Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / March 8, 1905, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
n iRooseyelt and Fairbanks With "Brilliant TREMENDOUS CROWDS PRESENT The Grandest Pageant Ever Witnessed on American Soil Great Crowds Present The Inaugural Speeches. Washington, D. C, Special. Theo dore Roosevelt was transformed from president by chance into President by -choice; frcm President through an as sassin's bullet into' President through the ballots of the people. , Under the shadow of the gray-doomed capitol, gazing into the placid mar ble features of Greenough's statue of. the first President, the twenty-sixth President of the United States swore faithfully, to execute the laws and to .preserve,, protect and defend the con stitution. J Once before he had taken this sol emn obligation, then, at the death-bed -of tis martyred predecessor, surround ed by a small company of tear-dimmed friends and counsellors ; Saturday, in the presence of a cheering host of fifty thousand people. Then he had ridden many lonely miles over storm-swept mbuntain roads to reach, the tragic scene of .his elevation, now he was escorted along the nation's grandest avenue from the White House to the . home of Congress between two densely packed lines of his countrymen gath ered from every .quarter to cheer him a?d wish him godspeed in the coming fymr years. Then he had said, with . -chocking voice: "It shall be my aim to continue absolutely unbroken the policies of President McKinley for the peace, prosperity and honor of our be- loved country." Sateurday he left it for his fellow-citizens, who had hon ored him with a greater majority-than ever before given, to judge whether or no he had redeemed that pledge. The colonel of the Rough Riders has written of his crowded hour in Cuba. Now he showed his former comrades a crowded hour in Washington. They were waiting for him when he emerged from the White House 30 picked men under Governor Brodie. With the crack squadron A of the First Cavalry, United States Army, they formed his escort to the capitol. As they swung around the Treasury building into Pennsylvania avenue a division of the G. A. R., with General O. O. Howard and staff in the lead, which had been standing at salute, wheeled into the column, .while ,the cavalrymen check ed their pace to accomodate the slow er foot-steps' of the aged veterans. A mighty wave of cheers swept ' along the avenue as the President's carriage came in sight. Throughout the whole route the" President, with hat in hand, kept bowing in acknowledgment the greetings-. Qn his arrival at the capi tol he was conducted to the President's room, in the rear of the Senate cham ber, where he began at once the sign ing of belated bills. At noon he en ' tered the abode of the Senate to wit ness the installation of Senator Fair banks as Vice President. This cere mony concluded, he proceeded to the stand on the east front of the capitol to receive the oath from Chief Justice Fuller and to deliver his inaugural ad dress. Immediately upon its conclu sion the President was escorted back to the White House, where, after lunching with' the officials of the inau gural committee, he took his position on the stand In front to review, the fomal inaugural parade. Gens. Kuropatkin and Mistcheneko at Odds. London, By Cable. The. Daily Tele graph's correspondent at Tokio states that, the Japanese Colonel Himada was killed at the capture of Seikajo, and that General Klober,-commander of the second Manchurian army, was wounded and sent to the hospital at Mukden. The correspondent says that General Mlstchenko has had a disa- greement with General Kuropatkin, ! . arid is returning to Russia. MB Inducted Into Office Pageantry The inaugural cost about $65,000, wihch it is believed has been fully re paid in the sale of grand stand seats and ball tickets. The guaranty fund subscribed by Washington merchants and business men will thus be return ed. Everything but the actual cere moies were in charge of the inaugural committee, composed of Washington residents, and headed by Brigadier General John M. Wilson, U. S. A., re tired, appointed for that purpose by Chairman Cortelyou, of the Republican national committee. The broad plaza whose level surface stretches east from the national capi tol can accommodate an army. For hours Saturday morning Washington poured its own population and a vast increment of visitors into the front yard of the seat of government. From the porticos and windows of the capi tol building a good idea of , the scope of the multitude could be gathered. Eight acres of humanity spread fan shaped from the focus made by a little covered shelter, Open at the sides, where the President was to stand. Over toward the imposing facade of the Con gressional Library it extended, liter ally a "sea of faces." There may have been only 50,000; probably there were nearer 100,000 in sight of the President when he took, the oath. Stands on the central portico, ex tending to the tribune wherein the cer emony occurred, covered an acre. From the central entrance of the capitol to