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iPPPPPPi mm THS CRABIomB N1!W^. SEPTEMBER 10. 1911 13 NEWS OF FOREIGN CAPITALS Serious Cnsis Is Pending In England At the Present Time (B PHILLIP EVERETT) .?ppf 0—It Is a very j*«>- 1 - Rneland is passing through T^e h«voc wrought by the of «silors and firemen ooronRtion 1* as nothinjf .-f\ to icreat rry for the (^nt of this victory arose »ir\i.'^tion which threatens «'• and lnd\j5try in the T-n’tn? manner. i»n-iand ^or hit?h waxes like an the Biitiffh workers, ouiaced hy the success of r v ?rikeJ« with enthusiasm ndu^*trit's in whicb they arp nd 'vith (»vident joy attack Hid oppose the troops. ■ncpRled joy a certain part man press ha? watched re- • iv- in Rneland. s country f>ari* h*»s been (Germany’s , d rival and which only a , - prevented h‘r from hu has given purpose and direction to the efforts to render these amphibious craft even more devilish in their war- 1 like qualities. Slowly a ship is being j created, stafjie by stage, which w'lll ! render destroyers of the old type ob-1 solete. T1T€ vessels of the “E” class mark ! the anothepls of the submei'sible i ship. They will have more torpedo | tubes than the craft now in the ser vice, and ^he torpedoes will be of 1 far greater capacit3'—a higher speed j and greater endurance allied with a ^ far heavier explosive charge. The "E” j craft will have decks somewhat reseui- i bling ihe decks of ordinary above-wa- j ter vespols; on the decks serviceable gunp will be mounted so as not to in- } terfere with the facility of the ves-^ «el to travel beneath the surface. In : the larger hull will be comparatively ! I'ooniy quarters for the crews, with 1 more ample provision of compressed t' nnce. The strikes havejj^^j.^ pf, gg len?,then the maximum t, the world *he weakness of period «>f submersian; they will l>e enii'irp and never as;ain {f^r wireless communication: r'nn 'ingo press announces j above all. the new “E" vessel w’ill .prT'sn eagle to allay itselfsafe as no submarines have been • midated by the Hritish lion. ^ in another less sensational •vp nf>rnmn press is there re- 1 hr papers in the great in- m'r,- of Oermany are jubi- ... q ijie the strikes are sapping rrz*h of British Industry, which h?d all it could do to hold >n competition with the Ger- r the last generation British hap been gradually forced to everywhere by the smart, en- fruKal frerman, who have un- ri bow to manufacture thous- necessary articles a little f’pcant and cheaper than the Tt will then be a very »e- for the British industry sud- •o have to shoulder heavier bur- nnt only in the shape of higher : but also of increased domestic •' 'ates. I'cfore- safe from the danger of explo sion, and with well-tried apparatiip to enable officers and men to escape in rase of collision. The "E" cla.'s mark a great advance of any vessels hitherto constructed, but no one who has followed the course of development, since the first little ship w’as built to the design of the Holland Company, will doubt that the end of this chapter of naval evolution has not yet been reached. The dis placement today is 800 tons; in a few years’ time it may and probably will, be doubled, or trebled. We may in a comparatively short period see sizeable cruisers equipped so as to cruise submerged by day and on the surface by night. Fjenchman To Copy ‘ American Papers Fo7 his Paris Sheet •'^^t Great Britain stands face to a great catastrophe, that f;^c»orie8 and corporations will to shut down, simply because 1 Tinable to continue with profit neif conditions. V"Klish Industrial circles the Llb- • ernment is being sharply crlt- pcause it did not at once hp strike tendencies with Iron Serious accusations are raised the government because it, TV reasons dares not oppose :i or party. - ' rerv creat question, however ^ ROYAL RAILWAY COMMISSION The Royal Railway Commission which is investigating the conditions that led to the great English strrke and the esnployers’ agreement that ended It. From left to right, sitting—Sir Thomas Ratcliffe, Sir David Harrel, K. C. V. O. (chairman), a«d Arthur Henderson, M. P. Standing—Mr. John Burnett, Mr. J. J. Mills of the board or trade (Secretary), and Mr. C. G. Beale. By QEORGE OUFRESNE. Paris, Sept. 9.—It has been noticed for some time that M. Clemenceau, the former minister, has been a regu- I lar buyer of all the American newspa pers on sale in the kiosks for the bou levards and many were those who ■wondered why he had suddenly be come so interested in Amerfcan jour nalism. The riddle is solved now, for M. Clemenceau has told *a few inti mates that he iuteuds to publish in this city the first real modern news paper in France and that he has found many novel ideas in carefully studying New York and Chicago pa pers. M. ClemenCc:au’s, new paper, which Is to appear at New Year’s time, will be brigiit, newsy, literature and profusely lUustrated. 