'It' life St ft i ;: -ill n .1 5 Advertising Rates on Request. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF BOONE, AND WATAUGA COUNTY, - $1.00 Per Year ;,: VOL. XXX. The Uncontrollables. ; "While Virginia has a better record for law enforcement in some respects than our own State, they have one custom in that noble Commonwealth which we trust will not appeal to the Tar Heels and that is a practice which seems to be becoming comon, of 'shooting up the court' when the decision of the judge ' and jury is not pleasing to the defendants. The Allen clan played that game on a large scale 'at Hillsville, and notwithstanding ' some of the Aliens came to grief - as a result, they still have itnitat ors. At Stanardsville, Va., last . . March one Edgar Morris, alleged ..desperado, was fined $10 and costs for carrying concealed wea pons, whereupon he shot up the courtroom," killing the magis trate who imposed the fine. Arraigned for this indiscretion Morris offers infirmity of temper ' as an excuse, saying thaMie was unaccountable for his actions- at the time he killed the magistrate as a result of feeling that he was being unjustly persecuted; and it I is stated that in support of this gentleman's claim the records of the War Department will be off ered to show that Morris failed , in the mental test for drafted men. This evidence, if it exists, may not be sufficient to relieve Morris of responsibility for kill- . ing a man whose only offense was imposing a fine of $10 but consid ering the disposition to let guilty wretches escape who can establish-any sort of claim to mental Irresponsibility, it will not be surprising if this Virginian gets less than he deserves. All of us are familiarwith indi viduals who plead infirmity of temper ,as an excuse for out breaks. The absurdity of t h a t claim is fully established by the fact that the very folks who make it can and do control themselves when they, think it best for their well-being so to do. Their out breaks occur only when they think they can get by with it, when those with whom they are in contact will stand for it. As a matter of fact if folks generally did not control their personal feelings and inclinations either as a matter of propriety or be cause of fear of the consequenc- : es (and the latter is often a con trolling 'motive), society would soon revert to the savage state. The average man, and most of the women, have savage instincts in plenty and if they would t?ll the truth they would say that . there are numerous occasions when they feel an almost irresis tible impulse to turn loose and play the savage. They don't be canse self-control of the passions has become inherent to some de. gree and we practice it because we fear results would otherwise m ake our position in the pom m u nity uncomfortable at the very , ' least, and possibly endanger our , personal safety. All of this is preliminary to saying that as about 90 per cent - ol us can and do control ourselves the other 1 per cent should not be allowed to play the savage and offer lack of control as an excuse If .the proper remedies are ap plied in such cases the uncon . trollable gentry will suddenly find that they have not lost pow - er of self-control. -The States vBle Landmark, Sufrirestion for a Camping Trip. - Buy a bottle of Chamberlain s Colic anc Diarrhoea Remedy be fore leavinar home. As a rule it cannot be obtained when on a hunting, fishing, or prospecting - trip. Neither can it be obtained while on board the cars or steam " ehip and at such times and places it u no, liUelv to be needed. The THE MIXED UNIFORM. Sergeant Battle Willurnas, of Camp Gordon. Ga., writes the following to the Charlotte Obser ver that should. ben. guide for our soldiers boys in wearing their u niforms: "In these days of 'Hack to Mufti' campaigns, when thous ands of men have returned from the service and others are still coming, there is a growing ten dency on the part of discharged soldiers io w.ear the uniforn in incorrectly, and in such a man ner as to.be inconsistent with the meaning and import attached to to the uniform by the Ameri can soldier. . . . "Almost wherever we go, whe ther by train or through the country we see here and there to a very noticable extent a mark of olive drab mixed" with civilian garb, perhaps the O. D. breech es worn with a blue serge coat, and' straw hat,- presenting as it does a spectacle of ''part army and some civic."