Newspapers / The News & Observer … / July 15, 1920, edition 1 / Page 4
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NEWS "ANtT 0D3ERVER. RALEIGH. N. C. THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 15. 1923 ' ) . . .1 Charlotte, oancUBf ,at Barber frith, both 21 ud 1 and connecting ngaia with the same train at Gresnsbore. This, ha maintained, would give Win-. stoa-Selem practically the aam aerviee, that It mow hat, and weald eoanoet them with Charlotte, which they bow, da aot hare, aad would restore the, eoaaactloaa at Salisbury fa a satisfac tory maaasr to tht main list cities. The News and Observer. - PalliiM bw Sap la the Tear-tV ' TES KIWI AJTD OBSEIVX PCBL1JHIN0 COMPAJJT. y ' josxtbv pajnm. ei. "-v;. ':. i 71 - kiwi Ajn bnnrn atnuort : ,.. Ulll Wees Mstia IM'; ; - " ZdHertd Seam ......at A4vrlbla Ds.....ltT . Iwl New D....H Ctwktf Dss ....UT intra or tetauocutxd ruts. Ilia AMtata4 Pr-e b antehnly atiUM m uprtlluiiri af U am d"ukM esvaiSMl r ana uthmmmt mint la MX. iw etc aba tea Imi smw paMfclM bmb. All rwktt ci wbHia. ttaav atf cental i'MH asses are aba FULL ASSOCtlTSD PtKSS " BIPOKTS uwcurnoM nucxi ,'r,;.- rajraala la Advaa afly aad Sealer . BaBr Oajf -u . . ..-. V.' .: , 1 Ona Tor ........is.m Oae TW ....... J.STM Bia ttoathe Bia Moatfes MS Tfcra Moataa t tluae MU .... Lit One Meets ........ Owe afaaih 4t Oaa Tear ........ JU Ma .......UM Tto Hewe aa OWw w a0an4 to eerrkm la lUkrich aadi aaswrfcs at lmr per PaB a SaxUy. PiJlr ealr hr stall Miaen par. bona M h Im a. BaMa.. Vesta CJatataaa,' All aatisaad ommuimntm. wlU to Hiiilil He; mm will to wtaraaa aflM aaaawaaM a? MORNING TONIC - -XV-W. Twlna-i---- -, Don't arraaiat f iadiTi4ality,.whiah' i ycur ffreataa atent af .power, ta Jha enatomi aad eoaaaattanalitiea that hara fottoa their lifs (torn tha' great am of thoea who haven't enough foree to praaerre their indiTidualitiea. x UNCLE WALT MASON - I read M able dattar'a aaoka, yaraaa aim ul which Cell af frichtfat Ilia, cadiaeha. aad pains la haawa kacka. T mere yea rM aaaat dlaeaaa tba either yea .will feel, aad yaall have aaamaa aad hjeaeeauida' haeea, aad faatada la the heL I aaed t read Ua alaaaaa that twaated Uaeper'a a411; I kept It haagiag la my aback, hard by tha Wiadew ailku Aad whea I ebaald have atadled kyaiaa, aad tract, aad thlap Ilka tbaae. I read af aaavlae aa tha linba, ad baataaa aa the toe. Aad every tine I read a Ha It llled aaa with deapairi 1 faaad I'd aarhrai la aay aplae, aad da draff fa lay hair.-Thea.fram v aarlRfa bak I drew aaea ak tea-dollar bills, aad ta.th dri- Mar prasaatly lew,' aad .called far Heeper'a pills. wee Baa, a ITobper'a ftatlbr1 aaed U pelt "aewa- aUIra to fetch tba wiaat aad Hooper llred la Kaey alrect,' aad Reaper rade to boaada, whila I aa wear, draff lag feet la' dratatarea aiada ay rvaaaa. juia taea aw .laara i nj rw aaa la ay dame, aad I fat ap aad threw away the dapa that filed asy baaaa.; I told myself that I was well aad felt aa slick aa was; glsd day, whea I aa longer fell for. Hooper's alaiaascst - r ' , r , , . ; It look at if they might be, trying to form a laFollettd fctrty instead of a fusioa party. OKINO OUT BAKDINC Tha Watemoat of Fraaklia V. Kooaarait, the Demoertle caadldata for Viee-Fresident, aner bis eonieieaea with GoTeraor Cos, that tha League of Nations would ba tha supreme iasas la tha cam paign, kat braaght blood. Senator Harding's re ply makes It elcarly erident that the BepubUaaa candidate is opposed to a lftagua of natront of any sort He stand with Hiram Johnjoa and tba irraeoaeilables sad not with Taft, Haghev Wiek- ertham, Wood, Lowden, Bufler and other leading Uepnbliraaa in tb .Mt.wbo want a league aad aha aoatend that tha platform calls for ft league. K doubt about it now, tba issua is league) at aa league. Harding la oppoaed to the Uilted. State entering into any iionorable aad ffeetiv agree ment with tha great nations of Europe to preyect war. Av.