'I'he ever young ex-premier was asked what the views of his journal would be. ‘‘Oh, reactionary repub lican,’’ he said, with a light smile. it is yuite possible that the fam ous politican’t real opinions on cur rent policies are not always accurate ly conveyed by his public utterances. In any case, his book in democracy, which is to appear shortly will con tain some startling theories from such a pen. A confident of M. Clenienceau’s tells me that one chapter deals with the English house of lords, and be pictures an ideal assembly representa tives not only of the aristocracy of intellect and character, but of birth and tradition as w'ell. To his senate he wotild invite the nol)le, but he the compartment. They throw bags on my feet and put their valis- ) es on top of mine; they suspend thelf " alpenstocks and capes over my lieaii'*|f they leave me hardly enough rooi»i> to stretch my legs. I turn from and look out at the scenery. But that moment, Jilas they discover thift-T this part of the route is marked Baedeker with two sterisks, and thV» whole band rushes to the window* ;• with “Hochs,” “Achs,” and “Koloae^''^ als,” that startle the entire tralft.>i- The German tourist is just as mucb>-- despised by the hotel-keepers as lf« s is by his traveling companions, for ' he is mean, superstitious and noisy. - One would imagine that they realljF . did all in their power to exasperate . the public by tiieir clumsiness.” "At tiie botioni,” adds this Frenclv>^ critic, “there sonduct may be to naivete; they shout, they eat aiu^n. drink and amuse themselves badly brouKh(-up children. And if yo\| lower your eyeurows at them and T^,, pulse their familiarity, they w’ill r^ tire into tljeir corner and not s&jf another word.” ^ , M. Bertaut concludes by saying tha^\^ his dearest dream is that some . the French, like the English, will hfevja hotels which display the warning^ ^ “No Gormans.” What with the heat and the Moo|- ' ish question, Parisians are almoW ^ becoming superstitious. ComparisoaS ■ ' have been made between 1811 arM A most remarkable change is taking Many are the captains place In the mental make up of the In England, therefore, 1 j^j^glish people, at least so far as the higher classes are concerned. While the English gentleman and still more the English men of business was a > somewhat stolid, very much matter-of- fact person, who went on his way looking neither right nor left, he has now become greatly affected by the general spirit of unrest which has swept across the world, has grown superstitious and seized with a mad desire to know what the future holds in store for him. Most evident, of coiirse, is the change in Txjndon society, w'hose strongest fad is now the cult of oc- Morocco Question h Occupying The Political Stage Now :fern reprisals would ha\e (.jjitjgm jiood or If they would not o tended to increase the is very easy to talk about '> p m-orkers by the use of ■ »'ps, but the results that crushing" on the part e'nnent are very seldom - rn ndition in England is ■ anvhodv must acknowl- •. r^uestion Is whether the ' for the miseries must t elsewhere but in the • and cupidity of the The sins of the past many ' '•.-'•veri here wlllingl.v ad- • > ame for most of the f ' :.e present crisis. W hlle .f the world progressed, ;• '»n#> ’emained stationary*, -histrinlly. and permitted left hopelessly far be- *he modern race of Indus- ' - • iniiiierclal competition in ' ’h# ftermans easily got head - fl^ad of all other European -r:- '--- -.r.iriand felt too proud to •B. #> I ‘-''It remained satisfied In ■■''.s rr. h old traditions Now the falling from our eyes and If --0 Eud'lenlv beginning to realize • • our old traditions are old nnrj wom out, that, like Chl- If ►nve been asleep on our little ' th» result Is that British In- — r' rnmerce and shjpping are ttot enniieh prepared to meet th« •/rmr.'*' of modern times in regard to Tr = ic Thf* r»*al crisis in B3nglish f' VTierris! life at present and it Is * -I- tin ^ nich is of the utmost se- r-.fr.'— find importance. : r a r. - •-^!f -A By FREDERICK WERNER. ; forgotten that, since the Franco-Ger Berlin, Sept, 9.—The eternal Moro- "^an agreement of 1909, the term . ,, , “political disinterestedness” has lost cco question still occupies the center freshness to French eves. of the political stage in Europe and , The “Temps” hits the nail on the helps the weary editor of many a head when it remarks that there i? French and German paper to fill his gaping editorial columns. What is to Throtighout the coronation season no one know's; the final out- the palmists and fortune tellers of liondon reaped a golden harvest from society women of all ages who called to consult them about love and mar riage. Many too. sought advice about contemplated journeys or a.s to whom come is still in the lap of the Gods, but as far as Germany is concerned it is plainly