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14 THE OHARLGTTB NSWS JULY 2, I91I NEWS OF FOREIGN CAPITALS Coronation Over- English Aie Taking Interest In Politics (3y PHILLIP EVERETT.) I selves begin todoubt theaccuracy of Tjoadon. July l—Xow that the Cor-Mheir own forecasts. It is this indif- onaticn i* a thine of the past and not Terence of the public, perhaps, which P’en the rai?T ingenius writer can has done more than anything else to find any more to say about this great nntional pagean>. Knglishraen are be ginning to realize that the country is In the midst of a great constitutional conflirt, and to a obtain extent are beginning to take an interest in pol itic?. Parliament has again raken up its work and the plans of the govern ment for the remainder of the ses sion r>re bei oming clear. Croatly to rhe relief of the Tories the liberal .government evidently does noi int'^nd forcing through the plural voting bill this though it may be aubrnltfed to the house of commons ■within a short time. The far more important issues of the veto bill and Llcyd George's In chill the indignation of the house of lords and to prepare them for^the ac ceptance of the veto bill. At a meeting the other day for the purpose of abolishing the smoke nuis ance which makes London one of the dirtiest cities in Europe. Bernhard Shaw made some remarks on genius and smoke which are well worth re peating. ■‘fmoke,” he said, "is a very com mon thing, and I know very Uttle about it. but crenius is a ver.v uncom mon thing which 1 know all about. I am in tliat lina myself. A man of g€nius is not a man who observes more than other men; on the con- sur.nnce bill wH! fulVv occum the time i .' cu will very often find, esne- o f'he house and v. ill undoiibtcdlv be! cluHy if you ask a genius' wife, that pafsed earlv. it the fixed intention of I he is absent minded and observes even the govemmrnt that there shall bej^ess than other men do. If ..ou meet no autum session this year, as the iMt months of the \ear will be need- ec! for the preparing the home rule bill rf 1912. Tho gcvernment has undoubtedly al ec realized that to a^k fur the passage a man of genius in Whitehall and ask hiri: what has passed up that thoroughfare while he ha& been there, you will probably find him reduced to a (.’cndition of stuttering inbecility, but if you ask the nearest policeman of th? Plural voting bill during the ho may or may not be a man of pi .'cnt session would be to add an | Senius, he will b? able to tell you a unne-essrry embitterment to the pres-1 ^'*^^^her of useful things, tnf situation. Mr. Asquith and his col-1 Speaking of tne smoke in London, lep^ues feel ou’te certair thnt the I Shaw then said that his principal ob- lea^ues feel qu*te certain that the hou-ie cf lords will pass the veto bill witl'.out compelling them to create the ominous 50n new peers. The> want to aake this course as bus: as possible and probably the threat, made in a' jection to it was that it made it nec essary for you to wash yours." "You have to be an Irishman.” he said, "to realize the instinctive dislike of every Irishman to washing himself. conservative morning paper, the other The man Vvho takes a cold bath every . dlly. that if the government insisted rnorning and rubs himself with a bath cn i)afsinc tbe Plural voting bill the towel, removes a top layer of skin j To-.ies xxould f^eht the Insurance bill from hi? body, which is intended by to last ditch, has not been with- nature to protect him against path o-at effect. Even if the Tories keep logical germs. As for hot baths, the the r.cireement with Llovd George in cnly people who take them are those': r€i£&rd to the Insurance bill, an agree- '^'ho look incurably dirty. As for my-| nicnt, bv the wav. which is quite un- I do not thing I have washed} r?f.. .1enied in British Miticai historv. except for the visible parts of my | the pat^ago of the bill will take at body, since the days when I was I le^^t two n.onths. washed by somebody else. It is true,; The much advertised doctors’ strike that I have got in the habit of tak- j against the bill thould not be taken a cold bath, but that is not wash-' tac» seriously. The possibility of it ing. I do it as a stimulant, but t have; hi’.dly exists outside of the columns often wondered if I would not be bet-j c; he Torv newspai^ers. The majority ter off if 1 had taken to gin. People of di.'crs admit that the chancellor never be clean until they get at Ci the Exchequer has shown a very c'^an atmosphere which will prolong 1 frit>ndly attitude toward them and the their lives and enable them to save I ffto» that they are realize that the aioney. Thousands of tons of coal arej public is strongly In favor of the bill '^'asted every year in Lo'ndcn and if i vil!, no doubt, curb the warlike ten- the money for this can be saved there! divies of who. for selfish rea- he a rush of new company pro-; son- Hculd like to tee the bill de- spectuses. i I unemployed in the cities would notj' tolerate the conditions of employ ment. Th conditions o'f housing in the German cities