ox VOL. XXVI, NO; 85. $1.50 PER YEAR. REIDSVILLE, N. C JANUARY 9, 1914. ISSUED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 9 1 i ' r THE PEOPLE WILL NAME PRESIDENT Plans for putting Into effect the lYesideiitial preferential primary Idea suggested by President Wil son, were discussed by Democratic leaders at a luncheon given in Wash ington this week by the Common Council Club. A plan of State pri maries proposed by Joseph VV. Folk was supported by other speak er, Including . Secretaries UedfieU and Wiiscn, Senator Owen, Louts D. Brandeis, Assistant Secretary Ham lin, of the Treasury Department, and John. Burke, trtasurerf of the United States. " ' K "comaiilltee" "was named to- draft a plan for the State primary method of nominating Presidents. If the ainmiittee's report is adopted at the; next nieetmrcrnhe tiud tt probably will be presented to the meeting iu May of the house of governors, aJid the committee Mil urge Congress to adopt legislation necessary for making the plan op erative. . . ' The truft question was discussed during the meeting and some differ once of opiniom arose between Sec retary Redfield and Mr. Brandeia aft to the best method of dealing with, combines. .Mr. Brandeis In sisted that his long advocated meth od of vigorous prosecution was best, -while Secretary Redfield held that the party should, not proceed too Vapidly in this work for fear it might disturb business conditions. He said that the trusts seemed bo Lie beginning to realize that they would have to coonie into line and that they anight be brought into proper control without taking any chances of upsetting general busi ness conditions. Opposition to Presidential prefer ence primaries, Mr. Folk told the club, had been due largely to belief that it would "interfere with the rights of the States to regulate . and conduct their own, elections." For this -reason he said he was for the State plan. - .'';- -..- A bill to provide for primiary elec tions at which voters of all parties may choose their, Presidential nomi nees, has been completed by Repre sentative Kuckor, of Missouri, chair man of the House committee on Election of President and Vice President, to carry , out the adminis tration recommendations.. The meas ure will be taken up by the. com mittee January 13. It provides f for retaining party conventions - only for the purpose of declining and ac cepting decisions of the primaries and for formulating the platforms of the parties. 'Worms That Cause Your Child's Pains. A foul, disagreeable breath, dark circles around the eyes, at times feverish, with greart thirst; cheeks flushed and then pale, : abdomen swollen, with sharp cramping pains are all indications of worms. Don't let your child suffer - Kickapoo Worm Killer will give sure relief It kills the worms rwhile Its laxa Hiive effect adds greatly to the liealth of your child by removing the dangerous and disagreeable ef ieot oU worms and parasites from the system. Kickopoo Worm, Killer as a health producer should be In every household. Perfectly safe. Buy; a box today. Price 25c. All druggists or by mail. - Kickapoo Indian Med. Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis. o AbsoIutelyPure ROYAL the most celebrated of all the f?ald&g powders in the world celebrated for its great leaverJfsof strength and purity. It makes yew calces, biscuit, bread, etc., hcalihful, it all forms of adulteration that Co willi Uic low THE NEWS OF THE OLD NORTH STATE. William! A. MeA'dco will in the near future erect a 12-story hotel in GnHMnboro on the site now occu pied by the old" McAdoo, Hotel. Wake county comimissioners have awarded the contract for the erec tion of the new three hundred thou siand dollar court house at Raleigh. Members of the executive commit tee cf the North Carolina Bankers' Association Is in session at Ral eigh to consider the location of a feaeraJ reserve bank, : A!a . election! has been called by the county commissioners of Cleve lani county for a bond election of forty thousand dollars to . take stock with a company that might care to build a broad guage steam railroad -fremt -Shelby-1 -Casar,--In upper Cleveland. James Dixon Hartcn, wiho myster iously disappeared from.' the Ylidkin Valley" section of "CaTdwell county more than 30 years ago and who was mourned for as dead hy his