SATOIDAY MOANING, AUGUST 2, 1919. THE NEWS AND OBSERVER. i: n. R. SHOPMEN THINK , . WELLOFTHEKO'YE , (Contiauea' frea Page Oae.) " llonal worklai agreement between the union and the Bailroad Administra tioa already affects, or will in twenty : (out hour affect, aixteea railroad in " 111 Southeast, strike leader said. This Include the Southern, the Seaboard, Nashville, Chattanooga and Louii d ether largo syitems under federal toaaacenteat, , , . ...; . . -The. striae was, called la . accordant ' with a reiolutioa adopted at a coavea- - tioa of th 8outheatern District of Fed irated eraft July 15 to 17. The work in involved ar boiler-maker, black smiths, sheet metal workers, car men - tad ether employe in railroad shop. ' Strike leader asserted all hop her ., Sad been affected with 2,000 men out - ind report from Jacksonville and Tampa showed the walkout general in PniA r......li i. ,1.. 1 A ivijimi MlvtUJU IV mo well mucip , Beports from over" Georgia were similar, while Columbia had no report. a ;et am the atrike, in that Ptate, there being none in the city itself. Situatioa at A. C. L. Shops, Rocky Mount, August At a meet ing tonight, federated craft of the A. V. L. shops here voted to walkout at 8 o'elock in the mornlag, , unleu the railroad administration grants 85 cents per hour wage during night work. Strike will affect thousands and result in clos ing of shops and railroad pumping station. Walk-Oat At Wilmington. Wilmington, August 1. Approximate ly six hundred and fifty members of the Federation of Shop Craftsmen, employ- ed in the local yard of the Atlantic Coast Line, walked out today at ID a. m. Many negroes were included among th strikers. Btrikers sav they or prepared to remain out until their ylcmands are met. Boad officials de clined to make any statement. ' -" n . I,i;v 1 : j protocol t the Versailles treaty contain ing a number of supplementary previa ions, aid Chairman Lodge put into, the record , an , agreement hitherto unpub lished in" this country, in which Mr. Wilson, IX. Clemeneeau 'and Premier Lloyd George had embodied certain reg ulation for the - government of th Khino provinces. Mr. Lodge alio pre rented n copy of the treaty between the big Ave powers and Poland, not yet submitted to the Senate for ratifieatipa. The only address in the Senate regard ing the Versailles treaty was by Senator Fall, Bepublieaa, Xew Mexiee, who op rt"cd the leage and criticised President Wilson for his course in the Versailles negotiations.' : . Barnch Before Cemalttee. ' before the Foreign Belations Commit tee Bernard M. Baruch, eeonomi ad viser to tho American peace delegation, replied to n number of' question re garding - reparation section of " the treaty. He said he doubted whether fGeTOaHy fver leaWifflfTW mount f indemnity that would be assessed against her, and maintained that even if the United States were to receive no part of the indemnity, it was "im portant in dollar and cents" that there be an American representative on the reparations commission which is to su pervise collection, of the bill from Ger many.' Mr. Barncb will continue his tes timony tomorrow, Watson Sees Wilson. Senator Watson, Indiana, was the only Republican Senator who saw President Wilson during the day and afterward he said there had .been a very pleasant discussion of the treaty, Including the League. tt Nations std the Shantung issue, fiis view' on these subjects, he said, were nqt changed by the confer ence. INTERNAL REVENUE HEADS OF DIVISION Situation in Mobile. Mobile, Ala., Aug. 1. Shopmen of tho Mobile and Ohio, Louisville and Nash ville,, Gulf, Mobile and Northern, and Southern Bailway are eipected to strike within the next forty-fight hours, ac- ... I I . ! coraingr ro lniormauon given oui Mobile tonight. in Florida East Coast Tied l p. Key West, Fla., Aug. k Up to mid night no train had left Key West since morning because of the strike of rail road shop men, which it wss said had tied up the Florida East. Const Railway. Th overseas line of the Florida' Kast Coast is the only railroad connecting Key West with the