WORLD SUFFERS BECAUSE SENATE FAILS TO RATIFY hubility of Europ* to Buy Malta* Stagnant Market Hara. Washington, Nov. tl—Th* buaineea 4epreealon in thia country la eerioua, •ad thoae familiar with condition* •broad believe that tha failure of the aerial* to ratify tha treaty and eatab Hah peace with Germany ara reaponai Ma for it. |)«mocrata who advocate salification feel certain that had not tha Republicans played politlca to win a preaidentlal t lection, and fooled tha people. confidence would have been re etored, and the world put on tba way la recovery. Doubt, uncertainty and poverty abroad are the thing* causing a panic. Senator Gilbert M. Hitchcock, lead er of the administration group In the Aght for the league of natlona, aaya that something muat be done for tha aalief of the farmer* of the aoutK and waat. To me, today, he gave hi* view* •a exiating condition* and their rela tione to the peace treaty. The failure to ratify, he declared, baa deatroyed confidence. "Until we get peace eatabllahed we ean't begin to reatore permanent rela tione or bring about aatiafactory con dition* with the reat of the world," •aid ha. **Thi* bu«inea* depression may be partly phychological, but the effect is last the same as if there were real aausea for a lack of confidence." "The fact Is, at the present time ■arope finds it more and more diffl ealt to pay for what sha buy* in the Vnited State*. Even within the last year there has been a notable fall in the exchange of every country we ex pert to. The franc i* not worth aa Much aa it wa* twelve month* ago. •or i* tha British pound, or the ex change of the Scandinavian and other eeuntrie* Thi* makes it difficult «*r u* to export. "The western farmer with bogs, eattle. whest and corn to •ell," Mr. Xttehcoek *aid, "i* threatened with •a actual lo*s on hi* crop* and 1* desperate. Com that cost 00 or OB •ante to grow ia Railing for 60. The •ame I* true of cattle and hog* Similar conditiona," ha added, "ex tat In the manufacturing diltriet* of the east" Mr. Hitchcock explained The ■uropesn nation* cannot pay cash for the export* they would tak« from us. "Biey cannot get raw material they aeed from 'his country t > manufac ture tha finished products of their iactories and the bankers are afraid to extend credits while condition* are "Doabt has caused (tarnation. We have the raw materials to sell but for aign nation* cannot purchase them without money or extensive credit. Vnable to get the raw materials they cannot pay in manufacture*. Bankers have the money but they will not extend credit while conditions are unstable. That is the situation that con tents us," lfr. Hitchcock asserted. ""Dnt.il our place with other nations is established and peace with Germany Is proclaimed we cannot have settled eenditions. Confidence has been stricken by partisan politics. To win aa election the opponents of the lea gue of nations crippled the entire world, already in desperate straita. Business men of the nation are not able to extend the credit needed to ■tart the wheels of indus^y. "Great doubt has been created by the two years delay in the senate. The Best of the world wants to know when Ike United States is going to make peare with Germany, if at all; wheth er or lint she is going in the league of •ations; if the world is to have peace •r war, and if this country is going to atand alone or go with the other great •ations. Doubt as to the answer to these questions is at the root of the troubles In the financial world. "The matter has passed out of the real of Idealism and Is now a vital business proposition. r"We have a great surplus to sell, 'while people in European countries are starving Our .nine*, our farms and our factories art stocked with the things needed abroad but our would ha customers cannot buy them. "Something must be done to rellev» present conditions In our own country It la dangerous for the farmers of th« west to have to keep their products 01 I practically give them away with Eu< , tope hungry for food, and shiverlni •or clothes. Grain and meat and cot tan producers In the United Statei have no market tor this -year's eropa.' FI.ICS THREE MILES A MIN UTE AND WINS RACE Lieut. C. C. Mo»Uy, In Pulitzer Contact, Average* 178 MiUs An Hour. Mineola, N. Y . Nov. 2fl.