Newspapers / Salisbury Evening Post (Salisbury, … / Nov. 20, 1920, edition 1 / Page 1
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. A Dollar And a Heart Is All Thai Is to Join the American Red Cross Roll Call 7 mMmk ir os ic fi. , " . ' '-. . ' !'. i , . J" - . J,' 1 Wcccssofi tnnnnnnr -------- - '-' - - -'- - - - ' ' ' ' ' " Weather To-day :'(''- Tl Home Edition Members of Tfc Mimoclated Pra 'FAIR TONIGHT AND SUNDAY ' '. ' W J ; . ' i- x ( VOL. 15. NO. 98. DEMOCRATS WHO BOOMED BUTLER FOR SECRETARY DF AGRICULTURE ARE DOOMED IN NEXT H. C: ELECTION Leaders Who Oppose But ler Will Fight Those Who Endorse Him , in Next Primaries. (By MAX ABERNETHT) Raleigh, Nov. 20. Democratic office holders who are booming Ma rion Butler, Republican leader, for secretary of sericulture in the Harding cabinet are going to have ,' mo uiuc ui wncir lives slaving uu defeat when election years rolls around became Democratic voters are going to see to it that the en dorsers of Mary 'Ann aro side- ; tracked in the primary., ; This is the threat that is being epenly made at the capital tot'ay by Democrats who are jealous of their record and the party. From a personal viewpoint they are not getting mad with , their colleagues for supporting Mr. Butler but t.le line is drawn in political circles, and these Democrats who have not . and will never endorse the former United ' States senator love their party more than they do folks wno, they say, have gone out of the Dem ocratic path to make asses of thern- ., selves. ,v. .-. - Plain talking Is the rage with them. W. F. McCulloch, who is an , appointee of Gov. Bickett as cashier of the. State's prison and who will jioi se Qusiea Dy uov. Morrison, speaks for publication gladly. "Any Democrat who endorses Marion Butler will not receive my support for anything," Mr. McCulloch de clares. But he will do his fighting in the primary. Mr. McCulloch is not a stranger in the Democrat; fold for he has been working long and hard for the party and Is a power in the Cape Fear section. Then there are scores of Democrats who are not afraid to say that they dislike the Butler indorsement by Democrats. M. L. Shipman, commissioner of labor and print ing; insurance conomisisoner-etec? Stacy Wade, Col, Jas. R. Young an about: all other prominent Demo crat can be depended upon, j ... Foe. yearr there has been a ag!1 tation amongst the Democrats to "clean ; out" Athe capitol. This mean, of counse.Uhat Major W. A. Graham, J. Bryan Grimes and Ben , R. Lacy, commissioner of agricul k ?ture, secretary of state and state treasurer, would be retired to pri vate life, and their long tenure, these three, may be brought to an , end four years hence because each and every one appear to have sign ed the endorsement of Mr. Butler. Commissioner Graham may ex ( pect to be pestered with opposition for he has not only endorsed Mr. Butler but he is sending to his friends a signed letter urging the appointment. The ; commissioner says that he dislikes Butler, the politician, but finds no fault w:ta Butler, the farmer. This an!y makes the madder Democrats who are not on the list of signers. Testifying -before ' Examiner Thomas P. Healey, of the Interstate k. Commerce Commission, here 'yes-' f. ierday H. F. Cary, general passen '. ger agent of the Southern, saw that the railroads are losing six ; tenths of a cent per mile on all in trastate i passenger f business in Norh Carolina as well atp ioslng a considerable amount of money by - reason of interstate, . , passengers buying passage to the state line . three cents and then buying tickets for he remainder pf their trip.;. . r The hearing was held so that the railways could be given an oppor : tunity to establish the existence of ' undue discrimination against inter sate rates by intrastate fares fn North Carolina. While all of tne hearing by their officials, or attor- . neys Mr. Cary was the principaf L witness. All of the states in the V Southern group, he said, had put into effect the 3.6 cents passengev fares with the exception of Nortn and South Carolina and Louisiana, The result being- that the other states ore discriminated against because of he lower fares charged passengers of these three states. Such a condition was represent ed as discriminatory and is causae financial losses to the carriers and demoralizing the entire , passenger rate structure! . The evidarice will be presented to the Interstate Com merce Commission at Washington and a ruling made later. - A conditional pardon has been granted by" Governor Bickett to Jack