VOL. XLVII Mumcipal Financial Act -J I '?' | Not Correctly Entered ii :• J - Attorney General Rules Against It On Technicality—Extra Session Wanted to Remedy Defect. PRINTING PLANTS SHUT DOWN. ~ 0 Highway Prospects Good; Wilkinson of Charlotte 'Succeeds Wood—Reduction in Values Will Affect Schools—Student Gov ernment at State College. (By Maxwell Gorman.) Raleigh, May 3.—The five job printing and three 'book-binding establishments in Raleigh are • practically shut down today be cause of the refusal of the owners to comply with the agreement made two years ago for a 44-hour week, the terms then Brawn up stipulating that the change should be made May 1,1921. The Capital Printing Company, which pub lishes the Union Herald, State Federation of Labor weekly, is not involved, beccause the owners are not identified with the "Typo thetae," the employing printers' organization, the latter having refused to grant the demand. The Capital Pointing Company is op erating this week on the 44-hour basis. The pressmen as well as well as the printers are involved and no press work is beingjjpne by union men. Three of the commercial printing offices have the contracts for State printing. Delivery of the State printing has been-so slow for years as to incur the dis pleasure of State officials and the Legislature. Now ft has stopped entirely. If an agreement is not reached soon the State printers may attempt to have the work sub-let to offices outside this State, in which event trouble will be - likely to follow. The object of the demand is to secure A half-day holiday for the workmen Saturday aftertioon. Newspaper offices are not includ ed in th« original agreement and are not affected now. No Extra Seiwlon Legislature. " If Governor Morrison has any intention of Calling the Legisla ■ tare together in extra session to help ont the municipalities-whicb have been in a hole thiongh the negligence or inefficiency of a Senate, clerk, whereby the fact that the municipal finance act which passed its several readings 'by roll-eall vote, after being re considered and amended was not properly entered, he has not so stated to any one. It does look like here is another manifestation of the law's technicalities that provoke thoughtful people—a case where there is no sort of doubt that the law was properly passed, and the three readings by roll-call vote being recorded on the bill itself, yet, because of the remiss ness or ignorance of a subordinate clerk, the Attorney-General tells the Secretary of State the latter • has no power to remedy the de feet by supplying the formal entry, although all the Senators and- Senate officials and newspaper re porters know the bill passed with all the Senators present presum ably voting for it, as no negative _ vote was recorded. As the jour nal aast show the names of Hens THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. tors present on that date the thing which the Attorney-General as sumes to be impossible with the Secretary of State is hardly that, notwithstanding section two of Article 14 of the Constitution. Yet it looks like some cities will be put to some inconvenience in raising additional money which this enabling act had authoMzed them to do. There may be An other way out of it as the Gover nor suggests, and we all hope there is, for nobody wants an extra session of the Legislature at this time. Fine Highway Work Proipeeta. With Clifford Older of Illinois elected State Highway Engineer and W. F. Wilkinson, Charlotte banker, appointed to fill the va cancy on the commission, the State Highway Commission is do J ing good business at the sessions which have been held here for a week pust and still in progress. One of the commissioners, El wood Cox of High Point, enthused everybody by . predicting that "within one year" trattic would be under way from Johnston coun ty to Charlotte in Mecklenburg county over the now hard sur faced State highway. The con struction is being marked out for all the nine districts and an esti mate of the sums to be expended on each out of the initial sum of ten million dollars submitted and approved by the Governor. Governor Morrison says that the offering of bonds for Bale was merely a formality, which had to be gone through with in compli ance with the law. Money may be borrowed if the bonds are not sold, and the only way to comply with the law was to offer the bonds for sale. The money can be Se cured for the road work and for all of the other building work the State has under way or under consideration. It can and will be secured when it is needed and in amounts that are needed. The work of the State Highway Commission here the past two weeks has put the machinery in motion and road building will be pushed rapidly all over the State. Equalization of School Term. The $600,000 fund set aside by the State for equalization of the school terms in North Carolina is but 15 percent larger than it was last year, and the counties whi.