mainland. LITTLE RESPONSE TO STRIKE CALL IN EAST REGION, New York, August 1. The strike of railroad shopmen called today by the Federated Shopmen's Union, has met with little response in the eastern region, according to an unofficial state ment given out tonight at the office of the regional director of railroads. No official comment will ho made pend ing the return from Washington of the director, A. T. Hardin, who is in con ference nt tho capital with other offi cials of tho railroad administration. Unofficially it was stated that the strike call had been generally disregarded, and the claim mad at union headquar tosr in Chicago that a walkout had oc curred in Boston wss denied. The eastern region is the largest of the seven into which the country was divided by the railroad administration. (Ceatinned From Pag One.) North Carolina, with offices at Salis bury; A. D. Watts, of Btatesville, super visor of internal revenue for North Carolina, snd Josiah W. Bailey, of Ra leigh, collector of internal revenue for the State. Their names are inseparably linked with the enforcement of revenue act and as dangerous foe to "moon shiniag." C. H. Hayne, of Mount Airy, occupies a position vof distinction a assistant supervisor of internal revenue for North Carolina. The ether assign ments are given Below; ' -y Chief deputy collector for North Car olina J. M. Cunningham, of Greens boro. .;' 1 Cashier, collector's office C. T. Hicks, of Charlotte. Chief, Winston-Salem division N. L. Cranford, of Winslon-Salcm. Chief,: BtstevUle division C. H. nayneaAx officio, who is the assistant supervisor for the State. - Chief, Asheville division Hugh A. Love, of Waynesville. Chief, Charlotte division P. G. Kisea, of Hickory. Chief, New Bern division W, T, Woodier, of Baleigh. Chief, Washington division W. C. Bodmaa, of Washington. ttiiefr Bneky- Mount" drvisionW.- Mpye, of Rocky Mount. ; - Marshall la Coming. Hon. Thomas R. Marshall, Vic Iresi- 'dent of the United States has definitely accepted the invitation to make an ad dress in Raleigh on Monday, August 4. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Mar shall. W. H.- Sawyer came to Wash' ingtoa yesterday to extend the invita tion to the distinguished Hoosler and in company with Senator Lee S. Over man, an interview was sought with the Vice President. He first declined the invitation, bnt the 'persistence of Mr. Sawyer and the consent of Mrs. Mar shall to accompany him were factors that determined the favorable decision According to the presentation of Mr. Sawyer, Baleigh is comparatively as much troubled .with the soaring price of food products as Washington City Consequently, the Baleigh Chamber of Commerce haj recognised the immutable law of supply and demand and the get' together meeting Monday night is de signed to stimulate agricultural pro duction. Likewise, the gathering of the secretaries of the eommereial clubs of the State will afford impetus to the purpose and scope of the gathering. Vice President Marshall will draw a erowd, and his home-spun philosophy wit will reward the trip of any audience hough It might come from Currituck jf Cherokee. Disclosures were mad her today to the effect that two prominent Baleigh merchants, whose tames are withheld from publication for sufficient reasons, wrote Senator Simmon their opposition to th Kenyon bill, designed to life th to th Kenyon bill, designed to lift the from picker, wa made at the request of a' representative et 8wift k Com pany. .They confessed te being gulli ble to the appeals of the representa tive of th meat packers a ad forth with,' registered protest to the J'ill in troduced by Senator William Kenyon, of Iowa. Subsequent letters, ' written within the past, two days, by th same Baleigh merchant have withdraw opposition and nTedie lunnort to a measure aimed to correct practice that would make it possible for a combine to control meat and food 'products. While the merits of the Kenyon bill have not beenfully-rxplainedH tnbe sstfly assumed msc any rjenaior or vongrcss mis from Iowa who would align him. self in