College in Wlscon I!"" " "?iu?n" of n tiundil KanKln lh.- ..II,..,, n?w .. 1 uf Sh*''s ? ni.m1?r <.f ihc VolunK. r, ?r Aimrlrj ,n """ Antonio, Tex., and ia gulnlux a hiK (ollowlns. sin and eventually drifted into the hanking business. He lias al ways been known as something of u radieal. Although running as a Republican he did not declare . for President C'oolidge until very late in the campaign. He has had a political organization of his own and has not been a part of the recognized state machine of the G. O. P. lie says he will affiliate himself with whatever may be left of the "farm Woe," when he gets to Washington. W. B. Pine, senator-elect from I Oklahoma, is not a typical oil ? millionaire. Hard work is his creed. He has no hobbies other | than to see the "black gold" flow from mother earth, lie belongs to no lodges, never went to col lege. Horn on an Illinois farm, forty-five years ago he grew up .to he a Republican ami a Metho 1 cllst. Being a demon for work, he has never playtd murh. 1 !?? does n't like KOlf ami doesn't expert to be lei astray in I lint respm t when ho gets to Wellington. Hi home is at Okmulgee. A new "nenr-Noiinior is Dan lei K. Stock. ?f Ottumwa, Iowa, who appeared on first returns to have defeated Smith Ilrooklian and who may yet prove to. it winner through content". I !?> i* another xoldirr in nolith's. haviug enlisted In the World War as a private and btt-n mustered out as a captain. TOTS APOTHfiXWIt Y SHOP Phone 4 00 A Good Drui; Sforo EVERETT TRUE - BY CONDO I f Ul?U., I 'Sl&e THERE (a/AS ??iotme r ^ SOICI-D& ' M "Tl+e CITY. IT Cs*T?I^LY BSAT'S At!. How MANY PeoPLe take THSiP oUjn Lives , ?possn't it 1. . ? ? 1 Ychj know I've ' th^t eve r.Vdot>v CID6 is feaflti-y that's a<_ i. Right as a'TH^^RY; BUT S. KNOW TOR A FACT ? ? SJTVA7 /4UL THC: CRA'iY 1=OCKS I Dont Commit 'Soici'Dcs 111 DUKOTHY 1MKN1T WOULD Vou LIKE T? MAKE A 0iG r HtT WITH M v , Sister? ' WOULD lm i ii 5 I WISH I HA AM UHORELLA f NOT SKHKHSUY HURT Bessie Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Williams. West Main street, suffered sever al cuts on the head but was not . seriously Injured whep ??+ M against a radiator hi !%? fkriupr school ha)l Wednesday. 3h? #?? not at school Thursday Out tjp* able to play abont borne. s 4 Notebook of an Elizabeth City Bachelor -?-*4 Illow lioi. blow cold. etc. Marguerite Is the sort of girl up on whom you caunot depend more than one hour at a (Itue. You may find her all excited about you today, but tomorrav l she gives you the glassy stare and you feel like thirty Cffttt I for the rest of the week. " ? / It isn't that she is naturally tickle of mercurial Natural failings can be excused if their possessor is making a stab to get over them. But assumed vice* are diaagreeable. doubly 40 in a nice girl who could ring the bell ten times out of ten If she would only be herself. s Hut to Marguerite It is a "matter of policy. " Alas! A :;lrl who go?is into a social engagement with any foul id* a that uh