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The Alamance gleaner VOL. LIII. - . ' ? - ? . - , GRAHAM, IT, C., THURSDAY JUNE 23, 1927. NO. 21. HAPPENNINGS OF THE WEEK | NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS President and Household Are Established in the ' Black Hills. By EDWARD W. PICKARD PRESIDENT AND MRS. COOL IDGE, two collies, five canaries and all the necessary household at tendants are now established for the summer In the South Dakota State Game Lodge, In the Black Hills. And the executive offices of the natlonul government are established In the new high school building at Rapid City, 32 miles away. Even though Mr. Cool Idge should not regain the favor of the farmers?and he Is not unlikely to he will certainly have a delightful and restful vacation In surroundings that are entirely to his taste. The lodge Is on the shores of a lake surrounded by picturesque mountains, and Is so secluded that comparative privacy Is assured. The Chief Executive planned to make the automobile trip to Rapid City frequently to attend to the more pressing business of his office; On his way west the President stopped a few hours in the Calumet region of northwestern Indiana to help In the dedication of Wicker park, the war memorial of Lake county. In his address he spoke of the prosperity and growth of the country In a mate rial way, but he mildly clitded the na tion for delinquencies. "In spite of all this progress." he said, "we are still a great distance from what we would like to be. Our delinquencies are sufficient to Require us to put forth all our eltorts to work toward their elimination. Although our government Is sound and our courts are excellent, too many of us disregard the obligations of citizenship by neg lecting to vote, and violence and crime are altogether too prevalent. The num ber who are lacking In religious devo tion Is altogether too large. "While we have reached the high est point In material prosperity ever achieved, there Is a considerable class of unskilled workers who have not come Into full participation of the wealth of the nation." * One of the bursts of applause greet ed the President's reference to Col. Charles Lindbergh when he said: 'The Ideals which we seek must be practical. We are lavish In our ad miration of realities. When one of your Western young men is the first to fly from America to Europe our country halls him with a popular ac claim so spontaneous, so genuine, as to disclose the true values of our na tional character." South Dakota as a whole welcomed tbe President warmly as the special train made Its way across the broad Prairies, hesitating at the farm cen ters long enough to give the lnhab 'touts a glimpse of the Chief Execu te and his charming wife. The offl " we|eome was staged at Pierre, the oopltal, Where the President and Mrs. toolldge were prevailed upon to obange their program slightly, leav g the train and taking their place K the head of a parade which went through cheering crowds In the busl toss section. Governor Bulow. Sen ior Norbeek, Representative Chris opaerson, committeemen, legislators, owspaper editors, farmers, and husl r8* mp" from all the central sect lop ere 00 hand to greet the President I n escort him from town to town. ' Mew York went completely daffy h? ?0,Tr Charles Lindbergh when flew there from Washington. Th? ? gave him a reception never be the young master dp'-."'1' Ra'd' was "the reception ?n?. Brussels, London and Wash Inh.M r?"ed lnt0 one " Millions of the I Hfi t8nt" ?' the metropolis stood In t7tr^h'ng from the Battery to MmIh aa thp pretentious psrade a_s ' madly cheering the hero and from* n* ?PPortunlty to see him. Mu. ,h,> buildings along the route P~ confettI was hurled until It ap ing Mi 8* '' "le marchers were pass 4e 8 lleavT *now storm. At r -v hall Mayor Walker greeted J A ~ ~ ? the clone! as the eon of one Imml to the son of another, anil Pnned on his coat the city's gold* hrtfa . honor; the aviator talked rlofl.v to the throng through the micro phone ; his mother wns called to the | front and Introduced to the roaring crowd, and the procession resumed Its march to Central park. At the Eter na Light at Madison square there was a pause while Lindbergh laid a wreath at the base of the memorial. At the Mall the colonel was met by Governor Smith who presented him with the state medal of valor. lolonel Lindbergh spent most of the week In New York and was enter talned extensively, though he found some time to rest. Early Thursdav morning he unexpectedly flew down to Washington and feturned to New Vork In a few hours with his trans atlantic plane, and on Friday he flew In it for St. Louis, where another* rousing welcome was accorded him lasting three days. Lindbergh says he hopes to visit many American cities in the "Spirit of St. Louis" for