-'v--" "' "' ' ';- " The Bepnblieia candidate it certain to elaborate thia position la his speech of acceptance on July 223, bet has already said enough U show what is to be tha fiepublicaa Una of baUle la this campaign. Tha men who mad tha Chicago plat form da not , want a League, Senator Lodge' threat to go upon tha aonrention floor to flgbt his own Benata rcserratloaf if put into,tha plat form as e Senator Murray Crane proposed to do, Mehoed in Harding' statement in reply to Booae- The BepuDOcans at Chicago beliered, and Hard ing jmd hi-advisers affect. ow to beliara that they can wla the election against, any aort of league. If they should win, what they will do t bout their aa-called.aociety: ofv nations la stlU ry aebuloud." They are not potherlnr TT ueh about what will or ahould happen after tha leo- What they bar decided oa fc to Cght tba League row sponsored by Mr. Wllaon and tht Damoarata aa led by GoTernor Con with no League. Senator Harding-must -af aoursa know that h will ba raaaad to . axplaia . how petea 1 to ba made, whether it it to -ba a separate peae , aftor tha plan" of Senator Knox or whether a new peace eoaforenes -to b called But 'h . will do. his beat, to .dodga'or eamouflag this phssa of th oneation. Ha an his party wll know they ess I not tear ap th settlements mnd by tha Paris Peas Coafaroaear- Thy know they tannot de stroy tha League of Nations now in eilajenee, But by holding thia country , out of tha League they think tha League can be modified to suit them and that thus they eaa destroy all credit due to Wilson in it. Sr. Harding on his course of no league with full steam ahead aaea the argument that If tht l.'nied States were now in th League of Nations tha country would ba engaged in the thirty so- called ware that are reported in different Corners of the world. But no ona knows better than he that the American people would not be a partiel pint in a aingls ona of these wars without the eonsent of tha present Congress of which ha is member and which ia controlled by his party, He knows that Mr. Wilson asked Congress for a mandate for Armenia and that tha mandate doe not exist because tha Congress refused it. Mr. Harding knows that if tha United States ratified the League of Nations Covenant it would not legally bind .the American people to do any thing . that., the : CSngrwi . does not approve of. But knowing these -things does not matter with a man aad a party that aee aa opportunity to win by appealing to prejudice. anil selfishness. Mr. 1 lWujl tu.. ..n .1... V.ttl. T... .V.t yon would aspect from a politicise accustomed to a soap man's barking. The Merchants' Association of; New Torkceev p'elns that New York ia losing its export trsde. Does New York want to hog the export trade of the country always! The seclusion into which Senator Harding hai wIMilrmwa Uniulf to writ hi aecentane anaanh is a earausal of wild excitement in comparison with tha obscurity which will eavelop him after early November. - An inadvatiaa at a reecat wedding ia Nersds eoasisted ia having the wedding march whistled by twelve girl friends of ths bride. How do yoa suppose they could, keep their face serious enough to do yit bt Beaching a platform acceptable to La fallette was as difficult a thing as ths makers of the new . party could havs attempted. Speaking aa gently as ana eaa about the Wisconsin Seaator one will have to admit that he is aot easy te pleaJr " . - Leas gold was produced throughout lost year than in 1911, and the 1920 output also will shew a reductioa according te the United States Oeo- kf leal Surrey. Oa the theory that the scarcer gold is. ths higher price will be, the outlook la not promising for Jones, the freight -payer. "Soma day," says Senator Harding, "I will de liver myself of. an address ia which I will giro my views as to tb desirability of a front porch campaign." There la n certain intimacy which has Uea associated with the front perch but it is aot precisely what one would call a political intimacy, Most people will aot quite grasp ths Senator! meaning. Germany at Spa is doing it best to get tht terms of wac softened. Its spokesmen saj that it is between civil war and iavaaioa. The allies will answer that Germany knows that civil war is vastly .worse tha a rseetittg the terms pf th allies already made substantially lesa severe than they were at' first. Germany will then come ap with the coal, ; - ' ' - f . f - r TestcTdsy -4wi a "great day rnith tha Trench, their Iadrpendenee Pay, the J31st anmvermry of the destruction