the interest of the packers would forever blast kis political career. Iowa haa striking similarity to North Caro lina inasmuch aa it is largely an sgri cultural State, and combines and mon strous trusts are in ill repute in this State where most farmers prosper and opportunity constantly beckons even th tenant to a state of horn ownership and an automobile. Secretary Daniels Leave, Secretary of the Navy and Mr. Dan iris left it 1 o'clock this afternoon for the Parifio coast, where th Secretary will review the Pacific Fleet. They will proceed to San: Diego, where they will meet the fleet. The trip will include s visit to Cot Angeles and other important Pacific Coast towns and Secretary and Mrs. Daniels will visit Honolulu before returning to Washington. Commander Percy Foot, a. native of North Wilkes boro, will accompany the party on th trip. They will arrive in. San Francisco erfrly in September te meet President Wilson who will review the fleet, th party will return te Washington prob ably the first or second week in Sep tember . , , . , Larry I. Moore, of Nw Bern, was in Washington today and succeeded in hav ing hi son, Thomas Owen Moore, re leased from duty as attach of th French embassy, in Paris. Toung Moore U to return to America and matriculate at the University of North Carolina ia the Fall, H ha been abroad several months.) ,.':,.:, ; ." jt .Major Matt Allen, of Goldsboro, has arrived in Washington from overseas, where he ha been atationed during the war. He was a judge in the territory of occupation, and administered justice to erring Germane, and hi stories of the life overseas will be interesting to folk in Eastern North, Carolina. Major Allen will remain in Washington until he obtain his relae from the army Lieut. Col. Miltoa McCorkle, of Nen Bern, has alio arrived ia Washington from overseas duty, and will soon b discharged from the service. Lieut. E. E. Williams, ef New Bern was a visitor to th National Capital today. V": i The Navy Department has been re quested to' furnish a naval band It Rocky Mount on August 6 and T o the occasion ef th Stat meeting of Confederate veterans. An answer to tht, request i , expected hortljr. , Baby' Second Sammer GROVE'S BABY BOWEL MEDICINE will correct the Stomach and Bowel Troubles and it is absolutely harmless. Can be given to infants xith perfect afety. ' See directions on the oottle. 30c Adv. Text of Proposed New Treaty Reservations of Middle-Grounders (Confirmed from Page One.) reservation program held the eentre of interest in discussions among Senators during the day, several other angles of the treaty controversy came to the sur face in the Senate and at a public hearing of the Foreign Belations com mittee. Additional Material. President Wilson submitted a short ' no In A Healthy Child All children troubled with worms haye an un healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a rule, there is more or less stomach disturbance. Grovo'o Tasteless chill TonZc contains just what the blood needs. Iron and Qumine in a form acceptable to the most delicate stomach and if given regularly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, improve the digestion and act as a general strengthening tonic to the whole system. Nature will then throw off or dispel the worms, and the child will be in perfect health. It u pleasant to take. Friee 60c PERFECTLY HARMLESS. CONTAINS NO NUX-VOMICA OR OTHER POISONOUS DRUGS. When A General Strengthen ins Tonio ie Needed in tho Homo For Tho Child, For tho Mo ther or tho Father, Taho Grovo'o Taotelooo chiil Tonio Prickly Heat tome day yea will ask yourself. Why did I refuse to us Tyrse's Antlseptle Powder for these tormenting eases of Poison Oak, Prickly Heat and Mosquito Bites f The person wbo does not nse Tyree's Antlseptle Powdsr freely in these eases fails in two ways, nerleet and fors sUht For the effect of Tyrse's Antlseptle Powdsr In these cases 1 almost marvel ous. One or two tablespoon full dissolved la a basin of water invariably rclisvea you while yen are applying It When used In th same dilu tions Its application Is very leuant and noncauterlslng. For thirty years Tyrees Antlseptlo Powder has been th accepted standard for per sonal hygiene. In small, me dium and large sises for sal by all drug and department store. Remember th nam TTREETB accept no other. Fx KIP- I mairT Just Received New Stock Of Handsome BRIEF Cases Full Leather, $5.00 to $15.00 'j7 NEW FICTION Cup of Fury Rupert' Hughes $1.75 DawnEleanor Porter .