Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / July 13, 1906, edition 1 / Page 3
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-T&LBS OF DANGER ON A I OCOMOTIVB. "The 308 was a very fine locomotive," aid the fat engineer. "She was the first of the large, battleship class of engines to make its appearance on our line; V Murphy, my fireman, an' me were very proud indeed when she was Hotted to us. "She was a very smooth piece of machinery 'n' moved Avitk- the ease 'n' grace of a racehorse. Every time her big drivers revolved she brought you (seven feet nearer your destination. The new machine avus so high up in the air that the smaller locomotives looked like watch charms by her side. After we got her I didn't think Murphy was takin' the best of care 'n' doin'all he could to keep her neat. So I ope'ied up on him. " 'Now, Mike, old man,' says I, 'you want to be up an' doin' an' keep her tidy so's they won't take her away from us.' "Murray he got sore 'if observed as liow. if I wn!d oi;f,'ii 'rypnTf to -(be runniu' of the train 'if the workiif of the injectors 'if other toys he could deliver the merchandize required of him by the book of rules. " 'Mike,' I replied, 'It's only a bit of advice I'm givin' you. There's no use gettiif warm under the collar. In this railroadiif business many are called but few are chosen.' Sure 'if I noticed that you got called good 'if hard last night by the master mechanic 'bout them oil cans,' replied Mike. " 'Yes, but Mike,' says I, 'see what a large bit of free advertisin' you git by bein on with a man who breaks so many records.' " 'Indade, 'if the only Tecord I iver heard of yer breakln' was that time you tried to talk into the ponygraf 'n' the hot air melted the wax,' says he. "After this Murohv keut un a dicnl- fied silence 'if I retired to my side of the cab, thinkin' the while of how hard it is to keep the Irish down. Sometimes I'm pretty sure that Jonah must have had some Irish in him, seein' as the whale had such poor suc cess keepin' him down. "Pretty soon I got the signal to go 'n' I pulled! her wide open, the 308 niovin' out of the station with her heavy train, her higbsteppin qualities showiif in every motion. She was of the stem winder type, with the boiler runnin' entirely through the cab, her furnace door protrudin' from the rear of the cab on the runniu' board of the tender. "On each side of the boiler was the space for the engineer 'if fireman. Her boiler was so big 'if high that it was Impossible for an ordinary sized man to see over the top, 'if her lubricators if other little toys on top of the boiler were &o lofty that to reach 'em there was an iron step fastened to the boilet about half way up. "We were soon clear of the yards 'n' movhf rapidly. The 308 was doin' her prettiest this evenin', 'if she ate up mile after mile at a sixty mile 'n hour clip, without so much as strainin' a spring. I only found one fault with her movements; there seemed to be some little bug in the lubricators on top of the boiler. They weren't feedin' prop prly. So I decided that when we got droppin' down the Hog Back grade 'n' I could shut her off I'd see what was doin'; I somehow had a hunch that somethijf was about to come off that wasn't down on the time card. The idoa had been botheriif me all evenin', 'n try as I would I couldn't lose it. "Sooifs I got 'em going down the Hog Back 'u' takin' care that I had a clear block I went aloft. I think If they keep on increasin' the size of en jine boilers they better equip 'em with elevators 'if fire escapes. Well, any way, I grabbed the hand rail runnin' Iong the top of the boiler 'n' put my foot on the st,ep, hoistln' myself up 'n' huggin' the boiler very close. "If a man has auy such thing as a guardeen angel mine got very busy 'if Increased his battiif average witji me about 300 per cent, then, for I no moreu't hauled myscif clear of my seat n' there was a deafeniu' crashiif noise. n poundiif up through the floor of the cab 'n' the seat where I had been sittin' came the end of the drivin' rod, swirlin' 'n smashin' things in its wake. I don't like to think of what would 'a happened to me if the lubri cators hadn't gone dippy. The SOS had stripped her side rods on the right side. "Not only was I myself in danger, hangin' on to the boiler with only one hand 'if foot, dodgin' the splinters 'if. flying nuts 'if bolt?, but the entire traia behind, with its load of passen gers, was doomed to destruction in a ; very few seconds, as that side rod flyin' rampant was sure to throw the j locomotive from the jails unless some-1 thin' was done to check her speed. "Already in one of its rapid revolu- Hons the heavy piece of steel had struck the reverse lever a crushiu' blow 'n' bent it so that it would be impossible to reverse the engine, even could I reach the lever. Any second I was likely to be hit by the rod 