A9 TTEL HOME GOODBYE v Who Go This Week To School Re mber The Semi-Weekly Warren ZZrd Can Be "Just Like a Letter 21 WEATHER FORECAST Continued Fair With Moderate Winds, Not Much Change In Temperature Be fore Latter Part of Week from - ---- iirvvTriruijTjxnjT-fur VOLUME XXIV (Tuesday) WARRENTON, N. C, TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 16, 1919 (Friday) Number 73 5c. THE COPY od Im Ann PLAN YOUR RACE AND -WIN! ait Fatii t 1 1 mm imv A' iilllr jl.50AJ a aii-WEEKLY NEWSPAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WARRENTON AND WAR REN COUNTY - v m a -m - I : : : : ; r a HISTORY CROWDED WITH REFERENCE TO DEITY IN ALL NATIONAL UNDERTAKINGS; RELIGIOUS STRAIN IN U. S. plea of Benjamin Franklin To Compatriots For Prayer Before Dis cussion Formed Bed-Rock Upon Which Constitution Was Built; Lincoln Based North's Stand On Scriptural Quotation "A House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand"; Other Sidelights. pv Harry F. Atwood, Author of "Back to the Republic' (Written for Manufacturers Record) The proudest heritage of this coun ty is that all through our history there has run the goldten thread of a religious strain. The great Baptist theologican, jear 0ld Dr. George Nor thrup, once said, "God Almighty writes a legible hand," and it seems to me that we find the handwriting of God all over the wall of the Republic. We find it written into our State papers, in the words spoken by our statesmen, on the coins that we cir culate, m the songs that we sing, in the literature that has been written, and in the aspirations of our people. More, far more than any other coun try we nave been essentially a relig ious and God-loving nation: and it is that fact more than anything else which has put character into our statesmen, courage into our soldiers, justice into our Government and con science into our people. The Mayflower compact begins: "In the name of God, Amen. And having undertaken for the glory of God and the advancement of the Christian faith.'.' That is the opening sentence of the first State paper ever adopted on American soil. In the Declaration of Independence we find such sentences as "Appealing to the Supreme Judge of the World for the rectitude of our intentions and for support of this declaration j with a firm reliance upon Divine Prov dence." In our Constitutional Convention weie assembled the greatest body cf men, frorn the standpoint of physical vigor, mental acumen and moral courage, that ever met together for human achievement. When the great William Pitt read our Constitution he exclaimed: "It will be the wonder and admiration of all future generations and the model of all future constitu tions." It is to the everlasting dis credit of our various States (which by the Constitution are guaranteed a re public as the form of government) and of all foreign countries that they have failed to make it their model, and that Pitt's prophecy has not been realized. The writing and adoption of our Constitution was unquestionably the greatest and most important human achievement since the creation, and as an event it ranks in history second! only to the birth of Christ. That mar velous body of men met day after day for four weeks and had not agreed on a single word or a single sentence. On the last morning of the fifth week, m the midst of a very heated discus sion, they were about to adjourn and abandon the great purpose for which they had met, when Benjamin Frank lin, perhaps the wisest man in the convention, mature in years, ripe in wisdom and! consummate in tact, arose and, adressing George Washington in the chair, spoke as follows: "Mr. President, the small progress we have made after four or five Peeks' close attention and continual rasonings with each other, our differ ent sentiments on almost every ques tion, several of the last producing as ttany noes as ayes, is, methinks, a melancholy proof of the imperfection f the human understanding. We in- I . ,"r"ru"'B-. "cm iu ieei uur want, ui uuiin- cal wisdom, since we have been run-! nm nil ,,4- u -r witionai convention. have gone back to ancient history for yodels of government and examined the different forms of those republics which, having been originally formed with the seeds of their own dissolu tions, now no longer exist: and we nave viewed modern States all around ope, but find none of their consti utions suitable in our circumstances. '!n this situation of this assembly, Ping, as it were, in the dark to find Mitical truth, and scarce able to dis tinguish it when presented to us, how as s it happened, sir, that we have not jtherto once thought of humbly ap riving to the Father of Lights to il nate our understandings? 