A EOC KING HAM COUNTY PAPER. VOLUME XXIX NO. 53. REIDSVILLE, N. C TUESDAY, SEPT. 12, 1916 ISSUED TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS CONSIDERABLE WORK FOR THEjef SESSION First Session of the 64th Congress Ended Closing Hours Remarkably Quiet Kitchin Issues Statement Regarding Legislation Passed. PRESIDENT ISSUES FORMAL STATEMENT Congress adjourned Friday morn tag, concluding a session record, breaking in many respects, with ap propriations for the future running well toward two billion dollars. . Con gress at the session just closed ap propriated exactly J1.626.439.V10 which, with obligations and autuort Batons, makes a total of $1,858,3.4 L 485. During the session 17,800 bills and 642 resolutions were intrbduced in the House. Of these 252 became laws and 33 public resolutions were adopted in addition to 150 private bills and resolutions. While the closing saw the adminis tration legislatve program mainly completed, some things wait to be continued at the winter session; nota bly the remainder of the President's program of railroad legislation, whi;:h was partly enacted to prevent the threatened, strike. In; a formal statement, President Wilson, speaking of the work of Con gress, gave notice that the remainder Wt the railroad program would, be pressed at the new session. His state Men was as follows: "A very remarkable session of Con gress has just closed, full, as all re cent sessions of the Congress have been, of helpful and humane legisla-1 tlon, which constitutes contriDiiuon if capital importance to the defense, the economic progress, and the whole some life of the country. "It is to be regretted that the ses sion could not have continued long enough 4o complete the program re cently projected with regard to the accommodations of labor disputes be tween the railways and the employes, but it was not feasible in the circum stances to continue the session any longer and therefore only the most Immediately pressing parts of the, program could be completed. J "The rest, it is agreed, has mere-! ly been postponed until it can be more maturely debated and perfected. I have every reason to believe that it is the purpose of the leaders of the two houses immediately upon the reas sembling of Congress to undertake this additional legislation. It is evi dent that the countrry should be re lieved of the anxiety which must have been created by recent events with regard to the future accommodation of such disputes." . The immigration bill,- the corrupt practices bill, and the bill to permit combinations of American exporters to meet foreign competition abroad went over. The closing hours of Congress were remarkably quiet. Only the presence of the President in his room, near the Senate chamber, served, to attract in- THE NEWS IN BRIEF FORM SINCE OUR LAST ISSUE Mrs. Annie E. Howe, only sister of President Wilson, is seriously 111 in New London, Conn., and is not expect ed to live. The Bulgarians claim that up to tho present time the Roumanian casual ties are 400 officers, 21,000 unwounded soldiers, and the losses in dead and wounded are enormous. In the primary Saturday in the Third Judicial district, Judge Francis D. Winston was defeated by Solicitor John Kerr for the nomination for Judge. Kerr's majority was around 2,000 and was the surprise of the "po litical" season. A strike of stage employes, long shoremen, brewery workers, machin ists, bartenders, moulders and print ers in sympathy with the unionized carmen who quit their places the past week in New York, has been .decided uDon at a meeting of the heads of their unions. IT CANT BE DONE! Two bandits fatally wounded Lee Ramkin, superintendent of the Ohio Coal Co. at Florence, O., Saturday and escaped with $11,000. Rankin was on the way to the coal mines to pay the employees. The bandits ov erlooked $1,000 which Rankin had in his pocket. Dr. T. 31. Jordan or the North Carolina health department, vaccina ted 17,000 persons against typhoid fe ver within five months. The work by Dr. Jordan has been in Bladeu, Alamance and Catawba counties. He made the record of 1,640 persons vac cinated in a single day during his ;ta at Hickory and during the first we.t that he was in Catawba county he vaccinated 6,746 persons. Virgil Butt, a white man 35 year? of age, shot and seriously wounded fve persons at the home of Thomas Mor ris in Marion on Sunday afternoon. Butt's wife was a cook at the home of Morris, supposedly against his will, which is .supposed to be his reason for the act.. Butt. shot his wife, then entered the Morris home and began shooting at