Republican Leader Chooses To Ignore A Shameful Record JFails To Tell About Graft And Corruption In Vet. Bureau ! Under Director Forbes. Chairman William M. Butler of the National Republican Committee has issued a pamphlet explaining corrup tion in the Veterans Bureau. Con gressman Oldfield has replied to it and the reply is a smashing one. It is in substance as follows: “Mr. Butler’s pamphlet is more re markable for what it omits than for anything it contains, for example, he refers to investigation of the bu reau, set up for rehabilitation and care of World War veterans, now known as the Veterans’ bureau, and concludes with this remarkable mis statement: ‘all of the practices and ■methods thus indicted were due to Democratic mismanagement and were persisted in by Democratic officials in the face of repeated protests from individual ex-service men as well as organizations of ex-service men.’ Ac cordingly, he said, when the Republi can party came into power, it set out immediately ‘to correct these faults.’ * “Chairman Butler neglects to men tion that in March, 1919, a Demo cratic Congress made an emergency appropriation of 19,000,000 for the relief of World War veterans, and that in December, 1919, President Wilson asked Congress, of which the Republicans had come into control, for and additional appropriation of $35,000,000 for the veterans’ agencies, t>ut that the Congress, through the manipulations of G. • O. P. leaders, delayed any action for 16 months, and then finally appropriated only $18,000,000. “There were two investigations of the service men’s agencies. The first was of the War Risk Insurance Bu reau. It revealed some inefficiency and very inadequate hospital facil ities, but there was no evidence of dishonesty. The second investigation was of the Veterans’ Bureau, of which Col. Charles R. Forbes had. been made director. Forbes was a Harding appointee. “This investigation was made by a Senate committee after the Repub lican House had refused to join in the resolution for its conduct. This investigation revealed the most shameful record of dishonesty, cor ruption, conspiracy and graft ever perpetrated in a Government depart ment. As a result of the disclosures, Colonel Forbes was sent to the pen itentiary. Mr. Butler omits any reference to these facts in his pamphlet, although the Senate committee’s report said of what had been going on in the bureau, that it ‘resembles more the work of buccaneers and the looting and scuttling of a ship than the mere neglect of trusted Government offi cials.’ “Although seeking to leave the thought with former soldiers that the G. O. P. is their guardian angel, Hr. Butler omits to mention that two Republican Presidents, Harding- and Coolidge, vetoed adjusted compensa tion bills, intended to do some measure of service to the World War veterans, and that the bonus bill finally was passed over President Coolldge’s veto.” Get Potatoes Out Of Ground Before Frost Danger Of Cold When Frost Is Heavy—Should Be Stored In A Dry Place. Raleigh, N. C., Oct. 10.—The sweet potato crop of North Carolina is ma turing early this year and there is no reason for delaying the harvest. The potatoes should be out of the ground before frost because when hurt by cold, the potatoes will not keep under any conditions. “Killing the vines by frost does not always affect the root crop under the vines,” says Robert Schmidt, vege* table specialist at State College, "yet there is always danger of cold in jury when the frosts are heavy. In handling the potatoes, they should be moved as little as possible and care taken not to bruise them. Bruises provide favorable conditions for rots and when the bruises heal, they leave unsightly blemishes on the potato.” Mr. Schmidt recommends a stand ard curing house as the best place for curing and storing the crop. Tobacco bams may be used but they have dis advantages but even tobacco barns are to be desired above -the earthen banks. Before “using .the. old storage house, clean it out and disinfect the inside thoroughly. When it has dried out begin to store the potatoes. Curing should start as soon as any potatoes are brought into the house. The cur ing temperature is about 85 degrees and it will take two weeks to get* a good cure. During all this time, the bouse must be well ventilated and at the end of the curing period, the tem perature needs to be reduced to about SO degrees and kept at that point all the time the roots are in the hjppg The potatoes need a dry atmosphere to keep well, which makes ventilation very important, states Mr. Schmidt Another Jersey Mystery First posed photograph of Mrs. Margaret •’Lilliendahl, widow, of slain aged physician husband, who lone diets. In Memoriam (To my friend, A. Carl Cox, Ex Sheriff, Randolph County) There is no subject worthy of more profound and more serious reflection than the grave. It is the most uni versal in all the records and tradi tions of humanity. It is a topic fa miliar to all ages, peoples and climes. It presents its mysteries with equal force to the savage in the cave, and the scholar in the cloister. As it gathered to its barren bosom the first man who trod the virgin earth, so shall it fold upon its breast of clay, the man or woman whose death shall mark the extinction of the race, the exodus of time. It is unaffected by history or geography. It knows no zones, no latitudes. It is