Newspapers / Everything (Greensboro, N.C.) / Feb. 24, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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v. PACE TWO The Tret Wc Oh. We,hae o.'rn'ffi cl the fact lhal easy 'a. c;a U hcM din and la.; to make ' ri t'fxis of worry. He thisg that !o ect rti!;r e:. he ccrji?c tsp all ls f tfrr,5r, i'Ja them to nir h:m. It is all rijh: a t cauilo-..: t i rerfccily proper to t-flvete the impo.b!e may happen fca-yetj to jv.. tut too many of w bt;r. on t-snecr-itary tfry. The c4 lr-e ishen cc:r.e is frcct cf , tut t rol httd them. They rtad: Tl ! . Mart t fcf ft I Ik f err. rrhap net ia lhec colsmn bul on ether pa;r. r hate fcisicd crjl bu 04 Kcfc;r-on Oytof, in lhat volume of delight lo rata aid boy, spent a mo l wretched c:jbt on the it'asJ when he fern landfd after hit h:p wreck. He saw h;mif a!-w; he knew lhal he mail cht hi way. aed l he fcm thing he d;i wa lo :r:d marnr h-o-jf nd:er 2 irte in k:h he ctM 'crn lo t-c prc from an at- ...... . A lack by Vi! feasts m ihe Icr.cly land. Fiea.'y he foaaJ a trre paur C3. ar.4 m it he a rr.oi fr:chf4 aa4 mfab!c cst. KbI ht frU tcs;r ffrcn I he a:uck. In Ihe tr.ofctrc c( the cet !ay ht irei4 the cn:ifeTI34 4 fo-r.J lo h !c!i;hi n4 cry hie thai there ain't a wi!4 tal on if. flsl ht hJ c!;rr.h 1 the tret arj in thai Dc fe rfhap hairJ b 4 moal lhai he (cl it BssnceiMfy i n?e. Wc a!!, alwaji. art c;K;l;-r tfrr$ ft eca the wI4 lxiU htcli j cc? eti:. T.e t;!4 teau ha-nl ct, bal they iJ rs a;:ak u tca- Iher art con t::e ct. How n-.any c c ccT)r. How rr.an c! tcrcw irchJe. ar.4 fira'Jy ts4. a the c'4 tf rta4. that ihe ha4 lack h;h t loclrl tct ce tcr carr.e to kr.ock tt fiat, ar.4 r i-iat r i the ioh!e lhai t feart4. Hs-trun tai-rt i let tht,rol ptl I he arse. or,e cf c further than other in ctsjsrr ihe ; wr.f rf c art co-ck tztt lha; c.rr.f :h:?;x t to har-yn befcrt cftx. c wa:e rr.ef.ul cccr ar.4 t!al rft terr-anrr i e:htsr that af lo Vhrrt Ctrcanr. Can Knrer Get RIfihv ' !l i fteatact to rea4 U ihif l'ice fooJ; il l'ea4nt to woer hv the alue ditin t take ;errr.aojp erioul3r in her tuffxtttion of f-eace Lul the Average Man waali lo kxjow, ar.J niU alwaya wasi lo know, about Belrium. There Kfmi lo be the one ipot in all thu wtrld that Germany violated. "Ihe IiUlc coun try of IWr!u.:CT wa neuiral. She bad insisted thai he be a neutral covatry. and her King and her pc?le had believed their righta were ro: to b-e diiiurbe4 because her neutrality wai ucderitoo,!. Gerwaay imariced. without thinkjcj, that he could croi Dcfgiura. o throJ?ch her terri tory and rip the ery uU out of Trance be- fore brrakla.t. Tfcu wa ia program, ii a mell coopered by Gerrsuny and bad that happened God only know tvhere the war would have ended or where Germany would feat e poe. Bui tt didn't happen. Tliai destiny vrfekb hape our end made it icipotiible foi Ihe German army to Ret into i ranee that moraine before brtAfatt. Tlx Gate tf Pari did not open, not because Franc. a prepared, but became Belgium wnuld itol al low it, That little country, loday famihed, bleed ing, jsarring, made ihe prfe stand lhal rsd m-iUtaritm imoib!e in the world. Had Bel gium winked the other eye. nodded wbile they aled l.ermanv tod nciM cavr oeen in Ihe juddte diciaticiT 10 I world aitoundrd. But il didn't harden. And thetefore the r.h!oxeher. ihe toie, ihe maa who deniM. muit omehow come out of hi hell anu iae off hi hat to the thing men call destiny. Some call il Cod, And it i God. There wa Ihe ho!e thing in a minute. It wasn't a cranditand r!ar. Il iut happened. And when thir.g iuiI happen, take on your hat to thai Hrghtr Toirer which doc hap thing. Belgium i iiinjcr. Why. if it pertormed uch an important part.' Becaute alL thoie ho hate worked lor the loodncia of the world hate uered. Throughout all the hi ak the and how. Ac4 h-iw. ak the phwctcjhft. thatl te pretrr.1 th; crpt tti: l jx)-sr c:v a jo-j p4 a:or.g; treat m m , a -I er-fti a rvate a;i men treat ar. J then rtt ihe o!J. o!4 trv.h Emit fctr l r jc-s? i zX lack lhat alter atl there i en!hL-x m thU re!4 bst to lot oce another. Gratpr-r;?ttiy. aarK;o. caic:it