of the famous prison, the Ba. iflle, by the pepulscei 'Amsricaa sympathy with France ia a vary reel , sad positive thing," and while formal celebrations in thia country may aot have been numerous ' there is no queatioa that wherever' the holiday was brought to he atten tina of aa American it awakened feelings of high r-pri for ths country whirh has takea s aW a 'i r-'l'rtg drama of history, - . mules ia the eottea fields or ia the mines. Bat tTsrdinnd bis party exhibit - tsrase wf TnoralU ot ,mTTifytms to Va President ef recponsibility la thia eontest. They would hsve tha American people repudiate their obligations to themselves, to their allies, to their own soldiers and to tha whole world in entering the war by deserting the peace. These latter statements eanaot ba repeated too often. The American people must be made to understand what this contest is about. WHT A LEAGUE OF NATIONS 18 NEEDED. Henry Ford has been counting up1 the cost of government and he reaches the conclusion that actual government costs this country sbout four hundred million dollars a year, ' and that war ccsts us the balance of the nearly ais billions that we will have to pay la taxes this yesr for our national expenses. For every dollsr that we pay for actual expenses ef government ws pay about thirteen dollars for war; And that is sbout the way we will continue to pay for a long time. War haa beea the principal expense of th united States front the time the nation was established, aad it haa beea ths big item of cost with all gov ernmente of the world. War ia tha great plague test takes its fatal toll of the atrongett men of the race, and that fills the country with widows and orphans, aad it Ms the great destroysr of property, th forerannsr aad agent of destruction, desolation and everything that la terrible. Alongside of war all other things fall into in significance. War overturns ths established order of industry, of commerce,. of society, and breaks into efyythin sad brings such a scourge that nothing compares with it. Yst when we under take a plan to curtail war if aot to stop it alto gether wise mea ia the; United States senate oppose any action because they say America should not be entangled ia world affairs. But we have just come eat of aa entanglement" that baa eot ua more money than all aur previous expenditures combined eince the colonics united in their first experimental protest against the British crown. Is four years our entanglement has cost us more than a century and a half of all kinds Of disasters "lad of legitimate expenditures, sad, w hsve only be gan to psy. Our annual interest charge for years Kill be a sum of money that twenty years sgo would hsve startled as If it hsd been proposed to spend that money for everything the government!. buys. But now we ere figuring on paying every year for ihtereat, principal aad annual outlay, more money than we paid before In a century. That is what war is doing, and ws still stead bsck and aay we wilt hot become entangled with the old world by a league that hat for Its aim to rest rici war. :''-.-' ..'v. ,:'"''-.'' ' a We eomplaia of tha high cost of living, but go ahead paying war costs ss cheerfully aa we pay for a tiawhistle for the baby at ths five-cent cennter. . , ' " .. . ' .: IMPROVING FARM COMFOHTS. In eitimating tha. value ' to the stats of the work done by th .Agricultural Extension serviee . It is cany te look Tor the erop gnins and the .financial ircrease and te forget -that other ends are accom plished that eaa eqaaUy as well be sated aa agri cultural gains. The annual report of Dr. B. W. Kil eore, director of thia service,, mentions one thing that it eMbe, highest Importance-In the last ysar 775 farm "water systems were installed. Better yet was tfi2i lightning systems, sad not bad was 5,20 rural telephones."' Horns Igronnds- were im proved en almost ais thousand farms, aad ether helps were brought to the rural hems by ths ag ricultural eervice department, helps that will serve materially ia making the farm a more desirable place to live aad therefor a mors desirable place ea which to work, aad car for tha. growing seeds of a growing state aad nation. . v. Tha 0,403 rural telephones may seem like a lux