'n' dashed to death. But I grimly hugged the boiler, which was already beginniif to burn my body terribly. ! "Could I only by some means reach the airbrake valve in the forward part ! of the cab, I could set the brakes 'if W 1 n t lifii nn tjlmvt- - TJnf If Time cnta death to attempt It., When I had given up all hope, above the din of the crush In timber 'n' flyin' metal, I heard a hearty Irish voice: " 'Hang to her, Bill. I'll get you out.' It was Murphy, 'n', turnin', I saw hinj tryin' h?vd to reach, the air brake valve with one of the long iron hooks used to shake ths clinkers out of the front end of the firebox. Could he reach it! "It was a ticklish trick to watch hii chance, 'if make a. Quick grapple foi the handle, keepin' an eye out that tin side rod did not knock the poker from his hand. But he did it. By a quick, true thrust, he got the hook firmly gripped on the valve 'if swung it 'round lo the 'mergency 'n' the train was broufciit up as quickly as a lansoed bronco. How Srmly I grasped Mur phy's hand when I had dropped safely to the tank! I Avould aever take him to task again. "'Bill,' he said, as teaTS filled his eyes, 'I thought you were a goner that time. I reckon it will be some tim before I can wipe the 308 again.' "She was almost a hopeless wreck, an' it was Murphy's month before she came out of the shop." New York Sun. SAVED BY COURAGE. Mr. Becke, the author of "Notes From My South Sea Log," tells of his tutor, who seemed to him the most heroic man in the world because he had been through the first Maori war, and be cause of an adventure which there be fell him, and which is given as fol lows: Poor Guy, such was the tutor's name, was a lieutenant, and he and two com panions were captured by the Maoris, They were taken inside the stockade, and the chief, taking up one of the captured seamen's cutlasses, felt its edge, and then fixed his keen tyes on the young officer's face. "I shall not harm these two mt'j of yours," he said slowly. "They shall go safely back to your lines if " He paused, and a grim smile distorted his tattooed face. "If what?" asked Guy, calmly. "If you will stretch out your right hand so that I may cut It off at the wrist, swiftly, no further harm shall come to you, and you, too, shall go free." "Will you keep your word?" "Aye. I, Te Atua Wera, am no liar." Guy nodded, quietly took off his coat and held out hia left hand. "Strike," he said. The chief again smiled. "Thou art as cunning as thou art brave. I said the right hand." Guy let fall Ids left and extended his right arm. Te Atua Wera stepped back a pace, raised the cutlass and struck the point of it Into the ground. Then he bent forward and gravely rubbed noses with. Guy. "Go," he said. &yiit come back no more." So Guy and the two sailors were allowed to return to Despard's lines unharmed. ' tf, SCIENCE i fa) RAFTING ON THE WISCONSIN. At the mills they made up the big rafts according to a certain system. A crib was made of boards, say, sixteen feet long, and was built in layers, cob house fashion, until it was perhaps a couple of feet deep, all fastened by long hard wood pegs. Seven of these cribs made a "piece," and three pieces, side by side, lashed together by lines fastened to the boats, made what was called a "Wisconsin river raft." That was about as large as a raft could be and run safely the various dams and bars and rapids. After they got to the mouth of the Wisconsin the men would shift these pieces aud bunch up a number of Wisconsin river rafts Into one vast, slow-moving snake of sawn timbers, a thing of terror to all the steamboats on the river, until. at last it found Its restination, perhaps tying up at some bayou far down toward St. Louis. Once such a raft piled up on the middle pier of the Dubuque bridge, and ran up the abutment to the bridge floor, frightening half to death some 300 gaping folk who had come out to see the wild men go through. But that was merely an incident. It was mere ly an incident if at night the men, asleep and forgetful of the green lights which ought to show that they were running,' awoke under a volley of pro fanity and' saw looming before they-j the bow of some river steamer, whose captain and pilot objurgated them by all the saints of the river to have a bet ter care for the observance of the law. Emerson Hough, in "On the Little Bull Rapids," in the Outing Magazine The Rev. Dr. P. S. Henson says the country is going insane because It re fuses to take sufficient rest. An expert manicurist says vhat the manicure habit will cure children of the stubborn habit of biting their nails. An eminent bacteriologist hs a the ory that trypanosomes in fish are re sponsible for the sleeping sickness in Uganda. ' The highest recorded velocity ot un derground water is said to be 144 feet in twenty-four hours. The new record is for water flowing through gravel near