Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / May 27, 1914, edition 1 / Page 1
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
1 yf.f1m;." i mm ' ' " . '..-.-v. ' " r-:--m .-; V THE FL0VVFf?r ' r?rr,'W A Horn Newspapers Published inthe Interest of tHe Peopie and for Honesty in Governmental Affairs. r IT Salisbury, N. 0M Wednesday, May 27th, 1914. Wm. h. Stewart, Editor UTE NEWS ITEMS. Matters of News Gathered an Condensed t for ibe Readars of TblrFapec. Washington, May 23. Senator -William O'Coanell Bradley, of Kentucky, died tonight in his apartments here. Dath came after a brief illness from kidney ' trouble. Senator Bradley was in a semi-conscious con dition for hours before the end came. His "daughter, t Mrs. John N-South, of Prank fort, Ky., was at the bedside jrWhen. theenator . expjre.. nis hrst term in the United States senate, which would have expired March 3, 1915. He was a native of Kentucky and was born near Lanceter March 18 1847, was a Union soldier and a republican. Loudon, May 22. Beneath the momentary wild excite ment caused by what the London papers "tonight call "an orgy of outrage," disin terested obs-rvdrs clearly see the symptoms of a revulsion of feelina: against the mili tant -S'iffragetts as a conse quence oi their many acts of the last thirty-six hours Oniy those actually on the ground can appreciate the tremeadous differences be tween the way the. newspaper toiay are treatiug the newest outbreaks of the militauts and the way in which violent militancy has been treated heretofore. New Bern, N. C, May 23. Fire which is believed to have originated from a pass - ing locomotive late this after noon destroyed the Mam moth plant of the West Box and Lumber company, in this city entailing a loss of morri than one hundred thousand dollars. When first discov ered the ' fire had gained mush headway and ibe. crew of mill men were unable to cope with it. By the time that the fire fighters had ar rived and laid about three hundred feet of h3e the blaze had grown to enormous proportions and from that time on it swfept over the - plant almost unhindered as the firemen could make no impression on it with a num ber of streams. In addition to the plant which was esti mated at about thirty-five thousand dollars there was about fifty thousand dollars worth of material on hand which had been finished and ready for use. Ihere was also a large quanity of rough lumber. Eleven freight cars filled with lumber were also destroyed, thousands of citi zens flocked to the scene and viewed tht; fire and in their estimate it was one of the most spectacular ever seen here The amount of insur ance carried is very small. Oyster Bay, N. Y., May 23. To all appearancas today Theodore Roosevelt has re covered entirely from the effects of his trip into the South American jungles. Four days at Sagamore Hill have brought back his full measure of strenght. As he sat on the broad veranda of bis noma he appeared- to he as fit ihysically as before he went away. The colonel to day held a long council of war with a few political as sociates.. The political out look in New Yoik and Ohio was taken up and plans for a vigorous campaign in New w ' Ill IB lorK atate were sKetcuea in bare outline. Much of Colo nel Roosevelt's time and en eries are to be directed to the fight in New York State which is expected to give one oi the severest tests oi the strength of the new party. The steamship Vaterland of the Hamburg-American line, which arrived in New Yctk on May 21 on her maid en voyage, is the largest ship in the world. A remarkable comparison will' be possible with the heroic figure of the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor. If this largest statue in the world were set down on the deck of the great liner the torch in the upraised arm would be below the American flag at the main WHAT THE UEOIATORSIRE OOIXg. Hems From Washiogtoa and Niagara Falls CoiiceriiiD& Tto f rocfiodiogs. Washington, May 23. "The United States will faring about the pacification of Mexico, peaceably if possible, forcibly if necessity. "The United States knows that neither the Haerta nor the Carrftn za faction in Mexico is friendly to American prestige in that repub lic and (hat both sides are play ing off this element against each othr to gain support from the Mexican people. Regardless of this the United States ; .will insist , op peaoe in Mwrteo. -JTh-swopi 4PJirr&1 Of as will uot be withdrawn until this is accomplished. Such other steps as may be neoeasvry to this end will be taken." m 1 . - 1 at inisis cne message coat was given touignt by Commissioner L. mar and Lehman at Niaeara Fails to the A. B. C. Meditators aud to the Huerta delegates and through the meditators to Oarran Zi. ina conference at JNiagara was ordered from Washington directly ry the president and Secretary Bryan after two days of oouferecce vith C.trranzi