jeal ea. (: I m:h a drrt ftr retere of wr-r,e-'thisx thai nrtr happerrv. m??y a man ha teen I chtri t. the du"!y fua4 cf death, rim erai:e. ppy, tiherea hi t a:h m rh: hate htn cne cf ft an i toy. Ds-n't tBrery ra, tcery. Great pro-e-;3C ta has! dan to ihe run who krvow hz crrd;:ce are a.trr hrj; who kro dear crve he: a; death door; who k&em lhat hit i5ream a i ar.;V;:cr. hate teen csrtahted; tib ksoT lhat enmemf! d;u:rr fo!owt ft al fo"mt fatter; ytt up bcb the other ftZaw with r-;:;rx countenance, well fed and wtll gre:mei. ay: OM man. dsa't AcJ jet that the tre rh-IotfhT the keji:ne and "the keynote cf $zt wery. t.a: t cri. " 5cmtt.:.r:f we tf itf if wfnr i a diteate wt mvr.irr if a man ct'd. by ioe !ow an4 aixn: pece era4;a:e it frrm hi fvitem. Ve wen'er if the retmerMaJ lale of woe which we- ir:i pcZen-en i real.'y a dete!?pmec! of I-ifaie er t i: ss a piece cf id.ocy which we think hzl J beccme current in ihe go;p cf the lawn Take is t-day and men are wtrrtinr oter torr. the toad of thoie who have tried to brine to belter and h:gher thing have suffered. Thi from thritl down and th to how u that the road t hard to travel. Belgium will rot be wiped oft the earth.. There will come a dar of tettletr.ent There will come a day when her tratail will ceaie, and she will stand among the Natioo of the earth glorified and resplendent. She carried the cros. She alone -ted the world from a military despotism which would hate meant untold misery and cnto'd woe. That i why thi country should open her pure; why thi country idsould see to u that Belgium doe not tuner jbc pangs 01 cucger. iter part wa important jne p'ated it and she stand today .the brightest star in the firmament. Wrecked, crushed. bleeding, starting, ahe is yet on the map of the wcr!4. and she will remain there. Watch ihe end see to it that this prediction, it not in tain. ' o TbeOld School ' We hate in this prim shop a man who talks about Long IVimer. Time was happy were the cctccme cf Germany petition ihey are rrisci'y preparing fcr the worn, if war ccmc. There are met wha wceder if the money mar ket wtU g- to piece, and met her are wt:ner- ?r -r.r s:n msit l war. Men are wceryirg oter a th-oswnj thing- whicJt will rre a ti may em. ws;;e tney actrpi a ire the Wcrd cf God. they d not seers fa wcery at all over their in muetai s:. They txi xern to remember ln4t in the twtnk:5rg cf n eye they may be called epen to leate lu theater of tnfe and the wrery they grrerate. to be called to meet tne c strange ?n ;tiCj cf a chanred exist ence that d-n"l interen them. No worry Alc-Qi whether er r.ot lefcrt the great white thrsneihere will be an accounting but much wrry an 3 m-cn wm:cr whether egc will be forty-fete or t:ty cent a dorea. Dcnt worry eo. d.cnt wvrry. Jstt take thing at they cffene-. and d:at try ta make them ccme. But where i the man who can do the stustsi We lure 43 icet cf magician, men who can keep three p'a!T up in the air; men who can i-n'e the market an 3 rnake a mulsca before breakfatl ; men who cars a'mcti tsro water into w.ne: h-t .w- Tc.t, and c-sr addrei i Mi ccri. where i the man who detni worry? A k:rrl?o fcr hi ph-rtcgra;h and poitcfnce ad freMthit free: h?m wc might learn the Great cetTTtcf i-fr. ZptriZU ta!4 and d:n rre.Zdeni Wilson I. hcw. that he t tig e-ugh to ho! J dawn the-man jc6 which i mw hi. o A Hnirrd ThotxrA, Wc dia't ccn: Vm. bsj Senator Overman Ks. anl he declare that there are one hun dred thc4nd Gftr-n ;r thi country. Wen. sppcte there are. We hate the search and se-.ture law m th; ttate. and if a hun dred thiian4 German p.e ir.t to searcis tss to aKcrta a if wr are cirrjmg oter the acrr! Quart Uc l.kc 4 German might at wtTl do it as a piJ detectiie. ,s:ttc, erv;u.'y ccniered. U t"ed with German. Per hap many cf then wi'l return to thevr own country, if &et ce to woeif. And each man who petpKi ta t total lo hi Sag w!J per hap t designated 4 4 ry. If ihU country gtt into 4 ir mh Orrtany. the internal ;rie will bt ome th:ng terce. Yen can't gM tl o-sl cf 4 man t item. And wh;!c ihe Anerkan German rrwclsted lhat ihey w4; he loyal to the g cf Ihe tar and ttnpe. jet o;4 Hsman Natsre i g-svng to lake a hand. There it sch 4 th;rg a Inr for country. an4 it will manl ffj: i;If if thi raternment cof to wr with Gcrmasy. Thi we ho-i!j rva!te and dijccunt befcrc il happens - --. . - - a a m . ihe day wnen cown ice auey in lae com poticg room-Slug Two wa seraing Long irimer and Slug int had a Nonpareil take. Bsfwbra wis that?.'