Newspapers / The News & Observer … / Sept. 1, 1918, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THE NEWS AND OZERVER SUXDAY r.IOrJwNa SZPTET.IZZR 1, ISIS' Th Two. Birr eat Value Offered Today "... ;"i , ; $-p g.75 Whiting -H $ 1 P.75 O Clothes Economy For Shrewd Buyers . i ' i . Two Lots - From - Our . Regular Stock, All Medium Weights and Heavier Enough For Fall and . Winter. ' Lot One, 115 Suits that former ly sold from $20.00 to $22.50, as long as they last; "your choice . . $15.75 Lot Two, one hundred Suits ranging in price from25Tt)0 to $35.00, all wool and hand-tailored; as long they last .$18.75 These Suits would be exceptional values under normal conditions, and under present conditions they are truly wonderful. Drop in today. It will pay you to buy two suits. ( orton Co. 30 Year Raleigh's Leading Clothiers. LABOR DEPARTMENT U IS GROWING RAPIDLY it J ENLISTED MEN ARE MADE f j SECOND LIEUTENANTS iferbert J. Docltery, of Wades jboro Is Amors List Quali I fying At Camp Dodge yrBsliiltgtim, Ant. 'M. Knli'te.l men In, the army (riantcd commissions as eeeond lieutenant .liter attending the fltilth officers training school t 'fi :ii; 1 'edge, Iowa, were mituiuiii i il tud.iy by llic" War lVartniPiit niul inrui.tr: Carroll 8. AnIriin, . Dutmru,' K ('.; John B. Jtiirkli-y, tirecin ille. Mi.; John D. .Itcnh.'im, Mnrianna, 'Ark.; John C. Rnwyer, I.-psIii.t'?, Kin.; lioh ert G. Bright. Miniph:. Tcan.; Charles 8 Colburn, St. Kin , 'IVnti.; Claud" T. Cook, Kiliiisuld, l.-i. ; lAcictt K. Di vnl, t'ofoi, Fla.: Herbert .1. Dnrfccrv, Wadeshoro, N. C; Alfred II. Fre.lrri. k. Irarnesvillp. G:.; Major II. Il.irris, lattaaooga. Trim.; Jefferson V,'. ,f. ! Mrlow.M, l.s. ; Tratik M. M iv ''id, Nashville, Tcnn.; Murk C. N'.JT, Dublin, Ha.; W. I.. O'Flshcrty, liid,. ond, Va.: William H. I'itt", Frink, Kla.; J-ovnlle A. Uo'y, Hamburg. Ark.; John H. Kiwcll. Marion. S. C; Ktiward K. Shambtin, JVIlii, La.. .Julinn K. strother. J-: iKfficM, H. c.; William II. Timothy, Chattanooga, Tcnn.; Arnold X Whatley, Knterprise, Ala. A PRESENT DUTY fur The jienerul tli( local food uf tank camp food situation aa vel aa Mtufi'.iDO due to location nt KaYigh makns it (f will 1 high. So plant enough homo uac, mi l sonic for market. While it is not too Inte to plant, there is no time t.i low. 1'lant on tins sea ton ami plant abundantly. vital importance that attention hp given ITie production of fall fooj , crops, gar dens, etc. It is toft iatp to plant pii.'i liran. r-ililia;;e. unions, lettuce, creeas of all kinds tiimipB, etc, Thuro nil! he n ready snle fur nil such. Anil if a per .ion must ): i)u-t things, the price I'listor Pryaniler, founder of thp npw liberal Cierinan American paper Fiied eusraf. at Zurii h, Sit.-rlan l, tele Crnphpd to tli" tiorman Kmpernr, who ias lost none of his sit Bona in the war, -How many foils has your niaj esty lost f How many hnvp heen womnl eil or iniitilateilf If there havp tipen no easunltiea in tin inip.rul family, i' ilemaiij an explanation." CALL TO ARMS MANTONE King of Reconstructive Tonics Uuilds up tho nnos and Sexual System and produces Uich, Red Blood A Builder-up of the entire body. "MAKES yot' FKKI, COOl) AU, OVEft" We takft all rhanpra- Full Treatment, No npnofit. No Coot FOB MEN, AND WOMF.N On. Dollar-All Pmggfeta I. ,1 Mi-.:-. -:?h 'mrm . !t jjj Tbree Hundred and Twenty-Eight Ufl and PSOS Just Arrived More Enrouto I now have on hand three hundred and twenty-eight extra fat. good-haired, well-broken Mules and Horses, any size Mule that you want and a good assortment ofHorses. Will have four loads Mules and two loads Horses to arrive by Wednesday, September 4th. Come and see this stock arid I know I can suit you. Each and Every Op Guaranteed To Be Exactly as Represented. I - L Largeat Individual Dealer in the South. FAYETTEVULE, N. C Many New Bureaus And Ser vices, Established Since War Began ' (From the Department of Ibor Infor mation and KducatioB PrTipe, Pub licity Diriaiba.) Labor Day, 1913, marka almoat new era in the United Htatet Department ef Ibor, for it witnriaet the fall oper ation of the freat war emergeapy labor program, which baa tremendously in rreaaed tha eop ef tha department'a work and baa added eight new bureaua to the departnient't organiration. The great importance of Iabbf in Win ning the war baa been reapoaaible for the rapid growth of thia part of tho gofernment'e nrtiritiea. The preaent organization of the Department of Ii bor, with its great employment nerviee eotering all the territory of the United Ptates, and with its many other bureaus, requiring seven building in Washing ton for their housings far surpasses the dreams of the few labor leaders who more than (ft years ago first suggested such a branch of the United Htates gov ernment. Probably the first mention of sueh a department came in a bill introduced JnQpgreas jnJjWbjrOodlove 8. Orth, momlter of Congress from an Indiana dutript, for the creation of a Depart ment of Industry. 