representatives had resulted in nothing but to bring forth additional quibbles from the )3 stituBionalists' chief. Niagara Falls, Out., May 24. The observance of the Sabbath at Niagara Fal.s challenged oriticism rom the most punctilious. There were no ODuferenoas or eren "con versations" until almost midnight when the Mexican delegates gath red for a short talk. Mediators, Mexican and American attended otiuroh services and walked in the pirks or spent the hours reading in their rooms. Sunday is at all simes a holy day in Canada and this seemed particularly quiet. It became evident here today that the hour for serious business had arrived. Toe Mexican dele gates themselves felt this the more keenly. The Constitutionalists were continuing their victorious mirch and soon the situation at the Mexican Capital mast require attention, &hidJ&eflirk Government collapse as the Constitutionalist Army approaches, it is realized that chaos and anarohy may re. salt. This might alter the entire situation, lhe mediators are working rapidly therefore, hoping to see established in Mexico City a new provisional government that may be accorded prompt re cognition by tie United States be fore the rebels cau seizi oontrol. The mediators believe a govern ment set op by Constitutionlist arms cannot last long if unrecoe- uized by the United States and the world powers. A revolution would be inevitable. Hoping to avert suoh a oontingenoy, they are rolying on the United states to en force a strict embargo on the ex portation of arms to ail factions in Mexico. The diplomats do not behave Carranza can reach Mexioo City in less than two mouths because the Federal Army is destroying the nilroads as it retreats and gathering more strength in the thickly populated regions. Should Carranza still be in the field when n agreement is reaohed hera on the kind of provisional govern ment to be set up. the mediators believe the influence of the United States may be relied on to bring the Constitutionalists into har mony with the plans set forth in the conference. mast. The boat is 950 feet in length. Kansas City, Mo., May 23. -Although a union of the 17 Presbyterian organizations long has been sought by the various church bodies.action looking to such a, federation probably will not be taken by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United State3 (Southern) in session here commissioners said today. A number of communications against amalgamation were read and referred to a ' committee on overtures for unity. The committee is expected to re port early next week. Most of the leading commissioners beleivea middle ground will be taken, one that will not antagonize rigidly orthodox members. An overture from the Presbyterian Church of the.United States of America was read before the assembly today. This contained a plea to unite all Presbyterian bod ies in a federated union un der the direction, of a Pres byterian Congress to be pat terned after the National Congress. BAUXITE AMD ALrJUIKIUU Soma InttrestiDg Thiigs AbourTltls Ifittl Which Rapiilf licreaslog ProHactloa. THe year 1918 was the most prosperous in the hiatory of the bauxite, and al nmini nm industries in the United .States, according to W. C. Phatem, of the United States Geological Survey, in a re port on the production of bauxite and; aluminium in 1913, from "Mineral Resources", The pro duction of bauxite in 1913 wai 210.241 long tons, valued at $997 093 against 159,865 long tons. valued at 798.932, in 1912. Bauxite is used ohiefly as raw material, in the production of metallic aluminium, ivi manufao ture of bauxite bricks, and in the manufacture of alnndum for use as an abrasive. The amount of aluminium con sumed in the United States in 1913 was 75,370,090 pounds, against 65,607.00o pounds, in 1912. The marvelous growth pf tne aluminium industry is shown by a comparison of the 1918 out put with the total consumption of aluminium during the j last 20 years, 877,000.000 pounds; More thau , 829,000,000 pounds hare been oonsumed in the last 10 years. The total production in 1843 was only 150 pounds. Aside from its uie in the manu facture of cooking utensils, alumi nium is now being employed on a larger scale in the construction of welded tanks, cooking vats, and vessels used by brewers, preserve manufactures, and fat recovers, and in industries where a; metal is required that will oonduot heat, will not corrode, andjis not poison ous, it nas been found by ex periments that the only substauoes whioh dissolve any of the met al are oranges, lemons, bruisels sprouts, aLd tpmatoes, and that in every test the quanity dissolv ed was so small as to be harmless. The use of aluminium wire as a oouduotor in long-distanoe power- transmission schemes is increas ing. A reoently developed branch of the aluminium industrv is the manufacture of the powdered metal known as aluminum-bronze