Newspapers / The News & Observer … / Aug. 1, 1921, edition 1 / Page 2
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NEWS AND OBSERVER. RALEIGH, N. C, MONDAY MORNING. AUGUST 1, 1921. wm my Inspection By Governor and Party at " " ' " tWornen's Training Camp Near Asheville I LOYAL LABOR LEGION A NEW ORGANIZATION Recogrnites Rift-ht To Work Be jjardlen Of Wbothcr Mem bers Of Union Or Not POLICY OF STATE SHOW DEPRESSION " S . prices if yonoN ORDAIN MINISTER ORDER NEW BALLO AT UNION MEETING nm Dcmicv imh Teachers At Trinity Summer . Scnoo. Adopt Strong Reso- lutions Of Commendation Trinity College, July M. Ths 250 tcaehers enrolled in the Trinity Cul l lew Hummer School Saturday morninel ii a inss meeting gave unanimous enl dorasraetit to the educational policies and progaama ( the North Carolina Department of Education when it adopted foimal molutiens to support th crtibY.tHia Vluxlulo, the State Budget aystara, and the State govern- n.ent'a sufl(rtioa of Die deficit result ing from the general plan for educa tional improvement. A paragraph wet included in th resolution which gave tpocial mention in commending the acta of the recent General Assembly in refusing the use of funda for the salaries of teachers fur purpuaes other than the payment of thee salaries. It was ahto resolved that the organization known aa the North Carolina Teachers Awmhly should -are the personal and rarirridtral sup port of every kenchnr in erery em munity of the .State. The follow: resolutions! "Whereas the Stxifcu of . XorUi Carolina haa in the fftee of the adverse eond tiuns of the paat two yar made, we believe, tho most rapid educational progress it has ever made; "Whereas we behove the larger part of this progress was directly -based up en the iutmduetioa of a practical bud get systora of school apfirutprialioaa and expendau s made by the Onerul As rmbly of 191!', in M-)Use to the wishes mf the State fluiWmntendent of Ptiblie Irfctruction and tne North Caro - -lina.-'E.'i'irf-' Aisewkly "Wheraa tile prav-tienl ftpliustiou of the Uudgojt System csme weicn, under the authority of the (Jenernli Assiuilil tie Stato Department of Edueatin worked out a definite salary sehedul '"' uaiel for ttin -tint time in t-be h-intwry of the State upon tho training servne and general qjialifieationa of the teach "Wbereaa tlie higher institaitions of learning luul the teax'sors of tha State have gene to no Jit:!.: expense and iu convenience1 in order to realize for th teachers and Jr the State the iidva. t ages accruing from the wise action of the General Assembly and the State Board of Education; "WTrereas the deficit of fdSOMW, in the State public school fund resulted directly from the eagerness with which the poorly paid teachers of tho State 'tmnVrJonk tr meet the reaaonnblo re- ule; - - - . - Br 1t tnwlvwl -by- the publie school teachers of Sojth Carolina in at tendance at the Trinity College Sum nier School : "(1) That we pledge tsur continued support to State Siiporlntttndent K. C. Brooks and his co laborers .in the State Department of Education iit their prog mlwatienal policies, particular ly in their policy of working out a modern certitiisation plan and main taitiing sslnry schedule tftat recog nises training, experience, and of tloieucy ; "(2) That we eommead the prompt Sid courage tis action of liuvrsor Morrison and his Council in assuming oa behalf uf the State the deficit re suiting from improved educational renditions ; "(3) Thst we commend the Genera! Assembly of I1MI) aud the General As serably of 1921 for their foresight.'-! statesmanship shows in introducing and continuing the Budget System - fur handling school appropriations aad ex penditures () That we commend in partieular luat proviaion in tae r,est scnooi kgis uaon. roruiuuing me use or tne .ecu BMrd the Bioaes of Una and after csjl ra Hulnrv funil for mnv niirootte ftthrl i ' - - l.i ...... - - 1 inas me payment or sauries; Sl )...! .. . ... I 1 iui wr .iruu uur 9utiri i" tits North Carolina Teacher's Assembly, ud urge sverv t elver m the (state to affiliate with soul- . itnt.v or city unit sf thst organirni Yss stiideat limiv . 