may be vividly illus trated by quotation from official re ports. For example, of Berlin’s 500,- 000 dwellings in 1905, 50,000 had only one room provided with a stove, and roughly, one-seventh were not even provided with a kitchen. Seven per cent of all the dwellings of Berlin are oercrowded, and 14 per cent of the poorer class live in unhealthy and unsanitary conditions. Poor fam ilies strive to reduce expenditure by crowding into dwellings, too small to hold them, and even then, take lodgers and let beds by the night. The birth of children in these dwell ings is a curse, and immorality is an inevitable result of the overcrowd ing. Count Posadowsky suggested legis lation strictly controlling housing conditions together with the erection of healthy, small dwellings, as a cure for the evil. or robbed of its democratic fr^ ni. In regard to the veto bill the Tory Ifudsrs are as for from having reach ed an agreement as ever, they do not kD- w whether to show fight or to sur- f indei, but are simply wailing to the for’ un hcpe fhTt sometliirg will turn up. Signs are not lacking, however, tba* their followers will gradually ccjtne over to the side of peace. In the rank and file of the peers. It B'fem.' very doubtful whether those e^-iniable men ar^' going to risk their existence on a home rule amendment. The.\ know now that even if the sup port the Tor\’ party to their utmost aed the only reward in front of them is exclusion from the liouse of lords. On the other hand, they have the prospect cf remaining there and per forming an important part in the life cf the countiy. it is not strange, there fore. that a considerable number of these men have already frankly ex pressed themselves as preferring the veto bill to the Lansdowne bill. But probably what has done most to brine »he house of lords to reason In the refusal of the public to be ex erted over their fate. It is somewhat djffurbing to find, after you have call ed the gods to witness that the end o( the world is coming, that nobody P8:s the smallest attention. The re sult is that the very prophets them- "IT MRS. CHAS. TAFT Mrs. Charles P. Taft, aiater-in-law of President Taft, who was one of the most honored American women stay* Ing in London during coronation week. Throughout the week Mrs. ! Taft hat been the object of coiici- toue attention on the part of the Britieh offlclais. Mrs. Taft leaves Uondon and Scotland this wetk. "You ought to cut unmercifully all! people who have smoky chimneys. You should refuse their invitations to din-j ner, saying: ‘I have seen black pro-) ceeding from your kitchen chimney.’ Coal smoke is not like original sin, a thing we are oblidged to put up with. It was once said that durt could not be done away with on our public roads. I have myself been riding in an automobile amid the execrations of the populace. Xow dust has been large ly abolished. If every chauffeur would now make it a point of honor to drive at a reckless speed in order to stir up any dust there is remaining, and would also mak^ it a point of driving rapidly through a puddle whenever he passed a bishop, those two pests dust and mud would soon be done away with. "My advices to those who want to get rid of coal smoke Is therefore that they carry a bag of soot vith them al-, ways and thro wit over other people’s collars and shirt fronts.” SIR BADEN POWELL Lieut, General Sir Baden Powell, chief scout of the boy scouts and two of the young men will take part in a review of 30,COO boy scouts at Windsor cn Tuesday (July 4th) before the King and his staff. London, July 1.—A deputation of Boy Scouts, who are later to attend the King’s Boy Scout review under Lieut. General Sir Baden Powell at Windsor on July 4, has brought a message from Oldtiam to the boy scouts headquarters in London, covering the distance of 191 miles in three days and a few hours. The message invites the chief scout, Lieut. General Baden Powell to visit the Oldham scouts. At four o’clock on Wednesday morning four scouts set out from Oldham and covered sixty-seven miles by eight o’clock at night. They slept in a barn, with no covering beyond the hay and straw. One boy had to go back owing to sore feet, but the others, who all ijelong to the ‘‘Beaver Patrol” of the 11th Oldham Trop, tramped pluckily on wards. The next night, after covering forty-five miles, they found a scout camp. They received a hearty welcome, aand had the luxury of blankets to sleep in. Although another boy had now to drop out because of sore feet, he did not give up, but borrowed a bicycle at Loughborough. Friday night was spent in a barn, and this morning, soon after ten, the three dusty, but cheerful, “Beavers” arrived at the Boy Scouts' headquarters in London. Like all adventurers, they traveled light. One carrying a spare shirt and pair of stockings, also an ambulance outfit; the others confined their luggage to a towel and a piece of soap each. Very Little Rest In , Get man Political Circles At Present People Complair. Against the Tat i Paris, July 1.