- The apparently increasing fashion of combining the olive drab with gaudy neck. ties and other strip-colored wear ing apparel is to be deplored and denounced as a transgression- on the dignity of the uniform. Such practice diverts from thesacred- ness of the honor of the soldiers who put olive drab over the top, tending to discount the many blood-stained olive drabs that went down with their wearers in the war for wordhumanity. Ev eryone should know tnat tne uniform is symbolical of the price we paid ior tne worm ireeuoni, that it was the raiment of the no ble heroes who fell on honor's field of battle, and thatitdeserves the most illustrious treatment and respect that we can bestow upon it. . - The wearing of the uniform is govorned by army ' regulations, but nevertheless many infringe ments are made, however, there is no civilian law to stop the prac tice of wearing part of the u- niform with civillian apparel. Neither does the arrny endeavor to go out after the man who has been discharged, but even not withstanding the vfactlhat the army has no recourse the men well know that they were expect ed to honor and respect the uni form that was given them at the time of their separation from the service and not wear it as a mixed suit of clothes, for then it loses its dignity and becomes more or ss a mere piece of cloth. The uniform should be worn as a whole or not at all. There is no real excuse for mixing the khaki witk-civilian clothes, and as for that matter they won't mix in the eves of the soldier Of nonrse there are varied excuses given for this very prevalent a buse, chiefly of which are that they were unable to get a full sunnlv of mufti" apparel at A- ir y - - once after leaving the service, and in some instances no doubt this would be a truthful answer, but why not wear all of the uni form until able to secure a com plete suit of civilian clothes?" State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ' T.nens Countv. ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the nrm oi r . j. enc nev & Co., doing business in tho city of Toledo, County and State aforesaid and that said firm will pay the sum ol rw Hundred Dollars for each ander- cry ease of Catarrh that cannot he cur ed ItV the use of Hall's Catarrh Medi cine, FRANK .r. CHKNKY. , Sworn to before me and subscriled in niv presenee,'tliis 15th of December, A. D. itl. A. W. GLMSON, (Seal) Notary Public. - Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken in ternally and acts through the Wood on the mucous surfaces of tho system. Send for testimonials, free.- - F. J. Choney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, 73c. - Hall's Family pills for.cou3'Juatiou. 6l)ONE WATAUGA COUNTY, Memories of Jonah and the Whale. An Albermarle special to the Winston-Salem Journal, gives ' a humorous story of a colored par son's sad experience on the Ches apeake Hay and in the North. It is as follows: If all colored people who are contemplating migrating to the north could experience what Rev. Bill Parks saw a few weeks ago the migration would promptly cease. Rev. Hill is a preacher of Albermarle, with a voice for song that would, with the p'roper trai ning, put a Carusp in aback num ber list as a singer. He had been regarded by Albermarle people as "a good, respectabje darkey" up to about six weeks ago. How ever, like many of Adam's race, Rev. Bill strayed off after false gods about the time ''a young man's fancy lightly turns to love," and lea chocolate colored sister alienate her affections. This caused trouble with his wife and, although a "professed pro fessed proclaimer of the sacred truth," he allowed his domestic troubles to get into such a des perate condition that he wasforc- ed t ) resort to violence in order-, h? says, to keep his wife under proper discipline. This brought the minister into Judge Brown's court about six or eight weeks ago. The result was that the col ored brotjier made up his mind to go no'th and leave his wife and babies in the hands of a kind he"arted providence. As'luck would have it, Bill was on the steam boat that was burn ed and went down in'thevChesa- peake Bay and he sawa number of colored as well as white peo ple drowned, Rev. Bill in relating the story of the disaster said. "When de cap'n said git in deiife boats, I sho thought o' Jonah an' de whale, and when you axes who got busy J's done tellin' yo' it wasshome. I tried to jump into dcrlife boat but I missed it and landed right inter de sea, an' yo' know de fus' thing I thought was dat I sho' would be swollowed up by some kind o' monster." He was saved from the whale's belly though and went his way to Buffalo. Asked what he thou ght of the north," Buffalo, Phila delphia and other cities, Rev. Bill said: "Them northern cities am sho! full o' wickedness, day desecrates de Sabbath, day holds yo' up an' takes yo' money an' all yeu' got, an' if you got nothin' dey kills yo' case yo' aint. Yes,. I sho has seen dewager of sin since I left of No'th Ca'lina, an' I'se come back home ten stay. ' I'd ruther be here wid my wife an' Babies. I says I's gwine back south." . Rev. Bill has seen his satisfac tion of the uorth. About Rheumatism. People are learning that it is only a waste of time and money to take medicine internally for chronic or muscular rneumausm and about ninety-nine out of a' hundred cases are one or theoth er of these varieties. All that is really nreessary to afford relief is to apply Chamberlain's Liniment freely. Try it. It costs but ducper bottle Large size 00 cents. .You can" do some tilings next week, but some you cannot. So don't wait, act now! Insure your house before it burns. Insure your health before you get sick. Insure your life Before you die for the it is everlastingly too late. . - I sell the best policies at uni versal rates. . 