the other occupants of house. Butt escaped after he had been wounded. Mrs. Leroy T. White, residing near Windsor, Bertie county, on Thursday ! i was beaten to cteatn oy ner nusnana , With the stock of a shotgun. When the body of the woman was discovered in the home seven hours after the crime, it was being cried over by the three-year-old son of the couple. Mrs. White was 23 years old and White is 27. The woman's estate is valued at $40,000. The motive of the crime is a mystery. White escaped. There is no ' cause for Democrats and Progressives lovers of peace and opponents of the horrors and crimes of war -to feel other than the greatest confidence in the re-election of President Wilson, Friends of his Republican opponent have been making vocifer ous endeavor to impress' the voters of the country with a fictional strength for Mr. Hughes' candidacy. . President ySCilson has the Democrats of the country enthusias tically behind hini. He has the friends of preparedness and peace. Tie has every Progressive who really holds policies above preju dice and deeds above vague promises. lie has the women voters of the states where suffrage is an ac complished fact, who hold their country first in their esteem and who are able to see more in the support President Wilson has already given suffrage, than ia the opportunist espousal of their cause by a candidate who before never has- shown by his acts even the most con descending sympathy. There are but a meagre few states where Mr. Hughes' cham pions can give him more than a doubtful chance of securing electoral votes. No issue has been joined by the speeches of the Republican can didate which is of sufficient worth to merit serious consideration. Behind Mr. Wilson there is a long record of deeds done and legislation enacted which puts him far up abreast of the times and popular demands. For President Wilson to be defeated there , must develop such reaction from present sentiment as would be startling indeed. He has the record of achievement. ne has the shibboleth of peace. ' " ne has the accomplishment of preparedness. He has a Congress which has stood nobly behind his policies and has written laws that the great masses of voters will surely indorse, ne has been direct, diligent, assertive and dominant. iso puDiic man eyer cnensnea loitier ideals or did more to win to them the public approval. A Beat him? IT CANT BE DONE! ' Beat him, and restore to power in the Government the old order, the Republican reactionaries, the guardians and agents of privilege and prerogative? ." Beat him, and blot from the statute books laws that register a century of progress? . ' NO, INDEED! Beat him, with the harvests ripening into such wealth as the country never ImrtJogl ,0' C'vi,; : ' ' Beat him, with the Government's credit the talk of the world ? Beat him, with labor employed, wages good and happiness the outward semblance of nation-wide contentment? Beat him, with the vaults of the banks of the country bulging and legislation already enacted which is the guarantee of low in terest rates? Beat him, with his neutrality achievements, which have made us the one nation secure from the criminal effusion of the red blood of the sons and fathers of the land? Beat him, when the law is highly respected, when the national honor is respected, when the flag has been made the signal at once of preparedness and peace, and our people home-loving, God-fearing and ready for the higher achievements in the future than were ever chronicled in the past? REIDSVILLE CLOSES SEASON WITH A DOUBLE VICTOR V Baseball is thing of the past in this town this year, so far as the Reids ville Athletic Association is concern ed. Besides making it possible for our people to enjoy the good, clean sport, the Association rounded out the I season with marked success financial ly and otherwise, and gave Reidsville a winning team and, we firmly bo- lieve, the best amateur club in North Carolina or Virginia. The local team, which has won a great majority of the games played, was composed of the following nam ed players: Miller and Ingle, pitch ers; Jesmer, lb.; Nichols, ss.; Wom ack, 2b.; Dr. McBane, 3b.; Mobley and Stuart, catchers; Claybrook, Mc Bane, Borland and Delancey, out field. This combination Is hard to beat. In the game with Thomasvifio on Friday something out of the ordinary happened when Ingle pitched a no hit game, the only one ever seen on Red J diamond. He and Claybrook featured for the locals, the latter hitting two nice two-baggers, while Gentry's splendid fielding for the vis itors is worthy of special