- Flying at ■ speed of virtually three milea a min ute, Lieut. C. C. Moalsy, piloting an American mad* Verville Packard army nlnno, won the first Pultlaer trophy aeronautical raca Kara today nguinst h field of 88 starter*. Ha rovered the courae of »H»»h» ly mora than 1.12 milaa In 44 minute*, 20 57 l<)0 seconds, an average speed of ap proxlmately 17H milaa an hour. Official* of the Aero Club of A mar ten, which conducted the raca, flrat having aitimatad the course aa 140 milaa In length, announced Immediate ly r.ftaV the raca that Moalav'a aver age apeed waa 188.4 tnilea an hour, • new world'a record. However, a care ful rescallng of the official map to night ahowed that the lapa were ■lightly more than 82 milea in length, inatead of 88, the average apaed on the corrected length being cut down 10 milea an hour. It la expected that a survey of the course will be made In •Her that exact computation may he established. The preaent world'a aviation apeed record la held by Sad! Lecolnte, win ner of the recent Gordon Bennatt trophy race In Franca, who averaged 1S7 milea an hour in a special contest nt Villa Coublay, near Paria, 10 daya nfter he won the international trophy. In the Gordon Bennatt raca over a course of 186.3 milea. Lecolnte aver aged alightly more than 160 milea an hour, although he had mad* 174 1-2 milea an hour In the trials. Capt. H. E. Hartney, flying an American army Thomaa-Morae mach ine, came in aecond today, flying the couraa In 47 mlnutaa and 8-100 se conds. Albert Acosta, a civilian, won third place with his Italian-made An aaldo 8. V. A. machine. His time waa 81 mlnutaa, 87 62-100 seconda. This was the only ona of the 11 foreign made machine entered to flnlah among the fit* 10. * - It waa a great day for the army. In addition to placing aeven of its man among the first 10, the srmy won a private fight from the navy when rep resentative* of the enlisted man of each engaged in a tfttle battle of fisti cuffs before the grandstand. A sail or was walking paat when ha acci dentally knocked off the hat of a sol dier on guard duty, the headgear fall in a pool of water. Instantly the aol dler gave battle and was getting much the better of the performance when the combatants were separated, Gen eral Pershing laughed with glee as he watched the performance, but Secre tary Daniel* scowled * bit and aaid nothing. County Boos* Some where in the shadowy hills 1 and hollows of Stokes county It ia said there are men making mean likker. They aay that tha likker which these men make is so mean that a drink of it will indue* you to hit your mother-in-law, and that a de t'uurh from it is worsa than the flu. ' Some one who evidently escaped, has I furnished The Reporter with the for mula of thfc diabolical concoction, to The sugar or molasses is supposed to temper down, but the compost makes you rise; the ivy ro>t brings '•in the stagger; tobacco bef'iddles tha brain, and the lye furnishes the fire. Can you conceive of a more hellish b'cw? Can you imagine a digestion that would withstand this corrosive T What brain would not turn topsy turvy what stomach would not heave at the very thought of it? Yet there are plenty of fellow* that will guzzle it, swill ft, lie for it, steal | for it. and almost die for it. After waking it they walk lik* a sick roost er and their breath smells like a skunk. They, talk non-aense, repeat ther word- they become idiota while ! th> brew burns, and invalids when it ! <-ools down.—Danbury Reporter. How to Be Healthy. If you would enjqy good health keeii your bowels regular and your stomari and liver in good working order Thli ir easily done by taking Chamberlnip'i Tableta. These tablets strengther the stomach and regulate the liver aru bowels. They are easy to take and mild and gentle in effaet. They onl) coat a quarter wit: Sugar or molasses Stable manure ... ! Ivy root Tobacco : Concentrated lye . 2 tin boxes . .SO lbs 1 bushel .10 feet 5 hands AMERICA ABOUT READY TO RECOGNIZE MEXICO Few Point* Remain to be Clear ed up Before Recognition Can Be Granted Washington, Nov. ZB^~ Secretary Colby is expected to make known he for* his departure for South America Sunday or Monday the nature of his reply to the recent latter of R V l'es<|U#ira. confidential agent here of ■ the provisional government of Mexico, netting forth the claims of that gov eminent to recognition by the United i States. Rocent informal conferoncea be 1 twe.n atate department officials and Mr. Pesqueria arc understood to have rleuri-d the way for auch an an nouncement. It was believed the Mexican agent had full knowledge of the poaltion the American govern ment would take when he left today on a hurried trip to Mexico City. Mr. Peaquelra's letter was made public by the state department with comments by Mr. Colby, which said , that a few pointa remained to be clear ed up before recognition could be granted. While officials decline to I discuss the substance of the reply now being drafted, It is believed to contain specific reference to the mat ters In dispute between the two coun tries. snd a statement of what the United State* will consider as a sat i isfactory solution by Mexico of some I if her problems. | It was said that no attempt would )>a made to dictate to Mexico what she • mutt do to attain the status necessary for recognition, but It will be made clear that the United States will be unable to accord recognition until cer tain tangible guarantee* are given by Mexico of her willingness and ability to protect American Uvea and legiti mate interests in Mexico. Among things Mexico will be ex* pected to do, It la known, will he In terpretation of article 17 of the con stitution of Queretaro by some official pronouncement. This U within the purview of Congress or of the Mexi can* Supreme court, before which many suits brought on behalf of American companies have been pend ing for six months to three years. The Late Election Cost the State $180,000 Raleigh, Nov. 28.