Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / June 15, 1922, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Courier (Asheboro, 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
rare Two .THUESDAT. JUNE IB, lia RAILROAD WAGES DECLINE: HIGH COST, OF LIVING CONSIDERED (News and Observer.) In a noteworthy discussion of the subject of wtges, particularly wages f railroad employes, in the United States Senate, Senator Robert M. LaFollett, of Wisconsin, laid down these propositions which he declared were "economically true and admit of no denial:" (1) The nominal increase m wag has been unitormly less than the in crease in the cost of living each near during' the war and ever year since the war. (2) The nominal increase in wajres has always followed and has never preceded the increase in the cost of living. (3) Whatever nominal increase in wages there has been since 1914 has been forced by the increase in cost of living, "unjustly imposed upon the public by war profiteers." Wage advances have been one of the ef fects of high prices and not the cause of high prices. (4) That the actual wage of rail road workers today is not only less than before the war, but in some instances less than the rates prevail ing in 1900, more than twenty years ago. During all that period the worker has been struggling against a constantly diminishing income, when the money received in exchange for his labor is computed in terms of commodity values. Workers Get Starvation Wage. "1 assert as an economic fact," declared Senator I.aFollette, "that under present conditions there can be no further reduction of wages of rail road employes without national men ace. "Railroad labor," he added, "is re ceiving at present the least it can re ceive without sinking below the level of efficiency necessary to maintain the railroads in successful operation. It is receiving subetantially no more real wages in terms of commodity values for services rendered than it received twenty years ago." The data upon which these start-ting- statements are based, Senator LaFollette said, have the official sanction of the United States govern ment. The facts he gave the Senate are embodied in the reports of inves tigations into wages and cost of living- made by the Federal Department of Labor. A table prepared by the Depart ment of Labor showed in the most graphic manner how far behind the cost of living the wages of union tabor have lagged during and since the war period, when "high'' pay was al leged to have prevailed. This table revealed these astonishing facts: Taking 100 as the base for wages and 100 as the base for the cost of living in 1913, the union wage rate in 1914 had advancd to 102 and the cost of living had advanced to 103. From that year onward the gap be tween wages and living costs con stantly widened. In 1915 the union wage rate still stood at 102, but the cost of living had advanced to 105.1. In 1919 the union wage rate had advanced from 102 to 106, but the cost of living hat advanced to 118.3. In 1917 the union wage rate had advanced to 112, but the eof of liv ing durii't, that period had advanced, to 142.1. In Dirt the union wage rate had advanced "0, hut the, co t of lin ing niovc-i 'orv.arl by leaps and bound .. caching that yecr 1 M.4. In 191 K the union wage rate had advanced to 148, but trie cost o' liv ing had gone up to 199.3. In 1920 the union wage -M-aV had advanced to 189 but ire co-i of liv ing had advanced to 2:4. Tho peak of high prices was reached in 1920, when the wages of union labor had increased 