indifferent alike to snow and sun and rain. Men may differ in culture, creed and na tionality. They may reside in the dis tant islands of Polynesia in painted savagery and ignorance primeval, on the steppes of Asia, recalling in their nomadic lives the state of man when history first reveals him, or in man sions surrounded by every luxury that wealth can give. Nay, twenty centuries with world transforming wars, with the annihilation of govern ment and peoples, the destruction of continent making boundaries, the dis appearance of immemorial languages and customs, may separate the ages in which they lived, they are identical in the dust. In the abysses of the tomb, human ity’s multiplying myriads pour. The dark battalions crowd the highways of the century and gather every mortal for the march on which retreat is never sounded. Fugitives may wan der from the fated path and the dreaded company, and seed remotest deserts, crags jnost perilous, dimmest wildernesses, wildest plains, but never do they pass beyond the trumphet call of that perpetual advance. Loiterers may pause amid the en chantments by the way, the fountains, jewels, flowers, feasts, yea, pause and for one rapturous moment dream that life shall riot on forever, but they must join that doomed and hur rying throng. The summons rings throughout all seasons, the lull of spring, the summer’s hush, the stir of autumn and the winter’s tumult It echoes through the shadow-pillared aisles of night, the vaulting dawn, the sinking day. It penetrates the silences of mine and cave; of peak and cliff, the clamor of the market-place; its sharp, swift notes like javelins of melody, pierce the storm. The bugles of the sepulcher resound from sea to sea, from mart to mart, from nation unto nation, and the obedient millions tombward turn, back rolls the quaver ing cry, “Dying, dying, dying”. This is the reward that awaits all human achievements. No brilliancy of mind, no craftiness of hand, no beauty of character, no power of wealth and no nobility of soul, can escape this final decree that God has written against the joys of life. The brilliant mind that burns its impress upon the world must smoulder into ashes, the crafty hand that touches with the magic wand of genius, must palsied be. The noble soul that lives to set the stars of hope in life’s dark night, sooner or later, must take that lonely pilgrimage to the mysterious “Isle of Somewhere”. This is the Divine will; yet, how strange this ex istence is. How unfathomable this transition from sunshine to shadow; from joy to sorrow, from time to eternity. The toueh of time is fatal. What the scythe does not reap in its continuous swing, is garnered up by the flight of years. Little flowers of love from the cradle, youth-buds of joy from the fire-side, the sunshine of home, with father apd mother and all the gems of love must be blighted by the frost of time and death. But we bow in humble submission to God’s plan and lean upon the faith that He planted in the human soul. If His will leaves our hearts in sorrow at the loss of friends, companions and loved ones, we may be comforted with the thoughts that the influence of their lives has left a beautiful im press upon our own. We would follow, but we can only walk with them to the threshold of eternity; \hey must take up the journey from there alone, while we return with saddened hearts to desolate homes, and in profound silence gather up the sunbeams that have scattered and weave them into wreathes of golden memory. On September 13th, 1927, Brother passed into the great un LoWn. His life was full of activity, efulness, honor and distinction, and s death has brought sorrow and Samuel W. Coltrane Dies In Missouri End Came September 25th— Short Sketch Of His Life Given By Mr. Welborn. We are indebted to Mr. R. W. Wel born, of Lawrence, Kansas, Route 7, for the following information relative to the life and death of Samuel Walker Coltrane: ' Samuel Walker Coltrane was bom Feb. 8, 1879, near High Point, N. C., and died Sept. 25th, 1927. His parents died when he was small, after which he lived with his sister, Mrs. C. M. Fuller, at Farmer, N. C.; then with an uncle, J. R. Coltrane, Randleman, N. C. He attended the Old Trinity Col lege, Trinity, N. C. At the age of 21 years he came West. In 1915 he went from Kansas City, Mo., to Collinwood, Tenn., taking charge of a demonstra tion farm for the Tennessee Valley Iron and Railroad Company. There he was married to Miss Myrtle Burns on Nov. 39th, Thanks giving Day, 1916. To this union were bom three children, all of whom are living. He returned to Kansas City, Mo., in the fall of 1917, where he worked until May 17, of this year. He moved his family to the R. E. Hale farm at Pomona in Feb., 1927. He has been at home since giving up his work for the Ford Motor Company on account of his health, in May. He was a devoted husband and father, a friend tq the friendless, a clean, sweet spirited conscientious man. He believed in right at all times and justice to all. He is sur vived by his wife, Mrs. Myrtle A. Coltrane and three children, Daniel William, David Orville and Mary Frances; two brother, D. W. Col trane, Heasener, Okla.; and J. A. Coltrane, Guilford* College, N. C.; two sisters, one of Wilmington, N. C., and one of Baltimore, Md.; and a host of relatives and friends in North Carolina and many friends wherever he was