THE DUNN > t Volume VIII. Dunn, North Carolina, May 27, 1921. COLLEGE PAPER HAS PRAISE FOR GIRARD WHSON Duns Boy Complete* Fourth Year in University of North Carolina CAPTAIN OF BASEBALL CLUB THIS SEASON Led Team Through It* Moat Successful Year, Defeating 25 Oldest Rivals—Waa One Of Beat Pitcher* In College —H n d Very Few Re Commenting on the ivcord of I. Girard Wllaon who was Just com pleting a year as captain of the Uni vmhKy bewt>all club and hU last year as a student In the University, the Tar Heel, official organ of that institutions athletics, has ths follow ing to say sd)tor.ally: ‘It seems that Trinity furnishr» material for Lefty Wilson to do his beat work upon. It was against the Methodists that he first permanently stepped in the lime light when h« pitched hia air-tight ball against them for two rsnss in as many days both going -for extra inning*. Using the one, and winning the other; it was against them, that he hunt up the record of sixty two pitched balls Ini - I.ot waar fhrrgbv clinching Carolina'* till* lo the State championship, and hi* own claim op en the captaincy of the present, par haps, the greatest of all Carolina’s bastoall teams; and It was against the Durhamtta* again on Saturday that the captain recovered himself m the right field. and at the hat, and made a fine eait from the college baseball world. “We were glad to nee thin finale for the man whose record h»* been only mar rod by the A. and K. and Georgetown games that came near the close of his career and were about to cover over the finenesses of lire record of the man who ha* no equal on Use Carolina diamond of this col lege generation. No man has served more ms selfishly, nor worked harder for the team than ha* Wilson. Modest at all times, unassuming ■ never, and ever ready to go and do for the wel fare of the team with, no co.isider* tioa The edtf. L. (Mrard Wilson pas made a record both in the quality and amount of work done, and in the spirit Aown that Carolina athlete* _ju*y all strive to emulate, but few can hope to oqual. "To those orf us who have seen him work fox four years, who saw him atetn the onslaught of the Virginians after our two first bets had failed at Greensboro, to those of us who saw him gather up bia team las* spring and in five day* pitch hi* way to vic tory through the three other strongest college team* In the State, and there by the team's way lo the State cham pionship. the reverse* that <carae at West Raleigh against A. and E. and at Georgetown, were nothing more than speck* upon the borlaon. and that could in no way reduce the ra diuses of a record already made "Wilson is a hot wcothef pitcher, and has really struck his stride at one time thia year: in the Virginian game here on the Hill when he held the Vir ginian* for seven innings before hu taammalc* had gathered themselvae together to offer the needed air-tight support. And it ia in terms of sort at work that the real Wilson stands. It Is in terms of this work of work that he came to be the captain of the present team which is the wit ness of lu own groatnea*. In the near* columns of the same newspaper the following story ap was * •"loft/’ rwtilson, captain c*' the championship Carolina baadbaU team for tho past aaaaon, narlleipaUd «n bug Saturday afternoon, playing right field, when Carolina wound »P the Mason with a victory oyer Trinity College by the aeore of 6-2. In hi* last game the Carolina captain con tributed one slashing hit, made one wmtjtv nut. amieted in one brilliant dlVrV play, and played an all-round *°T!L£Oorard Wllaoncamc to Carolina from hie home In Dunn, h. cTln the fall of 1*17, with aa ***■ viable high school baseball record bo Mad him. In hU first two year* In high achool b* hod played on th* in field and was alwaya considered as a fast and taappy fielder and a jury hitter In hi* laat -two year* of hig* ■ehool hall h* pitched and was knowr aa one of the heat aonthpowa in that **7n°hU first year at Carolina ‘lefty am* one of tL *•*/**•" « fmahman team, and looked to or var3jr* mate rial for the oral year In hu second year he was u**d a » relief pitcher moat of the warn" and *« ao«h be dletlngulAed him-H a number of timea. He pitched thi laat few Inning* of U»c nnnua >r«l venenata, and waa considered a one of Carolina** eurmt bittern "Lefty" had hi* baft season In hi I OBler year, when he made n repu UUoV for hnnaelf aa not only Care