i JiJ lJ LjL Boost E. City For Good Will Day July 4th. VOL. 1 REDFIELD'S WILMINGTON SPEECH CONTAINS FOOD FOR THOUGHT Address There before National Fisheries Association Should Be of .... Mr. Chairman and -Ladies and Gentlemen: I have not coma with any formally prepared address this evening. ! would very much rather talk to you quietly and frankly about certain things of interest to us all and of special interest to me because they affect our work, and things 1 'which it we will give them heed will i mean that our children will be bet ter off than we. I take it no man is so selfish and so foolish as to be Wind to that argument that his chil ' dren shall be better off than he. In that lies deep and strong the foun yf datlon of all we think of doing in , I conservation and the saving of waste. .We can anderstand, you and I, that an animal without a mans train and without a - man's heart might so do his work if he had it to do as to give no thought to those who were to follow him; but be cause a man is a man he does, If he be a man, give thought to those that 'iollow. The earnings of to-day, the earn ings of next week, the earnings of next month, are not all there Is for you and for me to consider. We should be lees than worthy the name of matt if we thought no farther than nat but because we we men and be cause we have children whom we love we expect so to do our work that there shall be something more for them than we had when we came. If we fail to work that way, then we are depriving our children and turn ing over to them deliberately more or less a smaller thing than we ourselves f oundt I doubt if any of" us would be willing to admit that we so worked and so lived. In that simple statement lies the argument after all, as I have said, for con servation in ail its farms. It is pretty hard for you and me, I suppose, to think that there are lands where people are always on the border of starvation, where the thing to be dreaded is that there shall' not be enough to eat. Some months ago I was in the city of Wheeling, W. Va., in February, and a heavy snow was falling. I found In the minds of all men the question as to whether there would be with the opening of the spring the floods that meant so much of loss and of terror to them. If you go to India you will find men, millions of them, to whom the keeping of anything in store has been impossible through many generations and to whom the shortage of a crop from any one of a number of causes means the im mediate presence of starvation. There may be enough yonder, across the mountain, for them, . but the means of transportation may be so Insufficient and often are such that men starve within a few score miles of plenty. If you go to China, in that thickly settled country you find frequent recurrences of lack of food and occasionally the starvation of men by thousands. But if you will pass to Japan you no a country vhere almost the same conditions xist and yet where care and wise foresight has so controlled those conditions that a great aad power ful people has grown up under very narrow circumstances. For if you look at Japan you will And that, I think I , am correct in saying, but 20 per cent of its entire area can e cultivated. The larger part of Japan is inhospitable, with lofty mountains, and a vast population, many tens of millions, must live up on a land of which but one-fifth is open to cultivation. Under these circumstances if the Japanese did not live on food from the sea they would not live at all. A very large percentage of their food supply Is taken from the sea, far more than we have any idea of in this country, and that, coupled with a degree of economy in ling of which we know almost nothing at all, compared to 'htch the narrow expenditures of ur poorest, siM'm wasteful that ELIZABETH CITY, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 17, 1916 i Interest Here - economy of living with that extreme carp lor the food products of the sea make Japan in large part the great and powerful nation that she lat For she has nothing else upon fwhieh to depend for her living. In this country we cultlvlte but 45 per cent of our arable land, and of that which we do cultivate so wasteful are our methods that only 12 per cent is cultivated as well as well as we know how to do it. We have as yet but scratched the sur face of our possibilities in agricul ture. Yet already relatively to our population our food supply begins to fall off, not in the total but rel atively to our population. You have only to ask your good wives to get the facts. What is the price of meat as compared with the price of meat ten years ago? How many cattle are there in the country compared with the population that there were? There are 20-odd million more peo ple than there were 20 years ago and there are 10 or 11 million less cattle than there were at that time. There are fewer food animals. There are many millions more to eat them. We used to be a great food-exporting country. In my boyhood I heard about the plana of the West feeding Europe. They do not feed Europe as much as they did and we have begun to import food. We import food very, very largely. I do not say, I do not mean to imply, that we are so much as approaching even in a remote degree the condition of In dia or China or Japan, for that would not be true, but there has been a change in your lifetime and mine in the proportion of our food supply