Tucson, Arizona. The observa tions were made during the last Christ mas holidays by Mr. II. C. Wolff, of the Department of Metuematics of the University of Wisconsin. In heated rooms we often perceive an unpleasant tickling odor, which ir ritates the mucous membrane of the larynx and causes coughing. It comes from burnt and decomposed dust, from which ammonia and other hamful sub stances arise. This decomposition, which occurs only when the dust. is damp, is most frequently found with the usual iron stoves whoso sides eas ily become red hot, in consequence of which the particles of dust lodging on the stove burn and vitiate the air. But the hot air flues of furnaces also easily become overheated, in consequence of which dust lodging burns aud the pro ducts of the burning mingle in the air. At the summer solstice at Faris. France, the sun descends only eighteen degrees below the horizon, and twi light continues from the jetting of the sun in the northwest until its rising in the northeast. At midnight a lumin ous arc several degrees high can be ob served in the North. This faint light was first photographed by Pouchet and Quisset from the top of the Eiffel tow er, and It was conclusively proven to be from the sun. Photometric study was urged by the late M. Cornu. A special photometer has now been con structed by M. Touchct, and with this apparatus the varying intensities of the twilight arc will be accurately measured from the Eiffel tower obser vatory. The authorities of Birmingham Uni versity, England, ha.e recently opened on the university grounds an experi mental coal mine, occupying nearly a:i acre of ground. The purpose is to give practical instruction to students in all the problems and operations of coal mining. They are exercised in under ground surveying, the conectiou of sur face with underground surveys, the testing of ventilation, the measurement of air volumes and velocities, the fric tion of an currents, the various rueih ods of oreaking coal, and the manage ment of different kinds of drills and cutting machines. The completion of tills artificial mine has been awaited with interest, and it is expected to prove very valuable in teaching the science of mining. A MIGHTY LION HUNTER. Among the passengers on board the sfeamship Koenig Albeit, wLich ar rived at Hoboken to-duy, were Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Doucet, of Montreal, Can ada, who have just returned from Cen tral and Eastern Africa, where they have oeen for the past seven years. They made their headquarters in Mum bassa, South Africa. They brought with them a number of curios which had been given them by the natives, including an African war guh. . Just before leaving for this country jftthey met Captain Stedand, of the King's African Rifles. Jost berore the train left Mumbassa, four lions made ;heir appearance, and. Mr. Doucet says that Captain Stedand shot them, but not until his right arm and shoulder had been so badly lacerated that It had to be amputated later in the day. The officer shot the four beast, but one of them was not seriously injured and again attacked him, succeeding iu bad ly injuring him before the last shot was tired. Surgeons were summoned and did what they could for the wound ed man, but later in the day it was found necessary to amputate .the wounded arm. New lork Post. Last year there were 09,211 millions matches sold in France, bringing intc that nation's treasury $3,210,050, this being a State monopoly. - ... ARBOREAL PENTI3TRY. Cement Fillings Protect Giant Oak From JUavages of Dewy. Considerable interest, says the New Orleans Times-Democrat, attaches to the cement nlling in the trunks of the great oak9 near St. Charles avenue, and mnny questions have been asked about this method of arresting the de cay of trees. Horticulturists have found that they have been able to prevent limbs from decaying by wrapping them in cloth. This helps to exclude tee dampness. Carrying their experiments one point further, it war; found that cement would preserve the trunks of trees from rotting, just as a filling in a tooth prevents further decay. The question arose last year as to what would be done to preserve ihe i great oaks at Audubon park, which were losing their growth and verdure by reason of big holes in their trunks, and it was accordingly decided to fill the apertures with cement. Several cartloads of sand, mortar and brick were used in the operation, which has been attended with g"eat success. Old oaks regained their strength, new branches began to grew, and alto gether they put ou signs of renewed life. The f.rt A "arboreal dentistry" has rifice then been perfecied to such a-n extent that even a new bark can be given to r. tre.. It is proposed at some future date to cover, the filling with a layer of ceinsnt the color of the oak's bark, which :an be so worked as to resemble a natural covering. It Is said that this will preserve the tree even better than will ordinary cement, while r.t the same time it will add to Its. beauty by hiding the mortar. H umor of On Life's Highway. Sons of rich men leave behind them. As they zipp past those who drive, Dust and odors to remind them That it's lucky they're alive. Chicago Keeord-Herald. -. During Devotion. letla-j"How do you knour she la aid fashioned?" Bella "She occupies the sermon iu planning a gown instead of an auto."