1 have lived, sir, a long time: and - uuul in acaiui vx ii the longer I live the more convincing proofs I see of this truth, that God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid? We have been assured, sir, in the Sacred Writings, that except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build it.' I firmly believe this; and I also believe that without His concuring aid we shall succeed in this political building no better than the builders of Babel; we shall be divided by our ljttle, partial, local interests, our project will be confounded, and we ourselves shall become a reproach and a byword down to future ages. And, what is worse, mankind may hereaf ter, from this unfortunate instance, despair of establishing government by human wisdom and leave it to chance, war, conquest. "I therefore beg leave to move: "That hereafter prayers, imploring the assistance of Heaven and its bless ing on our deliberations, be held in this assmbly every morning before we proceed to business, and that one or more of the clergy of this city be re quested to officiate in that service." And from that moment they began to make progress in the framing and adoption of that fame-crowned docu ment, which Gladstone said was the greatest piece of work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and pur- pose of man. There were men in the Constitu tional Convention . who refused to sign that immortal document. Alexander Hamilton was the only man from the great State of New York who signed it, but those who refused have all long since been forgotten. The men who refused to sign the Constitution were urging the inclusion of popular falla cies that are as old as Methuselah and played their part in the downfall of Greece, Rome and other countries, and during recent years have been advo cated by modern demagogues in this country as new milleniums, such as iniative, referendum, recall, boards and commissions, etc. When the men who favored those socialistic nos- trums learned! that they could not ap peal to the reason of the men who wrote and signed the Constitution, they tried to appeal to their fear, and they said: "Unless you write into this Constitution some popular fallacies to fool and please the people, the Consti tution will never be adopted." George Washington had taken no part in the discussion of the convention up to that time, but when he heard that state ment he rose from the President's chair and! in tones of. suppressed emo tion said: "It is too probable that no plan we propose will be adopted; per haps another dreadful conflict is to be sustained: if, to please the people, we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterwards defend our work? Let us raise a standard to which the wise and honest can repair; the event is in the hands of God." Professor Fosk has well said that those words ought to be written on the walls of every legislative hall, State and national, in this country, and ought to be carved upon the walls of every convention room where peo ple meet to write a platform or adopt a resolution or" nominate a canaiaaxe. It is illustrative of the type of reas- m j xi. oning that prevailed m the Constitu- Those men were not trying to fol low the crowd; they were trying to mold public opinion and give the peo ple what they needed. The great dif ficulty during recent years is that we have had crowd followers instead of statesmen who were leaders. The crowd does not want to be followed; it wants to be guided; and the great men the men who have molded pub lic sentiment, frequently have had to stand in the minority for a time; but history points to these men finally as those who molded public opinion and who stood for what they believed to be rights , . George Washington wrote to Gov ernor Trumbull of Connecticut: f.I can If it's a tie between INCOME and SPENDING, we lose. If we lose, we are handicapped on the next lap of life's relay. But if we beat our FOOLISH SPENDING, we start the next lap ahead of the game. If we keep up our saving pace, we dis tance the Wolf. almost trace the finger of Divine Providence through those dark and mysterious days which first led the colonists to assemble in convention, thereby laying the foundation for peace and prosperity, when we had too much reason to fear that misery and confusion were coming too rapidly upon us." In his Farewell Address he said, among other things: "Of all habits and customs leading to political pros perity, religion 'and morality are in dispensable supports. It is substan tially true that virtue or morality is j a necessary spring of popular govern ment." Daniel Webster, expounder and de fender of the Constitution, who stands at the mountain peak of New England historv and ranks second onlv to Hamilton as a governmental genus, said: "I mean to stand upon the Con - stitution. I need no other1 platform, The ends I aim at shall be my coun try's, my God's, and truth's." Into our national anthem, "The Star Spangled Banner," Francis Scott Key wrote: "And this is our motto, 'In God is our trust,' " and we have written that motto upon the coins that we cir culate. In the "Battle Hymn of the Repub lic" Julia Ward Howe wrote these beautiful lines: Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord. sfs fs st . ss In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea, " With a glory in His bosom That transfigures you and me. As He died to make men holy, Let us die to make men free, While God is marching on. Glory, glory, hallelujah; His truth is marching on. Samuel Francis Smith wrote as the closing verse of our inspiring national hymn: Our Fathers' God, to Thee, Author of liberty, To Thee we sing! Long may our land be bright With Freedom's holy light! Protect us by Thy might, Great God, our King! Coming down to the next great epoch of history, when it was neces sary to preserve the Union and save the Republic founded on our Constitu tion written by