i t t - . . p For C" People Vho .0 n n I . - People Who ? I 1 TMni Think 11 -.-nio, A m. KSTOUi Crt CUTI SATURDAY, AVGUST 18, 1917. ev axuE at tbx Tanfs afucDS ajtd ox raters ESTABLISHED MAY, 190a IELLS TO RING- THE SOCIALIST IN TROUBLE POPE PROPOSES PEACE PLAN DIVORCE MILL NO EASY JOB TAKES TOLL W LJ 1 Nlll "1 W , H ' cficrtjfbctc !t.i.f -to do with Mcfixsc Ikli Foe r. dry Co, of -A.Lco4i.iiL D. IX. will e&ciitc at .V icixi:afT ctrtrwcle of the btll, the v nbch will se ar.ocr.cM ut er. tit J wia nsff at tse variTOi cunoy txea cxr i 7 . R1- a! S r cu which if cille4 the ""Arui rcrnti:?! Trinity and -j. Jr tbe ehrrch belli fisgir. at d:?cftnt t:cr cf week Lfi will be tomcthtr.jj new, triTt. ycthaf. sooetKInj; worth while- la 1 rt riircruJ the ChrbtUn Sciecec Monttor -iri rf t-ct: ar.i give satsse tr.terr!irj: h:- -cvtrn;r; tr.rm. wr.ic pernaf r.a oeen I: wli that "the rtoTovil n-t for- tht the bc.il ol a :vvirt! th-'at J be rerje to pe roticc ca?hn nhm an air raid wa in r:; rr"tr,4 how rrcatly the bell r! ir.ta the bcVrtcr.4 of puhlic ff-v-f when th-re wou!J. of cotsme. -l it- Then? woId fc-e jr.ttr.c to hacUCot- I ri the b:. lr warn the fne rc a a trr" Jiff r r; far it mcc;4 n the ri ? r thrjrM to occur let r.e three hundred eiff rtxl cr.:t:'- before tht tsme, rii -y-- tit d the we 14. Eietr i uhrre ! in bv the fir.nj- cf the bellt of a ton He 4r ! i tht .V, a4 be- fcfIiet! i' w, -.-.: r.-.ft crror-er;i wnc jfi '' . . . r-.rtftrrr. ei weft, crrth. a4 SO r a fcree ther. So faHy, ..cetwjtteror ;te5 t rr.rit .own the trel.r cl a ;.v.f4 tnwp. arvi 4!. em craim. to ir.ell rn ca; ".ijrrJ ear.ron ar,4 fh;iin them into tr at 1 them in the urr;mef rtc4t. "Then. aa;r. tell er.:crei. at exxty turn. the hfe rf t! town cr the country tie. 'r were, f -r ir. ttar.ee. a! one ttrr.e. in I xc 1 bV. at the hartrt bell. ar.4 the ! Z t.!. which cattr! Uhcfer to their y--4. the 'elf ar.ir.c t ell. which f.ied the hewfi rr -rrr.r'tr.r er leairjr crl rfeantRjr. that iiser hos!l hatr an unfair aian:ai:c Then there wat the famou e whkh cxc rotice that the lord , f ra:-f 01 en wa ready foe hit tena the: a 'market bell." a signal. if! davs. for el!;r. to !egin: whi!f. a:" i- 1 cstt fcr.own el a;, tr.rre wat, 01 course. f;?f-nr. whch t t;tl rung from several :-r-ers in F;:lan-L Thoc who know :: remember the familiar twmn ef "Z : tot stroke at o o'clock, whkh i a.il fee the clstirg ef tht college gate. "V. the multiplication of clock and however, the value cf the bell to mark f'-: ef daily life ha been greatly rr-i;.-f. 4-! wherr ell ctm survive, they .f-?Tle a tntercviir.g survival, and have - -r crated in hae ar.v real significance. i tra ::;y riowtsg it own fT;t. in England, at any rate, and m, mm . Vi.- iff,' . urn l.-. one torches upon r- 1 a-.':r: art. Thu. a paten! roll of " I r-.e c.f rm the Trethrm of the V.V!:r:er, Si are appointed to h-:: there, ii the privi.ege and . v 4 $ That carrict cr.c J nner!h Century, an! I i". c-" b i that t nT kn how far wn It that at no: ing after re e: uz er? cr.urcn icwriv- k . . ' f?-i a: the 5;tth Century ;!!) rtncTf s begin to conceit ter.tfr-.th Century, however. V! i L That wa the time cf th-e 1 'r ar.i the Ancient So- . .allfd frrm their ;-4ct :e r- If-:. "t the . belts at 5t. Mar- a- I the ,5'0iety cf ljondon t:rre. tf. when Fabian l-e rf the 'jvxiftr cf lx- 1 " a h.4d. in to Ccm- 'h t. c- r':-rrr.: to the victor cf ! ?": rc;'y th-C Af.Ckn! So- 'C- Yr;:h are ::11 in exbtence. .-.:p seme cf the 1 B IP :urfd. m m larr-ar. trt such matters. it a m :rry. wh:lt it phras- car?? 1 i-.-! etr"rt. t? trth'e b-tb and $!ed e-.y a few, cenvrys, cf ur.:r::;atf i. Fortuna:e- j I j t r 4.-.y r ,4, r" things, ara izu- 3Jr. Hoover propoiet the first thing, to regu late the rncc of wheat. He intends to make rrJIIert produce their froducflow enough to in txre cheaper Sour to the consumer. He find from firure that he can do this. That is the fint thane to be regulated in the food world. nut he win be up against it. He will find that bi money will be ipent to discredit him; he will find that the farmer bn't Retting too much for wheat or that the honest miller iinrfug injr the public. He will simply find that the re tailer who goet through the hinds of commis sion, men and jobber! and speculator h the man charging the price, and if it is decided that the retailer it too high he will quit the business and the famUhed customer will not know where to gej. hii daily bread. The meat question it the same thing. The man who grow the animal doesn't get too much. la thb town beef retails for thirty cents and the batcher who sells it pays eighteen cents wholesale for the hind quarter and he mutt Ioc the bone and fat, or a great deal of it. Thirty cent it quite a price to pay for a beef steak, compared at least to the ten and fifteen cent steak