—Periodically the' principal thoroughfares of the city,.' notably the Champs Elysees, are covered with a coating of tar, on the supposition that it helps to al lay the dus-t and preserve the road way paved with wood blocks. Numerous complaints against this practice have been lodged with the municipal authorities. The tar coat ing, it is asserted, plays havoc with pneumatic tires, and in warm weather it exudes a poisonous vapor, which seriously attacks the growth of street trees and plants, when It does not kill them ootright. The perfect of the seine has ap pointed a commission, whose duty it' will be to study very carefully the pros and cons of the whole question. This body has been empowered to make the necessary practical experi ments. Woman was Man For 2en Years Madrid, July 1.—A woman’s ten year’s career as a man has just been brought to an abrupt end at Cuidad Roal. The mayor of the town was ac costed in the street by apparently an agricultural laborer, who asked for money. When refused he used such bad language that he was given into custody. He struggled violently with two civil guards, who had great diffi culty in taking their prisoner to gol. Inside thep rlson he defied the gov ernor and refused to take the regu lation oath. He fought with half a dozen warders, but eventually was overpowered when, it was then dis covered that the supposed laborer was a woman in disguise. Inquiry showed that for ten years she had worn man’s clothing in or der to follow the calling of an agri cultural laborer, which she preferred to the ordinary‘life of a woman. Would ye learn the spell? — a mother sat there; And a sacred thing is that old arm chair. - —Eliza Cook. (BY FREDERICK WERNER.) Berlin, July 1.—Supposedly the members of the reichstag are enjoy ing their annual summer vacation, which lasts until the beginnig of Oc tober, in reality there is very little rest for politicians this summer, as the members of all parties are grind ing their arras and getting ready for the great battle of thf; general elec tions early next year. The political situation is unprecedented in the an nals of German political history. The recent session of the reichstag closed with distinct signs of a seri- ious breach between the conserva tive party and the head of the gov ernment. Chancellor von Bethmann Hollweg, who is accused of an un dignified flirtation with the socialists, w^hom the conservatives consider the worst foes of the empire. In reality, there is, of course, no cornpact of any kind between the government and the socialists who simply sup ported the Al&ace-Loraine constitu tion bill, because it granted the in habitants of those provinces what the masses of Prussians are struggling for, universal suffrage, and also be cause the bill, although a govern ment measure. Weakened Prussria’s’ position in the federal council. August Bebel, the leader of the so cialist party anticipates great social istic gains at the coming elections, predicting that practically all the votes of the small dealers and farm ers of the peasant class, who have hitherto supported the cons-ervatives will this time be cast for socialist candidates. What this may mean to old parties, in understood, when it is remembered that even now the so cialists control more than three and a half million votes. The socialists promise that as far as they are con cerned there will be no disorders during the election campaign, and that the conservative majority will be allowed to die in peace. tische is not large, but some of the greatest banks of the empire are in terested in it, and practically the entire world of German finance can be reckoned on to stand behind it where enterprises of a political na- tuie were at s-take. Its immediate aim is the extension of German trade and shipping in Chinese waters, and in general the establishment of econom ic bases of support for the develop ment of German commerce in the Far East. Herr -Dernberg has always shown a predilection for this form of finan cial pioneering, and during his recent trip through the Orient, he had a chance to study economic institutions and possibilities in that part of the world. He has ideas and energy in abundance. With the training of a banker and the broad grasp of a constructive statesman he seems des- tined to fill the role of Germany’s Strong man in the East. Old Montenegro is gradually pass ing away, and a new Montenegro is taking the place of the Momeric so- ciey, which existed on the Black mountain for more than five centu ries. To begin with the external changes. Who would have thought some years ago that a public service of motor cars would run daily from Cattaro to Cettinje and from Cettinje to Podgor- itfea, or that a railroad passing through some of the finest scenery in South Eastern Europe, would convey the traveler from Antivari to Virpa- zar on the Great Lake of Scutari, thus bringing Cettinje and Scutari- in-Albania within thirty-six hours of Rome? The growth of the village capital, now lighted by electricity, has been rapid, while the magnifient Italian legation and the fine palaces of Austria and Russia would do credit to a much