evident from the biting comments in the official and semi official press or sensational articles a gulf of psychological darkness be tween the French and German ])oint of view. Germany does the very op posite of what she should do to convince the French public. ’ Insteau of setting forth the importance o? what is offered to us. Germany con fines herself to depreciating the value of what we are asked to give.” The in jingo japers. that the German they should include amonpc their government has no desire to be prod- Temps asserts that not a single Ger guests at a particular party or recep- ded on to fatal acts neither by the man journal has stiggested a positive tion. Even the day and date of the nianufacturers of guns and armor formula marking clearly the benefits function were often dictated by a dis- intere.sted seer. One woman came all the way from Devonshire to lx)u- don in June to consult a crystal gazer regarding the approaching marriage of plate nor by bloodthirsty retired army which, according to Germany, wifi officers, w’ho have turned yellow jour- accure to F'rance in Morocco. Every nalists. one says that the German government No sensible person doubts any long-1 will be very generous. But what about er that Germany’s demands in Moro- the German opinion, which, according efforts are being made by the I t- h admirality to otitclass any oth- f' po'A'or in the world in the number eff;rtpnry of *\jbmarine vessels, '‘in-t modern submarines now "r i '. here, known offlelally as t R r^-s, displace 800 tons; they ir. f.^rt fhongh not in name, small ■ . ' npahle of traveling either on ’^'irfare or tmder the water. “''■‘■ v 176 feet long, with a maxi- “•sdth of 2S feet. In the orlg- Ir'-i r -p,» of mihmarine, the speed. and under the water, was * ■' '1* as a result of the co-opera- t T, '* »h« admlrality with Messrs. ' Pnns, and Maxim, who have largely reaponslble for many '* '’■p rr provement* In the design of ‘ speeds have been in- ■ The n^w “E” class will be to »rav^I on the surface at fift^n ■ as fast, in fact, as our swiftest c-’.!*,' of a few decades ago—while 't-r. '.-n the Riirface the rate will ve '■'•.I*!;ihly higher than has hitherto flt'i^ined. The "E” boftts are be- '•'? r'.voii the most powerful engines ' ^ put into submarines, and '* fl'-A of a new type uilng heavy oil ronditions of absolute safety. ■ r' he no repetition of the dls- » eas explosions which occurred earlier vessels. .ire seventy-five British »ub- -ee hiiiit or building. The later a'ft ^iich good sea boats that can maive long voyages. One ■ a? recently been dispatched to find the other has just arrived ' rir Kong, a matter of nine thous- ' ■ '' after a storming passage, "iiirh the craft were not dam- the darinK crew suffered no The submarine is now a most ' ■' naval arm. for use not merely dpfen^e, hiit for oversea opera- The success already achieved her daughter, but fortunately the seer .coo are merely commercial and as Herr von Kiderlen-Walchter, is so approval of the prospective bride-1 this is so the worst obstruction in the distrustful, so touchy, so exacting? groom, and the w’edding was allow^ed. path of a p»»aceful arrangement is jg not being directed tow'ards to. take place. [ removed. When, in spite of this, it ^ categorical agreement giving But the women are not alone in still proves difficult to find a suitable. p,.ajjce in the Shereefian Empire their enthusiastic belief in occult form of argument, the reason is to he every satisfaction without any pos- powers and divination. Men of promi-j looked for in the old time enmity he-jgji^jg ambiguity? At present the price nence in many branches of life have,tween Germany and France, which *0 be paid is being sharply discuss- taken up the fad with equal favor. A makes both sides imnaturally suspic- T^-jthout the value of the goods certa corporation at a regular salary yearly to advise agreement is made in terms which do after her policy of the last six years, him in all his business transactions, not permit more than one interpreta-, ij^'^en the German offer is down in and he declares that he has never tion. ! black and white, many people in made a mistake or lost a shilling since) Another difficulty is this, that it is, denounce it as a damage he adopted this policy. j very hard to agree on what territorial discredit to the Imperial policy, lin managing director of powerful' ious of hidden traps and ambushes, having first been settled. This, oration employs a woman mystic and which makes it essential that the of course, is not easy for Germany told Another well-known financier was concessions France must make to ^^d as burning in 1911 the gods it Id by an "Egyptian” adept that the ‘ Germany in West Africa in return I .