i 'i , i, il; ( " ) in li. , j':ir- III-' , li , I h;i I i ,,l' Mill VI 14 111. n , . ,., ami i.i 1,1 .1 , , i') 1 1 , i i ( ii"l I ill I vv 1 1 h in ,;;) il ,i , il turned V VOL. 8 Llkln, H. C, Thursday, Au. M, 1G10 No. 20 G PACIFIC FLKPT PROPS ANCHOR AT LOS ANGKl.KS On Hoard the Flagship New Mexico Olf Port of Ii.s Angeles, Au. 1). The Pacific fleet came today to make its how to Is An geles. Six dreadnaughts of the hcr.vy fighting line ami two of the older class battleships of the United States navy, dropped an chor this morning at the San Pedro breakwater while 23 de stroyers with the niothcrship, thp cruiser Pirmingliam, and the tender I'rairie, came up into the inner hai l ki for anchorage. The flagship New Mexico with the secretary of the navy's flag four white stars and an an chor of blue flying from the main truck, took up her anchor ftge outside the harlor. On board the New Mexico, with Secretary of the Navy Dan iels and family, making the trip JYom San Diego to San l'edro, were Governor Stephenson of California, Governor Itrrazolo of New Mexico, and a welcoming committee from I)s Angeles. Six o'clock this morning found Admiral Hodman with his flag lieutenant, Lieutenant Comman der Jonas Ingraham, on the bridge of the New Mexico. Or ders had been given to "shove ofT" at that hour and four Mis had scarcely ceased sounding when the flagship got under way with the other dreadnaughts falling into single column for mation. Soon after starting Ad miral Rodman showed guests how convoy work was accom plished during the war. lie gave an order throwing an anti submarine screen around the ad vancing column of dreadnaughts and battleships, steaming ."0 yards apai t. The scout cruiser Birmingham with six destroyers in abreast took an advanced iosition l.JiOO years ahead of the dreadnaughts while on lxth sides of the big sea fighters, 500 years away were two divisions of destroyers, each in single column. In this formation the armada steamed away. STKIS TAKEN AT MEETING OF MEN AT CHARLOTTE Charlotte, N. C, Aug. 10. All street car conductors and motormen in Charlotte and Winston-Salem, N. C, and Greenville and Anderson, S. C, w ill go on Mi Ike this moining it was announced at the conclu sion of a lengthy conference of the carmen here at 2 a. m. The announcement was made by AlWit L Jones, of Chicago, organizer of the General I'nion of Street Railway Employes, who participated in the confer ence with the men. The pur pose of the strike was declared to be to enforce demands made upon the operating company, the Southern Public Utilities Company, for increased wages. ' changes in working conditions and recognition of the union. No street cars will be operat ed in Winston-Salem from this morning until the differences be tween the Southern Public Utili ties Co., and the Amalgamated Association of Street and Elec tric Railway Workers of Ameri ca are settled, the cessation of work being effective from the time the cars usually start this morning. A message was received from the off,cials of the union in Charlotte at an early hour this morning by the local men, who are 100 per cent. Members of the local union came to the Jour nal Office this morning to ask that notice be given to prevent many people from waiting indefi nitely for the usual cars this morning. The same condition applies to Charlotte and Grecenville, S. C the local men reporting that the strike does not apply to Ander son, S. C, where the Southern Public Utilities Co., operate the street railway system, only a few men there belong to the union. The approximately a men who will go out on strike here include three or four track men, jfour or five barn and about 63 or 75 motormen and conductors. S KILLED, SCOUE HURT IN ELEVATOR EXPLOSION Port Colborne, On'., Aug. 1). Eight persons were killed and a score were injured seven of them seriously in an explosion which wrecked the large government grain elevator on the Welland Canal here this afternoon. Four of the bodies have been recover ed, one has been located in the debris of the elevator and three others are in the wreck of the barge Quebec which lies on the beach outside the hartmr where she was towed to prevent her sinking. The financial loss is estimate.rat $I,HOO,000. Spon taneous combustion is Mievcd to have caused the explosion. The superintendent of the ele vator D. S. Harvey, was among the injured. The explosion occurred short ly after the elevator hands re turned to work following their dinner hour. The concussion shook the whole town and windows in nearby buildings