larger seat of gov ernment. The old “billiard table,’ once the oflScial residence of the ministry, has been • abandoned to school boys, while a huge and brand new block of public offices contains under one roof all the sections of the Montenegrin administration. Telephones connect the chief towns with Cettinje, and the Marconi Com pany has a wireless service from Antivari to Bari. Since 1906 the Black Mountain has had its own coin age; and with a longing reminiscence of mediaeval Servian and Byzantine times, the silver unit is known by the scholarly name of “pepper W’’hile the magnificent costume has disappeared far less than from Dalmatia, the officers and the young Princess dress in khaki, and return ing emigrants from America feel half ashamed, as one of them confessed to me, to exchange at Cattaro the “hand me down” clothes of New York for the crimson vest and blue breeches of Cranagora with the pie cap that commemorates the fatal day of Koss-ovo, the Waterloo of the Servian empire. More than this the stream of the Montenegrin emigration to the Unit ed States is changing the social out look of the mountaineers. Until a few years ago America was an un known land to this tribe of warriors. One day a young man went there, and reported that he had found el Dorado, as, indeed it was, com pared with the lean fare of the lime stone rocks around Njegush. Other members of his family followed, the glad tidings spread, and it is calculat ed that there are now as many as 20,000 Montenegrins in America. Eco nomically, this emigration has been to advantage to the country, because ; the emigrants remit their savings I home; and, in the autmn of 1908, j when was with AUstria was threat- ing, they returned en masse to serve against the arch-enemy. But Mon- j tenegro i& thus drained of the fiow- I er of its youth, and socially and mor- j ally their absence is greatly felt, j Montenegro is in a period of I transition. So long as the king lives, he will rule, and so long as he rules the country will go on well. But after his death uncertainty will play a large part in the fortunes of the country. Parliamentary government in Montenegro will then have its I trial; western civilization, that • doubtful and not unmixed benefit for I eastern peoples, will then have made further progress in the Black moun- I tain; while Montenegro will be con fronted with thep roblem of hiw to provide employment for its princess ’ —a serious question in a small coun try, All friends of heroism and free dom, all lovers of romance and his tory, however, alike hope that the “smallest among people” will pass through the ordeal unscathed. Due d’Orleans Tties To Recon cilia te The Royalist Pat iy By GEORGE DUFRESNE Paris, July 1.—For some time past there have been divisions In the royal 1st party, but the Due d’ Orleans re cently endeavored to set matters right by calling upon certain of his followers to relinquish their positions. The duke is now reported to have made another drastic decision. •The news is that he has sent a telegram to M. Lesurier, general secretary of the “Correspond ence Nationale,” ordering his to stop the publication of this paper, which is the official organ of the party. The order. It is stated, has been im mediately executed, and the paper will cases to appear from yesterday. This action on the part of the duke has, according to the Parfs Journal, had a rather startling sequel. As he had not been apprised of the duke’s intentioit, M. de Laregle, who is chief of the po litical bureau of the pretender of France, has, it is rumored, handed in his resignation, his action having been followed by several members of the royalist committee. There is no doubt that Germany Is to be congratulated on the return of the former colonial secretary, Herr Bernhard Dernburg, to active par ticipation in affairs of finance, for he is one of the country’s most t-ilent- ed and experienced meij. Since he was forced to resign. Herr Dernburg has been biding his time in retire ment, but he is too salient a personal ity to be easily obscured, and he has been by no means lost to view. It is realized that in as&ociating himself actively with the management of the Deutsh-Aslatische Bank, he is situat ed by the conviction that there is an opportunity to achieve important things. The capital of the Deutsh-Asia- Count Posadews-ky, formerly min ister of the interior in a speech the other day drew a very gloomy pic ture of the condition of the po.orer classes in the large German cities, and at the same time he deplored that the German country population was rapidly losing the virile strength which had hitherto made it the very marrow and strength of the em pire. “Although,” he said, “agricultural employment supposedly provides bet ter conditions for physical fitness in the military sense, yet in conse quence of the underfeeding that is characteristic of rural life there is to be noticed every year a steady de crease in the military fitness of re cruits fron> the outlying districts. He attributed this to the tendency of the rural population to. sell