^oj.ghipped in 1905. It is for this very “Temps,’’ free hand reason, adds the that reason why certain ventures had turn- for being giving ed out disastrously was that the mys- i Moroccan affairs. The German em- F/ance—not the government only, but tic number of his house-name gave'pjie naturally desires to enlarge her the public also—insist, on plain state- out adverse “vibrations.” The matter- Kamerun colony in two directions, by, ments. of-fact Ijondon county council w-ould j the addition of a larger coast terri- j not permit him to change the name of ory and by an extension of its boun-, Everv countrv in Europe seems to his residence, so he sold it on the ad-U^rjes to Congo in such a way that j^^ve an idea that it is impossible bought a new they w’ould just touch the frontiers kind of “vibra- Bels:ian Congo. France, on her vice of the seer and bought home with the right kind of ■ viora-iQf Belgian Congo, tion” In Its name. Strangely enough, jg disinclined to isolate her he claims that he has since been suc-lpQ^g’t li^e, but wants to keep intact cesaful in all his business dealings.! ^ gtrio of land permitting her a for a German diplomat to be frank and open, and any treaty formulate by German statesmen is accordingly carefully scrutinized and dissected in every newspaper of importance in A revival of spiritualism has also I ^{^^ct line of communication with the Europe, whether the matter itself llowed in the wake of the general prench hinterland at Lake Tsad. To; jjj|g,.ggts it or not. Small wonder then followed recrudescence of occultism in Ijon- don. Every few weeks the arrival of some new medium wMth abnormal jiowers is heralded among the elect, this comes that France to a very j that German papers and news agen- large extent has surrendered have been busy trying to prove colonial rights in Gabun to private | the recent Russo-German agree- . svndicates, whose rights and privi-, jjjgjjt contains no secret clause or and every seance is crowded with be-jjgggg j^„gt be safeguarded somehow [ j,gggrvation whatever, and that its llevers and seekers after the tru h. »^ change is made. main significance lies in the fact that Most of these mediums come from j ggid before, there is the United States, and though theyj^^ reason to anticipate anything but have been highly recommended very i peaceful solution even if it is veiy few of them have succeeded In produc-1 coming, the only danger is Ing anything beyond the fanilliar mani- both nations are becoming im- festatlon of tablfe-tapping for the de livery of trance-given messages of an important and unconvincing charac ter. One of the few exceptions was Pro fessor Bert Riese, an American of German-.Tewish parentage. He came to Ixjndon from New York with excel lent credentials from prominent trans- Atlantlc spiritualist^, as an occultist of wonderful gifts. He had not been long installed in luxurious apartments at one of the palatial hotels in Picca dilly when long lines of wealthy and artistocratic visitors began calling upon him dally, including many Eng lish women and one foreign princess. The professor was also in great de patient and this impatience may at any time give birth to an unfortunate incident, which no diplomat in the world would be able to smooth over The recent insults to the German colors in Aix-les-alns, in which it- was fortunately found no French armV officers took part, show how highl) laden with electricity is the air. In France statesmen are busy _dis cussing in the papers the question. “What policy is Germany prepared to follow in Morroco in the event of an agreement being arrived at? and in what terms will she bind herseU for the future to abstain from all ;rnd‘''i;re“v«>« interference In that conn The Echo de Paris says: “W'e were informed yesterday from a partic source fair and Belgravia. Rather short and stout, but impressive and magnetic, a fluent talker and a keen judge of char acter, he speedily became vastly pop ular, especially with the fair sex, who declared his dark features and bril liant, penetrating eyes to be ideally mystic. Although Professor Riese did not court publicity at the time, he gave several private exhibitions of a rath er startling character duriug his stay significance it was concluded just w'hen it was. The “Agrarian Deutsche 'I'ages Zeitung” sa.vs that what Germany obtains is chiefiy economic assur ances, the value of w-hich cannot yet be reiterated, and that the treaty it self is much more important*for the Russian position in Persia. For the first time, it points out, the Russian sphere of influence in Northern Per sia, which w'as established by thp Anglo-Russian treaty, is tacitly rec ognized in a diplomatic document and made the basis of all agreements. This, it contends, strengthens Rus sia’s position in Persia very consid erably, especially via-a-vis her good friend England, who “notwithstand ing her treaty with Russia, has used every endeavor to prevent that coun try setting firm foot in the sphere of influence odjucated to her.” The “Reichsbote” considers that the most valuable assurance for Ger many is the “Open Door” in Northern Persia, and it rejoices that the conclu- troubles enough ovei* Crete and Is now said to be anxious to give up her “sovereignty” over the island, but strange to say it dares not take any steps in this direction, for Turkish public opinion Is alpiost unanimously opposed to the idea of surrendering the island. A prominent Turkish statesman interviewed about this said a few days ago: “For friends of Young Turkey to demand would be for them to insist on the ruin of Young Turkey’s hopes and risk the possibility of a return to Hamidianism. The enemies of Young Turkey will at once say, as they said in 1908, The Young Turks are worse than Abdul Hamid. They yielded to Bulgaria and to Austria; now they are yielding to the Grecian national ideal. The thing is impos sible.’ “And there would be a revolution,” he added. “Young Turkey must pre serve her territorial integrity if she is to prevent a wave of reaction, aud, to do this, military strengih—and tliis especially in view of the military traditions of the Ottoman Empire— is essential. Our army, which has been thoroughly reorganized, is no manace to the peace- of Europe, and our single Dreadnought will be no menace to any naval power In South eastern Europe. They are simply em blems of our national consciousness .■and of our determination to preserve our traditional integrity.” Foundotwns For Radium. Palace would also include tlie trades’ union'1911. "I'he question is asked whethellf * officials and other elements of demo-! at the interval of a century, astronO^ ^ cratic weight. mical, atmospherical, and pollti6w' I events are net repeated. The sumni^’ A statement made by M. Meissimy, of 1811, we are told, was exception^ French minister of war, seems to con- ally hot, but for all that the th^* firm the rumor that the grand man- mometer did not rise above 88 euvers this antum will be counter- grees. This year we have seen iv’ manded. Following the usual custom, arise, in spite of our indignant several members of the general army , test, to 9S degrees. If the 88 ^ staff proceeded to the district where grees of 1811 were followed by the manauvers were to be held and to borrows of 1812 at Moscow, W'ha!t'' see that all was in good order. The are we to expect of the 98 degrees result of their inspection w'as a report of this year, if the Morocco question to the effect that an epidemic of en- is not settled? ^ tei ic fever was making consiiieralile j In 1X11 there was much talk of tne ravages in the department of the comet Kiess, the ver.v comet that Aisne, the proposed center for the astronomers are again spying ^ military operations. It would lake loo the end of tlieir telescopes this long to make arrangements else-, Why cannot this comet keep out where, and the minister, under the the way just when we are iri th®; circumstances, proposes that eacli midst of Agadir and ^8 degrees heaf army corps should go through evo- But the vintage of 1811 was .^01^ lutions in its own district, shouhW^ derful. For years after People talked , the continiuince of the epidemic di r-_ ot the “Vin de la comte. Ihis jeat,, ing the next weeks render the grand , tlierefore, is also to be notew'orthy maneuvers inadvisable. ■ foi' its excellent wines to console U^, } fu." Agadir, and the heat of a Baby*^-^ One has w>^ondered why for the last six months the French banks scrape in all the gold they can get and give such high rates of exchange. Perhaps the figures just published of French imports and exports may ex plain it. During the first seven months of the current year foreign ‘mports into France shows an increase of 945,891,000 frances on those during the corresponding period of 1910. That money had to be found in bold. French exports in the meanwhile were less by 7.^322,000 frances. Cuii- ously enough, the rise and lall is in the elementary products^ which showed progression of 6r>7.1(>4,000 frances in imports and a diminution of 115,000,000 in exi»orts. Economists should be able to put two and two together. Paris, Sept. 9.-—FoundatIons have just been ’aid at a great depth of a "radiimr palace” for Mme. Curie. All her laboratories will be installed there and she will carry on the researches which she began with her late hus band and has never interrupted since his death. The radium palace will stand appropriately in the Rue Pierre Curie, in Southern Paris, beside the pavilion of the Oceanographical Insti tute, founded by the Prince of Monaco. The building will be lined throughout with a thick layer of lead, which is im penetrable to radium rays. Its weight will therefore be enormous, and excep tionally deep and massive foundations will be required. A Profitable Investment. Beggar (who has just received five cents)—Thank you, sir; heaven will reward you fifty-fold. Giver—If I felt sure of that, my