llna's beat bet oa the also as Juet about th# leading twtrte In the atats with George Hurray o SteM College Hk» only rival On tb annual northern tr'p he tamed ou th« he«t maond work of any of th foi fiatl witters and in the . Jni vraak af the season he d tlr.ru *"* biamalf with yktaries over Stale Col lego, Wake fW sad Trinity la ** ikMbrt IDKI of 9M w«ok. In th Trinity gam* he hung u? what ml** ha a world a roooed wtth aaly 6 Better Basis Of Cost | Than For Many Years | Cotton Planter U Approaching Pro War Normalcy Aa To Labor Costs By 1'jr.rtr Rue iter 1 have no h« - latino In myrng tint i I my regai d for the approaching: col-l ton season, from both the standpoint j of production and consumption, is] frankly oplinaist'c tempered only here j anil Vhote with th<* -uggeit <»o of uM tm-conserva!iip in ^afrruariLnp con ■ dltiors left over from the socalled | period of dcflal'on now, I bcl.evc, happily drawing to an end. The 1021-22 crop it utaiinjc the romphliun of what may be loughly termed its start, about two w«kj la ter than normal, and with a reduction in actcage, taking the belt as a whole, amounting to in my opinion 20 per eent. This in conjunction with a very considerable rvduruon in Du bm» of fertilisers east of the Missis/'ppi nvci* may br placed, as 1 have placed it for some week*, at HO per rent of th’ normal yield. The planter is and bus been in poKseiu.on of a much better basis of coil for a Utimber of season* pas:, And la thus approaching the nor malcy of prv-war conditions in ao far a# labor, fertiliser*, and his further items of sxpsmr arc concerned Kruo the standpoint of outlet we <k« no reason to doubi that th*a la Improving condition* tight themselves, and open up the normal outlet* foe cotton, and will continue to improve a* world some idea of which may he gotten from the consumption flgu.es of the srvcral yoar* preceding 1VI4. My one wo»<t of caution is dimN at the c red it sitiur. on, am with a very considerable portion of a cotton crop made to swll aniund 40 rents still nn*old. and facing the piesent level of valuas, a ia of pnmc importance thnt the oidarly liquidation of the Indira led loss should proceed a* it h&* pro ceeded with the utmost conservation. It ha* been with this idea in mine! mm l »r luirru nij unt »• lion to the matter of stora*.- and fin anetmr of cotton ben* in (ir#cndioro. believing that by both precept and , sample, it U the duty of thoar who have made cotton the study of a life time to develop ibis storage feature in order that the commodity may be marketed in accordance with the dr mnnd, and thus do »»#y with the »o calk'd weight of the crop at one per iod of the aoason, and its abnuimtil scarcity al another. OFFICERS GET CURIOSITY IN FORM OF DISTILLERY Greenville, May 25.—One of the most unique whiskey Mills seen m this tretina of the county since pi ihibition waul into off apt w«a Ctttuwht to- rasp efty Saunfay aftemon 6y Sheriff Earnest Dudley and Joe Nobles, Rc thol Tnwis-hip eon .table, and placed in the cotifi-rated cell at the county jail, where it will remain until the •sheriff get- ready to send it to the N_tional Museum at Washington City. The outfit was raptun d the ear ly pa>t of last work by Con.-.tablc No-, ble> white on n raid ebuut two miter I this aide of the town, and is believed, to be the only "he of its kind ever I before ured in the manufnrtnre of contiaband beverages. The still is nf ten-gallon rapacity, oval shape similar to an ordinary anted wash pot. and has one of the most complete send skillfully construc ted worms ever eac-n in the h-story of still capturing m the tertitory. The Mill itself is so constructed trial it may be need on a pnc-buimr oil stove, and ia capable of punluring a capa city output much sooner than the I ordinary type. A small nil stove wn.i etc pored at the same time, and shnwe| .signs of continued operation for many months. The slHI was constructed en tirely of copper, even down to the I lend of the worm, which is an umiau lally long affair, and the condition of] the copper shows it must hava been Free uso of motion picture semens | throughout the country for the das soeninatinn uf "any mot sage the gov ernment wishes to spread for the welfare of the people’1 was tendered to President Harding yesterday by a committee of the Motion Picture The atar Owners of Amcrira. which ia in tension here.