DUNN, N; C„ NOVEMBER 1, 1933 NUMBER 20 VOL. I . Stupendous policies are being wrought day by day in the National realm. Yet the people of North Car : . olina can be only spectators of tlnCswMing tides of ■ - revolution upon the National arena-. * For months, . the people have been, so far as state and Nation are (concerned, mere on-lookers. But »n event of far reaching importance* is at-hand which is to be de . termined by the voters of North Carolina. The- citt-. Ben’s (boasted share in' the country’s sovereignty has . been at a low ebb for a season. But the- time ie-at hand when North Carolinians are to Meld their (sovereign authority. _ ■" / A Stamina Telting ^Event v ’ ' . The stamina of a state is the combined stamina fof its citizens. A -test is at hand* 1/ the majority bf the citizens of North Carolina are willing to fol low the wish-washy example of those 33 other states and measure their responsibility and their inde pendence in terms of the popular, then North Caro lina, too. like a sheep, will jump the hurdle in the same fashion as that set by its predecessors. But if North ^Carolina is the old North Carolina, act ing in its sovereign capacity utterly regardless of the action or 'attitude of Any other of its sister states, then next- Tuesday’s election will he really a sovereign action. - „ .■ Independent sovereignty may .have been wielded in the event of either possible'result of the election. But in case the state votes .to ratify the repeal reso lution" it can be a truly sovereign act only if every , voter forgets, or ignores^ the unanimous action of the 33 other states which have acted .upon the re : peal resolution. Any citizen whose vote is deter mtaed by the seemingly overwhelming vote of other States for repeal is not voting as a citizen of?da^ sovereign-state but as a person, moved by mass phy phology or the mob spirit. “Let The Voter Examine His Motives • ’ • - In view of the foregoing observations.’^; behooves every North Carolina voter to consider whether he Ifj planning to act upon considerations that are suggested by the, state’s own better interest and in accord with principles that are basic to the state’s sovereignty or whether big is drifting upon what Seems to be a wave of-National (foment created by Interested parties’abroad and at home and long and (constantly deepened by propaganda (proceeding from thq same selfish sources.' • ’ . ' • An Individual Responsibility One's Tote next Tuesday' will determine the meas tore Of his'* own responsibility for whatever x>f evil inay result in either state or Nation from the legal • i^^on-na^the sale of alcoholic beverages Granted 'tjiattj$. prohibition W is abused to an inordinate extent, yet any citizen who has not aided and abetted in the niilliificatibh^of the law to any extent Is ut terly unresponsible for any ruin that may have 'been wrought, by blockade liquor. Yet that aid may have been rendered by omission of a good citizen's duty f to co-operate in the enforcement of law as well as by a positive participation In those practices that have resulted in whatever degree* of , nullification that exists. No man broken by drink, no family im ; poverished and disgraced by a drinking husband or father can attribute'to jbifii who has had no part, active or passive, in the nullification of the prohi bition law one iota of responsibility for the disaster jtvrought by drink. The drinker has drunk despite the state’s protest, despite the National government’s ]t>ar of disapproval. He hag wrought his own un doing though you and the government have sought to save Wm< *But not thus will fit be if you vote to legalize H ^cjuor sales and to respectabllize it in a measure..By ~ that act you become'* partner in (the ills that liquor works—and all the more heinously responsible if you base your action upon the selfish desire to relieve > yourself of a bit of tax. ^ • • Hypocritical Mouthlngs '• . You should desire not only to avoid sharing the " responsibility for the' future ills due to liquor, but you should avoid as you would poison, if you have through overt adt or sheer indifference aided in'fos ' Wing the ills that now exist, the hypocritical mouth : tngs of “caiinot be enforced”*. If you have bought ^and dTtmk liquor,; if you bate indifferently allowed the violation, of the law» jtate* and Nation to occur-under your very nose, then you have no moral . -right. to point the finger of sconf at the law Itself, No law enforces itself. President -Roosevelt’s ad ^ ministration is right now preparing to provide iblanks -upon which the NRA violations may be re ported. _Even the NBA regulations will not enforce J ' themselves. It requires the co-operation of all con- : etmed. 'What a fool any employee would prove him- - self to suffer chiseling when the remedy is at hand. ; And what a fool or coward you have been, if you bewail the evils you attribute to failure of the pro- * hibition law if you have. cowardly or indifferently 1: allowed it to be nullified under your nose by they hellish minions who have furnished supplies for the* youth, who have nourished! fche thirst of the drunk ard, and who have'robbed the very wives and chil dren of their patrons of food, clothing, and decent j shelter.' Scorn your own [cowardice instead of the i law which would, with your cooperation, prevent j the evils which you bewail. For your very man- - hood’s sake, don’t be a hypocrite! Havef Regard to Your Own Economic Safety | •f If you would consider the- possibility of a mini mum of tax relief through the legalizing of the sale of liquor, common sense dictates that you have re gard to the greater economic ills that threaten through the increased sale, at higher prices, of quoR A fool must see that every additional dollar spent in the promotion of the manufacture and sale of liquor to that very extent lessens the amount of money that can go into the purchase of essential - commodities or' in providing wholesome liying con ditions;. The merchant, for, instance, must be half witted if he fais to see that every dollar spent at grog shops jdeprives his guild of a dollar apd perhaps _ many. Not only do the' dollars' that buy , the drug" 'that destroys fail to reach: the honorable merchant s till but perhaps lose a good workman his job and a " family its income wont to be spent for home and pergonal comforts/ The: inerchant < who rotes for more booze votes for the cutting of his own economic • throat. ’ A Million-Dollar Testimonial In the above connection, it is pertinent to cite the million-dollar loss of business by the^Ayer adver ' tising agency ip support of the principle just sug gested. For half a hundred years the Ayer Agency has been one of the most prominent in America. ; That concern'is an authority on trada Hundreds of men and women are constantly studying trade conditions, and Jbuilding trade arguments. The firm, through President Frye, positively refuses to renew ' a contract thalt has paid them mints of money.