1 tbe ftumius-i Bchool in ait.!iurnei mass meeting elected the following officers for the suing year: Cssirmaa Johu W. tare, Jr., supenn- tend st Durham County Schools. .Vice ChttiiaHiu K. K. 1 glummer, Principal Virgirtis ('srolina High School tm sr Ceeek, X. See'rstni'y Mies Keo Ooodaiaa I'm ateavd, of the Hamlet Schools. Executive Committee Y. J. A Smith, Principal Ijowell ; Miss Anne Mrhitener, Cornelius High School; Miss SIlie Beavers, Grammar School Princi pad, Durham ; Mrs. W. R. Taylor, Wilmisgtos Mieols. CONNOR'S "SKY PILOT" HAS BIG THRILLS IN IT . Th Americas public may have for fottM the rugged vigor and the cirsa, decent idealism of Ralph Con mat aad "The Sky Pilot." It hat bee-i fifteen years since tbe book' was "written, and mnch water has flowed . under tbe bridge since then. Mayhap people look with soro-illitng of derisiu nrpoa the thing that' Connor put into the book deesde and half age " rwsrannr rne etorr ivaaui wiviu shos.d bring It back sharply te xnl! hoes ef Americans who jrs forget tif sowi things tkey ought sot to forget. Deeeney and grodness ess be s thrillinf as snllsls n seraia au rarsinns UDen auestionahle ventures Tk pieturs it t th Superb today, aad sebodv will M ids wore jor seeUf H. Oa th eoatrsry, betur. It has sll ths thrills of .blood and Uwader mtlodreraa, rind bobs of thee. in strained and far fstehed. It la hi ntvf floors nietaa. ik big nea m it. nut Wltnai ins line mima f Cossor's religioa to ot kit, aor tarsnttsB. Thsrs is a rrtacher la it sritk bis- heart Bad tws fist lo sutch H, and sceaM that will bring OK ot eaiiouscd awls asvoies to joe idgs ( Ms seat. 0R. A.S. ROOT TO SPEAK AT HEALTH CONFERENCE MBBBSSBBBSBSBBS '' Dr. Aldert 8. Coot. wQ kaswm physl iaa of Xxlelrhk, left yesterday for WamatcsB, wkrr kc win tMsaf ftMltk foafsreaet cf Bar aad xaotk trt ef Us KTursatoa distrtct, wkieh ril bs ktld at tit plseo today. Dr. loot iU addrsss ths oesiirrtses today si "EeeJtk ktssMrot la Iafiaey and Ctiiaao. - . ., . Lower Range On New Orleans Market From Opening un- til Close Of Week 1 New Crista, La., July- 31. Prieet I were depressed in the cotton market I th is week from the opening, stand I injf-t to 20 points under the close of I 'the preceding week at their highest and 08 to 4 points under at their lowest. On the close the trading months were at net losses of 41 to 51. October traded at 12.10 at its highest level fell off to 11.33 au delosed at ll.fl6. In the spot department middling loat 75 points la the net results, closing at 11 against 38.7.1 a yead ago, Poor trade roporta from Liverpool and Manchester and the quiet in the pot markets of this ceuntry were tl;e main factors against values. For !i while the more favorablo weather over the belt reused selling but it was finally quite generally conceded that tho stage bad been sot in the belt for the usual August deterioration and that this detcrjorjitka mlghtf. be all the more severe become of tree comparatively slight July deterioration, as indicated in most private bureau reports on the crop, inward the end or the week a eoveriag movement set, in among shorts and they caused steadiness and partial recoveries frem the lowest levels. Thia eowsring was induced by general fixrieetntlon of a rather bullish show- ng by the bureau reports d ie Monday. The week was punctuated with private bureau reports on the crop, Mil con dition percentages returned ranged from 03.1 to (U.s wim indicated crop figures runnug from 8,300,000 up to 8,H0,(H0. At the end of the week it looked as if traders expected a report 4riW..tke.tofnjiLl '"Ud 67.5 to S I newpfr of North i,ro!in mav indicating a crop of around "piW'i,,. & sto'r of tluurrEtufi! To their Feeling was more bullish regarding the size of the indicated crop thau re- garding the percentage ef condition and