powdaJV wiiioh ia osad . tiiyly as a paint pigment, in explosives, in lithographing and in printing. Aluminium toil has partly displac ed tinfoil for wrapping articles suoh as oheese, chocolate bandies, and tobacco. One of the newest and perhaps oddest uses for alu minium is its employmeniin mak ing tne soles of suoes to be used by workmen employed in wet and damp places. The aluminum soled shoes lasts muoh longer than an ordinary shoe and is sard to be impervious to dampness. It has been found by experi ment that when the impure forms of bauxite ooutaining consider able iron oxide are exposed to in tense neat the bauxite is convert ed into a solid mass of emerv which iB so hard that it can bare ly be out by steel tools and resists chemical, thermal, and mechani cal aotion to a marked degree. Recent applications of bauxite in brick acoording to the United States Geological Survey, are in the lining of rotary cement kinls, lead-refining furnaces, and baiio- open-hearth steel furnaoes; Though new bauxite deposits are being found from time to time, there is considerable' inter est in the preparation of pure alu mina irom oiay or other silicate minerals. As soon as a: process for the extraction of alumina from olay is put on a oommerical basis, large quanities of low-grade bauxite containing considerable admixtures of olay wilKbeoome available as aluminum producers. According to the United States Geological Survey there is a large tonage of suoh material associ ated with moat of the southern Appalaohma bauxite. The mineral bauxite is used on a large soale in the manufacture of the artificial abrasBiye alnn dum at Niagara Falls. This ab rasive is made in the eleotrio fur nace by fusing calcined bauxite Alundum is particularly effloent in the grinding of steel. A copy of the report may be ob tained free on application to the Direotor of the Geological Survey, wasnington, u. u. Child Cross? Fwerlsh? sick? A cross, peevish, listless child. with coated tongue, pale,", dosen't sleep; eats sometimes very little, suen again ravenou.iy; atomaoh aour; breath fetid; pains in stom toh, with diarrhea; grinds teeth while asleep, and starts up with terror ill suggest a Worm Kill er 3oni9tbing that expels worms, and almost every child has them. Kickapoo Worm -Killer is needed. Git a box to-day. Start at onoe. You won't have to coax, as Kicka poo Worm Killer is a candy con fection. Bxpels the worms, the oauie of your child's trouble . 25o., at your druggist. THE L0K6 AKEKfCOXSUL IS FOUND Ifr. Silllnan has Arriisf Safelj it Mexico Washington, May 22 The fact that the United States has appeal ed to. Great Britain to secure the production of Consul Silliman re sulted in the arrival today at Mexico City of th : long missing oonsul. The Brazilian minister at Mexi oo City sent s dispatch to the state department statiDg the safety of 8illimsnavt. Mexico City at the Brazilian lesatlottonly an hour after the Secretary of State Bryan had had announced information from a eonsnllteartBita. based on I'm. J" 5 '"i -v' iV a n-if tones oi iiugeerr?nas suuman bad been "moraerea." One of the embassies here has received that information that Silliman, instead of being under the protection of ' anybody, has actually boen in the penitentiary atSaltillo. This aooounts for the condition of inoommunioado with respect to Silliman. The reports on Silliman have been of the most confusing na ture. Even the British oonsul at Saltillo sent the British smbassa- dor here a dispatch last week stat ing that Silliman . had taken a train for Mexioo City on the 14th. This information evidently, was from Borne Mexican official who had Silliman in custody. The Silliman casoCwas regarded by the administration as the most serious one thai nas arisen since the beginning of the revolu tion. It was the on that the ad ministration could! not explain without immediatei investigation if it had turned otttfthat Silliman had been dealth with criminally. Aaoaii W. O.W. Picnic at Trading Ford The Spenoer, Bast Spencer and Yadkin Camps, -Woodmen .of the World had their annual picnic ast Thursday and had a real feast ing oooasion. Tne exercises open ed by a parade by the order and the consul oommander of Yadkin Camp took charge. G. A, Pea- cook gave all a welcome and ln- bury. In his remarks Mr. Peacock stated that there were more than 800 oamps in the United States and more than 800, 000 members of this fraternal order . Then Rev. B. W. Avett of Granite Quarry, spoke, expressing his high regards for the order, xtq was followed by T. F. Hudson of Spenoer, who pointed out how that men can not live alone in this age but there must be unity and communion, and one way to gain this is through the fraterni ties. J. L. Oarriok of Churohland High Sohool, followed next on the program. He took as his subject The Supremacy of Ideas". The oonsul commander then introduced G F. Wise, State