were smashed. Flames spread through the wreckage but because of fire proof construction they soon burned out and soon after the ex plosion Tcscue parties were at work. The barge (ucUc, moored at an elevator leg was smothered under a pile of w reckage as she heeled over and a huge rent wa torn in her side by a block of concrete. To prevent her sink ing she whs towed outside the breakwater and trenched. The elevator was built eight years ago at a cost of $2K)(),(M0. It had a capacity of more than two million bushels and the bins were said to be one-third filled with grain, mostly wheat. SITKItl NT EN I) ENT KKOOKS TALKS IN .SUKKY COUNTY Poison Aug. 10. To a crowd ed house, coniK)sed of teachers, school boards and patrons L.". K. C. Prooks. state superintendent of public instruction, spoke for little over an hour Friday in the courthouse here. County Supt. J. II. Aljen had written personal! letters to all the district com-! mitteemeu asking them to meet with himself and the county !oard of education and had se cured the promise of Dr. Prooks for the occasion. This was the first visit of the present state superintendent to this county, and those who had been promis ed a great speech realized fully their expectations. j The speaker chose for his sub ject a matter that exactly fitted into the 4'asion, "The opera tions of the new school law and the far-reaching possibilities its wise enforcement means to the children and society of Surry county." lie cautioned against impulsive and prejudicial deal ings with the matter, and coun seled patience and firmness on the part of the teacher and school authorities, lie told how that the results of the school now lay with the community. That every community could now have just sich school as they desired. He advised re taining teachers in the same schbol from year to year and the consolidation of small districts into larger schools with greater advantages. Dr. Prook's lecture marked the closing of the sum mer school for teachers that has been in session here for four weeks. Miss Haltie Parrot, who is a member of the state board of ex aminers, and who organized this school, stated to the teacher that out of CO counties to hold school this year, Surry county led all in attendance the en rollment here reaching 1155. Miss Parrot associated with her in the work here Prof. W. P., Owen of Winston, who has' directed the work ; Miss Carlotta Mew iKirn, of Kinston, taught gram mar grade methods; Miss Cora Jeff coat taught primary plans; Miss lima Carraway, of Wilson, taught writing and drawing, and Miss McGill, of Fayetteville, music. There were 02 teachers who took the state examination and eight obtained life certificates r v.. . i t i I r 1 I , Oue of U Iiuk iiur'l i of (ill ry. inti:ki:st!N(; lktikk i kom i it i : i i.iM.nr.itin Kvcn in tin- American Jixjwdilion ary nrcvx Ihore arc komip .t iht (ilii ami one that Maruln out with th Kivati-ht luntx; for nif, m my rut f allMTlC t VlNlt 1'i.IIH. 1 r'H fi .''l thi Icavn Monday, A pt il 21, aft'-r Mllinnllinif mv nainn and ifi;iicst aliut on week ftan. t'.vvi)i wi-u-nt vi'ty nuiih in my favor at lliii tunc, financially fjiiakmK, hut I it-lowi-d tho tiMtfii-v from a friend, and in ordi-r to avail myse'lf of nil on.-.i-hlc lour allmvcd nip I h ft juxt a fov linurx ahi-ad of tunc, hut did not cam any tun hy lining bo, fur 1 did not K t on thi- tram that I rxM-rtnl to mo on. 1 Imi'd up in tht h )t at 1 M um l:"0 that lutflit with a lon line of ricmh Mildii5, Amci icant a"d Fn-nth rmliani. and they wi-ie a'l iu.t a aiixiou to fct a tn-Vit a I ;u. anil it lookid for ahiln that I would not K' t mini' in time for tin I'J.O.'i wl.irh a a fa.t rxpnui fiom Hi ml to fail, union it an late, and it wa late I 'a! not arrne till I:"t) and thi-ie wi-n tir- an many folks !hrip hy that time a rouM ift on tlw tiam, and I km-' it mrant an "Over th top" ru-h if I i'XHcti'd to i nil- thin 1 1 ;iin for that i the way Ihry (to at it over hfif, and I was luky I'Mimirh to K'"t hut cotiliUmofKi-t a Ural, and did riot func uit r.Hm enough to island up. m I cot off and learned from nn M. V. than anoiher KlM-riul tiam a.t ln'in made up and uould pull out at 2:00. It hum fa-t hum. ami the tunc wan idiott to wait, 'i I look a rhanre and gl a mm foitahli' - at. ridinc thiol !a of (oiiim1. We at rived at Pari 7:00 a. is), at MiinipaiTttHM itemt, making only one ntup on the way Up. We then di. rk- l out at the A. 1'. M. of fne and had a tiloe little hn jkfa.t at he ld I'io.k whirh in almoM in tli( le', a id a lar;e Y. .M. t'. A. a'iny