-Every man, and merchant particularly, who has any regard for hs own economic interest should read " •' ••/. • •. ;* . . '-v-v 'N ‘:VV> vti __ - ", • -H**! -Ayer. Statement .> :-f; v k Follows the full and authoritative statement of > that great company. That statement alone'should be sufficient to carry North Carolina against, repeal. Here it!is: ?..£■*? 'V^’ ;> “We have cancelled our ten-year old agreement with the Canada Dry Ginger Ale, Inc., a highly val ued client, following that Client's decision to engage in the manufacture and' distribution of beer and whiskey after repeal. We regret, of course, the con ditions which necessitated this step but on a strictly . business basis we are certain we are right . “The return of liquor will, divert an important share of America’s mass purchasing power from es sential commodities! This diversion may run ?s hizh as twenty per cent, based on preprohibifion ex perience and the trend of economic and sociologies j «!nc, «.<> iwwtowt WM : adopted. . _ mTuin pan be - “The moral question - left out entirely, bot from a purely bom"** Btand point, »e .till ennnot see a eery happy result ln,th. return of liquor. - * ' ‘ w!11 „nn “It is true that revenue from- alcohol will con tribute many millions of dollars t» ^ and local treasuries, but this-contribution in. main, will be mufte by that class of the PuhHc which can least afford to mate 4t. This was true before prohibition, and «t will unquestionably be true when - prohibition is repealed. : - ; “The liquor business has not-changed. When tne thirty-sixth state has been lined up, it will be run hy the same old crowd in the same old way. . > f.; decades--ago- my firar-adopted a Bhliey1 not advertising alcohol. The reason for thisis sim ply that, as an, advertising agency, we must identify ourselves so closely with th« affairs of our c ten that we are. a part of their business. V • “In the case of a client who manufactures or dis tributes alcoholic beverages, this would create for us an impossible situation, since we would then be in the position of making alcohol. attractive to. the f youth of this county. Furthermore, we do not wish to classify our other clients with the liquor busi ness’* The foregoing opinion cost N.- W. Ayer & Son bfe money. The au'toors of the repeal propaganda hope to make or save ibig money.' It is not a mere differ ence of opinion but a difference in the motives back of the opinions. Choose whether you .prefer to follqw what is absolutely an honest opinion or one that comes accompanied by a big suestion mark? lyi] Now You See! . ■ By Arthur I>. Gore ■ 7} It comes with poor grace from the multimillion ' aire promoted Rokeifeller Institute this new recom mendation in behalf of the poor man that he may git drunk on cheap liquor and tote the burdens of; ec-stly government, and if this recommendation had ' come from some^other source it would have bad more’ appeal as actually a wise and beneficient move to wards cheaper necessities of life for the poorer class. ■ es Another thing in that Institute’s recommendation doesn’t eeti well and that IT that while preaching jrepeal so as to. restore States’ rights, it urges ex clusive supervision of certain Initial tax-methods, of liquor without states' takin® fheir pro rata share. It .is, though. Ulwgyg easy to puncture anything that i8 as faulty as this repeal propaganda.* One ,only needs -to squint one„ eyq and stay half awake to see their undercurrents Qf more to .the man who has and lesd to the'feilpw-who hasn't... . .* . , v What prestige Is ex-Governor Gardner’* prpnounce . ment having Ain. his--native, heath now .that he has gone to Washtogton and Resigned from a seat among the officialdom of in this repeal campaign? -Especially: since another former governor and ex aenhitor, and life-long zdry has .thrown bis bat in ' the anti-repeal ifght? Senator Reynolds Is about to annex ns to Russia now and plans a whirlwind cam paign among the most rural counties of North Caas . '' -' ',* - '• i olina in behalf of the doping plank he walked In to prominence upon. Why rural, counties more than urban? Would he Want- a Jury of city hoys Instead of 13 good farmers Jto sit in Judgment on a tion of right in a court? Why rural, Counties? Hate- - .. n’t country people «anse enough to vote ; wthoht J special attentien just now! . - Raeford, N. O., October 20, 1933. HOW TO TELL IT. It is probable that no more definite and sufficient reason for not voting for repeal has been 'given 1n the state .than that of Judge Pell, of the Corporation Comjnissionl . Judge Pell thus states his reason tor opposing repeal.. It is in answer to an inquiry on the part of the North: CaroUna Progress of which , Mrs. Charlotte. Story PerkiAson is editorial writer. Judge Pell will not vote for repeal for two reasonfc: First,^even though repeal seems sure, he fears tlmt North‘ .Carolina’s ratification of the repeal amend ment would affect legislation in this state on prohi ! bition; second, he does not “propose to line up with the liquor crowd on aMy proposition.” /v • - r -'V -V: '■ gtk L. "Mr. EL E Faison at Clinton is interested in the^ ISneedsborough article. He wishes- to know if . there^ ’is any connection, between he Sneyd family for wbier that was named and Sir Robert Sneed* (or Sneyd) . for whom Sneed’s Ferry was namedt But you may depend upon that historic mind to find the answer to bis own .question. ■ r' .