or ganizsr, of Siler City, who gave a history of the order and what it was doing today. After he had finished oame the dinner. For Those Interested in Marketing Prodoce Atlanta, Ga , May 24 Antici pating unusually heavy fruit and vegetable crops throughout the Southeastern states, the Southern Railway and affiliated lines, through their market agents sta tioned at Atlanta, Cinoinnatti, Washington and St. Louis, have begun an aotive educational oam paign for the purpose of assisting growers and shippers , to success fully dispose of their products. With this end in view, an illus trated pamphlet has just been issued giving full information in regard to marketing and proper methods of preparing, paoking and loading the various kinds of fruit and vegetables grown in the South. This pamphlet was pre. pared after very careful study and should be invaluable to Southern growers and shippers. Eighteen illustrations are shown of proper containers to use. Copies of the pamphlet will be furnished inter, ested parties for the asking, Not only will the market agents assist Southern growers in prop erly marking and paoking their products in sound and attractive shape, but will put them in touoh with dealers located at the vari. ous important points in the Un ited States and Canada and help them to find the best markets. Rheumatism Quickly Cured. ''My sister's husband had an attaok of rheumatism in his arm," writes a well known resident of Newtoi, Iowa. "I gave him a bottle of Chamberlain's Li ii ment which he applied to his arm and on the next morning the rheuma tism was gone." For ohronio muscular rheumatism you w find nothing better than Chamber lain's Liniment. For Sale by All Dealers. HAROLD STEVENS DROWNED IN YADKIN. Boat Overturned lo Narrows Last Satnrdav and the Body Lost Yesterday's Charlotte Observer givesrthe following acoount of the drowning of Harold Stevens, an employee of the Sothern Alumini n am company on tne work near Whitney: Njt yet have the Yadkin ripida yieiaeaup the body of Harold Stevens of this oity, who met his death in their tumultuous waters last Saturday, but a large number of the most prominent citizens of Albemarle will go to the scene this morning in automobiles and it is expected in Albemarle that the body will be reoovered by noon The body of the unknown negro man who entered the searoh for Mr. Stevens only to meet a simi lar fate was reoovered yesterday by Rev. Alexander Miller, pastor of the First Baptist Church cf Albemarle, and Charles Helms. They found the negro's body iu water four feet deep, A short distance above where the accident ooourred the water is 18 or 20 f jet deep or more, and the ohurniop rapids rise constantly to a height of eight or ten feet. The soene of the aooident is t- mile and a quarter above the site where the Southern Aluminium Company is preparing to erect a mamoth dam. It is about three, miles below the old Whitney dam, whioh haB now been abandoned. Brent S. Drane, of Drane & Blairrin whose offioe Mr. Stevens was first assistant engineer, re turned late last night from Whit ney where he has summoned Sat urday sfternoon by a teletram from Mr. Smith and where he spent the ensuing days in pros? outing the search. From him was obtained for tho the first time an authentic aocount of the sad oo- currauce, ooncermng which the facts are as follows: Mr. Stevens and Wilbur Smith for the past vear have been muoh interested in canoeing. They had done much of this on tha-Catawba andLhad haoo ma real ly expert oarsmen and were snlen- aia swimmers. Six weeks ago tney oonceived a desire to case a trip throgh the Yadkin narrows and made a special visit to the scene, where they made a careful investigation. On this basis, al ter mature consideration they de cided that they could make the venture safely. They returned there last Friday intending to spend Saturday and Sunday in a boating trip from Whitney through the rapids to the Blewitt Falls development 40 miles away. Saturday morning they made a safe start but in some way, which has not been explained, in going through a particularly large rapid the boat was capsized in rough water. When Mr. Smith oame to the surface he found himself clinging to the boat with one hand and to the paddle with the other. Raising himself above the water he saw his comrade appar ently floating on his back some distance below the boat. The canoe and Mr. Smith were swods into an eddy of quiet backwater and he swam to the shore without difficulty, his friend still being visible down stream apparently floating on his back. On aocount of the denBe undergrowth whioh he enoountered in hia dash for aid, Mr, Smith hoally lost sight of Mr. Stevens about 400 yards from the point where the boat capsized. He continued to eearoh for him until finally it dawned on him for the first time that Mr. StevenB had not been swimming, but was insensible, probably