'The bill was not adopted, however, and no great amount of discussion even waa erpated byiit in the midst of the Civil War,"9 In the following year 13 labor lead ers met at louiaville, Ky., anil drew up resolutions urging the establishment of a Department of Labor in the United Statea (iovcrnment. This was the germ of the idea which has now had its frui tion in the present great organization, for the labor orgaaization of the day took up the plan enthusiastically and featured it ot their pouventions. More than 1 bills and resolutions were in trodured in Congress up to 1!HI2 sug gesting the organization a Depart ment of Ibor. When William McKin Ipy was in Congress he introduced a bill for a bureau of labor statistics. Thia and other bills led to the for mation of a bureau in the Department of tho Interior by the name of the "Ilnreau of Ibor.'' The date of' its foundation was June 27. 18H4. Four years later it waa made a department, but with a commissioner at its head an officer not of Cabinet rank. In 1903 it became again the 'Bureau of I.abor," under the Department of f'ommprpp and f3tor. It still survives in the present Department of Labor as the Bureau of or Statistics. The department as an institution of Cabinet rank dates from March 4, 191.1, when it was definitely separated from the Department of Commerce, with W. H. Wilson, the present Secretary, as its head. The labor men of 1S63 called for a "department conducted by men of and for labor." Their desires are well re flected by the act which called the de partment into being. This act declares na tho purpose tif the department "to foster, promote, and develop the wel fare of the wage earner of the United (States, to improve their working ron ditions, and to advance their opportuni ties for profitable employment." The Bureau of Uab'or Htatistles, Naturalization, ami Immigration have existed with the department from the beginning, aa has the Children's Bu reau, and a mediation service waa an important part of the department's work. From the beginning the aim of the department has been to lessen in dustrial disputes and to diminish their severity. Heeretary Wilson held in his first report that much industrial trouble is due to the refusal of employera to grant their workmen tb right of or ganiration, though the employera them selvtes were organized aa a matter of course. The right of organization lv both parties has been recognized in the war-labor program. "In most instances in which employers, grant to workmen praetipal repognition of the right of collective bargaining, which they them selves exercise, fair relationi are main tained," the Secretary wrote in bis first report. It waa also the aim of the de partment from the fleet to remedy in duatrial conditions that cause distress ing controversies. The department had a normal growth and steadily became a more important factor in the nation's life until the out break of tha war with Germany. The vital importance of an adpquate labor supply was perreived at onee and tho de partment revised its organisation in or der to handle the new problems brought about by war conditions. An Adjustment Service, with H. I Kerwin as ehief, is aa extremely 'im portant feature of tb war organization. To this servir has been due in many instances the preservation of industrial pesee and the smooth operation of war work. The War Labor Board and the War labor Policies Board ar both operating under the department ia the labor problems of the day. Perhaps one of the most spectacular new lines ef work takea up by the department ia that represented by the United States Employment Berrrie. Thia great organisation is bow distrib uting the oaakilled labor supply of the atioa, and its diverting, labor from nonessential work to vitally importaat war jobs. The is also the Training and Dilation Bervice, the aim of which is to fill the p Impea of skilled mea with thoee less experieaced, yet ia such a manner that ther will be bo shock t iadustry. The Information and Education Ser vice is making known to the nation the importance of applying effectively every one of labor power, and the Investi gation and Inspectioa Service is hand ling tha field work of some of the nu merous other lOrganizationa in the de partment. Tb Conditions of Labor Service and the Women in Industry Service a r undertaking important work ia special fields, and the Housing Bu reaus is bus ing itself with the prob lems of war workers ia industrial cen ters, i Such ia the present organization of. the department. The Employment Serv-1 tee alone now has about j,000 names on its lists of paid or voluntary helpers, ine growth of the department is keeping with the increased importance or laoor itself. Gcrr.3 Shrivel t.:d lc:::n Cif Dy U2 Qsgfe GETS-IT"1 2 Drop Do five Work. "I MI m Ww 1 Wrt mr4 