we-teenier eee4 wOWing- U legurXl .J"1 i0 bales aa bullish in spite of the fa.et viiat it was larger than the indi catsd p on June 30th when the figures were S,43:y00 huiles. The re port from the government is due at 10 o'clock (New Orleans time) Monday morning anil will compare with 00.2 on June 25th of this ysur, 74.1 on July th of last year and the ten year aver- age of July 23th of 73-1. The average variation for the last ten years dur ing the July rondition period has been a lose of 3.4 points The annual report by Jl. C. Heater, secrotary of the New Orleans cotton exchange. Is due Moirdiiy, and will con ..... t.. ii ki..k . I. t ... - i hupn a.'iiFArtv waitintr tnr tnnntK nftat Ttiiji applica iwrtitiitttoVTn'eitFirV"o? m. vu J .'vi, n ii ii ii iiii-h ia much disputw. The average trader look for a carty over of about l,i0i, OUO hales of Anierioau eoUmi and any thing over that figure is likely to cause selling while anything under Is likelv to cause buying. The figures on the commercial crop for the year just end ing, and on mill takings exports and consumption will be statistics ef great trade interest. SAND BANK CAVES liMt THREE CHILDREN DEAD kiaetou. MU-. July ai. Thrwr children were killed aad one was so seriously injured that she will die, whitn a taild bank under nhieh they wers playing late this aftrruiH'tt caved ia, burying them. The dead are: Annie Belle f'ollison, agi'il hrnest ( ovy, aged 1; mid Susie Covey, aged 8. The injured child, Lena I ovey, is agd ft. When the ekildmn fuili.it tn ,nin,n v.w,.. tnT ,,..,, , rtti...., k..... a 8,arh. Nearing the aaad bank he mi; ir neip oe uug ner out in an intense oils condition. Mr. f'n.v ,,) . . - ..... ,.,.., 1., nul ..J .... ,),. Udies of th t On... ...... recovered. All the children exec.pt f- na t ovey had been smothered under th aaud, according to medical exninl natiuns, N bone were found broken tn any of the bodies. GREEKS NOW MENACING TURKISH NATIONALISTS - Athrns, - Jnty --ah fOrek- Official agency) lhe three points on the HJiek ca coast at whtch,Gretk foniu werfl, isnaed last week are Ineboli, fsmope and lnrerh. The troops landed at luaerli have, begun a march on Ada nai.ir. lareatcned by tlieso landings, the Turkish Nationalists sr continuing loeir wiiaqrawai toward Angoraw The commander of the Grek air rorces reports the raptuje of the Turk- i-ii steamer, tin. lie lurks are re- portci ny me eommsnder to be de- morausea oy tne blockade of ths Black rx coast, TA tireks operstlng with in range of the Suns st Ssmsnn rith- out being fired upon. Gsrssers Writes Letters Washington, July SI. Samuel Oom pers, presideet of th American Fed eration ef Uhor, has written presi dents of local unions and organiiers te aid in the fight against, ths prison con tract system la s-ariou sta'es, to rgo improvement ia Teder and Slat eocational systems and te assist in In creasing the membership ef the federa tion to 5,000,000 befor th next con vention. Th communications, made publio todsy were seat ent la accord sneo with resolution adopted at the irnver convention. v tlherf.U Bsndd Memphis, Tsa, July Jl.-John D. Martin, president of the Southern Asso elation, tonight upndd Norman (SM) JEIUrfeld, manager of the Liitl ItotS elab, for thirty days for whst Mr. Marti a kld "aa entirsly unjusti fUbls physical atuck' oa Umpire Pfeaalnger in otday ' (am at Memphis aad gars warning that a repstition of suck oosduct," os th part of Eiber fold would mult ia his xpulia from ths iMfa. swd Trewps ts Merecro Madrid, Jnly ll-Reiaforcement. tr kolac soat forward with est difficulty to tha raltof tt tk SpsaUh troepa ia oat lyiaf position ia Uo Motitla battle res. aaya aa oei4 statessent ta tk MoroeesB Cghtisg isssed early today. Ia tnral tk litsatita ia tk tre U aaekasftd. Tha tribssasa, adds tk tstetat. uda nttttr fsebls attack aps Men ; . .. . . . ... . .: v t f f- Governor Morrison, Jlrs. Hickett, staff, and Lieutenant Uuttcrfitdd inspecting the three companies at the Women's