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THE NEWS AND OBSERVER. .y -. - v.. .r::'::;: --Monday morning,' ma,rch t. fy v. - , , "-r . ' c . i ) The News and Observer rwbllshed every day im Om Tea . ObSJrer !W-lfet Co. Sew aa Otatmr feaMtwg - 1UMI W. startta I Ml TEXCPBOITESL tcej Hew Bdherlal Room ClrtassfJoa Dfpff t Mairmg -t -I Ring ...,...m 1 road 1ST Rlog Ill Ris FULL. ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS HibM-KirTiuN rmcit! year ,. -SIM" Month ' Entered at th Poetoffle at Raleigh, North Carolina, a second-class matter. Morning Tonic Phllllplan 1. to.) JV CCOKDINO to my earnest expectatlAlia -Tab and my hop that to nothing shall I be ashamed, but that with all boldness, as always; ao inr alao Chrlat shall I"- magnified In my body, whsthsr It ba by life, or by death. TUcli "Volt Wlo4 (nt a mil of water, kid," said Jere- . . iM did, he kinged t have a drink. Tb kid, ha Jinn, Ik- JuM hail hired, u ! Ih- ilallj cjMirea; to are the Inrnvv wan kept Nat-d, and - bead erff aotsosne boor". "Ob. slukl I Ae M at rrr.r. , he weL" aajjl he SUING gl tJfnUKH. at lite u liig, ' or at - the rk In yonder driL where t-ttra-rful tmllfrog slug? er shall I tap the hydrant' flow. ir seek Manr quiet drain, -'- ist shall I to the cUtcm go, tin nvtMurr to li. tads? And shall I take the Iwetve-quart pall. '"" or yonder china urn, to brine this lag of Adan'i air, tor which yon wrm In yearn' (h, had I - better take- the lift, ur down the stairway go? Wore on thla Journey drift, ttww thing I'd know." Yon lake your bonnet." Mid Jbe box, "anil kindly. fle away; that youth Will never t-iiaeaTrii ahu -que-illiwiii aats all libu.. l nrff Toa,rc Uilit to thi au thing, yon houlilift arraU-h your dome, anil ak raaaa-driiai-t ym kltould sprtng u fitch the bwcon Itoate, The lad who would hi hnniir rise, aad travel with iho licet, imuhi'hsc hU hrala and - band and eyes, ami give 'tit tongne a re-M." y. resolution for Htata-wldft prohibition wa U4.eaed by the Snuth liakixa Senate "jltovemerH marches on ' Th We think see a tendency" wu the pail uf .tiuae lio write tor the press to bolt U i)in Hut itk art- Uiurhlnf wood. lyibalU hUl by tb banka of tlic ity 1 JtiicaKO Mad around a billion dollar, but It i$ -monay that la workina that doo thr nooi "Tha IrninKoyu' and aaitator irmnt no." le jlar lr. Nlcholaa M ..-) ""tl-r. Tea, alon with tha carpinn. t-nroiinti oflege preaident tba type oTTl'uilar. of At kaarl every Legialature lha dnurt- evil y 'ahui-a it hidroua head. Thla ia a -juration J. wblch. IT the people could vote' on It. aouM ! plaod on tha ahalf. there to May. Marth t'aruUnahajt taken a bark e.t in . hlM tha aon-proirrei-aivea atala by the enactment a" aa aaay divorce laa'. raapact at itaat. "1ft T the day Tn '.one A Uoaton phyaldan clalma that vaaoiuarma a child with tha white of an egg- will cure It of aathma. Koine of tha rlhJma of tha d.H ton kaa to be taken with aeveral degreea of l-lowaaaa.ira-t.t- lt 4hv haht of wrw-4 they rtave kbeompllahad one la prepared to bel aitnoat anything poaslhla In tha way of putting dlaeM out of bualneaa. MajrlmlUan Harden, a noted OerniAO aiiltor. wrltrng of the aew German war aonea. aay: 'What to about to happen haa been tmpoaed by pHllaaa aacaaalty. and muat ba. And let no cry . Jf pain and no menace pound In Germany' ear. , la other- worda we have gut to do what the -tenderfoot In the Weat waa told to artnK tna liquor, artnk it out or a tin cui an : H good wa and tibaervrr t-nattea It , tng rule not to puhljh communlo tha aaete of tha writer ia not win tiplala to a number of rommunlcatloaa do not app Selro vommanteatlona -thai makf public, but aa Xhyjtrip accept reeponaiDiiity the nnbroken DONT MAKE DIVORQE EASIER Tea yeaJ-a aapaj-atioa should nerar have been made a cawea for divorce. To make five year r of aeuaj-an$haTalMefoTfftyorco la makTBTouf divorce law twice aa bad aa it la. The Senate ehould make abort work of the Ill-adviaed metv aura that trot through the House by the aarrow margin of a aingla vote. There, -ia no new argumeat to be offered against e-aay divorce laea. It is an old story thai, the bmi ia sacrfd, that what operatea te tear it down la hurtful to t bo bent and . moat fuadamentaj thing In human life, that the marl 11 relation la the most solemn and aacred of relation and ehould be guarded with the-trt- moat care to maintain It pure and aweet. ' Hut the fact thatthe argUhient for difficult divorce There appeared In Saturday' a lasue of tha . i new ana oo-wirtr m d-tivi catipruu, iiiw. imi t tild and tun, worn ioM nL IjtKjtaaxjBjL-OLl ,p-, , -.u.