tturk nan WdiliiiK to take u to rue !. Ann. I only i.voifnirrd one ilaee an wr went up. and that wan I'larc it la CondoMile. uml an I nnle thtu tin if and aiio-n Hi,' h'lin hrultre over thrt S-ine nei tie thoimht fame to me that I'n-K.ih'iit Wiixm h.iil noth ing on me, for I wan rnjovinK the irii-at il,ui.uie and cat aamiiation an hr. and many nthei of nohle tank had enjoyed tidlnif thiouli mirh a ii!h' of h'iiuiahli i',..: .ii. ',,.iii only they had gor.i thrmigh fi'-t. We m rued at no nt. Ann a few minuten later and airain i -becked in at the, A. I'. M., and wan then iie for 72 hou !rt n't' IV in. and rould (TO whrrr vv phaM'd. I tatel walkinic iluvtn a ntreet alone, and did not know wliric I wan or whiih way I Sfoinif. hill I I'K'kmK lr I M. t A. or UmI t to... of hnh eillier la ii) l.utnf r- on in I arm, and arter w alking for hlmut one hour, I tan ni:ht into a Y. Ahout (Ue ft i .-.I attiaiti.in.H that I had to notice when I Matted walking iloun (la- htiii-l wan nii-n and woiihii. Ih and K"ln appioaehing me i-riv ten ntepn and olTeiine r-xciy kind of mii vennn nm h ax i5t nn! -, map, and iewn of ITnin and they wnr ".ery clever at the ti.oie, tmt. Pit'lty noon after I got to the "Y" I learned that one of the Y men wa. to r an tru'de and take a p.ntv on a nihtweing tup. which thev do at all the " M. f. A'." and Ked 'n- ntationn fvny day, no I immediately joined the party of ahout .rU Ameiican xnldirra and nail 01 n ontv, anil we walked thri- hhwkn to Si. Ienin Metro atation and went down under the ffinund and I gut an idea of the wonderful nuh-way nnteii in I'm in, hut will not try to tell much con ting it now. however it in the beid uli-ay jvntem in the woild. Yi went under the Seme river and l,ot olT at St. Sulphico Nation, went out and went through St. Suliihice cath edral which m a wondeiful chuii"h of Itoman di-stgn and an-hitrcturr and affortln nmne wondeiful ritatuei un I pngiavings. One in always imprrsa el with a quite and me red mnfation while K'n(? through any of thene largo fathedraU in franco. One thing that I rememher in pa'-tiriilar almut thin rhuirh in that there in a long hrasH rod extending clear armnn the (lixir and half way up the wall of the church, and in parallel with the collator, and served the purpose ren tuien ago of determining the time of day or when it wan noon. There In a nmall bole in the wall somewhere and each day at noon the nun would rcfle.-t itself. We Went from there to the l.undy Ait musfum and naw nome wonderful heauUful arts there of al most every description. From there we went to the Luxembourg (iardenn and pal are, my vocahulary of wordn in not sufficient to denciihe the Iwauty of thin place ao I will pass on, and next we came to "The Pantheon," a building dedicated to (Jenevie, and is now her renting place. Thin in a wonderful building. The dome of our national capital building at Washing ton, I). C. was designed and built an a model of thin one, There are nome beautiful picture and drawings, alno nome tapestry centuries old in thin hall. From there wo went to the old IDLE WORKMEN PARADING IN 1 T r ' - till V V : :, !! .,A ; IJ . A wtrkiut o tlmt umrk Ui rule of coruuuulMU lu liudniM-st, lUu tm-ltnl pt IJun- I. at in Quarter,, and I don't remember enough to say anything about it. I'lom tin place we went through the Parin University. Or So. limine erected in I62U by C'aidinal Uitehlieu and in the most famoun t niveimty in Fiance oi Kuropc and in rnont famoun for the noted men and degree of din tmrtion awarded to in ntudentn. Pres ident Wilful rereived the degiee of J'hiloMiphy or fconi' thing bke it three month la-fore I visited there, and I sat in the Minn hall and beard the guide tell un ahout It. 'Ihi I'nivernity accomodate lO.MKI student and has a l.ihiary of lTo.(MM) vol. Fiom thei-e we heat it back to the Y hut and had a bite t eat, aud in the afternoon we went on another tiip a boat tup on the Seine riser. We got on the boat at the lluti-l de Yille and went up the Seine tucr and into the Maine river foi a slioit diitance. Thin nvi r in famou fur many ieas onn, one in. that during the war, thousand of wounded soblin, were s'-nt down thin liver into I'ann hm-pi-ta!s and to other nl.ice. Then we turned ur.d went ba-k thtough Paris and had a wonderful view of the building and scenery on lth niden of the river. There ttiv thlily four biiilgen that span thin liver with the wall of Paris. We nav many inter ixling things that I will not nuntion on tins trip down the iiei. We went an far down an St. Cloud iwveial mile below Paii-i and went up on a high hill and ftont there we could get a panoiamac view of Paiin. I got tiied of the boat, for it wa crowdeil, their being about five hundied on. so I de rided to take the stiret car bmk. and did so. I got hack and went out on the Champ KIvmm- boluva'd about nun down, and the scenciy i some thing beautiful, really I can't ih-n-crilx- it, thought I might nay it in a busy place. 