—Associated Press Rivera with sources but no mouth# m_1_IE sL.. ..._...1 laaa tksSRt. selves in the parched dealr waatas of Persia. Sand along tho greater pait of Uke Michigan will "sing" if sUtred when dry. p'trhed balls in 12 inning*. During thia aeaaon whHo not working in the bo* the southpaw was often used in the outfield. . . . .. For the season just closed "Lefty Wilton was unanimously elected cap lain and although he did nut go so well in the bo* as in previous sea ion*. he was one of Carolina's most vernatile players. In the early part of the season he wont In hU usual stride and in the first Wake Foreat game hia clever pitching and hit hit in a pinch wore the Instrumental fea ture* that contributed to the viriory over the Bapt!>,ls. Hr pitched hti worst games against Stave College Georgetown, and In hi* start again*'. 1 Wake Forest In thr serond game with i the Baptists. But in spite of those • rrveives Wa work for tho season was i not, by any means, a failure and in two of the three games in whleh i he was handicapped by bad- rold • weather. Wilson has always been a hot 1 weather pitcher, and In every season r before this h« hat been known «• « r great fielding pitcher and with ai r nusually steady bead He has t 1 good assortment of hooka and won > dtrful control. In many of biu rot t ins games he has struck out na ana I ■ suol number of men and alluwat - lan unusually low number of hit*. I» ila pinch he has. aa a rnla, been at II ways effective, and as a batter h< t has been one of the hast, hlttmg pi I chan Carolina has aver had. NEGRO GETS EIGHT YEARS IN PRISON Six Other Black* Implicated In Norlina Riot Caao Cot A Yoar Each Wamnion. May 26—Jerome Hnn* ter, Warren county negro, wax found guilty in Superior court bore yester day of iicrct asuul on Raby Traylor, young white man of Norlina, and1 sentenced to eight years in the Stale Penitentiary at Raleigh by Judge E. H. Cranmer Hunter, represented by John E. Woodard, of Wilson, plead guilty to shooting Traylor, twice, one | bullet taking effect in Uie stomach, I Iteming his intestine* eight times | and knocking his belt buckle off. Hunter received the hcaviwt penal-! ty of any of the sixteen negroes i brought here early yesterday morn-1 mg from Ur Penitentiary and tried I for uaiticipatlon In a riot at Norlina,! Sunday morning, January 22 In whtch. which Raby Traylor, Floyd Traylor, | II. L. Rainey, and W. J. Upchurch, white boys, and Jerome Hunter. I Claud!c Jones and Robert Moss, ns-' gross, were slightly wounded. Thr riot •« a icsult of the dtsaatisfac tlon by Plummer Bollock, negro, over the purchase of ten cones worth of apple* from Raby Traylor, clerk in J. P. Williams’ grocery store. Itirliard Li r os son, Alex Milam and H. L. Jones were sentenced to one year in jail, with leave for the county! romnvseioners to hire him out In an olhi r county for road work. Ben Crnxrvn, Claudle Jones, Robert Hsu, and Charlie Rodweli were each sen isnerd to six months in jail on the same conditions. Charges against John Bmrey, Henry Jonee, Jim Hun ter, Robert F. Mow. Norman Smith, A.lhur Kearney. Elia* Alston, and Walker rerry were nol prosecd with' leave. Capias was issued for Matthew 1 Buttock, brother of Plummer Bollock, I who has'been miming tine* the shoot-i •og and Is generally thought to hove I been, along with his brother and Al- j fix'd Williama, one of the chief con-' •pi i atom Mrainat the Traylor broth-1 rrs Alfred Williams and Plummer: Bollock wore taken from the Warren! county jail tbe night of January 2S| and shot to death by a mob. Charles! Smith was not tried on account of I serious and probably fatal tobercalar! lUnesa. 1 The trial was conducted quietly! and the crowd la the court room I •aimed pleased with the punishments mated ant. Solicitor Garland E. Mid yette, of Jackson, was nsaisUd la the prosecution by Tanker Polk and B. B. - — "LET HATEFUL SECTIONALISM BE SUNK" Eerrv sincere lover of country who earnestly hopes to see fulfilled the promises of restoration of the balance In common affairs so rudely disturbed by the World war will endorse the heart-touching words uttered upon Uu- floor of the I loose of Represen tative* by Congressmen Tou of North: Carolina, whose soldier son lie* buri-1 cd In Fiance. Hi* utterance* art so! described because they contained oae. of thr meet beautifully eoorhed sp-1 peals for a united country that the, capital has beard in many yearn- | The occasion