vm wimi ' ' ' ' NO. 21. I 'I A DANGEROUS CRISIS AT HAND Bristol Herald Courier, Driven to bay, and therefore fljldtuiwiin . -. J ucopjiaw;, uurumuy ueciares uer purpose to use every weapon at ner command agamst her ene raies. Beginning the 1st she re sumed her illegal submarine war farejthan everbefore. Her warning was sent to the neutral nations and for them the gravest situa tion, of the war has suddenly de veloped. . Yet the neutral Nations, espec ially the United States, should not and may not ha ve been sur prised by such a development. It was to have been anticipated since the rejection by the Enten te Powers of German's peace o vertures, and more certainly since those Towers issued their statement of their aims and ob jects in this war and the terms upon which they regarded peaee possible. Germany made her peace pro posals as a victor, but perhaps not as a Nation which felt that it could hold to the end the ad vantage it had gained. It is wide ly believed in this country that Germany's overtures were promp ted, by the realization that she and her allies had reached the ze nith of their strengh and power and must begin to weaken and give way if the war should con tinue much longer. Doubtless the same opinion prevailed m Enten te countries, where Germany's sincerity was promptly question ed and the German Government was charged with resorting to a subterfuge to solidify sentiment at home and to win the sympa thy of neutral powers Whatever may have been Ger many s motive or reason, shi signified a readiness to enter in to a conference with her enemies for a discussion of terms of peace According to her ownexnlana tion, she was prepared to con tinue the war indefinitely, but made her proffer in t he interest of humanity and to wash her hands of responsibility and fur ther bloodshed. The reply of the Entente powers, as contained in their joint statement to Presi dent Wilson, was notonlyan em phatic rejection of the proposal, but amounted to an announce ment of a determination to pros ecute the war until Germany was crushed. And, as was to h a v e been expected, Germany now de clares that she is fighting for ex istence and that she will hesi tate at no means or methods at her disposal to defend herself, to defeat her enemies, to make the war more terrible and bring it more quickly to an end. Iler statement and warning are re ceived in the United States with serious misgivings. The stage has been reached where Germany no longer re gards the friendship or neutral ity of the United States as of more value to her than the war Bhe can make on British ship ping. Another enemy will not increase the gravity of the situa tion for her, if she is free to wage the kind of war she considers to her advantage. Therefore, she will break" the promise made to the United States, following the sinking of the steamer Sussex in the English Channel and resume her submarine warfare on a more extended scale. She has drawn wider sea' zones around Prance and Italy and the British Isles, and will destroy without warn ing merchant vessels entering those zones. In retaliation for the Entente blockade of Ger many, the German Government will establish a strict and merci less blockade of the Entente countries. She will maintain and enforce the blockade with sub marines, which will sink merchant Vessels without giving those on 1 board a chance to escape. She wilj'attempt to starve the En tente countries as the Entente countries have attempted to starve Germany. Unless the Administration at Washington has changed its at titude, the hour of thfl severance of diplomatic relations between the United States and Germany is at hand. Germany has made certain Renditions under which American, tind other neutrals may travel through the war zones in safety, but she has made similar conditions before, and they were rejected by this Gov ernment. Germany abandoned her maritime policies when threatened by Washington with a severance of diplomatic relat ions. She will now return to that policy, and prosecute it with more fearful vigor. That either of the Entente Nations placed in Uermany s position probably would follow the same' course. does not alter the fact that this Government has declared that policy illegal and intolerable. and that Germany reverts to it in violation of pledges made to this Government to secure acon tinuance of friendly relations. V hat will follow a severance of diplomatic relations, which now appears inevitable, can not