IT hat Will The Soldiers Say? ^JTha# is little doubt but what labor, or some provinces of it, will have a lot to live down when the soldiers come marching home. There have been some mighty dark spots in the record. But it is an actual fact that those spots have been painted blacker than they really were and that they have been pointed out by the privileged classes after a glaring fashion to hide their own sins. In too many instances, the fellow who con demned the working man the loudest was the man making the most profits. There’s the record of Sewell Avery. Some said he was right in his stand, but those who stood up for Avery and his towering Montgomery Ward never even suggested that the common worker was right in asking enough to live on. Right or wrong, Avery defied his government and was not lam basted and condemned by the kept press and tht' muzzled commentators. Rigid or wrong, workers struck and they were lambasted and condemned by the kept press and the muzzled commentators. And now we have another group balking the government. The professional entertainers and their fun-makers, or quite a few of them, are challenging the government’s right to enforce a midnight curfew on merrymaking. What will the returning soldiers say about that contempt for the government and the war? Too many commentators and reporters hang around the cocktail joints, carousing until early hours of the morning and wearing their bloated faces, to expect an all-out attack upon those who would dare open speakeasies that the fun and merriment might go on and on. But the thous ands who play the whole night through will escape detection because all the blame is being | centered on the common v/orker. T-;t bulging'profits of industry have" ff< | ; ■ ftligh'Uai raw people yelled “fire” and, bloody murder to at tract attention to the laboring ranks. if one will stop and think he’ll realize that few have a right to condemn the other fellow. We are ready to shoot the worker who asks for a living wage, but we think it all right to cheat ihe ration board, burn gas and wear out tires. If all the unnecessary travel was banned from j f1.< j,' ifjb.vr;. vv 1 ■ uie iioi ! .they know that so much of the gas and ,'H, many of the tires arc- being used needlessly ; , We do not stop to consider the facts. We don’t seem to understand that the labor used in drill ing nil, refining gas, making oil tankers, and in distributing gasoline for the joy riders and the really unnecessary travel could be diverted to jobs directly in suport of soldiers on the fight ing front. We hold no brief for John L. Lewis. He is a dangerous man. But Lewj&.nnd his- min ( rs know that all the coal they dig from the bow els of the earth does not go into the war effort or to efforts acceptable in this crisis. Tens of thousands of tons of coal have been burned in locomotives hauling vacationers up and down and around the country. For more than three years we have held the clubs open all night, burning coal and other fuel. But the coal miner is informed that he is wmrkmg for the war ef fort and that alone. There are too many free riders, and it is quite certain that the coal min er and most of the others who labor know it. Then there are those who are real smart. They sit back and enjoy life to the fullest, taking time out occasionally to tell others wrhat they should do and how they should do it. Unfortunately, labor and capital were not drafted along with the cream of the nation’s manpower. Until capital is brought under the yoke, there is little justification of hitching la bor to the double yoke alone. It is believed that when the returning soldier gets all the facts, he will not be content to con demn the working man alone. Tradition Discarded Old traditions that have chained Washington in years past are being thrown out the window. But strangely enough the side that opposed a third term because it would set a new precedent just recently by ignoring the recognized right of a President to choose his own cabinet. The reactionaries and Republicans cry very loud about traditions when it is favorable for them to do so ,and then establish new precedents when to do so is advantageous to their selfish interests. “Learn of me,” says the philosopher, “and ye shall find restlessness.” “Learn of me,” says Christ, “and ye shall find rest.”—Drummond. « ■ > PEAK The -markedg.'vwth f>f the pany in 1944 has attracted atten tion in the nation’s banking cir cles The institution with branches here and in Robcrsonville, gain ed aimed ten million dollars in deposits last year and climbed from 585th place to 490 in the list of banks with the largest de posits. During 1944 deposits of the institution climbed from S19, 900,-A-". $29,757,712, s® in crease of ‘$9,850,945. The marked sa il was a subject of a story in a recent issue of the American Ranker, official publication of the American Bankers’ Associa tion. Boy Sr?. • her attorney with will be pieaded in bar in their recov ery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 28th day of Feb., 1945. ESTELLE HARRIS, Administratrix of Garland W. Harris. Elbert S. Peel. Attorney at l aw. Williamston, N. C. m2 6t ADMINISTRATRIX’ NOTICE i North Carolina. Mr’•tin County. Having this day qualified as ad j minj.strairix of the estate oi J. L. j Pierce this is to notify all persons j having any .claim against the said j estate to exhibit .them to the' UjKder . signed or tier attorney within twelve month: from the date of this notice or this notice will be pleaded in baa of their recovery. Ail persons in debted to the said estate will make immediate payment. This the 8th day of Feb., 1945. MRS. J. t. PIERCE, Administratrix of J. L. Pierce, deceased. Elbert S. Peel, Attorney, Williamston, N. C. f9-6t PRELIMINARY CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION State of North Carolina. Department of Slate To All to Whom These Presents May Come—-Greeting: Whereas, it appears to my satisfac tion, by duly authenticated record ’if th 'proceedings foi the voluntary dissolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stockholders, de posited in my office, that the Farm vilie-Woodward Lumber Company, a corporation of this State, whose I principal office is situated in the Town of Williamston, County of Mar tin, State of North Carolina (H. R. Butler being the agent therein and in charge thereof, upon whom proc css may be served), has complied with the requirements of Chapter 55. General Statutes, entitled “Corpora tions.” preliminary to the issuing of this Certificate of Dissolution: Now Therefore, I Thad Eure, Sec rotary of State of the State of North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corporation did, on the 9th day of February, 1945, file in my office a duly executed and attested cor. sent in writing to the dissolution of said corporation, executed by all the Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel genu laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw. tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. 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