-w u ffIlowll; ' .-rhe its fo. For tbeae arriimenta have stood the teot of years and they have never been answered. And no one can doubt that easy divorce law tend to break up the home l)fe and tend to bring the marital reiationkintu contempt. You have only to look at" State which haya eaay divorce Toa- to see tha disgraceful conditions that Inevitably result. Sow an easy divorce law and res-ay-4--rarrHtWTTnp rrf--Jtvnrrei wtrh Its acconioanvtna- lose in popular respect for the obligation and dignity of the relation of mar rtage, it never work out any other w'uy. Ohio, we helU-ve It la. there an five divorcee to every marriage. Think of that! Think of how far that condition la from tha scriptural standard' Is it eafe to drift so far away from tha advire and counsel of the In aplred writers? The law Is too eaay, not too rigid and it should be let atone if it cannot be Improved In the direction of making the .taking of the marriage vow a more twrlou- and solemn thin instt-u.l of nwklnir It a thing to he- used to gratify a fu--tiin ahr and then to be aa lightly 1.M-'1 uKld-1 ltnslaTr-n are too prone to look at the merits of individual cases and to be little ' concerned aix-ul the . ITeot on the moral fibre of the people as whte-Jn such inattera the average law Miakr Is iuI aa aaf-Tajrotde a a nuniater of the guaj-el, .Tiie lawmaker Is in the . nature" of xp'-rial deader and he thlnkn of the hardship that may obtain in a particular instance, while the man of Clod la a juet Judge with extraordi nary opMrt unity for studying the texture of or ganlxed aoclety and delecting the danger spots In It. It Is highly slrnltkant that tha ministers are with practical unanimity opposed to letting down the I -a re In the matter of divorce. The niinlKter ia closer to the home than -any other oulalita nf tt-rt-wn charmed -lre4nd ike mln- t-tferity.m'gjgra,urety llwinhf layman wrren danger threatens the home life of tha Htate. Four years ago when lliln same qtiattOnJ WaJ tip tho Nwa and Observer obtained a number of expreiwlolis from leadlnK mlnlHters and a few of thenv re peprodueed thla morning. They are Juet a H'fif iU'H m then and they present an argiieryyt7sr!( utmnnwerable. Two 4'ailo also the fight for" easy dlviifce re .wWlw' 'Ud loau We haver faith that It wUl be lMit''l - this year, ' . .. . u VT n rXR THE HXKAK BIIXH. The legialature lay more behind in Its work thajr any'wf Its ofedeceasfjra of recent yeara ltiiMtig thla. theliialngweek of the eeeslnh. the lawmakers .wifl hafe a crush nf" bualneaa greatly the tha u of any freJuu Irgialnture rh theXXawMecae. Th House has appointed a calendar com mittee clwy -el with the special duty of guard ing agnlnatt the aneak bills which ara some- lime icntten through legislative bodlea ahepJ tlitj, i-aVnilara are greatly congwtedJMrfJ'rltere i tmt leisure for the ptoper lnrf3eton of niea- pre .sr ti t el -for-actlloj.