89 per cent, while the cost of living had in creased 1!C.r per cent over 1913. "In the face of constantly rising living costs the workers' declared Senator LaFollett, -"had succeeded in gaining only such advances as pre vented actual starvation of millions of persons." Railroad Workers Lose Ground. In investigations made by the Fed . eral government, added Senator I-a-: Follette, revealed the astounding fact that railroad workers as a whole had barely kept pace with tho increased ost of living, while a number of . croups today were much worse off, so ,4x as the buying power of their money is concerned, than they were . ,. before the war. 'We find," Senator LaFollette aaid, , 'that the only groups whose earnings lave increased as fast as the Increase i rh the cost of living art those who In ... 1900 wars earnina 12 a day or leal. j These workers were shamefully un v,,derpeid then, and they arm shamefully e.Awderpaid ow, ... ,,.,. Al .nj- TTim earning of the- engineers and '-v aeoductorv -whom the railroad, prop- .'rllAa MMa lift VHT' fit-tilt nil IT .(. Increased aa a result the war, hate i as the official figure show, fallen far behind .the Increase la , the coat- of . living, and they ar actually ii worse . , condition .today, ,M .far-.ae purchasta; power is eofteerned than ihey were t t the beginning of the eetitury. ';,' J ' " The? evrr ware ,ef al . railroad employee lit IDOO, was f 56S. ' The av erage wage la 1921 waa "This," .ears, . 8enatot .laFwIlett, , 'Wrrt'o he. very ,uStr.tinl ; and sufficient to compensate .'or imf ',. thsnjre that he' tsken place. r Hut .". IM ituprestlon is dlip.tl when e f" the enormous Increase in he tost rf living that hat tkji plate lit th aaine period. ....... , "( f-0t f'i.iirr: Wl.. "! I V --,cr I, ,!("'', 1 . ...-. " I '.at ' "i i .. v, ,j I e rn r - - . r , i'.tnl a ) rnr, now ,,ro"JT,e- SENATE CONSIDERED Following; is a list of jurors drawn by the county commissioners at their session the first Monday in June for July term superior court for this county: I THE PROPOSED SOt DIER BONIS MEASURE oonus Dm was WOW NORTH CAROLINA. Teachiaf Agriculture t Most educational leaders now real ize that special education and trsin- ine souuers oonus - ohi Asheborc-J. R. Clark G. S. Brown, sented by the chairman of th7ienatVing toahTal ltocrang t- I Vl1 h Psle,y-. w t inanc e?nuttee June 8,with an ac- rfculture, is highly-essential for the vHijjiijiin5 rrjwn,. pacing proDaDie greatest etnciency THE RIFT TN THE RE rPHpUCAN PARTTEETS f WESDAYS GO BY State Now Produces' ; High Quality Cheest W. L. B. F. D. J. S. Lewis, R. L. Paisley, Foust, J. T. Lassitei. Coleridgo J. C. Moffitt, Kearns. Union Jesse Rose, W. M J.-. Providence G. F. Barket. Pleasant Grove H. H. Brady. Randleman E. O. Hussey. Columbia F. L. Williams,, W. Thomburg-, W. W. Dixon. Franldinville A. M. Underwood W. Hinshaw, J. M. Ellison. Tabernacle John Briles. New Market T. L. Cox. Concord Bert Pearce. ; Back Creek M. C. Brown. ; Cedar Grove J. W. Jacks6n. Second Week. , Randleman D. P. Williams. B. Kobbins, Jacob Bowman Union A. R. Call iPresnell, F. M. Williamson, Liberty John Perry urani 1. cs. montt, w. rl. Mcr"ner- son. , Cedar Grove A. C. Rich. New Market B. J. Whitehead, J. C. Frazier, Ellis Farlow. Columbia E. B. Leonard, J. O. All red. Asheboro H. B. Styres. Concord John Bingham, Lee Kearns. I Coleridge J. E. Moon. Richland J. W. Richardson. Franklinville Geo. H. Richardson Tabernacle E. A. Springle. Few persona realise that ' ehe made in Western North Carolina ie equal in quality to that made ie ie YBv Dai-id F. St. rSnlr 1 'rinirv wnrlrara t tk. r.