I ruining Lamp. Carrying North Readers of Instead of Scandals And Prize Asks For Consideration of Ashe County As Cattle Rais ing Country and Watauga As South's Cheese Center Address of San ford Martin, Kdi'or of the Winstjon-Salcni Journal, before the North Carolina J'rrss 'Association. There is onJv one wav hv which tho rradcrs. The formula is. simple find the fncts and print th-io. It is a Iml- story. If told aright it i- worMi front page top of column. Hut iii. . order, lu. nit..wc.r...llik...oQ-. (fectivelv ina-nv of us m'l I . i. revise our thinking on the question of what constitutes big news. What news! I suppose the tin:-' ! definition of that t r m ir.ut - ,: a can to a dog's tail; if he run : To dowa tho street it is not news; if he v.-i'Ls It is. The news writers are ahovs on the hunt for something out of the rdinury. Thev thit.k that hat ;'iotl the l his their reasiera want manager knows it end the IS. I wo ! 1 I last to disturb the report search for the in'tereting ai d t! e novel. The public wants th" -envit omal, the strange, the weird. If he expects tils I . ' ' . . ' , .. . f -,V r. y y-c. - -,f , average cflitor evervwhere c'si give tho public what it wants than what the editor thinks the , tntl r:-' h" pnlui oii'ht to have. Whit Docs Public Want Now the question ims; vl ' d -,-s the North Cindina pol io- want f May I make hold to nsscrt that that always has depended and alwn-ys will depend In large measure on the newspapers themselves. We like to bo:it that th" press is a molder or public sentiment. T'.nt that is not true anywhere quite so much :cs ill puhjic M-ntiinetit rejr.Trdin iietts. If it will devote, itself inteili gently to inn lass, tne press or .Mirtn Carolina can create a desire for any ort of news. For example, what doe the average. North Carnliuinn knows or car about a jirire fight 1 Not one in a thousand of them have ever seen one. Hut the tuggest rrow.l that ever assembled in front of a newspaper oftice in Winston Salem gathered there on the afternoon ef July 1!, -las', not1 to see, but nierelv to hear ths report from a prira fight in New Jftstv. 1 submit that the newspapers and tto newspapers alone were responsible for the intense puldu' interest in that, twelve minute tis'ieuff. For weeks be forehand they hsd whetted the public's appetite for th big fiifht. And when tha hour finally arrived men run over one another, snd women too, to sc the sluggers and bear the pens from the rincsidr. ' If the public likes blood and thunder better than ho nnd hominy, the press is to blame. The fact that the public's taste runs te scandal, sensation and oh stuff instead of to bread, hsron and httfternvHk is krgoly the fault of tho editors, who are the educators of the public puuttu. It our readers ire more intensely interested in a priie fight in New Jersey, a race riot in Oklahoma divorce esse in New York and a lyn, h ing in tleergia than fliey nre in tin news of ths industrial, agricultural, social and educational developments in North Carolina, then our readers are simply flattering us by displaying tho greater interest in those things that feed them from the front isgos of ou- newspapers In or.ler to carrv the s'roy ef our Stats to our readers it will u- t be neces sary for us to sacrifice legitimate news or fail tn "play up" the tenia! inna!. But it will be necessary for us to side track some of the stuff we hae been featuring tn make room for the renl newt of North Carolina. If the i c. rert of this State would evote one . at muck tpare to it ts thev give i 1 hall, or one fifth an much as tl . . ume In reporting crime n r olitiet, the story of North t r would b given effectively s.i iv ! ..n.T ' '.v tnd week by wrck to everv nm, vo and child in the Common wc; who rttdt at all. Wier Ask Really Erels When the floods swelled -her river into torrents ot destruction, wnen a few slackers hid in her mountains, when t group of women msrehed np a creek tnd destroyed a blockade