Alexander Hamilton and his associates, on one occasion someone said to Abraham Lincoln: "I hope God is on our side," to which Lincoln replied: "My concern is so much whether God is on our side. My great concern is to be on God'3 side, for God is always right." Lincoln based the great issue of this Republic upon a text taken from the ible, "A house divided against itself cannot stand. In his farewell address to his old neighbors at Springfield he said, among other things: "Today I leave r i A. 1- JJ you. 1 go xo assume a. tasK. mure uia- fi'cult than that which devolved upon George Washington. Unless the Great God who inspired him shall be with and inspire me, I must fail; but if tlw same Omniscient Mind and Almighty Arm that directed me and protected him shall guide and support me, I shall not fail; I shall succeed. Let us pray that the God of our fathers will not forsake us now. To Him I com mend you all. Permit me to ask that with equal sincerity and faith you will invoke ; His wisdom and guidance for m- The great God who can stay here with you and go there with me and be every where for good! In his inaugural address, when pas sion was running high, he wrote: "With malice toward? none, with char ity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are m. Into the Emancipation Proclamation be wrote: "And upon this act, sincere ly believed to be an act of justice, I invoke the deliberate judgement of mankind and the gracious favor of Al mighty God." ."In his Gettysburg address he said: "That this nation, under God, shall jhave a new birth of freedom." At the time of Lincoln's assassina tion crowds had gathered m New (York City, and their minds were in if lamed with the thought. "Our leader is gonei our cause is lost.'! Men kill ed one another upon the streets. A group was organized to destroy the World building, in which the news paper was published which had op posed Lincoln's administration. James A. Garfield happened to be in the city, and it was suggested that his pres ence and personality upon the plat form where the telegrams had been read announcing Lincoln's condition might tend to bring calm to the situa tion. He raised his hand and wove together some of the choicest gems of the Psalms that his good old moth er had taught him in childhood as she held him upon her knee. He said: "Fellow-Citizens: Clouds and darknes are 'round about him. His pavilion is dark waters and thick clouds of the sky. Justice and judge ment are the establishment of His throne. Mercy and truth shall go be fore His face. Fellow-citizens, God reigns, and the Government at Wash ington still lives." Those words wrought like magic, and from that moment violence ceased in the city of New York. ' Rutherford B. Hayes said: "Look ing for the guidance of that Divine hand by which the destines of nations and individuals are shaped." Benjamin Harrison said: "God has placed upon our head a diadem and has laid at our feet power and wealth beyond definition or calculation; but we must not forget that we take these gifts upon condition that justice and mercy shall hold the reins of power.' Grover Cleveland said: "Above all I know there is a Supreme Being who hot-(les the affairs of men and whose goodness and mercy have always fol lowed the American people, and I know He will not turn from us now if we humbly and reverently seek His powerful aid." . In opening his inaugural f dress William McKinley said: "Invoking the guidance of Almighty God, our faith teaches us that there is no safer re -liance than upon the God of our fath ers, Who has so singularly favored the American people in every national trial" and Who will not forsake us so long as we obey His commandments and walk humbly in His footsteps.-' And in cooing he said. "J will, to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. This is the obligation I have reverently taken before the Lord Most High. To keep it will ue my single purpose, my constant prayer." (Continued On Sixth Page) WARREN'S FAIR AT NOR LINA OCTOBER 9 and 10TH Prizes In Addition To Those In Catalogue To Be Awarded; Of ficers Asking Aid To Make A Great Success of Undertaking. At, the Norliha School building on October the iyth and 10th there will be held an agricultural fair for Warren County, this place being selected on account of the superior advantages afforded by the school building and grounds for the exhibits, especially the live stock. The management of the fair receives absolutely no com pensation for time or trouble, it be ing given free for the good we hope will come to the county on account of the fair. This being a fact we con- ndentally expect the co-operation of the farmers, business and manufac turing interests of the county, that our combined efforts may be crowned with success. If we fail on account of not having exhibits it will be a re flection on our county. We hope to be able to select out of the exhibits shown an exhibit which will do credit to our county at the State Fair. If you have not received a catalogue we will be glad to mail one on receipt of your your name and address, Below you will find a few special premiums received since catalogue came from the press. Mr. R. B. Boyd $5.00 Best collection canned fruit. Mr. J. A. Dowtin $5.00 Best collec tion canned vegetables. Allen & Fleming $5 