th seats of honor surrounding the pagoda-like tribune was laid a carpet of crimson plush. Long before the cere monies in the Senate, where Vice Pres ident Fairbanks was taking his oath cf ci5.ee, was concluded, most of the reserved seats had been filled "by ticket holders. All in all it was the grandest page ant ever witnessed on American Soil. The ceremonies were simple but solemn and impressive. The order was ex cellent, the weather "was fine and the exercises were dispatched without a hitch. At a sign from Chief Justice Fuller, the clerk of the Supreme Court step ped forward, holding a Bible. A hush fell over the crowd. The President raised his hand, and the oath to sup port the laws ad constitution of the United States was revently taken amid deep silence. When this had been , concluded, there was poetically no tle monstration, and the iTesident began his inaugural address. As soon as he finished speaking, he re-entered the capitol, arid as he disappeared within the building a signal was flashed to the navy yard, and the roar of 21 guns was begun in official salute to the Presi dent. The expiration of the old Congress and the beginning of the new was wit nessed at noon. Senator Fairbanks took the oath as Vice President and made his address as follows: VICE PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS. Senators: I enter upon the discharge of the duties of the position to which I have been called by my countrymen with grateful appreciation of the high honor and with a deep sense of its responsibilities. I have enjoyed the privilege of serving with you here for eight years. During that period we have been engaged in the consideration of many domestic questions of vast im portance and with foreign problems of unusual and farreaching significance. We submit what we have dope to the impartial judgment of history. I can never forget the pleasant rela tions which have been formed during my service upon the floor of the Sen ate. I shall cherish them always among the most delightful memories of 'my life. They warrant the belief that I shall have in the discharge of the functions which devolve upon me under the constitution the generous assistance and kindly forbearance of both sides of the chamber. We witness the majestic spectacle of a peaceful and orderly beginning of an administration of national affairs under the laws of a free and self-governing people. We pray that divine favor may attend it and that peace and progress, Justice and honor may abide -with our country and our countrymen. Wealthy Former Coal Operator Dead. Pittsburg, Special. William Dun shee, a former well known coal oper ator, and one of the wealthiest resi dents of McKeesport, died this even ing at the family residence in that place, aged 85 years. Death was due to' pneumonia. During the civil war Mr. Dunshee operated two large- steamboats on the Mississippi river and was active in the government service? THE INAUGURAL SPEECH President Roosevelt's Remarks Were Brief, Timely and Appropriate. The inaugural address is as follows: My Fellow-Citizens: No people on earth have more cause to be thankful than ours, and this is said reverently, in no spirit of boast fulness in our own strength, but with gratitude to the Giver of Good who has blessed us with the conditions which have enabled us to achieve so large a measure of well-being and of happiness. To us as a people it has been granted to lay the foundations of our national life in a new continent. We are the heirs of the ages, and yet we have had to pay few of the penalties which in old coun tries ,are exacted by the dead hand of a bygone civilization. We have not been obliged to fight for our existence against-any alien race; and yet our life has called for the vigor and effort with out which the manlier and hardier vir tues wither away. Under such condi tions it would be our own fault if we failed: and the success which we have had in the past, the success which we confidently believe the future will bring, should cause in us no feeling of vain-glory, but rather a deep and bid ing realization of all which life has offered us; a full acknowledgement of the responsibility -which isours; and a fixed determination to show that under a free government a mighty people can thrive best, alike as regards the things of the body and the things of the soul. MUST B7 FRIENDLY. Much has been given to us, and much will rightfully be expected from us. We have duties to others and duties to our selves; and we can shirk neither. We have become a great nation, forced by the fact of its greatness into relations with the other nations of the earth; and- we must behave as beseems a peo ple with sueh responsibilities. Toward all other nations, large and small, our attitude must be one of cordial and sin cere friendship. We must show .not only in our words, but in our deeds that we are earnestly desirous of securing their good will by acting toward them in a spirit of just and generous recognition of all their rights. But justice and gen erosity in a nation, as in an individual, eount most when shown not by the weak, but by