GREENSBORO, N. C PAGE FIVE WORKING CLOTHES The spring Working carry the brands of Sweet Orr o Corduroys Prices the $1 and $1 $3.00 lip, time demands Clothes. Ve well known overalls, in and Headlight, g and same. Overalls .25, Corduroys Kahki $1.50. VanstoryClothingCo., chas. h. Mcknight, Tntsaorr ' ' PJ, ri-r-- ,r No Matter Where You Live In town or out of town, if you need the best in Commer cial Printing call on or write to KENDALL" Greensboro, N. C. Orders promptly filled at prices al ways satisfactory. W. J. SHERROD, Attorney. 115 Court Square, Greensboro CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY. Is About To Enter Upon A Broader Field Of Usefulness. A meeting of the Executive Com mittee of the North Carolina Chit dren's Home Society was held Fri day, last, February 2 5 tb, upon the call of 'Mr. .A. M. Scales, president. Messrs. Scales, Boyles, Betts, Van Lindley, Kiser and Superintendent Putnam "were present. V Consideration was first eiven in the matter of authorizing the Presi dent and superintendent to make an offer of $1,500 per year to Rev. W. A. Newell, of Tryon. N. C, to act as financial agent of the society. Mo tion was made by Mr. Boyles and seconded by Mr. Van Lindley that this be done and it was unanimous ly passed. The president and super intendent were authorized to secure another man in case Mr. Newell does not accept and to pay him the amount above stated if necessary. The rental of the building located at 519 Lithia street, as recommend ed by the special committee ap pointed to consider this matter. Messrs. Scales, Brewer and Putt man, was considered and the same was approved. The employment of Miss Stack as office secretary at a salary of $55 per month was considered and upon motion of Mr. Boyles and seconded by Mr. Kiser was unanimously pass ed and approved. The matter of the creation of a committee to be known as the or ganization committee was considered and approved and the president was authorized to appoint a chairman and two other members. The duties of the Organization committee as considered by the ex ecutive committee are to be as roi- lows : "Said committee to supervise the work of organization of a ladies auxiliary in Greensboro and advisory committees in various parts of the state, said advisory committees to consist of one lawyer, one doctor, these to aid the society in their re spective professions, and one or more representatives of the various de nominations in the different localities."".-.. It was decided that the work of the ladies' auxiliary is to be as fol lows: "The ladies' auxiliary will supervise the Receiving Home of the North Carolina Children's Home So ciety, subject to the control of the Board of Directors and the direction of the superintendent." Said auxil iary is to take the place of the pres ent Receiving Home committee, which uDon organization of the ladies' auxiliary will cease to exist. After consultation immediately following the adjournment of the meeting of the Executive Commit tee it was decided that the Organ ization committee is to consist of the following: Mr. Claude Kiser, chair man; Mr. A. M. Scales and Superin tendent Putnam, v THINKS IT WRONG. SAM SMALJL TALKS. Always Some Fellow To Take "The I Sees A Black Cloud Rising Over Other Side." longer roviuea: Colonel Sam Small who puts things in a nut shell when he talks, has surveyed the field and concludes since Underwood and others have suggested enfranchising negroes in Washington, in order to hold the balance of power on the matter of granting saloon license, that it will not be long until the Southern lead ers will return to the South and in sist on universal suffrage down this way in order to again put the saloon in the saddle. Of course Sam fails to understand that in all honesty and under the law the negro should enjoy the bal lot. If the white man took it away from him it does not follow that it right. However the Southern It seemed for awhile that every body was agreed upon the interna tional proposition that it was busi ness to "Do your Christmas shop ping early." All the newspapers carried the slogan; the men who looked upon the humane side caught the light, and long and tedious were the stories we read telling us that if we were opposed to cruelty to ani mals we should also be opposed to cruelty to shop girls. We should do our Christmas shopping early not let the overworked clerks be impos ed upon by rushing them to death at the last moment. All this looked good. It reasoned well. It didn't seem