rela tives, has been located at Hughes ville, Mon., by his cousin, W. J. Horton, of Lenoir. In the mountains of Western North Carolina timber cutting has been abandoned on account of the heavy snows and work will ;-emaln at a standstill until the heavy snow drifts melt. Between 2,000 and 3,000 laborers are out of employment temporarily as a result of the snowstonm. . The 2001 "striking" students of Shaw University iu Raleigh for the black race have been entered on the register as "dishonorably dis missed." In refusing to go on reci tations last Saturday the students rebelled against alleged too. rigid regulations by the president, the figbft being to force him from the presidency. In Superior court at Wilmington the cases, against Mrs. Elizabeth Van B. Nichols, formerly leader in exclusive social circles in, that city charging her with embezzlement of fifteen thousand dollars from Mrs. Helen, P. Lomassons, long time friend, of. Philadelphia,. Were! , nol pressed with leave, as It appeared that officers will not be able to lo cate the defendant. In a civil ac tion against Mrs. Nichols, Mrs. Le masson was given the amount naked, $27,483.94, with a year's interest. : The State Board, of Education this week apportioned the, first $250,000 State appropriation fcr making the public school terms the six months minimum now prescribed by jaw. There Is another fund cf $125,000 de rived by the special tax of five cents on : the hundred dollars tax valuation of property, bringing the wihole fund' to be distributed up to $375,000. ft is,' found that this will Fall short of the proscribed six months minimum; school term, the actual school) , terms . this, year to be a little over five months. Reports from conductors who run in all directions to the various points in! North and South Carolina and Virginia, show that a band of pickpockets are working the trains in this part of the South. They have gotten sums of money ranging ' from $20 to $77 front various passengers as they enter the crowded coaches at Salisbury, Greensboro, Charlotte and other places. It is believed a woman is working the game lax con-' nectiom with one or more men who keepi ati a safe distance. It is said they bu,y tickets and board the trains in the crowd, riding sometime 100 miles in order toi get in their nefarious work. priced brand SEVEN THINGS NAMED PROGRAM FOR Mr. J. W. Bailey, of Raleigh, in ! the News and Observer, names even things as the People's Pro gram for 1914. He cays: I propose that we shall demand i f all candidates this year that they stand wholeheartedly lor the follow ing measures; I propose that we shall make the adoption of these measures paramount to anybody's election in North Carolina: 1. Legalized State-wide primary, covering all elective officts and nil parties, with a powerful corrupt practices act. 2. Revision of our system of taxa tion an absolute recasting of Oar system," along lines contemplated in the constitutional amendment pro posed on this subject. 3. The adoption of other proposed constitutional ' amendments, as fol lows:.' (a) Restricting private, local, and special legislation, and thus en abling the General Assembly to at tend to important matters. (b) Giving more elasticity to our judicial circuit system. ' (c) Preventing special charters to corporations by General Assemibly, 4. Strengthening and enlarg ing, wherever we wisely can, Our works In: '".'. (a) Public Health, in which Itreat things are being done. . (b) Public education In which much progress has been achieved tince the old do-nothina days; but In which, much remain to le done. (c) Public morals, in which North Carolina has made ranch encouraging progress in recent years.; (d) Public industry, in which our agricultural (board Is making! won MR. JOHN A. HALDIN PASSED TO HIS REWARD WEDNESDAY. -Mr. J. A. Ilaldin, the tailor, died at his home onArlington street Tues day night .albout 10 o'clock after an illness for a week with uremic poisoning. He- is survived by. a lone wife, who. Is left without a relative of any kind. The death is a peculiar ly sad one. The devotion of the aged man to his aged wife, wiho is feeble, was noted by all. A more devoted couple never lived la Reidsville. Mr. Ilaldin was about 64 years of age. lie camp to jRkidsville 18 or 20 years ago, and has since, from