-h participated in this fund will not be able to get more than 15 per cent over what was sec a red from this source last year. Coni-equent »ly any drastic reduction in tax values will get the school author ities in trouble with the G months school law unless the tax rate is increased somewhat io proportion to the reduction ot values. No county can participate in this equalization fund uotil it has levied at least 30 cents on the hundred for school purposes and finds this not sufficient to ran the schools of the coanty for a six monts term. The leugth of the school term is fix-id by the constitution of the State and a penalty is provided fair the county officials who fail to make provis ion for this length of school term. GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY. MAY 5, 1921 The counties which make dras tic redactions in their valnes and do not have sufficient money to run the schools six months can not make up the deficit out of the State fund, for there is not a suf ficient amount of money set aside to take care of all of the deficits that may be created by a general redaction of tax values so far be low what they were last year. Dr. £. C. Brooks has figured it oat that the average county which paid its way last year will be in a position to do the same thing this year. Those counties which did draw from other communities in the State for the purpose of run ning its school six. months, can get about 15 per cent more money from that fund this year. County superintendents and school boards can figure on this and no more. Dr. Brooks is send ing out a letter calling attention to this condition and suggesting that care be exercised in working out the school tax for the coming year. Self Government of Students The right to govern themselves was conferred upon the students Of State College by the board of trustees ia a special meeting here, thus ending a fight of several years duration. The plan of stu dent government submitted to the trustees by E. W. Constable and W. R. NVearn, represents tives of * the student body, was unanimously adopted, aud the new system will become operative at the beginning of the college year next September. The election of Clarence Poe, editor of the Progressive Farmer, of Raleigh, chairman of trustees, and the appointment of a build ing commission to supervise the expenditure of $600,0U0 for uew buildings was the principal work of the board after the considera tion of the petition of the students to be allowed to regulate their conduct by self goverumeut. W. S. Lee of Charlotte, P. S. Boyd of Mooresville. and T. T. Tiiorae, of Rocky Mount, were named lor ih e commission. The building commission will go ahead immediately with the construction of an agricultural extension completion of the me chanical engineering building upon which 1100,000 will be ex pended. Other building operations will be determined upon at the meet ing of the board the latter part of May. Dormitories for the accom modation of 200 students, addi tions to the dining hall, a laundry building, extension of the heating system and general repair* aud improvement appropriation made by the last General Assembly. Institution of student govern ment at State Collge removes a cause to which much of the fric tion between faculty and students has been attributed during the last several years. At various times the students have petition ed the board of trustees for self government PLANS FOR LARGEST ALUMNI REUNIONS. High School Baseball Teams to Num ber of 39 Working for Championship. Cor. of The Gleaner. Chapel Hill, N. C., May 3. — Thirty-nine high school baseball teams, more than twice as many as ever enrolled before, have entered the high school baseball championship contest conducted by the Tnlversity of North Caro lina and are now fighting it among themselves to decide which is the best high school team hi the State. Twenty-pne of the teams are from the western part of the State, eighteen .from the eastern pirt. According to plans worked out by the University committee sec tional championships will be de cided in the west and east, and the two sectional champions meet on Emerson Field at the Uni versity probably May 21 to decide State honors The teams entered from the west are Spencer, Salisbury, Badin, Charlotte, Mount Holly, Monroe, Asheville, Henderson ville, Morganton) Hickory, Star town, Winston-Salem, Guilford College high school, Leaksville, Reidsville, Greensboro, Trinity, Jseeetomn, South Buffalo. Monti oelk>, and Hawfields. From the Tobacco Drovers nl Alamance. The Time is Ripe and Rotten Ripe For a Better Marketing Plan. thousands of tobacco growers of" Virginia and the Carolinas have signed their "Declaration of Independ ence" in the contract of the Tobacco Growers Co-opera tive Association. Dr. Clarence Poe, editor of the Progressive Farmer, will explain the contract for fair markets at the tobacco growers mass-meeting at BURLINGTON OPERA HOUSE, - SATURDAY, MAY 14, AT 1 P. M. Do you prefor to tug alone at your own bootstraps or will you reach out and grasp your neighbor's hand for marketing and control ©f your own crop 7 Will you let others run your