'GEO. F. BLAIR, Blowing Rock, N. C; N. C, THURSDAY JUNE Women And Reform In Dress And Movies. Believing that it is the most active above its eyes of any organ ization in North Carolina, we al ways watch with interest the sessions of the State Federation of Woman's Clubs. And its dis cussions this week are indicative of continued habits of mental hon esty. The Federation not try ing, as so many associations of men and women try, to impress the world with the Federation's ability to furnish salvation for all concerned and unconcerned right hot off the bat: it is. playing on its own side of the fence, nor seek-f ing to overturn in entirety the present social or political order. To uphold American institut ions, the North Carolina .Federa tion will, with the National Fed eration, seek to Americanize the women of the country. And if anybody should ask you, there's quite a bit of Americanization to be done in North Carolina, for the very reason that to more than one member of the State Federa tion, we suspect the Government at Washington stands for that collection of individuals who so far have failed to make payment for grandfather's cotton burned by Sherman. . But getting right down to tacks a.t home, the .women are talking of dress and moving picture re form. And only women should be and will be allowed to reform le dress of themselves and their sisters. If the club women of North Carolina want to reform dress, hereabouts, they can do it quite easily by signing the pledge to forswear ultra styles and liv ing up to it. The same thing goes twice for moving pictures. When the wo menfolk get tired "of "vamps" and sex problems on the screen and stop shoving money in at the box office, the movies will become safe for our small fry. Censor ship of the sort that would result n women getting up and leaving a theater in the midst of an inde cent picture and telling the man ager of the show why they were eaving would do more than the creation of a board of male or mixed censors. But we have no doubt that the State Federation has thought of something of the sort, for its members are among the most practical of the thinkers of North Carolina. Raleigh Times. The Finished Treaty. It was entirely proper that all the Allied Nations interested should have been' given full op portunity to discuss the pi oposed answer to the German counter proposad answer to the German counter proposal, that the treaty in its final shape would represent to the fullest degree the inter ests of each . country, and while the discussion has taken a broad scope and all matters in contro versy have had a thorough thresh ing out, the document emerges very largely in its original shape One valuable end has been gain ed. Occasion for future quareling has been reduced to a minimum,, mutual agreement having been established on all the disputed points. The time has not beer wasted by any means. Practical ly no concession has been made to Germany. In submitting the answer of refusal, the Allied offi ciais i-nargea witn tne duty may make verbal explanation of cer tain features of the terms to the Germans, but the discussion wil end with that. The German Gov man government win . be given five nights in which to sleep ovei the matter, and by Wednesday the Treaty will have been remov e"d from the realm 'of controver y. Charlotte Observer. ; 19, r 1919. Ford and Lee.. Henry Ford has. sent word to lobert E. Lee, a young farm boy iving near Jonesboro, ancey otmty, that he will send the boy i Ford car, as a result of a witty remark the boy is said to. have made when the Ford party pass ed there last year en route to Asheville. According to th sto- Mr. Ford went over where boy was sawing wood, and tlie asking to help him, remarked1 'Do you know that you are saw ing flood with Henry Ford?" To which to the boy replied asquick as a flash: ' Do you know that ou are sawing wood with Robert 1. Lee?" Ford, it is stated,- told the members of his party,., who was John Burroughs, the great naturalist, Thomas Edison and H. irestohe, that he had never heard such a splendid comeback and he was so impressed that he ssnt the boy a ford car, new and fully equipped. The Ford party spent the night on the Le farm near Jonesboro, and Ford also assisted in many chores around the house. Morganton News- Herald. ormer Gennan Emperor Becomes Less In visible. It is as well to keep, advised as to how it goes" with the former Kaiser. A dispatch from Anier- mgen states that since he has been acquainted with the peace terms he has become even more invisibh? to the outer world. The only possibility of catching a glimpse of him is when he crosses the drawbridge twice daily, going ) and returning from his log sawing in tho-garden of the cas tle, and then he is only within sight for about four seconds. Replying to a repeated request for a declaration, the former em psror seat the following word: "Tell the Associated Press that my attitude is unchanged." The messenger, General von Este.noff, gave tlae correspondent no hope that anything was likely to be given out for publication. It is virtually impossible to glean anything regarding the former emperor's life or plans, as every body in the castle-is under strict