the purpose of boosting commercial avia tion. To date he has signed only one contract?for a book describing his flight to Paris. (hamherlaln and Levine spent a Jolly week in Germany waiting for their plane to be repaired. They vis ited various cities and were hand somely entertained. Commander Byrd had his Fokker monoplane America all ready at New York for a flight to Europe with Bert Acosta as his com panion but was delayed by adverse weather conditions. Hope for the res cue of Nungesser and Coll sprang up when reports came that flares had been seen In the wilds of northern Quebec, but unhappily the Stories were soon discredited. Commander de Plnedo, Italian "four continent flyer," completed his tour, returning from the Azores to Italy via Portugal and Spain. Lieuts. F. B. McConnell and C. An derson of the army were killed during air maneuvers at Langley field when their plane crashed and burned. SOVIET RUSSIA'S rage over the murder of her ambassador to Po land, following the break with Great Britain, was enough to cause grave concern to European statesmen, and It was aggravated when the Polish court before which the assassin of Volkof was tried fonnd the youth, Boris Kowode, guilty but sentenced htm to life Imprisonment Instead of death and requested the President of Poland to commute the sentence to fifteen years. Kowode's lawyers turned the trial Into one of bolshevlsm and Its terrorist activities rather than one of the slayer. The Soviet rulers seem actually to be trying to Intimi date the enemies of communism, for they are executing scores of men many of whom they accused of being spies In the pay of other governments, and then gloatingly announcing the execu tions to the world. They also decided to exile many thousands to Slheria. The Russian territorial army reserves, numbering some 300,000, usually called out for three weeks' practice, have been notified they are to stay In the service four .months, and as most of them were being concentrated along the Polish frontier Poland was frankly alarmed. Members of the League of Nations council, which met In Geneva, considered taking formal collective ac tion denouncing Russian communistic propaganda abroad, but abandoned the plan at the request of Poland. THE league council discussed the prospects of the projected disarm ament conference and decided the sec ond reading of the preparatory plan should be held early In November. Only Herr Stresemann, German for eign minister, criticized the lack of progress. "I regret the Inability to advance a solution for the problem, and even If the second reading does not result In failure, a solution seems delayed to the distant future. The convenant of the league says all nations must re duce their armaments," Instated Herr ittresemann. voicing the German gov ernment's thesis that If the rest of the powers cannot agree to reduce their armament to the level Imposed on Germany by the Versailles treaty, then Germany should be permitted to arm herself up to the same general T standard .a her European neighbors. ron"?T notlfl'<l the ambassadors' " '?*! ,he fort" ? "s eastern frontier had been demolished, as re nutred, and demanded that the Rhine land occupational forces be retluced nrorMa!! *t France agreed to this provided Marshal Foch be pennltted to examine the forts and found the <?erman statement to be correct. \X7 HILE negotiations for a com Shok *p?nilse ^tween Chiang Knl nf vh ^ang "n arid the governor fShnnsI province were procedtng. the - nnklng Nationalist nrmy continued Its advance toward Peking and captured the important city of Halchow near the Shantung border. The southerners, according to reports, "committed rob . ry and outrage In Wholesale fash , (;en-^ng Yu-hslang has pledged allegiance to the Hankow faction of the Nationalists and has been given 'com mand of Its drive on Peking. Roger Oreen of the Rockefeller Foundation at t eking, accompanied by 29 physi cians and nurses, has gone to Han sew to help In the care of some 12, 000 wounded soldiers gathered in hos pitals from the Hobtti battlefields. Antagonism against the Japanese Is steadily Increasing In southern China and It Is still feared they are plan ning to reoccupy Shantung province In order to prevent the Nationalists from driving out Chang Tso-lln. Rep resentatives of the Japanese communi ties In Manchuria have sent to Tokyo demands that the government prevent the civil war from entering Manchu ria and Mongolia and thnt all Jap anese Investments and nationals there be protected. IN THE recent elections In the Irish f fee State the government se cured 46 seats, a net loss of 7, in the Dal! Elreann; Fianna Fail (De Vale ra's party), 44; the Slnn Teln, 5; La bor, 22; Farmers, 11; Independent. 