- New York Sun. Eighteen Hole. First Microbe "Having a good time?" , Second Microbe "Yes; I found a perfectly splendid golf course in a Swiss cheese," New York Sun. say "he The Place For Him. "Notwithstanding what you about Kraftie," id Goodart, seems to be a loyal fellow. He ap pears to keep in with his friends." "He shovld be kept in with them," replied Crabbe. "Most of his friends tre in jail." Philadelphia Fublif Ledger. SOUTHERN fARM fOTEi C TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PUNTER, STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GHOWE. Cynical Bachelor. "I think," said the strong-minded" female, ;'Uiat women should be per mitted to whistle, don't you?" "Certainly," replied the cynical bach elor. "There is no earthly reason why women should be denied the privilege accorded tj locomotives and tugboats." Chicago N'-ws. IUl.jul;eil. "That Bligsins is the worst fool 1 ever saw." "You misjudged him. He's not as much of a fool as he seems, lie has succeeded in ranking his wife think his senseless performances are mani festations of the eccentricities of gen ius." Chicago Record-Herald. In 19!J3. The grand stand as well as the bleachers was filled to overflowing and it was time there was something doing. "How many of you are there on th grounds?" asked the umpire of a po liceman. "About S00." was the reply. "All right," said the umpire. "Pla ball!" Destitute. "You look sad," said Mrs. Much wedd. "I feel sad," responded Mrs. Tenth time. "Why so?" "You'd feel sad, too, if you didn'i know where your next husband was coming from." Louisville Courier Journal. Its X'luSnh. Tess "Isn't your u?w gown finished yet?" Jess "Gracious! No. The dress maker's work on it was only conipletec last Saturday." Tess "But if the dressmaker's through what else?" Jess "O! all my friends have to criti cise it yet." Philadelphia Press. In n BsmI Way. "Yes, poor pap's been shu: up in the house so long. The doctor says il he could only get out to take a liUlt exercise he would be very much bet ter." "Is he too weak to go out';" "Oh, no, but there're pro; ess .servers ail around the house, ven down tc the back gate." Baltimcre American. The Finest Sword. "." jmose swords are the finest," said a swordmaker. "They are liner than tk-e bl.-des of Ferrara. of Toledo or f Damascus. The blades of Fer rara. of Toledo and of Damascus must bend Into a perfect circle without breaking, and a pillow o down being thrown in the air they must cut il in iwo with the clean stroke. "But the Japanese blade must do all that and mere. The final 'est of a Japanese blade is its susper.sio. edge upward, beneath a tree. It must hang beneath the tree for twenty-four hours, and ever bghtest leaf that falls rp on its edge must be sg eral ueatiy. One failure, and back to the lor. goes ue Japanese blade again." Den ver Time?. Indiana's steam railroads were, as sussed at $lCrl873,3G9 in 1903. A Special Make. "What's this peculiar ius!rumei.t?'! inquired ;he visitor. "That," replied the manufaHurer. "is a table knife. We've just tilled large order for a Chicago firm." ';3ut what's the idea in the ;aisec rim ull around the blade?" "That's t keep peas and things Iron1 rolling oft." Philadelphia IVblie Ledger. l'olnt Nor. Will Taken. Mrs. Jenuer Lee .Oudogo "I don'f see why they call it 'grand opera' when it's in English. It isn't grand opera when you can understand what the singers are saying." Mrs. Seldom-IIoluw? "Why, bless you, you can't understand them any better when they siug iu English than when they sing in Italian." Chicagr Tribune. Manuring Cotton. At this season of the year many of us are considering methods of fer tilizing our various field crops, and cotton largely enters into this dis cussion and thought. While a great deal of experimental work has been done looking to mastering some of these fertilizing problems, it still re mains a fact that we are very largely in the dark about tunuamental prin ciples of manuring. As a rule our cotton lands require phosphoric acid, nitrogen and potash Neither phosphoric acid nor potash gives as good results when used alone as when combined with each other, Phosphoric acid alone largely sur passes no manure; but it is doubtful if potash alone is of any value. Ni trogen when combined with phosphoric acid and potash shows marked effects, but small favorable results when used alone. While it is true