■ : ! i ■ n» mamm «tt tog* fast bafar* , Nr Laad'a ntm, and tka paoata* 3 .'f.jjrvi' Ivtt'wai Th**~~ * ‘rlfr ^ wkaie aad amMt kia (Aar. 114. 4;) rrt ry aa whaaa aaaaa la aat written ta tka bonk of Ufa af tka Umb. tkay will parnaaato tka Latd'a poo plo rroa mate daoth. VMaa pr'aphati aboU aria*; takjoi *9 *k*n abroad; tka bn of tho ateay akall wax cold; Ufa* and won date Nail b* wroogkt by Satanic rj AnUckriat aad bit folio won ‘.tka Lord; bat tka ratam to tkia body, aad fight -1 “ ka fooght in —_d*y #1 battle. kotwaaa tka two Ckriat aad —n> ia IKf war or _. --— Tka Anal hattl# will NON hafaoght to a finite ham —,.«kta anyth. Tka arnica of tka ■ottenawfll gather ia the Holy Land »V Ctad> appointed tine, foe Jaro ■>— teall be a cap of reeling and • matam Nana to all pconiu; ■® tkat tain the awe It e« with it •kail be aore wounded (Sack. “And 1 aaw tka hand." any* John, “aad Um king* of Ike aortk. and tholr ottetao. gotharad tegetker to make war age lad tka Lamb." It ia the war of tea groat day of Gad. the Almigh ty. Tka erlda conus, God giraa foil text to hie long pent-op wrath. He loaka daw* upon them, aa ka did up hi Um Egytian* in the Bfd Ren. i his throws them Into confusion anJi panic (ef, Ex. 14:24; 2 TV*. 2:h).l Terrified by his storm and AUcd with confusion, every man luma h . ■word against hia brother (Tou. 33: 11,22); and they fall upon the mountains of bred. The Jew/ shall see thair miraculous de'iv.. ance, and glorify Him, whom they pie read. The coming itorm will be brief for the eleefi cake it thall be short ened. Beyond it is a golden day, fur Jens will be king of the nation;. "HU kingdom will be righteous, per petual universal, benign" (P*. 72), for righteousness and justice am the foundation thereof. Sea Pi. 80; 132; Dan. 2:44. Ha is and will be a comfort to his people (Pi. 46 and 47). "Eve rial ting joy shall bo up on their heads: they shall' obtain gladness and joy, and sorrow and sighing shall flew away." THE NATIONAL CAPITAL By E. A Jesaa. The trend of the times indlcats that out of all this stress and turmoil which the country hat been going through, that man may yet carry in to execution the throat of doing the sensible thing, by accepting tribunals and courts in which the masoning processes of the human mind will supplant violence and passion that have had thair outlet in industrial strikes The preliminary itau-m.nl of the President's industrial Confer W• itii *t th* close of the year, «■ if rd.vetos that there are jtui. "•r: nun, mu-crowned, who live *i»cv* Uic foe •< j»Jlt duty ifod In private*llilnk !»C." * i- • ( i. d ci.'.'rrtttct )ai procctd-1 . u u wtsliy different manner from •'* ••’••>* which want on tb« rocks • -tc Garys and the Goa peri dis -u lUktwrt Ily should have been , H.'I cue * ba miuj*a III ••CO.. A • u h IBs new conf'-i • orwhed t v the errors of it, .1 r.to.jr, ar.cf rofusad to premit it : u b- come u rirbatlag society, r. 'giiiig tho fact that industrial , ubiciaa present Irrcconctlabi* pouita of view, and earve to provfie that tha minds of glen arc in some inAancc* at far apart a* the polm. Lord Grey, in ravigwin gthe days os for* the outbreak of hostilities in isuropa, biuahod aside all the “if*” and “and*" of prior causes and told Ibe Gridiron Club, that if tharo had! been eomothisg like ths League of balioni to turn to, that the war •••ould (hnibtlea* have been arsrtldL ‘iCtd Grey is one of ths "tall man. -un-crowr-ed, who live above tha fog" and ills prescription tor thepravention Ol war, is in principls exactly the dune ua the method recommended by Sr- rcUry of Labor Wilson, Herbert loovrr. ex-Governor* Martin H frlnn and Samuel W. McCall, former Attorney General Wickersham. Oscar 3. Straus, Julius Boesnwald. snd tnolr asaociatea in- tho Industrial Con ference, who hav# proposed that there be created a federal industrial court whith headquarter* at Washington, With a do sen regional boards of in quiry and adjustment throughout tho