'I hen I went to the Ki d t'losn fm- supper, and bad another pleasant walk in the i-w-mng and pull ed in about lit. (Ml bi-ii.g lx-e coo fa tigue. Next morning I stalled aga.n and visited a laige t)M-ia nm by the Y free for the American ddern. and th' in nome fine place, it in built in the shape of a dome and will scat thousands. I next went to the petit Pa'.ace. or I.ittle Palace. Thi wa.' hu.lt for the Kxpoition in l'.ilO and i-onlam nomu of the finest aitn in the world, and cost loin of money. From there I studied down and arms Alex .m liia hiidge. one air'mf the ftm ! nn the Seme liver; there a-e to huge statue at each end of thin budge mounted high up in the air, these four aie bias and the n ilecliun of the sun on them ran be neen for tjiii'e a ihn tanee. There Bie manv otbei on this budge and the hiauSiiul aichitxtuie and peif.- t design in untaxing. From then- I went to the famous vur paint iiig PiHiUo-oii de la tluerie, or in '.n-gli.-h Pantheon of the war. Thin in the greatest picture that ban Iw-en painted, and ir-ptex nt each allied na I on in lifel.ke fun;i returning victor ioun fiom the war, it a'so i.huw the larnlst aie of the battle fii hN, the hui mug of Phcim, Verdun and many other place n, and in after vein will he famoun all over the woihl. I! Fn-nch artist of the best have been woiking on it innce P'M and it n only finished a shmt time ago, atol i now leiiig xisitefl by iH-ople fiom ail over the glube and of every distinc tion and rlasn. After I b ft the war picture I strolli-d ilown to Fa-ele Mil itaite wheie there i a lied l'io can teen ami had a bite to rat again. Thin station in veiy conveniently located, and furnishes 16(H) comfortable bed for noldicm on leave in Parin, and the puce for the night' stay i thf sum)! sum of one franc, or about eighteen II uts in Aiuetican money, and at that rate the pressure on a noldiei piHkct book ix much les that il would lie if be had to go to French hoteln. 'Ihi station in a very nhoit distance from Filfe! lower, and ahout ten min ute walk from the Dig Wheel. After 1 had eaten nome snndwitrhcn .and drank a cup of hot chocolate I went for a trip on the wheel, and the sen sation in great, and when I got to the top I could nee nearbout all ovrr Parin. I paid 1-2 franc extia for a guide who pointed out nome of the place of most interest. Thi fellow happened to lie an Fng!i.hman, and the dialect and tone that some F.nglishmen use in talking make it almost a diifirult (Continued nn third page) THE SLAIN MANS Fl'NKKAL .Mooresvillc, Aujr. 7. The fu neral services of Deputy' Sheriff Robert Lloyd Cloninjrcr held Ht St. Mark's Lutheran church, Tuesday afternoon, was attend ed by one of the largest congre gations ever assembled in the town for a funeral occasion. The pastor, Ilev. L. A. Thomas, was assisted in conducting the ser vices by Kev. J. L. Morgan, of BUDAPEST J ' r - I - ''1 V 4 -" V ' : I' i ' " l I t , I . ' ? ! 4 t f 4l 'V, , V "v. J ' " ' ' Tioutman ,u former pastor of Mr. Cloninger and Kcv. It. A. CiKidm.'ut of Mt. Pleasant, N. C, The pall-hcarerH were Mc.-srs. I'slt r Mayhew, Marvin Turner, Wood Johnston, John Mc N'ccly and Sheriff M. 1 Alexan der and Kx-Sheriir J. M. Deaton of Statesville. The floral offerings in number and 1 reality were .significant of the high esteem in which Mr. Cloningt r was held here and elsewhere. Among many other beautiful de.-i'rns were those re presenting the liible cla-is, the Sunday sclmol, and the Indies' Aid SH-iety of St. Marks church. Mr. Cloningcr is survived by the following brothers and sis ters: Messrs. OAar and PeYVitt Cloniiiger, of Columbia. S. C. ; Mesdantes Lynn Wagner, of Tioutman. Walter Rogers, of Jacksonville, Kla., Paeon Smith, of Tioutman, Roy Suther of Charlotte, and J. L. Arthurs of Tioutman, All of these were present for the funeral. r. s. si:(KFrsi:iiYin:oN TRAIL OF FOOD COICFRS Washington. Aug. 0. Tangi ble result1 from the investiga tion of hoarding and profiteering initiated by Attorney (leneral mer are expected to develop in the immediate future an the ie suit of an order today directing the entire secret service of the bureau of iinctigation to nsi t the