cry aa. the farm, but ia thia day ef quick action they are aa esseatial la the country as they are la town, aad ae reason eaa be offered why every fsrss house should not have access ta the wire The telephone is sueh aa efficient agent ia shortes Ing time and distance that the garl wtlfar af tba State is increased by aa 1 efficient telephone system reaching into every corner of every town, ship. '! ":V v'. .K :--:'' Th installatioa af 775 water systems ia if arm homes tells ef a big Improvement and ef a bigger one to coma, for it t oresbsdows tht extension ef the Idea of running water Instead ef a Umitedtof Journalism." amount of carried water. It sounds rather aa if water aad light were running iaf reversed gear whea it ia said that mere than three times as many lighting ayystems, were Maetalled, for lighting ia probably more expensive. But it ia only a ques tion of tlm until water, telephone and light will bo the rule- ia a great proportion of (am hones. Tha family ia, the country mast have comforts la the country or it will ge to town, anil as snost of the country folks do not want to go to town they will tiring town conveniences to the country. The Agricultural serviee is helping in this work, and la doing it is doing ons of the beat Jobs undertake in the State. , . , f , FLOUNDERING. Senator Harding, ia floundering la water that does aot' seem adapted to his .depth.' Hs comes Into politics a comparative stranger to the Ameri can people, appointed to ths , aomlnation by a junta ef senatorial ptoflteers, aad hs glvss'ae In dication ef what he ia to do, aor how hs is to do it The dream that he thinks he is dreaming ia thst he is thd reincarnation ef McKialey, perhsps be et use McKinley was from Obi aad espoused ty .those able financial captains that mads .Mark Hanna's ejeetioa ef McKinley possible. Harding is an Ohio man, and ths big interests ars already traveling to Ohio to look over their acquisition Alsa Harding seems to be intent oa imitating that front" porch esmpsiga that wss originated in the McKinley days whea erowtis were herded ap te Canton te hear a kindly Ohio man speak his pieces prepsred to, suit ths delegation. ' But whatever be did, MeJLwiey was aot aa imitation of somebody else. He was McKinley. He wss not floundering in some other van's aid shoes and old hat, trying to shine with' the lights that, had goae out whea the shoes were devised to the survivor. t ,J.y,f , Did you ever stop to think how. full the world it of mea whose names ars begun with Bobert Leo er Andrew Jacksoa or Thomas Jeffersoa or Ahraliam Lineola er George Washingtoa or some other fsmiliar cognomen I But la the whole bunch Is not one that ever msds you think ef the man who was the 11 nt of the Bame. Of the thousands of Thomas Jeffersoas that have come along ia the last hundred years hot one could hav wrlttea the Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jeffer son Smith may not be able to read tea linea in big print for all you hnow. The ptinclpal trouble about the imitation ia that usually it has none of the qualities of th thing it imitates but the name. Harding may ba another William McKinley aad probably some William MeKlnleys an driving the United States. Ths msa who by asms or imsgination is trying to ba another McKinley may be a McKinley, but when he pretends to be a real McKinley he Is floundering. Great mea' are aot made ia bunckes. . . KNOWING YOUB STATE. At times efforts' have been made to establish a permanent state organization to put North Care lina more prominently before the world, but so far they hsvs all mst with disaster. The Bureau of Publicity formed a few years ago did considerable along- that line, bat -want ef f anda compelled it to Coaae. Now comes another attempt ia the form of a State Chamber of Commsree which is having its origin ia Tsysttevllla. From the organisation is issued the State Chamber of Commerce Bulletia, aad if nothing more grows out of the movement than this one bulletin the job Is worth while. As a people we do not know North Carolina. We caa never tell the world anything about our Stat unless we first kaow it ourselves. Ths Bulletia shows for instance that Winston-Salem , ia the greatest tobacco manufacturing city