-Thiela- weH; I fa-tttwiH he dlfflcjrrTTor either Mouse to ja ullon althihe purpose of keep- rr and Jokers. one fe the ntost disappoint init ami regrettable rhHrVrten--t lc of the Ijegialuture m thla (natter f puNlnk off till the last mtrrme so tmu h of Its worit Some yomparlsona of the relativjj', amount of ' work dona in tha roncludiftsTyMy of the, eevoral Legislature in recent yeifrs nhnw .11. nations reaponslbility ferth rrokea ml of da not aseThellglvi the eommuni- T neat the : soraatlmesr hap tatut yxk : apsrauoa ui wouliT not aa net fi for one constituent It law la placed) oa tha divorce easier. . If the wa-ould atop right there, it much difference. Hut It Many others beside the It waa passed us It aa a from revponalbflttiea that have aad thus the whole reputation mg divorce easier for one meeaa makijig dl rceaaair for alL aad. legislator. ouarht to nfkeaaa ae bUA dlvore laws aa they would tha Ul!U convt nraalng the new perTfcrl -eteaea aoem to bring moraryher :hae lesa of I ham. Heri ia a welcome to Nam her cAe of Valam (n of the Chadboara H ar id d. r. A. ralor ia the editor and the Initial 'A auai.ierjbi an attrscUve aheot. t..ajs. kaoy ledge ecetpt of theUom ChreaieleX the pnb!lcatloai of which baa beew com ane need by Thai naaageniaiit. of the Cblldrea'a Hem ef the I Mirthodlat. Vptaoopal Chareb, Bexrtb. Wlated ol a amllea quaty ef papa aad Mal -wttk we areprad avittar, thlato a eW " tfartlve publleattoanatow-BeJeraTsi tha place ullcaJtieV. ; .-.!. the remarkable andr growing- tendency to wait until tha la-af minute to tin the Work of the Ucti- uml Amesnoly In 1T fifty-eight per cent of the bllln n LI ar r IJTn the tut ten days of the aeasUin. ln lli(r-iM per Cent nf the Mil "eref paanrll in Vffr last ten days, te, li 1 ,1 seventy-eylrteh pft cen and iu Mil seventy-! per eerflr ( ft. Is eattmated that there will be tjHr tlu.il- nrd pngea or tne puhllr and prttare law passed at thla session. thef flKurcH'iteJiig ar rived at from the amount of lcsiylWioii'. gotten through by previous legislatures. jj'jnjy fnough bills' to rover 2ht pages have VJrett 'jjiiuid by this Legislature. 4u jither wol.j during the remaining days of thla seasii kSIiTT per cent of the bills of the aeaston are 1 La passed? Member of the laiilat uce jtwho ' would not at oop to get a aneak bill thrughl find themselves contrnnteii. withthe duty f seeing that none other succeed in anything of thla sort. We should like -no think thai there la not a -win art member of the legislature who would attrrnpt to "put anything ever." hut rectUectlon of aim tlxr attempt tn the Tast are fresh in the mind. Watch for the sneak bills and guard carefully agalnef the error which are ao liable to he made In the. conrted fag-end of the legiala-irve-eeMalo'n. . - f- - - - - - Srt !XSiHTiTlT10!VL. The uueetlnt of the constitutionality of the Orier antl.Jug t4Jl haheen raised, but it ia likely that jhp dintculty will be encountered In thi connect ion. The bill has been passed on by some of tha best lawyer In the Htate and It -would (lot hav received the sanction of the anM-lbuor forcee If it Constitutionality had beea doubtful, for .-the foes of whiskey realise the need of s law that win stand all testa. Cm the nueetloa of the constitutionality of the bill Ree. K. U Davis, Superintendent of the Kotth Carolina Aatl-8alooa League, has mad soma Inquiries and the reaul of hla Jnveatigation Is Such as to assure ftienda of the measure that there) la Be danger that It wilt be found violative of any of the provisions of the Constl tatleee - Oat this nattr Mr. DevU send "the News and -Crtieerewirth fBttswiiTfr""""""'" - "Aa tha eonstltutlonallty of the Drier House bill to1 prohibit the delivery ef liquor for bev rage purpose la North Carolina was questioned Mi tha flor nf tha Besate It ta order to say that of Its eensejtutioaailty waa raised soma days age ate rrtijriejttrl deem a seran. ee h question I took the matter ap with several attorney's, and I also wrote to Congressman K. T. Webb. All these atlornsya seemed aatlsfied oa this score. In writing to-t htr. Webb I auted the grounds on which th constitutlonaiity of tha bill was quefc vlng previously ia Cob greasman Webb's reply on paragraph reads: . " 'However, I dont think tha above ease covers the point yon rale and, giving an off-hand dec 1st oa, I don't see .that the bill would be unconstitutional on the grounds 'suggested.' "Let none of our friends la the Senate be dis turbed on this score, for this bill has been passed upon by some of thi beast attorneys In the 8tat and It only remains