.1 ' 1 V V Trade AT.EOME V J AT HOME Alvayo ! Always ! L smzn crry, N. c. Grit ) " - - . - - - -.v.-,.,-. - . . -. ' : - . f ' " ' -X . - i , ' - - . I I , . . - -' - , ? V - ' i: U u n .t "-.1; BY AL FAIRBROTHER A THANKSGIVING Country Boy Learns Too Late, Alas! (For Everything by William "H Ross.) HERE; is nothing doing on the . farm' ssnd 7 the boy; 'and he lef t it for a big- city to get ' rich as he had' read of other poor country boys . do- ing.,Vhenr hearrived there lie -got a job lifting heavy barrels on ;?nd oii vagc :s and lived in a .room.so small Le could i:ot- ret.hjs old hair, covered trunk into it. He had a big appetite but did not earn enough to board-where food rwas - fresh and abundant; i.asrit1' was ;at home -on the farm. . v' ..'.V " : '?V r. He - was often hajf hungry- and he learned to drink; smoke and stay outs late, at night, isoon losing the glow on' the'xheek wliich made him so wholesome looking: When at last he' .asked for a raise in.pay his boss gruffly -answered "no!"; 'Then he .went after " another jr'j nd got work in; a banbom.. There he .v 1 f.aors,' cleaned spittoons; and' v,did all ' cf menial work;- He hoped-an time to . .ix.: He lived off the lunch countermand ' -! 2 got; a -"chance toolv sty ;iiips of .:. liv. .... . . ,S i 1 : - - . - the saiooniceeper , xugnt :ick him outrof tt; div;;; " -as 'r. fight' and iY - r"' ' cr' - !lal. His i . .'. !.j a'.jn 3 be t smeued ,al fjie .i-iuagto. t),-Ci.uiiu io : back of f henhouse ;and rest by the brook v.. Jer. the trees,-He -would like to haVefed . the , horses, thei cows and the pigs again; even V 3 f he had to get up before dawn. He never again would complain of . getting out of bed at any hour if be only could open doors and "walk afound as he pleased. ,;To be free to come' and go as he liked no pleasure could . .equal; that! :.:'V '. . ":';h At last they took him to the prison office I, and gave ; him some money, a suit of clothes, new shoes and a new hat. '? h-h "You are free now," h they : said : "Your -term' has expired. Don't ever do anything to bring 'you back. ... i He went back to the farm on the first train. It was the day b ef ore Thanksgiving. Fqlks did not know him at first. His face, onceso round and rosy, was long and bleached by prison pallor. " There was something about - bis walk, which years of lock-step had instill ed, that made people lo6k at him. He stood oh J the '.'station platform and gazed ! f around. ;Not a shingle seemed qhanged. There, was Uncle Si loading groceries into his store " wagon. Bill Jones was sitting on '-the baggage truck just as he sat - the morning 'the -boy : had left s for the : city: ' .There was ;' AMandy Jane Perkins. She had been such a ' pretty girl when she sang in the choir. She came across the track dressed in a calico gown . and wearing a ' sunbonnet. Her sleeves were r.oIled up - and - her arms ,: seemed big, red - and oarse; Yes, she had changed. The convict . iid not know she had married Sam Gray. She looked at ' the - stranger curiously while she talked to Uncle Si about the groceries she wanted left at her house. But the convict did. ; not notice that. He was intently watching children who had come into the world while he was immured from it. Once he had been as happy, innocent and care free as they were then, -What would they do? Be healthy, happy and content in the old home, or wicked and foolish in the big city as he had , been? When he ; turned down the road, Mandy Jane said to Uncle Si : "Do you know who he is? That's Tom Johnson he's been in pris on : he killed a man. Isn't he dreadful! I shant sleep a wink to-night with sich a char acter in;town! I -declare!";" exclaimed Uncle bi, peering i;hrougrh horn spectacles at the figure slouch ing down'the road. "I swan I can't see what lie s after here. 1 11 speak to Amos. Amos was the village constable. ; .There were no telephones in the village and nobodv oassed the convict on the road but now the news seemed to spread ! At every house people he' had known from childhood -oeeked at him from windows arid doors, Children he had never , seen before ceased their olav and gazed at him in wondering fear, or fled into houses to 'hide their, faces in ' mother's anrons. . , ' - .', - "How did they know I was coming along the road?" Tom asked of himself.