that nitrogen in some soils shows good results, yet phosphoric acid on the whole seems to be the controlling ingredient in in creasing the yield. So far as fertiliz ing goes, kainit and muriate seem to be about equal, while cottonseed meal and nitrate of soda are. in proportion to content, popular forms of nitrogen because of their value. Now, how much manure shall we add? That depends. Fertilizers pay bftst on lands In good mechanical con dition and well improved. Just us you cannot fatten a very lean animal in a few weeks by large quantities of food, so you cannot in a very short while force land into immediate fer tility by any unusual quantity of chem ical manures. For that reason, then, we must keep within moderate ex tremes if our land is not under a high state of cultivation. A second question Is. "Does double flosings of fertilizers pay?" We have experiments both in favor of and against double dosiugs. While nitrate of soda may be applied in July, the results of tests show "that it may be applied as effectively and certainly more economically with the other fer tilizers than It can be in one or more top dressings." In general, it may be stated that where quantities up to 51)0 pounds are used, it is wise to apply the same in the drill, incorporating the same with the soil thoroughly before planting. When as much as 1000 pounds are used per acre, side-listing of one-half the quantity, or its appli cation broadcast, the remaining half applied in the drill, is more satisfac tory. Of course, let it be understood that the writer feels that this large quantity should lie used only on soil that has been well prepared and well taken care of in previous years. C. V. Burkett, in Progressive Farmer. to the ways of wisdom and lr. ence. Farmers, wake up ant doing. The cowpea is the easi to grow that you can plant A of the very best. The pea is fi for man and all your farm a The vines make one of the ver hays for all jour stock; and tli and the roots form one of tl finest and the cheapest fertiliz can return to your soil. Our ai; to grow peas; feed your stock -wf peas and vines and return the ; to 3-our soil. We figure It in th one ton of peavine hay fed to c, worth, as food and manure, a $lo. A farmer should want all product which he raises, that t in it for him, and hence siioui his peavines. But if he does n to keep so many cattle, the p and roots, after the peas are ge for reseeding, are worth $7.50 as manure to the land when plowi der. While it is better to ha $13. it is worse than folly to id $7.30. Any farmer can grow a peavines cheaper than he can 200-pound sack of guano. Wei men every day, who tell us hovl can tell to the very row, in their ing crops, where their peas were ed last year. We know labor is 4 but this is all the greater reas planting peas, so as to incren yield of cotton and corn upon th you do cultivate. So, whatevt nature or extent of your farm tions, plant peas. The peas them are as saleable as cotton. Every sized farm should hav a pea thr and twenty-five or fifty extra b of peas, over your demands for sowing, will bring more than! many dollars to buy some r household goods or your family it suit around. If you are a stock f. plant peas if you are a cotton fa plant peas if you are a fruit grf plant peas if you are a trucker, peas if, finally, you are in sym with the best interest of the Sout have any regard for the fertili your soil, plant peas. This is a mon ground, where we all can! should meet, and as the cowpea t planted any time from the first of) to the first of August, we call up to remember to plant as many pe possible sow them after your put them in your corn; plant thes tween your trees; sow them in melon patches, and plant them every available space you can fi put them upon. Then will our sf improved, our stock better fed. fertilizer bills reduced and we w much better off in every resp Southern Cultivator. A tinny i sr. Mc GarAner "VvVIl. dear, how ar the tomatoes you planted?" 5Irs. Gardner "O.'.i, John! I'm afraid we'll hava to Buy what we need Uiii year." Mr. nardner "Wby, how's that, Mary?' Mrs. Gardner "I recollected to-day that when I did the plautiug I forgot to open the cans!" Puck. I.ailj-I-lke. "Pop:" "Yes, my son." "You know those little fire-.-v.u-k.