to be enacted Into law te give ua the results we desire." i Til K CHILI AJfD THE KINDERGARTEN. legislator who takes part In th making of to protect childhood can have no regret, for ht action. The arrest heart of humanity calls for legislation which will properly care for the child. The present Legislature should do Its part in carina; for the children of North Caro Una." ' Mince th editorial referred oaopeared our attention has been called to the fact that the sentiments therein expressed are particularly applicable to theHtrnder(fkt-leTBill recently In troduced In the Hoase of Representative by and It occur to u that In the turmoil and con fusion of the Polng day of the present nes Ion of the Oeneral Assembly the' lniportanc to - childhood our greatest asset of thi hill hould not be forgotten. . , - The best posted educator testify that rhll dren who- have- had preliminary kindergarten training make far better pupllnr in the first grades of the public schools than those who start in without aucb trailing. KlnderKartenlng Is no longer an eiperiment; on-the contrary. It has been in practice.. Ion; enough to have demonstrated Ita value and use fulness: and' our legislator should, not neglect to enact this most In another column -w print the Kindergarten Hill in full, ao that our readers may be In formed a to Ita provlslona. Kfr.I.lIF TILT rIIOVU) BK-CIVRV. The Kenate can well atiord to follow" the How in passing the eeml-monthiy railroad pay bill. Such a bill will work no hardship on the rail roads and It will be of arrest asslirtancv t. the employees concerned: XJhdef the present rules the railroad worker have to wait lotiKpr tor their pay than they can reaionahly bj ttremll. But they are not ; tha only ones Interested in the bill, liuatneas men In the place where rail road men Uve alao Join in the request for (he pauasre of this bill.. It would be better for them aa well as better for the men themaelvea for semi-monthly pay to hex the rule. There la understood to be no very aerioua ob jection to the bill on tha part of the railroad, for the employees in making their plwi aeerrf to have a strong case, one the force of which It ia difficult to overcome. . Thla relief should be given to the men who toll In the rallnuid shops Th's House by a majority ip one vote passed. the essy divorce law. The vote waa not credlt- able to the lower bragr-h of the Oeneral Aneeffi- bly. The people had a right to exjjiwfbetter of It But th Kenate will hold iCWdder-trtjer. 1 x . t. : : J . ... . . 1 ?KJ s X' " ' ' . .)' - ' - SUPPING. : - L; " -jr -MVAMmf :rrr , ? -l:tVf i r-jm & i. j v ai - i .,l5eW II I I 111. 'iW".''.. "U .-w.' e .UTavTS iWVI'r;-j I -lmpenlmiwireiUo- lav4t fcaa4 MiSf XYilKJLiSP Mi I 'VHot fit, 1kcU4C.d (I'nlveralty of North CaroUnst Alamnl ii'- . . IU iliw.) , , , , T ,the Annual Inter-Society Itanquet held aW Commencement In 1114, Chief Justice Walter 'lark, the principal apeaker of the even- Ing. jtodk the poaltlon that the enrollment oi tne CrtteVrilty of a great Htate Hike North Carolina. frilouKirii vrglnirrm-JfnUja Instaud of-LiiOiLand that la so far a the I'nlveralty and the State alnglyor Jointly had failed to make the num ber troOO, to that extent trlry were aertoualy at fauli and had fallen short of their high privlleita. IB Mop port of his position, he cited thu fact ftlut the States of the North and East had their Har vard and Yale anil llrown and Columbia and Corfiell and' Princeton and I'eniisylvanla, and tnal Aucnigan, eia-nnain, siinncnoiH, rvaneas, Illinois. Texas, and California, though not so old by a half or even a fourth as North Carolina, had otit-dlatanced North Carolina by far In the number of student enrolled In their universities, a position which finds convincing substantiation In Hcience for December It. 1IU, In which sta Unties of attendance at thirty universities of th country are given. In this tabulation, Colum bia topa the list with a total of 11,211. The I'nlveralty of Texas, only 13 years old at Its laat