-T-. Washington, June 13. The Repub- Agricultural Extension Seme. -i . licans hare heard from another nrel Hunt than tnnnnn IT ie nnlv r -l.t -J e-V-. V-. -- a - . n -. - - - - T 7 . utl fstreiWo?erT 3 pris in IndSiad coun'tXfiK ABBES' e,O0y,81, spread Over a neriod of Dersonal rurinMt nl k T- ..i j .1.. ii i: j -m ... . " as niK i, t..,.-.j ,r.- J r . -j .v.iu.ta wuBjiTiuua "oiacu ura uwMiiig u- 01 tno state, wTuie -t9 rioamont and 43 years from next. January. This is from the experience and observations ministration That it wu unnin. for r-0i-JS.. nil . 1 ' . . .... - " v ...wuirf W.UVU UCUCIIU U DDI - vearn to perform a head-on colli soin with nublic senti- cheese jmnnrtjwV tnJ JurtaicliJ Li Coble, approximately less by 1250.000,000 'of others that men team islation. Chairman McCumW. : Vti: i l:..,?.1 , Vul" r!MB 'S" ?ien nave Deen 'made td-sKrp iheese Port said it was hopKl that "K redu. euT public 12 "n mJWZSZ W&Wa SnS S&dt P . Z"in rr""" vv roroe up arge- ana, tne KepuDUcaa . conjrress No tino- na ohMA additional taxation. I "If it does become necesaarv- pose additional taxes," the reDort tinued, "it is believed we can better F. termine the amount of the jjeeessary actbries are-now put in anyT commercial - Tw A 1 . ..l.ll ; .:-tr. "'r . , 1 . . ' T , r-Mr . T ,7 r-r ui oreiM, irauuiioi Hiuiu uao uibwh secret Torm. IndUdinfir SWlSa Cheese "wtiir-h U r . . w- .,".- uiufuwueiiv wj. nio powers ai. nUininr- said, 0 M Of It Mirh iniUM' u con- in will uAA t cha flHuA -4.J vi tiJji. ,TIii-II.i.-'vir,i1.rv-, o oj a nign. s quviity jae . doubt be in the interest of more Dauirhertvism ''imiT' Newtek , A. T. Wall, levy ana the methods ofc-diatrlbuting'irofltable nroihierlon tul f,.n 4 WaS.'- rti-'.1ua-wi.A iJi-oT"f,t",,,-V,?fl. icutt, Ernest such burdens for the future at later Ssisto tiv I f! " lTi-S! 5,ffl2 assXst ; Wrsone .. date when the future condition of the! TteHnT Wnw '.W CK5TrE3 ?S3W?r. W.e. Me. ; in Nprth , A. E. Dark. treasury will be more accurately es-'maVtoJ aVHffii-" ooJw ZZZV?l,J.W iorresptiidahre tablished.' As to the refunded foreiffn ..obliga tions the hope was expressed that gricultural throughout the South. and. these soon would be obtained and better "Thar l -. 1 1 h. nnech a f : . . i . .w , mwivi wiv ivreiKi: ineir auiy cieany and perTorm it in governments to provide for the imme-telligently. .In almost every ' ; com- yajuicuv uwrett vnereon so munitv of the statft. ther ia a Tiuhli- thAt Rilrh interpflt. rati lm noiul f i 1 i.;i. , .j-. . v . t " " " scuoui wmcn is. or snouia ne in re- w" . -..v , .v.jor.i:'",:..; , . M. cteiraying the expenses authorized un- aiitv a '.f' Wih, .j but thfr' Colonel Dolled over. 40;. oer wltfl 9 cpunties peing der this act." xhto school belongs U tte communlty eent of the tote. So BrwKiart-:., .April Explaining the bill. Ohirftlan Mc-land Sd SriS"2 come -to the senate another Wfl- S B:mtt- nnmhor enirf in tia . th. .71: T " . : k.- v I.. tu fi Vmi . ;eu, oi wnicn numner H7 reacted to the ' . ... ..... . uv v win viic iniiKL HVfrv mnvprnflnr rnr itq rurrai. v. uvuivu. . .. flaf i nn mnrnrv at advancement rectitude bt the kmHA oli 'okrt: ,'w4ri:i3ir higher institutions7 are to Way I ?n Ioa '-BXm must P1 a FlGHTINe R - m irt V Important, part in bringing aWt pnW'- W eent -o-??:-???1 --SaNlirNrTH r. conditions, provided they seS votey)f hi. party to't beanorruned. -. - : f ; f? pearance Of ?Brookhart; rushed ""nvsviL 12ffi'i&Fli!$i other cahdidates ifcto-the? neld sd'aallf 'A .SHfH r4 er.iii- .tn : tKai ta .riAaaf vim stal8 ...yfeterintrian. 