Wade Addresses Knights of Gideon Inmrxncp ('ommfHsbmer S|K??k< to Negroes at tioldshoro Tues day Night Goldsboro. .August 8.?"If there is to be any hop*' for your people If they are to become a power in our industrial development; if they are to receive the greatest 'ben efit from your labors and to create a province of permanent existence. It must be upon their own soil among their own people, and by vir tue of the concerted effort to make each Individual a better citizen of his community and sUte." This statement was made by Stacey W. Wade. State Insurance Commissioner, in the course of an address before the Grand Lodge of Knights of Gideon, (Negro) in ses sion here. '\Nb man or woman among your people or mine can ever break away from indigence and servility so long as he or she makes no effort to x learn and apply the rule* of health, sanitation and thrift." said Mr. Wade. "Lowmlndedness has no place In society, religion or in busi ness, for 'As a man thinketh In his heart, so is he" and and life in every sphere or cllne Is a continual struggle for supremacy, a survival of the fltttest. regardless of racial equalities or environment. "Sixty years of constant struggle have taught the people of both races that 'No man ltveth to himself, nor by bread alone.' That period has been characterized by achievements in your race no less remarkable than In my own. and each added year marks a higher step in the progress Of both toward an ideal citizenship. I feel that It Is especially fortunate that during this period you have been thrown among people under going the same transition and facing the same problems. A people who have understood your characteris tics, who have sympathized with and undertaken to aid in every move ment looking to your advancement. Comi*nre With Foreigner* To Indicate, how successful our j combined efforts have been, contrast | your lot with that of the foreign j element that his Immigrated to our northern shores In a constant' stream, not as. slaves, hut ps free i men. eligible for American citizen:j ship. They, no doubt, ? were at- I traded there by the same lure that 1 now tempts so many of your own I ] people. What has their stay In j that country of wealth done for I them? Visit any metropolis of the | North, composed of a mixed popu-j I latlon, and notwithstanding the i great opportunities which are said to 1 exist in these states, viu will find I the foreign born housed in the slum 1 1 districts sweltering in an unbeara-11 ?ble heat or shivering In intense i cold, living in filth and poverty, with I no history ftp be proud of and little .\ ; hope for oTuturo.- Out of such a 1 heterogeneous mass has grown crime and thievery, the gangster and the gunmen. It Is a natural condition ?for any section where there js a 1 lack of sympathy, concerted effort t and a uniformity in purpose to build Jl tor the futurfc. Compare their pro gress with the wonderful achieve- 1 ments of the Southern negro during ^the ?ame period. I "Y6ur great institutions of learn- 1 ing in which so many have seen the Bight of a new day and from which thousands have been dispersed to , shed their great influence and lead ( your people forward to greater op-1 portunltles. These things could I have happened in no other country, in no other section of these great United States except in the South, for in no other quarter of the Globe are the Institutions of the people so democratic and the aims of its peo ple so unselfish. Have Vision "Here your leaders have caught a I vision of the possibilities which lie I In organisation, and It Is a slgnlfl-fl cant fact that you have attacked the! problem at Its weakest point. The I aecret of failure in nearly every re-I form or great undertaking lies in I lack of organisation, and In this. I your people, like most of the South-1 ern born have been larking. It is I at this point that Societies and Fra-1 ternal organisations such as yours I have entered Into the convbat and! carried the standard to new heights.! It U here that useful cltlsenshlp Is I taught by precept and example. It I is within your halls that heresy has! ?been put to route and true Aineri-I canlsm enthroned. "I have been dellphted to see n I aentlment of reversion among your I people of the south toward the fan-1 clful scheme hatched by Northern I promoters who have been endeavor-1 ing to show seed of discontent and I anarchy In your midst that they! * might thereby reap personal power I \ and profit and It Is gratifying to I ' know that their leader, the notorious! Marcus Gurvy ha* been convicted I In his own stronghold and rightly] punished for the fraud he had en-l V? WE HAVE? Oram Country Cabbage Pnrii Hnap lleana Nice Tomatoe* Oora Apple* for Cooking OtorfU I'MfhN CanteloapM and Watermelon*. FRESH LIMA BEANS We will appreciate your or der*. large or mall and will do OW beat to pleaae jou. PHOXK ?m M. V. Perry ???????? Ideavored to perpetrate upon your ! people. Few Are Deluded From quite another source, an ef fort has been made throughout the Suuth to breed dissatisfaction among ymir people with their lot in life. . Tempting offers of attractive pay and | soctat -advantages have been held out as an Inducement to the negro of the ISouth to forsake their friends and I native soil to which they are adapt Ied by nature and temperament for I the wealth which they have been I told awaits them In the North. It is ka tribute to your leadership that so jfew of hem have been deluded into itaking this unwise step." "As Insurance .Commissioner," 1 Mr. Wade continued, "I have had an ! unusual opportunity to study the ? record of fraternal societies In ourj state during the past decade and to | note their effect In communities where they are properly organized and conducted, and 1 am paying tri-, bute they Justly deserve in saying that wherever they have taken root,! there is a striking absence of fric-i tlon and discontent and a noticeably i high standard of citizenship." i "It is probably too much to say that the relation between the two' races in every community is all that it should be," the Commissioner said ip coticluut. ?