orders to maintain silence. - NOTICE. North Carolina Watauga County, in tne superior iJourt, before the clerk Charles Ki Vannoy and wifo Winnie' Vannoy; Uusscl K Vannoy, Flor ence Vannoy and Dale Vunnoy, the last three by their next friend, Ida Vannoy vs. John A Vannoy and wife F.lnia Vannoy, .lames F Van noy and wife Mamie Vannoy. Wiley C Vannoy and wife Josic Vannoy, Tell H. Vannoy, and wife. Tate Van noy, Hoyt.L Vannoy and Larrie Vannoy. The defendants ahnvo named will take notice that a speiial proceeding entit led as above has leon commenced in he Superior Court of'Watauira coun ty, North Carolina for tho purpose of partitioning real estate in Watauga snunty, North Carolina and the said lefendnnt will further take notice that ;hey are required to appear at the of :lce of the Clerk of the Supurlor court for Watauga Cuity on the :M);h day nf June Hiltl at the court house of said ounty, in Boone, North Carolina and answer or demur to the petition in aid action or the plaintiffs will apply ',0 the court for the relief demanded in said iH'titlon. This 24th day of May O. L. COFFEY, Clerk Superior Court. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. Notice Is hereby iriven that the un icrsigncd have qualified us adminis trator of D. F. baird, deceased nnd all persons having claims against said estate are hereby noli tied to present 'Jui same, duly authenticated to. the undersigned within 12 months from the date hereof or this notice will be ilt;ud ft) bar of their m-ovcry. ' All persons indebted to said estate are aotiueu to maKe iiumeuiato payment. , May 1C, 11)19. : .T. C. 11A1UD D. C. MAST, Administrators. ' BIRCH OIlL. We" want pure Oil of Birch at $4.00 per pound. , R..T. GREER & CO. Marion, Va. . , ' NO 36 TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR STREET " IMPROVEMENT. ' Be it remembered that a meet ing of the commissioners of the town of Boone was held on the seventh day of June, having been adjourned on June the second to : meet on said date, when and where were present I. G. .Greer , M. B. Blackburn, and F. A. Lin ney, commissioner's, and T. &.: Moore, mayor, when and where the following proceedings were had. - . It was moved by M. B. Black burn, seconded by I. G. Greer, said motion being put by the mayor and carried by. a unani mous vote of the commissioners that the following ordinance be adopted: , 1. That it is necessary for the town of Boone to' construct con-; crete sidewalks in. the said town and to construct and 'maintain a macadamized street throughthe said town and on the streets lead ing to the depot, and to build bridges, and that it is necessary to defray the expenses of said street improvement to v,lssue ' bonds in the sum of $10,000,00, $3,000.00 of which to be issued for sidewalk improvement, $1, 000.00 for bridges, the remainder for macademizing the streets. 2. it is therefore ordered by the board that coupon bonds in the sum of $10,000.00 be issued by the said town and sold as the law directs to defray the said ex penses aforesaid. X That the said bonds bear a rate of interest, not exceeding six per centem per annum. . 4. That the said bonds be is sued in denominations of $1,000 each and shall be due and" paya ble as. follows: The first bond on June the 1st, I92l., and the remaining bonds payable one each year thereafter on said date, until the ten bonds HrePaid off and discharged That a tax sufficient to pro vide for the payment of the prin ciple and interest fit the bonds be annually levied and collected. . . (. That a statement of the present indebtedness of the town and the assessed valuation of the property, subject to taxation by by the municipality for the three fiscal years in which taxes were last levied, be filed with board and sworn to by the treasurer of the town. 7. That the form of the bond shall be determined by the board at a future meeting; but the said bond shall be a coupon bond, signed by the mayor of said town and the secretary thereof and sealed with the corporate seal of the said town; the coupons to be signed by the mayor fcf the town. 8. This ordinance shall take effect upon its passage. Passed in regular meeting by a unani mous vote of the commissioners on this the seventh day of - June, 1919. T. B. Moore, Mayor! M. B. Blackburn, F. A. Linney, ' I. G. Greer. Commissioners. The foregoing ordinance was passed on the seventh day of June, 1919, and it was first pub lished on the 12 day of June 1919. Any action or proceeding ques tioning the validity of said ordi nance must be commenced -within thirty days after its last pub lication. . - F. A. Linney, Clerk. It is moved and carried that the treasurer of the town be au-" thorized to borrow the sum of $1 00.1.00 to be used on street work at a rate of interest not exceed ing six per cent and to be paya-: ble in twelve months out of thtf" funds derived from the ' bond sale. ' - T. B. Moore, Mayor. F. A. Linney, ; , , M. B. Blackburn, . . I. G. Greer,- Commissioners, ''':'. I'l l .-Mi- i'i f.i. t -1 mi m Ml J :.ti ;'iv m Mm m IP 4m 1 t :4W :':bl ilv .''I.',.'-. '1 f! - jjftle way is to have it with you 'v .v " ' ' ' .ft A.- ! - 'I - ..I.. '''v"T.:V