as though any answer could be made to such a humane proposi tion, but we note that one writer in the New York Sun objects. Among other things he wants to know : "What would the 'efficiency ex pert' do to the shop girls if we all got through our shopping three days before Christmas? "Wouldn't he either reduce the staff in proportion to the falling off in shoppers or run a huge 'Just Be fore Christmas Sale' to get us all coming again? "The retailers are fast killing the beauty of Christmas and are reduc ing it to a commercial scheme to sell us their wares, and while I have no objection to doing my Christmas shopping early I do resent the im putation that I do it to save the shop girls. "If we all did our shopping very gradually for several months before Christmas hundreds of needy, worthy clerks would be out of em ployment." : So there you have it. This man thinks if we all rushed pell mell days before Christmas there would be no extra demand for sales people and the merchant would really forget there was a Christmas on. Mavbe he is rieht. Mavbe. after all, it takes the Christmas spirit to buy Christmas goods. It is hard fo get a man to buy his coal in the summer and if he does he can't en thuse. The man who would go down town in earlv Novemhfr tn huv Christmas goods would buy only half what he would buy if he went out purposely, in Christmas times, to do Christmas shopping. Always two sides to a piece of bread and some times both sides carry butter. NOTHING DOING. was negro would not vote for the bar rooms. At least not in North Caro lina. He has found that prohibition is the salvation of his race, and therpf nre Sambo f or the most part would vote always to keep the sa loon door closed. Rut as Sam Small is always inter esting, we quote what he had to say and which is as ioiiows: "Hnw soon. now. mav we look for these Southern leaders of the National Capital liquor negrophiles to return to tneir nome states ana smind the slogan of enfranchisement of the negroes of Alabama, Georgia and every other prohibition state in the 'black belt in order that prohi bition may be repealed in them and the hellish liquor traffic now almost wholly a Northern institution, riot virtnrinnslv over the South aeain. riding upon the backs of a redoubt able and debauched negro elector ate? "It will be intensely Interesting to hear Senators James, Lee, Under wood and Hardwick back home ex plaining to their people why it was necessary to enfranchise the negro voters of the District of Columbia in order to Drotect 300 Capital City saloons from the fatal grip of con gressional prohibition." All of which sounds good; all of which is impossible and improbable: all of which however, gives Sam a chance to hit Old John one and show that he has lost none of his vigor at a type writing machine. WOMEN DRINKING HARDER. English Reports Show The English Women Hit Booze. A Bald Headed Man Always Sorry He Lost His Hair. WOMAN DETECTIVE. 0 Wm Woman Plays Fortune Teller And BANK. Jul i&nS. Can-President Wm.J.Holloway Cashier THE BANK OF THE TOWN WeStrive to Oblige and Accomodate SWINGS We Issue CertilEicatej of Deposit bearing FOUR, oencent Interest $"Jfi9 opens you an Account 3UEEBIND i.y 5URE FIND (safe deposit boxes FOR RENT Burglar 5 fireproof Vaults - want tkinn Pattv thr vemt vourfeusineas. ' . I . Durham, N. C. A Mrs. Pond who looked like a gypsy fortune teller, principally be cause she dressed like one; had a wagon and assumed the role, played detective in the ' celebrated Arden blackmail and arson case, and Claimed to have secured the evi dence that made it interesting for those on trial. We had hoped the detective busi ness would always remain for man. The new woman can do the man's nnrt in all the : grand and noble things of life- but we sorrowed when she became a barber: we re gretted to see her a bar maid but to know that she is going to De a detective well, we have no more use for a detective than we have for a rattlesnake. Of course it may be justified but the man who Tor monev eains the confidence of a fel low brother and then betrays it may be all right, but not with us. We never believed in seining or trapping game fish. We never be lieved in shooting a bird on tne ground- and certainly we do not en dorse the man who works nimseu into the confidence of a fellow brother, and then, for money, be trays. But perhaps it makes no dif ference just what we thmk. Two Years. A London dispatch says that the annual reports from the minor , n. . J courts of Lancashire