to our population which we need all our brains and energy to overcome, and the evidence of It is in the price of bread and flour and eggs and milk and cheese and meat that you buy every day. There it is written on the books of every retail store in the land, plainly to be seen of all men and only to be overcome but certainly to be overcome if we will put our brains and our vision into it. For just as you and I can not afford to live without thought of our children, so we can not af ford to live in the present with our eyes closed and fail to see these things which are going on all about us To do that is to become truly mentally blind, and being blind to wander (in foolishness to our hurt. . These are facts, these that I have mentioned to you, and they must be dealt with soberly, like men, quietly, unselfishly, with vision and in the light of day. Now let me, if I may, speak to you of another country wherein some of these thoughts that we gather un der the head of conservation have been worked out, with very extra ordinary results. Come with me In fancy, If you please, to the Island of Java, which I had the pleasure of visiting only a few years ago. It was then to me, as I fear it is to many still, a spot upon the map. I wish you and I knew more of that spot, for proud as we are of the produc tiveness of our own land we have things to learn from the Javanese and the men that control that won derful Island. It Is about the size of the State of Pennsylvania or the State of New York, almost exactly the size of each of those two States. Its territory is very largely moun tainous. There are, I think, 60 vol canoes in Java. A qng range of mountains runs the entire length of the Island, which supports a popu lation of over 30 millions of peo ple, nearly one-third that of the en tire United States. And it exports tond! That has been done because of the wonderful management of the Hollander. He believes in conser vation. If it was not for that there mould be no Holland. If Holland was not conserved every day It would not be there. Much of It would be salt water And the Hoi lander has carried his ideas of con servation into his colonial posses sions, where he was free to work them out. Consequently you do not have to raise the question whether there is a bad road in Java. Indeed the Malay farmer knows that the bad road he can not afford. He ls only a Malay; he is a Buddhist by profession of religio'n, but he knows that about the most expensive thing for the poor Malay fanner, is a road over which he can nof haul quickly and cheaply to the nearest marktt. So every foot of that land is in tensively cultivated and extensively cultivated .as far as it goes. I have seen a mountain thfre 5,000 feet high which from its tip Bummit to its base wa3 wholly one continuous field of rice. From the top down in successive small waterfalls flow ing from terrace to terrace,.. where there were a few square feet to be gathered out of the mountainside to make a little pool in which rice grew throughout the whole mountain on ajl Its sides, was one continuous rice field. And they have achieved that wonderufl result (in of course a tropical land where there are no winters and where things grow all the year around) of supporting over 30 millions of people on 48,000 square miles of .territory and of ex porting coffee to the United States and sugar and tapioca and other ar ticles bf food to Europe. We may learn something if we will from the successful management of the Hol lander and from the every-day be havior of the Malay farmer under his cafe, So may we talk a little while to night about wastes and the kind of things that bring waste and the cause of them in this, land of ours. I think U !" to Good Book ,that said, "Faithful are the wounds of a friends," and I suppose It was right. My old partner used to say to me, "Don't tell me about the things that are going right about the shop. I know those things. Tell me the things that are going wrong, that I may correct hem." And so for many a long year I never went out into the shop without looking not to see what was good there, not to see that which I could tell of with pride, but to find what was wrong in order that we might make it right, for in wrongs and weak nesses corrected rather than in right things 'existing lies the future and growth alike of a factory and of a people. We suffer first of air from wastes arising from imperfect organization in this country. We are not organ ized so that' the poor man gets al together the chance he ought to have. What do I mean by that? In the city where I live there were said to be at one time about 30,000' small tradesmen, men keeping small stores. Most of them lived above or behind the store out of which they made a modest living. For the small amount of money those men needed for their business their credit was ust as good as yours or mine or that of any large concern anywhere. But conceive what would have happened if one of those small tradesmen had walked into an ordinary commercial bank and asked for a loan of $10. I think you know he would not have been welcoraed I think you know that there is no established way in this country whereby the small tradesman, honest and for the loan he desires just as good as you and I are, can get a small business loan in the same sense and in a similar way to that available to a large con cern. We are not organized that way. We are