. - - - ' t In these new-fangled day of poinfv when ten point ha supplanted Long Primer and six pc;ni has long been known at nonpa reilwhere i the man who ued to set bour- mm geot and wnere 1 the man wco bad a bre vier take? ir-ey catc gone or mey nave come new fangfed with their notion and their way and it really once in a while does this old man good to hear the printer with hi rray beard and hi spectacles and bt paintlakinr care at: ut ti itere it any more Long rnrner on tne fcooK. Of course there i cot. The Mergenthaler cfcew cp-copy like a fcunrrr ouirtr crusher: il fcrgtu that there was ever a human being in ice equation ana ihey chime their chimes and cick along .turning out their molten metal Machinery that they are, and no beed 10 Ruman interei. Of core folk who read the'papers nowa day do rot care. They want what they get 4na 11 ecm tcey get what they want but there wa once a Romance in the Composing noom. uonc are those cay gone all of the 4ug rour and Mve and bu and the o ek- up man who had walked over all the off.ee to get a market lake. Thi. though, is shoo talk, and Greek rr. haps etcept to the old fellows here and there. -"o roi many, wno msg hi read what we arc saying. ionf rnrner yej, let it come to the hell ocx w-.ta yovr lea point. 0 The Granger. e were juit reading of something that ihe state Grange of Pennsylvania hid to do with something or other. The State Grange. . . & 1 . . --t agw year pick ytmcer when we were Ti::r.f it i$?2 or thereiboutf the State lrangt wa ihe fad. All tatea had the Grange, and Granger were at thickf as fieas 00 a country dog. But we thought it had gt?r,e down the Cume of Time. We thought the lrar.ge wa numbered with the blest but it seem that some state still have the cecer. It was a great upnung of the farmers. It wa the chance of ihe Montgomery Ward U Co. concern to make the greatest mail order fcoue ct the cay. it was the Grange lhat really starte4 the mail order busice and put on the whole people a terrible burden. And vet the Grange wa the thing that pro peed lo eliminate ihe middle can forget- . " CitiUm True. - . - fT Ci.i.w. in i .ri- alwavs broad and viewing both sides, a od knowing there are two sides to most all questions, hands tms down, and it is worth while:. - - . The Southern Railway Company ex horts its employes -to renewed cfiorts in the matter of courtesy "to ; the public There has been a very great change y ihe attitude of the railway people toward ihe public in recent years... but among snjne of ihe employes there is room for further improvement. ;Mranwblc Jh public, while demanding courtesy which is its due from the railroad folks, should make a upecia! effort to return the consid- eralion by refraining from asicine loonan and useless qdestions and doing other un necessary thing which try the patience of those who deal with the public. Some lime, a railroad man, or any individual who comes in contact with the public, is provoked to discourtesy by lack 6f con sideration from those with,. whom he deal. The bell ha runr. That i the milk in one of the cocoanuts. We exaggerate nothing when we say .we have seen men-deliberately walk into a little railway office and proceed to ask some of the most foolish questions ever cronounded to mortal man. Is that clock running? "Is that the correct uraer "wnen will the train be herer When .will it reach Kalamaroo?" or some other seaport town. . Any fool could see that the clock was run ninr: any fool knew the agent supposed it was correct in its time or he would have cor rected it. and the blackboard in front perhaps conveyed the information sought but idly sought. And the agent, busy with his train orders, busy selling tickets, busy as a man can be just