VOLUME 41 SM1THFIELD, N. C., TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1922 NUMBER 68 INDICATIONS OF BUSINESS TREND Developments in Industrial Conditions Have Differ " ent Effects NEW YORK, Aug. 27.—Both indi cations as to the trend of business and finance and opinions as to fall prospects, have shown marked divers ity during the past week. Settle ment of the soft coal strike is gener ally expected to be reflected in a sharp gain in production, a figure as high as nine million tons a week be ing mentioned as likely to be realiz ed in the immediate future. On the other hand it is pointed out that the government’s scheme of priorities must remain in force for some time, particularly until the needs of the northwest have been taken care of, so that the steel industry is likely to feel the restriction imposed by fuel shortage for some weeks to come. The 20 per cent increase in steel wages, meanwhile, is interpreted as indicating that steel manufacturers expect to be able to dispose of all their available production this fall at favorable prices. Whether steel prices will rise materially above pre sent levels, however, remains to be seen, since coal prices have already touched scarcity levels and some ob servers anticipate a decline as the scarcity is relieved. As* far as the jailroad strike is concerned, financial quarters have not entirely abandoned hope of a set tlement and do not seem alarmed over the prospects of a finish fight. Car loading statistics show the roads are continuing to move a volume of freight comparing favorably with the best performances of the year. On the other hand, it is recognized that a car shortage during the fall is in evitable. Arguing from the increase in wages in coal and steel industries which are symptomatic of a shortage of com mon labor, and the higher prices of coal and steel products, some observ ers conclude that he country is en tering a period of “inflation.” What is probably meant that something like of a boom short-lived or otherwise is to be bred of a general rise in commodity prices. Opinion on the matter is, however, divided. Those who refuse to sub scribe to this view point out that the present increase in prices is due to abnormal situations arising from thf strikes and that as such the higher prices are likely to be temporary. Such critics also emphasize the fact that certain commodities, such as rubber, are cheap and are likely to remain so. In addition, they mam tain that with grain prices at ex isting low levels, the farmers’ pur chasing power will remain moderate, and conclude that no great boom is possible until the farmer can take part in the movement. They also point to Europe’s low-purchasing power and the general consumers’ resistance to high prices. According to this view, the situa tion is likely to continue to show a marked lack of uniformity. Short ages and high prices in some com modities and industries are expected to exist alongside of quiet markets and moderate prices. Sentiment in the grain and cotton markets has been affected somewhat during the past week by the adverse developments in the Europan situa tion and the resultant weakness in the exchanges of Germany and the continental allies. Wheat has hover ed just above the dollar mark with the weather conditions and crop prospects little changed. In cotton hot, dry weather in the southwest and boll veevil damage in the other growing areas have induced private crop estimates to place the condition at about 60 per cent, and the proba ble yield of 11,000,000 bales, which is some 500,000 bales below the last government estimate. The next government report will be published September 1. Little, if any change, has been ap parent in the money market.—Asso ciated Press. The professor: "Let us take the ex ample of the busy ant. He is busj? all the time. He works all day and every day. Then what happens?” The Bright One: "He gets step ped on.”—Life. HARDING SIGNS LICENSE FOR LANDING OF CABLE Grants Permission to Western Union to Land and Operate Cable to Barbadoes. WASHINGTON, Aug. 25.—Presi dent Harding today signed a license authorizing the Western Union Tele graph company to land and operate at Miami B ach, Florida, a cable ex tending from there to Barbadoes, where it connects with the line of the Western Telegraph company, Ltd., a British concern, to Brazil. Announce ment to this effect was made after official notification had been receiv e ’ that the Argentine government 1 ad accepted the renunciation by the Western Telegraph company of its n onopoly rights in that country. The effect of the Argentine govern ments’ action it was explained, open ed up South America to the all Am erican, Western and Western Union companies with equal privileges in all the South and Central American re publics. “One of the conditions of the issu ance of this license,” said a state de partment announcement,” was that the Western Telegraph company* should surrender exclusive privileges which it enjoyed under concessions in South American countries, while the All-American Cable company like wise renounced similar privileges enjoyed by it it in countries of the west coast of South America. Both •ompri?? have made such waivers and sarsfact. ry expressions have been receive 1 from the South Amer ican governments concerned regard 'ng *he action taken by the Western Telegraph company to that end and by the All-American Cable com pany. “This occasion marks the success ful culmination of efforts made to remove obstacles to the entry and operation of ca'oles by American companies presented by monopolies enjoyed by British cable companies in countries of the east coast of South America.