Best collection preserves. Mr. W. G. Rogers $5 Best loaf bread. Mr. C. C. Hunter $5 Best three pounds of butter. W. A. Miles Co. Alumnum kettle for best peck sweet potatoes." LMti J- D. Newell $1 for best whiesa? apples. ' Mr. W. D. Rose $1 best caromel cake Mr. J. A. Dameron $1 best butter milk biscuit. Mr. Bob Pinnell $1 best ham. . Mr. Rob Watson $1 best home made molasses. Mr. Ben Hilliard good tie for best home made broom. Mr. A. D. Harris $1 best pound cake Mr. J. Willie White $1 best ginger cakes. Mr. H. L. Falkener $1 best beaten biscujt. Dr. W. D. Rodgers $1 best tea cakes. Celebration at Littleton 13th Littleton is to be the center Thurs day of an interested and enthusiastic crowd at its welcome home celebra tion given the soldiers, sailors and marines of the surrounding territory. The Red Cross as sponsor for the day guarantees an auspicuous gathering which is destined to be staged in splen did style. Dr. Alston's grove will be the gen eral headquarters to which the sol diers of River, Judkins, and Fishing Creek in Warren and of Butterwood Brinkleyville and Littleton in Halifax are invited. Five hundred pounds of 'cue with many other tempting things to eat will form a delicious dinner for the soldiers. Families are expected to bring baskets as the dinner will only be served the honor guests of the occasion. S Judge Francis D. Winston will be the speaker of the day.' Soldiers of different sections, however, will called to the platform for short talks as will other citizens prominent in war work. Garber-Davis orchestra, of Wil son, will furnish music during the day. Every effort is being made by the committee for a successful celebration and the attendance of a large crowd from the surrounding country side is confidently expected. Philathea Club With Mrs. Allen The Philathea Literary Club of the Baptist church met with Mrs. T. V. Allen last Friday night. A very in teresting program was helpfully en joyed and the evening an occasion of pleasant social intercourse. Delicious fruit punch was seived. TOBACCO FLOWS HERE FOR OPENING SALE TUESDAY Streets Crowded With Citizens and Wagons Block Side Streets Leading To Warehouses; Price of Weed Declared "Good." The streets rang this morning with the familar "awgon in the road" as the warehousemen of Warrenton handled the biggest opening break in the history of the market. Citizens from all sections crowded the side walks and wagons literally blocked traffic on two of our side streets in the effort to place the golden weed upon the floors. Farmers were present from all sec tions of Warren and' some from ad joining counties. Even as early as four o'clock yesterday evening the farmers commenced to arrive for to day's sales, and this steady flow con tinued until sales time today. Much damaged tobacco was in evi dence. The heavy rains of the latter part of July being one of the chief uses for the damage. The prices received were good and the farmers as a whole were satisfied with the results! of the first day's sale. COLORDED FARMERS CONFEtt ENCE TO MEET SEPT. 26TH The Colored Farmers Conference i& called to meet in its annual session Friday before the 4th Sunday in September, 1919 (Friday, September 26th, 1919) at the County Court House, Warrenton, N. C. Meeting called at 12 o'clock. All colored farmers of Warren county are urged to be present. Bus iness of much importance. Election of officers, arrangements for County Colored Demonstrator, and etc. Mr. L. E. Hall, State Farm Demonstrator for colored farmers is invited to speak. Let" the colored farmers turn out as never before. JACOB JORDAN, President. C. H. WILLIAMSON, Secty. Big Crowds In At tendance at Court Superior Court convened promptly Monday morning with Judge Lyon presiding and Solicitor Midyette on hand to look after the tate's business. The Grand Jury was quickly drawn and ably charged by Judge Lyon, and proceeded to business. A detailed statement of cases and their disposition will appear in Fri day's issue, as press of business around the Clerk's desk has prevented getting Court proceedings in detail. Clerk Newell, assisted by Mr. Joseph J. Macon, is handling the records in good shape and with little inconven ience to witnesses and the Bar. Panacea Property To Change Hands Persistent Rumor has it that the Panacea Springs property has been purchased by a syndicate composed of Henderson business men and northern capital and that the Hotel will be con ducted throut the entire year. Good authority from our neighbor ing city states that the report is cur rent that the Hotel with improve ments will be conducted as such and that a modern sanitarium will be built on the hill facing the resort. No direct authority is to hand for this rumor but Madame is persistent enough to make the most doubtful think that there is something to thl3 ripple of news. Robert Plummer Passes Away Robert Plummer, highly respected colored barber of Littleton, a son of John S. Plummer, of this city, was buried here yesterday afternoon with Masonic honors. Many flowers by white friends attested to the esteem in which he was held. Mr. John T. Waring to Wed Mr. John T. Waring announces his coming marriage to the popular and beautiful Mrs. Jessie Terry Phillips, New Bern, N. C, on Thursday, Sep tember eighteenth, nineteen hundred and nineteen. i