about train time, must answer courteously and civilly each fool question or be voted discour teous. We are glad that the Landmark has made the suggestion it made, and we are pleased to pass it along 1 o A Little Hasty. We have half an idea that the verdict in San Francisco against Mooney, rinding him guilty of first degree murder because of the explosion of a bomb thrown by somebody, was rather hasty. Mooney bad been for years a labor agitator. He had thought dynamite. perhaps made dynamite, but there was no evi dence that he had thrown dynamite. The theory of the prosecution was 'that Mooney brought the dynamite in a suit case; that he perhaps threw the deadly bomb that cost ten people their lives but it was all circumstan tial evidence, and to hang a man on that goes further than we w ould ever fq Mooney's reputation for thinking dvna- mite seemed to be the stronr card asrainst him, and while .we always favor outline the iynamite man out of businesr, cten if he is only tTUNly of dealing in mental djnan-r-without the courage to make or thrtn ii bomb, we do not think because of ) 1 feeling against dynamiters a mat: rKu found guilty of first degree murder. However, baa I rancisco lias so o honecomhed with corruption ; San I'raJ, . feat ha roofed so manyoutlaivs. cut-tl.ic' and thieves and murderers ever inej tV days of the Virilantes. the davit when liW and Order took 4 hand and hanged a bunch of Trains me spirit 01 those days has been manifest, ban Francisco always wants to avenge herself she wants to put the stripes on somebody. Abe Reuflf was one of the vic tims of that Spitit. Abe may have been guilty, but no more guilty than a half hundred others. But because he was the cleverest of the bunch and because he was a Jew they nailed him to the cross. Mooney was per haps guilty of talking too much, but hardly guilty of murder. However, that is the ver dict, and doubtless he will go over. o His Hobbles. The Prison 'Reform. TUm VArfrtik v;Vennisn-pnotl'i'oaper.wEich.- -The legislature' is Istai'wnstdirinfr. a.u seems to have nothing but unkind words for understand it, the question of-prison reform Mr. Bryan, hands this down as one of its.edx-. An: investigation by.: the legislature reveal; tonais under tne-neaaing -uicu Mr. Bryan's scheme for a popular endunrhas died .Vi-borninV Another. ht- i TWrttin.- -Hd-rt tn thosft dottincr ine L ' graveyard of hTs hobbies. The abortion t did not muster enough supporters in the,-; senate to act as pallbearers at.it$-funeraL- : nd yet as we walk througlj the graveyard of the Bryan hobbies we see that' the tomb stones bear but few remarks sacred to any memories unless it be the immortal. Sixteen m rn. we the two nominanc paruca i this country endorsing government control of credence because Jifc i$ without the nothing except the-cloings of4 day, a wv monin, a year. ; ' It mav .haDDn- ttiat an. iiivestio-fl Be ordered but it' amduntsf, to nothing aft zl is said ;and "Morfe. ' The ' man who mvL givehis evidence 'is a .convict, and the con yict cannot "stand Vup like 2 one unconvicted and 'tell his story. -Why? .i -Because he has taken on the stripes He is a self-confessed or a selfonvictecl rtrespasser, and the State has said he has transgressed. . . - Ut -course wnat-ne ' says not given fu Pale. WTm rr4 ', . - Ia. we make. up. 6ur : report accordingly. ' But wncix we miK ine ope saa mistake is in as """MTf, . j moil imuucilCU TO (rat railtvavs : we see them- teliinfi: us that they favor univer3al suffrage under, certain condi tions; we see state after state endorsing and. outline- into effect strinrent prohibition laws ; we see the federal reserve banks; we see-free trade in aH its, frightiulness; we see, m fact, nearly everything that. Bryan introduced as a hobby in other years a Fixed Fact in our pro finrim of todav. - - , . .".'