be preaiciea wren accuracy. It is .1 j 1 , 1 ... hardly probable that the United States would take a conspicu ously active part in the war. if war should be declared. The pow er to declare war rests with the Congress, and the Congress may find an honorable means of a voiding that calamity. But, un doubtedly, the gravest crisis of the war. as it affects this coun try, has arrived. Germany's note will fall upon the American people with stupi fying effect. It is impossible for this government to tolerate the new rule winch Germany seeks to impose, Washington Post. If this note is a bluff, it is cer tainly a most audacious one and will not terrorize neutral nations into taking the German view of thesituation in Enrope.-Age-Iler-ald. Woodrow Wilson's peace moves were what they purported to be, the last attempt to keen Ameri ca out of war. Seemingly the at tempt has failed. Macon Tele graph. The rationale of Germany's po sition is brutal, insanely brutal, in its utter disregard of t h e rights of neutral nations and in its brazen contempt for the de mands of humanity and of civili zation itself. Lynchburg News. The Von Hindenburg notifica tion of a new campaign of fright- fulness makes it too late for "sol emn warnings." The strict ac countability warning two years now means severance, of rela tions, then war: Danville Regis ter. Great Britain has directed a- gainst Germany a war of starva tion, the intent being proclaimed in and out of parliaient. Ger many now claims the privilegeof retaliating in kind. It is to be assumed, therefore, that the evil and inevitable day has come and that the Washington govern ment wi',1 presently sever diplo matic relations with the Berlin goyermnent. Greensboro News. This--And Five Cents. Don't Mint Tl lis. Cut out this slin. en close ft ye cents lo Foley & Co., Chicago, 111., writing your name and adclress clearly. You will re ceive in return a' trial package contoiiti ng Foley's Honey and Tar com pound for coughs, colds and croup; Folny Kidney Pilln and Fo. ley Cathartic Tablets. Sold everywhere, ' i Leather Famine Predicted. A Los Angelese. Cal., special says: Dealers' greed and a leather famine threaten to make a bare foot nation of the United States within the next two years. Shoe dealers and manufactur ers predict tnat before the end of 191 7 the price of women's fancy boots will be $35. per pair, and that all other foot wear will be correspondingly high. Ere long a pair of all feather shoes will be a curiosity in this country. Heretofore most of our shoe material has been imported from South America. The United States furnishes only 25 per cent of our leather. Buc blood-red Europe, having in spite of the war lost no . whit of its business acumen, has con tracted for the entire output of South America for the next two years. And the irony of the thing is that they clinched the deal with American capital money loaned by greedy Wrall Street and the American banking interests!, Substitutes for leather are be ing used by shoe manufacturers in .this country wherever possi ble. In the next few vears thn A- merican people will be divided in to classes by their shoes! ( The very poor, for instance, if they wear shoes at all, will .wear a clumsy, cheap brogan, such as graces the feet of peasants in ma ny foreign countries. And the middle classes will be marked by the cloth uppers of their foot gear, while fancy, high topped leather boots will be left to the very rich. "The problem that is now fac ing the American shoe manufac turers,' says the man with the information regulating shoes, is to create a leather shoe that will be substantial and at the same time stylish, and which also will be within reach of Mr. Average Man's pocket-book. "Shoe manufacturers of this city have come nearer accom plishing this than have Eastern makers. The "openwork shoe," which has become so popular for summer wear throughout the country, and which is a product of this city, will be put on the market with a few variations in the near future for $2.50 per pair. "This ehoe, however, has prac tical value for year round wear only in that portion 6f the coun- try where the weather is mild en ough to permit it. Nevertheless, the popular shoe of the future willkbe built along these lines, and undoubtedly it will have un disguised wooden heels!" Sloan's Liniment for Stiff Joints. Rheumatic pains and aches get into the joints aud muscles, ma- king every movement torture. ueneve your euuermg with Sloan Linimnntjit quickly penetrates without rubbing, and soothes and warms your sore muscles. The congested blood is stimula ted to action; a single applica tion Will drive out the dhui. Sloan's Liniment is clean, con venient and quickly effective, it does not stain the skin or clocr the pores. Get a bottle todav at your druggist, 25c. The depest river flows with the deepest sound. Prefers Chamberlain's. 