organized for the man who wants $600, $1,000, (5,000. He gets "considerations; but the man who needs $5 does not find it as easy to get a loan on honorable terms, with regard for his own self respect, as he ought. Suppose your wife or the wife of a very poor man in this country Is minded to give him a good dinner. She must needs If she wants chick en, and can afford chicken in these days, buy a whole one. It is not so necessarily in other countries. I could take you to great civilized countries when" she could buy a leg of a chicken or a slice of chicken or a wlnj? of a chicken. May I illus trate this lank In our organization by telilng yoj of an actual experi ence.' When t was living In France in in year 1 30 0 we found that the Con'lninri on Last Piue 7n n . I I , - f vkMtk FOUR LIVES WAS THE TOLL Whon the Eight Escare Gr.s Bont Marion Sinks In The Pamlico River (By KuMein l'resw) Washington, N. C, June 16 Four passengers were drowned and sevMal others had a narrow escape from drowning when the gas boat Mari'M. Captain Lawrence Tate, bound from Hath to Washington, sank Thursday morning at nine o' clock a short distance from the ruoutli of Bath Creek. The dead are Maud Mason, age 14, daughter of W. W. Mason; Ruth Brooks, age 14, daughter of C. J. Brooks; Katie Brooks, age 1 8, daughter of C. i. Brooks and J. S. Woolord, age 6U. Those who were saved wer Edgar Campbell, Will Arnold, Sam Brooks Surry Bowen, Hilton Bowen and Captain...Tate '1. The Marlon left Bath early In the morning with a large load of pota toes. The boat had just rounded the point, of J. B. ArchbeH's farm, when she turned over . The acci dent occurred about 500 yards from the shore and In 20 feet of water. The screams pf the passengers brought Mr. Archbell and others to the waterfront.' Four small boats were immediately secured and res curers hurriedly rowed out to lend Assistance. The surytyoj-a of the tra gedy were hanging to the aides of the craft, which had not sunk, but was floating almost .bottom side up. Captain Tate, Sam Brooks, J. S. Woolard, Surry Bowen and the 3 girls were in the pilot house when the accident pecured. As the Mar ion went over, Captain Tate, Mr. Brooks and Mr. Bowen managed to crawl out through the windows. The girls and Mr. Woolard were pen ned in, however, and were unable to get out. Hwell Caused Iia.str Clarence Mayo, captain of the Pun go, has arrived in the city and stated that his boat was coming out of Bayside when they noticed the over turned Marion. The survivors were standing on the bottom of the craft, she having completely turned over. Mr. Mayo headed the Pungo over to the craft and when he arrived there, attempted to right her by the use of a line, fastened from boat to boat. His efforts were unsuccess ful, however. Mr. Mayo states that he talked with Captain Tate and that the lat ter a iimted having loaded the ccft rather heavily. Captain Tate sala that vhfp she came out of the craek into the river, the swail washed over her and she became waterlogged. FJR.ST METHODIST CHURCH The pastor will occupy the pulpit at both morning and evening hour. In the evening he will preach the fourth sermon in the series on "The Making of a Man". The subject will be "The Spiritual Man' or "The Development of the Religious Life" A cordial Invitation is extended to all. FIR8T BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. B. C. Henning returned Fri day from Richmond where he attend ed a meeting of the Foreign Mission Board, and will occupy his pulpit Sunday morning, preaching from the subject "The Happy Dead." , At the evening service Dr. Hen ning will preach from the subject "Living in Error." The public are cordially invited to be present. BLACKWKLL MEMORIAL CHURCH On Sunday morning at eleven o' clock Rev. I. N. Loft In will preach from the subject "Grieving the Spir it." ij At the Sunday evening service Mr. Loftin's subject will be "Pray er, the Release of God's rossibili tis. A cordial Invitation to at tend thong services Ib extended the public. THE MIKADO IS THECLIMAX Of Seven Joyous Das Under The Big Cautau qua Tent Chautauqua's Seven Joyous Days came to a close last night with the excellent rendering of the Gilbert and Sullivan-classic, "The Mikado", which proved, as was anticipated, to be the brilliant climax of the week's entertainment. In the afternoon ..Junior Chautau qua opened the program, with its delightful "Junior Town." "We want something to uo," plead ed the boys Vnd girls, and we will be more useful when we grow up, If you will give us something to do." Uncle Sara and Mother Earth were visited by Mother Earth's Children, the Indians and the early settler's descendants. Dances, drills and the well-known song since last Chautau qua. "My Town," were a part of the demonstration made by the children for Uncle Sam. The Commission ers of Junior Town were introduced and prizes were awarded by Uncle Sam for excellence in canning, gar dening, and other industries. Pyra mid building, fancy tumbling, build ing a human bridge, relay race, and the Chautauqua march followed in succession, and the Junior Town play closed with the chorus, "Depend on the Boys and Girls." -A- few numbers from the orches tra and other members of "The Mi kado" company followed, at the dose of" which a violent thunder storm threatened to cut off the af ternoon's program. Prof. Raus chenbusch, to whose address the most thoughtful people of the city had