mention. Thomasville never had the least chance of scoring, while fast bane running and squeeze plays enabled Reidsville to pile up a large score. First game: R.'l. H. Thomasville . . . .000 000 000 0 3 Reidsville . . . . .200 030 2x 7 7 0 Batteries: Zachary, Mason and Smith; Ingle and Stuart.4 Struck t, by Zachary 2; by Mason 5, by Miller 7.' : Saturday's game was featured by the pitching of Miller and the neavy slugging of Nichols whose opportune hitting scored four of the five runi made by Reidsville. Dr. McBane and Claybrook also secured a couple off Zachary's deliverey in this game. The box score follows: THOMASVILLE AB R Sullivan . . . . . . ... .4 0 Long . ... . , .... . .4 0 Devane ... . .... .3 0 Gentry ... ...... ..3 0 Finch, A., .. .. .. ..4 0 Zachery .... . . . .4 0 Finch, B., .. .. .. . .4 0 Smith .. ... ..." .. ..3 0 Murphy . . .... . .4 0 SPRAY MAN KILLED BY i DEPUTY HARRY LINDSAY i Officer Was Attempting to Overtake Party of Men Riding In Buggy When Pistol Was Discharged and Murphy Was Instantly Killed. shooting claimed to IIAVE BEEN ACCIDENTAL H PO A l 1 10 0 It is estimated at the War Depart ment that the Mexican expedition and the assembling of the National Guard at the border had cost the government $15,000,000 a ionth. This average cost per month, it Is stated, began im mediately after the Columbus raid in March. It will cost the government more than $900,000 to return to their home States the 15,000 guardsmen or lered demobilized last week. The ex- tA.of f what tthor-uriaa wnuM h.1VA ! ' ff..i 21 avnnt-- Pense including food as well as trani been an uneventful ending of an event-, . .. . . . . poriauun aim extra ai;i;oiuiuuuti.iuiia ful Congress. There was disappointment, but no bitterness, over the failure of some measures during the long session and Democrats are proud of their legisla tive record, with Its six hundred mil lion dollar National defense appropri ations, the creating of the farm loan board and rural credit banking sys tem, the child labor bill, the preven tion of the Nation-wide railroad strike, establishment of a Government shipping board to rehabilitate the American merchant marine, creation of a tariff commission and many other legislative enactments of more than usual importance. ; : For the winter session, the Demo cratic leaders look ". to the railroad legislation as the dominating feature. The subject next in importance which Congress will consider will be conservation of National resources. Water power bills which failed at this session will be revived, as will meas ures for the conservation of mineral resources and for control of destruc tive flood waters. First on the De cember program, however, will be the immigration bill with its literacy teot, passed by the House but not the Sen ate at the session, and the corrupt practices bill to reform election meth ods which Senator Owen vainly tried ro get on the statute books, before adjournment. Representative Kitchin. majority leader of the House, and chairman of the ways and means committee, who was not always In accord with the administration, said before leav ing the Capitol: i "We have put through more con fer officers average three cents a mile per man. Enraged because of practices of a strange sect known as the "Holy Roll ers." a mob of men and boys, armed with guns, axes and clubs, raided the "church" of the order at Carlisle, a mining town in the mountains near Gadsden, drove the worshippers away and razed the building. The "Holy Rollers" claim to talk with God n "strange tongues." A year ago cne of the "preachers" permitted a snake to bite him to demonstrate to a crowd that even a reptile could not harm one of God's chosen children. The snake sank its fangs into the man's arm. Twenty-four hours later the man ws dead. structive legisl-tion than any other session of Congress. It has been ic complished with good feeling all around. There has been less bitter ness and less filibustering in this ses sion than in any previous session within my recollectios. On the Demo cratic side we have had united action and the session has been eventful and epoch-making." . The Republicans pointing to the appropriations and authorizations fcr the futureamounting close to two billions, closed their part of the ses sion reiterating charges of extrava gance and waste. IT CAN'T BE DONE! CASWELL'S HISTORIC COURT HOUSE IS HIT BY BOLT For a while Friday afternoon the courthouse of Caswell county, at Yan ceyville, was menaced with destruc tion by fire, which was started when a lightning bolt struck the pinnacle of the belfry. Happily