— W:' nington Star. $5,000,000 IN SHORT TERM LOANS ARE SOL I RALEIGH, Aug. 25.—Five mil lions worth of short term loans on which the state a year ago paid five ninety five were sold today for a year at four per cent and two mil lions three hundred thousand in school bonds went in serials from 27 to 46 at par and a four thousand dollar premium. The B. J. Van Ingen company of New York, which has gobbled up fifteen millions of these bonds, took the five million note today and the two million plus bond issue. State Treasurer Lacy did his brag financiering this time, he executed a piece of prophecy that was almost uncanny when the state jumped up and cracked its heels together on getting money at five ninety five. ; Everybody laughed at Lacy when he put an enabling clause in that act^ which gave the state the right *o* take up these notes after the first year. By the trade today the state saves forty-seven thousand five hun dred dollars. Incidentally there is a trifle more advantageous sale-of long term bonds than the state has made before.—Greensboro News. MAY PASS BONUS BILL IN SENATE TOMORROW WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—Passage of the soldiers’ bonus bill by the Sen ate before adjournment Tuesday so as to clear the way for possible leg islation growing out of the coal and rail strikes is the plan of Republi can leaders. A night session was in prospect tomorrow with disposition at that time of several of the pend ing amendments to the measure. Proponents of the amended House bill believed it would be approved as reported by the finance commit tee, except that probably the Smith McNary land reclamation bill, which has been approved by the appropri i ate committees, would be added as a | land settlement option for the vet | erans. Father (at his son's rooming j house at college): “Does young Mr. Jones live here?” Landlady (wearily): Yes, bring j him in.”—Pithy Paragraphs. -— Every person is born with brains, but they are without value unless de veloped. FORD PUNT CLOSE FOR UCK OF COAL ! Hundred and Five Thousand | Employes Will be Thrown Out of Work DETROIT, Aug. 26.—One hundred and five thousand employes of the Ford Motor Company throughout the country will be without jobs after September 16. In addition, several hundred thou sand other workers employed in in dustries furnishing materials for the Ford plants will be affected. Henry Ford gave these figures to day in announcing that his three big motor plants located in Detroit sub urbs and his assembling plants throughout the country would be closed on that date because of the coal shortage. The announcement was the most severe blow that industrial Detroit has sustained since the industrial depression of two years ago. It means, according to Mr. Ford, that 75,000 men employed in t he High land Park, River Rouge and Dear born plants of the company here will be without work. Thirty thou sand no.w working in the various as sembling plants scattered through out the country also will be thrown out of employment. How long the machinery in the Ford plants is to be stilled will de pend entirely upon the coal supply of the future, the Detroit manufac turer said. The statement issued by Mr. Ford announcing the pro posed shutdown was the story of his losing fight during the last few months to insure a fuel supply suf ficient to keep his workers at their machines. Mr. Ford declared he “had not the remotest idea” when the plants could be re-opened. It was an nounced that the normal daily con- j sumption of coal in the Ford indus tries was 3,800 tons and officials said it would be impossible to do more “than keep the furnaces and ovens warm.” * Only a comparatively small num ber of the employes of the Ford plants will be retained in service during the shut-down, it was an nounced. Crews sufficient to keep the furnaces warm will be held, how ever. Mr. Fords statement in part fol- | lows: “The coal situation has become impossible. For the last several I weeks we have seen a situation ap i proaching that we feared would force j us to close. We greatly regret hav j ing to take that step. “We wish to keep’ enough coal on hand to keep our furnaces and coke j ovens warm; to let them get cold would cause us a loss of hundreds j of thousands of dollars. At the | : rate we are getting coal now, Sep- | tember 16 will mark the time when we will have only enough coal left to keep our furnaces and ovens warm. “Our reserve stock by that time will have been completely exhausted. We, therefore, will close down the entire jdant on Septembr 16. ‘Last night we wired 900 houses that supply us with material to stop shipments, and this morning letters and telegrams were sent out tr about 1,000 more. “We appreciate the great loss it will mean to these hundreds of sup ply houses, but it also will mean a* tremendous loss to us. At present, we are producing 5,200 cars a day, end we can sell 5,300 a day. Wo have to close down at a time when we art doing a greater business than ever before in our history.” Effect of the Ford shut-down will i he felt on industry in every part of j the country, according to officials of ! the company. The number of work ■ er- employed -by firms supplying the , Ford Company with various parts ’ and raw matei'ials, including iron ! and steel, was variously estimated j at from “several hundred^thousand | to three million.” ; Announcement was made recently , that Mr. Ford had installed oil ' burning furnaces at one of his plants as an experiment, and the i hope was held by many workmen ' that the Ford company would weath er coal shortage. It developed to day, however, that only the fur naces in the machine shops had been PAY HOMAGE TO THE MEMORY OF COLLINS While Thousands Kneel At Coffin of Dead Leader War of Hate Goes On I DUBLIN, Aug. 27.