was the erroneous as-1 sertion of tbe fact that the standing I committer minority representation was being framed to give tbe Bo nth! leadership in the vent of a Demo n's tic victory Id 192k. This was de-| nounced by the Republican majority itself a* unfair and unjust, the condi tions being duo solely to the almost minate representation of the minority from the Northern and Western state*. Declaring with vigor that tbe people of the South wore tired of the sectional issue, the eloquent speaker told his hearers that his people thought that when the Spanish war was fought, the end of sectional charge* would be witnessed. They believed, too, that when they saw their boys going to the front of the world War the compensation would be obliteration of the prejoidice of the sections. HU own boy wont and never returned. Yet in the election following the armistice the whole issue again was1 revived, a thing that caused the Con-, gross man to ask this question, which I should be pondered by every man sad woman to whom it comes: "What sacrifice in It that tbe men and women of the Booth must make In order to ead this feeling! what wo will respond. Wo hart rallied to I the flag; our boys hare done their I beet. They cheerfully offered their i lives, just as the hoy* from other S'Clion* offered their*. And yet the I sectional issue still llrce. It Demo crat* win, whether true or false, the charge is made that the South ie in the saddle. “If the Drmoerau are defeated the l plea Is mad* to keep them defeated 'to keep th* South oat of th* saddle.’ I When all issuna fall, whoa our oypon iwitl hare ao iasuv, sectionalism is ra |vivcd. No man in America lavas th* flag more ardently than tha man on |Uili aide of tha chamber. Wh«n, In Ood’s name, will the lime come when I political aalgrnclos will aot bo such las to require this sectional issue to he raised again?" I With compelling force Coagteasman |Pou pleaded for the whole people to sttnd united In the presence of the I Sag. and said that th* political party having the moat economic issues I should pravall to tha end that never I me re would be heard the eoatempll hle asaertion about “th* North ruling the nation or th* South ruling th* nation." , It I* the credit of th* mamfcam I of tho House of Representatives who hoard this prayer that they gave H 'thetr applause; but It would h* for better la ever* way if they gave H their honest, riaerre and actlua.eup port In thought and deed. Appeal* to sectional prejudices are but admit ■ slows of weakncM.—Clnelaaali In quirer. , Dempsey Goes Through His Strenuous Workout WUk Attorney General Daugherty Uokhi Or — He Inereases Bea ir« To Six' Raaods Atlantic City, N. Y.—May 2*.— With Harry H. Daugherty, attorney general of the United States, u his guest. Jack Dempsey today went through the moat stgaauous workout he hat indulged in Macc he started training here 10 dayt’ggo. The heavy weight champion iaetuased bis boxing rounds, covered six miles on the road punched the bug for 14 minutes and ihadow boxed for two’round a Clad in full length trunks, a cap tn old sweater, and a three days’ growth of beard, DeAeey wat pre sented to Mr. Daugherty before go ing to his indoor gyxMasium. The attorney general chafttd with the ihanrmlon for a few naiautci and then poeed for the pictured After giving the champion a cleat OV inspection, Mr. Daugucrty said: , "You’re biggor thaaJ thought you were. 1 «nr you be«TBr»asian and you looked small then- I am glad to know you and I shall drop in every1 woekend. Perhaps I shall he able to I help you out—out it Will ba in ad riaory capacity and gft with the gloves." The attorney general is an ardent boxing fan. having tmgsk in the sport when he University pf Michigan, and he ^geroosly ap plauded the chomploniVteT he had Itnlahed boxing. ”* After punching the Bag and shad rw-boxing. Dempeey ieuk on Larry Williams, Jack KenaaJt, Alex Tram tilt** and Babe UiruU In succeaa lon. -I— Fire Destroys Tiro Wooden Buildings I rtiMC DEBTBOYBgcT- J.".N Pmsesg Club sad She. Shop On I—ha . Fre originating 4a a yearning club iertruyed two wooden atom buildings| fronting Lucknow 8quare West Tues lay night. The setlmstay damage is. ■pproxhnatcly (5.000 wnh probably 1200 insurance. The pressing club contained many I nsita of clothes and lbs prewing equipment. All of it was a total low rfw adjoining building waa used as s shoo repair shop sad gaMIstd few poods of valas. Mayor J. Lloyd Wadwwaa earner >f 4>oU> buildings. ’ ' *Tl wfwJsmJoot«s wMfts | the aom ..coml'dl lot be saved. Good work by tbc fire men, however, confined the blase to he two buildings burning whi n they, irrtred. , CHRISTIAN EDUCATION INDIVIDUAL MOVEMENT Nashville. Tenn.