birthday, alanda 1 f th In the table with a total of 3.17 1. w hile Carolina falls to qualify At all on th tiuals nf attendance. And that too after a his tory of practically a century and a quarter! Why ha the enrollment not reached 5.000? Does not North Carolina need that many inen at its Htate l nlverslty equipping themselves for I he flute's upbuilding? Thu Kevlew does nut propose to attempt an answer to theae quea- ..or to explain the causes which have re tarded so lon'g the attainment of the present en rollment H will, Jiowever, make mention of several fact which It consider aismiflcant. . n of these, a shown In the January Issue, la thai North Carolina la one nf a very, very small number of Blate which charge resident stu dents tuition In their' Htate universities. Th bearing of this fact upon attendance la at one obvious. Again, the first appropriation made to the I'nlveralty for maintenance wa not granted until 11, or 14 yeanrago, and It years after the Institution was founded Fur thermore, of the It buildings now on th cam- pu. the first to be built by the Cut out of funda from ths State treasury, was th prsssnl chemical laboratory which wa erected in 1101 at a root of $r,00 And from a statement con tained In the president's report for lll-'14 of the total amount of the $ t.l7.80 plant which the I'nlveralty now comprises, only 1141, te ha been contributed directly by the State foe per manent Improvement and buildings. . Two further causes have beea contributory . to thla end. I'nttt 17 no provision had beea made for a system of Hut supported high, schools. and It was only In till that a compulsory school law was placed upon the Htate' statute, hooka. held that John C. Hrtcklnrldxs beat tness. stately bearing. If Claude Kltchtn hud the mind of John Bharpc William- some pf us Democrats would feel belter over the refusal of Finis Oarrett of Tennessee t contest with the North Onmlinhxn fur the leadership. Now, there Is a young char' Oarrett. who extorts your confidence. He Is the ablest parliamentarian on the Democratic aide, and the eiual of Mr. Mann on the Republican side. In debate he won hla spurs his Unit ses sion years ago and IT I were called on to pick the moat promising young statesman on Capitol Hill I "''iiTi"Tl'rT- h-iiUi to immfJl"'' Carrott of Tennessee. .''' If old Tennessee will only encourage and stand by this young man he will do her great bpr,eber representative at either end of UterNatlonal Legislature. He -would be a wor thy successor nf Jamea .K. Polk In the chair of the speaker of the House of Representatives, and hs would worthily- wear the Uk of leham (1. HJtrrta,or Edward W. Car mack at the Senate wing, f hope I can say this without imperti nence, for Kentucky and Tennessee have ever beeri twin In the American sisterhood. .vea.derhlp'.'itt.lhe American Congreas has Biwavif ten a vajruw term c-omiuvredr with what yh la In Kngland Thaddeua fttevens and Thomas H. Heed were neareet actual leaders our Con gress Jia ever known. Yet even these very ti- LSEWT-'il-1!!?!". SS!l. KS.re..uUan Jja,mpered and oc. r lunany uficwru py rffl'n-'iningy lis I in paii ivr ., tne inember of- their own party. They forced things. There was Mr. Carlisle, the ac tual leader of hi party in every t'ongreaa in which he sat. 'He convinced. Hi speech was the slmplem of nnv man of h! time. It con- LKADKRSHIP. I DO not recall a Utesmaa en tha House aid of Congress who eceuM beat Claud KUchta tor "looks' since Tom Ewlng. of Ohio. Roacoe Conkllng was th noet nuittflcsnt personal new I ever saw aanong the statesmen at hla Capital; bat there were old f allowa- who slated of etatenicnt, a laying down of general principle and a marshaling of an array of (acts. T-an-surJjiatjnni (larrett comes as near to that way of tiresentTiiga quentiB-as any Jither member of the present House I can name now He is growins man.'for he I a student and he haa industry He profit from experience with his fellowa. , Mr. Kltchin la lender of the House by virtue of the law of