., ViII the Virginian-Pilot please tell us, with free, but we make bold to say and have often the exception. of . the free silver. foolishness, said,. and. perhaps, we could. .'not furnish the where lio'an has lanea to:De a voice in wc Wilderness? Will it tell us; please,,where his hobbies have 'miscarried, and will it please rush suddenly to the front and prove" that Brvan hasn't been the afreatest reformer of the age in politics and in all things in which this country now seems to be interesting it ielf? : . We understand, that he. refused to longer remain a rubber stamp for, Woodrow Wilson. We understand that, he was ultra on free sil ver but we do not understand that the grave yard contains any of his,. 'dead loves. In fact, everything that Bryan has fought for is today a live issue peace more man any men it not, why this watchful waiting in Mexico why this hesitation in the Gennarry. episode? Bryan has been essentially the big man -of the. democratic party. It was Brvan who nomi nated Wilson at Baltimore, it was Bryan who. saying that anything is wrong but when men mree limes neaoea nis party ana carried u-to defeat; but with it all Bryan has been the man who has formulated the principles .upon which the two parties today stand before the country. aou cant deny it but of course vou will try to deny it. o :a ni5. incury: wjn. not go witn many of the . men : outside . the Walled City. This theory : will, nnti cri-with thn whrt .tmr .-w jri. wllKinp n dirept proof, that many outside the prison are . guuiy as minyv men msiae trie prison .This is: a proposition that looks harsh, but we all know it is a fact. : There are men today inside the Walled City who are guiltless of psemeditated crime. That they are guilty of crime there is no doub t; but "the law which presumes . so much has never ftfterested Jtw aVid d6es not and cannot make' that tfplirat. qistmcnon wnicn men Know. ;.. ' ' ' ' tj' ' ... - . " - - r - -. " If it be .charged that there '.are shortcom ings in prison management; iflit appears to those who have charge of those for the nonce held in subjection, it certainly lefoks like there should be aa investigation of the charges pre ferred. Men are not telling tales out of school which they cannot with some degree of rea- suoicuci5 ' suuiwuuiic. - XW5" paper is nnt Of course a. whole lotef us would like to see the Coler road, but the question is: Would we vote the two hundred thousand dollar -bonds? From our viewpoint we would vote: Yes." ' o ticg lhal were h,e knocked out ihe Granger wtaia cue no marKeu o- It seems a true bill that Germany doesn't to tomciH ioc oven aci u it can keen m away irom mediated. it. There will be nothing pre- Aa It Approacivea. As March approaches we understand that the O. Heury wUI take shape at lent the wtifk w;U be commenced. When that build ing it abotit six stories high, with a roof on it. i3c coiiaunr ooes will enmmmre in 1 oeuete. 0 The Thing. Only a day or so ago we wrote, as wc sang befoie the stars had set, that a man ought not worry. We quoted an old. familiar verse we introduced some of our own home-spun philosophy and several people have spoken to us about it and thrte different ones have written us. One letter, rather interesting, we quote: Mr. Lditor: iou say don't worry and here I have a sick husband, a little child who cannot go to school, and the doctor tells me he thinks I have tuberculosis. Why shouldn't I worry, and what else can I do?" inis irom a woman. we know. AnA hm - m m wm M W a.ks what else can she do. Well, does it be come us as a grave and careful chronicler of ttic trungs which hapoen as the busv xorA Spins 'round to tell thst lone woman what tn Co? bhall we, a stranger and not a profes sional, break in and say the word? Wc rather mmic u is up to us. And this is our done: Suppose that the end of the world were to come tomorrow. Suppose it was scheduled, and suppose yem had, to have an important pan in the street parade.; Could you help it - j v. ncni -iu cc in Ana it mmt back the same thing la the little family affair. Admitted that you hare a sick husband; let us understand that theiHe child cannot go to school; and let us, and here with hesitancy admit that maybe the Doodle bugs are d.nc ing on your lunrs. even with all ihi should one. accepting the inevitable, worry? Life, doesn't hold all ihe existence beyond ihe grave will Juve its rewards. Take