forces now at woik trying to uncover instances in which the public has been ponged by the illegal control of prices. Officials of the d-'pal tioeiit of justice said report h front many sections of the country showed the search for evidence of extor tion in the neccsMties of life was pi weeding vigorously and it was indicated that many prosecu tions might come very i.non. Announcement also wa. made today that Congress would pro ceed promptly with legislative measure recommended by Pres ident W'iKon in his address yes. terday a.s necessary to step the "vicious practices" which have lieen largely lespoiisilile for the rising cost of living. Republican leader Mondell stated in the house that appro priations would be made at once to enable the government de partments to attack the prob lem, and Chairman 1 1 an gen an nounced the agricultural com mittee would l'gin heat ing Mon day on legislation to control the time foods couM be held in cold storage. The senate interstate com merce committee discussed sug gestions of the President that interstate shipments of necessi ties be controled by a licensing system, and Chairman Cummins announced that he would appoint a sulr-committee Monday to re commend such legislation as it should decide was necessary. There were indications at the White House that President Wil son might let the high cost of living share with the league of nations in the speaking tour which he soon is to make. The President has been devoting vir tually all of his time recently to the economic situation and ha.s come to Mieve that the impor tance of the question demands discussion equally with the big international problem, to explain which was the prime purpose of the tour. ASKS MERCHANTS TAKE ACTION A ROUT II. C. I Statesville, Aug. !). -Sugges tion that the local retail mer chants association of the state hold meetings for discussions of the high-eoi-t-of-living crisis is made in a bulletin issued today by J. P. Leonard of Statesville, tate secretary of the North Carolina Merchants asM.'ial ion. The bulletin rearh as follow.: "And now, even the Pre- id'-n of the United Stales (haievs t!ii retail merchant.? of th" totinti with being re pon. ibli- in pai t -'sometime., it) large ptiT'--fn: I he hi) li pi i.-e;. Xfv,. paper-, representatives in Congrev, tin big five meat packers, governors and other public official, fanm-iv laborers and in fact about every- Iro'ly has been making that charge ever since the agitation started. It is now apparent that the crisis has been reached, and that some investigation will be done. Honest merchants will welcome these investigations. Who is responsible for the high prices? That's the big question of the hour. "There are doubtless retailers in the United States who arc guilty of profiteering today, just as they were during the war, but unless your state secretary is 'a badly fooled man' we do not have such merchants in oui organization. Just as the food administration found during the war, the number of profiteers among the merchants of North Carolina is comparatively small. The records of the fod adminis tration show that our associa tion came through the war un blemished. The slate secretary made a brief investigation him st If yesterday and found one grocer in Statesville who was ac tually selling at least two arti cles which are less than the in voice pi ices of shipments of the same good-? not yet receive,! Prices of fiiut ;, Vegetables, but ter, eggs and other farm pro ducts were found to Ire viitually the same at the fanners' wagons that they were in the stoic. "Statesville retailers tell me they would welcome an investi gation here, and it is probable that a committee of the lix'al as sociation will ask the mayor to start a local investigation. We commend this to oti, and sug gest similar action by your as stxiation. Call your niemlrers together for a discussion of this inin)itatit question, and let's se if the merchants can help solve th greet problem of the nation While it is against the rule of the .Merchants association to dis ctiis juices, because we are not a piicefixing organization, this is an exlra-oitlinai y tH.ca.siuu." In the same bulletin Mr. I,eoiiaid who U'piv.scr.tcd hi- as sociation at the conference with the state child welfare commis sion last week, calls Attention to the rulings of the commission, published today, and urges the merchant not to violate the law. but to show their appreciation of the concession made? by the commission by complying with every piovMon of the law with out quibble. STRIKINcTsl