primogeniture He was senior on the committee of Ways and Means and thu the "leadership" fell to him like the pear that Is ripe fall to the ground. There was an excep tion to this rule Instituted by Thomas R. Heed In the Kirty-fnurth Congreas. That great man put aside Me re no E. Payne and promoted to the leadership ' Nelson Ptngley and th event Justi fied the Innovation. I call It "Innovation" not withstanding that Mr. Kpeaker Kandall had pre vicualy deposed William P.. Morrison put him off Waya and Mean and gave the Job to Fer nando Wood. The cases were not aim lifer. Kan dall sent Morrison to the roar because he was not In accord with him on the tariff "Question. Keed promoted Dlnglcy over f'ayne because he was better fitted for the position and I predict that ere the death by lapi.e of time of the Hlxty fourth Congress the Democratic majority of the House will regret that the example set by Heed twenty year ago was not followed and K!nl Oarrett selected for leader. To be aure. for a dramatic and volutrte occa sion Kitchln can beat Uarrett. That would have done admirably forty yeara ago; but we have fallen on time when "debate" la no longer mere volreful oratory. Go back to the war Henry Winter Davis was the very flnet orator In either house of Congress. Hut vocabulary was magnificent and It was ornate; ar- rathei-4 good copy of hi model, Macaulay: but who recollects Henry Winter Davis He must have been a very considerable man. He was ths head of- rebellion against President Llncojln In hi own parly. Mr, Maine hated Cookling -because Theodore Ttlton aald the mantle of Davis had fallen on Conkllng, for Hlaine was persuaded It had fallen on himself," When I first came here more than a third t a century ago, I waa told that Congress had never known the match for Henry Winter Davis as an orator. Who re member him Who haa forgot Triad St evert a. or Tom Reed? Who does not recall JohA, Ct Carlisle, or Roger Q. Mill? . ' - e - -. , Mr. t'nderwood has been, a very capable" leader of the House of Representatives. He u a man nf strong will. In the sixty-second Con gress he got a Donna Jalla approbation out of Claude Kltchtn for a tax oa wool In a Demo-: crmtie tariff, though ths Hon. Claud swere he would never . consent . In ths ucceedlhg"Coa gress tha Hon Claude opposed the President ra th repeal of the free, tolls for theX ship trust for lu craft passing through the Panama CanaL At thla moment the leader. Mr. Kite hla. Is op posing the President, who la striving to relieve tha situation by ths ship purchase bilk . I shouldn't wonder. If th Democrats tregre that Ftnl Garrett ta not the leader of the ma-. Jorlty la th fUxty-fourth Congees. . Waahlngton. rebruary I. . . The Rnad Drng F-vcr, An Ucnx' .vmblilon. nt of Nashville Home The road draa; fever la Hpread- inu. and It s a mighty good element or ambition to ponseaa. Mr. J. l Montartw4ine day last week draggrd the se-tlon of road leading south out of , tuwa . from Mamvlllt lu Utti w dam creek, and ttl ooka and rltlrs Itia. ne wroad . m -flanged Watch Fnr Coca 47 made Waxhaw Knterprtse, Dr. W. H. McCain a yerj profitable exchange of some corn for a mighty goW watch one night laat week. The deal cam about In thlr way. Ikibw unknown party or part lea entered the doctor crib during the hours when darkness prevailed and relieved hla feed room of about bushel and a half of good corn. Hut in his haste to get away before he waa discovered the thief b L a good ugh jeweled l.lslo B vemnl watch beside , the barrel where the corn was. Ilian Hall Ithe- - eommlltee of TIi 37E1 f eiT Mates, Henate to which th. falmer-Owen child labor bill had been referred had, reported the meas ure, favorably. ..j'u, itJiard to break the allied lob by force in- this .State. It looks; how ever, aa lf'wejdarl find In nalAnal" legialation a remedy for theJfttf of our State evila In child labor. jtllflrew a Hurr The Wirt on the lllaw asaee Valley Hallway is being pushed now and It aill only b a short time until th grading will be finished. This is a very Important line t-lhis section and that the work is progressing so satia actorily. "lay county and v:alleytowr township are certainly doing a great work for the iople1 of this entire aecTThW The trains wiU-iasjunjlinK oe, this line sometime, this summer "arut you will aeeI he great benefit it U Hi all our people. HIS BEST PHRASE. Tom 1 a great talker. Ray a lot of nice thing. Tea. I remem ber one saying of hi that pleased ma greatly. What wa Itt Good night. Cfcorue g I r 1 ar kicker who ar always . ad-anlred - - V. 