things at they come, but. do not let them come against your will, if you can help it. If vou can t help it. and xour 'ritndt take what vou tt tike it ehrfttll bravely be happy. Ti nv. t vti A .,. it snail oe easy. The mind U mutrr body-get it right and all will be well. ! - 1 .i Q i Of course. a we understand it. the Giv Planner could show us how to save the infer est on the Million Dollars the city now owes.' Let us nasten to the uty runner. And then the Gty Planner miirht also tell us how about conserving the water suoolv. As it is now those with nice lawns generally use the squirt in the summer regardless of ex And then as was written, the water nines. tbeyfrore. Wondrous Wise. The Wilmington Star, which hardly ever twinkles out of harmony, when other morning stars sing together, has this to say anent the bill fathrrcd bv the state pharmacists: ! I i!C pharmacists, having representa-:t-': ':;. c legislature, proposed a bill of - id it has been passed, while ii by Ihe State Board oi -n killed. The pharmacists' . -omcs operative upon rati-'-: Hs the sale, offering for r iting in this state of any - ( r device purporting, to. cure; 2 ' 'ror which the orthoddx medical :.' 4!;'jritis declare no cure ha$ been i"oui:d. 1 he penalty for violation is 'not exceeding Sioo for each ofTense." This may be a victory of the. pharmacists against the state board of health, but it is' just as dangerous as the original bill, which was a scheme to boost the doctors. Will the old Star which twinkles down Wilmington way tell us, in candor, what' is the "orthodox: medical authority?" -Will it go back with us to fifty years ago a bard head may yet be raked up in the office to antwer and explain what Stokes and Bell, perhaps the best au thorities then, meant in telling us that water should not be administered to a typhoid fever patient? Will it tell us vhy men and women, regardless . of their physical condi tion, were bled, no matter when or how, but always bled because the letting of blood was the only thing? Will it tell us why . now the ice bag is good for the typhoid fever pa tient and why they feed us on stuff to give who are bearing: the yoke: men who are sub jected to prison rules; men" who have been detected , in crimes of one sort and another tell us that things are rotten it looks like we owe it to ourselves to see if , the truth has been told. And we say'it for a fact 'that the 4 truth can come but of a prison house ?s easiJr . as it can come out of a -church Because its ' our belief that because a man is in prison h is not necessarily lost to God or lost' to So ciety. Let us investigate I . ' .x :v 1 O j. ; ' " ; w '"' -: The prison investigation rriay Amount to nothing but it looks like there will be some thinc: 'doing:. -' : " While" it hasn't said so, the State Board of Health in some of its.'BulIetins 'printed at the state's expense, might explain that a bath is worth while. ; - -o i-L. It Ii The Old, Old Story. The Durham Sun urges support . for a Sal- vation Army Rescue Home for? young girls who are led astray. It speaks of the foolish ness , of . a state Jaw . that mate's . the ae. of .'consent idequaieV4$uth :presented.. .- . V-V--.1;' x::' ." vr. - And it is this: ; : : ... . . If the people of. Nprth Carolina -feel that a girl has the right to consent to 'sell herself at a tender age; if they feel th4t it ;makes no dif ference if she goes -to hell beforc she knows what she is doihy, why build homes to take care of them? . - V ' ; :; Why not, build .tke wall around them be fore they make the break? Why offer induce ments to men to ruin therjij nd'1 then build homes to care for them after they are ruined? Isn't there something in this thbught? Of course . we kriow jtjiat we .delight in tend ing the nigger to the road because Jhe has not and never had: th6 moral coirage - to pass a hen"roost----but'ShQuldfwe deliberately say thatx ah infant had a legal-right to' niake a contract bartering her immortal; soul at the age of six teen but. before, she could, barter her house and lot, if She owned one, sbe , must have rarhH further rrtatilritv? " ;'. - ' - us