of other and happier days, but when yoa find that the wholesaler ha had to do with it; that the railroad company has had to haul it a thoutand miles in iced cars: that the re tailer must pay hi licence and lite what else can ytu etrect? Not hi nr. And to on down the line. The honest farmer holds you up puts an arbitrary price on what he, sells. If he gte out in the winter and traps a hundred rahbit he will charge vou twice as much at he did fne years ago, and the bloomin rabbits r.eter cot htm a cent and not a penny more than they di4 when meat was cheap but he understand t. With full and absolute authority to control igm4 prices we do not doubt that Mr. Hoover, acting for the iVrident. will bring down the Mice cf flour, and h miv fx !! in tirint I bread back to the five cnl loaf. Hut we doubt I St. Haur wiltbe cheaper, but speculators will j tll control wheat, and if wheat goes to two I fifty a buhel. which it can without any real reason for it, flour and bread will at the same time go up. Each community has a differ en! rrorocl:on confronting it. In the price ofjotl. the regulators hare put U rp OTer hundred $tml and tbcjbfriutttY consumer,"" the man who buy t it and burn it, cues the retail deal er, but the retail dealer it not to blame. The mine owner say he can't get cart he waits until a community ts shortof coal, and any old ricc goes. We wish for Mr. Hoover all kind of tucces. We want to help him in bootinx hit chore we don't want to -hrow any cm tie on his track but if he succeeds, notwithstanding Congre ha given the Presi dent absolute power to proceed, we will be turpriKd. In other words the route between the producer and consumer i too long. There are too many stop over stations and at each station stand a ticket laker who must have hit hare of the profit. If the covernment could send stuff from the mine or the mill to the con sumer then we could sec how .Mr. Hoover authority would help out. He could say the price could be onlyso much hut he can 1 say that if Tom. Dick and Harry handle it the la' borer is not worthy of his hire. o The Divorce Milt A glance over the court calendar shows that the idea of true love bn't all that it should be. Th r I lite first and the man and wife don t agree. cat tried in court yesterday wa a divorce cac. and several other are on the docket. To the credit of the black man be it aid he doesn't eek a many divorce at hi white brother. Thr divorce court always bothered us we have insisted aiid shall forever Insist that un lev it i for infidelity a divorce it not neces sary. When two people conclude they can't agree they commence pulling in opposite di rections and each one goes hell bent for de struction of the marriage lien, rAnd there is no doubt but what there should be a national divorce law, a good one, and then when a cou ple of wild cat figure on hametsing for life ma) be they would gt slow. But to know that divorce can be secured at easily a putting on an old shoe well, the man with, the nerve is willing to take a riik. Divorced people should be shunned unlet they had a mighty good rea tcn for making fool of themselves. This for the protection of society. o And they think by September first hundreds of thousand cf soldier will be ready to start to France. - o The latest new from Georgia is that Tom Wa! is still in crupt.kn and the officers of the law haven't caged him. mate knowledge as to how they are achieved Is not" necessary to their appreciation, and. if a man hket the sound of bells, it will make lit tle dtfferer.ee lit htm whether a 'peal it in pro cess cf 'development, or merely a touch. Around Greembcro we have the Sabbath bells; the Wednesday night prayer meeting bells; the old court house bell for town meet tr i and courts; the fire bell and the chime of the Greenibero L n and Trust Company. But it wouldn't hurt to have bells ringing- oftener juit to break tie ccrxtony. The socialist doesn't mean to get into trou ble, with hia" mouth but he often does. It has been his habit tolaihout against the gov ernment; to insist tthat the wrongs of man kind be righted, and he often goes too far. Sev eral of these people have been in jail charged with seditious utterances,' and it is hard for them to see why they can't epjoy "free speech" which they claim the:cnitution -vouchsafes them. But when they get. into prison and wait their trials they perhaps have better op portunity to study conditions. The Appeal to Reason has been hushed several publications that hae gone bcyondhe dead line have been, put out of businest, ami the socialist, while thinking he has rights, a wise man if he holds his yawp. ,,,, " -, :: ' In thr.se times cverv, citizen enjoying protec tion under the nag is supposed to be lovai. The President is given authority to uphold the law, ana tne law, in lime pi war, is aincreni man at other times. In fact the editor of any news- . . f'r - . 