the strong. When ever careful to refrain from wrongdoing others, we must be no less insistent that we are not wronged ourselves. We wish peace; but we wish the peace of justice, the peace of righteousness. We wish it because we think It is right and not because we are afraid. No weak na tion that acts manfully and justly should1 ever have cause to fear us, and no strong power should ever be able to single us out as a subject for inso lent aggression. OUR RELATIONS AMONG OUR SELVES. Our relations with the other powers of the world are important; but still more important are our relations among ourselves. Such growth in wealthh, in population and in power as this nation has seen during the cen tury and a quarter of its national life is inevitablv accompanied by a like growth in the problems which are ever before every nation that rises to great ness. Power invariably means both re sponsibility and danger. Our forefath ers faced certain perils which wo'&ave outgrown. We now face other perils the very existence of which it was in possible that they should foresee. Modern life is both complex and in tense: and the tremendous cbangep wrought by the extraordinary Indus' trial development of the last half cen tury are felt in every fiber of our social and political being. Never before have men tried so vast and formidable an experiment as that of administering the affairs of a continent under the forms of a democratic republic. The conditions which have told for ou marvelous material well-being, which have developed to a very high degree our energy, self-reliance and individual initiative, have also brought the care and anxiety inseparable, from the ac cumulation of great wealth in indus trial centers. Upon the success of our experiment much depends, not only as regards our own welfare, but as re gards the welfare of mankind. If we fail, the cause of free self-government throughout the world will rock to its foundations; and, therefore, our re sponsibility is heavy, to ourselves, to the world as it is today, and to the generations yet unborn. There is no good reason why we should fear the fu-. ture, but there is every reason why we should face it seriously, neither hiding from ourselves the gravity of the prob lems before us nor fearing to approach these problems with the unbending,-unflinching purpose to solve them aright. Yet, after all, though the problems are new, though the tasks set before us differ from the tasks set before our fathers who founded and preserved this republic, the spirit in which these tasks mpst be. undertaken and "these problems faced if our duty is to be well done, re mains essentially unchanged. We know that self-government is difficult. W know that no- people need such high traits of character as that people which seeks to govern its affairs aright through the freely expressed will of the freemen who compose it. But we have faith that we shall not prove false to the memories of the men of the mighty past. They did fteir work, they left us the splendid heritage we now enjoy. We, in our turn, have an assured con fident that, we shall be able to leave this heritage unwasted and enlarged to nur children and our children's, chil- .Tn rln sn we must shOW. not merely in great crises, but in the every day affairs of life, the qualities or prac Hffli inteNisenee. of courage, of hard ihood and endurance, and, above all, the power of devotion to a lofty ideal, which made great the men who founded this remiblic in the days of washing ton, which made great the men who preserved this republic in the days of Abraham Lincoln- News by Wire and Cable. Mr. Robert L. Campbell was stricken. with smallpox -in the Westmoreland Club, Richmond. , Four persons were injured in the wreck of a limited passenger train at Rockfish, Va A movement is on foot to have all hangings in Virginia take place in the penitentiary. Two Richmond negroes, -who are condemned to be hanged were bap tized in a oam tuo m tne jail. LIFE SKETCH Of PRESIDENT Sketch oj the Life of the Man Inaugu rated Saturday. The Congressional Directory. Theodore Roosevelt, President, was born in New York city on October 27, 1858; entered Harvard College in 1876 and graduated in 1880; took up the study of law, but in 1881 was elected to the New York Legislature, and was twice re-elected; in his second term in the Legislature was the candidate of his party for speaker, the majority of assembly, however, being Demo cratic; during his third term served as chairman of the committee on ci ties and of the special committee which investigated the abuses in the government of New York city; was a delegate to the State convention in 1884 to choose delegates to the Repub lican national convention, and was se lected as one of the four delegates at large from New York to the national convention; later in the same year he went to North Dakota and spent most of his time there for several years on a ranch, engaged in raising cattle; in 1886 was the Republican nominee for mayor of New York city; was ap pointed a member of the United States civil service commission in May, 1889, by President