Smith, Northampton county man, convicted at the August, 1916, ' term of superior court and sentenc ed to seven years in the state's pri son for manslaughter. . The prison er has made a model nrironer an 1 the judge, solicitor and conntv oul cials of Halifax county petitioned .for the pardon. Membershio in the State Teacher Assembly today passed the 8,070 mark according . to an announce- ment her by A. T. Allen, of the executive committee. This num ber represents more than fifty per. rent of the teacher, m north Caro lina. . . Conditio a f National Banks. , Wr Tha Aaaorfetcd Pm ' Washington, Nov. 20. The controller of the currency today is sued a call for the condition of all national bank, at the close of bus iness on Monday November 15th. BABE RUTH ENTERS -v CUBAN POLITICS Havana, , Nov. 19. Victor Munoz, sporting editor of SI Munda, of Havana, who has attended all of the world series games in, the last six years, won his fight for membership in the city council here the other day by novel advertising methods. Instead of attending political rallies, Munos went to the ball games, and on election day took Babe Ruth, the home run king to the polling places to help get votes. : Ruth, un able to speak Spanish, made signs to the voters, who desert ed other candidates and put Munnz nvur. f . The day befire election Mu- nos wrote a two column ac- Ruth apepared. Everybody read it, and under the name of tha 2iSA-nnnnd editnr-aiwllrlstii nr,nnr(1 tM! "Candidate of great physi- cal solvency far the position of councilman. .as on III BRIBE PLOT? Charged That R.4Y. Boll insr Was in On Deal In volving $40,0C3 Treas er Shipping Board. (By The AmocUU4 Pran) New. York, Nov. 20. R, W. Bof ing. brother-in-law of President Wilson, and treasurer of the shio- plngf board, was named . today in . t-.; vin nnrf'4v.i..- utri Mf4BiwMv& wuu a. ftUWu vuo Al leged to have been paid by the Staten Island Shipbiulding Com pany, to procure unusual favors from the board, in testimony be fore the congressional ; investiga tion committee investigating the shipping board's affairs here. ' Tucker E. Sands, former vice president of the Commercial Na tional Bank of Washington, ' tes tified it was his "understanding that the $1,800 he loaned Boiling against his notes and of which Boiling had already paid back $300 was Boi ling's share of the 540.000 "bribe" of the Wallace Downep Shipbuild ing Corporation for unusual ship ping board favors. Sands said the $40,000, he un derstood, was to be split four ways between himself, Boiling, Mr. Sis ler, the former shipbuilding secre tary, and a man named Rraner. Sands admitted he had in an inter view with Alfred W McCan, a re porter on the New York Globo, made allegations of the alleged bribe which were Incorporated In an affidavit, a photostatic copy ot which was submitted to the board today prepared for his signaure. The transaction involved a loan of $1,800 to Boiling agahftt his notfil; of. which Boiling had paid , bacy $300, Sands made it plain. Sands admitted that he was un der indictment for allowing a ship ping company in which he was in terested to overdraw its account at the Commercial National Bank. Boiling's share of the money, Sands said he understood, was to have been $6,200 but Boiling did nottaxe' the balance" between it and the XlJ?nn Innnprl him Sdi iSS"the name of . man named Kranerl' as John Cran- er, who he said was a promoter i., and a "rep- swninir Shin- living in Richmond, Va ADnWD I J I AUf I nil 1 1 1 II ii-iii"! nil building Compay. H. said he in- IaRue, who headed the dele troduced Craner to Boiling and Sis- Ktion. that the asuance of per ler. He said he knew Boiling and f14 to liquor dealers as manufac Sisler "did not have anything to u reJ.l wf 8 ? ot au" with awarding contracts for tne fthorized by the Voktead act. shipping board." Sands said ne f et.9' nndrfd ,whlcth a.F still owes Boiling $900 on a real es outstanding, expire automatically tat- lot Hollinir sold him and Sis- i vi .. vi- conn3, "w4tt the IWIent'to use his influence to his behalf .In connection with Sands indictment. He said he did not doubt that he had received a latter from Boiling dated Oct., 18 1918 and exhibited to Mm by the committee chairman which Bollin? said- because of his "relations with the President" any attempt on Boiling's part to "iner fere with the process of the depart ment of justice would not only be open to serious misconstruction but improper. RATIFY RAPALLO TREATY. ! Slav Cabinet Battles Treatv Which Secures a Settlement of Vexed Adriatic Question. lUr Anoclated Pr Belgrade, Nrv t0 Ratification of the treat j of Rapallo by which Italy and Jugo Slavia reached an agreement 'settling' v the vexed Adriatic question was unanimously voted by the Jugo Slav cabinet to day. . . , y - " 1 ' Rub flat-irons with salt before using. WILL EX-KING ! 