business or will you hire brains to sell the crop which others hire brains to take away from you ? ' For every dollar that the consumer pays for tobacco the grower receives 8 cents and others get 92 cents., Do you think this fair ? Will you let others set the standards of living for North Carolina housewives and children of the country districts, or will vou demand a voice in their future ? You and 60,000 tobacco growers of the Carolinas, and Virginia must sign The Tobacco Growers Marketing Con tract to make it a success. Are you afraid ? Don't be a slacker now and regret it through the lean years of starvation that will follow. Alamance growers go over the top May 14th. Will you hesitate and hide, or will you fight ? Answer by coming to the mass-meeting—Burlington Opera House. east are New Bern, Kinston, Bur gaw, Wilmington, Edenton, Eliza beth City, Romioke Rapids, Wil son, Red Oak, Durham, Raleigh, Chapel Hi'l Cary, Clayton, Red Springs, Fayetteville, Carthage, and Raeford. The contest has been conduct ed for the past seven years Greensboro won lust year by tak ing the final game from Hurgaw, champions. f Flans are being made at the university for one of the largest crowds of returning aluinni at the commencement that ever swarmed across the campus. Com mencement this yenr will be June 12-15, and aluuini day proper will In response to {he inquiry of many telephone subscribers: "What can I do to help my serv« ice?" this advertisement is published. Autoists Destroy A Pole a Day In this section of the ) state the telephone com- » pany loses an average of * a pole a day, due to automobile and othec accidents. Worse still the destruction of a telephone pole usually means a serious interruption to service. mm When there is a cable or a cable fcox on the pole, the damage is likely to put 200 or more telephones out of order for a day ox; more. Substantial as they are the poles cannot withstand the compact of an automobile driven at high speed. We cannot control tte reckless driving, but we can ask you to bear this in mind when your service is interrupted by an oc currence of this kinJ. SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY be Tuesday, June 14. Ten university classes, ranging from 1801 to 1920, will hold special reunions and in addition many alumni from other classes are expected. The class of 1861 will hold its sixtieth reunion, the class of 1871 itß fiftieth reunion, I'Bl will be back for its fortieth j time, Hi 1 for its thirtieth gather | ing, '9O for its tweuty-fifth, 'Ol for I its twentieth, 'OG for its fifteenth, j'll for its tenth,'lo for its fifth, | and 1920, last year's class, will I return for its first reunion. The central aluinni committee in charge of all plans is composed of Dr. H. M. WagstafT, Frank I'. Ora hatn, aud E. R. Rankin. DREW ON HIS IMAGINATION To Put It Mildly, Longfellow was Not Always Accurate In Hit De scriptive Poems. The poet Longfellow has set an ex ample of Inaccuracy In dealing with our Pilgrim ancestors which has been widely followed. His charming poem, "The Courtship of Myles Standlsh," has been read by millions of his coun trymen and doubtless accepted by great numbers as gospel truth. Yet It has no historical basis, says a writ- j er In the Boston Transcript. There la not a scintilla of evidence that the fearless captain, who was small of stature and red-haired, but every Inch a soldier—had any desire to win the affections of Prlscflla Mulllns. He j was a very busy man during the first years at Plymouth. And. but for his } Wisdom, skill and heroic actions, there j Is little doubt but what they would j have all been murdered by wild sav-.l ages, who were not wholly restrained j by Massasolt. It seems too bad that so brave and unselfish a man as Stan- | dish was should now be paraded be fore his descendants as a rejected suitor. He and they deserve a better fete. The poet Is no more accurate In dealing with him than he is In de- ; scribing the marriage of John Alden and Prlscllla. What a pretty-bit of Action It was to place Priscilia on a "milk-white steer." when there was not a cow, nor a steer, in all New England I What Is Art? The conclusion Is that heaven born geniuses are a myth. Actors are no fonder of thinking hard and laboring hard than any other set of humans. The manager, seeing that there doesn't appear to be Very much difference In the# caliber, has taken td selecting them by their physical appearance.) The actor Is the cause, and the man ager Is the result. The public l» quick to respond to really fine acting —that Is what fine acting Is, for If It j doesn't make the public respond It Isn't fine acting. You often hear It said that the public doesn't want art It would be Just as sensible for a man to take a broken watch to be-4, mended, stQte .his wants to the watch j repairer and then add that he mustn't j employ skill In the operation! Fot j what is ar.t In Its practice? It Is | skill —accomplishment.