Harrison; resigned this position in 1895 in order to accept the presidency of the police commission of New York city, mder Mayor Strong; in April, 1897, was appointed by Presi dent McKinley as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Upon the outbreak of the war with Spain in 1898, resigned this post and became lieutenant col onel of the First United States Volun teer Cavalry, was promoted to the colonelcy of the regiment; was in the figiits at Las Guasimas and San Juan; was mustered out with his regiment at Montauk, Long Island, in Septem ber, 1898; was nominated shortly af terwards as the Republican candidate for Governor of New York, and elect- to in .November, ly; was unani mously nominated for Vice-President of the United States by the Republican national convention of 1900, and elect ed; succeeded to the Presidency upon the death of President McKinley, Sep tember 14, 1901. Vice-President Fairbanks. The Congressional Directory. Charles Warren Fairbanks, of .In dianapolis, was born on a farm near Unionville Center, Union county, Ohio, May 11, 1832; was educated in the com mon schools of the neighborhood and at the Ohio Wesley University, Dela ware, Ohio, graduating from that insti- ution in 1872 in the classical course; was admitted to the, bar by the Supreme Court of Ohio in 1874; removed to In dianapolis in the same year, where he has since practiced his profession; never held public office prior to his election to the Senate; was elected a trustee of the Ohio Wesley University in 1885; was unanimously chosen as the nominee of the Republican caucus for United States Senator in the Indiana Legislature in January, 1893, and sub sequently received his entire party vote n the Legislature, but was defeated by David Turpie, Democrat; was a dele gate at large to the Republican na tional convention at St. Louis in 1896, and was temporary chairman of the convention; was a delegate-at-large to he Republican national convention at Philadelphia in 1900, and as chairman of the committee on resolutions re ported the platform; was appointed a member of the United States and Brit- sh joint high commission which met n Quebec in 1898, for the adjustment of Canadian questions, and was chair man of the United States high com mjssioners; was elected to the United States Senate January 20, 1897 to suc ceed uaniei w. voornees, Democrat, and took his seat March 4, 1897; was re-elected in 1903. . 1 Main Russian Army Doomed. Since Friday night the Japanese left, which is how extending north and south, has advanced several miles The Russians are retreating in great disorder. The Japanese extreme left is" now 15 miles northeast of Mukden and is advancing rapidly. The escane of the main Russian forces sedms impossible. It is al ready estimated that the Russians have lost over 10,000 men. China Protests. Tokio, Special. It is understood that China has lodged a protest against Japan, alleging infringement of Chinese neutrality hv the occuna- tion of Sinmintin. The government has not indicated its attitude, but it is expected that the reply will declare that Japan is bound to respect the neutrality of North China so long as Russia does so, but that the presence of the Russians in occupying Sinmin tin created a condition of belligerency mere, and that the operation was strictly in the nature of a military necessity for the projection of the rights and interests of Japan. Legal Battle Promised. Ottawa, Special. Honore, Gervais, a member of Paliament, has been en gaged to assist Mr. Taschereau, of Quebec, in the defense of Messrs. Gaynor and Greene, and a big legal battle is promised before it is denn- nitely known whether they will be forced to return to the United States. Fresh From, the Wires. The revolt in Yemen is spreading and Turkish garrisons which had been relieved, ar.e again in a state of siege. WORK OF CONGRESS The Senate and House. Regularly at Work What They are Doing. The Civil Appropriation Bill. The Senate passed the sundry civil appropriation bill, carrying about $68, 000,000. Various amendments were offered to the measure, and most of them were debated at? some length. There also was discussion of the pure food bill, and Mr. Dolliver made a brief speech in support of his reso lution providing for the 1 appointment of a joint congressional commission to investigate the -question of railroad rates. The resolution was referred to the committee on inter-State com merce. When the sundry civil bill came up, the House provision relating to the expenses of Federal judges was amended .at the instance of Senator Piatt, of Connecticut, so as to provide pay "for reasonable expenses actually incurred for travel and attendance," not exceeding ?10 a day. Mr. Culberson nresented an amend ment, prohibiting the allowance of fees to United States district attor neys in excess of their salaries. It was aimed especially at the New York district attorney. Mr. Bacon suggest ed a fixed salary of $10,000 for the New York Officer, and with this change the amendment was adopted! It prohibits the payment of fees to district attorneys except in the case of the District of Attorney. j An amendment was adopted author izing the construction of a light-ship off Brunswick, Ga., at a cost of.