—"The Christian I ’duration movement is no longer a rroat undertaking of a great church. | 5ut a individual enterprise,” era# the itatemant given out by A. C. Marts, sdvlsory director, in commenting up on the prospects for final success ■hen the Christian education move ment reaches Its climax, with the put-1 Ling on the drive for the big educa Llonal fund. Mr. Marts stated further.. 'What was the Church’s responsibil ity In January 1021 has become an individual responsibility in May 1921. Prom this time on the movement is a searching challenge to huso million individuals to think of tha undertak ing not aa the Christian education movement of the Methodist Bpiseopel Church, South, but as a individual responsibility for the Christian edu cation of America. Wboti wa are driven by the corapuMon of personal accountability we will not spars our selves la i-neryy. davetJan. intercee sion or giving. When, sro, as individ uals, have one by one, paid the price in our own hoarta and wills, then we, as a Cburvh, can reader this sav ing service to tha world.” Leaders of tha movement (a this section say that during the past six months the Methodist church, South has forced upon the attention of the people it enrvex an Ideal which has already begun to exercise a far-reach ing Influence, and that the develop ment of education throughout Uia South wW be affected far years to coma by tbc Ohureh’s commitment to an anterpiiae which ia planned to result in Christian character. They slate further that it la aot the cus tom of Methodists to erect an Ideal and thee walk wwsy from it, hut that during the approaching financial drive In behalf of tha Christian edu cation movement, that wiU seek to stake that ideal effective by a sweep lag victory for tha various goal* soogni. The Hut* fen- the clmrch-wi<te fi nancial appeal i* Map 29-1 tine s and the amount to be raised throughout the ehoreh ic $88,000,000, which will be applied to the imprevemeat and enlargement of Its $1 education plants. It is said that between on* and two million dollar* already has been suborrlbed te the load. CARPENTIER GOES EOR A LONG RAMBLE IN WOODS I Manhaeaat, N. T„ May 24,—)■ keeping with his ea* day's work anf Iona day's rest schedule, Georgia Car Knttee today spent 10 minwtea al fct exercise, want for a Wag ram .bit in the woods with hie dog, tool a short automobile ride and thw railed it a day. This a florae on was fool and a ctM ihrscxr was Wowing, so Ooorges d>< ! not coma out for hbi asoal hewn part] with Manager Dewampe, Tminc I Wilson and other meadbers of On training camp squad. This keenly die {appointed n crowd of msodl hoys wh< gathered In the road, hoping to glim boo the rhallonger. They started roll lag whereupon George* appeared « the Dorek, sculled aad waved Ms ban te them. The youngsters than dispel sod. WANTS REPORT ON FERTILIZER USED ■Simmon* Mtkn Rtquut Of Agriculture] Department; N. C. Census Figures Washington. May 28—Senator Simoon*, following a request of the Amtrirun Cotton Association, has asktd that tbs Crop Reporting Bureau of the Department of Agriculture make a special Investigation of the as* uf commcicial fertilisers in the making of this year's cotton crop, and that a report as to the quantity and duality used be issued oa July 1 at the same bate that there is issued the government teporl on the cotton acr eage. He holds hat this is impera tive in attempting to reach a conclu sion oo the sue of the crop, because ef the information that h* baa of the greatly reduced use of comm err Let fertiliser, and purchase of low grades of fertiliser, especially uf acid phos phate. Thu Census Buieau it to issue lo munow morning Its statement of the population of North Carolina by rac es, giving sex, color and activity. Today it Imued statistics of ilbtrraey in the District ef Columbia, whkn show tbst in 182<1 there were 10,180 persons more than twenty-oac veers uf agv who wtrt illiterate, this bring 3 3 per real of ail parson* ten year* of age or moie. Of these 0,000 weir female*, 4,18k mains, while of the illiurmtes 024 wore of native par entage, 