known. Prefers Second Husband When James Rolling came back from the war to his home in Los Angeles, California, one day last week he found that he was supposed to be dead. The War Department had no tified Mrs. Rolling that her husband was killed in action in France. Think ing she was a widow, Mrs. Rolling married again. Mrs. Rolling took her problem to her lawyer who advised the only way out was to obtain an nullment of her second marriage. This Mrs. Rolling has agreed to do, but she says she prefers her second hus band to the first and wants to re marry him as soon as the matter can be arranged. Asheboro Loses Game To Greensboro By One Point The Asheboro high school football eleven journeyed to Greensboro and took on the Greensboro high school reserves in Greensboro Friday after noon, and the lone margin of one point only separated them from a tie. Asheboro scored a goal in the third period of play, but failed to kick goal, netting only 6 points. Rushing in some of the first string eleven in the last quarter, the Greensboro boys were able to put the ball across the goal line.' The dropkick sent the pig skin between the goal posts and Greensboro reserves had the game 7 to 6. The Asheboro team put up a good- battle, the back-field at all times making good gains through the Greensboro line. This line, however, held at critical moments to stave off defeat. American automobiles are the most popular in the Free City of Danzig. to greater work, for which a splendid faith in God made him emminently fitted. His record is one of duty well performed. He fought a good fight, he kept the faith. Henceforth is laid up for him a crown of righteousness. We may well honor his .memory and ever hold in sacred remembrance a life so full of unselfish service. “Out of the strain of the doing, Into the peace of the done; Out of the thirst of pursuing, Into the rapture of won”. —D. M. WEATHERLY. Nurse Advises WEAK, RUN-DOWN To Take Cardui ld haVe frequently recommended to others, for it is a splendid iedicine «nn I am glad to give peo la the benefit of my experience. "I have been a nurse tor several mts have often came in conr ict with patients who were run >wn and weak. Often I have told ifferers of Cardhi, and the way L and advised them to give it dSnPSmSErfie Mule Kills Automobile (Moore County News) It has been said that the worm will turn. And it usually happens that he will turn at the roost unexpected time and occasion. Observe how the worm, this time a mule, turned and wreaked vengence, as recounted in the fol lowing dispatch in* the Greensboro News: Ramseur, Oct. 1.—On Friday night while Wake Kinney was driving to the county fair with a number of friends he met a negro man who was riding a mule. The negro man reined the mule out of the way of the automobile, but the mule turned immediately in the way of the car, killing it instantly. The negro man was thrown with great force to the ground but his injuries are not supposed to be serious. This is not only an example of the worm turning, but it is also an example of what is called poetic jus tice. Slowly but surely the rein of the mule upon the highway has been curtailed. But a few years ago this faithful animal as the chief means of transportation on the highways, had them all to himself. He was the bully of the town as he walked the highways up and down. Then came the automobiles, at which he was wont to shy and then fly from them. His fear instinct was more deeply founded than we know. Most people K. 0. OINTMENT For all skin diseases caused by germs, especially for itch. ASHEBORO DRUG COMPANY Asheboro, N. C. Your tongue tells when you need Coated tongue, drymouth, bad breath, muddy skin, groggy nerves and sour stomach suggest its use. attributed it to his stubbornness. But the mule knew better. He sensed not only the present, but the future, danger. His instincts were right for ! now he has been almost entirely I driven frpm the roads. He scarcely I dare turn a cotton row on the high ; way where once he reigned supreme. ! Hence it is no wonder that this Ram- j I --- seur mule turned with venom upon his tormentor and destroyer. When he turned into the way of that car, faced it and annihilated it, there must have been in his mind all the burden of suffering and torment which these nefarious devices have inflicted upon the whole mule tribe. When the worm turned he turned | with an instinct and an impulse to ! avenge all of his kind. If there had been before him at the moment a whole fleet of automobiles we have no doubt that he would have killed them all just as he did this lone contrap tion of Mr. Wake Kinney’s. Tea was first produced in Asia. The cigarette that leads by billions Just to state a great truth in another way—Camel is so exactly what sQjgnany smokers want ■,£V ,—mgm other brand is e close second* If all cigarettes were as Camel you would anything about special tnents to make cigarettes for the throat. Nothing the place of choice tobaccos. © 1927, R.J. Reynold* Tobacco Company, wuuton-Salam, N. C. V > Easy handling is assured by a modern 3-speed transmis sion and a smooth dutch. £±^•745 “isa&r15 ■Ts^s&J*’5 All prices tab. Flint, NANCE CHEVROLET CO., INC Asheboro, N. C. ASSOCIATE DEALERS: that defies # comparison/ A powerful valve-in-head motor provides smoothness and snap that are a constant delight. 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