'N catHe tiibercu :' Wrri. . Moore. Mortn CaroUna Brookhart Special Service at Friends Church. June mothers, sons and daughters, all vited to attend this service. J. Wolff will preach at 11 o'clock a. on "Personal Responsibility," at evp.rv ' fnnwmAnt: f n amount of the adjusted service credit mmi shnnld WnlmniJ would be at the rate of $1 a. -lav for'mot.ion On af -th ' mne' rKv with it domestic service and $1.25 for foreign'ways to vitalize these centers will be miliation fe'J!!8. 'J,? ?ld wl?,en teaching of agriculture in the About five months ago the President "f 7 ZJ2. i.vr to after much nrennfir succeeded in ee -i Wl " j r . . his Tf ' uinerence in size oi nerds, the total exceed IWtfiri the case of little or no practical bearinff on their seat m the senate for a place on the VTrTfy 49 K00d,;,f carries t m.q M4i. e c . ... j t.. a rather painful personal nu- i mj j ror rresiueni naniinK. u,,,, ntu 4- j tho VOi-nron c urm HiBh nml Al - i . '. - ... . iu . i . Vml the ed?church serTice. T no eventi ft0 "m n ,i?niwo" 1 ' I 1 1 H TJITIII pTrfWI VMKMIt rtlA ACCA rt. . . 1 1 1 . .' I L f . . 1 wo nm ceieDrateci tne event oi riauinsr mem-' T ,. i. i . necessarv. Rut nftwv thnso ffora selves of one of their most dancrerouS ' . ,--.f: ig The adjusted service certificates, should h anm WayV Iffc'MiemiVs with a frstival: Thev had .:ne.ar? an .t?sted ll.OOQ cattie, in-H ,v, ua - xr."v ."r.,u: " ." ..rTT . 1 ....ii not a better showmir than anv otha. -..""w ..v iwu ...... uwuvbuu acrviLi: i Lir.iirf' iitr. I it frm rco it ie r(unmii.ui TRfiRrm nRnrn in iiiwh i jm jm ivuhtii ... 1 w " " and S.R9.R fnr thnco wVin kol K.l, .1 ! . ii.. j t..? l.l -4..J .L f JJ u. ; BtHift ....w uu win viu-.uiin. me i uuuiuueiiuu tnree ul" mestic And foreign sprvio. La.m.bi t,. Au the Friends church SuDDose vou o and 1 T T V. anouia oe apme. .marnea auterenees enenuee wn- iqevst. iwey urn while 'North fMMnA TctW1V o iei , . . J payaoie at the end of 20 vears from Wwiwn tUa wlinf fKtf naWati' fhiir first I'm- ' . - . : ryVyH vUjr fXDX near what no has to say. the date of issue, or sooner uDon'ritv R put .herds in Nebraska' iyerag M death, would have a face value of Jng mathematics, it seems logical and hated senate farm bloc for KenyWOMa. 3.015 times the total amount of the practical to use problems largely of was the creator and the inspiration 27i lmKTL Z ijuM Kiw cram, unui January tne Kind that come up for Solution in oi tne dioc Ho .otj tuftfTjir- Sv-T--7v 1, 1926, banks would be authorized to the life oflwiv nwt oSrl. tho f., But when Kenvon deoarted he warn- f1' .fasted, for this; disease, ..While the loan to the veterans an amount eaual Such problems may be Used as ef- ed the Old Guard that his state would Jal numD'J appears small worlt ie tn ka T., ,.t .k. ..ii..... v. t. . j . a v.. vkj beme pushed to comoletion in several fpl. .,- . . , . , -v v..w ui oujuauju service lecuveiy in tne teacnin oi matne- cnu uc wvim Ilul ne iuu ctci t. - , . J. - ------ thJf !S ' h,exKpl8,ned' adf5ut. credit plus interest at the rate of eKtaatics as are the problems Of the to smite the iniquities of the Old counUea , mj!