distillery and tad had it owner sent to Atlsnta, the newspapers gave Ashe eonnty th big gst heaHiaes in th shop. But there it another and better story wt rtn get out of Ash when w know that these tarn river hsvt enough poirer to run TrT Mdton mill in North Ctrnlina teat an fits six thousand more cattle thsa aay eonnty ia th Stat, and that nearly all of them are told is Virginia beeius ef lack of trnntportttion faeili tiet to tho market of North Carolias; lad thst specimen of iron or from ths montUint of Ash took tho prem ium at ths World Ttir at fit. Louis tnd Ue at tk Chicago ttd ririt ti peaitions. It was big titsw. fiat csme cut ef Allefhssy Iks other tay kca a nsaa murdered kit wtfs as J thrrsr ker lody in a sreek. Bat tkew ia a bitter store ia ths fart that tho sv r'U woaltk I '. i Miss Corroft, Mrs. B. H. Griffin, chief of Carolina To Tar Heel Papers Fights Col. Santford Martin of that caunty is larger than thai of any other strictly agricultural section of the Htate, that it produces more blooded cattle per i.ip.tx and has mote fine blue grass growing land. " ' A 'mfin-iv Warmrpc it-g4vc-.-fe.r.t. page, but there is a better story in the fact that Mwo thirds of all the cheese produced in the Southern statca were shipped from Watauga's twelve cheer; fac.ries last year, and that nine tenths of it went out of the State "be cause of no transportation facilities U oar own markets; that although Wa fanga has been a "lost province'' dur ing all these years, yet the State has built th.re a great teacher training school with a plant worth five hundrje. thousand dollars; and that on her fee- t: e mountain sides there grow the larrf est and the sweetest cabbage in the world. Willie. Lead the South We l.ae heard loueh about the ex collcnt quality "of w hiskey and brandy made in the Comity of Wilkes, and the bloekadcrs of that eonnty" have had no trouble getting their names in the head lines. Hut the real story of Wilkes is thai rt bttc yt'rfrs the bse wiftdf tttoM rapid strides in the development of her public school system than uny other county in the South; that her npple or- 'liefiN utvi r tail btloru frteid or fiott: and that one town ships annually out of i!kcs county 4iiO,litvi pounds of poul 1r, Si.'i,mi dozen eggs and 6,000 tur keys, f.loOjOno worth of berries and ;oo,ivin wortti of roots and herbs. .May I be pardoned fur referring briefly to my on city f When a mob of tempted fn batter down the doors of our jail and soldiers were sent to prevent a lynching, Winston Salem was featured in the biggcat headlines of th day. But there is another story equally thrill ing to the people of North Carolina who love progress and are proud of develop ment. Of course, I recogniie that prac tically everybody in the Slut has beau told in confidence that Winston-Salem is the State's metropolis and lurgest city, and that more tobacco is manufacture 1 there than in any other city in the world. Jiut iverybody doscn't know that Win stoh Salti-a- i..41ie lariiijt revenue pro ducing point on the line of the Souther , li.-ilnav, St. I.ouis being second; that she is the Inrgest manufacturer of men's knit underwear in tie I'nit.d States, and that she bus hi industrio, i -i mi tac-tu ring 45 different commodi ties Vhcn a mob tried to force the gatos of our State prison No.th Carolina got front page, top of column in all tho great newspapers of ihe country. Rut (rorernor fiickett told the real story of our Slate in Philadelphia when, in r.n sddress tint everv North Carolina rewsnaper nuiht to tuhlish again and lip; in, he said: Blckett On Right Track. "North Caroliau ia . tJia healthiest Stite in the Cnion. Our death rate is the Iou.it and our'Iiirta' r.ita lilgbest of any St.te. During the Isst ninu years North Carolina has climbed from tucnty sci-ond to the fourth Stats in the I'nion in the vain of agricultural products. "Charlotte is the largest distributing center ef hydro-eleet'ie power in th world Wj manufacture more cotton