$1.60 Tin Soldier Bailey v $1.50 Love. Stories Rinehart . . . .' $1.50 Jungle Stories of Tarzan Burroughs. . $1.40 EASTMAN KODAKS AND SUPPLIES 7 Ordera-Promptly Handled. ALFRED WILLIAMS & CO. BALEIGH, N. C 1867 0 Liberty Bonds Bought We wish to buy Liberty and Victory ' Bonds. Market Price Paid. The Citx Bank Right la Ike Heart ef Everything. R. C ALLEN, President t' H. H. MASSEY, Cahir HAVC SHOUT STUBaORfl wfcM It U vo ltr to hav l -ut aa rr -t-w nvrw( r rifc i . STRAIGHT HAIR , Just apply aoatt , QUEEN HAIR DRESSING fmr ktlr an tor amrlf Mw quirk- gulf alt k..pe CAHDSyrr tw. as Mi Mlh lr. IMa't Ml we Sir aWaaa la tlaaiM ar snr tor asetj itUI aaar fl NEWBRO Mra CO.. ATtAHT. OA. . ...its uitarrrfi WriMlor AUn l mw f, I Delicate, Complicated Machinery It neither necessary nor tcoaomkaL Bar money ia (rinding your (rain wnn " ' Th Cibbts Corn Mill r ' SLnpU. Fast - Ecemkal Dnrabt . f eosapllciiU parts, srhet sudila easily aaadlel Kith hall. fcMrint arua M Is BrM resnlng see rasi. rsnRiI very llltl srsr. Utile vnar. sasoeth.rsaatng, la a nart t repfcace. sUda tt the U e sutarUls. Abss Sirl.lr awaateed. tat lUastrsM Ktsrsttr and titaf aMrsss-M - v itsn BACHiiitrr ca,owt Ara,ctaita. a. a m Iri, -TABLETS - hw' Ml t W. PARSES DRUG CO. Ir) "Hi I I 7 Demand the Best! ACME Cement Plaster" GAGER iljdrated Lime STANDARD SANDS Of ' Portland Cement Metal anJ CoBpositioa ROOFINGS I airoAU jnJ Wire or Writ Carolina PotnaCeiatat Gq, 0tla,S,C. AdsBt lacksonvfll f Blminstiasa New OrW.ru "Raleigh's Shopping Center" x BqYLAN-Pe ARGE GoJ 4- White ID MU Of Gabardines, Pique, Linene and Various Other Novelty Materials. TS m r.TVR AnnF.n momentum to THIS AUGUST SELLING, THEY HAVE BEEN SPECIALLY PRICED, AND SHOULD NOT LAST THROUGHOUT THE DAY AT THESE PRICES. ABOUT ONE HUNDRED OF THEM AT $3.69 ! SKIRTS ARE MADE OF SUCH POPU LAR FABRICS AS GABARDINE, PIQUE, LINENE AND VARIOUS OTHER NOVELTY MATERIALS, SMARTLY TRIMMED WITH POCK ETS, WIDE OR NARROW BELTS, AND BUTTONS ; ALL THE REG- dQ CQ ULAR AND EXTRA SIZES VOtOV At wholesale today, they could not be bought for such a low prifce. ViSti G (lamim louses They Come Ever So Often and Now They're Here Again lprottier Than Ever These are round neck and square.neck Blouses, with" collars and without collars, trimmed in" many delightful ways. ! BLOUSES OF VOILE, lf- ff t BLOUSES OF GEOR- fclA fiA Sl.SS, $2.95 AND" TO: . :9 1 O.UU j GETTE, 53.SS TO $ 1 7OU 18 cents a package Canitto sre aeU mrrhir Is ' mtmtohntor sssta saetaa e TB ' Of arMtaa ar t.a pacaatn UM clia nttaa) la a (laariaa-MraTerara f art.a. W. atron(lr rseemBim thla tartea fcr tha homa ar aAcesvppIr Of haa fee traval. E. i. IETH0LDS T0IACCO CO. WhaaaaatJaW K C CAMELS are in a class by themselves easily the most refreshing, the most likable ciga rette you ever smoked.' You can prove that! Simply compare Camels puff-by-puff with any cigarette in the world at any price ! Put quality, flavor and cigarette satisfaction to the utmost testl Made to meet your taste, Camels never tire it, no matter how liber ally you smoke them! The expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos makes Camels delightful so full-bodied, yet so fascinatingly smooth and mellow mild. EverytimeyoulightoneyoTi get new and keener enjoyment I Freedom from any unpleasant cigaretty after taste or any un pleasant cigaretty odor makes Camels as unusual as they are enjoyable. - - ' In fact, Camels appeal to 'the most fastidious smoker in so many new ways you never will miss the absence of coupons, premiums or gifts. You'll prefer Camel Quality! I'lL. , - i - - i-J i " i - I . i . iii I, ii, n " 'I. .

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