1 oaoer can co only so far, and to co further than prudence dictates is to get his foot in a bear trap. If a man doesn't like what is going on in mis country 11 up 10 mm 10 nine 10 Germany. There is where he belongs, and he should be promptly hanged if he undertakes by word or deed to give aid or comfort to the enemy. Hancing it what will stop a great deal of wild talk. o Only One Or Two. Wc dare say that a hundred citizens have hastened to congratulate The Record because of its protest against Doc Summers putting up a thousand dollars and escaping the roads after he had been found guiltv of manslaughter. We shall atways insist that -no man has a right to purchase immunity. The law found the man guilty. The jury said, he was guilty of man slaughter and the Judge sentenced him to pris- . . . on. i ncn ne comes up wnn a tnousana nonarr and our. Governor accepts the money for the state and says the purposes of the law have been met. Jn other words the criminal with a thousand dollars can buu.his way oul cf .the f.ilmliirt. wrf With nr mnn na sJLsctram .id juripeft W-?ob mi r that this i altogether wrong. , It doesn't make any dif ference about the guilt or innocence of Sum mers, If he wasn't guilty he should not pay one red cent. He should go free. If guiltv, however, as found, then he should not be al lowed to purchase his freedom. That is fhe pro position and no honest man can say we are wrong. Either one thing or the other let him go free with no string to it or let him serve his time. Xo man can say that freedom can be deliberately purchased by counting , out so many dollars. -o To The Springs. Again the heated season it on and Mr. and Mr. Goomcwhere are packing their trunks and preparing the notice for the papers which will readJ , "Mr. and Mrs. Go somewhere will leave the 10th instant for a four weeks sojourn at Soakittoem Springs, in order to escape the heated term. Colonel Go somewhere says that life is short at best and if he can stand off his grocer why not get away? Why stay at home all summer when you can get out and have a good time? The Colonel is essentially fisiht. Upon the return of this popular couple j,rSt Go somewhere will give a delightful pink tea to her many friend complimentary to Mis May Comingfromsomewhere, who ac companies her from the Springs. And thus life runs in its mad, wild way. The summer doen't last long, and the years frolic on. Here it is the middle of 1917 and it won't be long Just about a few minutes and November, with the first breath of winter lightly in the air. Go somewhere if you have the price. Get away from it. It will do you good, and you will find that life holds many pleasures that you can't get out of it if you stick to the old beaten track. Step off the path and pluck a little wild flower here and there. o Still Making Raids. Germany every once inawhile sends a fleet of air craft over England and drops down bombs on innocent men, women and children, and thit only prolongs the war. If Germany really means anything by all these peace insinuations she has proceeded the wrong ivay. The French, we note, have recently sought reprisal for air1 raid by rcsorting to the same line of conduct, and after all it seems that anything il fair in war. But the allies ai more numerous than the German and every time an air fleet de liberately kills women and children by drop ping bombs upoahem, just that much deeper becomes the hatred of the civilized world to ward the hunted Nation, "All is fair in war and love long ago became a universal adage but it isn't. It int fair for any nation to de liberately murder women and children who are forced to be at a certain place. They are help less and innocent, and the Nation that resorts' to this kind of warfare will never succeed. It is impossible. 0 The man who has a wife arid child appears to be much in evidence right cow. It was nothing to occasion surprise when we yesterday read that the Pope had submitted a peace proposition to all the warring countries. In fact the Pope has had on his peacfe cap for some time, and what he handed out was only in "due course" and will be read by the differ ent powers, and parsed up with the declaration that his suggestions cannot be taken or con sidered seriously. The Pope gives down his plan and it is approaching what might happen. Xot that his proposal would in any way meet the demands of the allies because the allies propose to do more for Germany than the Pope imagines. The Pope rather favors Ger many, viewed from an ally stand-point, and in the final adjudication of the case Germany is not going to be favored. The Pppe must understand that already the blood and treas 1 .