show an in- a uaiu ueaueu mau win not auiuri , , , , . .. . . . . . ,. . . , crease in drinking among women in it, but he regrets to see his hair fall- , . . . . , . . - . the manufacturing districts. At mg. He tries all kinds of restora- . . , A. , " , v a i v Rochdale, the justices records show tives, but finds, alas, that nothing , . , .,'...,, . r. that during the year past 173 men will induce the hair to "come back.' and 122 women were arrestel for He knows what the matter is, but drunkenness, against 228 men and he has never taken steps to prevent only eighty-seven women in the year it previous, nocnaaie s prusyeiiij, uuc The barber will sterilize his razor, to the fact that the women of .the hp will nw a fresh clean towel he laboring classes have all the employ- w5A?ve?n ment they wVd . . . ssenaration allowances from soldier- maKe tne latner out aiter tne Baa nuSbanda. Is held responsible for the I8 coPeted- ttoe. :-'8anmSairh?,h K increased drinking. There is one brush, the germ, license in the town to every used, and of course that ends it. If Ttt,ranr.9 the germ theory Vn Nearly aU of the manufacturing with germs that cause baldness can p -ne brUtSetdn 7l. brS i, free It chief constable of Wigan says within from that on the germ is free It months the number of can make a whole community bald- liaitintr hnra ha9 nloat dou. headed. Men know this, but there . "r , , . i i uim. nas never jei uecu a. aj i win A few exceptional points show an brush is out of the question. To use improvement. a new brush everytime you get shav ed away from home would be too expensive. ,iu cany uue wiiu juu n-j.v. would be out of the question. And The Great "Expert" Comes On With OLD DOO WILEY. so the germ. has spread until it is a world of bald heads and there is nothing done to protect the coming generation Another Horse. Old Doc Wiley, who couldn't mi.lifv aa an OYTiort Yiiit wlin Tenses uciauvu. ijuaui; j x- And we'll bet ten cents that but as the most wonderful man in the world when it comes to a knowledge few people have given thought to the suhiect ever figured on how to overcome the spread of germs that of pure foods, is out now with lurk in hair brushes at barber shops. o -, . LO, THE POOR FAT MAN. He scheme to check marriages, says, this Great Man does: "There is a great wave of misin . , w . WS4I, formation spreading over the coun- A Moral Here For All Men A ith Too . DD.Qrfl t -,tHtion ventila- Much Fat On 'Em. tinn and sanitation. Congress should consider measures to relieve the sit- If you are too big to climb the lad- uation. The race cannot be preserv der have a care. This is a story ed wnen persons uixeny uiic6 worth while coming from Cleveland, tbe nrst iajs oi naiure Ohio, because it carries a moral with r Jim Davis, the 19 year old white youth who was convicted of beat ing his sister, will perhaps better understand the laws when his term of two years, given by Judge Glenn Brown, of this city, expires. n might not have been a bad idea to have made it five years. ut as me fellow was only 19 maybe by the time he becomes of age he will Know better. Thpn he wants all candidates for v ' I liitll I l(lgC XAaU LLAUvU wvw w m. - it which need not be told. The story 5 rnT,tAd and wants Congress to make it a National law. If such a . , ' I inw pvpr oes on the books there Dwight Nuting. Pj'"1"; wlll be more illegitimate children in who claims to be the largest man country among the whites than1 in Cleveland, mscoverea a nre ,a a g were'before the war am0ng froei swnrk of the Fulton road l"f c , . . i colored ueopie. n iwu ucuyio bridge near Vega avenue southwest, coioreape v v t be Mr. Nuting saw .teDiaze iroma wedding or if not a wedding they window of the Leisy, Brewing Com- man and wife. pany, where he goes frequently bun- gcare put out Dy men of flav niehts. Seizing a fire extm- v A-.erfnl guisher, the deputy -sheriff ran out d on the briage ana cumoeu uuu - 0 DULL TIMES t HpIow the deck. When the fire department arrived 1 hp bad nut out the fire but couldn't climb back up. They hauled him up with ropes. The Georgia Spirit. The Eight Hour Demand. Many big business man over the country are pointing out the fact that if the eight hour a day demand is met by the railroads, business must suffer. The idea is if labor costs twenty per cent more, some body must pay that twenty per cenx. Trade is a little dull these days and in order to stimu late and encourage buying we are giving away the big gest end of our profits. Read er, if you are looking for the big end of a bargain you can certainly get it here. J. M. HENDRIX & COMPANY The Home Of Good Shoes. Cartersville put on the map by Sam Jones, comes out with a lynch- I . - - I UUUJ IU01 - - ing. It was a white mob of course, be figures are ample to prove the and still the spirit of the Marietta rauroaas cauuot pay it " j t, . ..nnHin nn I nrocon T lncniues. 