the persistent efforts of Yancey ville citizens, who prize the substantial structure with a sentimental value which knows no computation, succeeded in quenching the flames with a bucket brigade. The belfry was ruined. The courthouse is heavily insured and there will je no monetary loss. An hour after the lightning strack the courthouse the Danville fire de partment wa.9 asked to make the 18 mile run with one of the automobile America First. The Reidsville Review notes that the Statesvilie Landmark is worried because the new dimes scon to be sent out from the mint bear the fig uro of a Grecian lady on the obvserse side and the bundle of rods and the axe of the Roman lictors on the re verse, and wants to know why they continue to put these "furrin' " figures of people and things on our money in this free and enlightened country? "Why the figure of a Grecian lady," asks The Landmark, "when we could have a fine figure of an American lady? Why the bundle of rods and the axe of the Roman lictor, when we could have a plow, a cultivator, reap er or something representing the great American Industries? Why not put the pictures of some of the girls' and boys' cannings clubs, and corn engines. Two large chemical ext'n-1 clubs? or a bale of cotton, sheaf of guishers were sent, but the man car rying the extinguishers when about half way to the Caswell capltol was flagged down and told that the flames had been subdued. The bucket bri gade had proved effective after strenuous efforts. At about 4:30 a heavy thunder storm passed over Yanceyville, doing wheat, or a factorry?" The Statesvilie Landmark is right in demanding that American figures and American ideals be represented on American money by an administra tion professing to be pre-eminently Amercian. We were on the point of raising the same objection, but The Landmark anticipated us. If we are REIDSVILLE McBane, Dr. P., cf. Stuart, c," ... . . Nichols, ss. . ... McBane, E., 3b. . . James, lb ... . . .4 Mobley, If. .. .. . Claybrook, rf. . . . Miller, p VVomack, 2b. . i . . 84 0 5 24 11 AB R H PO A .4 .4 .4 .4 0 .4 .3 .3 .3 33 5 6 27 3 4 Struck out by Zachery 7; by Miller 6; bases on balls: off Zachary 0. off Miller 6; hit by pitched ball: Devar.a, Gentry; stolen bases: Stuart; um pire, Mr. Staples. Score by Innings: R. II. E. Thomasville . .... 000 200 1003 5 7 Reidsville .. ..102 000 20x 5 6 4 NEW YORKER INTERESTED IN THIS PARTICULAR SECTION considerable damage. During i;s , ln reality the greatest nation on earth. Mr. Robt. T. Amos of High Point was visiting relatives here the part week-end. heght, a thunderrbolt struck the top of the courthouse and within a few minutes flames were seen to be emerging from the belfry which crowns the two-story, stuccoed bri ;k building. For an hour the flames gradually gained and began to eat their way down towards the main building. While the fire was burning a corps of men began removing the furniture from the courthouse, alsu books and records of great value. The storm was one of particular violence, and several residences were struck by lightning and set on fire. Mra. Cora Siade was knocked senseless by a bolt, but recovered consciousness some time later. Lightning set tire to a quantity of feed and tore some fences to pieces. and our motto is to be "America First," let us cease to be borrowers and imitators and try to do something original. Art is long, they tell us, and it is time it had reached Ameri can studios if it is to have permanent place in modern civilization. Some of the "delectable damsels" often referred to by our morning con temporary, would look well on a silver ten cent piece and better still -on guM coins of the larger denominations. And this without reference to the'r commercial value. Greensboro Record. Private Paul R. Wootton of Camp Glenn has been spendng a few days here with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. A. Wootton. " J " Mr. John Fargar of Leonardsville, Madison County, New York, writes The Review as follows: "Through the courtesy of your editor or Mr. J. W. Dunn t have re ceived quite a number of copies of The Reidsville Review during the spring and summer, for which I am very thankful, and many of them nave been read by Linn Cross, of this place, who Is considerably interested in. that section of the country. Have mailed quite a number of them to a Mr. Car penter, Cassville. N.Y., who also is Interested in the South. By the read of these papers I find that Rocking ham county, especially Reidsville, is an all 'round progressive city and county; it must be seen to be real ized. "Although