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THE NEWS AND OBSERVER. l-KIUAlf MORNING, APRIL 23, 1913, The News and Observer NO AMERICA BIGHT SURRENDERED. - state uwirtytsmr aat thjc navy. 0 I twery As? tm the Tea TL New. umI OWrar PUI4Jo Ce. . JOttTtrci DAniaAsV . " The answer of Secretary Bryea, which ta I -The eerrtee which M - Calveralty of North understood to b the Joint product of the See I Carolina ku dona for the Navy VU strikingly t. -; ' y . Newa aa Oinria asaSdJa 114-114 w. Mams stoat! ncucrBoviax Vmcml Newa PigMta-f I CdlMrlal Wnsai Ad--tsriw Pli sita-ial Urredatioa P tineaiM ..411 Bta I ratarjr of tutt gad tha president, to Count Ton fJerastorf, tha Qermaa Ambeaaador. to thla country, w the beat esproastoa of Antriet'l aplrtt of justice and wtadom aad eslf-rspreealoB- A strong man and a treat nation can afford to ba calm and - temperate In ail utUraacee. That la the atutude of president Wllaoa and of tha Unitad Statea, aad it la ana which should eommend lteelf to tha wisdom of tha people of thla greet nation. Whan Ambassador von Bern- atorff wrota tha not to which tha reply re brought out oa Wedaesday ta Chapel Hill, at tha banquet given on tha oceaaiaa of tha lata f oration of President Oraham.' la tha course of bla remarka ad toaatmaaur Secretary of tha Navy Paalale bad spoken of tha navy aa being- a great varvei-ty. Later when former President Yeneble was apeaking ha referred to tha fact that tha ralveralty at North Carolina had had something ta da witfe4 that because tha Secretary ef tha Navy Mi University man. eloelng hla remark with tha JW m9 ..in Kintal I thla country who aald tha Ambaaaador ought ta ha told to. Sntnd bis nwn h nnl n mmm end nthars FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS kaid oughi io b. vB hie peaaporte. a atateaman not conscious of power tnlglt have Kia hLuactumuN riucsi ferref to waa mads there ware many people In I query: "Aad now I want ta ante tha. toastmaster wnerw wouia oe nia navy nivereuy nut tor taa University of North Carolina?" . Secretary Daniels waa ready with reply. Ha said "that the University of North Carolina bad1 ,$1.M , MM Entered at tha PoatofBo at Raleigh, North Carallaa. aa eeeoad-claai aiaMar. Morning Tonifc (Jemao J. Walsh.) WORK never hurt anyone If it waa only broad enough aad deep enough in lta claim on human nature. Our extremely long. lived mea have always beta very hard workers. , e is K any wonder that a physirtaa gwta lm perl eat when people talk about the man and women of our generation doing so much that they are exhausting vitality r Tha trouble la they da not do enough. Their latereata are so faw aad so auperflcial that a lot of energy that pagtit to ba toed up la good work is dissipated wit his themselves and dote them mack greater haras, than would any possible amoant of work) that they might try ta accomplish with It. HE lieimj Hprlaur ahoald atir np all ancn to ... s- aahora eas-a, - hen - ee there la Turnip aates, not grata. The plow's an' with mat tW hoe la redt tlw - raMrvaesr treaty stated idle ta the artea. Red la Urn arraaa that wa-hea Ha pathway ta tha era; they're) planting SPRING IN EUROPE, sunt, not , what altall the harvest bef TheyVe pianUng aara, not pampklas, be BMNttaj the bright Kfwtng sky; Kryre sowing par dead eauttpfctiM who fought and knew not erajyi theyVe plsaitng asra ta rurrows, assoag Iba aoda and sUMsca, aad there the gopher bar' rows aaaoac the aoldlrra' boara. Oh, w hat fopjieh aaartag, la Karopr's aoddra plain, while hara the crops are growing In sua aad wind aad rain! la thla fair hunt the farmer la at taa; wheat with drills o'er there tha genu la araaor are pUatlag taea la hUls; they ptaat, the praeaat'a yard la, the VhsUaaa of thrtr Mffs, thai rammoa aa the tardea vartrty of atlfa Oh, i:aoc, oM aad hoary, yea ought to have awre eeaaei year agricaltara gory, that's now la evf tcwca, la vsarked, valaaad footlehi the seed la cart of style; the toots yoa aae are ghoallah, tha rofs yoall raise are vile. been tempted to make that aorf of reply. Not so President Wilson or Secretary Bryan. They were self-contained aad remained calm and temperate. They were net swspt off their feet avea for a moment. Thsae two mea have not acted rltbout full deliberation la tha matter. In all the diplo matic relatione between this country and Ger many and. England they have kept la mind all tha time that the people la both those great oountrlea, knit to ue by a thousand kindred tie, are In a stale of war, a condition which doea not give a people a clear virion. Each of th warring nations la so intent upon victory and feala that victory la so essential, that they have at times forgotten the International obligations and have spoken and written not one but many things that were beyond their powers and rights; but tha President Is big enough, and great enough, to understand this and to alwaya keep the American notea on the high plane of perfect neutrality and friendship and firmness. In no Jut or tittle has President Wilson aur rendered any American right, but he baa recog. nlzed that a great nation like thla must in wort crtst be cairn, and 4hat -ite atrengta Ilea ia Its presenting Its own posltlun with power and" with confidence thai In the end. vo when some people of this country criticise the policy, they will come to see that It is essential to the world'a restoration when the horrors of the war which now. angulfa Europe are over. Then it will be that tha calm and temperate position taken by. the President will be found to have been the correct position, and In that time there will come full Justification to- the course which is being pursued by the President in deullng With these matters which have tu do with tha diplomatic relations of the United Wales Sand the countries of Europe which are aow at war. DEMOCRACY AND EDUCATION. much mora to do with It thaa that, because It waa under tha