1 l The defeat of Ven'lselos by indicate that ex-Kto Conatantlne will xetura to Atwne as ine rei power. ""VrVt , nn Taotually takee the throne. Above, the family .napped at a Swiss hotelseated (left to rifht).. PrlncTowwrelen Sophie. Constntine and Princess Katharine; back row (left light . Stocesa Hetene PriBoe Paul and Princess Irene. Inset, Ventvelos and Mil. Nanos. the morganatic JrtSTiB f Ute sSSSSSTrnMnlw to the king ha. Just been upheld by the cour at Athens. She it expecting an heir who may some, day take the throne. , . ; aoioiE e' f .-;.-.. -S " . ' -.k, .A --' ( 'X Much Valuable Property on the River Front Goes Up in Smoke as Result Spark From Engine. (By The AvocUUd Preu) New Orleans; Nov. 20. Fire be lieved to have started from sparks from a switching engine started a river front fire early today and which before being extinguished had caused property damage esti mated in excess of $2,000,000. The fire started at the Desire street wharf and fanned by a strong but changing wind swept both directions up and down the stream. leveling - the new Cuyam Fruit and steamship wharf and practically everything between De- sire and Independence street docks, a distance of approximately 2,000 feet. Included in the destroyed prop erty is the new $10,000 crane own ed by the 'United States govern- ment. The fire stopped within 100 yards of another fruit wharf. The : area swept by the ifire is in the "downtown section of the river front. PROTESTS MADE BY PROHI. LEADERS . (By Th AssoclaUd Picm) , Washington, ov. wj"- on leaders .today Protested to government enivrceiueiib uuitcio against the re-issuing of permit W wnoiesaie liquor aeaiers to nan- dl (intoxicating Mquors. liTh lB,m ! Wheeler, counsel for th by Wayne B. the Anti- Sa- December 1st. Mr. Wheeier ap nealed to the prohibition office not & a renewals, asserting that ft iJUane ' its 'acihtoted use. MODISTE GIVES SECRET IN MAKING DRESSES Atlanta, Ga, Nov. 20. Accord ing to a well known local modiste, the followers of feminine fash ion, would be surprised to find what deep, dark dressmaking se crets are often concealed under ap parently innocent and obviously charming innovations. There', buttons, for example; two to a coat s now smart style, one to hold tha collar, one to fas ten the belt. And an attractive little trick is to fasten them with silk cord rather than with the old fashioned worked buttonhole. This is not a mere caprice of fashion, however. It is careful ly planned economy of the manu facturers. For behind those two button U the saving .of thousands of dollarf with tha manufacturers. They do not hava to oay for mak- Jing buttonholes. SALISBURY, N. O, COMSTANTINE Constantlne force in the recent CONGRESSMAN--' . . ELECT KILLED fRv Tha AMMsHatad VnwI gressman-eiect unanes r. uanaer water, Republican of Long Beach, Cal., and his secretary Miss Jam mess Leuvin, also of Long Beach, were killed at Walnut, 12 miles from here early this morning when the automobile in which they were riding struck a motor truck. PRESIDENT WILSON DISCARDS CANE , (By Th Aoeltd Prm) Washington, Nov. 20 President Wilson is now able to walk about the White House without even the aid of a cane, it was said today at the White House. He uses his wheel chadr only for the purpose of an occasional relaxation, it was said. . White House officials declared the President's health had so far imoroved as to make it nossible for him to address congress in person 'when it convenes next month, but Mr. Wilson has as yet made no definite -plans to do so. SUGAR REFINERIES CLOSE, NO DEMAND (By Th AMOcinted Prawl ' New Yoi ork, Nov. 20. All six re fineries of the American sugar com pany have been5 closed as a result of the slight demand for the com modity, it was announced hera to day. An official of the company ex plaining the shutdown said: "We lhave ample stock on hand and are 'atdnMu rhl prepared to make prompt deliveries , , , JW-oro to lack of demand . WONT VISE FALL PASSPORT, SAID y - (Bjf Th Aismclated Prm ; Washington, Nov. 20. It was said today at the Mexican embassy that they have been directed by Robert V. Pesqueira, Mexican con fidential agent in the United States not vise the passport of Senator Fall, of New Mexico, for he Sen- ator's proposed visit to Mexico to attend the inauguration