- He was o dazed that he did not seem to feel it -"ich then but deep io.his mind and heart he, i.uew it was aeronizing. , . . -' : v The houses were unchanged, there was lhe i same turn to the road and the hills looked as- green and cool ' as ever. But still it was so different all was so different. : He shut his eyes to recall the pictures which had'haunted : t " - - Heon, but he was tree now ana SUBSCRIPTION $1.00 A YEAR, SryGJJE'tOPY B CENTS FOOLS NOT ALL DEAD Mod Adam And Eve In ern Maine Woods; EVER AL ways' theie are of get- " At Vv'- ting into-- print, and one of the MVji ways is Jo make a fool of your- seitKio sometmng oaa or accen it.tric. and get a reporter on a yel low journal to play you up as having done a stunt altogether, original .' and quite beyond - the imagination, ' sane and "sober folk who do the yworth' while things in a world where the freak always gets the front page.1 , j - : " h' Just now a couple nipiiv 'Alaine a man and his wife are attempting to demonstrate that they can live, and be happy "under conditions confronting no man or woman' since the time of Adam and his introduction into the garden -of Eden. Even the primal state df the First! Man had advantages over that of the Maine adventurers,- since, according to tradition the garden in which the father of the race" found himself - was located in a mild climate and filled-with fruits, which he was .at liberty ."to pluck and eat. - t. v' Not so with, the Adam and Eve of the mod ern -storyiappearihg with stock pictures-in-V freak : pages llof the. -more or. less sensational dailies. '-T- se proposed to g:o into the. Maine .woods,in X 'bleak and checT.less month-; of,. No vember h - only f th wearing, "'.'apparel', brought vritL "i j-' tire "-rid, at the time r f their birt1. , ' . f?r r-.c-pliar res of 7 kind v.-' ..y. -n 1 . .. .':.'. zatio:.. 'ar 1 ve bevc cf fat editq try their daing;;expeiment..-;'-'- lnd 11 reports are to be1 believed they are doing it. They confess to feeling a" little bit breezy in their improvised costumes of leaves strung together" on a foundation of bark, and have ' ha4 recourse to deer skin coats made from the hide of an animal caught in a dead fall. They are also getting: up an appetite for bread like their mothers" made rather than the hard tack compounded of blood and roots. But great is . ambition and "the desire for fame! Mr. and Mrs. Estes that is the name if they live to get back to civilization will doubtless show up in the movies as the orig-. inals in the Eden story and a wondering world will gaze in awe and admiration as it puts up its coin for the latest. t "V" ' O" ' ' Whims Of The Great. " The amusements and whims of great men have always caused astonishment on the part pf the masses. Diogones thought that a tub was the only fit style of dwelling, Nero liked to set Rome on fire and then play the violin, Dr. Sam Johnson, who wrote the first "un abridged ' dictionary, used to walk around London touching street posts, Shakespeare was: given to poaching on the side, Lord Bryon, who had a deformed foot, took his chief delight in swimming, Ike Walton re garded every occupation except fishing a waste of time, George Howard', the bank burglar, bought fine pictures, Andrew Carne gie gives away libraries, John D. Rockefeller plays golf, Tom Lawson writes books, Abra ham Lincoln told stories, Carrie Nation chop ped up pictures and William E. Gladstone chopped down trees, Zion Dowie founded a city and Pasteur found the hydrophobia bug, Billy Sunday calls men to grace and Teddy Roosevelt calls them liars. And now they are saying that Germany is about to be starved out. If the starving out process is the only way to end the conflict J:he sooner this is accomplished the better. Latest advices .from Washington tell us that the White House will be "gay" following the introduction of the new First lady. How soon we are forgot. m And it looks like Claude Kinchin was rap idly becoming a national figure. where he had longed to be, so he could not bring back .. the mood of anticipation framed by bars, and cold gray walls. f A woman white haired, dim eyed, old and feeble was standing at the gate when Tom got home. - She could not see across the kitchen without her specs but she had seen Tom , a mile away up the road. He tramped with, downcast head : through the dust under the hot noonday sun. He did not see her until right abreast of the gray, weather" stained house in which he was bofm When he looked up he caught her eye. He walked up to the old woman and into her arms. She held' the close cropped head to her breast and patted his cheek with long, thin," shrivelled fingers that seemed all knuckles.; h "Mother !" cried Tom. " 7 , 1 1 i . 