- - . ure spent, has been because Germany made it necessary. She was the aggressor in war and has become a demon in practice. She has for feited all rights of recognition in anything ap proaching a settlement on terms even remote ly suggesting consideration of her. She must be annihilated. She must be put entirely out of business, and those who win the battle will suggest the terms of peace. Germany has forfeited all rights. This must be understood, and Germany, in a peace con ference will only be consiedred in the past tense. However the. note of the I'ope is worth while. It suggests that there is something in the air. It suggests that such a thing as peace- is in sight, some day, and every time peace is talked it hastens the day that peace will come. When the Pope suggests the re turn to Germany of her colonies he suggests unthinkable things. Nothing will be returned to her, and from her, will be taken all that she has. The German Empire; once so strong and, haughty will be, reduced o. practically a coun try town, so "far as power, is concerned:. She has Own-ntrtn"e -ui4las'.fthf.: mixst-g-"ia.- thc whirlwind. I he. Pope understands .that his good book says "Bles5cd are the peace makers for they shall see God" but when he comes to make peace what he wants to bring with him is a coffin for Germany and the allies will then perhaps submit to a Christian burial, but that is about all. America is going into the struggle, five million' strong, if neces sary, and she is not gofng in to stop the war she is going in to subdue and annihilate Ger many. That is what wc arc in this war for to secure for all the world freedom, and to simply set Germany up again with her lost possession restored and her treasury simply touched for the restoration of countries she has devastated will not do. Too late to talk of that. Germany must surrender she must stand palsied and humble and exhausted be fore the world powers which will subdue her, and she may get a chance to run a country ( store but no longer will she remain auto cratic and defiant. Her tail feathers are al ready missing and the beloved Pope can try again. o The joy riders are asked to curtail mileage and go slower. The government says the na tion needs gasoline, and if the joy rider doesn t divide the loaf Uncle Sam is liable to take it all away from him. o A Cigar Centre. With the announcement, made some three weeks ago, that the Lango cigar company was enlarging its capacity; with the good news that the El Rces-So Cigar company must soon build another building, all of us who have been watching these "infant industries" grow to man's estate should rejoice. There are other smaller cigar factories here to say nothing S. the big one that makes cigars for a nation. The two most prominent local companies, the EI-Rccs-So and Lango hae forged ahca' to beat the band in the last few. years. John Rccs started out with one cigar maker and today employs hundreds of working people sells his cigar everywhere in tht country and can hardly keep up with orders, and the Lango comes along and extends its territory and its business. Greensboro has long talked of fac tories and here are two local concerns which have gone ahead without blare of trumpets simply had men at the head of 'them who knew how to do things and have done Ihem. ..The El-Rees-bo cigar is best known because longer on the market, and the chances are that it will develop into a national institution. The Lango comes along and will make a place for itself, and Greensboro is to be congratulated and Greensboro should smoke the home pro duction. o The first rose of August fared pretty badly.. Too much real hot weather and then the rains too heavy. But the October roses, in this coun try, those growing in the open are always the fjC3t and therefore we await October with some impatience. . , o ; If China goes to war, the question is: Where vfill she go? In looking over the court calendar each term-; .-,: it is a matter of regret that Guilford county - makes too many applications for divorce. And; ; w in each divorce case there is always a new settincr. Infidelity is often incidentally charg-fc ; "ed. but it appears to be for other reasons that: most divorces are sought. There is talk, and , :y; we have talked it, that there sliould be a na-! : .. tional divorce law; that there should be cer- '? tain dead lines and if a man or woman went . ; t beyond them, a divorce would naturally fol- : low. However it is perhaps Jiard to see .why. a.; . . t divorce law that" would apply to one condi--. ; tion should apply to another! :,They have de- :.J grees of murder and there should be degrees ; of neglect and condition's "should always guide , the court or .the jury in deciding whither or " . not a separation would be a. good thing- for. . Society, for the community, for those vitally. - . , and directly interested If a man comes