stunned, aud was drowned. The aid of John Tolbert, a sub contractor on the works, was se cured and plans were begun for a search. Messrs. Smith and Tol bert borrowed a river boat at a ferry a mile distant and found two negroes who volunteered to take it down stream. They were warn ed to I e sure to leave the boat at the head of the rapids to make its way through them and then catoh it below the falls. Messrs. Smith and Tolbert then pursued a short er route back to the soenoe of the tragedy, arriving before the negroes and just in time to see them disregarding instructions, undertaking gleefully to come through the rapids. The second boat oapsized at almost the same spot as the other. One of the oc cupants sank just below the falls and was not seen again. The other.swam out laughing and with great pride n his achievement . The first drowning ocohrred at 10 o'clock in the morning and the second at 4 in the afternoon . Searching parties were organis ed, Messrs . Rookwell and Cotton of the Aluminium Company being especially aotive. The pool was dragged with hooks below the ra pids and all the shallows for a A FEW OF ROUE'S ERRORS I Tunnels Coansct Nunneries and Priest's Houses Deceptioi Masterpiece. The following interesting and reliable statements are taken from The Menace, the paper that is arousing Protestant America ot prepare against the possiblity of a second Bartholamew. The effect- of an infallible church which professes to know all and to teach all that is worth knowing, is to stop the mind and smother research. Rome 1b the jailer of the intellect, the exeou tioner of mental freedom. The old-fashioned dootrine of the divine right of kings was set aside sometime ag" asstriotlv un- American, and now America is challenged with a similar dogma, lhe divine right of the pope." V 1 . . m Aome s motto: me less von xnow, the more you can believe ; ii ' . sue more you oeneve tne easier you can be humbugged : and the more humbuggery you stand for the better Catholio you are. Whatever critism may be offer ed concerning the proteBtant churches of the United States they have the decency to separate itieir organizations completely trom all non-American govern. nutBr Tbere is not in the United abates a Bingle man, eminent in science, in philosophy, in art, oi ri literature who has been bom and educated in the Roman Catho lie ohurch. If liberty has the right to de fend itself from tryanny why should it permit aliens to vote and hold office ih this country who get their politics from the Vatican? Rime's dependence is on dead issues, dead dogmas, dead saints and a dead language. In her estimation bones are better than books. No wonder Rome has no sym pathy for popular edooation. To eduoate those born into the ohuroh and inheriting its super stitions would besuioide. SEVEN WONDERS OK MODERN CIVI LIZATION. I. What is Rome going toido with, the millions oflgold that aha has procured from purgatory. in diligences and graft? 2. Why is it necessary for a relig ious Beet to have an armed mili tary department (Knights of Col umbus) in a free-thinking coun try like the United States? 3. How muoh bratns are in a man's head to permit a petticoat fiet.d to take his sweat wife or daughter into a secret confession al box where the priest .claims the right to question her on any sub ject, more particularly in legard to her sex?. 4. Does the Roman hierarchy in tend to destroy free speeoh, free thought, free worship, free libra ies and free government in the United States as she has done in every other oountry that she haB dominated? 5. What is the difference be twasn moving young girls from place to plaoe in white slavery and maintaining plaoes fir the same purpose snoh as the solid high walled and padlooked con vents and nunneries? 6. Why doeB the Roman hier archy insist on pushing her own political aspirants to the front first, last and always? 7. How can a lover of Jesus Christ and of humanity inoite church membership to blackmail, boycott, kidnap, arson and many times to murder suoh as being done by the Roman Catholio pet ticoat degenerates to aooomphsh a purpose? DO THBY HAVE TUNNELS? Febra Donato of Ipswich was held in $1,200 for the grand jury today after pleading not guilty in the Bast Boston court to a charge of breaking into the convent and church of the Sasred Heart in Eisfc Boston. Patrolman Mo Ken dry arrested the man early to day in the tunnel leading from the long distance below were waded throughout Sunday. The work of searching deep water was con tinued yesterday, with the result stated. Wire fencing was stretch ed aoross as much as passible of the ohannel a mile below. Messrs. Smith and Frank P. Drane remained at Whitney to oontinue the search. Mr. Steveos was 22 years of age. He and Mr. Drane had been warm psrsonal friends linoe they first met in 1935 when Mr. Drane was located in New Maxido. As soon as the