-, indications W at wnrwf track laborers and other per cent comp0unded annually from'bank and the store. ' jGaard. Brookhart is a fit successor CaroUna will soon be up with workers, numbering more than 300,- the date of certificate. After January! North CaroUna cannot train its of Kenyon and the Old Guard does !Aeafd.in .st4 m the work of 000, to a point where they are now , 1926 the government, would make'rurll vJttTJTrL not attempt to exilein away its de- radicating bonne , tuberculosis. , work full time y lon on the certificates varying on the farm until agriculture is pro feat in Iowa as it' hat In terms f 'th i,oci amounts according to the time nego-'crly taught in all our rural schools, diana and Pennsylvania. of 190nheOketortSdPOTh: t,S uAimkAv JPJ" ' S900 whiOh t.h mn mw .. will . '-, 01 special euueawon wiin reier- the decision of the Railroad Labor Board cutting wages 12 per cent "as adjustea service credit. ble acts ever perpretrated by a gov ernment institution." WHISKEY BEING SMUGGLED THE INTO UNITED STATES $JW which these men may earn will port that the committee had recom-'ence to farminfc-C. B. Williams,1 0The war of exposure that Senator The fact that 87 cases of imported buy only $341 worth of food shelter mended elimination of the reclama- Dean of Agricultore, Statd College 0r.Siminons and his lieutenants aro wag-wWskey were discovered Saturday, at and rlnthtnc whpn mpasiiroH Kv tho . ..... . . .. "6"-""l "-v- """'B0 mn- nn f Via nnnllinir tariff Kill la nnw iU. M.. V I i xt-.ii i ., measured by the m nrnvin tt mi a :.n,.?j K tag. on .the nendinit tariff bill is now the Naw Yard at Nirfnit hha ju ,m r-"-"" i AKiituimro turn iiiiKiiieeruiv;. i.r!5 rra.. i" ' ju .. .. " .77. -:.T. .- tiuiuiaoiiig i"ioi ui a uonai in lsuv. three reasons - leinnn. ne country is rctunB.mui iortn a rigid investigation. it is t 'niher r?s'" dec'are(J Senator .Any -reclamation scheme will be1 A Library of Southern Literature, f Plto he authors of the bought by those in. charge of ' the Larollette, in terms ot actual buy- exceedingly expensive and will in the; Oglethorpe University,-of Atlanta. bi have been compelled t0 make a Navy Yfjr that a thorough inveeti mg power ot money these men are end necessitate the expenditure of Ga., has undertaken a great and pa-utnberf I "" reductions in gation will reveal a conspiracy be reduced to the level of $1 a aay. -But miiiions of doi,ars. lt wiU be many triotic work for tre South. Mr. J. T. 8omet?f- th fedules. But all such tween American bootleggers and West thus is a foretaste ot what the rail- years Def0re a veteran wiUJbe able to Lupton, of Chattanooga, has given reductions that may be made now and Indian liquor interests to try to smug ways hope to do to labor, it they are determine whether he could secure over J125.O00. and the finest fire-oroof ?"? Ttel can never relie-e the gl contraband goods into the .United an o rn ronn rhn I .a nm- li rva rn rn inau- i . i. . 7 ' - . any rights under such a plan and library m the South has jvtet been f".1 TalrJwnTJT ate The whiskey was, found on where the projects' will be located, eomnleted. ;nun vybiui un ou 'u.- ooara xne transport Sirius, and it is and, in making an application for, Tne University, which is non-sect- Zn Lrr, IMS!"?1'0' Admiral Hugh Rodman such aid the veteran would not know rian, aims to put in this building a Sun anything relative to the location, cost complete libraiV of soutrern litera- 'riSffifteS' Xyo the traffic, cther- or advantage of the project." tureT books, manuscripts and literary TXb! tariff Satt had ' vJS gqT at the Navy , As aland settlement provision in remains of southern authors, so the h!,ut,H speech that he chad Yard Saturday could not have been place of the reclamation, veterans future historian and biographer may. e ; J." . JJa..4 ,4 -smuggled aboard the Sirius." guns ahd Senator Ndrrls cliarged that,fjORTH CAROLINA QUOTA 1 the tariff