—Exact fig-urea a* to how much it cost* to *tage the quadrennial election In North Caro lina for national state and county offi cial* la not and will not he included in any state record under the present reading* of the statute books, but fairly conservative estimate* baaed cn the expenditure* of the *tate board ef ctiort* | see the out'ay at •om* what more than ft50,000. Upon the counties fall the heaviest end of the burden. . In addition to .printing half the tickets that are dis tributed to the precincts election day, their* ia the taak of hiring and paying registrar*, poll holders, election judge* and finally the county tabula t'nn. The coat of these things fcaa advanced along with the price of everything else, and the wave of price cutting had not gained Its present headway when the election waa h.ld. Printing the twenty-five million hallota that were used in the atate in the selection of a |.resident, a gov rnor and Stafr officers, members of ' tiie gene al aasemhly, county and township officera ia in itaelf the least of the burden* of holding an election. | It take* t wo carloads of paper, four or ! five barrels of ink, some typesetters, I a battery of commercial presses, and upward* of $!>0,000, in the currency of the republic. Panamn Defenses Are Inspect* ed By Harding Ancon, C inal Zone, Nov. 26.—Prob lems connected with the defense of the Panama canal were studied by ; Senator Harding today during a de tailed inspection of the fortifications at the Pacific terminus of the water way and in conference with army and navy officer* in charge of the xone forces. He spent several hour* mak • ing r round of the defenses in cotn ! pany with Brig. Oen. Charles W. Ken , nedy and Rear Admiral Marbury John j ston, at whom he a*ked many ques , tion* on the capabilities and needs of the establishment. The operation of the big guns was demonstrated to the President-elect, and many problems of strategic pol icy were laid before him. Accompanying Senator Harding were Senator Fredrick Hale, member of the senate naval committee, and Senator Joseph 8. Frellinghuysen, chairman of the coast defense com mittee, his guests on the ftp.. HIGH PRICES IN CUBA DOUBLE THOSE HERE Erm Sugar, Produced Thar* In Immanaa Quantities, Sail* For 24 Cant* Havana, Oct. 28.American women, disturbed by iht mounting rout of llv iitl, oufht to com* to Cuba. Tht trip would mako them satisfied with con ditions at home. Kroadly speaking, price* in Havana are ju*t about double the high intrk in top notch American cities. On* cause, according to dealer*, la the 'in precedent port congestion, apparently with little hope of early rlcarlnr, aid which ha* resulted In the ruin of hun dred* of ton* of necessary product*. Whatever the cause, the island Is go ing through a period of high oat, )e* critied by pa|ier* here as mora burden /v.me than that found elsewhere on 1he tut* of tl e earth Even here wher* it ia pr-Juced in sufficient bulk to supply ailllion* ei*e where, sugar retails on the Havana market around 24 cents per pound. Grapefruit, going to waate a few mllaa from town, *clls at New York quota tions. Financial depression, the de mand for ready and available caah, and the moratorium, under which banks limit withdrawals to 10 per cent, have failed to atart price reduc tions in the hope of unloading luxuriea to meet weekly pay rolls. Until the moratorium ends December 1, hotels will not permit patrons to sign bar and cafe checks, a time honored custom here. Cash is needed and a man paya when he eat*. Conditions In Havana are of little concern to the wealthy element from the states that will be coming here soon by the thousands for the winter and racing seasons. But for folkt of ordinary mean*, with two weeku for recreation, a big bank roll is needed. About the lowcat hotel rate la $7 a day for room and bath. And this Is not at the beat places, for there rates are much kicker, and along toward the middle af November the 97 will fetch 116 Americans living in Havana pour out a tale of woe to frienns from the statea. The women seem to lie hit the hardest Price tags in store* selling men's wear show that a go >1 pair of men's low shoes costa aa high aa <28. The rainy season is not ende'l, and 18 for a cotton umbrella is a "bargain." Flannel trousers are there for $2fi and silk shirts for $80. A lot of odds and ends that a man needs cost more than twice the mark at home. The correspondent saw a Panama hat valued at $450 and the dealer declared that sugar men pay ft without blinking. Cigaretts aelling for 20 cent* a package at home cost 60 here, and for a $2 bo* of American candy they ask $7. Two cent American papers, three days old, cost 12 cents. You may get a reasonably fair suit of clothe* out of stock for $100. In most cases women's shirtwaists, it was explained, cost three times the home figure. The only exception in the upward trend iis the straw hat, the cost of which is about on the American scale. The only paper money in circulation here is American. The bills are so worn and utterly filthy that a man parts with them rather gladly. Jap Government Buying Tobacco at Danville, Va. Danville, Va. Nov. 24.