11 luuie ucisuv muraerers maivuca 6icu.u.j " , , . . (1, .... j vi arm raonrH I barrpd -tbe consumer eets it in tne to keep the clearance house figures neck. The railway men are making of mob violence to the front, ana aemanas euuieij iou muv 1 wants it understood that the average I nog. ... !H V rx-ntx a n Q V I " tnis year win pei uno uc - A Weather Vane. Better Use What We Have. No weather vane was ever kept Ptpfnrp we send nublic money to more busy than President Wilson. reclaim land in North Carolina we He seems to change his mind every tv $?nend some dav T.ike an Inexnerienced sailor Hall UCLICI Mr - tr I .f " - money inducing settlers to come and out with a sai boarhe . does, , t n- utiiiTP -what has always Deen re- aeriu -"c 6o. i - - utilize wnax "asaiwajr u ItiM.n and almost every day he shifts ciaimea. -a 1,7 ,,:and fbat l why he is I Si weSSfre there Peo- liable to run into the rocks. pie to cultivate it. No Joke. The Expense Of It. Two negroes, Ernest Lowery and It certainly is no joke about the George Posten, were electrocuted at rt-ir rpnnblican camDaign in this Raleigh last Friday. They had kill- state and the way the dimmycrats ed a Gaston county farmer, Grant looked in on Kaieign ana reaa me uavia. ui. -"j e." papers next day shows that It is in of having an electric chair when the air that there mignx do bo me- i wajuo D" ; thing doing. ao just as wwrBm uuws KEEP GREENSBORO K10MEY It! GREEMSHORO Help Greensboro people. Take your Life Insurance in the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. And enable us to loan thousands of dollars more in your county. In addition to its first mortgage loans in Guilford county, the Jefferson's monthly salary list is of more financial value to the merchants of Greensboro than a factory having a weekly pay roll of over $1000. Policy Contracts Unexcelled A Message By Mail or By Telephone, Which? "Every letter written in a business house costs somewhere between twenty and fifty cents. The stamp is the smallest item. Stationery, stenographer's time all bring the actual cost of a letter higher than most people imagine.,, ju. h. auinu It is more Economical to Telephone Not only does it actuaUy cost less to telephone your message but you reach your man instantly, talk over your business per sonally, and get an immediate reply. Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station. ii Hotel Clegg The Hotel Clegg has been for many years the home of the traveling man, and no pains are spared to make every guest experience a home-like feeling. Splendid table ser vice, first class rooms and beds. The Hotel Clegg is con ducted on the European Plan and each guest pays only for what he gets. The traveling public is cor dially invited to give us a call Just across the street from the depot and yet "right In town" W. F. Clegg, Proprietor. Southern Railway Premier Carrier of the South Traversing all the Southern States, connecting all the principal cities, re- sorts and affording qnlc , convenient and np-to-date service between points. Throngh trains from all the Southeastern territory to Washing- ton, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York. Throngh tickets sold and Pullman reservations made to principal points. Use the Southern for SAFETY, SERVICE, SCENERY. For rates, schedules or any other information call om your agent or n Titm C. G. PICKARD, Passenger and Ticket Agent . . Greensboro, If. O. B. H. DeBUTTS, in vision passenger Agent, r . - all X T3;innTV X mm all V ! Iti JM?M Fragrant Flowers iMLd sweetness and beauty to their rorroundings. Like a magic wand tnv what Is most beautiful la nature. All the garden and hot i house heautiea promptly delivered to yoo. et us rasnion yur loirsrs for you Into exquisite designs H. Sieinsmstz, Florist, b-X-sgb; kobth Carolina WHEN times are good and when times are bad whether your plant is running overtime or half time-the econ omy of power adjusted to ac tual needs is obvious. For per fectly adjustable, economical power buy electric service from Central Station. "HOT MERELY ELECTRIC POWER, BUT ILLUMINATING SERVICE" N. C. Public Service Co. Phone 3 j and 331.