ioi'M KNAT HALF.U.H PACK AT WORK Raleigh, Aug. -RnleighV do striking machinists and helpers voted almost unanimous ly tonight to return to their po sitions, the night shift going on tonight and all others tomorrow morning. The stiikcrs, acting indepen dently of all other shops and brotherhoods, declared their con fidence in President Wilson's ability to get justice for them and to show the country that they have n righteous cause. They will work until September 2, when they and all co-ordinate branches will again walk out if the wages asked are not given. It is known that the men never sympathized with the ra dical demands of Plumb, and their action means that they are uninterested in government con trol. While acting independent ly, as they did when they went out a week ago, they arc morally certain that they have other towns with them. 1J I KI'ACII IIUIDLS FIND IIOMKS I.N DIXIK Atlanta, Aug. ). Nineteen French brides married by south ern soldiers during the war have arrived in this county and if they have not been introduced to Dixie already, will shortly take up their abode in the stales of Ceorgia North Carolina South Carolina, Tennessee and Florida. The P.) are tall and short, fat and thin, pretty and plain, ser ious and friVoIous in short, ty pical of almost any set of nine teen girls you can assemble any where. Put they have one uni que characteristic in common they are all unusually young. The average age is 17. These facts are gleaning from the report of Miss N. F. Willison, head of the reception committee of the American Red Cross at Newport News, Va., where 375 overseas brides have arrived during the six weeks ending July 1". Southern soldiers, it seems did not dash eagerly into matrimony abroad, despite the reputed gal lantry of the southerner toward the fair sex; for out of 375 by far the grcaler number are mar ried to soldiers from other parts of the country. Perhaps that wa.s because the southerners were more faithful to "the girls they left behind them." The P. French brides of south in lioys, in common with thu others, found in the Red Cross, according to Miss Willison's re Krt, a rnuth needed friend. Realizing the epochal change which tlu journey to America marked in the girls' lives, the Red Cro.s, in co-operation with the V. W. C. A., undertook to make their chaperonage part of it great humanitaarian work from the time the girls left their homes in France until they were settled in the I'niled States. At the port of embarkation in Hi est. the Red Cross and the Y. W. C. A. assist the army in fur nishing fotrd. making their quaitcrs attractive, teaching; the girls Fnglish, geography cooking and facts alout Ameri ca. Fn route on the transport these cla.sscs arc continued, and there tie Red Cross workers ready to see to the comfoit of the brides who travel first class, while their husbands occupy the usual tumps quaitcrs, being allowed to see their better halves but it few hours a dav. At Newport News, Mis Willi- on and the members of her re ception committee bourd the transport and help the bride? through the customs regulations The Red Cross motor corps has a fleet of automobiles at the dock, ready to take the strangers to their quaitcrs at the old Camp Moriis.Mi hosiptal five mile dis tant. When their husband are ready to take them home after lieing demobilized or transfened the Red Cross motors them to the railroad station and sees them off safely. Nor does tin.1 welcoming hand top there. P.efore their depar- tuie. the din dor of the depart ment of civilian relief of the Red Cross in the division in which they intend to live is notified of their coming and he communi cates with the home service sta tion in their home town, where they are again welcomed hy the Red Cm s and told that a help ing hand will be given whenever it is Iitlili.d. T1IK CLIMAX POST OFFICE ItOnnKRS AUK CAITL'REI) Morganton, Aug. 9. Guy Field, John Field, and Kye Pre vo alleged postoffice robbers who yesterday made their escape from train No. 22 at Pridgewat- er, were captured thi morning near Glen Alpine. The men, who are charged with robbing the postoffice of Climax, Guilford county, were arrested a few days go in St. Ixniis and in charge of an ofneer were en route to Grecnslioro to stand trial when they effected their escape hy div ing headlong through the open window as the.train was leaving '.ridgewatcr. Ploodhounds were irought from Ashevillo on the next train and during the night trailed the alleged robbers to heir resting place. The three were taken to Greens! oro to day.