'A- "My jxrecious boy t'h said his mother hv, - SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1915. JOHN D. HOST TO KIDS T'HEY abuse him; they lampoon him; they nave-used him for a National pounding 1)'ag untii his flesh is hardened and his soul is sad "-and yet Old John D. Rockefeller looms up big vand necessary in1 the economy of the world.-'" Eery now and then he does some thing worth while. If it isn't tossing a mil lion info the lap of a university or endowing a foundation for scientific research it is some thing else which shows he has a heart and a soul. The other day he was at Tarrytown, his "New York home, and he telegraphed to Cleveland and invited the ninety odd thou sand school children to be his guests at the flower show. A trifle you say yet had they all accepted,, and all accepted who could get therethe admission fee would have cost Old John a little over tw'entythree thousand tlol Jars. - ' r ; ' - .r., , ' And who t!ia1l say; that in doing this any motive but tl r -jht motive moved him? If he made glad e hearts' of the school children; if lie stopped : '.'I - I;fe-to think of them, vvbo shall S3 " benefactor of his A Taswell, Virginia editor who "views with alarm' the inevitable injury of the free trade policy to American farmers as well as to American manufacturers, offers advice to Chambers of Commerce in the following: "The Portland (Ore.) Chamber of Com merce is seeking 'a practical solution of the problem of placing idle men on idle lands.' Certainly va great problem and worthy of study, but no one' remedy will be complete. There are. many things that would help, and all combined would go far to bring idle men and idle land, together. For one thing, every effort should be made to make farming profit able. No man likes to go into an occupation which calls for the labor of himself, his wife and his children unless he sees strong prob ability of fair compensation. "There have been some happenings in the last two years that ought to shake the con fidence of the American people in the perman ence of profitable agriculture. For instance, the enactment of the democratic tariff law promptly closed beet sugar factories and put the sugar beet growers out of business. Can adian and Mexican and South American stockmen began shipping cattle into the American market, cutting the American farm er's price. Argentine corn was sold in Illinois. Chinese eggs flooded Pacific coast markets. Dairy products began to pour in from Aus tralia and Europe. The war put a stop to most of this competition, but the importations had assumed a sufficient magnitude to make any cautious man hesitate to go into farming unless he is reasonably confident of the con tinuation of war or the restoration of a pro tective tariff. "There is no probability whatever that for eign, producers will be able, even under free trade, to seize American markets completely and destroy American production! What they can and will do is cut the price the American farmer receives and make tarming unproht able. That means more idle men and more idle. land. Chambers of commerce that are in real earnest about diminishing instead of increasing idleness of men and land in this country will do well to discuss this question of foreign importation from an economic standpoint, even if it is associated with, poli tics. It is all very well for chambers of com merce to avoid political questions relating to individuals, but this question of getting idle men upon idle land in America is something more than politics, especially when existing American legislation tends to put busy men on busy land in China, Canada, Argentina, Australia and other countries." The Compensation. When it is very cold there are no circuses and no foot ball. Therefore we see compensa tion in things that at first blush look against us. Winston-Salem is jubilant over the opening of a great white way. Didn't we hear some thing about Greensboro doing something of that kind about the year so long ago. , we have forgotten the date. - .'