—With impos- | ing military honor the body of : Michael Collins, Ireland’s warrior i statesman, was borne this evening through the streets of Dublin and placed on a catafalque before the main altar of the great Cathedral. Here j tomorrow morning a solemn requiem j mass will be celebrated for the re- j pose ef his soul. Sunday’s total suspension of civic activities permitted the people to render unrestrictedly their homage to the memory of their beloved lead er. Not from the metropolis alone but from the country districts nearby there streamed to the city hall where the body lay in state, countless j thousands to gaze upon the features , of the man to whom, more than any one else the people had looked for a peaceful settlement of Ireland’s woes. They came by train, by donkey cart, by jaunting car and on foot; they choked Dublin’s streets, yet without disorder formed in line, awaiting their turn to enter the cathedral and pass before the coffin. They knelt before the coffin, beneath the flickering candles, and prayed for the eternal happiness of Michael Collins and for the advent of peace in their unhappy country. The war of hate and ambush goes on. Today’s newspapers reproduced a striking portrait of Collins from a painting made by Sir John Laverly as a memento of the signing of the treaty between Ireland and England. He is seen sitting with folded arms, his handsome, intellectual face in re pose, his manner debonnaire. Un derneath are printed complete de tails of what the news editor calls “Dublin’s latest shocking sensation.’’ Here is the incident in brief. It is a tragedy of the “yellow lane,” a peaceful suburb of Dublin, where last evening young people and children were playing. Suddenly from the city appeared a large open automobile traveling swiftly. Seven or eight men were passengers; some of them seemed to be struggling. The car stopped a few hundred feet down the lane and a man got out and went to a gate leading to a field. The struggle in the car became violent. Two men were trying to get* away but were held and were carried to the gate. They were moaning and protseting. One was heard by wit nesses to cry out “but what is it for.” This is what little Irish children saw yesterday while the nation mourned for Michael Collins. There are ambushes and sniping, where innocent civipianpl including women are wounded and some killed. The main fighting in the field is over ; but the sudden attack on Bantry, 1 southwest of Cork on Friday by a force of so-called irregulars, shows that the revolution is still in prog ress and that Richard Mulchay, the new commander in ch'ef. has much to do before it can be said that peace and order have been restored throughout Ireland. — Associated Press. AUSTIN ENTHUSIASTIC OVER COTTON ASSOCIATION W. H. Austin, president of the N. C. Cotton Growers’ Co-operative Association, is very much encouraged over the outlook for the cooperative marketing of cotton after a confer ence in Atlanta with representatives from other Southern states. Mr. Austin was in Raleigh Wed nesday to attend a meeting of the executive committee of the cotton association,, and declared that the plans of the North Carolina associa | tion for handling its cotton met with the enthusiastic endorsement i of co-operatives from other states. < (inverted into oil burners. The Ford plants, in the aggregate, constitute Michigan’s greatest indus I try, from the standpoint of employ | ment, and as such are among the i largest in the country. Business men and manufacturers here were unanimous that the closing of these plants might have far-reaching ef fects on the national economic situ ation.—News and Observer. CO-OPERATIVES HAVE SUCCESSFUL OPENING Close to 750,000 Pounds of Tobac co Delivered to Warehouses in East Carolina. GOLDSBORO, Aug. 24.—Close to 750,000 pounds of tobacco was de livered to the co-operative warehous es of eastern North Carolina at their opening today andthousands of mem bers of the 'tobacco Growers’ Co- ' operative association witnesses the starting up of the marketing ma chinery of the giant organization, went home satisfied it is declared of its certain success. Admiration for the fairness, speed and accuracy ofthe new method of grading, weighing and paying for tobacco was expressed by growers on every market visited today by T. | C. Watkins, Jr., manager of ware houses, and C. B. Cheatham, assist ant manager of the leaf department, who were at Goldsboro, Smithfield, Bailey, Wendell, Zebulon and Fre- ! mont. In spite of warnings to the farm- ] ers not to rush tobacco good de liveries were made today. Smithfield handled close to 100,000 pounds for th egrowers. Fremont 50,000, Golds boro 35,000. Rocky Mount 16,000 pounds with Kinston, Farmville, Washington, New Bern, and many smaller points not fully reported at the close of the day. WANTS GOVERNMENT TO OWN POSTOFFICES WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—Gov ernment ownership of postoffice buildings in every city and town in the United States, where none now i sowned, has been proposed to Con gress by Postmaster General Work, with the approval of President Har ding. The President’s approval, adminis tration officials said today, was raised upon reports showing that the plan, once put into effect, would mean a saving to the government of approximately half a billion dollars within the next ten years. Administration leaders in Con gress, regarding the undertaking as an important business reform, and designed to check “profiteering in rentals,” were prepared, it was said, legislation to provide for a national postal Lull.:.ntr program. In a letter to the President out lining the program, the Postmaster General explained that the depart ment now pays in rentals annually about $12,000,000 and that when many leases recently expired own ers of buildings demanded and ob tained substantial increases. The Postmaster General declared that with the adoption by the gov ernment of the plan suggested “prof iteering in rentals would be checked and shameless speculation on the part of those who sought to prey upon the government would be abolished for all time.”