—John E. Kel lerd, In the Forum. Apple Roll. Ml* together one and one-half cop- j fuls of flour, one-third of a cup ful of lard and a teaspoonfnl ofSsalt; when well blended add Just enough water to make a paste of the con Dresses Made of Dope. Hoon women will be able to dress themselves entirely In varnish —and with perfect propriety! The varnish Is opaque and becomes clear as glass If rolled into a thin film; but It is still varnish, for ull that. This new dress material, In Its liquid days, was called "dope," and was used to protect air plane wings from fire and water. Now It is being spun and woven for wom en's dresses. The only difference be tween a film of dope, a sheet of this magical varnish, and a skein of "silk," is that the first Is laid on with a brush, the second pressed out on a plate, and the third forced through a tiny This material can be used for practically atiy article of wearing apparel. The articles so made can- . not be spoiled by water, aud are also completely fireproof. Dyes of all Shades are readily absorbed and retained, and the material waslies beautifully. * Oas Warfare on Rats. The chemical warfare, service has recently demonstrated that ruts can be killed wilh poison gas. A mixture containing :vr per cent of phosgene and 70 of chlorine was used. This was allowed to escape over un ares of 000 square feet. Fifteen rats were on the area, and they died from the effect of the deadly poisonous gases. They were killed st a cost of 40 cents. Wlthlr. 15 minutes the phos gene bad dissipated, while the chlor ine gas required 30 minutes to diffuse beyond the danger point. In view of the millions of dollars' loss caused yearly by these pests, any means of destroying thein Is welcome. Airmen Find Volcanic Crater. Discovery of a huge volcanic crater surrounded by a great lava lake, in the Mojave desert, has been made by D. D. France and John O. Mont I Jo, aviators end pilots of the plans known as the Desert Rat. Flying over the wastes of the desert the two air men, mapping a region little known to man, sighted the huge crater not far from La vie. Although the dry lava lake Is shown on maps of the desert the fact ttoat a volcanic crater existed In tlis region was tjnknown until the airmen reported their And on theU mWv.—Loa Ansreies Kxvr-nt. NO. 13 PROFESSIONAL CARDS GRAHAM HARDEN, M. D. Burlington, N. C. Office Hours: 9 to 11 a. m. and by appointment Office Over Acme Drug Co. Telephone*: Office 146—Residence »64 JOHN J. HENDERSON Attorney-at-Law GRAHAM, N. C. Office over National Bull of Aluw^M X. S. C ©OXE, Attorney-at- Law, iRAHAM, .... *N. 0 Oflloe Patterion Building Second Fleor. . . , , l)R. WILL jil LONG, JR. I ... DENTIST ; : : » »r«hem. - - • ■ North Carolina )FFICE INSJMMONS BUILDING ACOB A. T.ONH. J. EI.IIF.R LOHO LONG & LONG, % ttorneya and Coanaelon at Ltw OK AH AM, N. C. Dandruff was killing my hair" ■ "My head itched unbearably and my *E Z hair was coming out by the handful. Z A lew applicationsofWildroot loosened S - and removed quantities of dandruff- S £ the itching stopped. Today it is thicker - and more Deautrful than ever." 2 VVlldroot Liquid Shampoo or Wildroot - Shampoo Hmp. UHd in connection with - Wiidroot Hair Tonic, will hasten the 2 Z treatment. ™ "I WILD BOOT 1 = THE GUARANTEED HAIR TONIC = ~S For salt here under a i money-back guarantee 5 Graham Drug Co. Hayes Drug Co. Sale of Real Estate! Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in H cer tain mortgage deed from E. W. Lasley to A. 11. Maness, dated the Oth day of October, 1919, and recorded in the office of the Reg ister of Deeds for Alauiauce coun ty, in book of Mortgages No. 82, [tape 5, and the* bonds secured thereby having been duly assign ed, mid the real estate therein having been duly cnveyed to the undersigned by the mortgagee, A. il. Maness, by assignment and conveyance dated the 25th day of Noveuuer, 1919, default having been made in the payment of said indebtedness, the undersigned will, on MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1921, ' at 2 o'clock p. in., at the court house door in Graham, N. C., offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash all that tract or parcel of land in the County of Alamance, and State of North Carolina, in Faucette town ship, and defined and described -is follows, to-wit : Adjoining the lands of Martha Adams, A. L. King, J. M. Crutchfield and others*, and bounded as follows: Beginning at a rock and post oak slump, corner with said King and McAdams, miming thence N 6G4 deg E 18.00 cliaius passing over a rock on W bank of Boyd Creek into center of said creek and said King's lijie corner said Mayness; theuce up said creek as it meanders N 2.75 chs N 14 deg W 1.84 chs iu center of said creek E of a sycamore tree on VV bank of said creek, corner with said Crutchfield; thense S 54$ deg W 13 25 chains to a rock .u said McAdam's line; theuce 8 55 de»f E 7.43 chains to thebegin i ning, anil containing 16 acres, 1 more or less. This 4th day of May, 1921. W. C. WARREN, • Assignee of Mortgage, i \V. S. Coulter, Aity. J I Graham aud my , home, screw cap to my tripod. , Finder please retnrn and get reward. LEWIS H. HOLT *