—The Japan ese government ia represented on the Danville tobacco market at the pre sent time by three agents who are buying bright leaf in larger quanti ties than ever before. It is said that tha barring of opium on the oriental empire is causing a more decided trend each year to the mora widely known narcotic, and the Japanese are buying hundreds of hogsheads of to bacco on the southern markat. Ob servers on the market say they are shrewd in determining tha quality of tobacco. Tobacco is grown in Japan, but it ia so fine in texture and of so little weight that the heavier bodied grades grown in this section are In demand now to mix with the home grown variety. To Lay off 1,000 Employe* and Reduce Other's Wages Saltville. Va. Nov. 26.—The Mathie aon Alkali works, incorporated, here today announced that, effective De cember 1, 60 per cent, of ita 2,000 em ployes will be cut off. The wages of the remaining employee will be re duced 20 per cent, the company stated. The fact that "business conditions have curtailed tha company's salsa" was given as a reason for the reduc tions CURFEW IS THE SIGNAL FOR RAIDING IN DUBLIN The Daylight Hours Put Quietly But at Night it ia An other Story. Dublin, Nov., 24.- Dublin, long ae muti.med to tragedy, Ui nettled back with two day* of outward calm, which ins, however, an Indefinable and un healthy quality cloaking much beti * ne scenes, and there ia activity In | Iwth ramp*. W)nl» the daylight hours pau al | moat without incident, the curfew haa 'come to be the Hignal for the crown ! force* to commence unceremonioua raiding of all aorta of prem' , wo« "/.ure of any waated documents and : rroat of aua'pected persons. The** arrests are becoming almoit indls criminata, but in many raaea the de tention end* after an examination at headquarter* which ahowa abaance of, connection with the Republican move ment. A a no class of residence*, even the fir*t-claaa hotel*, ia exempt fromI the*# *earchei, there haa been a marked diminution of cross-chanel traffic, and nn almoit total reaaation1 of tourlat arrlvala. Reports from various parts of tha country today recount a widaapread leisure of bicycles, which tha author!-1 ties at Dublin caatle interpreted aa a move on the part of the actlvlata to counter the motor licensing restric tions. Franco's War Dead To Rost In Permanent Cemeteries Paris, Oct. 22.—France's 1,000,000 war-dead ara soon to be tranaferred to permanent military remeteriea or re-Interred In private buryinggrounda, at the option of relativea. It may be many montha before tha work ia even well under way bat the start in to be made soan, under au thority of lawa paased at the last ses sion of psrliament and now made af fectlva by decrees. A separata monument, at a design not yet adopted, will be put at the head of each grave and the car* of tha military grounds will devolve upon the government in perpetuity. Sanitation and lack of transporta tion has delayed the assembling of the bodies, but it hss been decided that by careful planning the work may now be done without danger to health or to industry. Illinois Gives Mr. Harding A Plurality Of 890,085 Chicago, 111., Nov. 26.—Complete,, but unofficial election figures for Illi nois, available today for the first time, place the plurality for President-elect Harding in this state at 890.085 and show that the Republican preaidential ticket was given a larger proportion ate percentage of the women's vote | than was accorded Governor Cox. Senator Harding and Governor Cool idge received 71.6 per cent of the vote cast by men in the state and 74.6 per cent of the women's ballots. Total, figures for President: Harding 1,424, 480; Co* 634,896. The Size of a Cent. The Standard Oil Company an nounce* a reduction of one cant a gal lon in gasoline. ^ cent doesn't look like very much moqey but the saving ■ r North Carolina from that reduc tion amounts up so big that in tha course of a year it is a fortune. At least one hundred and twenty-five thousand cars are running in this 1 state. If those cars us« a gallon of gasoline a day one cent reduction in 1 a gallon means twelve hundred and fifty dollars in a day, and that rum up to more than four hundred thou sand dollars in a year. An illustra tion like this shows us that it Is the 1 little things that make tha big ones. 1 Few men that drive cars give much consderation to the cent that is saved on a gallon of gasolina. Yet that cent if gathered up with all the rest would build a hundred miles of mighty , good roads, and in some sections oft the state would build five hundred miles of that sand-clay type that la' giving such excellent service. A rent on a gallon of gasoline would do a lot of things if it was applied in the right direction.