—Associated Press. UNDER $10,000 BOND FOR BURNING BUILDING WINSTON-SALEM, Aug. 26.—The Nissen block, located in the center of the business section of the city, was almost completely destroyed by fire this morning about 3 o’clock. All business concerns located in this building were destroyed, the total loss being estimated in the neighbor hood of a quarter million dollars. The fire threatened to destroy the business section of the town at one time. William E. Chatman, a young boy, 18 years of age, is charged with caus ing the fire. He was given a hear ing this morning before Judge Kirby, in municipal court, the judge holding him for an investigation by Superior court grand jury. His bond was fixed at $10,000. The youth states that he set fire to the building because of a griev ance he had against W. W. Smoak, whose business was located in the Nissen block. Mr. Smoak declares he knows of no reason why the boy should have become aggrieved at him. —Greensboro Daily News. Insurance Man: “And if you have any kind of a fire, notify us imme diately.” Shopkeeper (feeling the business depression): “Next Thursday.”—Life. Mr. T. S. Ragsdale, Jr., spent the week end in Wilson with friends. CO-OP TOBACCO MARKET 1ST WEEK Nearly One Million Pounds Delivered to Association In Eastern N. C. RALEIGH, Aug. 28.—Close to one million pounds of tobacco were de livered to the Cooperative markets of Eastern North Carolina last week, at their opening, according to lat est returns which describe heavy de liveries at Washington, New Bern, Richlands, Kingston and other big receiving centers where the sign up of the Cooperative is particularly heavy. Rejoicing, prayer and thanksgiving featured the day in a score of mark ets when the long cherished hope of the farmer to control the marketing of his own product in a fair, orderly and profitable way, became at last a reality, following years of struggle and organization. Visiting Goldsboro, Smithfield, Zebulon, Wendell, Bailey and Fre mont, T. C. Watkins, Jr., director of warehouses for the Association and C. B. Cheatham, assistant general manager of the Leaf Department, found almost universal enthusiasm and satisfaction among the grower members, which were confirmed by telegraphic reports from a dozen other markets. In celebration of the day, the doors were thrown open to new sign ers throughout the belt, and more than 250 new members hastened to join the Association. At Richlands, where more than 50.000 pounds were delivered, 46 new members joined the Cooperative, 38 came in at Kinston, where close to 100.000 pounds of tobacco were han dled on the first day, 40 from New Bern, 24 at Washington and 39 at Smithfield, where 100,000 pounds were delivered, and 70,000 pounds were graded, weighed and stored for shipment. Three farmers en route to Wilson with tobacco from Cumberland coun ty were, invited to visit the Coopera tive warehouse at Smithfield. So pleased were they with the table of advances and the system of Coopera tive sales, that they drove their loads of tobacco into the Association warehouse, signed the contract and have returned to Cumberland county, enthusiastic members of the Associa tion, with their first advances in cash, their participation receipts and the knowledge that they will receive further payments and the highest dollar for each pound of tobacco which they left with the Association. Members of the Association are being urged to save their fodder to deliver at their convenience and in an orderly manner, and satisfaction is being expressed on all sides by those who do not feel obliged to rush their tobacco to market and do not find it necessary to drive long distances to secure the highest price. The cooperative markets will be open for deliveries on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays until the machinery is sped up at a later date to meet the increasing de liveries which are expected as the farmers’ crop is prepared for mark et. The fact that present payments are based on a conservative cash val ue was made clear to members de livering tobacco on the opening day. Final payments, according to Aaron Sapiro, Attorney for our Association, will amount to over three times the first cash advance, if the first suc cessful sales of the Association are an indication of the prices which its leaf department will continue to se cure. SOMNAMBULIST DIES AS RESULT OF FALL SAVANNAH, Ga„ Aug. 27.—Walk er Hodkins, 18, son of Henry 8. Hodkins, walked out of a third story window of his home while asleep last night and crushed his skull on a brick pavement. He died within a short time. “That locomotive factory that clos ed for lack of orders has started up cgain.” “Yes, they’re making whistles for the jazz orchestras.”—Life. | Mrs. M. R. Stevens spent last week ; in Raleigh.