time- to time, been engagtKl , in the tailoring business. When in faealtli he was able ta provide the comforts for himself and wife. In recent years, however, he suffered greatly with rheumatism and his earning capacity greatly diminished. V People who knew the deceased held him in 'high esteem. He was of an amiable nature and cheerful even when the clouds were hanging low. No one ever saw "Uncle Jack" when he could not muster up a cheerful word. Mr. Ilaldin was imbued with an un UBual amount of patriotism, and his Passing ends one of the. matt active military careers of modern American times. As a boy b.e Joined the New Jersey troops soon after com ing to this country from Sweden, and served throughout the -Civil War. He was a lieutenant in Capt. Ellington's Reidsville company which went ta Cuba, and was in the Philip pines in service there during the insurrection. He also saw service In one or two foreign wars, we learn. Less tlian a week ago a party vis ited him for the purpose of learning facts about his long military life with a view of trying to establish his right toC a pension. Owing! to his age Mr. I&ldin enlisted in the Union, army under an assumed name, fbut during a recent visit "to his old hem in New Jersey he found comirades wiho remembered nis service in the Iwiar. Mrs. HaWinls future, he great sorrow in her old age, and her lone lkiiesal In the world, will appeal to every humian being who knew of the devotion of the old couple, and It is( hoped that some way will be found to enalblei her to Bp end her last few years at least comfortably. The funeral services , were son ducted from the late residence of the deceased Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The Masonic Lodge, of which he was a devoted member, had charge of the services. Mr, Haldin was regimental color sergeant on Colonel Craig's staff, and commission ed officers of the Third Regiment were' 6elected as pall-bearers. Thesa were Colonel J. N. Craig, Major R. G. Gladstone and Lieutenants R, T. Rurton, J. II. Mobley and C. T. Somers. Reg. Q. M. Sgt. Mflnton Oliver! and Reg Com. Sgt C. u, Jones bore the colors, and Capt. w." i.' Miiirror" and " ills "l'Tit '"iTwii pany, and Sergoant D. G. Sullivan in command of the hospital corns. took part In the funeral pnd burial services. AS PEOPLE'S THE YEAR. OF 1914 derful progress, and In which it de serves ail encouragement. 5. Unrelenting fidelity to the josi tion already taken- with respect to freight rates and the discriminations against North Carollna.and a search lng investigation of insurance! rates and discriminations. 6.-'Active but well considered steps in the direction of rural cred it facilities and the segregation of lands as between the races wherever It may be demanded. 7. A child labor jaw that will prevent working children at night and prevent working them, at any time under fourteen years of age. Notv this is an ambitious program, but it is no more than the people have a right to expect of ihemselv es. . It is their work; and they can Jo it ff they - wish to do it- Par ties make platforms with more or less. success; but the people can make ure of their platform if they only will. Let them try this one. I was impressed by no sentence In the recent address here of the Ambassador from France bo much as by that in which he spoke of the civilization of France, Great Brit ain and the United States as hav ing work in common, that work be ing the dominant purpose of making the wibrld a (better place- for the worker to live in, a happier place for his peqple, a fairer place for his children. These measures I have mentioned will stand '.he test To adopt them1 will make easier and happier the lot of all who toll in North Carolina. And this is all I could wish to be said in their be half. They will be adopted sooner or later. Why not in 1914? COMING AND GOING OF THE PASSING THRONG. Mr. P. IL Fontaine, of Kemers vllle, visited his uncle, Mr, E. M. Redd, here this week. . " Misses Anoie Barnes and Ida oiBack .have returned , . M .