la ths world. . .. . . . , . . . . c sad that Durham is ths second, thnt Durham has the largest hosiery mills la the world, that Greens boro leads all other places ea earth la dealms, thst Winttoa-Salsm Is the first place ia the manufac ture of men's underwear, that Kannapolis makes mora towels thin any rival, thst Wilson is the largest bright tobacco market, aad a whole lot of ether information is given that mighty few of at have suspected. , It Is to. be hoped that this movement will hsvs sufficient financial backing to enable it to live. North Carolina has ths goods, and gradually is coming to hsve ths acquaintance, but we might advance much more rapidly if we would spend a little money, bow that we have money, ia taking stock of our resources and .progress sad making known what ws find out. The State Chamber of ''Commerce la dsveloplag. It will try .to interest peopl ia every section ef North Carolina, an) it will pay a profit on any work er money invested -in it. It should aot have to burdea its enthusiasm ia the job of calling in rceruitr, for its energy is worth mere ia .other directions. The proposition deserves to be backed up vigorously from the beginning Try 'every' county. CORRECTING AN ERROR." The Herald, Hunter, Kansas. . ' - .We msde a slight error lsst week whea writing up ths account ef a well saving ia oa H. D. New man. It stated that "unfortunately" ao bones were broken. We mesat thst fortunately ao bones were broken. ? v, -v ' ' -r" SHOULD HAVE CALLED SPECIAL SESSION. New York World. y The Leglslaure of Vsrmoat bow represents only half of the people oa aa issue respecting the en franchisement of the other half, and it would be the asms way if a new Legislsturs were elected. On this psrtieulsr lsuept( rsUflcstion. Thus the present Legislature can act eomnetently.'and as consistently with ths principle of populsr govern ment en this subject ss a new body, and Governor Clement should have given it the ehaaea. ; ' " BRITISH TRIBUTE TO O. HE!tRY. Oa this tenth anniversary of O. Henry's death it is a actable faet that not only America bus Eng. land and the continent pay him tribute as the mas ter short story teller. - , . Ths diatlsgulshed British critic, writer aad play wright, Dion Clayton Calthrop says of himi- l ao not think this msa Is a small great man. I feel he is a giant, so, therefore, I may speak of gianta in his company. , . " J ij th fines, shorj stpjy if story ef Ja- seph and his Brethreai Ua finest Bevel, David CoDDsrfleld: the asset poem, tha Bong ef Eolomoaj the finest romaaee. The Throe Musketeers t ths fiasst pamphlet, the Pilgrimt Progress. If I were boob a desert Ulead familiar diaeassioa4 should like to have with me the complete works of OX Henry. V ' He is more of a Boulevard than anything also. He has what Dickeas had, tha power of patting dowa a crowd oa paper aad giving wonder mi vi bration to that crowd aad woadsrfaal character to the background. ' . "I soak ia Shakespeare as X soak ta tha aaa. I am drenched by great muaie as I cm-drenched by the rein. Ia the case of this mea I am hurried, eager, staring, aa a child looks with woader ( at his first signt oi ins aca- a, -:. This is my poor aosegsy. O. Hsary. It is laid te your memory as yoa weald like it ia the Street j BTJGENII Of PBANCS, '-. . Nsw Yorik World. ' ; ' ' 1 - -' v When Maris Eurenie Ignaee Augustine ds Mow tijo. sx-Impress Eugenie, resehed last May the sgs of nlasty-four she hsd outlived the empire by forty-aine rears, lust short or kali a seatary. She bsd beea separated almost ss long irbm asr eon sort. Her son, the hapless Prise Imperial, had beea more than forty years ta ais grave. Having lived to sse France, 'that sympathetic anvils of modern civilization, saved from dectruetioa aad set upward ways, aha aoald have ssid her NaaS dlmltUs" ta the faith ef her childhood, the eoa, solsUoa of age. She had little to lire for. ' lurenis s birth Was fsr from royaL la bar days of glory aad of dowafsQ alike she impressed, those who koew her as befitting her station. Her mots er wss aa American by citizenship1, though aot by residencet and however devoted we may - be to republican France, most Americana are well sat iated that Eugenie's plight ia 1870 . so strongly appealed to the chivalry of" Amerieaa Minister Wsehbume, vand . thst . he aad other Americans could reader her aid aad courtesy. .