Carolina Watchman Published Every Friday Morning By The Carolina Watchman Pub. Co. SALISBURY, NORTH CAROLINA E. W. G. Huffman_President SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Payable In Advance One Year_$1.00 6 Months- .$0 Entered as second-class mail matter at the postoffice at Sal isbury, N. C., under the act of March 3, 1879. The influence of wo kly news papers on public o in m exceeds that of all other publications in the country.—Arthur Brisbane. POPULATION DATA (1930 Census) Salisbury -16,951 Spencer -3,128 E, Spencer-2,0?8 China Grove-1,258 Landis -1,388 Rockwell- 696 Granite Quarry- 507 Cleveland- 43 5 Faith _ 431 Gold Hill _:- 156 (Population Rowan Co. 56,665) FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1936 PROPAGANDA We hear more and more about "propaganda.” The word has come to have a sinster implication. It is loosely applied to any effort of any kind to influence public opin ion. To those who don’t agree with the point of view of the pro pagandist his efforts are vicious and should be suppressed. To those who do agree with his opinion he is a praiseworthy apostle of a highly laudable doctrine. There never has been a' time and there never will be a time when in dividuals groups and organizations holding certain things to be true will not attempt to convince others of their truth. The very word "propaganda” was first used to describe the efforts of the Christian chu ch to spread—that is to propa gate—the doctrines of Christanity. Doubtless there are atheists and others who consider even that noble purpose an entirely vicious one. And beyond doubt a great deal of propaganda has been carried on in recent years for entirely selfish and often sordid purposes. Propaganda in the real sense is an effort to educate. There can be no honest quarrel with the desire of anyone to convert others to his way of thinking. The real quarrel with propaganda arises from the subtle and underhand methods which are too often used. Propa ganda conducted in the open with the motives and purposes behind it clearly disclsoed is a sound and legitimate method. It is only when the identity and motives of the propagandists are concealed that it becomes dangerous. WHERE AMERICA STANDS These are exciting days. Not in many years have the minds and tongues of so many Americans been busy in the consideration and dis cussion of public affairs. And at no time in recent history have there been such wide divergences of opin ion as to what is the best course for the nation to pursue. From now until the Piesidential election in November these differ ences of opinion will become more acute and their expression more heated. We shall hear public men and party measures both fulsomely praised beyond their deserts and de nounced in terms of unsparing cri ticism. A great deal of the langu age that will be spilled in print, over the radio and in face-to-face controversies will be the product of emotion rather than of reason. That is always the case when pub lic opinon is aroused.- But it would be beyond the facts to conclude that the sober processes of self government are always the products of emotional reactions. In the long run the underlying sound commonsense of the people always decides the important issues in a democracy likesaours. But. de mocracy arrives at its own conclus ions through the wholesome pro cesses of debate and discussion, however emotional. There are no signs on the horizon to justify the alarm which we hear expressed in many quarters. Those who feel that we are on the verge of a revolution, that there is grave C/'n"'rnonism on one nano o. a as^i-rn -..j ^ -1 e r may supplant our traditional and well-fried system of representative government have not learned the lessons of history. The United States is the oldest government in the world that has continued un changed in form or principle. In our 147 years of Constitutional Government we have come through far more serious crises than any which confront us now. We have prospered as no other nation in the world has ever pros pered. We have achieved a meas ure of individual liberty unparall eled in the history of mankind. We are not going to sacrifice our lib erties or imperil our prosperity by yielding to the passions and emo tions of the moment. TODAY AND TOMORROW — BY— Frank Parker Stockbridgf. PENSIONS .... ALL HANDS The people of the United States seem to me to have been infected with the pension- craze as I have not seen them since the 1890’s. Even then, nobody thought of pen sions for anybody but veterans of the Civil War. Now the American Legiorf comes out for pensions for soldiers’ widows, and the Veterans of Foreign Wars is advocating pen sions for all veterans, and on top of that, Dr. Townsend and his fol lowers would pension: everybody over 60 years old, while almost every class of public servant, from