(. their school In CatiawiM county. Misses Daisy pods and Amnle Wo mack have retumed fromi a two weeks' visit ta New York. Miss lone Fuller has returned to her horn e n Winston after a short visit to Miss Theresa Foy. . Miss .Bessie Howard has returned . td Stoktffiland after a visit to her (aunt, Mrs. J. M. Hubbard. i Mrs. D. H. Hopkins, of Danville, has been a guest of her father, Mr. P. F. Calllher, in West End. ! Mrs. H. I. Lane and children have' returned from, a visit to Mrs. Lane's parents in Tlminons ville, S. C. , Maser Willie Woods, of Winston Salem, who has been, , visiting his aunt, Mrs. J. M. Hubbard, has re returned bonne. Major Wm. II. ; Watlington, Uni ted States of America, and more particularly Caswell county, was in Reidsville this week, . 'Squire D. B. Purcell, of Went worth townsiilp, ' was In Reidsville Wednesday and phtd The Review an appreciated call, Jlr, Royal Sands has returned to Greensboro after spending several days here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. "Sands. Mr. Andrew! Horsford and sister, Miss Minnie, of Sumimerfeld, visited at the home of their aunt, Mrs. T. I. Duke, and other reUitives, the past week.. ; ' ;' " ' Mr, J, H. Hobson and familyy have moved to Reidsville to reside, and occupy a part ot Mrs. R. T. Wil liams' home on Main' street Mr. Hobon is a miombor of the "firm of Burton and Hobson. ' ; ; . ' Mr. It. C. Norman, proporietor of the Hotel Rockingham at Reidsville, and one of the best known hotel men in. the State, was a Greensboro vis itor last night, returning to his home from Danville, Va., where he closedi a long termi lease for the dining1 room1 and cafe of the Hotel Dan there. Tthe Hotel Dan Is con ducted on the European plan and Mr. Norman's lease Is for the din ing room service and cafe located in the hotel. Mr. Norman will re main in Reidsville with! his hotel there and wrill place R B. Fraley, an experiemced steward, late of Richmond, in charge In Danville. Greensboro News. A! special frcm Stoneville to tlie Winston Journal sa,js.r Milton, the little sflven year old son 3f Mr. J. H. Fagg, near this place, .-was accidentally shot and killed Wednes day (morning. The boy was playing some manner it was discharged, f he load taking effect in the littlo fel low's stomach, killing him instantly. VHAT HAS HAPPENED SINCE OUR LAST ISSUE President Wilson will end his Southern vacation ; and leave Pass Christian, Miss; Sunday night, ar riving in Washington Tuesday. . An order signed by John D. Rockefeller, chief owner of ;he Colorado Fuel Company, has been; posted in the company plant pro hibiting the smoking of cigarettes by employees. After serving nine of an eighteen month sentence, Willam S. Paylor, formerly city and State treasurer of Danville, has been released -. from the Virginia penitentiary on parole. Paylor is now, living in Lynchburg. The United States Steel Corpora tion soon will distribute its annual bonus ta its employes. The amount is expected to be close to $2,000,000, as against $1,500,000 in 1912. In the past year employees have also re ceived Increases in salaries aggre gating $12,000,000 annually Frequent conferences between Amiblassadors and Ministers in Wash ington are tending to unite them on a line of conduct regarding Mex ico which, while conforming to the Plans of the United States, Involves an understanding as to obligations the American government will be ex pected to' 'assume as the result of non-interference by foreign powers. The Ford Motor Company has an nounced that beginning with Monday neit its officials will put In opera tion a profit sharngf plan by which ten million dollars, representing ap proximately one-half of the- profits of the company, will be distributed annually among its employes. No employe over the age of 22 will be paid less than five dollars a day. It is announced by the executive committee of the U Union . Pacific Railroad thjat it will recommend the distribution among its stockhold ers of the Baltimore and Ohio stock owned by the company, par value $82,000,000, together with $3 per shjire In cash. Estimated on, the present market value of Baltimore and Ohio stock Ithla is lequhtalent to an extra dividend of 33 per cent. . Sentences of 24f of the labor un ion officiate convicted In Indianapo lis of conspiracy to transport dyna mite were confirmed this week by the United States Circuit court of appeals Counsel for the 24 within 30 days will petition the court of appeals for a rehearing on newf le gal points. If that Is denied they will tjake the case, to the federal Su preme Court. Loss of $129,000,000 