TrtH, GRKEN8BORO PATRIOT. JANUARY 21, 1015 PAGE 2 Why Do We Sell The Blue Bell Overall? First, because it is as good as any Overall for the price. Second, because it is a home prod uct. This overall gives over 100 of our Gu' If ord county girls an opportu nity of making a profitable and clean living, and these are reasons enough why every farmer and me- chanic in Guilford county snould wear Blue Bell overalls. The price is $2.00 per suit. $1 per garment. The buttons won't come off and if they rip in wear you get another pair. Men's Suits, and Overcoats at 4 off the regular price. $1 Regal Shirts always a bargain at $1. Savoy Shirts $1.50. Boyden Shoes $6.50. Crawford EXPERTS PREDICT ANOTHER GREAT WAR. Rees v. 300 South Elm St. J If It's Gardners It's Good" COMI'LKTK I.I.N i. OF Dependable Rubber Goods WILL. ALWAYS UK I Ol'M) AT THIS HTORfv Hot Water Bottles. Combination Outfits, Fountain Syringes, Nipples, Ktmlng Bottles, Spongts, Sponge Brushed. Sponge Bags. RubDer O lores. Invalid Cushions, Ice Baps, Ic and Water Caps, Rubber Bath Cap, Baby Comforters. Finger Cots. Toilet Brushes, Air Pillows, Soap Dishes, etc. COME TO US FOR RURSKR GOODS HOWARD GARDNER Druggist and Selninn. Take Dr. Howard's Liver Pills. $. Glenn Brown Attorn ey-at-Law 010 BANNER BUILDING, Greensboro, N. C. The Literary Digest presents the views of two military experts who do not believe that the terrible con flict in Europe will result in perma nent world peace. One of these ex perts is the editor of the Navy, pub lished in Washington, who foresees a distant struggle, and the other Is a well-known French peace advocate who looks for a nearer combat in fact, a series of them immediately after this one. Whether America can preserve its neutrality through all the turmoil is not stated, but one of these writers warns us to be pre pared. Urbian Cohier, who has written an illuminating book about us as "Tin- People of the Twentieth Century.'' believs that when the diplomats gather at the end of this '. ar to arrange terms of peace, they will find the 'ask impossible. in an article translated lor the .New ork Times he declares that "the interna tior.:il arid social MuesHous which the nreseiit war is iroing to raise are too numerous., too complex, to be settled beyond appeal and irrevocably by anv diplomatic agreements whatso ever." Then will come the fight over the spoils. He writes: " Icemem her trie two Halkan wars. The first was terrible; thesecondwas still more cruel. The allies who had crushed Turkey rent each other in their struggle to divide the booty. "After the collapse of the German empire and the dismemberment of the A.ustro-Hungaran empire the booty will be richer, the participants therein more numerous, the difncul ties more inextricable. While the great congress of 1915 or 1916 works for the reorganization of Europe, of Africa, and of a part of Asia on new basis, the combatants of the day before will not lay down their arms for good; perhaps they ill tak" them up again with greater fury. "Within each country formidable disorders will arise. Several mil lions of men will return home to their hearths with new souls. Their sufferings and perils will have given them other desires, other ideas. other manners. Thev will not dread violence as yesterday they dreaded it, and "hey will not have the same respect for human life; thev will have seen death from too near by. and will have marched over the corpses ot menus or enemies. "Now they will find, in their re spective countries. political life. economic life, social life, all turned topsyturvy. They will expect to reg ulate it anew; hut their ideas will j not be in concord and harmony. "Actuallv one wishes no longer to i recognize parties or cliques. Com- t I mon peril reconciled adversaries, as j common hatred of Germany has re conciled the French and the English, : the Ktiglh 1: and fl.e Ru ; ians. But these reconciliations are but condi tional. They ".ill last as long as the ordeal lasts that determined them. On the morrow of the peace Eng land will find herself face to face with Russia, and the Socialists face to face with the conservative par ties, the anti-clericals face to face wiin me ainoiics, ana political co teries face to face with their rivals. races upon the white civilization antiMf the white race has not by that time deteriorated so as to be unable to offer effectual resistance to their attacks, there will be a- series of wars of such tremendous extent that the wars which have been fought previously will appear insignificant. "In the past rivers and moun tains have formed barriers, so that it was difficult for tribes or alliances of neighboring tribes to wage war beyond their own territories, but the rivers and mountains are no longer insurmountable obstacles. The oceans alone, at the present time, furnish an obstacle to the transpor tation of large armies; but if the past ftfty years is a criterion of what is coming within the next century, the oceans will present no more dif