. : o - The question of preparedness has two sides. It is altogether the way you dope itout.i ; ON SALE AT THE NEWS STANDS AND N TRAINS HANDS BRYAN ONE Scriptural Quotation Calls For Another One. MAN who thinks he can make a point and clinch it by finding an apt biblical quotation is going to miss it because the Bible is so universal that it will cover al most every thought we have. A few weeks ago Colonel Bryan sent Governor Stuart of Vir ginia a parcel post package in the shape of a paper weight, and it had en graved on it a quotation from Isaiah reading: "They shall beat their swords into plow shares," and a waggish friend of the Governor was inspired to turn the point of the "peace propaganda plow" against the former Secre tary of State. In a communication addressed to Governor Stuart, he comments upon the biblical quota tion employed by Mr. Bryan, and remarks that in view of the desertion of the ship of state by the secretary in a crisis, Mr. Bryan's attention should be directed to that saying of Christ which is to the effect that "He that puttieth his hand to the plow and . looketh-back is not worthy of Me." All we could say concerning this is that Mr. I Bryan put his hand to the plow in good faith. He saw that he was being used as a rubber stamp--and, big man that he is, he gracefully pulled out. .When men -are plowing for other people - other people should at least treat them with respect. This Wilson. did not do. -v '. . 1 - o ' - . -.-,'. v- r- Navy A Necessity. -, v .' Andrew" Carnegie has said that the Unite ! impressed v lien he expressed it only because armor platehas been a big source of profit to I the Steel Trust which he organized. Howev er a man might sell rum and at the same timo say it was bad to drink. The naval question is very engrossing to all nations that have a seaboard." , It enters largely into getting and holding trade. Great Britian clings to the view that a big navy enters as largely into its commercial prosperity as manufacturing plants. In India, China and many other lands, it landed its goods in the beginning under the cover of its guns. Naval warfare has shown that it is the men behind the guns who really determine a nation's naval power. Natural born sailors make the best sea-fighters, as Napoleon learn ed when he tried to beat England on the water. The French were exquisite ship build ers although inferior to the British in hand ling the vessels they constructed. Some of the best fighting craft in the British navy were French built and captured in sea fights. Islanders are sailors by birthright and that is why the English beat the French on the ocean and why the Japs could so easily de stroy Russian fleets. Whatever may be individual opinions as to the value of a navy to a country, most governments are agreed that it is a prime nec essity. The difficulty that confronts them to day is its cefst. In Lord Nelson's time, the British government could build a thousand frigates, corvettes, sloops and other style of craft for what it costs now to put one vessel of the Dreadnought's size and type into com mission. I Just before the civil war in this country the United States was pushing England hard for the carrying trade of the world. At the close of the fraticidal struggle, the United States had a navy that in numbers and guns was second, to none. It required an immense fleet to blockade the Southern seaboard. But that war introduced a new epoch in naval construction. The Confederacy built the first iron clad when it armored the Merrimac and, at the end of the drawn- battle between that ship and the Monitor, wooden fighting craft propelled by sails were as obsolete as the oar galleys of the Carthaginians. Then .the United States settled down to building rail roads and Europe gave itself over to the war ship industry. Now that this country has Pacific Colonies, arid has taken upon itself the duties of a world power, it is a question if its naval policy for the first; decade or two after the civil war was not a mistake. It takes a long time to launch a modern warship in American or European yards, although the Japs have "shown that they can do it in about the time it required to build an old fashioned three-deck frigate. On the other hand naval architects are going ahead so fast that a war ship gets but of date in the light of improve ments almost before its paint gets soiled. The mighty British navy is. full of ships that would not stand the crucial test of actual fighting with craft launched within five years. What the ultimate ship will be like is beyond guessing. -r ' 10 ' Mr. Kitchin is in line to be the most talked about man in