'N "In this course of a conventa- tion with Cnauiberlain Medicine i.os. representative today, we had occasion to discing in ad-pd- eral way the merits of their AH. ferent preparations. At his sug gestion 1 take pleasure inexpres- mun my enuuiuMoik oi unamoer Iain's Couirh Remedv. I hn.vii family of six children and have used this remedy in my home for years. 1 consid.er it the only cough remedy on the market, as I have tried nemrly all kinds." Earl C. Rose, publisher Hamil ton County Itep&blican.New8Sy rucuse, Kan. A Bill That Should Be Defeated. Editorial from Greenslioco News. .' The' newspaper of the st ate. both .small and large, nave co operated finely, geaerously, with the, medical leadership of the state for years past, in a cam paign of education in Sanitary matters. If. the medical authori ties had given the newspapers an opportunity of considering the proprietary remedies' bill that they are now attempting to whip through the legislature, it is not at all probable that there would have been a chance feu this bill. This uneandid course, this elaborate strategy, whatev er merit it may have as strategy, or generalship, is amazingly un fair, aud arbitrary, and auto cratic. It has been suggested that the main enterprise here is to find revenue for the state board of health at the expense of the news papers of the state. This the Dai ly News is loath to credit; yet that legitimate advertising inter interests are ruthlessly and reck lessly jeopardized is one of the outstanding facts of tho situa tion. This with reference to the orig inal bill. There have been numer ous amendatory suggestions; there is no way for the newspa pers and the people of the state to know just what isab'out'to happen to them. We hear of pro posals that seem altogether to ignore the federal laws. There ai-a others that appear wildly im practicable. The substitute offered by the pharmacists for their own gov ernance,'and passed by the sen ate, inasmuch as it would extend the operation of the principle in the federal law to intrastate bus iness, is an unobjectionable mea sure for which some present ne cessity may exist, and necessity for which might at any tune a rise. This would make unlawful the sale of any proprietary or patent medicines purporting to cure certain diseases for which, it is well known, there is no cure at the present. Much as has been said, it ic learned, in the rhetoric which has been employed to becloud this is sue, of the Jntent of the physi cians's bill toward remedies in which alcohol is contained. This mustbealmo8t wholly disinge uous, and is certainly unworthy, in the case of a measure for which a body of scientists stand spon sor, There are numerous enact ments, state and federal, that fully cover the phase of the busi ness, that are enforced and ob served. The very essence of the original bill, moreover, is to com pel publication of the formula and statements of the ingredi ents. The statement on each pack age of amount of alcohlic con tent is fully secured by laws now in force. The newspapers of North Caro lina should at once advise them selves as fully as may be, under the disabilities and embarrass ments that hive been carefully created, of the nature and indi cated effects of this astounding legislative proposal If they will do so evidence will point to the conclusion, we think, that it is a piece of folly, freighted with inju ry. Inactivity Causes Constipatiou. Lack of exercise in the winter is a frequent cause of constipa tion. You It el heavy, dull and listless, jour complexion U pal low and pimply, and energy at low ebb. Clean up this condition at once with Dr. King's New Life Pills, a miid laxative that re lieves the congested intestines without griping. A dose before retiring will assure you a full and easy movement in the morning. 