-rs that make so much noise are called lady trackers?" "So I believe." "Why do they cull 'cm lady crackers, pop?" "Because they make so much noise I suppose." Yonkers Statesman. An Aliidliis; raitli. "I don't see why there should bo any difficulty about settling these life in surance complicatijus " remarked the patient looking man. "The subject has commanded the at tention of sunn; of our most eminent men." "Yes. But t ipy ought to s.nd for V.i" agent wiio sot me to take out my policy. Then; L-n't anything tli.it niau eouMn'i explain.'' Washington Star. Plant Cow-l'eaa. We often talk of our natural advan .rgos. and yet these very best "gifts of the gods" are the very ones most ig nored and least appreciated. We do not fully appreciate health until its blessings are gone. Pure water and air are taken as a matter of no conse quence until the fearful results of their beinr violated come udou us. Heaven has indeed been generous to the South. All men speak eloquently of our "great monopoly of cotton," and Jt is indeed a wondrous money-maker. t Yet we have but recently seen our whole peo ple groan under this very monopoly; and on account of receiving only half nav for its production, many of our farmers driven either into bankruptcy or to the cities. Then cotton, on. ac count of thft clean culture necessary to its production, is an exhaustive crop, to our soil. In consequence, many a Southern hill, that should be robed in verdure, is now seamed with gullies and millions of galled spots are left a a blot upon our landscape, to tell the tale. That portion of our South land that still responds to culture, is taxed more than a tithe to pay the enormous fertilizer bills we are annual ly forced to make, that we may enjoy growing our- "monopoly." This is all our work it was never Heaven's plan. Nature, in her kindness, would have foretold such results, had her children been attentive to her teaching. She gave us a twin monopoly, and intended that the wondrous- easy growing., ni tru sen-gat her ing. mI-ivsioriim :uii-mal-feeding legume, liie i u vpea, should receive equally the attention devoted to cotton. It was her plan that the cowpea should produce the fertility necessary to the best produc tion of her sister, cotton. For over UK) years we ha'.e known something of the value of the cowpea, but we are too busy in our active pursuit of the tieeey staple to give the cowpea the consideration it deserved, and which would have resulted in an untold bless ing to our soil and to ourselves. Like the children of Israel, we have gone astray after false gods; we preferred to listen to the oily talks of the cotton speculator and guano dealer, who were laying heavy tribute upon the labor oi: our lands: to the "still small voice" of nature, who would have wooed u Feeding Vounc Chicken. Let's begin with the chickens hatching. We will leave them ii nest until the last one out of the is fully twenty-four hours old, and are all bright and active. Thei should take the hen and her brood coop with double apartments, th a place snug and warm for fee hover the chicks in, and a box tension with but a small entrance from the coop proper. The first thing in the way of fee should be to give the mother all grain she will eat, and water her. Then scatter a little feed in the. w apartment for the chickens, so that may help in learning them to Their first feed should be of bard b egg, cooked potato and corn, or oat: mixed up iu a crumbly state. Then, after the chicks are a da two old, open the passway to the v coop, which should be well Ugh and feed the little chickens in the After the chickens are two or t days old, the egg food may be drop and a mixture of cornmeal, slig parched, boiled potato and pure. bran, may be given them. And at the end of a week or less time, meal may be parched and fed to chickens with millet seed, ti cracked wheat, etc., scattered in c' hulls, or other line litter in the v coop. They will take to it uatui and will scatch like beavers for it, Iti the meanwhile, after being f the nest a few days, a runway sli be made for the hen and hw ft" so that thfv may get out into'fa Ikrht him! air aud exnvise ;.'!' '. it Luis syiitiii is folkmoil, be but very little loss of the CU:U hatched. II. B. Geer, in Southsrfi iivator. A Warning. In this State, where there is' so m clearing going on at all times, following warning from the IVaral T Yorker is specially needed: Do not c arry an ax on your saow when walking with others. We h seen men slip and in trying to t from falling strike a horrible t with the ax. Carry it under th.a Florida Agriculturist.- A dispatch from St. Jehu's st: that the sealers harvest in the Ai this year amounts to 337,000 saali. Reflections of a Bachelor. News Items. A girl will never bcloeve you love i The special session of ! ware legislature, to t Vet her if you tell her m plain, sane lan- States Senator met lat W g"aS- i The General FeoVsatLc, When a man knows how to earn ens' Clubs began its amuun his living it's a sitrn he doesn't try St; ;, aul- , , I lie twelfth . peace coil:. to write poetry. . ,,,, m Lake AlolurJ.. tl. If women could vote yea cuuM nev- ; of armaintnt and the tor fv ct them to fleet a curly-headed . an intVrnnt ional' eonjrress ouo to anything. - : iTin'cipal eubjeHs Ht--eusso I i 1 :.
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
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July 13, 1906, edition 1
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