14; National league, 8, and Inde pendent Republicans, 2. President Cosgrave will have only seven fewer seats than at the dissolution. It Is be lieved he will annex ten members from the farmers and Independents and be stronger than before the elec tion. Eamon De Valera says his 44 will refuse to take the oath of alle giance to the king. If they hold out. another election Is probable. YirEDNESDAY was a busy day for T V Andrew Mellon, secretary of the treasury. He took In almost $400,000, 000 in Income and other tax pay ments, due on the completion of tlie second quarter of the calendar year He took In about $89,000,000, paid by the debtor nations of Europe on Amer ican war loans. He sold $249,598,300 of new treasury 3* per cent bonds. Then he paid off maturing short term securities aggregating $378,000,000 and paid $70,000,000 In Interest on various Issues of the Liberty bonds. The rcelpts went to swell the $600, 000,000 surplus for the flcal year ex piring June 30, next, and the retire ment of Liberty bonds and refinancing Involved In the transactions means the reduction in the annual Interest on the public debt many millions of dollars. Great Britain turned in $67,575,000, which was Its ninth semi-annual pay ment of Interest. France paid $10, 000,000 "on account," Italy paid $5, 000.000, and smaller payments were made by the other debtor nations. NOBLES of the Mystic Shrine gath ered In great numbers at At lantic City for their annual meeting, and 100,000 wearers of the fez took part in a mammoth night parade along the five-nille Boardwalk that was said to be the finest procession ever seen In the resort city. Clarence M. .Dun bar of Palestine temple, Providence, R. I., was elevated to vhe office of Im perial potentate to succeed David M. Cromland. Thirty-eight of the 203 cadets graduated from the West Point Military academy last week have re quested service with the air corps, the War department has announced. Un der a department Interpretation of the air corps act, commissions cannot be granted In time of peace to any per son not a qualified flyer and the 38 cadets, therefore, will undergo train Ing before receiving the second lieu tenant commissions bestowed upon them at graduation. I Urtariization Urged as Farmera' Great Need "rough organization to help an p(rni urai situation In which a mea l^""P tna.v be worth more than a rJl*r 0De wa" urged h.v former Got. l 0 T.owden of Illlnola. Speak Ul *' annual meeting of the ^Trmen's League Preoperative Aa "l,?th0n 'D?'' advocated the ?- farmera' co-oi>eratlve or ^ '' ""a to a point where they ?tionwlde and federated. He | also voiced his fafth In .the proposed . I federal farm hoard. I Deploring the perplexity In which I the farmer finds himself when a rich | I crop hrinps him less returns than a I poor one. Mr. Lowden cited the 1924 corn crop. It was worth about $750. 000.000 more than that of 1923, al | though about 20 per cent smaller, he explained. "If the corn powers had been or I jjanl/ed and found that the market 1 would not receive their corn at what i It cost to produce It," he continued, 4. "they would Dot hare dumped the larger part of the crop upon the mar ket In a few hrlef month*." Deaplte agricultural figure* which "the financial wrltera gloat" over, un der the preaent ayatem "a aurplua. no matter how alight, aeema to have the effect of depreaalng the price with a total illaregard of the coat of produc tion of even the abaolnte neceaaltlea of life," he decjared. Collective marketing I* "progreaa Ing." he aald. and predicted It would aome day "cover the entire field." ''OURj^&k PLsmwm i ? ?n 1 ? -J Palisades of tho Hudson. (Prepared by the National Geographic Society, Washington. d. c.) A FEW years ago "park," meant a relatively small city breath ing space of lawns and llower beds. Then It came to mean also a great preserve by the federal government, where some major scenic wonder was dedicated for the people of the nation. Now the term also In cludes the growing number of res ervations by states where scenic beau ties, points of historic Interest, or julet woodlands or meadows are saved from private exploitation and set apart for the pleasure of everyday folk In search of an hour's or a day's or a week's vacation and enjoyment of Nature. Forty-three states have now estab lished more than six hundred state parks and forests. Scattered all over tha country, from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the Canadian border to the Gulf and Republic of Mexico, they range In size from a modest homestead, a military camp site, and an old trading post In western states, to New York's huge Adirondack park, more than' 1,850,000 acres In extent. Thus there Is growing up In the United States a graded system of parks owned by towns and cities, counties, states, and the nation, so that the traveler Is seldom out of easy reach of a publicly owned recreation