goods than any State except Massa chusetts. At Canton we hav the larg est pulp mil! in the world. High Point makes more furniture than any eity tu the world, except Grand Kapids. At Jludin w hav the tteoud large.it aluminu-n riant in tho w rid. At Kan napolia is the larjest towel pltnt in the world. Durham it th center of thj largest hosiery industry in the world lireensboro is th home cf ths largest (U nm mill in th world. "North Carolina is today per capit i j "it rirni-st t?iat oetwecn trie i 0- lumae and the Kio C.uuc." And If he were mak: ig that speech today the Governor might add tha! during ths last four jetrt Norrk Carolina has jumped from aext to th bottom to th fifteenth rung oa th ladder labelled publio education. It it s big ttory nnd the editors of the Stste will tackle no small tack when they nndertaks to tell it at U should bs told to tl! the people If we sre to do thia job ss it fhould bu done it will bo neceesary f.-r n to de velop sons new soarees of big news. County tuptrinttmdtntt ef school, farm demonstration agents, leaders ef nusines ana commercial org i-i trtiont. rtptt'.r-a of industry, tnd th hftds of tk rarieu ttat depsrtmealt s! Jislp Us-la gst tkil story. Lett find it aad print it. tvety lin. rllow aaembers of ths press, I irmly believ thst if ws shall tert oosly dciicats ttrtclts.s ts thu task for 'at least oss year, by th time w thtll tgtia ssMxtbls all tkt poopN f North Caroliaa. assry ansa and every wrnua aad srsry littl boy anl girl frost MlthUt tlood-sspped top to Morehetd't wavw-wpt beasa, will! tiag aa they hs sever tuig beferi, wtth a warmer sytspathw, toftier prids aad deeper f reefs, "He, fr Ctroliss, tkat'i tk land fof a.". --.,, . 4 Rev. Louis V.' Coggins Takes unarge Of Group Of Churches In Person Sanford, July 31. Rev. Louis V. Cog gin, of Bear Creek, was ordained to th Gsoapel ministry -Saturday after noon at the union meeting of the Ban dy Creek Association, which met in thu Baptist., .church of 8iler City. Dr. H. W. Williamt, of Jonesboro, was eheser moderator of the presbytery that-examined aud ordained Mr. Gdggini, who also deliverd the charge to the young minister. 'Kev. Walter M. Gil moro, of Sanford, was made aeeretary of the presbytery and also lead tbe prayer of ordination. Rev. O. A. Kel ler, of Aberdoen, presented ths Bible. Rev. W. B. Waff, of Pitttboro, and Rev. J. D. Jameson, of Monro, L., also took part in the ordination Rev. Mr. .Coggin, who is a gradu ate of Wais Forest eollegs and it, ro cci't full graduate of the Southern li.'iptitt Theological Seminary, of Louie v III.. Ky., hat been called to ths pai t.ir.ite of th Semora field in Person County Rpa will take charge of his work in his new field the first of August. The union meeting, whieh began Fri day night with a, sermon by Rev, W. B. Waff, of Pitttboro, wat well attend ed and full of enthusiasm. ''The Ev ery One Win pne" Campaign wat the basit of a very interesting discussion throughout the day of Saturday. Th campaign is getting well under way in thia Association. Kv. O. A. Keller, of Aberdoen preached s sermon thia morn irttT writhe- Siler- ity Bjiii-.Jjiucb. on "'Evangelism" and Bev. J. D. Jame son concluded the union tonight with another sermon. Tha next tession of the union will be held with the May' Chapel church, 12 miles north of this place the 6th Sunday in October and Saturday before, liov. O. A. Keller was elected moderator of the union for the rest of this year at was J. D. Henley, of Sanford, clerk. Bev. W. M. Gil- more, Ir. H. W Williams, and Rot. W. B. Waif were mads the program committee. DELAY SHIPS LOADED WITH MANY IMMIGRANTS New York. Auir. 1. Almost nn tlin stroke of midnight the tttmmert Magal )i Hellas and Calabria from Piraeus Greece, and Palermo, Italy, respective ly, came within the three mil limit ef the -United States coast.. They had been held outside thut area sine Fridav night because they carried immigrants who, under the new immigration law, would not