school teachers and policemen to governors, are nawadays being pensioned at public expense. It is an understandable human desire to live comforaably in old age without working. But I have never been able to convince myself] that it is society’s duty to provide anything beyond decent subsist ence for the indigent aged. S' s * THRIFT .... BEST PENSIONS I have not seen in any of the projects for supporting old peo ple at public expense anything that does as much for them as every man can do for himself, if he wills. Even the contributory old age ben efit plan of the Social Security Act does not provide for as large old age annunties as the ordinary man could buy for himself from any in surance company, if he would pay out of his Wages the same percent age that the government now pro poses to take from his in old age taxes. I am reminded of Bob Davidson, an Albany newspaper man who1 died only a few years ago. Bob] never earned more than $28 a weekj in his life but when he died, after] 40 years of work, he left an estate of $100,000. He had the quali-j ties of thrift and self-denial, which are so repugnant to the folk who are now loudly demanding old age pensions winch they have done nothing to earn. * * * CONSTITUTION . . CHANGE The latest decisons of the Su preme Court holding that Con gress had exceeded its delegated powers in undertaking to regulate business and agriculture have re vived talk of amending the Con stitution. Half a dozen amend ments have been proposed to give the Federal Government broader! powers than it has yet been grant-1 ed by the states. No good American can quarrel j with the idea of amending the Con-j stitution. We have done it a good many times and doubtless will do it many more times in the future. The Constitution itself provides three ways for its own amendment. | The only thing it doesn’t provide for is amendment in a hurry. And that, it seems to me, is very wise. J Whatever party is in control at Washington would always like to have more power. But it can’t get it without giving all the people and a_ll the states plenty of time to think it over. I am not worried a bit about the Constitution. «• * * HAMILTON . . . influence' Every time I pass Trintiy Churchyard, in New York, I pause’ to look at the tomb of Alexander: Hamilton, who died when he wasj only 47 years old. I believe no man in our history has exerted such a: strong and enduring influenc. I was impressed anew with that be-1 lief when I read the two opposing opinions of the Supreme Court in1 the AAA case. It was Alexander Hamilton who: first put forward and maintaned the view that the taxing power of Con gress under the "General Welfare”! clause of the Constitution was un limited. That vie’tv was Trljcerb WE ARE not going to say where THIS LITTLE incident happened, * * * BUT YOU Know it could have * * * HAPPENED RIGHT here in SALISBURY. IF you will make * * * A FEW investigations you will » * *■ FIND THAT perhaps it did happen HERE. ANYWAY your guess is AS GOOD as ours. The DEPENDANT HAD been found * * * GUILTY BY the jury, and he * * * HAD MADE a direct appeal to THE JUDGE. "And why should * * * I BE lenient with you?” asked the JURIST ON* the bench. "Well,” * * * SAID THE guilty one cautiously, * * * "IT’s MY Lawyer’s first case.” I THANK YOU. contested by Jefferson and Madison, but every one of the nine justices of the Supreme Court unheld Hamil ton, although they did not all agree on the AAA case on other points at issue. There is hardly a phase of our national development that has not followed along the lines and princi ples first laid down by Alexander Hamilton—who died at 47. MONEY . *. * . , evil J. P. Morgan proved himself the other day a better student of the Bible than his partner, Thomas W. Lamont, who is a minister’s son. Mr. Lamont remarked before the Senate Committee on Foreign Af fairs that "The Bible says money is the root of all evil.” Mr. Morgan correrted him. "It is the love of money that is the root of all evil, according to the Bible,” he said. Nine people out of ten misquote St. Paul who never expressed any hatred of money as such, but was everlastinglyy right when he said that the love of money is the root of all evil. Those who love money for its own sake and not for the good it enables them to do are the real enemies of the people. But money itself can be and often is a tremendous power for good in the hands of possessor who is imbued with the Christian spirit of service to mankind. Money is no more evil than any other inanimate thing. It is only its human owner who is evil. FAST PLANE TESTED Miami, Fla.