country, to investigate try and deter utmo disputes arising between am Pioyera and employes. And in ordw to be selected through nominations which will be made In a way satisfactory to both the employ. >ng and the employed classes, with {or the pubHe—that same pablk which CarlyU said was “an old woman"—and which is euro to ha oatkftcd if two such contending class es as employers and employee can be biooght together In harmony ,,Jh* ."Utwnenl of the President's industrial Conference passes rather over the relations 0f the public Utilities, but the Spirit of the docu ment ia to create machinery that will "isae strike* unnecessary. But (t doe* not forbid strikes sxcept among government employes, policemen, and the Ilk*. The pupoae ts to establish a *>rt of league of Industry, where aggrieved mortal* can bring grievan css and got justice. It is not surprising that the Hin denburg* of American industrial af ff‘r* JkouJd have thus early aligned themselves against tha constructive plai^ act forth by the Industrial Con ference. and the fleet VBjce of oppo. Action comet from Mr. Gompers’ of flee, from whonee many substitutes for work have emanated. “Any plan to establish or maintain anything like fair relations between worker! and employer* must avid Compulsory fee. tore* " Mr. Gc'ZTo Ch Secretary Morrison adds that the re post offer* “no hop;* to lovers of In rt“*trf.1. P<*« wbo tee the necessity of abolishing autocracy in industry/’ Which interpreted into American Xa glisli speech means that these auto crat* of labor’s council board insist that any laws that prohibit strikes or* acceptable to them—possibly bo “life and ®*d#MH*s Have rapeqtr Cdly denounced the “radical” work radicals in thoir conventions SCCUS ^SnSESlL**?. °f *-*"* conservatives.’’ Assuming that I their difference* are of the f ifty-rifty variety; and peaaisg by all the Hin denburgs of industry, what her they ore found in the employing or the employed elaaa. there ought to be lit tle question about tha principle re cently voiced by Attorney General Palmer iu the coal itrike when he assertod that “there is involved the right an dpower of the Government to vindicate its own authority and sov amity.” Ai the wild men of the forest*, iho vig'Iancc comretltecj of the wild and wooly. uad the autocratic kings of 1914, fell betoh1 the onrush o f ad vanced civilisation, so mu*t the illo gical weapon called •‘•trike" take its place with the dodo birds, and alee way to th* ^people'* judicial proce dure. In taking positive stops in this direction the men in the President's Industrial Com raid ion have given rplcndid proof thot they "TWe above ihe fog in public d«ty u4 udiito thinking.” Diggia for Cold New Bern, Jan. 17.—The favorite ►port of the Dover and Cove City •action In digging for goM, «U eocoe - owiivra will not Hell their land for a hundred time* ite value. Thii woe brought about by atoriea of fortane U*JWr* who ftomtttixne &(0 Tiiitad this r.Tlion. J | ii i. i i ( i ' \ ;: \ Wednesday, Jan. 28th, li o’clock a. m. • !! < • < > _ _ ;; K :: .. J I v ■ . < * ' : * On the above date 1 will sell at auction, to the highest bid aer on easy U^nt, the following business lots situated near the cen ter of Dunn: „ One lot 25x75 feet, situated on Broad street, between X Clintqo avenues, upon which stood the store building oc by M. C. Butter & Co. oefore Jjie recent fire. . . One lot 31x110 feet, facing Clinton Avenue, just back of the Christian church. HI Id J ^ . , _ ,^5® j^^O ^®et* 00 jw* off Broad street, back of ;; the |. E. Jordan old stand El I ... propeily will be sold upon the following terms: One fifth cash, balance in five equal annual payments, deferred pay ments to bear 6 per cent interest from date of sale. This property is part of the estate of the late M. F. Gainey Hfio every foot of it is desirable for business buildings. 4 _______ • ! ’ • —————————————- i ___ ■1 ; - i: Residential Property I I ' > . PT **»• •“"« ‘ * •- ! ‘