in and asks for a divorce from h?s wife on the grounds of infidelity, and he1. can prove it, " ! naturally enough he should have", a divorce, and "the Good Book says he should lve i tJ; .:S But for a woman to come into court, and ask ." for . a divorce when there are children in the; ' s : family little tots who are entitled to the. pro-; -tection of both father, and mother, and ' her charge is lat the husband does not support her; or that'he is a drunkard; or that he now, . and then in sportive glee tosses a cuspidore or ; t a coffee-pot at her head she should not be ' granted a divorce. And she sliould know be- L' fore she marries the beast tkat she couldn't get " f a divorce, and if both of them knew that7 they . j were yoked for life unless there was some real i ' reason, you wouldn't see so many divorces , dreamed about. '"'-v' It has gotten to be that a jealous woman imagines her husband is flirting wi(h a whole v regiment of pretty girls-merely a ' dream : nursed into an actuality so far as she is con- :. cerned, and feeling that way about it she pro-' -ceeds to make herself so diabolically enter-- 'v taining that the' husband may, and with justi vi n fication, break a-few pieces , of furniture ' arid -4- do a little cussing in, the loud pedal. The mere r.v fact that because the husband hasn't (been all the woman,-expected, hini to; be; because ;lie -. &1cjL161 nqeaVi ji .nptvhe4d eat. -she -dreamed, u"' she saw when he Was" just across the drug-, V V store table making pretty dabs at the vanilla ice cream and. she -was looking at him with v eyes of wondrous blue and , trying' to discern why heaven had sent her such, a man', is no - ' reason why she should undertake : to reform , him or have him made over. She can go to ' the hand-me-down clothier, and if , the trouser, " . ' loons are too short in the,-limbs ;. or if the coat - - j needs a little lengthening here or a little short ' . . ' ening there, the President of the Pressing Club will see that that is done but the hubby is built just so and, no furbisher can ' change the cut of , the jib as designed by the. v: Creator. It is up. to her to study the wealcV ' spots; to see where he is deficient andnaker due allowance remembering betimes that'she-i. is not the same darling peach she looked to 'V'" be in the happy courting days the. days when she powdered her lily-white Jace-and spent ' - v steen hours fixing her golden .hair. She. must . - ' not forget that in those wooing days; those sun-kissed and balmy days of June it always . ; , took her an hour to "fix. up" in order, to! ook - " her very best before she appeared in the par- ' lor to exclaim "My dear George" and there is a whole lot of difference .in' her" appearance -: . 5 ; when she gets up In the; morning "in these lat- : ter days after the romanceis eroded and, slips ; . herself into an old cast-off dress ; doesn't take .' ' time to comb her frazzled hair and goes down - ' , stairs to spank one of the children who has L upset the coffee potjust 'about as; breakfast . was ready to be announced. He' comes down V and. beholds her ip her kitchen attire and he ""' fails to see even the semblance the beauti- " ful doll that looked to the stars and sighed '-' arid dreamed and talked rr love and a cottkge in the old days. Realism ' calisnf, my masters -is sterner stuff-than caror.icls and,marsh-mal- '. lows. So they quarrel -and finally the first thirig that pops into thehead of the rhaddesf - one of the twain' is the divorce couft-faneb" f ,! then all the hatred and; malice ...that' evil' j genius ever drearned is conjured . up and,re-v ' - tailed to the crowd that always goes ; .to see : V k this kind of soiled linen laundered iri puWic',5::-r. However, perhaps as long as -the; "Heart" Has passions, apd as long as life hai woes". yo;i -will see"sotno fellow drive in' the. court room . and ask t1 judge to unharness . Him. :Ahdv 1 along, will come, the woman with her tale of v- f "- woe and insist that she be separated from thes . -' . '-t j Beast in' pa,nts whom, she' once. loVed and f orp jv, ' . 1 Whom' she has lost all regard. Arid-Society, '-'. 1 that masCed and double-faced old ftaiid, says V ' 'i '. it is better so and the' divorce is granted be-:-lvA;1 . 1 cause. laws are written governing such Cases',. : o V :r-.:'iJV The City Commissioners find much trouble-V-'V in satisfying all the people, -and just what all ' ' '" ; the people 'are going to say,atout the. new or-, V dinance concerning, cars' on. Elm street isa;' , question. Makes it bad for the car owner arid r 'r. he often thinks he owns the earth and; the , ' fulness thereof. ' 4- A Japanese mission, is expected tc do things i iri this country; and : we regret to 'note that; . Kisser Hobson isn't' on the. eajtertainrient com; mittee. J . ' ' ; hlT 1