'The colnolqncea ' of Mfe are In terceting." SS Mr. W. H. Swift, sec retary of the North Carollnahlld Labor Commfttee. "On the day first Im In the Senate for the considera tion of the Weaver child labor biii came the new that the lower House of Congress had passed the Palmer Owen child labor bill. The vote. In the Norttj.. Carolina Senate was c&t- poned. "Baturday the vote In th Nairth Carolina Senate Weaver bill was defeated. Wlthlu three hour came the new lhaL This hotel lobby at the Y arbor ough yesterday afternoon- wa enlivened by thr presence-of Vnlt'ed Htatea Attor ney Krancia' I. Winston. Naluaaily part of the conversation. -."Who Is to be the Itepubilcan nominee for the presidency?" he waa asked. "WhJ aald hp. "of course if Colon et-Reoee jccltwanta f hatjwmination he caji have it f.ir the asking." It seem a tKat the District Attor ney . was qouting from a Washing ton correspondent in whom -he ha great faith. Colonel Rooeevelt then carfTe in for reviefr by the crowd age. srmbled. First one thing and then an other aa said. It wa an interesting dissection of the Colonel. "Do you knwi.-' seked a gentleman, "I have often. Wondered why the word Arma Kfddi.n was used by Rooeevelt tn the last Campaign?" "That 1 easily aqw) counted for," said Judge Winston. ' "Colonel Rooeevelt I a great render of Scott' novel. You know he named" l "on after Quentln Durward, of the Scottish Archer, the hero of th ', J. noVeof that name Doubtless Colonel Roosevelt favor Woodstock as on of ' . the best of the hovels written by th . Wizard of. the North. When Crom well sequestrated Woodstock. the royal park and Dutcy Hall, "one-of his Commissi, mers was General Har rison. ' He i supposed to hav been the sliced. er of Henjamln Harrison, one of the Presidents of the United States. . He was Cromwell's right hand mart: He was of dauntless courage on the held, and of exalted enthusi asm-among the mUtary aainta and sectorise who composed th mala strength of Cromwell' army- He was . bred to-hi father's trade of a butcher. VERT GOOD Hi wsa the chtef lettdef of th Fifth PROOF, I Monarchy men and went far beyond the fanaticism of the age. Interpreted- - I Just danced six times) with yoUT I doat see any proof la that. leu Would- if you oaiy realised how yoa (Uac. The black fth Vagi a at th foot aad get anaay at kick,.- . -. Clt rmiru larV ra very fend at bot,R ' Revelation after hunwu yeu. Why. haven t "ande: considered that the second - - idvenl ol tne Measlah was at nana . nd that, he was the chosen Inst ru nent for establishing the new reign, or Fifth Monarchy, aa it wag called ; and was fated to win ft honors both torrential and celestial.. He had beea guilty of great cruelties and out ran es. It is aald the remembrance of these of' en drove him to frenxy. and ' he -outtv.h4,. array himself In hie reglmentaia. go to sums solitary woods- . i and conduct imaginary charges . against imaginary- enemies. 'When V aught disturbed him be toeoam aomee V thing rapt In the apirit and then he conceived that be was romi&andlnf a -reserve of pikes at ths great baTrte-aC , Armageddon?' At least that la thtrde-r-scriptlon given -of htm by Joaejh ' Tompkins, hi trusted ' eCTUlh--DouMleaa you can se the rearm- blance. At any rat that la where the Colonel got the Id sat To know, of -course, Amageddoa la la th tUbka, I MUedd.- e -J- ' V. w
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 1, 1915, edition 1
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