of presl- FURNITURE MEN MEET IN HIGH POINT IN 1921 Recommend Substantial Reductions in the P rice of Furniture C. F. Tomlinson Given a Silved Serv ice. . Asheville, Nov, 20. Closing an eventful convention here, members of the Southern Furniture, Manu facturers' association recommend ed substantial reductions in tne price of furniture to take effect be fore the big sales in Grand Rap.ds, Hf.. Tn. VtVv , v er big sale centers. Price - cut ting has already been started by some of the dealers, it was said. Scotch experts have found that the African baobab tree yields a fibre that is one of the finest pa perhanging materials to be found. Ohio leads 'in the total number of college students tnrolled. ' :': '.jl,c SATURDAY, NOV. 20, COME. BACK election In oreeee would eem w Bureau of Internal Reve nue Indicates That All Using "More Alcohol Than Law Allows. (Br The Awoefoted Pros) WashingtdV "Nov. 20. All breweries manufacturing beer which contains more than onehalf of one per cent 'alcohol will be seized by the federal government I it was indicated here .today at the bureau of internal revenue. . Officials of the bureau said an analysis of beer brewed in a num- ber of places was now being made and that where they found the al-' coholic content exceed ' the , legal limit the government would act to enforce the law. Breweries Seized. Cincinnati. Ohio.. Nov. 20.- The Jackson and Herancourt brewer- day by ttte government as a result of seizure Thursday of samples of beer manufactured by the two concerns. . v ..' . . j VIRTUAL HECOGNITION " OF SOVIET GOVERNMENT ( Bf Th AHoelatcd Preu) ' Washington, Nov. 20. In view of the State Department officials virtual de facto recognition of the Russian soviet government is ex tended by Great Britain in the pro posed trade agreement between the two countries. A copy has been re ceived at the department. Former German Empress Worse fBv Th Anneiatcd lru) ? r iirj xi on tm m.mm if f rmZSZ'viXta if "1 homeless, prospects of spend r? P !tJTflmt !n the winter lights under kris Germany, whose condition several rrZ- T . h5tnT.i Sfehnirmatin recelved RUSSIAN GIRLS ADOPT AMERICAN CLUB PLAN New York, Nov. 20. At the re quest of organizers of girls club in Russia, the Girl Reserve Man ual, which is the Y. W, C. A. club program for 'teen age girls, has been translated into the Russian language and is being, used as a basis for activities there. ' It in cludes activities .appealing to girls, ' which lead to development along four, lines, health knowledge, service and spiritual growth. The honor system is used as in the Girl Scouts "and Camp Fire Girls and insignia is .given for points in such practical habits as proper bathing and eating, studying flowers and stars, helping mothers at home in the housework and learning First Aid and some form of community service. All but ten of the State Sunday School Associations in the United States are using the same program for the weekly activities of their girls classes. I India is preparing to manufac ture tinplate on a scale so large a. rto threaten the Welsh supremacy in the industry. 1920 1HTERNATI0NAL MMY PROPOSED FOR LEAGUE OF NATIONS: FIRST STEP Fourteen Other Families in Apartment Escaped or Were Saved by Fire men. . (Br Tb AMoelaUd 7mm) New York, Nov. 20. Nine ' persons constituting every member but one or two enure families lost their lives here to day in a fire which destroyed the five-story apartment house at 307 West 146th street Four teen other families escaped or were rescued by flreoK. Originating. Um fir. authorities say, in a baby rairlar est the first floor of UM Mir strartara. um nr. sweat n award thra the as stair way., rutting off neap thra tha hall. Nearly a hundred awn. wom en and children clad ia nightclothes warmed to th. fir. escape, soma making their way to tha ground whila other, huddled on th plat forms in mid air until carried to safety. All of tha dead were found on the fifth and top floor after the flame were brought un der control. Thev were: Raphel Gebbie, his wife and four children who ranged in years from seven to one ana half; Mrs. Ada Frank, and Mrs. Bertha Reynalds, her sister and Ruth Reynalds a fgiri of W. . ' . , HOUSING SPOITAGE MiUerand Get. Forty One Applies. tiona For House He Vacated. Paris. Nov. 19. The great dif ficulty of finding lodgings in Paris hase .been the cause of many un usual incidents recently. Divorced persons seeking separ ate apartments are having such' difficulty dn finding them that, In one . case at least, they composed their tempermental differences in