7,838 were colored 1400 for. eign boiei, with 84 foiuign or mlxad parentage. A. W. Melx-an, of the War Finance Coipnration, returned this moewlug from a visit to Red Springs, where he wont to xtund a meeting of thn board of dirtelors of the Flora Mc Donald College. On Friday morn mg n« gu*» u> rn.iadviptiia to make an addrass at the stiver jnbilva con vention of the American Colton Man ufacturers’ Association, his topic to be "Financing Foreign Trade: How lb* War Finance Corporation It As sisting." TEN TESTS OF A TOWN Question* that people ask about your town before they decide to make it their town: Attractiveness: Shall I like the town its atmosphere? Dona it has* the beauty of shaded streets and eth er beautiful features? Is it a ylg, Healthfulnua: Will my family and I have a reasonable chance to hasp well in that town? Hew about its wa ter supply? Its sanitary ay-tern? Its method* cf milk inspection? Ita health department? Its hospitals? Is H with out any rongested district? Eduention: Can 1 educate my fam ily and myself in that town? Hoar about its public schools—present and future? Its institutions of higher edu cation or buslnrsa training? Its libra ries? Ita lecture and concert courses? Its newspapers? Ill postal facilities? People: Shall I like the people of the town? Arc they “home folk*" without false exclusiveness? Are they neighborly and friendly? Ii the town fre* from factionalism? Recreation: Can I have a food time in that town—I and my family? How about the theatres, museums, gymnasiums, parks, etc.? Are invit ing opportunities for pleasure drives afforded by wall paved alroota? Living: Can we live reasonably and well in that town? Are the best of modem conveniences available for Its residents—electricity, gas, telephone, etc.? An the housing and shopping conditions favondblo? Renta, takas, and price! fair? Hotels good? Home and truck gardens and dairy products plentiful? Accessibility: Can art go and coma easily? Dost the towa have adequate railroad connections and train Mr: vice? Street car linos? Interaibon line*? Well marked automobile route* and hard surface roads? Business: Can I make good uas of capita) in that town? Am thars bank ing facilities? Manufacturing inter est*? Up-to-date stores? Good ship ping facilities? Favarabie labor con ditions? A prosperous farming terri tory? Active eo-operation among bo si ness interests? Employment: Can I got a job in that town at fair pay and with good prurprci* i or me Tunrt: tin 1 count on cooperation from organization* making it their bueinrst to halp intro duce and establUh new commercial Intel w*u and lo welcome new eltt aena! Progrcraiveoeaa: Shall I And that I am ia a town having a progrr-aaiva city government, active enric organi zation, modern Are protection, and a pull together spirit In everything—a town with future!—1- K. flint. De partment of Jouraallata, University uf Kuuai VARNER HEARING WILL COME UF ON SATURDAY nrveunhaio. May ft.—Argomvnt on a motion that the divorce cull brought by Hcmy B. Varirr. of I** ,r.gw>n against hie wife. Mr*. Flop nut C. Varner, br rem »vcd from Da y'deon mprrior court for trial wil be m -dr before Judge T. D. V.riaj here Saturday. A tv.iron, war u have been heard today, but a< roper purler court war hi the alddli of civi raac> and to have in-.erupted wjuli have enuard canaid.rsbia cap. nae t< 1 the county. Judge Finley rO-if.naei the hearing. Ia addition, soma c 1 the attorncye in the eaao wcj bur ■ elsewhere. At t*>» mmu time a motion fer all - moay for Mr*. Varner and for th i Sling of a new bill of partlcalare b ■ her haaband will be argued. Ai three aeotloaj were made by ettoruey l for Mrs Varan I - In many parts of Chino Bpaghuti la eoten as much as rice. Man Cauda At Still Draw* A Fine of $100 culm* WUhay Pleat Waa Nat Hu Aad That Ha Wat Attracted tw It By Tha Light Of A fin Fayetteville, May 14.