the produce Instead of using it for their oVn nourishment and to buy instead cheaper, inferior foodstuffs. He also asserted that there was a growing disinclination for physical exertion as shown by the fact that Germany imports 850,000 laborers for the har vest every year, although, he added, “every year we also hear ‘complaints of unemplo3Tnent from the big towns.” Count Posadowsky’s remarks are hardly likely to enhance his reputa tion for sagacity as an economist. It is true that country laboror is un derfed and has a poor physique, but it is economic necessity which forces him to sell his produce in the towns and buy cheaper and inferior goods for his own consumption. Har vest laborers are brought in simply because there is a lack of labor in the villages, and because even the The trial of Duez. opens another page of Jiumiliation for the repubhc Duez was one of the functionaries charged with the compulsory winding up of the property of the “congrega tions” after their refusal to register under the associations law. It was con fidently expected that at least $200,- 000,000 would result from the liquida tion. It represented the “gross lot^’ of the Anti-Clericals. But the result was quite different, and as if he had been a conquerer M. Duez made the millions of the rel.gi- Paris for the moment and is bound for the Argentine, where, no doubt, an extraordinary welcome awaits him. He is the most powerful actor that Paris has today, and there is uor.t who expresses the deep emotions of modern man as he does. His pe.’scna- tion of the politician in Paul Bourget’s latest play. “Le Tribun,” is a remark able piece of acting. Many of our actors and actresses are making their way to the pass for sum mer engagements. A talented troupe Is interesting a mystery play at Rouen In connection with the Normandy cele brations; others will be seen in the open-air theatres of course and of Cantarets, whilst, of course, every “plage” has Its casino, where are given thea'frical performances. Retgn of a Sea Lioness Ended London, July 1.—For nine years Emma,, the sea lioness, has ruled the hearts of two swains at the zoological gardens. Regent’s park, but now her reign is q^er. Efer favors, once eager- ly sought for by her two cavaliers, are at a tragic discount. The cause of these troubles is the advent of Eva. The fact is that the newly arriv ed Eva is quite r girl, while EJmma is- by way of bemg passe, according to the male’s standard of youth and beauty. Emma’s pangs of jealousy began from the moment Eva first flopped into the great pond. The ous orders vanish into thin air. Opin ions differ as to whether he was con- fiickle males, true to the reputation sciously dishonest or merely a foo’, their sex, swam and brazenly kiss- but his examination In court has shed considerable light on his transactions, which do not put him in a very favor able position. Duez is said to have confessed to the examining magistrate to a dericit of $800,000 in the accounts of-the “con gregations,” and a bagatelle of $200,000 in some other affairs. Revelations as to his personal expenditure seem to show that he spent gay evenings in Mont martre and made binlself immensely popular with the pleasure seekers on the- hill. Assiciated with him are-two or three subsidiary creatures, who will also have to stand their trials before the jury of the Seine. Poor radical illusions about the Mil liard of the Monks! Was it not to pty for old-age pensions for the poor? In stead, it appears to have paid (p:'i tly at least) pensions for “cocottes.” And the actual measure, to crown the mis fortune of the government, is intensely unpopular with all classes of society. The employers have no wish to con tribute their third; the work people say; “You must not take anything out of our wages, which are low enough already,” and the state naturally de clines to shoulder the whole ’Durden. As a consequence, the scheme, which was to be compulsory, has become vol untary by sheer force of circumstanr es. Thus the misdoings of Duez (pre suming they are proved) have a direct influence up on the success of the gov ernment program. ed the blushing Eva under poor Emma’s very whiskers. ,The sea lions’ “kiss” must he seen to be credited. They gently prass their muzzles against Eva’s nose and make slight, gentle caressing move ments. Eva reciprocates. Emma does not disguise her feel ings. Though s-he has not yet at tacked her \val she has aged ter ribly and has lost both appetite and bulk. She has refused to perform her famous high dive since Eva wrecked her happiness. Her familiar haunts in the enclosure knew her no more and she is still searching for a place where she will not be com pelled to be a witness to Eva's shameless flirtations. Bvital Attack By The Apaches Paris, July 1.