ficulties to invading forces than did the narrow Tiber in Italy to the enemies of Rome at the opening of Roman history. When Afro-Eurasia has passed under the domination of the final winner and its new undeveloped p?o-j by pies have assimilated the war i steamer science of the modern world, then vi!' come the test of the new world's strength. May we be prepared!" THE BRITISH DETAIN ANOTHER AMERICAN SHIP Parents Liable for Children's Crimes Under a new law in New Jersey a man and his wife have been in dicted for crimes committed by their minor children. This law Washington, Jan. 19. Since the dispatch of President Wilson's note to Great Britain protesting against British treatment of neutral com merce, the state department has re ceived comparatively little informal tlon about detentions of American cargoes or ships. Officials said to day they did not know whether there had been a change in the policy of the British fleet or whether Ameri can ship-owners arer withholding their complaints on the theory that negotiations on the general subject soon would result in a definite state ment of England's position. The hope was expressed that 'the latter was not the case, for the department's chief source of information as to detentions has been the vessel own ers. Ambassador Gerard cabled the state department today the sub stance of a statement made to him Capt. Farley, of the American Greenbrier, which arrived at Bremen a few days ago, with cot ton from New Orleans, after a se ries of detentions, notwithstanding assurances by Great Britain that shipments of cotton in American vessels would not be molested. Officials did notdisclosethedetails of Captain Farley's statement, but it is said that he charged that after of Stationery Your Taste Revealed by the VOU USE Vai. .ai nrativ a7fU itiiitfa nersons bv the kind of sfn- JL VI f - " 4 O M. " tionery they use. Good stationery is inexpensive and we have a wide va riety from which you may select and it is all in keeping with good taste and your pocketbook. C0NYERS & SYKES, Druggists McAdoo Hotel Corner Tie Busy Store 1 0 Two Phones 324 The Home of "Sy-Co" the Better Ice Cream. STFSHdSIX'irjRCSIRKB SftlLE For the next two weeks cost will be thrown aside, and every piece of Furniture, every Rug, Drugget, Go-Cart, Sewing Machine, Organ, Cooking and Heating Stove in our two big stores will be put on sale at 4 and J the for mer price. You must come to this sale to give us a chance to show you what a little money can do. McDuffie's Furniture Store Next to Odell Hardware Store. holds parents criminally liable for j examining the Greenbrier's papers, the crimes committed by their minor j a British prize crew ordered the children. For hundreds of years American flag hauled down and con the common law of England and the j voyed the ship into Kirkwall, a Brit- United States has held that a father is liable in a civil action for dam ages done by his minor children to person or property. Many a father has had to pay money in a civil action for damages done by his minor child, but, so far as we know, New Jersey is the first state to make him liable criminally. Under the New Jersey law parents may be fined or imprisoned because of a crime committed by their minor children. The reason given for such a law is tnat parents snouia be pun ished for not bringing up their chil dren to become decent, law-abiding citizens. Such a law is calculated to make many parents more careful n raising their children, so that they will not become criminals. B. L. FENTRESS ATTORN EY-AT-LAW with A. Wayland Cote Fiaher Building Greensboro, N. C. Notary Public. A. Lu BROOK H, 8. CLAY O. L. WILLIAMS 8APP Drooks, Sapp & Williams Attorneys-At-Law GREENSBORO, N. C. OfSc in Dixie Insurance Building DR. J.W.TAYLOR, Fitting Glasses a Specialty. RELIEF OR NO PAY Qm, Fifth FW Bnnr BMfe. pnKlDNEYPlIIS VWM MSKWMATMM KIDN IT AMD "To sum up, I foresee a long bat tle between the Germanic block ana the allies, followed by arduous dif ficulties among the allies themselves, before the territorial, economic and dynastic reorganization of Europe and its dependencies; thereafter, so cial disorders of great violence." Turning from the peace advocate to the naval expert, says the Lit erary Digest, we find the editor of the Navy looking for a world-wide convulsion that may set race against race and continent against conti nent. Instead of this being the last great war. he believes, it "is much more probably but the first of a se ries of tremendous world-wide con flicts that will be fought by the in habitants of the earth, for national -upremacy, until that supremacy is ebtair.ed by some single people. or possibly by an amalgamated race, the ingredients of which are just now being thrown into the melting pot." He reminds us that despite civilization, despite religion, despite everything, we now see that "primi tive brutal instincts are as strong as ver." And if enlightened Europe' suddenly bursts into an orgy of sav agery, what can we