-.. Whether a vain aad beautiful toubst Impress . .V. . 1 S7A.T1 u m ia new of little moment. Whatever sao msy have said, or thoughtth world knows, tlaee the pf Usation of the troth about the Beneaetti ae patch, that it . was Bismarck's jwr. coldly laeited because ae anew xrussia wouia wis. rot years Eugenie was the sols eoaaplcuoaa survivor of her time a time when Prussia ao longer hsd a Bis marck I Her romantic career closes -just as s vic torious Fraace sets terms for humbled Oer- PEACE OB WAR. " (By Savoyard.) r : Here is some "canned" eloquense Candidate Harding has delivered himself of that Is to be re produced by the phonograph at every cross-road in our glorious Union! , To safeguard America first. ) To stabilise America first. - Te prosper America first. . To think of America first. - To exslt Amsrica first. to live for and revere America first" t No doubt that is very patriotic No doubt Senar tor Harding holds it to be profoundest policy. But is it not possible to look upon ft as just a uttls selfish f Yet all of as would like to see oar glorious Union "first" smong the nations. Woodrow Wil son mads the American Bepnblic first whsn he ne gotiated the pact of the League ofNstloas ia tht Treaty of Versailles. All the world hailed as as first smong the nations. Ths Bepublioan United Statoa Senate, of which Warren G. Harding was oaa of ths majority side, pulled our country dowa from fhat exalted eminence where Woodrow Wilson had placed it, and now he prates of ".America first I" A yssr ago Amsrica Isd the world; to day ws are completely isolated. ; . i But let us strip tht queetloa of ail Ideality, of all Christianity. Let aa admit, for the enormity of it, that maa'a only mission ta life is to accumulate leads sad tenements, coeds aBd-ehattate.' rirhtai and privileges, let as worship Mammoa for a while sad argue that tha sols aad af this Ufa Is to lay ap filthy lucre by all the possible expedients aad all knavish subterfuges. Let aa- say that bub la all stomach and entirely without aouL Let as pat it oa that lew, bass, hellish plane. Our glorious TTnloa ia become the greatest far mer la toe world, the grestest shephsrd ia' the world, the greatest miner In the world, tha greatest manufacturer ia the world, the greatest merchant in ths world, ths greatest banker in tba world. Now let ns admit that our one and sols ambitloa ia to add te our enormous wealth ia money aad proper ty.' How caa you better or easier accomplish thst end then to preserve the peace of the world! There is but ons wsy to preserve thst peace, aad thst is through universal disarmamaat of ths aa- tlons-all of them. And tveryody, including Thee dore Booeevelt. Kllha Boot aad Hoary Cabot Lodge, has preached that the oaa way to achieve disarm ament is by a decree , of a League of Nations, Senstor Harding cannot deny that It is our wish to trade with all tongues and peo ples. It is to our interest that all tba world 1 corns our customer and our eopartaer ia walks of material industry. We ahould atrive to toclaim all waste places wherever on our globe they msy be. and to open to material development wast regioas in Bouth America and In Africa. The Amazon Val ley la an immense solitude, with mora material potentially! than any other region oa our plane! Some day tad most populous aatioa ta the world will bo located ia that valley. The way to hastsa that day is for ths actions to disarm, and what a glorious thing it would be if much of th tressuro worse than wsated in supporting armlet aad navies were poured into tho Amazon Valley to reclaim that wilderaess aad found towns and eltlee, fields sad psstures, teeming with happy aad free peo ples. Thst is not only a possible . achievement of tht League of Nations, but a certainty. Here will be located our best customer aad oar trade with him will total billions of dollars ankuslly. Henry Cabot Lodge says the League of Nstioaa will bo worthless end impotent without as, and ha insults- every member of the League by declaring that they hav got to toka ns oa oar owa terms. If this were tiue and it Is falae if thst were true, it would b infamous for us to take advaa tege of the world's necessities to thus play ths hog with the situatloa. Thaak God it ta aot tree. Twei'ty-nlne nations have catered the League aad aot a great day distant Germany wHl bo a member cf the League. As Chairmaa dimming, of the Democratic party, as eloquently nnd SO signifieaat- W. saav acre art ths. nations wlthou t the Juesguo, not counting Germany, who is certain to join the League: ' . ".Revolutionary Mexico, Bolshevist Bassia, un- sneakable Turkey, aad the Uaited States ef Amer ica.".