25c, at your Druggist. Washinjtoif Preparing For Reunion. Ulrmingliam Age-Beralh. y Although , the Confederate re union, to be held in Washington, is more than four months off June 4th -preparations are well under way. This will probably be the last reunion, but whether it is or not, it is safe to assume that it will be the last big one. Not only is the Washington committee of arrangements busy every day in the week with de tails but veteran camps in every State of the South are perfecting plans for moving on to the na t ional capital. Also the railoads are giving a great deal of public ity to the forth coming event. Tho lines traversing this part of the South with eastern connec tions that is to say practically all thp lines are making an nouncements whic h appeal to the sentiment of the old soldiers who fought for the lost cause. One railroad company is. stressing the fact that its trains run thru historic battle fields of Virginia, taking .in a view of the crater near Petersburg and the fortifi cations around Richmond. An other company calls attention to the tact that t he veterans who travel on its road will ride over one stretch of 48 miles which was built by Confederate soldiers, 'and which has remained, per haps, the most permanent mon ument of any work done by the Confederacy." It is the line be tween Greensboro, N. C, and Dan vile, Va. When the war began there was no railroad connecting the old Richmond and Danville with the North Carolina system of roads. A railroad official in sketching; rho situation, says the Confeder ate authorities saw the strategic value of such a line, "and were able to biing to bear sufficient pressure to overcome the obsta cles which had previously stood in the way of its construction owing to the rivalry of North ( Carolina and Virginia, each State seeking to protect its own railway interests." - The rail necessary for the con struction of the Greensboro-Danville connection was procured by tearing up other lines. At the close of the war the 48-ttiile stretch was confiscate by tiie United States as Jone of the as sets of the Confederacy and there was prolonged litigation before the Richmond and Danville re ceived it. This section has been double tracked and but few changes were found necessary. After the Grip What? Did it leave you weak, low in spirits and vitality? Influenza ia a catarrhal disease, and after you re cover from the acute atafe much of the catarrh is left. This and your weakness invite farther attacks. The Tonic Needed is Perm First, because it will assist in build ing up your strength, relnvigoratbig your 'igestion and quickening all functions. Second, because it aids in overcoming the catarrhal condi tions, helping dispel the inflamma tion, giving the membranes an oppor tunity to penorm their functions. Thousands have answered the ques tion after trip by tba proper uh o( thla graal lonle traatnant. I cm may profit by tbatr a parlaaea. Liquid or tablat fans both aafa and aatla. factory. THE PBXUNA CO. CcIobbu, CJe mm Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S C A SXO.R I A P.R OFESSIONAL. E. Glenn Salmons, Kesident Dentist. ; . BOONE, N. U. OfRcet Critcher Hbtel. OFFICE HOURS: 0;00 toia a. in; 1;00 to 4:00 p. in, ' " Dr. G. M. PeavlerT Treats Diseases of the Eye, Ear Nose and Throat BRISTOL. TENN., 1 15 '14 ly, . E. S. COFFEE A TOHbiEx A 1 LA W, LOONE, N. 0. Prompt attention given to all matters of a legal nature. tVAbstractiDff titles and collection oi claims a special iyj M-'ll. Dr. Nat, T. Dulanej SPECIALIST ITX, KAR; K08f(, THROAT AND CHBST BTB8 EXAMINED FOK OLA88K8 FOURTH STREET Bristol, Tcnn.-Va. EDMUND JONES LAWYER -LENOIIt, N. C.- Will Practice Regularly in the Courts of H ate usa. I 6.1 Mi . I l. 1). LrtWK Baunur Klk, N. C T. A. U)VK,' Plncola, N. C. LOWE & LOVE lATTORNEYS-AT-LAVV. Practice in the courts of Avery and surrounding counties. Care ful attention given to all matters of a legal nature. 7-0-12. F. A. LINNEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW', . BOONE,-n. c, Will practice in the courts of Watauga and adjoining coun ties. Ml-1911. VETERINARY SURGERY. When in need of vet erinary surgery call on or write to G, H. Hayes Veterinary Svrgeon, Vi las, N. C. 6-15-16. 8. F. Lovill. W. R LotU Lovill & Lovill -Attorneys, At Law BOONE, N. C Special "attention given to all business entrusted to their care. . , T. E. ingham, Lawyer BOONE, . -,v . . N.C "Prompt attention given to nil matters of a leual nature Collections a specialty. Office with Solicitor P. A. Liu ney 0, ly. pd. DR. R. D, JENNINGS RESIDENT DENTIST BannehsElk, N. C. "At Boone on first Monday of every month for 4 or 5 days nuu cverv uuuri wfeK. UmCO at tliu llluthiien I Ts.l s '4 'air I n ..i .'..J.. .VJ.-,f.'