expect of the black, brown and yellow millions when they learn to handle the white man's weapons'.1 As he argues: "It would be id'e to expect that the next : ;' . one hundred, or five hundred years would materially chance the nature of the human race. In fact, it is much more reas onable to assume that when the scientific knowledge which has been discovered by the white race has been assimilated by the peoples of vsia and Africa, who have not had the advantages of the culture ac companying that scientific develop ment, but who will be able to use for their own ends the highly developed modern offensive weapons, there will be an attack made by those Gen. Iee's Birthday Observed. Observance of the one hundred and eighth anniversary of the birth of General Robert E. Lee, comman der-in-chief of the armies of the 'onfederate States of America, was general Tuesday throughout the South, the day being a state holiday in Virginia, North Carolina. South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama. Mississippi and Arkansas. Among the principal exercises commemorating the occasion were those held at Richmond, Raleigh, Columbia, Atlanta. Macon. Tampa, Charleston, Memphis and Mobile. Joint celebrations of the birth days of Gen. Stonewall Jackson and General Lee were held in North Car olina, with special exercises at the state capitol. In many of the chief Southern cities memorial services were held under the auspices of the united Daughters of the Confeder acy, assisted by the United Confed erate Veterans and affiliated organ izations. ish port. Capt. Farley refused to J navigate the ship while the British j flag was at her mast, and claimed that, through incompetent naviga tion by the British, three booms j were swept away. He was ordered ' to take the ship to Leith from Kirk : wall. He did so after raisng the Amercan flag and later was able to proceed to Germany, after a delay of three days. The state department, it is understood, is investigating the case through the American embassy in London. Test For Liver Complaint Men tally Unhappy Physically, Dull. The liver, sluggish and inactive, first shows itself in a mental state unhappy and critical. Never is there joy in living, as when the stomach and liver are doing their work. Keep your liver active and healthy by us ing Dr. King's New Life Pills; they empty the bowels freely, tone up your stomach, cure your constipation and purify the blood. 25 cents at drug gist. Bucklen's Arnica Salve excel lent for piles. adv. L. M. AMMEN & CO. EtmilbaillimKBFS 600 SOUTH ELM STREET Day Phone 488 might Phone 1 521 SERVICE AND QAULITY These are the watchwords. of our business, and upon them we depend for our success. We sell goods only of the highest quality and we pride ourselves on the fact that no drug store gives better service. Everything that goes out of this store must be up to the highest standard we cannot afford to have it otherwise. Telephone us your orders and we will fill them by mail, postage prepaid. Greensboro B tjl C o. Cor. S. Elm and West Market Sts. Telephone 926 0y n North Carolina Folks Work. The University News Letter has . l . 1 i 1 1 . y . . lauuiaiea a ust or tne toners in North Carolina, the workers who win their bread by the sweat of their brow. The distribution by gainful occupations indicates that the farm ing class outnumbers all other work ers by more than 242,000. The 1910 census records the fact that 940,000 peopie in iortn Carolina, iu years of age and over, are engaged in gain ful occupations. Eighty-five per cent of the white boys and men in the state, 10 years of age and over, are engaged in toiling for a liveli hood a living. Twenty-four per cent of the white girls and women af engaged in toi insr for a liveli hood. These figures make no count for the women busv with their housework duties. Continuous Performance. "She's a devoted mother." "Isn't she? For weeks she has been sewing and getting Susie ready for college." "Well, she'll hr - ve a rest after her daughter goes." "Will she? After Susie goes her mother will be just as busy getting a lot of clothes ready for her to come home." Prompt Action Will Stop Your Cough V hen you first catch a cold (often indicated by a sneeze or cough,) break it up at once. The idea that "it does not matter" often leads to serious complications. The remedy which immediately and easily pene trates the lining of the throat is the kind demanded. Dr. King's New Dis covery soothes the irritation, loosens the phlegm. You 'feel better at once. "It seemed to reach the very spot of my cough" is one of the many honest testimonials. 60 cents at your drug gist, adv. II lr 1?) If-lr 0 J U A Ui Lizzi To every farmer of Guilford county who will mail us a postal card asking for an QOMStHi ntvn i ic PODIR HWHS we will mail one absolutely free to each address, as long as the sup ply holds out. This Almanac contains many valuable points for farmers aside from the regular information con tained in almanacs. mi mi fluid li rtvn