place. Leads In Stats Parka. Ncv? York has gone farther than any other state In furnishing recreational and conservations! areas. Its far-flung parks and forests constitute the greatest state park system In the country, covering approximately 2,150, 000 ncres. The state owes Its for ward position In the park field to Its large population and wealth, Its con gested cities, whose people demand breathing spnce, and to the early growth of public opinion and govern mental understanding. The first scenic state park (n the East was created In New York In 1885 when the American side of Ni agara falls was set aside for a pub lic reservation. Thus set to thinking about conservation, the state look a second Important step the same year by putting an end to the sale of Its forest land In Hip Adlrondacks. This marked the beginning of the great wil derness park now over two million acres In extent Strangely enough the Far West, where there was no urban population, had led the way toward the establish ment of state parks many years be fore. Other states had set apart me morials early In the Nineteenth cen tury. But the first large-scale park planned to preserve natural beauties was the Yosemlte valley, made Into a state park by California In 1865. This remained the premier state park until 1895, when It was taken over by the federal government as a national park. Park-to-Park Highway*. " Ju*t now the Idea of park-to-park highway* la receiving attention from park and conservation hoard* and highway commission*, and doubtless before many year* It will be possible to map out Innumerable tour* and cir cuit* that require from a day to sev er* I months, on which one may enjoy each day or perhaps every few hours the facilities of some state or national park. A number of the states are rec ognizing the value of the parks to motor travelers. Like the federal government In Its national parks, several states have seen the desirability of adding to the comfort of visitors to state parks by building In each a small well-equipped hotel, with moderate-priced accommo dations. 8ucfa hotels hare been built hi practically all Indiana parks, nnd Kentucky In building a hotel at It* Natural Bridge park. Even now It Is possible for a mo torlst striking west from the Atlantic seaboard to add Interest to hli trip by visiting numerous parks along! the way. Starting from New York city, he toay almost immediately enter the Palisades Interstate park along the Hudson. Farther along the Catsklll park may be visited, and In the center of the state are numerous small parks In the Finger Lake region. Westward In Livingston and Wyoming counties Is 1,000-acre Letchwork park, Including the three famous Portage falls. South western New York's wilderness park, many thousands-of acres In extent. Is In Cattaraugus county. If a route Is taken through Pennsyl vania the traveler enters the second among the states In areas of public land devoted to conservation and rec reation. In this state the forest re serves are the backbone of the sys tem. They Include 1,131,277 acres. Within the forests are special tracts known as state forest parks main tained for tourists and picnickers. These are scattered over the state near the principal highways. Valley Forge, of course, has been set aside among the points of historic Interst as s state park. In the states farther sonth parks are not numerous. Maryland has Six state forests, some of which are In the extreme western portion of the state. Only the Patapscn State forest, a few miles west of Baltimore, ,1s so situated that It Is accessible to large numbers of recreation seekers. ' Virginia Haa Only Ona. Virginia haa yet to build a system of state parka. At present It haa only one, a forest WW acres In extent, nrar the renter of the atate, In Prtqce Kd ward county. The eatahllahment of the propoaed national parka among the mountalna of the atate wilt doubt leaa atl mutate the growth of auhafd lary parka. North Carolina haa only two atate parka, one, the anmihl( of Mount Mlt rhell, hlgheat peak eaat of the Missis alppl, and the other the remalna of Fort Maron, together with two mile* of ocean beach, rteorgla haa no for eata or parka, but haa created a atate hoard of foreatry, which will acquire landa. If the Lincoln highway la followed after crooning Into Ohio aeveral of the atate "reaerrolr parka," formerly con neeted with the canal ayatem, will be found within easy reach. The two largeat of theae are In weatem Ohio, one aoulheaat and the other aouthweat of Lima. Indiana haa a atate park and foreat ayatem which conaervea exceptional typea of acenlc beauty of the Middle Weat Moat notable la an area of the remarkable aand duneg at the aouth end of Lake Michigan. The Lincoln highway and varloua other hlghwaya entering Chicago paaa cloae to thla unique