—Raleigh News and Obser-' ver. Iain's Cough Remedy. "Last winter whjn my children were sick trith colds and were coughing a ?ofl deal I gave them Chamberlain's Cough Remedy" writes Mr*. C. M. Bullock. Gorhara, N. Y. 'It relieviid then at once and under this treatment all symptoms at the cold gradually disappeared. My axpariem» with this medicine warrants my recommending lit to others." Favor* Mora Pay For State Superintendent Aaheville, No*. 2d.--Tto>ry •■fto lion for the "back to the fan*" Bin ment, executed tonight by Dr. 'reofye A. Works, rural education profeeeer, »f Cornell university, Ithaca, N. T., marked the close of the annual Nt renllon of the North Carolina t«Mh-, »r»' assembly, a three-day event (feat tn-ought Hid registered delegate* ta Ashevill*. The last session wiui held In the arty auditorium and waa railed to order by the retiring president, 8. B. Under wood, at 8 o'clock^ jvho directly after the meeting turned the r<-lna of to* »»*emhly over to the newly elactod li'—r*. K. ii. l^atham. Dr. T'nrk'a address followed a pee gram of exercise and an appeal mad* by John Carr, Jr., who represented toe student body of the University erf North Carolina. He pictured crow4M condition* In the schools of the «tato and pleaded with the teacher* aad citizens of North Carolina to hdf minimize the** condition* *o far a* possible. Mr. Carr appeared !?> the role srf "the generation of th* future " appeal ing for adequate facilities today, ** that h* will not b« handicapped ki training for the position "a* th* iead er of tomorrow." In hi* explosion of the *3>ack to Aa farm" movement Dr. Work* declared that the movement of men from A* rural communities to th* citle* was only natural, from hi* viewpoint. "Machinery i* rapidly dispiaetoc man power on th* farm*," he pointed out, "and it i* only natural that Ufe displaced manpower should be ooratag to the cities tr. help manufacture this manpower saving machinery." Indorsement of government plaaa For an appropriation of |100,000,0M to be used In fighting illiteracy by to ititating a general school upbuildiag program in the United States, and *■ pressly going on record as favoring a ■alary of $8,000 per annum for Ik* North Carolina state school superto :end*nt, the assembly this sftemota :lo**d its 1920 boain*** *e**ion to lUhaeilla. South Carolina Democrat* Won by Majority of 60,297 Columbia, .S. C. Not. 24.—The Deaa sratic majority in the election of Me 'emlwr 2 in South Carolina waa M, 197, according to the state board fit canvassers which met today and 4a ■tared the reealt The Democratic elector* receifW 12,MS vote*. Two *eta of RapuhM -an elector* received 2,61(1 vote* wMU Socialist rote* were cant. Die* at 93 Year*. Blkin Tribune.—Mr. Henry Shore** kged 91 year*, died Saturday at Mi borne .our miles southeast of Jonaa wille. All of hi* lif* va« spent k Lhi* community, and in hi* death the rhurch ha* io*t a loyal member, aad the community *n upright citizen aad ?ood friend* and neighbor. The f» era I wa* held Sunday at Fall Creek church and the remain* interred i> the church cemetery. He i* iurvind by three son*, three daughter*, M grandchildren and several great rrand children. M'Swiney'a Widow end Sister To Visit Asherille Ashevilie, Nor. 29.—Madame Mar garet MacSwiney, sister of the lata ord mayor of Cork, received s eable rram from her brother, Peter Maa ?winey today stating that the widow >f Terence J. MacSwiney will visit \sheville upon her arrival in Amfri •a. The cable reads: "Minnie (MacSwiney'* sitter), Huriel (MacSwiney'* widow, left rhursda.v to visit you with new*." Madame Manraret MacSwiney is a lister at the college of St. Genevieve >f the Pine*, this city. rhree More North Dakota Banks Cloae Their Door* Bismark. N. D., Nov. 82—Three nore bank* were added today to the itring of North Dakota financial instt utions that have closed their door* ia he past six days, due to depletion of heir reserve*, which official* say t* tue to failure of farmer* to meet lotee held by the bank*. Farmers State bank of BelfMd; the 'tat* bank of Kill Deer and the Se curity State bank at Colombo* eloeed ;oday making nine sine* the first of last week. O. E. Lofthos, state bank examiner, declared that crop failure* or short L-rops, together with depre .itf-n hi lands, and wheat holding by 'armeoi for higher pries* are responsible far the closure*, a* farmer* hare no (*ak to moot their obligate*** at tfce Writ