be permitted to land in July as the quota for their nationality had been filled for the month. Tho Megalli Uellas carried 130 Ameri can citizens and !)9 immigrants and the Calabria had ten American and 400 immigrants. Another thip lighted off Firs) Island last night was the Cedric, from Liverpool and Queenstown, Ireland. She also carried a number ef immigrants who would not b permitted to land in July, and wn balieved to hav in tentionally delayed her arrival by slow sailing. The Z?eland from An'twvrp, due last nisht. ia thought, tn hnv.. slowed up for th tame reason. REV. C. A. ASHBY TO GO ON VACATION TODAY . , The Bov. C. A. Ashby, rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd, and Mrs. Ashby will leiv today for Black Mountain, where thoy will spend a month. They will mtk the trip o Westorn Carolina bv motor and wi.l be joined at Black Mountain by Mrs. H. M. Nelson, of Bicnirnnd, Va., sister of Mrs. Ashby. While in his vaentiou, Mr. Ashby will hav nhtrge of XI James Mission nt Black Mountain. Or. I. McK. Fittiniret. rector emeri. tus, will hav charge of the Churct of the Good Shepherd in the sbsenei of Mr Ashby. Caretaker Shot Dead. Belfast Julv 81. Thnm.. Rail tM.to years old, caretaker of Orange Hall, near Combtr, County rown, wtt tho! dead bv il sefttrv IshI niffht k,?n tnuturnnf past ths l;lster fipeeisli' eamn in .sewioKiiarus. nem am not hear ths sentry's ehsllenje, it i thought, be. aj of ths noise his motor ear was making. CASTOR IA For Infanta tod Children In y For 0ver30 Years Always ossr th Signature of EFIRD'S Raleigh's Busiest Department Store Sells It For Uu Railroad Labor Board Declares Recent Election By Union ' To Be Illegal Chicago, Ills., Jury .11. (By the As sociated Prejs) Declaring elections of employes' committee! held by the reuu sylvania Railroad and by the Pennsyl vania shop rrnftt unions illegal and void, the United Statet Railroad labor Board today issued a decision order ing a new ballot to select a committee on negotiation of rules covering work ing conditions to replace the national agreements established during Federal control. The-decision also cancelled rules now in force as a result of agreements reached by the railroad with the com mittee elected on the Penusylvauu ballot. The shop crafts' unions are fully reeognixed in the board's decision al though non-union men were declared to hav full aad equal rights. In s form ballot drafted for use in the new elec tion employes were to be given their cioiee trf-Tepifsentat-roTi -by the Penn sylvania system federation, amliatcd with the railway emuloyea department of ths American Federation of labor, th American Federation of railroad workers or hy another organization or individual for whom a majority vote is east. The labor board refused to be drawn into a discussion of the open shop for which the Pennsylvania has o.i r'y can tended. It was ou the priueip! that th railroad refused recently to r ; nize the Union's claim to representa tion of the majority of mop eiiimoy. and proceeded to hold a g nenil tien. The board, however, taid the dis pute which arose over th Union'! nlim.lw,as 'merely, one of proeeedurs." Neither the 'enntylnwT'ielSeaT'' election nor a ballot condurted hy the , mj av. i.uviH.lun ..na, lir Ul icgrtl, ll.V board said, and the employes have con sequently neen denied their legal tight to' twt -Topi-r-arntnliTrt for this important conference on rules.'' The Board's ruling ordert a confer, ene pa or befor August 1, between repretentativee of the road, tha Penn tylvtnia system "Federation or any other organisation, having shop crafts members and established te functtiou a a labor organization at tet forth in the Act and eny other representative carrying the signed authorization of nn hundred unorganised employe. This conference is to determine the method of holding the new election and the general committee will also have charge ef the election. SECOND WEEK OF GRAND - CIRCUIT RACES BEGINS