park. In Illlnola only Dixon blockhonae, a relic of the Indian daya, la located di rectly on the Lincoln highway. It la worth while, howerer, swinging aouth from Chicago, to Include Starred Rock park, about 100 mlleg aouthweat of the city. Thla la Illlnola' largeat and moat Important atate park. In Iowa la an excellent park ayatem. Pall aadea park In Linn county, the gorgea of Ledgea park In Boone county, and the Wapalpnlcon park In Jonea county are near the Lincoln highway. Where thla highway paaaea through Nebraska It does not touch any of the three atate parka. The single atate park In Wyoming Is also off the chief trans continental highway, and thla route does not touch the many large na tional forests In the state. THE PATCHED STOCKINGS i ?? <e bT D. t. WaUh.) MIRA SANFORD drew a long black allk stocking over her ?lender hand, looked at It throngh her glasses, parsed her Hps and shook her head. "No use, Margaret won't wear thetn again," she said to herself. "So I will take them. I don't mind darns." She began to ply her needle deftly.' Beside her stood a work-basket which was packed with stockings, allk and flneat lisle, and all In need of mending. Gray, brown, black stock ings Interspersed with lighter shades In blue, nude and orchid; stockings to match every gown that Margaret possessed, and she had a great many. To Mlra It seemed a piece of woeful extravagance on the part of her daughter. As a girl she had never possessed even one pair of silk hosiery and as a middle-aged woman she wore only those which Margaret dis carded. Indeed, she wore all Mar garet's castoff things, dyeing them, re modeling them as best she could to make them appear suitable to her graying hair. She had not had a new thing in years. Of course. Margaret earned her things. She had a fine position and she kept all ber money for herself. Mlra never asked for one penny and naturally Margaret, being Margaret, didn't offer It But Mlra managed beautifully on the amall Income ber husband had left her. They say there are forty ways to cook an egg. Mlra Sanford must have known forty-two. She was like that in everything. Ber great object was to keep the home for Margaret. It was a large house whose upkeep was Increasingly expensive, but somehow Mlra kept It going without a cent of aid from any body. And, because she did not take roomers or boarders (Margaret ob jected to having any one besides themselves In the house) the neigh bors thought that her means must be ample. In reality she came out even every month. In spite of the fact that she herself cared for the lawn, the garden, tended the furnace and never hiked an hour's work for anything. A door slammed and Margaret ran In bringing a spring freshness and brightness with her. 8he had Just alighted from a car and the stimula tion of pleasure gave her that look of buoyant happiness which always In tensified her clear, blond beauty. "Mother," she began, "Fve asked Herbert Dean to supper." Mlra'a work fell Into her lap and ?ha gazed at her daughter. Uncov ered, her eyes were quite as lovely aa Margaret's, although darker, thickly lashed, gracefully browed, scarcely a line about them. "Herbert Dean!" she breathed diz zily. "Veil, Herbert Dean," Margaret laughed flippantly. "Didn't yon aee him? He Just brought me home In hla car." Margaret did not aay that Mr. Dean had called at the office to aee her employer, who waa an old friend, that Mr. Pritcher had Intro duced them and then anggeated that aa Mlaa Sanford waa Just leaving, Mr. Dean aee that ahe got home through the rain that threatened her new aprlng toggery. "I didn't kdow he ever Intended coming back here," Mira said, uncon sciously. "Well, he la back, for a time at leaat. He aald be knew you and father, and Intended to call on you. That was why I aaked bim to supper; I knew you would manage." "Oh, yes, of course,"Mlra murmured. "How about the stockings?" Mar garet beat to look. "1 think I can repair most of them, so that you will get a lot of wear out of them yet. This pair though?" "Yea. You take them. I hate darns. Oh, by the way, I fancy Mr. Dean Is rich, don't your "He must be?by this time." "And he's ever so good looking. I'm going up to bathe and do my hair and rest a bit" Mlra put away her work. She glanced at the clock and sighed. All day she bad been thinking about Her bert Dean, and here be was back again after many years' iojourn In far coun tries. She bad not seen him after she married Joe. He had been a friend of Joe's, one of the young set that had played about together for a few happy years. 