W tn mm Ulna aftar anetfc 1 still s4 tli, I mj to m a isr trie. Foiret-tlM Pkia, Lotv tJxrCornlj tWIf I aw east Joss what ifcas of wKh w bW tW toe asm. im r TAR HEEL WANTS TO FLY ACROSS ATLANTIC Ijent. Samuel if. Connell, of War ren county, who has been traveling uirouga me west with a squadron of aviators -which have been giving ex hibitions and perfecting themselves for contests with the Huns on the battle front in France, ia now at Dayton, O., tearing uoerty machines. Lieutenant Connell is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Connell, of Warren Plains, and at one time was a student at the North Carolina State College of Agriculture am! Engineering, He joined the North Carolina Na tional tiuard in December, 191.1. He served with this outfit on the Mexican herder during parts of 1916-17. He mustered out at Raleigh April, 1917, ami went to the otticers training camp at Fort Oglethorpe, (ia., in May, where inter ue passed a suecesslul examina tion for army aviation. He went to 'the ' n w LIEUT. SAMUEL M. CONNELL, Georgia Technical Institute to learn the theoretical side of aviation. He went to the Wilbur Wright field at Day ton, )., in August, w here he did his first (lying. From there he went to Houston, Ten., to the Ellington Field, Vhere he took an advanced course in flying, bombing, and gunning. In April, 1918, he went to the Ounter Field at Lake Charles, La., where he fin ished his gunning, pursuit, and other courses. Thus equipped, in June, be went to Minneola, Long Island, and there he was made a pilot of the first provisional wing of Death Head Aero Squadron. He had the honor, with a comparative few, to fly over New York city on July 4. He has volunteered and hopes to b one of the few who will drive his ma chine across the Atlantic and safely land on European soil. Lieutenant Connell had some thrill ing experiences during his recent west ern trip and the papers of Ohio, In diana Michigan, and others western States give his (lying exhibitions and those of the other members of the party much prominence, it The orange was originally a pear shaped fruit, not much larger than a cherry, and it ia said that its evolution Is dn to twelv centuries of cultivation. Open Today s, ( tucker Building ; Pharmacy This Good - Looking Oxford, from a, fam ous New York shoe maker, is one of the attractive but practi cal styles from our Autumn Opening. 1 - . J ' , .' The Oxford in vari ous new patterns will find more general fyor than for many a Fall season. We have suitable new shoes for every occa sion, and some very attractive ones which are good for several purposes at once. jpmiiyLatC. mi kudva mmi kv Thars has tmn BifhSas iwwrf sss it was susraaa- s fsst eeraa asaea "G-Ir wws sara. ir Mm Saw MS) H Cwraa Dttvw Tea Ha4t Try0ta-ir aaa Tkatsm ri misat on on my shoe. 1 ascd salvia and ether thlnss that t off more of the toe than they aid the eora. I' rkn, but Two drops of -Grta-lt' don all Ha work. It wkoi the com shrivel and set so Iodm that cut and die with kaivas and now no mora footin for war tho sommon so, slmplo, our war. "Ocss-lt," tlw awrmntMd, nonT-back eora "nw. tl onlr ur wr, emu but a trifle at anv dnist store. MTd bj K. Lowraoeo Co.. Cklasao, III. Sold in RaMsh and mas, wooed aa tho world's sort eora roaMdv ar i. C. Braatlo aad J. E. Haaalba. "Better Merthaadlso Bettor SorrW RALEIGH. NORTH CAROLINA Fall Fashions In A Noteworthy Showing - Which only the really great fashion designer? can create. , The first appeal ef th Fall Styles aa ahawa stsfWiiUtlvaly la this atore la, of coarse, their exqalalt boawty aad dlstletlve atav plicity. Bat th lasting satlafaetloa (hat oaat mere la th ead la their vain achlvwaaoat fasr th wealth of ar aiparlaae la hrytag greater valaoa, aa well aa mt or artlstl atylea, staads aarely for th merited aerited accsa of ' thia star, SUITS Coats longer and skirts tell the story, In a setting of beautiful fabrics and graceful lines. Fur, where used, is used with thoughtfulness. $25-00 to $125-00 DRESSES Simplicity Is the secret. Long and nar row are the lines tapering somewhat at the ankles, not confining the waist line. Collara are rarely shown on the smarter dresses. $17-50 to $75-00 COATS Thcy are enveloping. The materials used are of exquisite qualities. Rich furs a,nd fur fabrics, effectively used and graceful lines com plete the picture. $20-00 to $100-00 HATS Everything from the newest sport model to the fashionable dress hat, showing all the fall shades for suit or dress. Velvet and Satin An tique of finest-quality tastefully and becomingly trim med. - Moderately priced at from $3-95 to $15-95 A style for every individual idea yto duplications These Hats are exceedingly smart in every way. Misses Badger & Denton Secoad rioer Over T. W. Dobbin's
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 1, 1918, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75