friend, I’d give you a dollar. ularly well-authorized source that of the treaty has caused disap- Germany w^as disposed to make us in j pointment and vexation in England Morocco all the concessions desirable J and prence. The treaty signifies, it de but that she w'anted a generous' dares, that friendly relations have been re-established between Germany and Russia and that “the encircle ment policy pursued by King Edward has been made ineffectual. ■pourboire,’ It was added that it was not to our interest to hagle over strips of Equatorial territories when we were going to get what we wanterf. In Morocco.” It is just this vagur and succeeded in getting many people promise, this alleged l^aUng about fo believe in his alleged powers as a the bush, which is inexplicable to th€- medium. The Turkish logical Fraoeh mind. It muet not be last concluded government has at that she has had M. SAINT SAEN8 M. Saint Saens, the French composer and pianist, whose compositienc are At one time the French writers exercised their satirical faculties on the English tourist and his women folk. But since the German has taken to traveling, he and his ‘‘frau liave become the target for the mordant shafts of the boulevard “chroniquer. M. Jules Bertaut is very outspoken with repaid to tiie TaiiLon, ‘ with his apple-green costume, his Tyrolen bat, his hob-nailed boots, his alpenstock his exclamations, his vulgarity and his sufficiency.” “When he is discovered far oir, it is the signal for general stampede. ‘Suave qui peut, le voll!’ Englishmen and Americans give him wide berth, w'hile the Frenchman ‘toujoui’S bon garcon,’ contents himself with laugh ing heartily at these ‘grotesque Tar- tarians, who dress like explorers to take the steamer at Lucerne, and arni themselves with an Iron-pointed cudgel to perambulate the Promenade des Anglais.” German tourists, according to m. Bertaut, are eternally ridiculous, and vet, however clownish they may be, each of them drag in his train some one more ugly than .himself: Madame son epouse. Tiie author appeals fo confirmation of his description to all those who, on the roads of bwitzer- land or the Tyrol, have encountered “these beings in short skirt, heavy nailed boots, and wearing smoked glasses, who painfully climb hillside, a haversack on their back and a cape of gray wool thrown over their shoulders. 1 personally am con vinced that the German tourist and his wife are an invention of che Di vinity desirous of humbling pride at the moment it is Its highest degree m face of tne gardiose spectacles of natiye, by i filcting on it the view of what is •possible to poor humanity. If the German tourist w ould coi- tent himself with simply being ugly, one might try to forget hiin by clos ing one’s eyes, but, sa>s M. Bertaut, “he is ‘encombrant,’ noisy, familiar, insupportable. I have only been five minutes In my compartment, and the German seated beside- me has already tried to get me into conversation three times. Then, in despair, he tries his neighbor on the left. He lights a cigar, closes the window, opens it, gives vent to exclamatidns, 'declares that it is hot, takes off his coat, rummages among his baggage, drinks beer at the station^, speaks much and toudly, jokes with the train attendant, hails tne passers-by. Sud denly he recognizes some of his compatriots. They stop, shout at each other, and exchange edelweiss and Ionian furnace. We are to have • a; •‘Vin de conite' of whicli future gep*^, eratious will speak. Perhaps w;e miglit bear the. heat and look forward^ to drinking this year's wine greater gusto if the Moorish qiies--^,- tion were only settled. One of th^ scientific oracles tells us that we/ must wa't for the autumnal eqi/Inox, and if that happens to be favorably* all the l>ad omens will vanish. » — f WEATHER INSPECTOR SENT TO CHARLESTON. By Associated Pilss. - ^ (’harleston, S. C., Sept. 9.—Due harsh criticism of the weather bu* reau because of the shortness of nq^ i tice given of the approach of th^ i hurricane on Sunday night of last ' week, an inspector reached here tc^^" day. He was detailed by Chief Wll*"' lis L. Moore, thoroughly to irivestf- ' gate thee barges. The general ;^piih ' iou prevails here that the local" offr" cials were not at fault, having tfif. | obey instructions from the centrai ojE- ' fice. _ ■ At the Right Tl^ne. Friend—I suppose it was hard ip ,, lose your daughter? Father—Well, it did seem as if ij« would be at one time, but she lan^r,,.. ed this fellow just as we were begii}^^^ niug to give up hope. : v. J 4- now In great favor In the Pari# halls.' cigarettes. The entire horde invades M.CLEMENCEAU M. Clemenceau, former premier France, y/ho is about to start a new^fm^ paper in Paris upon progressiva American lines.
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Sept. 10, 1911, edition 1
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