in two yeare by the unsuspecting public through swindling operations : carried on by use of? the United States mails has stirred the postal authorities to, a drastic campaign against fraudulent schemers. Wholesale use of the government's right to deny- the mailing privilege to persons or firmis whose operations may be tainted with "get rich Quick" and other lfatee promises is the w-eapon to be employed. The Virgin i Legislature will be asked to authorize the State at torney general to sue to recover the will of MJartha Washington, now trt the private collection, of J. P. Morgan in New York. - The will dis appeared from) the Fairfax court house near the Bull Run battlefield dring the Civil War. Morgan's li brarian declined to return the will to the court house archives. Citi zens of Virginia who hKve been searching; for the win nearly fifty years accidentally learned that It was in Morgan's collection last year. CITIZENS-BANK, Total Resources Over $540,000. A checking account with the CITIZENS BANK would be an advantage and a safeguard to those who have bills to pay, large or small. 4 per cent, paid on Time Cer tificates of Deposit and Saving Deposits. Safe Deposit Boxes for rent JLL-WAITPrea. E. W. STAPLcS, A. J. WHITTEMORE, V. PRAY FOR CAUSE OF PROHIBITION THE PRESENT CRISIS. . Once to every man and nation Comes the moment to decide In the strife ofTruth and Falsehood, For the good cr evil side. Then, to side with Slight is noble; Then we share her wretched crust Ere her cause brings fame or profit, And 'tis prosperous to be Just Then it is the brave man chooses, While the coward turns aside, Doubting in his abject spirit Till his Lord is crucified. Hast thou chosen, O my people, With w hich side to take thy itand, Ere th eDoom - for- her worn sandls. Shakes the dust against the land? Lowell. iuo jwcut eatutriug ui. UQtj Temperance forces in Washington, D. C, at which time an amendment to the Constitution providing for na tional prohibition wins presented to both Houses by ICon, Richmond Pear son Hobson and Senator Morris Shep pard, the 16th of January, 1914, wast set apart as a diay of prayer to be observed all over the United States by all who are interested in, the advancement of the temjperance cjause. The services in Reidsville wdll be held at the Main Street M, church and will consist of a prayer service in the afternoon beginninff at 3 p. m., and a union massmeeting in- tlie evening at 7:30, at which! there will be Btirrtng addresses by good speakers and' inspiring tnusic by the combined choirs cf all the city churches. The addresses will all Jbe short and to the point. The ministers, the laymen and some of the of ficials of the city will take part in the Programme. . Come out and be informed on one of the greatest Issues of the day. The programm e will appear in tne next Issue of The Review. MR. C. TALMAGE DAVIS MISS LAUNICE WEAVER Mr. C. Talimage Davis, formenr of Reidsville, now! of . Winston, was united In marriage to Misa Launice Weaver, of the Twin-City, In the parlor of Clegg'a Hotel in Greensboro Tuesday night The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Clyde Turner of Greensboro. - . Mr. Davis and his bride, accon panied! by a few friends of Win ston, went to Greensboro, where the party was met by relatives and friends from Reldlsville and the service of . the minister was coon arranged for and the marriage cere mony performed. . - Those attending the marriage of the happy young couple were Mr. P. II. Neal, Mr. J. A. Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Carter, of Greensboro, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Wray,(the latter a sister off the bride), of Hillsboro, Miss Gertrude Smith, of Salisbury, Messrs. B. F. Davis, IPenry Satterfield and J. D. Gregory, of Reidsville, Misses Grace Eartey, Blanche Barley, Parnell Da vis, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Barley and Messrs. C. C, Armfjeld and Oscar Norman, of Winston-Salem. The bride is a popular young lady of the Twin-City, and the groom, who left Reidsville a few years "ago to accept a position with the It. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., has many friends here as well as in the Twin City, who extend felicitations. . ...-. lEUCENEJRYJN. Cashier. Asst Cashier. P. VV. J. IRVIN, V. P.