8he had liked him very much and had bad a foolish fancy that be really cared for ber. But ahe had been vain In those days and happy? happier than she had ever been since. For Joe?well?Joe was gone these half-dosen years. That fact must settle forever the whole question of his usage of her. Herbert Dean waa back! He had brought her daughter borne In his car and was coming to supper I Of course, Margaret had charmed htm; she charmed everybody. It would be strange It after all these yean. Her bert Dean should?should choose her daughter tor the wife lie had so long delayed In taking. But she must think about ber sap per. Even with her ability to cook eggs In forty-two ways she must set something else before (his particular guest. In the kitchen she deftly puzzled with the contents of her cupboard and her refrigerator. Then In desperation she snatched coat fnd umbrella and ran to the corner grocery for fruit and ham. Her purchase emptied her purse. And It would be three days before she recelred her quarterly div idend. Margaret met Mr. Dean at the door and gaily referred him to her mother, who waited near, flushed with store heat, but controlled and looking very nice In a pair of sheer black silk stockings, strapped shoes, white Mouse and dark skirt?all dlrcards of Mar garet's. The stout man with gray hair and Arm, friendly mouth looked at his hostess closely through his glasses as be took her band. "You seem quite unchanged, Mlra," he said. "Ob, do you know mother well enough for thatl" she exclaimed. "Well enough for what?" Herbert Dean turned to the girl. "Well enough to call ber by her first name." "Your mother and I are very old friends," he smiled at Mlra. "Didn't she ever tell you about me?" "I never beard ber mention your name," Margaret answered. The supper was excellent: broiled ham, creamed potatoes, fruit salad, rolls baked that day. Margaret's fa vorite cake served with preserved pears. Afterward Margaret enter tained Mr. Dean while Mlra did the dishes, brought up coal and put things to right. She was bending over the stove when Margaret entered the room hur riedly. -Mother I One of my stockings has laddered dreadfully. I've got to go up and change. Can you look after Herbert for a moment?" Mlra snatched off her apron and went Into the parlor. She surprised the guest, who was standing beside the phonograph listening In abstrac tion to a record which was Just play ing the last bars of "Say, Au Bevolr." At the small sound of Mlra's entrance he turned and looked fully at ber with the reminiscence and tenderness aroused by the air discernible In his face. "Well, Mlra," be said. He led ber to the sofa and sat down beside ber, keeping her dishwater-soaked hand In bla big cool one. "That's a good old song, isn't Itr he said, and murmured under his breath: "I loved you then, I love you yet Of course, you know that I've come back on your account I lost you once, to Joe. rm not going to lose you again, my dear." The music had ceased. The phono graph was grinding In defiance of the automatic stop. But the couple on the sofa did not hear It They were only conscious of each other as they sat there, looking hopefully, yet wtat | fully, Into each other's faces. Throwing tho Shoo Th*. custom of throwing old shoes Is ss old is the hills and common to many countries. The popular Idea is that It Is lucky to do this, not at weddings only, but when the desire Is - to give success to the person In what be Is about to do. On the east coast of England the shoe Is thrown at the bridal couple as they are leaving tor the church to be married. In other countries the shoe is tossed when they are leaving for their wedding trip. Whan the whale ships leave port M Yorkshire the wives and friends throw shoes'at the vessels as they pass. En Suite Little Mary was taken to the conn try and, of course, they showed her the barn and all the interesting things It contained?little pigs, a tiny calf and old black Tabby with her three little kittens busily getting their breakfast. Mary was enraptured and turning to her mother, exclaimed, "Do you suppose we could get a set like this for our house?"?Los Angeles Times. Country Without Trooo Iceland is assigned to the Western hemisphere. It is a large, volcanic and treeless island in the North At lantic ocean. Its most northern point Is 66 degrees 88 minutes north lati tude. Its estimated area is 60,407 square miles, so that Iceland is some what larger than Ireland. The popu lation numbers 96,000. The capital of Iceland is Reykjavik, containing a population of about 20,000. Briot, hut Appealing The prise /or brevity in a court plea was garnered by Raymond Anderson In a Hartford (Conn.) police court Asked if be wished to say anything before he was penalised for speeding, "he stammered a little and then blurt ed out "financially speaking; your honor, rm married." Judgment was suspended by Judge Sehata.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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June 23, 1927, edition 1
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