I have to work for my living, I am contemplating a visit to that place some time between the middle of November and the tiist of December for the purpose of trying to secure a home in that section. There are a number of others who seem to mt to settle in the South, and if you can give me any information in regard to such things from time to time, I will be glad to receive the same and will impart the news to others who are interested. Thanking you for fa vors which I have received in the past and appreciate very much." School reopens at Bethany li gh School on Monday, Sept. ISth. Onlv classification the first day. Let all who expect to attend this school -one out and be classified. You can then secure your books and be ready to begin work when you start to school. J. Wilson Carrell, Principal. (By Murdoch Murray.) Mr. Tom Murphy, an employe of the Rhode Island Mill at Spray, whilo driving a horse and buggy in which were two other men, Mr. Nic Martiu and Mr. Charlie Martin, was, appar ently, accidentally shot and killed Sunday by Deputy Sheriff Harry Lm1 aay of Draper. The three men drove through Dra per returning to their homes at Spray, and Murphy was singing "Tipperary" as they passed through town. Officer Lindsay followed thera on his. wheel, but finding himself unable to overtake and arrest the men, he cast his wheel aside and jumped ou a passing jitney. When the men saw this. It Is said, they slowed down and Linidsay climbed on the buggy, and reaching up, caught Murphy by the clothing at .the back of the neck with his right hand in which he held bia pistol. InstahKy two shots were fired. One ball entered hs head at the lelft side of the neck and cam out, it is said, about the center of his forehead. The other went wild. Nlc Martin says that after the shots were fired he was so unnerved that he Jumped out of the buggy and start ed to run, when Lindsay called to him and he came back. Lindsay, he said, acted as if he had killed Murphy by accident, and offered his pistol fo Nic and said he would go with him to Spray. Martin says he lold him he did not want his gun, but would go with him to Spray. So the two men went to Spray and Lindsay was turn ' ed over to Sheriff Eanes. Nic Martin was seen at his home about 8 o'clock and told the writer h,3 version of the affair ln a stralghtfor-. ward manner. He said he knew Lindsay very well and they werfcr old time friends, and that they were all good friends, so far as he knew. . Mr. Martin was asked if they were drunk when they drove through Dra per, and he replied: "No, sir, we were not." Asked if - they were acting boisterous, and this he positively de nied. ; '' 'Tom," he said, "was singing Tipper ary, and that was all there was to it." Those wha saw Mr. Lindsay said he felt very bad over the affair; that it was purely accidental, that the shot (and they said there was only ore shot fired) that killed Murphy, ard this was when the hand was used both to hold Murphy and the pistol at the same time, the weapon being one of those "squeeze" pistols that pressure alone will discharge. All parties to the affair are well known and bear good reputations. The dead man has lived in Spray for three or four years, and leaves a wife and two children. He was a member of the Red Men. The Martins are well known and stand well. Mr. Lindsay is postmaster at Dra per and is popular and highly regard ed. Lately, he has been acting as of- . ficer at Draper. Coroner Jett was 'phoned for and a rlved upon the scene and after an ei amination of the body, ordered It re moved to the home, and set the hour for the inquest at 12 o'clock yesterday. Shell Spoils the Beer Barrel. Lieutenant Fishbach, the adjutant of one of the Prussian regiments on the Eastern front, writes home: "There was joy in one of our jou panies yesterday. One of the sol diers had received a large barrel of genuine Bavarian beer from his fathr and he invited his comrades to share the precious beverage with him. As the barrel contained sixty-eight gal lons every man In the company would have received about a quart, but the Russians spoiled the feast. Just as the barrel was about to be tapped a shell struck the shelter of the dug-out. A splinter of the bomb went clean through the cask and the beer squirt ed in all directions, forming a small lake on the floor. Two men were kill ed and three others severely wouni ed." ... VV. : - -. Mr. L. S. Somers, a progressive young farmer of near Mclver, calle-l In to see us Saturday. He says he made the best and brightest cn'p cS tobacco this year that he ever "nada before. 7