levied on" iruns was not for lvf.n protection because we Sell guns to all .. ,w . yMrLJSTB The WrKes About Randolph Koads. able to bend the Labor Board to their will. They hope and expect to reduce the wages of these workers to an ac tual rate of $1.60 for a 10-hour day, which will be equivalent, in the pur chasing power of 1900, to only 50 cents a day. Coolie Standard for Americans. "' ""a"1 J7 woula 0e R'ven Preference in making find there the material he wants. V- u -. Z ? t entry on any Publlc or Indian 'andsj Mr. H. E. Harman, of Atlanta, rim- ...i.i i.i.vm opened to entry. . to pay tor these self a well known: writer, has wnriH rv wnn n iih wimi ii iini v wiiili. n.t innrtr. fhm. i .1 u : . i .i a. i . . . . . , . , . . , . :" " . ; , "cj' wuuiu oe enuiueu lo a sum nis services tree, to collect this ii- iv n MtrMAi. cems wouin Duy in mis wouiu equal to the adjusted service credit hrarv Th ..nderj.Vino. i ln.,da. :.. ""TtVI " . r ' The chief of rtafr. KiWt . jiivlrf be less than Chinese Coolies were paid increased by 25 per cent. (ble that every one should help. Send ZZSZZZ has been authorized to continue ac- whatever you can, in the way of books, and we are reaching out-to get -the S5 ,J?Plicnt8 ,or the ; Citizens' old southern magazines pamphlets, -balance of the world. We want 'the ijf?. Tra'ning camps this summer manuscripts, letters and pictures, Mgh t, keep 'but tho foreigner uLlhf 9nta "r?. GaroI'fna pn.u : 4 i . : 1 1 l k.. i j J n . , rntriTiIPtA ntrr Yin Qnhli"arMi will K In regard to the roads of Randolph' V. ,vu He,,u 80 that we can se" -weocn aSer-JunTao " , county we wish to sav as fo -mei c iti- ,th ?u name as the giyer and enormous. piif:.at.: home and ;.heap We,, JAyLJl-V tn Lupton Hall, where it will be eftolHrh -abroad to nut the foreiirner, . , This reopene the opportunity for vv Vi BhanJitrn i: cinfo fho nun Af fiit-UVtA . ,-pive.l hv wArkers. nd th sums ul- turn to our homes, that nevof- t""-:1 X wr " 4- oui oi ousmesa. 1 ...! k., -..;l,o avimilivn: In Viuvo hnve WO coon en f l ' STpneraUOnS. been paiii them. van'irnt' ...n nrTn ..mtiioi nnr icn ri) I v I. .... . . . .. . -e . - -, : . .. . . v . , r ... :., " 'vT' Z 'ii " ; ";; i,.. tk. u:u . '. -rbndJng-w W southern mera- terial in the tariff biU, out millionaires expense oi uncle bam. ihU oppor- been padded, to establish the impres- i sion upon Congress, as well as upon enough the public, that the workers were get ting an exaggerated and unwarr portion oi' railroad revenues. These various items included in the many miles the road is fine but should waire bill but wnicn snouia be omit- one nave occasion to eo down-' thai. wi.t.. i- in l . , .,. o j i i .u u:n - rj t . ...... F- i, wmiw, ieu, tne senator .leciareu reacneu u.e ..... . m iok, ne just as well nave lK f- ,-B1- w 1 h..t hllnM.ihl 1. in the days when the Pacific railroads were permitted to import them freely and to exDloit them unmercifully." Testimony presented to the Senate Mi. Editor Committee on Interstate Commerce, siiid Senator LaFollette, shows wide discreuancv between the wages re- Send all items to H..E- North Carolina boys between 17 and Senator Norris said as in guns so A' years 01 age to obtain One month s . 1 . 1 . ... 1 .... . . .. Kunerauons. oetiu mi ibei.ta w n. cj. Knnntnv Nnrni au s in ri uves 10 nav. "V'Jl Mr)m y Harmon, care 402 Trust Company of ia wing machines and many other outing at Camp . McClellihr, Alabama, inte.1 out trn'coun y8 Uf tlVeGoo'-giaI Building, tlanta.