Atnerica. ESTABLISHED MAY, xgoa. WILL BE LIVELY 1 Something To Be Doing In Congress. HEN Congress gets down to its knitting, and the appropriation bill gets fairly under discus-" sion, there will be more . -doing in this Nation by the corner grocer loafer than ever since the davs of free' silver agitation ' or when "the Nation was confronted with the perplexing probfem : "Is Harry Thaw Insane?" From all quarters, and in all quarters you will see the fur fly, figuratively speaking. At the present time, . before the discussion takes place; before Bry an fires his long range guns .from the 1 outside and Kitchin responds wit,h his long range r -guns from the inside the average man says he .-, is in favor of it. He hasn't analyzed the ques- -;' tion. He doesn't know what it means. - He : understands that the democrats arid repub-,'-Ni licans are ior it, and naturally he is one of these. Therefore he is for it and he doesn't, know why. v V, : The average man, however, stops to think -finally, and- it is the average man that puts V' on the brake. Those for it. will contend that it is necessary for this, country to be prepared . for an assault- by - any or all .the ..nation's.,'. " the earth. "They canriqt tell ns why. ' They : cannot rioirit to' any precedent."' They . c .' -simply show, that "we should be pf c that we should build bigger ship? ships; that' we should. have -. hi : - sr,y ; th't v ' because son:-: :;h. ... it to. us and we shou ... i: to defend ourselves. Here w : powerful nation absolutely at "ti;.e .mercy oi all the other nations and while it "will tak'e ; a billion dollars to do what should be done, ! the question of cost or the question of how we can get the money is not considered or sug- gested. - " On the other hand &e man who expects to oppose the preparedness programme is going to show that we haven't the price ; we haven't ' any need at this time for all these prepara-. tions; that for all these hundreds of years we have managed to get along and that now of all times, because every aggressive and fighting nation is on crutches; has lost all their sol-,' diers.and their treasuries are depleted, there is no danger, and that if we prepare like Wil son wants to prepare, a hot headed president will be sure some day to use his power and throw this nation into a terrible war. The children who are to come after us will pay the terrible toll and a great Nation will, because . of its attempt at conquest be wiped off the map as have all the Nations -of the world as bloody and sorrowful history records it. On the one side will be the Peace propagan distson the other Wall Street and Mammon and within a short time every, man will be talking- and talking with all his force. There are indeed more firey times ahead than we have been promised in a long time and when Kitchin, from the floor of the House fires his first gu, the music will be on. And it will be music that will be heard around the world. Too Many Laws. Most of the men who get elected to legisla tures, state or national, are lawyers and of course their capitol business is to make laws.' No sooner do they adjourn and return to con stituents, families and personal clients than they join the great army of other-lawyers who devote their working hours to learning how they can devise ways and means of beating out the provisions of the statute books. It is very profitable and educative, but a nullifica tion process which confuses the people. One of the chief industries of the United States is law-making. The different states and Con gress are busy at it for a considerable time every year and tlje country at large fills in in tervals with infractions. On the side are town and city governments framing ordinances, and if it is true that the best governed coun- . try is the least governed the American re public is in a bad way. But the Americans dearly 'love to legislate." Every party has a few laws which it wants put on the books and it is as common as the announcement of an "alteration" bargain sale to hear a man say about almost anything, "There ought to be a" law to prevent it." -'' ' o ,:.v.-:.:f;. : There is a growing demand all over the state for better school houses. ' And so it seems that Greensboro is not the only 'North Carolina town whose population has gone for ward faster tharl its bond issues. . -V y . . Let us all be thankful that we . are tlive Americans rather than dead Europeans.' ; . -