blood and not take it from us? Will it go things which are the thingslwhich are the t l H A i Aire Af A. ArlMnSIIC A I 1 9 I ' V m. f - m t m - I. .. - laws of a commonwealth which now and then has the nerve" to talk about its , patriotism and lis acnicvcnicuis. As we view : it, and as back to the days of Aesculapeus'and tell us when and how doctors have agreed? What is a medical authority and how many schools of doctors are there, and why should any of them be accredited? We are not particularly pessimistic tonight as. we write, there is no tooth aching and no bunion palpitating but tell us, pray, arid prove to -us what is an or- thodox medical authority and who . has de fined the term? We Would like to know. We would like to know if it isn't true and if it isn't a fact that medical authorities from the tjme medicine started from the day of the apothecary carrying the pot all of. them disagreed, and if it isn't true that every new theory that comes along has peopled the graveyards. If we are wrong, tell us so but prove it v . . : -o ',. i ... . "' , Of course this wet weather isn't a part of the. Glorious Climate but it seems to. be a part of the Climate. Just what you may con clude to do about it is problematical. o ' f .." A Grouch. ' ';. Old Man Dan Coble of the Oxford Ledger, old enough to know better, and better than to be old enough, puts this into type: You can almost always tell by looking . at the girl whether she spells her. name MEdithM or "Edythe." we view it, ann as . we,-have always viewed it, a girl should not.be considered in tellectually capable of partinWitn her virtue unless she was dd enough, ia law'.' to part with'her propertyor mafie 4 contract Jbr a piece of real estate. Arid the .men who think otherwise think of lust and not of virtue. Are we right ?4 . ; c -. ' ' ' o ' , Mr.. Cone suggests water metres for all who use water or" ho metres at allzOctat that would mean about .fifty ihousanda yrar deficit to the wafer"fujul;, - - - .' ' :r-S4:iVlr-K4 "O V"L "J V . . - v. v It Accumulates. The evidence that our prison, system is as rotten as rdt 'gets to be;acctrmulates. The legislature has a sacredi and important duty to perftirm There is no:use to'tell our read ers that convicts have xas may. rights as a cur dog.' But having; them, they have not been accorded i them. ; The .story, . we s print ed th6 other day concerning:-the Caledonia farm is being proved true. " Arid such horrors as . were there depicted aStouhd . the dullest mind. The legislature is' now in session. No longer is the evidence that of-a. man with a rrrnh . but there is plenty to prove that the un, no, m wm-nui uo. yyc nave Known I whole system musi uc cnangea, ana a general -tdtth ana we nave icnown -tAythe; both Kweedinef out must nappen. of them sweet-faced girls, little earth angels they were, and whether one had a bad spell and: the other didn't was no fault of the fault less day.. There is nothing in a name, the, Master has so declared,.and certainly it makes no difference how it is spelled. The parents We do not want the prisoners to live on an gel food; we do not want them - to sleep on beds of down; we do not ;wapt;,themto be given special privileges, but we ,dp insist that they should ;be ttreated as humanely as the averaire man treats NmYhogs If thi is done, and ifreformi are made that should he made in ner teens, dui ciiin is always tAith. and North Carolina can be . proudof her lesisla ii iw .v.v. iw. itv4. suuuiu noc De I xurc. it is her own burden; m the brighter lie-ht h knows she made the mistake. Dan should not talk that way. - 1 ". o-t ; . -And iust now the man who thinks lWt. going fishing next summer bur a" salt mack. erel for breakfast and dreams pleasant dreams. If we could get the Coler road it would help some. Aria. we can git it if we go after it. .(gasoline, goes up in;price, tat the:joy rider doesn't ,seem - to care.-vAutomobiles mult'101 arid people wonder where and how.
Everything (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 24, 1917, edition 1
2
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