—H. C. Dar den. a farmer of CarrarV Creak township, this county, area found gailly of manufacturing whisk ay and Aned 9100 by Jsdg. Jamn McRae In tha recorder's court hare Monday. Darden’s conviction amt on tb# testi mony of Deputios W. o. Patrick and W. T. West, wbo taatifiad that while watching a (tin ia a map ia Car ver's Creek they saw that defendant punching op the fir* around it. Dnr dun amt arrested In an Intoxicated condition, the officers declared, when thay closed ia on the atiU. The defendant testifying in His own behalf, swore that tb* still was not his and that be knew nothing of .t until ha observed the light of a firu shortly before tha raid, wbea he walk ed down into 'be swamp to investi gate It, found u still in operation, tha operator* apparently having fled. He declar i-l that ha wa* not sending tha Are mod. r the atilt ho' raked #*.n.e bam ng .caves rate tha blase f -T fear the underbrush m.gh; catch tire. A number of character witnesses appeared tor Dardxa, these being Capt. Jamas D. MrVriO, City Cl art R. J. McBuic and SI. X. Bcthua*. of this city, and #. T. Reeves, of Car-1 ser's Creak township. Tha naenSbors of Fay.-tUvdia'e po lice fart* were elected by the city board of aldtrmei last night, selec tions being made on the rvesasmen. data on of the police committee to All all place* os the fire* Waw that of' chief. Julia* A. Mel**-] was alerted I chief at a previous meeting of the! board. The new personnel U as fol-. lows: J. L. Campbell, assistant chief;j W. J. McQunge, A. A. Waides, Ben King. J. Ossdsmn and E. M. Vinson, patrolman; R. F. Mayheur usd | W. L. Johnson, motorrycl* officer*; i T. J. Powers and H. Y. Re arbor o desk i officers. The teal* of a*ltrict adopted by •ho board It, mayor, $180 a month;' city attorney. $3i a month; city cleric and traarer, fit a month each; chief ef po’ic* aad raperintead eat of street*. 1/$; patrolman, yiM; motoreyeJe officer*. 3110, aad desk •flic ere, 130. INFLUENCE OF COLOdLS Oa* of the Croat laflooncot opoo our live* ia th* color of oar rarTouad- j ffc*,1 ihould avoid thorn U powftl*. The roawa far oar feeling* oboott certain colon it fond io nature. Green, th* color of all foliage and hcrbtg*. It naturally the moot restful of all. Blue, the color of th* iky aad of I th* seo, is eoaduciv* to d"~ oorioua mood, and often give* the impression i of coldness. Tallow U th* color of fanlight end. of aim oat all fires. Treat these arao-1 elation* it take* oa a cheerful aspect. It givas th* impression of warmth. Red,She color of blood, ia exciting and stimulating by It tend* to mako one hasty and excitable. Black ia tha color of night aad mourning. It b always a depressing color. It makm us fool gloomy. Purple give* somothing of the im pression of black, but at dates con-i veys th* idea of ologaace. This I* pro-, baWy duo to Ha long association with | royalty. , A dweller in th* eity soldom teas enough green. Usually ho is surrounded by brown* and grays Wa would all he batter off If wo would got into th* woods aad and Bolds more, not only for the ex ercise and froth ale, hut far the in ffuencr af grata of th* trees and the • Moot of us who live in the cities have poor opoo. This ia do* in part to th* amount of elans walk wa do la artificial and poor light, hut tha lack of green la the rarreuadlnga certainly has a lot to da with tt. W* have a feeling af rest when wo look at green, for the reason that groan is good for tho syoo. Oeu lists pro scribe green tinted glasses in many caeca of eye wookaomo* or MMltiv* *00*. Tho writer know* of a church which is doeonAod in dark groom. It I* a pleasure to go to that church, H is to roatfal. Yellow Is a good color to surround ourethras wKh in sold climate. H give* the imorotion of warmth aad eh»M. The writer me* weal to wuih in as office that ni finished all in yellow. Shortly after ho cam K tu re Anlthod la elate bine. Bight away tha rttnef raphe re began to Uek about be ing cold. It wm found tkat the office had to b« leapt throe to fhm degreee mentor or aobody felt comfortable. Office* flaiiked la yellow shear* bars n sherry and business-like look. Yon rarely seer ass interior* fin ished In rede This i* because we bo eome tired of rod quicker than any other color. Bed makes sc arrvous end seen Irritable. The effect color* bees non Be bee been eta died by many eekntssu. A French eel on list studied the muecular effect Be found that blue light waa the lee* stimulating, end rod the meet Orarn was moderately (thnulettag, end yellow somewhat morn so. Orange wee almost as stimulating a* rad. ,|Thf« was undoubtedly the reeeoe that I red It axeitiag. H eUmalatee muses - i ler activity. Effect of oetor on the ftollug* hae a large piece In literature end Annua. On wa stage, blue alwaye Is need . for moonlight, aad esnecy* each an i impression to the spectator Bed nssd I toaage give the bapreeteea of warn, i ruddy dawn. 1" kurature, pnbahty the