-- . -u-, Suppose ths Leaxue. as now constituted, establ- IIIDCI WV.II4 UWIII, PT BUS. WW, tm IM.M4. M ss under the blessing of God it is certain to do! Suppose thst, and ws rem si a out of hi Where will the United States bet Not first, but tost of tho notions. That is ths Barmecide fesst to which tho "Forty of Great Moral Ideas" iwvtea oar excel leal old Undo Bam. ' y- Another thing and a vital thing. Seaator Phil ander Knoa has argued conclusively that it would be destructive of the League if we entered it with special privileges aot granted to. ether members of tht League, end Mr. Knox .-'declared that the Lodge rescrvstions would deetrey ths League. Mr. Knox is 'manly in hie assaults oa ths Lesgue, which he opposes altogether, He weald isolate' our people entirely and totally, Our republic .has beea held together because ft Is a Union of equal States. Suppose New York should acquire the ipecisl privileges la our Gov ernment thst Lodge insists on ear astioa hsviag ia ths League t How long would our glorious Union isstT Not a minute. - , Ths issue betweea the Democratic aad Republi cs a parties ia 1920 is, Shall ths world be at peace, or prepare for wagf Shall our aatioa be first or lsatf . ' - ... Rival De!c:stlcns V;3 Hard :.. Ficht Over Train Routes (Cawttoaed freaa Psge Oaa.)' believe the Commission will accept He proposed to restore the trains back to tho mala lias, aad give Wtastoa-Salem a train running from Greensboro to T Official Returns From Second , , Primary For State Officials OOUMTTJsl hi i is i i i Avery CaUweB CeststwS Casswha. Catr Ciwea k.................... eecsllsiHsetSMtMisiiitii(eiiMs ..se . teSSSsSSsSeeSteSetSeeteeSttMt -a. etiesseelssssseettssat MtMIMIHMMS4lMlMUMl etsesseestMtsesMeisstit at a,, ooe. ............ .... ..t ftotooa tiMssss tsstssoseV aaosr - woo. .oseWA,e,...M. MMtSOttaateqttttia, wSee) rw ),) SttttbttttStSttSttttStttStttISJr , Psaff wajoaaeo.aeoa....aw;..,q( sMM .o.....o.,.i,.., ,.. Biwk .-... i.eseeaosfVatteefstt ItSSStStsSSIK eoso ., itieilttM! sooooao..,oo.MWe.. 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Mf , MU :; TS1 Koekteerhass ..................... 44T T1S MT - 471- SU. j, 44S tUmejs-. . ...... .... a 'HI ITI Ut l,ll tM . 131 Betaevfsed ....... ...... ... ............. til lMI 1,SM - ' M ' Mt v tMl tiaissra Ul SO tTI 1ST ... CM . 14 Isetlaad MT 414 Ut 4M TM 14 ttasdy ...... ......... Ttt . 444 ' IU MS ' ITI 111 tlokas IM 1ST Ml 14. - 141 MS Barry Mt. Til TT-. 41 TU 40 Bwala ;. IM 71 IU IU 14 IM TnaaSTvaasa . I4S IM IM t 141 t IU M4 Tyrrell It ; 1ST IM 11 IU IS TJaiea Ttl 1.4U ; TU . MM Mlt MI Vaasa ITI - .411 - 441 , IM tit ' 114 Wake , 1.111 ' MM 1.14 HI MU Mt Wum STt'.MI' III W III HI WssBlactoa Ill 114 ; IM ' 14 " til M Wetawaa ,. tTI 14 , IM ' IM , M lot Warao 1,W Hi Mil ' IN , )H Mlt. wnaa , t4M IM IH UU 1,(11 lit! WrM tM IM - TM UU, - TM 1.4M Tsoksa .. Ill IM ITS ltt , 111 W T.aMC IU Ml M tt ttl lT TMai ............ .....;. . TS.U1 11.171 tMtt ItMt TtUT 4,lto: I Have You Too Many Acres? Why not SLL tha lind vou . tre not using and let it produce food for the fwinjraillioMf- YOU, of court, want til it will bring' K ' ' ( W kninr hew to got tht kiebeet dol lar for your land. - Will ou lot tu . show jrouf W will grvt you tht ben. 1 fit of many yean experione. ' Fill In tha coupon today nai wt will do tho - -fait.'" .. v. , : 4 Eut Msrtln Streets RsleigKltC Bow snaar Acreef.. ........ Hew new Ul.'wutieaK2M.M. ' "v ''': . - '- " V--" "" . . '. '':-.:,'.- Number cd DIliatrsr'....u...M ' Best Prictf I......,, Hsme r a I
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 15, 1920, edition 1
4
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