young man graduated from the University of Missouri in 1911 he oame at onoe to Char lotte and entered the offiae of hia friend. He was a young man of fine mental oapaoity. energy and character. In the three years he had resided here he had won many fmnds who are inexpressib ly saddened by the tragio ooour ranoe whioh out short a oareer or promise. I, ohuroh to the convent. Dnnafcn was in his stocking feet hia nvar. I coat and shoes under a church pew. Seyen poor boxes had been ripped open, says The Menace. The above clipping says The Menace, is a news item from a Boston daily paper. You will note that the man was arrested "in the tunnel leading from the church to the convent." I thought the "holy fathers" said they didn't have tunnels con necting the chnroh with the con vents where the "holy nuns live." When Maria Monk wrote her book and told about the tunnels connecting the nunneries and priest houses in Montreal, the "holy dads" howled themselves hoarse, and they are still trying to undermine her story, but there is a daily paper that states as plainly as anything could that they really do have tunnels. Why do the "holy fathers" have "holy" tunnels through whioh to reach the "holy"nuns? And how did the Romanized po- ice officials happen to bungle this case and let it get into court? And how did the managing edi tor ever oome to let a reporter lip a story over him with the word "tunnel in it? These are mysteries that are hard to solve, but it happened, and the "holy dads" bad as well shut up abcut the tunnel busi ness. HE OOMES BY IT HONESTLY. Eldex Chas. H. Spurgeon, the great Baptist minister of London, England, was a man of plain speech and intense feeling. Oar Otis L. Spurgeon seems to have in herited some of the vigor of his namesake as the following woids spoken by Mr. Spurgeon in his Exeter Hall lecture on November, lool, on the "Mystery of Iniqui ty," the papal church, show. Had he spoken in Denver he would have met the fate of Otis L. who is a healthy sprout of the old stock of martyrs. Hear what the Senior Spurgeon haB to say of the papacy: "Let me not recount the his tory of the baoksliding ohurch, for ye have heard if often enough, nti one's hearV i-okti o-el it o'er again. Yon know that, at last, with oenturies of cunning 'the mystery of iniquity' had swollen into the most masterly and colossal counterfeit which time has ever seen: anti-Christ was developed. Instead of Christ, satan brought forth 'our Lord God ' the pope;' instead of the apostles, cardinals walked forth in their pompous garments ; instead of humble pastors who ruled their ohurohes in the fear of God, proud mitred prelates held the golden bejeweled oroziers ; instead of for giveness of sins, there was absolu tion from the priest; instead of the sacrifice of Christ, there was the unbloody sacrifice of the mass. For the gospel, there was supersti tion ; tor the work of the Spirit, the lying wonders of relics; for regen eration, baptism; for communion, a wafer; for holiness, vestments; for truth, riohes and pomp. The wisdom of Christ was oonoealed beneath the folly of man. The deceiver took away the bread, but gave a stone so like it that the hungry world received the treach erous gift. Was not the cloth richly adorned? 'Who would sus pect that it covered the cheat's mocking imitation of the chil dren's bread? The great founder of Rome's heresy took away the liviag egg of life and immortality, and gave the world the deadly scorpion of a soul-destroying superstition. A more frightful counterfeit thaa thia tha combin ed talent of all the fiends- of hell has failed to invent. This re mains, DECEPTION'S master. pieoe, first-born of hell, the ex press image of the prinoe of dark ness. Others have followed limp ing in its train, but this still stands first-born among many brethren, and among all hypocri sies it hath the pre-emineuae." THE ME SAO E. The Menaoe is doing the nation 6he greatest possible service in the greatest bottle for principles that has ever confronted mankind. It is a question of truth and righte ousness versus error, superstition and daoeption. On the result of this battle depends the safty of of oar republic, ohurchas and homes, and, whether you believe the assertion or not, the situation demands the honest and iuteligeht consideration of every one. If the statements made in the Men aoe are false and contrary to his tory Protejtants ought to know it, and, if they are true, Roman ists ought to know it If you are being made a tool of by some eolesiastio, real; if you are honest and are seeking light, read; if you are a fool and can't help it, read ; read The Menaoe. Subscription price only 25c per year, if the amount and your name and ad dress is left at, or sent to The Watchman, Salisbury, N. C,
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 27, 1914, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75