-Ga, n This -StawlnSde in steel and Mother ma- 0, fort ; Barraneas, Fleri at the inteil out ton county. . Lv,.,.i( i onnk.. i t.. . , B. i . .jul'h ..--mi. 1 nntnu r.f TTnnla a.m Tl,ia rv. . nief tlyjlW- work of collecting is a. free- &v. cairture1 U8 and ,areJoluing us tunity for this,,, year will end just as .n.,-k t i!" " " 7 , ;"v?""iwiu offering ana certainly wis is a s4 bondage so as to capture the ,baL- Hn .as tne quota ib made, up. Any the tO live On it, bUt for thOae .,. UiU d.unIU ' V,a1n nf fi-J . Ur.Tl Ii. 1 1- . hnvk ),.. rourorl Qkmil.l wAti. t , Iwn n !h rat' the?t,the!:e;evaryone interested tauthern writ- Sorifl day, he asked, when through Chief of Staff, 87st Dlvisioii, Am down n the mud. from the ount M 'wd booksFron, Southern "toU and sweat our' milUonaires stein Building, Knoxville, Tennessee, seat over to Ld Yarks and on' fot. a ,nitr4, , , , ,ni ici ma t nnfnd -h WrlH . ant everybody will pay'.'.'. .tribute -..to man.Js Btronger than his stom- . ineir greamess anu Kr..ue.i,. ym,m. acn.' Auiuac .win matte your Stomach lt;Af f tn Standard Drug Co. w 'ri . . --- . . . iiii.,i 'i. wage Bin, sure he can't, if there should eorne a '"T. ;- . -j "a-, "r j 7f, .W4.. " . ' '. '1'"' th nmW utti- .1- r ..j.. .Ai" onoW'Teii every raontn 01 vn year.i every uroj. vi rou ,..w xajik bkauu ARTILLERY . addcTa think in cZ rf-aeriaJ." llnla.rWttn IM hiuv bee. gen,. suffering tha t&w -ndOre we ,w l. SCHOOL TO "'FORT .i.: from death in the home of mv fathatl.afMliw",'," r' '"r?- Ftt.zJ? ri " "T"!. 'Ii. I'i"'" 'J i .'tn - ,. ylinjjj j.IP'1KU'-UJU 1 tur ' " .. "ri Till I jjl )uril,.kUlri iwo uuivu I fujnvnra ..rfeirsi fnf.. :?n till .'TtllJ.MA.'aBJ1 TMM U'flflUlff. fi-!- MU. I. . . , , .1 .1 - ,1 J . '1 . th roii . . . V. -Tl Th Hrtnfl.rTiil tnMriC 1ft.' Vlr-. mum., nifiiv. 'W mmmj hww. SILL JPeclsloh' to' concentrate all field ar- ery schools at Fort Sill: Oklahoma. was, announced last week bV'the Bee- . . .. i . ... . . . . . ffinu ror ui umieu duimjs rh ' t..w mfv.vtwa - hw ' nuj LM X niflOTMB Ul Lfl Mklinl . - . . to attract ,watteirUott'affld of ' ; 1oard 'Of enormous total of $1,250,000,000. De- no occasion to go up it for duct that from the whole and divide the result by of workers employed, he the result will be vastly different the impression the railroad executives mother, Mr. and Un. M. L. have sought to create. ham,- We see no way, or their Ail uiaaae Hon ny wage cue oren to get in or out in case The "deflation" of labor; while is not perfectly dry. ; . -v if, most inlurioua to the workers. -r. has ' This road ia a diarou ik th mmiiv had a correspondingly taboos ffe Ay J m u tts bffkert'tecnti;apHnt Hd '-study upon all our people. i declare Senator Jng .on.uas rural route .Iroifi, Ed 1BT the Old, Toinln' on-August the army whool iyjtem ahd make re- tJ.rwteT.te. ne traoea oaralysis of business w nen n -nd ' Stadil "there is pr Jcety .not wnly WnOMl, ,rx. .cc. wrr th t rnmbrs I th hlf r rxilnr vmld; winiiii' n-. k. u fc-ii .1 u i ana the iqiiage oi we sorest !W?es , . .tli ,tTWAt l .lnt ; riw rtand- i'L. i-I'.t- ZrL7lM Wt W the fro-ts.,, ! f w wif-m wpw -w- nsaaaMB wW,,',,,I aro sf living there u oommeros. ana the high way a go wiWwut any at ten-1 iadustrial Mairaatioa and depreseioB.T Hon at all.. AiuL wa th undmim.d.' .Constitutint aa they U more than d0 ask yea au ouaty 1 get bunyi V 1 kA'eHalsi4I-Aati , m. fkls 4wAtlBklr -. J, i U. . J I il J t . I SMI. Mi wirwejwwpi'-f.wM. Wfl WA W IVM DWnMOmQ i , v . ' . a.i, 1 it. nutwrw saw! -st Jlw- - " taaf lndattriaMwrkera4.and f their and when this is done we will tl.cn Z. i.U?,? ll J.tnrZ the Democrats return te power here been drowned tn a filing m!