—A brutal attack by apaches was made the othed day upon Serge Ivanoff, a retired officer of the Russian imperial guards, who was found lying unconscious outside the fortifications. A stranger to Paris, he had set put for Bloud, but on the way his ve hicle broke down and he started to return. Near the Parc des Princes the other side of Auteuil, he was accosted by two nowen, who re lieved him of his watch and cash and stabbed him with a knife. A powerfully built man, the Rus sian struggled with his aggressors whereupon one of the amazons, put ting a whistle to her Ups, blew three calls, which summoned to the spot three men who rushed to the aid of their female confederates. The visitor was overcome by the ruf fians and felled with a blow from a knuckle duster. The band then made off, but Ivanoff, staggering to his feet, strted in pursuit, calling for help. Seeing this, two of the apaches retracted their steps and savagely attacked their victim with knives, leaving him for dead. Ivanoff remembers nothing more until he found himself in the hospital. On his back and chest were ten knife stabs, two just below the heart. The two women w'ho partici- pateji in the attack have been ar rested, aaa the police are hopeful of speedily catching their male asso ciates. There is much fear that Paris will have to suffer this year through short age of the water supply. Already Par isians have been brought face to face with the reality, the water supply now being entirely suspended between mid night and six o’clock in the morning and it is no secret that the regular supply will be quite inadequate to provide for the greatly increased con sumption of water during the hot wea ther if there is no change within a week or so. Filtered water from -a river—last used six years ago—will soon have to be pressed into service, and naturally the authorities prefer lo postpone the beginning of this system as long as they can by reducing the regular supply for some time before hand. The situation Is a strong reminder of the Inadequacy of the water supply of the French capital. Paris obtains her water from the sources of five trib- taries of the Seine’ including the Dhuys and the Vanne. The w'ater is brought to the city through huge conduits, and there are small service reservoirs in several quarters—notably at Montmar tre, Passy, and Montsouris—which serve to regulate the supply. Under this system, however, there is seldom a strong pressure, and the quality of the water varies from quarter to quar ter, according to the sourse from which it is derived, as well as from season to season. Hence the frequent warnings in the Paris newspapers: “Parisiens, faites bouillir votre eau.” It is no uncimmon experience at any time of the year to find the water in the morning bath so clouded that one cannot see the bottom, so the wisdom of the warning is never held in doubt. According to the latest reports, the daily consumption of water in Paris during the present hot weather would appear to be more than 7 gallons per head, but apparently this figure includ es watering the treets and operating the public fountains. ~ There is some promise that Ihis formidable quantity will some dav be steadily forthcoming by means of a perfection of the existing system, but Parisians are asked to wait four years for this. No looihpicks On German Train The theatrical season is on irs last legs, and our leading actors are dis- presing to the four winds. M. Gemier, well known actor manager of the Theatre Gimier, is not only going on toi^ with the whole company, but he is carrying his theatre with him togeth er with all his scenery. He will play each night in a large tent, which will contain the ordinary seating accommo- dation of a theatre. The arrangement will give him great nobility, enabling him to visit the most out-of the wa\ regions, as well as to be independent of the municipal theatre when he vis its the large towns. Lucien Quitry has said good-bye to Paris, July 1.—An Englishman re cently returned from Vienna, is tell ing anamusing incident which occur- red in the Orient express during the journey. One of the passengers call ed for a toothpick after dinner. The waiter disappeared to fetch it, but did not return. The diner became im patient, hammered his glass on the table, shouted for the waiter, and when at length he came, demanded toothpicks. The waiter gave this ex planation : “You see,” he said, “we waiters have to supply the toothpicks. The German customs exact duty upon toothpicks, so w^hen we reach the German frontie* »we always leave our toothpicks there, and pick them up again on our way back.” ^ VQH.'*' ' * ' .'t PRINCE OF WALES A late picture of the Prince of V/alcs. heir apparent to the throne of Great Britain, who wilt be the principal vic- urt in an ancient ceremony of irv vesture at Cararven Castle, Wales, on July 13th. Eight thousand people will be seated In the castle court yard and hundreds of thousands will see the royal procession as it passes from Griffith’s Crossing to Carnar- von. m the ct^ slat Cc oti dn> wil ver fro: W! rou bac 1 to wo mi gei as pri • Iht prc i:.' SOI his 'i ing I are dai COl ;v ■ Pe f ma 1' sm sm Iv gn the dis foc >4, ri
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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July 2, 1911, edition 1
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