$90,- uuu. ine Dill was then Dassed. A conference on the river and har bor bill was granted, and Messrs. Gal- anger, Nelson and Berry appointed conferees on behalf of the Senate. Mr. Heyburn, immediately called uo the pure food bill and addressed the Senate on its provisions. While talk ing he was interrupted by many Sena tors desiring to pass bills. Among these was one prohibiting the sending of insects injurious to crops through the mails. Mr.. Culberson obiect&d. and in doing so had a letter read from Charles William Cunningham, of Tex as, proposing to "corner" the cotton crop by the wholesale introduction of the bull weevil into the Southern States. While the letter nurnorted to be from Texas, it was written on paper bearing the letter head of Price, McCormick & Company, of New York, and the writer said that the name signed was fictitious. Mr. Piatt, of Connecticut, offered a number of amendments to the pure food bill, and discussed the provisions of the measures. Mr. Hale reported the general deficiency, after which a recess was taken. When the Senate reassembled, the pure food- bill was temporarily laid aside, and Mr. Kern reported back the resolution instructing the committee on inter-State commerce to. sit during the approaching recess of Congress. The resolution was commented upon by several Senators. At the instance of Mr. Martin, the scope of the reso lution was so extended as to include an investigation into the liability of railroads for accidents to employes, and was then adopted. - The general deficiency appropria tion bill, the last of the great supply measures, was taken up. While the general deficiency bill was under consideration Mr. Martin called wo the House bill appropriating $250,000 for a celebration in 1907 of the first settlement of English-speaking people, . and it was passed. The bill will now go to the President. Mr. Hansbrough moved to increase from $10,000 to $25,000 the appropriation to defray the expense of the congression al committee to attend the opening of the Lewis and Clark exposition. Mr. Bailey opposed the increase, saying that $1,000 each for the com mittee on such a trip ft unwarranted extravagance. The motion was voted down. The general deficiency bill was passod after striking out the Hcnse provision appropriating $190,000 to pay mileaft to Senators and Repre sentatives ou account of the extra ses sion of the 58th Congress. Messrs. Allison, Hale and Cockrell were appointed conferees on the sun dry civil bill. For Jamestown Exposition. The Senate bill providing for partici pation in the exposition to celebrate the - first permanent settlement of English-speaking people on the Wes tern hemisphere, in the vicinity of Jamestown, Va., om the waters of Hampton Roads, was provided by the douse when, by a vote of 192 to 91, the nil for that purpose was passed under a suspension of the Rules. The amount appropriated is $250,000. To put the bill through a two-thirds vote was neces sary, and this was obtained only after considerable debate. The members of the Virginia delegation during the roll call mingled among their colleagues and personally appealed to them to cast their votes in support of the meas ure. An interested speccatoi was Gen Fitzhugh Lee, president of the expo sition company. Mr. Maynard, of Virginia, moved to suspend the rules and pass the bill ap propriating $250,000 for an? internation al naval, marine and military celebra tion to be held on the waters of Hamp ton Roads, beginning May 13 and end ing not later than Nov. 1, 1907, in com memoration of the first permanent set tlement of English-speaking people in America at Jamestown. Virginia. In 1607. Mr. Tawnev nf Minnpsrrfn hairmaTi of the committee on industrial arts and expositions, in favoring the bill, gave a graphic description of the plans and purposes of the exposition com pany. The bill also was strongly sup ported by Mr. Sulzer, of New York, on the ground that expositions educate the people and that the. results are lasting and beneficial. The whole plan was described by Mr. Burkett as "ridiculous from beginning to end." The proposed exposition, L. said, was clouded with indefiniteness, because, he saidi no one knew when or how long it was going to be held or whether there would be a single cent available to hold the exposition at all. Mr. Hepburn could only see in the appropriation an international junket for certain foreign guests, provided they came with a military or naval dis play. In addition, he said, it was-but the authorization for further expendi ture. Mr. Barker, of New York, also oppos ed the measure. Mr. Samson, of Virginia, replying to Mr. Burkett, indignantly denied that the money was intended for a govern ment exhibit. He emphatically assert-' ed that the exposition company had at its disposal $1,200,000 for the undertak ing. The debate was brought to a close by Mr. Grosvenor, of Ohio, who, in fa voring the bill, appealed to the House to get' rid of the questions