>, "but the same may be said as to the relations jf the indi viduals of either race between theui ? selves, and only by hamnnl/.i.ig the I individuals of either race with leach other and inspiring them with a common aim toward education and usefulness, can ideal . relations be brought about. "If all our people respond as indl- 1 viduals to the efforts of both races I In this direction, there will be no racial problems, no social handicap, for with their advancement will j come new opportunities for employ ment and service and true to our j motto: 'The weak will grow strong and the strong grow great through the length of our great North State." Added to Staff State University (?eorge It. Zelinier llead*L Department j supervise the work of the following . bureaus: Correspondence and class Instruction, short courses and insti tutes, lectures and public discussion. I Miss Mary Cobb. Phi Beta Kappa , graduate of the University, is Secre- j ary of the Bureau of Correspon- j lence and class instruction, fend has | is assistants. Miss Elsie Lewis and Miss Mary Daniel. Prof. 11. D. j Meyer Is chief of the the bureau of nhort courses and institute. George V. Denny will have charge of the lecture bureau this fall. Miss Nellie Robertson, an honor graduate of the University, is head of the Bureau of Public Discussion. The services of this 'bureau include: Programs for women's clubs and parent-teacher associations, pack age library loans, home reading courses and general information. Miss Adelaide Denham, the asnlM tant In this bureau, is also a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Chapel Hill. It is Raid that under Mr. Zehmer's guidance the work of all four of these bureaus will be greatly aug mented. DESIGN CARS TO PIT CONDITIONS OF ROAD Stockholm, August 8.?Sweden, considering the motorizing of its highway traffic, declares that the' general establishment of regular au tomobile passenger and truck service can not wait for the construction of new roads and the rebuilding of old one*? but that motor vehicles must be adapted to the roads. The roads are to be divided into four classes, according to the weights which ihey are able to sustain. Trai lers. rather than additional motor trucks, ar to be used wherever the traffic is large. A curious type of ve hide is recommended for wiater usef in northern Sweden. ThU car Is to, have sleigh runners instead of front ] wheels, and will be equipped with | special drive wheels and gear. For the financing of this new ser-j ? ice yearly subsidies have been pro poned, as well as a government loan fund. i WATER STOI?S MOTOR TRAFFIC Edenton. Aug. 7.?J. Edwin liuf flap, who is on vacation, motored qv-, er from Elizabeth City with his fam ily. to show them the city, was) cauuht in the storm and had to stop! over all night. Report stated that a bridge between here and Elizabeth City had fallen In. i Twelve Thread Full Fashioned MEN'S HOSE Brown, Black and Gray, slightly imperfect. The regular $1.00 grade, the pair? 65 We recommend these as excep tional values McCABE & GRICE Treat Yourself Right If you over hope lo get the things you wanT most, you must first tare money. If you ever hope to keep those things when once you have got them, you must continue to tare money. If you ever hope to enjoy the good things of life before it is too late to enjoy them, you should start in now without de lay to save money. Treat yourself right hy opening a Sav ings Account hffe. Four per cent interest will make your dollars grow other dollars. Carolina Banking & Trust Co. ice ? We serve "The Velvet Kind." "You'll appreciate the difference." 10c plate, 35c pint, 65c quart in handy take home packages. The Apothecary Shop PHONES 400 and 800 Men's Silk Underwear At Half Price jjyri Our entire stock of Kufman's Silk ft! Union Suits for men. These Suits sold for $3.50 as a special reduction. We are closing the lot out for? ? $1.75 WEEKS & SAWYER Where the Best Clothes Come From I YOU KNOW 0 L D F I E L D CORD QUALITY BUY NOW From Regular Tire Dealers at These Astounding LOW PRICES I Oldfleld Cord Tires are race tested?holding all of the track records made in the pant three years. Oldfleld Cord Tires are road tested?in the Wichita, Kansas, Economy Road Test, in the winter of 1922, the officii record showed a set of Oldfleld Cords had traveled 34,f>25 miles be fore the first tire gave way. And this is only one of many in stances of unusual highway performance. Oldfleld Cords are built by one of the largest tire manufac turers. who must maintain the established reputation of these remarkable cords. Here Are the Biggest Tire and Tube Values Ever Offered By Anyone FABRICS CORD8 Klz-e Tiro Tube HI* Tire Tube 80*8 *,900" |7.40.,..?1.?5 82*4 M $28.00 $8.80 80*8U ?????" _ 99.85? $1.75 88*4 H* $28.80_.$8.50 88*5 _$84.90 JM.9.1 (OltnS 85*5 $85.84)?94.15 80*8 M $11.25 $1.75 88*8 $60.25 *8.70 82*4 ?.$a0.8O $2.55 88*7 $85.75410.80 88*4 $21.05 $2.85 40*8 $110.50 $18.75 All Other Tires Reduced Accordingly Purchase from a regular tire dealer, located near you. We stand behind these tires and are ready at all times to give you prompt service. All Priees Are for CASH ONLY E. J. COHOON HE'S HERE Mr. Geo. Fisher Taking mr?urr? for Fall Suit* and Overcoat*. Clothe* make the man. If you don't believe it go on the afreet without them. Come to nee him Aug. 7 th and 8th, Tuesday and Wednesday at T. T. TURNER & CO.