meal striking um of safer la la fee's "Kan ' twfetlte* ** BORAH AMENDMENT FOR DISARMAMENT MEETING APPROVAL ADVOCATES CONFIDENT OF HARDING'S APPROVAL Following f Ww Made to Vote Ob Pan “t« of Nani Rill, Bw* Maw Oratory PrmalH It; BUir Nomination Up Today. . Waihiagton, May Z • —Vaaalnou ■raato topraval waa riven today te Braator ftorefc'e prenoeal far an K termttaaal naval dliamaawBt con The vata waa 14 te 0 the Ida he Senator', amendment --*<—Ittnr end reaueatiu* to, PraaMeto to Invito gen treatau «f Great Britain aad Japan to Mad representative, te a confer enee with repreaeataUvaa of the Uni tod States la an effort U ranch aeme ■ftwcaant an disarmament The veto waa in conformity with the aatoratandiar reached la* week by admiatBrnUoa farce, to give theh report to Senator Borah', plan. Be lidts tko fortr«Ri» Rnifbuctni and twRoty-eight DewocrvUvoLiihg for the ^rsLsirs3rh«ss torn they tea revered the dimrmaman! plan. The text ef the amentia ant foUewa Test ad * “That toe President is aathorised kltd requested ta invite toe govwrn nenu of Croat Britain and Japan to ^ rVTotat.fr— •• • «tow •torch toall be charged with too doty of promptly entering into an aadei rtaadmg ee agreement by whdefc toe natal expcnditurm and building pro P*n« of each of said governments, jfrwit. too United States, Croat Bri to^ and Japan, toail be iifimallnHj rednaad annually during toe next flee reart to inch a extant and agon ante i*A Bows, hot its ddvacate* believe" R nto[he endorsed and then apprand With toe Borah amendment incor porated, an effort woo mode to roach » vet« on pasoago of too bin lot# to iny, bat ton was frustrated by de bate arising oa minor amendments. Senators La Pallottc, Republican, Wia contin, ,aad King, Democnrt, tub. else had several amendments pending. Tfca laiur promised to introduce sev eral to abolish what be tanned ‘‘use tom'' uv^ yards tni dtmh. Senator La Folktto made another lengthy addrem today in opposition to capital ship construction and cea ridoribla Mrs debate was ia paws pact when adjournment eras token to night. With tomorrow sat aside by special order for consideration of the contested nomination of David H. Blair, to be Internal Revenue Com missioner, immediate passage of tea bill was a haty prospect. Admiato nation leaders soproewd hopes that It would be adopted late toeserrow or Friday, bat there waa a possibility of delay until next week. Among minor amendments adopt ed today was toe committee pi as Mu a * for creation in the aavy department of 0 sports) Bores* of A aonautlen. •ito ehtod (elected by the Frsolilmst, Another amentonent, by Senator Bmoet, Republican, Utah, adopted would authorise toe department to continue publication of toe “shipping bulletin” for toe benefit ef merino sad other intonate. The amend ment provides that R bn supplied to rabeeribem at actnal coot, about com dollar e day. •book takes .VACATION “Jim’* it oa vacation for tom weeks. Jim Is the sfcoat whs set**. tain* visitor* to fa Smith homo nmr Linden with taleo of how ha was killed and haded *aaa* eight or nine year* ago to lb* boa** which i* near (ho haw* of the faith's. Last Thurs day night Jim bads the family good hay, telling hi* friend* that he was tired sad waald taka a short reel Ha wa* awfaily tarry to hava earned them so sack trouble In antartato dag the thousands of visitor* whs har* coat* to liataa to bU talk, knsaka and whist)** dec* he decided to tonarwk an tk* fellow who bumped hba off—but he wn* drtosmiaad fat . the killer should not go unpunished. He still insisted that his body eras buried at the *pot the folk had dag SSBM fa* before, but said they would have to go deeper. Jim it do* hack neat Thursday sight He wUi b* gtad to entertain his friend* from I till aiidnigbt A ■wsag those who probably arW ha praoeat U A B. Haas, of Ooldahoru. •ho. It trocar* from a letter written by Hr. Keen to Chief of Pbtlr* Pago, if n prsfoastawsl ghost chaser. Hr. Haan 1* net wfningta bail eve fa* Jh* I* a ragtoar honest-taguodaem hatot. He doesn't act aa aatheatie nlrlto nkeall att, aeeordiag to Mr. Kaon’* letter. Mr. Kean guaraataas to cMm Jim *way la fa event he corns* •»«» U investigate. HEN'S MIINING EXAMPLE The example of fa muy well be stadlod fa toduatriaa a*** the pete* of egg* fa • dsssa to the last _ ._ got* right an peadaafa Just fa aMM. —UwTtes* Jaurunl-warid.

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