of economy, and of territory for a moment, "and) do an act of justice to the grand old patriotic Commonwealth of Virginia- On division the House "by a vote Qff 185 to 81, suspended the rules and pass ed the bill, but on demand of Mr. Lit tlefield the yeas and nays were order ed and the bill was passed. Report Transmitted. Washington, Special-The President has sent to Congress a report on sugar cane experiments for ; 1903-1904, con ducted by the Bureau of Chemistry of the Department of Agriculture. The In vestigations were made chiefly in the State of Georgia. The report contains the result of experiments with ierttli zers, character of the soil best adapted to the growth of cane, technical de scriptions of operationp of syrup facto ries, directions for sampling and pre serving juices for an analysis, and kindred topics. Sody Identified. Chicago, Special. The body of tha woman found dead last Friday in Lain Michigan, at the foot of Fifty-nintls street, was identified as that of MrsL Eva Belmont, whose home is said tu have been in Milwaukee. The clew tor the woman's identity was furnished tqr John McCarthy, of Chicago, "who as serted that he had known Mrs. Bel mont for some time, and positively identified the body as that of the Mil waukee woman. Mystery still "sur round the death of the woman, bat the police are of the opinion that thejr have a murder problem u. ve. liABOR WORLD.' Building contractors and union brfelr Iayers adjusted their differences aft Chicago by signing an agreement foe one year. A conference of governments for tfi& protection of workers against accidents' has been- called to meet in, Switzerland? next May. In 1904 the free delivery mall cnrrit system of the United States employed 20,761 persons in towns and. cities anal 24.5G6 on rural routes. Over the matter of a half holiday e Saturday, 8500 carpenters and 350O bricklayers are in a deadlock with, their employers at Chicago. - , The Boot and Shoe Workers' Inter national Union expended during 190& $17,277.07 for 'strike benefits and 5S8L 029.52 lor sick and death benefits. The .smallest international union fa the country is the National Chemical Plumbers and Lead Burners' Uaion, There are about 250 men in the busi ness in this country. The Michigan State Butchers' Asso ciation will endeavor to have a law passed for the examining and licensing of butchers, and also a law fox-the Sun day closing of butcher shops. Organized Labor, of San Francisco-, a newspaper published in the interest: of working men and women, declare that in many parts of Californa farm hands work fourteen hours a day. The cigarmakers' .unions of Ohio? have notified their representatives in Congress that they are opposed to the lowering of the tariff on cigars coming; to this country from the Philippine? Islands. The'Brotherhood of Blacksmiths andt Helpers and the Journeymen Horse shoers' Union, of Pittsburg, have, signed a contract that in the future will provide that one craft will not inr terfere with the other in work to be done. PERSONAL GOSSIP. Emma Eames has become a vegetal rian. ; President Roosevelt is five feet eigbl md three-quarter inches tall. John D. Rockefeller has developed! in enthusiasm for automobiling. The Czar's regular Christmas present: to the, Kaiser is caviare in porcelaJst jars. Governor Folk, of Missouri, has foOTT brothers, all of whom have attained t more or less prominence. The Italian Minister of Public In struction made use of 67,900 visitingr, cards during his two months in office. Andrew Carnegie has offered the University of Virginia a gift of $500, DOO on condition that the university will raise an equal amount. R.,1. Knapp. the inventor of4he side hill plow, died at Half Moon, Cal., re cently. He was a native of New Yorlr, but went to California in 1856. The German Emperor has given to" Harvard University the German ex hibit from the St. Louis Exposition which represents the social ethics of bis country. George H. Sisco, a Sandy Hook pilot; retired by the commissioners on ac count of old age, declared that at se-snty-nine.he is . better man than ne was at forty. Mme. Melba's maiden name was Net lie Mitchell. Her father, David Mitcifc 11, now seventy -six years of age, la? rated as one of the wealthiest men in. the Australian Cojnmonwealfli. . Mrs. Isabella Beecher Hooker, tn uly surviving child of Dr. s Lyman? Beecher, a sister of Henry WardL Beecher Stowe, recently celebrated feer-;ighty-third birthday inHartforcLConm. Manuel Enriquez, one of the oldest pioneers of California and the last sur vivor of General Fremont's battaliosr In the Mexican War, has recently died: at Los Angeles. He was bonTin Fcsgl There is a time when death is machc easier for a man than to fulfil hi& duty, and if one dies just for the sake of death he cannot execute the duty that is assigned him, says Marui Ge&r sai in his- book, "A Daughter of Jan away one's life, or courting death, but in doing one's duty at the hazard of! one's life. You .must mt forget that.
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1905, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75