looked forward, more than to any other number during the week, was obliged to wait some time before delivering his lecture on Christian ity and the "Social Crisis." Perhaps the term "a Christian Scholar" most accurately describes Prof. Rauschenbusch, for his ad dress left no doubt of the serious study which he has made of the sub ject discussed by htm, and his atti tude throughout was that of the man who loves his fellowmen. Prof. Rauschenbusch began by saying, "We use this word 'social' frequently, and sometimes without realizing what it means." He illus- strated the meaning of the word by animal life and later by the human family. "When God said, 'It is not good for man to live alone' He cre ated a social being, creating at the time for us greater power, greater pleasure, and greater possibilities, but also, greater responsibilities and dangers. For while our greatest joy is found in our dearest friends and loved ones, these are also they who cause us most anxiety. It has been said that a man's wife is his dear est enemy and that a woman's hus band is her most tantalizing friend. I knew a little girl once in the New York slums who when her father found her doing something naughty one day spanked her, ran crying to her mother and said 'Mama, that man that sleeps here on Sundays slapped me', That was the child's impression of her father and his ha bits. "There is more or less antagonism in human society, even in marriage. Society becomes complicated for a man as soon as his wife's relatives come to his life, and his problems become more difficult. There is al ways in society the possibility of hos tility. When our children come, life is yet more complex. The family evolves, then the community. The commulty enlarges and becomes a great tenter of human life." The Christian ideal Is each for all and all for each. This Is the great possibility. ' . "Hut as. we look about, us we see a great division, extreme wealth and poverty. A few have taken the choice places and by owning them have control over the whole land. It Is as though a mothrr left the cup board key with one child to glvn food to the oi hers and the selfish News Without Bias Views Without Prejjdice NO, 18 LOOKS LIKE HYDROPLANE Generous Subscriptions Secured Last Indicate Success In Undertrking Following the Chautauqua pro gram last night, Mr. Pugh, In be half of the Chambem of Commerce, called a meeting of citizens to nut j before them the question of wheth- riiaueui uity wtu have a hydro plane here on Ub Fourth of July, Good Will Day. It will cost Elizabeth City $600 to get this machine here in a dem onstration flight on that day, but Mr. Pugh Is very'optimistic and be lieves that the money will be forth coming. A fairly good beginning was made last 'night Dr. L. 8. Blades led off with a subscription of 125 and O. F. Gilbert followed with a like amount. There were quite a number of ten and flve-dot lar subscriptions, especially eonsid ertng ttie fact that the purpose ot Vie meeting was not understood aud many business men" did not re main for It. Mr. Pugh announced that with committee of. helpers he would see the business men personally within the next few days and that by Tues day of next week he would be ready with a definite announcement. By that time It will be certainly known whether there will be a hydroplane fir for the Fourth. , It looks like the movement will go through. CAW MEMORIAL CHURCH Dr. Hugh W. White, who is at home on his furlough from Yen- cheng, China, at which place he la stationed as a missionary from the Presbyterian Church, will occupy the pulpit at Cann Memorial " Church both Sunday morning and evening. Dr, White is well known here and will be welcomed by many friends who remember with pleasure his six months stay here , during which he preached regularly at Cann Memor ial church. The public are cordially invited to hear Dr. White at the Sunday services. child for the food extorts from the other children their choicest play- things. "The question is, shall this ten dency go on and intensify itself or can we reverse It and create a more even social life? "This question is a religious one. Our churches are dependent upon the social life of our community. If that life is uneven in the way in which I have mentioned it Is diffi cult for both the rich and the poor to develop religiously as they should. Investigation has shown that religion among the well to do flourishes though it Is somewhat superficial; among those who have little plea sure or time for pleasure It be comes meagre and austere. In the dregs religion disappears. There are no ideals and religion is blotted out. r "Religion thrives best in a popu lation 'where conditions are most even and wher there are few differ ences among the people. "The real test of Christianity ia this; that we serve our fellowmen, that we meet this wrong tendency and reverse it so that humanity shall be lifted up. Not solely in church membership, nor In donations for missions Is our religion expressed. We must meet this wrong tendency with a driving force that will make Its Imprint on the future. We must do It even If it involves the sacrifice of some of our dearest personal pleasures. "We must do it in order that the 'Kingdom may come,' for which Christ taught us to pray," The people who use Gas prefer It to any other fuel. They say Is it cheaper and less trouble than any other ful. - Tit I t.AS CO. . l'lioiw 271.