order to keep their old apartment'. A painter and his wife who had were both looking for apartments, Fretnientlv their natha crossed in th aaroh tnr miartora. Tha first time they met they bowed gravely w. nwxtalv. - Thnir mnfnaT miin gradually broadened as the hunt for flats narrowed down to a few hovels l in th .Iran wwtinn. Lefs km and make up and go ibaek to our flat." the wife finallv said; and . they did. President MiUerand, . who re cently took possession of the Elysee Palace, received 41 applications for his apartment on the Avenua de ViMars. Henry Landru, who has been m La Santa prison for the past ZO months awaiting trial on charges growing out of the disappearance of 11 women, recently was dispos sessed from the flat that he haq oc cupied on the Boulevard Rocne chouart, a rather sordid section of Paris. Requests came from every quarter in Paris, some even from aristocratic Auteuil, asking that the flat be reserved. A vagrant just finishing 30 days in La Sante prison told his cell mate under sentece of five years fri ttuHnHllnv that h AranA&A tA I .. t j. , t.. return mio com, reary rans, . tt-MAZZFEh& and cards of identity and when the I warder called for the vagrant to send him out into the cold -world. the swindler responded. The fraud was discovered only when the swin dler's lawyer called at the jail. WILLIAM F. CLAUSSEN IS KILLED BY TRAIN Automobile in Which He Was Rid ing Struck at Crossing. Was 72 Year Old. High Point. Nov. 20. William F. Claussen, of Claussen, S. C, father of Mrs. Charles P. Coble, of High Point, was instantly killed When an automobile in which he was riding was struck by an Atlantic toasr Line passenger tram at a crossing near Florence, S. C. Mrs. Coble accompanied by her husband, Rev C. P Coble, pastor of the First Presbyterian church here, left to day for Claussen, in response to a message telling of her father's death. Turkey For the President Washington, Nov. 20. The first of the Thanksgiving turkeys which President Wjlson receives annually arrived today at the White House. It was a 38-pound one and was sent by the Chamber of Commerce of Cuero, Texas. j FIRE DESTROYS 2 WHOLE FAMILIES; 1 MEMBER ESCAPES TO REVISE THE COVFMT INDICT LABOR CHIEF 4 JPQBEPTP&XINDBLI, NEW YORK Upon disclosure mad to the Lockwood laveetlgat Ing committee, Robert JP. Rrlndell. preaident of tha building trade council and highest paid labor leader ia th country, ha been indicted oa charge of attempting to extort money from contractors bv threats of calling strike. Builders claim they gave Brlad.ll a toUl of f 100.000 flurlai th last VW1 IF" "tHE CRANK" GETS LIFE SENTENCE .(Br 11m AmtaU4 Ttwm) . - Norristown, Nov. ;20j Augusts Pascal, alias Pascmale. "the cran"" in the Coughlin kidnapping case was sentenced to life Imprisonment this monring by Judge Swartz in Norristown court. . Pascal nleaded guilty at the trial to second degree- murder and .kidnapping for extor- tin. Ha twla ftlolralw rmiiykKn the 13 months old baby of Mr. and Mrs. George Coughlin from their home near Norristown on June 2 last and smothered the infant un der his coat. He was sentenced on the' kidnapping charge and Judg ment suspended on the second de gree murder charge. KIWANIANS WILL MEET IN GREENVILLE IN 1921 OonvfenlSonj at Charlotte Adopts By-Law calling for Two Meet ing Yearly. Charlotte. Nov. 20 Greenville. S. C, won the Kiwanis convention for next year, the convention adopt ed by-laws that call for two meet- igs each year, spring and fall, dates being left to the' trustees. Officers elected today were. J. Thomas Ar nold. Spartanburg. S. C former district lieutenant president, elect ed district governor for the Caro lina district, and Jesse 11. Voyd. also of Spartanburg, elected secre tary-treasurer, decision being to have this officer in same city wltn governor, iwq lieutenant gpver- nors from Worth Uirolina and two from South Carolina were as fol lows: ' i North Carolina: Harry T. Adams, of Raleigh, andt W. B.;Merrimon, Greensboro: South Carolina: W. P. Conyers, Greenville, and Frank E.' Broadnax, Columbia. COLLEGE "TFA HOUNDS" YIELD TO PIGSKIN COHORTS Dance at Northwestern Will Not Be Held on Day of the Football Game Chicago, Nov. 20.