Toledo, O., July 31. The second week of Grand circuit racing of the season on the Fort Miami track hero will begin tomorrow and last five days tour races are on the program daily with stake event added to make the gam more, in tertinf for the horse men. Chief interfrst in the week's pro gram probably is tho Matron stake for three year old trotters with a purse estimateil at J.i.iiUO. Fifteen are eli gible to start according to the records In addition to the Matron staki-. other races for opening day are tha 2:0fl trot for 11,200, the 8:10 pace for and the 2:11 trot for $1,200, borne men are not atisfied to be the nrch.teots of their own fartuns uu less they are constantly adding exten siniiF. TO THE POLfCTrTOT.TrRRS Sf THB PRUDENTIAL JXSTJ1UNCS COMPANY OF AM ERIC NOTICE is h.rtby given thst intin( of th ahayholdira el THE fRUDf.NTUL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA will k b.14 st th Hon OBm ef laid Com fqy is th City ef Newark, N.w Jsrs.y, oa Mond.y, tb Fifth d.v at Dceenhtr, 1M1, tl twelve o'.hxk sew, lor th purpae tl hImu ins four persons to be rtd lor by tb eoliry holdtra' Trust M ainbr at tk Bosrd t Director, it th annusl election ef Directors of th CsnptDv, to b h14 tk Niatk Uy I jtaiwry, 1921. At auck siMtlnf frrry tssNeybelder f tb erporaUea wbo it el tk f l tvealyi. yrs or upwards and srbem policy bat bee. is fan tot a ewM a yw Um put ball k satltM to eut set votaln praoa or by proxy. rOlUBlT F. DBYDIN. rWsUat 'Jihlhnes? .drink; W3U ThPrtirtthlng, tan jy flavor of WtJt Indlca Umt is the distinctive feature of this newest of the ''Crushes" the companion drink to Ward's Umon-Crush and OrtJije-Crush. Delicious! in bottUi or at fountains Bottlsd t7 Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co., 16 W. Davit St. Phon 544 KALUGA, X. C . New York, July 31. Formation of th lioyrjl Labor Legion of Nw York City, designed "to entirely chango the trasii tional eoncept of the American Federa tion of Labor' sttitude toward sm ploy.irs, ths general p'iihlie and organ ized wage earners,'' wit announced to night by F. P. A. Vaearedli, formerly vico-president of the International Longshoremen's Association and new head uf the legion. Mr. Vaearelli said the constitution adopted by tha new organization reeog nlzed the following points: "Tha right of men and women to work regardless of membership er nMi merbership in trade unions. "The right of the general public as a party at interest in laber controvertiet.' "The necessity for lawt establishing courtj of arbitration, with power to en force obedience to their decisions. "The settling of differences between employers and wage earners without in tervention by persons not personally affected by or direct, parties to th mat ters in controversy." Ninety per eent of the membership of the new organization wat declared by Mr. Vaearelli to be composed of offi cials of trade unions tfiilisted with the American Federation of Labor. There arc at present, he said, 20,000 work men in New York City. Prlntera Play Baseball Detroit, Mich., July 31'. St. Lou s aud Washington survived the fir, round today in the printers baseba.l championship tournament here, tie. former defeating Pittsburg 10 to fi :ind Washington eli.uinatiug Detroit 10 to 2. Tomorrow's schedule call for games between New ork and In dianapolis nnd Bost m and Pt. Paul. The latter team now holds the title. -,..Tfce-.tvntr.atilwanw,Qi.in, are talking of 'having an electric railwav built from Hiaiigtan to Changsha, a distance of 30 miles. Do you know why It's toested? To seal in the delicious Burley flavor. It's toasted. Summer Hosiery "Not-a-seme," com 'fortdble, stylish, dur able 79c $1.00 $1.50 Summer Ties Cheney Silk Ties $1.00 Spur Bow Ties 50c Summer Collars Silk and Linen 30c and 50c "Come and took" is All WoAtk Good Quality SpU. Witt Boom Soils C. R.Boone f t -
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 1, 1921, edition 1
2
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