- . families must canmime . the. greatet .hang our opinion aa to tbe Jbr-way W9V l, , !ar-. ' tnenwrtorm M n wU Bering the great wr. u hn at Amurday, I.ft.riA, June 7. , r firmi tlJ... " ' ... ' ion nifrni i wiwun, iw. r,aiu.rmla Inwlv There hfm hn tin friira nf ha rw : malned there" through the night, his wHh nator Simmons, pediilly in tar Sunday. ml irnr are Oflp- fet booming no aevrtly front-bitten. u tri(T(.tsr and farm lKilatlon. 'rrmith Allen, William. Wolf, Up.t it wns neArJr U amputate , ito0(, houMr to ahnuldpr with sn It, f-wnnnon, Hoa'-wrln's1 Mate one of his grat - F,.mmr.s In th heroic f ,-!,t th.'orth l I rhrvY, GunnrrV J.T, Frank F.1U ?'sny r-"i-!i r,'ri';hd, In the rvrw tr,,1P- l.ntoT tntde Ut KTitf tTiJ TS, fcum-l Ion NM, Jlnhert I 'tee ' .'t.--. n.t fiit nnnrs of lhm ,,.,...- bf.r rsaslnir tha. t.ll re-i ' ",, f"1""' ' ! " f-'l'ls. ' vh f th war finance corTxirs'.len.l traoed the- existlnr York'a to the M.Patin niar n lnat snow leu oft tne evewn.-ot wune 1j iA9faT.ia!iuui ha learned at omrnendatbns ellmlnatln daolicaMons iness : to wholesale anUtled U an outlet tha i MwWe.??5A- slighf In the pourses'and a reductlorf of aoV --: i With aemll Zmdbu:-ZIiZZZL M"Cih BM&M' SkmU hak- RihtW- fiwansawaw be' tnlnitftrat 01t ttsts. : 4-'t V ,n t 1 'seMta-'oo' either .efficertbsjtjc school" nd 'MrtiHeTT debater 'whea! be' Held , officers, ' school ' Csrny' ragg, -fornidc' 'oretofc rretteville, wfil go !: td-' Fort 'Bill. ' ' Bfhomi""?t"rr J. ' Z' ?; A- Ha is one of the seven meafter.er nre acnoois for Dttry mcr atxl .WUtojMlt r4he.;'irrkara;ravmJthe, we arc most dependent,? W"r-proudt jll1'": anlist-dspecialista already at locate senate eomwutteee ana aia' in uewca , , . " -.- wining the ertanisatioa Ot the senate. EI G ITr 8AIIX1RS Or Ui a OUN- - In U i M i rtt rrm M th .nrutf araa . . . . . . ,.j. .r-. r. . . AMM . ., , . ranks nign as a uemocra. oti-tne. , ui.uiuy tvi pr, ist twelve Inches .deep on, una fVrandj la fo, Hst.onJ emmltt- nd it th'l,J-.1;-;t.?' i" ' ' ' Va6oi,, eirhtatm.,-f hpit pranking Imof-rat on the naval eenv, FU-ht enlisted "mn from theU'. -Joseph v. ajj4r, aa old gentleman 01 w,u... ,m w v.iywin,'ninhoat' K'w V?n ar rnKuiu4 . Aiii. hiu., iwowm p. 1 cjianri our opinAua portion. el tha products of our farms 0f andolrh county and the- output ,ef eur faetorien, aeid ,y (Sigae:) f . . Mr. aad Mrs. W. L Myrirk. Troyf ti, C;,. ,; . . .SenatoriUJr'frllttte- ,M .that the, have to etchange for food and other nereasarlcs is the reward, of their la-! bo. ' . .. I Great Dettberry Crop Near Ham!-4 When. worVers are nmeloyd, or. - . their earning urt.'lel, t'y inrit- lUrr.iTy ihre )'e hn man I l!or Ii lie fji-sii V' i"l 1 1 .- 1 it My rnut 1 ' a- r , ..illtd ' ti'n of 1 i iuitin -. . ' ! 1. . ....jftry. 1 1 iutt r ntii v ult.ir and t . nt C'l'iilt. I nn " m it r.ni be t rrm'ra- I ;,,."cr- i - 1 .' n- of 1 A"hev Ii't, 01 t' ! hl"li-oy. "-tr.t ' 'v r t 0 t ,n t. ii.i,l.,n It M li ti ! .ii Ii !' " , i vln t . : . f. a n ' -it. "i ; v ! .1. iwakinr ef . -S 11 r ' "f : .-Tirpntia ni-1 Irt cr.:i!r ,t, I! it rti:fiwnt t1 i. ' t Vr.n time w"' M t ' - i Ii l.'l r-' It t' Killed Taming en I l.fgM " u formar msror of f rf tJ J' ,iit.h y f f !'-t tMy, !'. v ;! aU H t I at t. C. Tol'iH ; .-i . , . rt rg ff- ' r.wyU I, Jl 1 to I1! ,r.fi t- . . ! i. ' t. f f aur irtr"'i , B'' r I.t i i.'' 1 i) s ' ' I'!". it, M l r '" .it r f rv. i
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 15, 1922, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75