—A (Fairchild) single-motored monoplane, said by Pan American airways to be the fastest amphibian in the world ar rived here for test flights before assignment to the "jungle run.” is from Belem, Brazil, to Manaos, 800 miles up the Amazon. The last volcano in the United States, Mt. Lassen, will not erupt again, according to scientists; its last eruption was in 1914. rHE DOCTORS ARERIGHT Women should take only liquid laxatives 4any believe any laxative they night take only makes constipation ?orse. And that isn’t true. Do what doctors do to relieve his condition. They use a liquid THREE STEPS A cleansing dose today; a smaller quantity tomorrow; less each time, , until bowels need no help at alL axative, and keep reducing the lose until the bowels need no help at all. Reduced dosage is the secret of aiding Nature in restoring regularity. You must use a little less laxative each time, and that’s why your laxa tive should be in liquid form. A liquid dose can be regulated to the drop. The liquid laxative generally used b Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It contains senna and cascara — both natural laxatives that form no habit even with children. Syrup Pepsin is the nicest tasting, nicest acting laxa tive you ever tried. THIS WEEK IN WASHINGTON (Continued from page 1) before. Mosj of the union labor groups, some of the farmers’ or ganizations, a very large proportion of the radical element, and the ad vocates of economic planning by the Government, are expected to back one of the proposals for amendment, in the hope that the present session of Congress may submit them to the states. How far this movement* will get at this session is rather doubtful. There is no desire on the part of the Administration to make: the Constitution an issue in the' coming campaign. Certainly the! President is not likely to advocate' Constitutional changes before elec-j tion, which would tend to break down the rights of the stare. REVENUES WANTED The killing off of the processing taxes knocked a big hole in the Treasury budget estimates. These had been counted on for more than $5 00,000,000 of revenue. It looks as though the Government would have to pay at least that amount to farmierp under existing con tracts, so some new way must be found to raise money for this pur pose. Also to pay the bonus. Un der any of the bonus plans that are now under consideration at least a billion dollars of cash will be re quired. Seemingly, the only answer to this situation is more tax revenues, which may take the form of upping the income taxes and extending them further down the economic line, or the imposition of a general manufacturers sales tax. The lat ter plan is not believed to be pop ular, with the voters, because it makes the ordinary man tax con scious. But the idea is being reviv ed on Capitol Hill and it may shortly be taken seriously. BORAH BACKS VANDENBERG Political interest still centers on the question of whom the Republi cans will nominate. Recent devel opments indicate^ that Senator Bo rah is really working for the nom ination of Senator Arthur Vanden berg. Borah does not want or ex pect the nomination himself but he wants to control enough dele gates so that, he can dictate the nomination of Vandenberg. The influence of former President Hoover, it is believed, will be thrown to whichever candidate he thinks is best equiped to put up a vigorous knock-down-and-drag out fight with President Roose velt. Governor Landon, it is being said here, has not so far dem onstrated his fifhting spirit and ability. Those who hold that the coming campaign will be a batle of person alities regard Frank Knox of Chi cago and Senator Dickinson of Iowa as the two best-equipped scrappers now in sight. Route One Items Herbert and Earl Lyerly visited G. R. Fink recently. Horace Shaver has been working in Woodleaf. Shaver and Hutchins spent Thursday nite with George Dean. Frank Rex of Salisbury spent Thursday night with N. C. Shaver. The Rawleigh salesman canvass ed this vicinity during the week. W. B. Myers and O. T. Nesbit motored to Mocksville on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Morgan and children visited Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Thompson the afternoon of the nineteenth. Dorothy, the little daughter of John Pouflas is sick. HUNT MISSING AIRLINER Marseille, France—Planes and ships joined in a search for a Mar seille-Tunis airliner with six aboard which vanished off the coast of Corsica after radioing for help. Many a Friend Recommends BLACK-DRAUGHT People who have taken Black-Draught naturally are enthusiastic about it because of the refreshing relief it has brought them. No wonder they urge others to try it! ... Mrs. Joe G. Roberts, of Portersville, Ala., writes: “A friend,recommended Black-Draught to me a long time ago£ and it has proved its worth to me. Black-Draught is good for constipation. I find that taking Black-Draught prevents the bilious headaches which I used to have.” ... A purely vegetable niedicine for the relief of CONSTIPATION, biliousness Policemen Are Called Upon To Rout Snorous