-Rattle flags of the tea-hound forces are droop ing forlornly on the campus of Northwestern University, signify ing defeat at the hands of the pig skin cohorts. Miss Mildred Pierce, generalissimo of the tea-hound forces- who had scheduled a dance at the North Shore Hotel Saturday afternoon in competition with the football battle between Northwest ern and Notre Dame and who had steadfastlv refused to call it off. despite the agonized. wails by the istudent rooters', capitulated late. yesterday. " - Te student rooters had the back- ing of the faculty, who do not be - lieve dancing and sipping tea con ducive to the muscle and aggress iveness required in football games. Next Week'a Weather Washington, Nov. 20. Weather predictions for the week beginning Monday are: South Atlantic and East Gulf states, local rains at the beginning of the week and again Thursday-and Friday. Otherwise the weather wil be fair with nor mal temperature. jA PRICE 2 CENTS BELG'AN SAYS IT IS HOT YET TIME FOR DISARMING Proposes Internati o n a 1 Army and Staff To Bo Used in the "Cause of Right." (Br Th iAttricatl Prau) . 1 Geneva, Nov. - 20 An interna tional force with an international staff was proposed today to the as sembly of the league of nations by Senator Henry Lafountain, of tho i Belgium delegation. Senator La foUntaln had somewhat - startled the assembly by declaring that the world was not yet ready for dis- . armament; v -.-,-? ; "It is necessary to say frankly to the people," he said, "that , the time for disarmament is not yet come. v "The beginning for the world dis armament,' he added, "are entirely different from those that prevailed before the war and must be incul cate and applied." y . He proposed that the army be comprised of an international force with an international staff ready to be used "in the cause of right" in such case, are arose as the present situation of Armenia, WANTS ARTICLE . ' : RECONSiCEr.ro Geneva, Nov. 20 The first for mal .ten looking toward , the re vision of the covenant of the lea gue of nation was taken by tha assembly of the league at today's session. , ine uutcn minister o; ioresm ft-ayf mtroa"fea. a r'''- tion xur raconsuleration 'of XVIII having to do with the regis tration of fareatiesVt v;.:.T.-v r- The resolution provides that the consideration be conducted by the assembly itself or a committee to make the meaning of the article clear. The foreign- minister said several interpretations of the ar ticle which in brief provide for treaties, between, nations will not be binding- until they are register ed with the league and proposed that it be studied carefully with a view to clarifications. - BRITISH DEMAND ON VANDERLIP " (By Th AMOfteUd Prml London, Nov. . 20. Washington D. Vanderlip, the American who recently announced the granting by Soviet Russia of important con cessions in Siberia to an American syndicate which ha i represented, was met shortly, after his arrival hero from the United States by a demand' from British authorities for an inspection ox the document in his possession, he declared in a statement today.;-'He declared ho refused to show .official the , docu ment. LNVTSTIGATION OF ' RURAL ORGANIZATIONS iWest Raleigh, Nov. 20. The de nartment of Acrirultural Eonnm. Tr nt Rtat.A Hollt-cfi has started an in w-te C0UAty. The survey is nder the immediatfc airection of Mr f.ri n Zimmirmn. Aiit.- - ant in the Department of Agricul tnre. Dr. ft C.iTavlor. head of tha tendent J. C. Lockart, of the Wake County Public Schools, are assist ing and cooperating. The purpose of the- investigation is to dteover ar.Q map the natural and spun'ar. cou grouping of rural popiatIon into iieighbornood, commun,iy or other types of organization. It 13 believed that the discovery o the?e natuial groups will furnis.i valu able information which can be ussd to more efficiently promote all economic and social work in these districts in the future. The Government is conducting the same type of investigation in a number of other states and hope3 to discover some things about the natural "bases of rural organization which up to the present are un known and unused. The Department of Agricultural Economic is in its first year's ex istence at State College, it ex- ipec4! to do a great deal of his yr 'of work in the future, always wii i i two things in view, viz: finding out new facts for use in the classroo i sand. assisting in more efficient r ral, social and economic organ!: tion. -..'- - f: Tha investigation will presu bly take about six months to c plete. Every school teach ?r i farm family in the county v.-.!l i sist in gathering the material t will ultimately benefit from t finding, of th. Investigation. Cake, can b. pravenf I f burning by sprinklins s: t I ; bottom of the oven.
Salisbury Evening Post (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Nov. 20, 1920, edition 1
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