Snorer From Under House Dunn—Empie Hall, Dunn busi ness man didn’t know whether to be afraid .frightened or scared one night when sitting beside his com fortable fireside, he heard loud yawnings and snores coming from under the house beneath the living room. He listened. Evidently some drunk—or maybe a fugitive from justice—had crawled undei; the house to get out of the rain and cold and snuggling up beside the warm chimney base, had gone to sleep. Mr. Hall thought and thought hard. Finally he got down his double-barrel gun, shoved in a couple of buckshot shells and sallied forth. But another thought struck him. What if the man proved des parate and had a gun himself? He called the police. Patrolmen Broughton, Pearce and Smith, who represent exactly two thirds nf Dunn’s nnlirp f nrrp rp sponded. They held a hurried con ference with Mr. Hall, all the while listening to the snorous snores un der the house. Getting out their artillery, blackjacks and flashlights they deployed figuring on making a mass attack on the intruder. "Who knows” they reasoned, "it might be another Dwight Beard” and they weren’t taking any chances. Creeping up with the chimney between them and the snorer, they yelled in unison: "Come out with your hands up and no funny busi ness.” But the snores grew louder. Finally, since something had to be done, they threw heads and tails to see which one would go under the house and drag out the desper ado. Patrolman Broughton lost but was game to the core. Pistol in one hand and flashlight in the other, he crawled under the house and edg ing around the chimney camman ded: "I give you, put ’em up and come on out.” The sleeper awoke, gave a long gapping yawn and followed the officer to the open where Pearce and Smith stood with drawn automatics and blackjalks —the snorer was a mangy yellow dog. No arrest was made but the coppers gave Mr. Hall some rath er insinuating looks. Trench Silos Increase Winter Milk Production X Over 500 farmers sold three mil lion pounds of milk to the cheese factory at W“st Jefferson to be processed into 250,000 pounds of fine cheese says F. R. Farnham, dairy extension specialist at State College. This is the largest volume of milk delivered to the factory since it was established in 1929 and the cheese production was upped 40 per cent over 1934. Farnham says the income from milk was increased 60 percent for the winter and much of this is due to the construction of trench silos throughout the area during the past year or two. f ' Lady’s Painful Trouble Helped By Cardui ■ Why do so many women take Car dui for the relief of functional pains at monthly times? The answer is that they want results such as Mrs. Herbert W. Hunt, of Hallsville, Texas, describes. She writes: “My health wasn’t good. I suffered from cramp ing. My pain would be so Intense it would nauseate me. I would Just drag around, so sluggish and ‘do less.’ My mother decided to give me Cardui. I began to mend. That tired, sluggish feeling was gone and the pains disappeared. I can’t praise Cardui too highly because I know It helped me.” ... If Cardui dees not help YOU, consult a physician. NEW HIT-RUN TRICK Lansing, Mich.—Something new in hit-and-run cases—a driver who picked up his victim solicitiously as witnesses watched, drove him away from the scene of the acci dent, then threw him out of the car—was reported to police by Frank Drake, 63, who said he was the victim. checks flfiri COLDS nnDFEVER llgP Headaches Liqu'd - Tablets in 30 alve - Nose minutes Drops |r*T PVpf^ina che marrciou&WiDard B l* 1 Treatment which is fcrin*inr: 3 omgTtHp relief. Sold on ironclad 3 money-back guarantee, i? PRICELESS INFORMATION g —for those suffering from a STOMACH OR DUODENAL 3 ULCERS, DUE TO HYPER- M ACIDITY—POOR DICES- 3 TION, ACID DYSPEPSIA. H SOUR STOMACH, GASS1- 3 NBSS, HEARTB URN, CONSTI- 3 PATION, BAD BREATH, SLEEP- 9 LESSNESS OR HEADACHES, DUE 3 TO EXCESS ACID. Aak foe a/raa copy of WUlartS’* Moan. Carter & Trotter, Inc. if you telephone her "Meet Me at BLACKWELD ER’S FOR LUNCH today.” BARBECUE, all kind short or ders. Leading brands of beer. Tables for ladies. Corre here for THE BEST ALWAYS BLACKWELDER’S 20)’ S. Main St.—3-04 N. Depot WHEN YOU BUY THE *. £ Put your money on a sure thing when you buy razor blades. Why risk discomfort and faulty shaves? Probak Jr. i — product of the world’s largest blade maker — positively guarantees comfort and economy—sells at 4 for 10^! This blade is automatically ground, honed and stropped by special process. It is made to whisk through dense stubble without smart or irritation—never pulls on the tender spots. This is easy to prove. Just ask your dealer for Probak Jr.— he has this marvelous new double-edge blade or can get it for you quickly. Buy a package of Probak Jr. today. PROBAK JUNIOR BLADES A PRODUCT OF THE WORLD'S LARGEST BLADE MAKERS