admlnlatratloa of President Jamea K. Polk, graduate of the University of North Carolina, that tha Naval Aeademy waa established, that It la tha foremost educational Institution' of the navy, aad tha father of ail the educational policlea developed. And th It la that the University of North Carolina has placed Its Imprint upon an institution which has rendered, and which la rendering, a service of great value to thla country. Aad it will ba re membered that Ave tlmea North- Carolina haa furnished the Secretary of tha Navy. PROVED BY BOTH fclDKM. Is President Wilson strictly neutral In the war that shakes all Europe? If any havs beea disposed to ask this ques tion. It will be asked no more. Tha telegraphic dlapatchea in todays paper from Oermany and from Canada furnish irrefutable evidence of the neutrality of America, showing that it la friendly with all and has entangling alliances with none. The proof Is that the German papers aad tha Canadian papers agree that thla country la true to Its policy of strict aautrality.. , i . . ... A neutral must for a time expect nothing from either side. nut - the- day comes when both recognise and are grateful' for raithful ad herence to a policy of justice to each. "IS THE THIRTEENTH." Wa hear much talk from beguwned high brows or Democracy and education. We aee erldencee from able educators, who upon occa sions begown and becap themselves, about De mocracy and Education. In not a few colleges the real democracy In education la In practice. Unfortunately, we hear' more talk of it in great universities than we sea evidences of It. A new spirit haa coma, however, to touch many colleges and all the real progressives In educa tion. No longer ia the university regarded aa pinnacle or aa a cloister. Ita service must Ureal day It waa yesterday for baseball, waa It not? Of course we have particular refer ence to the thirteen inning game in Raleigh. What a lucky number thirteen Is. Especially when, anything with thirteen In It goes your way. And the thirteenth Inning yesterday gave Kalelth all kinds of Joy, for In It Durham lost and the score waa four to three. This Initial victory for tha home team tivea us opportunity to urn "pokeberry." and. wa are adorned with that this morning.. But aa we give It the "pokeberry" we also give warning that It had best look out for tha Durham learn. aa that is a husky bunch of hall players, and they are going after Raletgh'a eoglp. With the "pokeberry" wa present our contral ulettons to the Kalelgh team. It fought nobly and well, and beat of all R won. T There ahoali be no igTiwayDuniHffTtortIi t always le BHK lTIB6s-wntitTi ita walls and the Carolina witnout inert is employed a eompe- ' tent road engineer to have charge of tha work. I Better reada tad money saved will be tha result. Horn la the time for tha farmer to remember I ' '.hat the aafe thing la to practice dl varsities - ' :loa af eropa The farmer who raises food ;rope le the wise farmer. Would It not ba a good thing for the next j Doard of Commlaeionera of Raleigh to look over the-bills It pays out for the city and cut out the rnattera ef extravagaara which put thla sRy Into deblT- product it sends out will be the acid teat of its-worth, la lba. country, We had eloquent speeches at the inaugura tion of President Oraham at the. University this week on Democracy and Education. The beat part of the speeches on thla theme, handled so eloquently by President Graham and ex-Presi dent Alderman and others, waa that back of I their earnest advocacy of higher education aa a aervant of mankind waa their own practice demonstration of their faith la democracy in education, because they have put It Into actual practice, - The beginnings of democracy For More Onunty t'oau aeata. Charity and Children : Multiplied thousanda of North Carolina chll dren have gathered together at the county com mencementa within recent weeks more,, vastly mora, than aver before In any one year. We hope the time will come when there will be ex actly one hundred of these educational ralllea witnin tne ooraera at our state. Berrlea Via ParoH Post. It took thirteea Innings to do It, and yet the Raleigh fang may well feel delighted that the eow wa ReJeigh four aad Durham Jthret i In. the opening game, for Durham haa a ball team that daea business whea it gets into action. Wilmington Dispatch The parcel post haa accomplished much, ctrovtns of ersat eonvenlencs and henAt tn H education" nnV-well organised and practical people, and every-now-and-t hen some new feat' n i ki.Hh r,.-.,,,.. , - I ure presents iiseii. now we nna mat straw . ' ' " '" """" I berrlss can ha sent thai . The lirxm m.. uiv uni, met Alu.rnun miu jnoivvr, u lasil- Oa Moaday, the third day of May. the olty eleetlaa f Raleigh lake place and every voter. ia Raleigh should east hla ballot for men who will aot ran tha eity la debt or put oa bond laavee without the people paaaing oa the mat ter -at the ballot box. ' i v- ""f Cnallaa lagiie of profsaalonal hasabail cot ehT with a rush yeeterday and the attaadaaoe waa In so large numbers at the eaaaee that thia may ba regarded aa a siga that hatlasst la Improvthg straight along aad that tha .eaya of depress! oa aava pissed. Old Mr. Calamity had aa wan Uka a back Beat. ? Thia frees the Moaroe Journal la worth aara est aoaetderatlont "Of the H boys In the Jack. am Trauuag acaool a ear Concord, but IT of Iheta are from the eouatry. Pifty-nlna of them are froaa tewaa aad Mtiee aad 11 are from fac tories, whea the fact that the population of thla Mate le largely rural la takea Into eonsid eratloa It It at aaae aeea that it ta hot the touatry boy that gets lata devilmaat and hat U ta ta the reformatory- Idleness that's what rets the hey. htto the ways of the criminal." The New Terk Peat, discussing the matter of hla yaare aottoa aereage. asys: -Among tl aatlmatea aa to what the cut la cotton acreage wlU' be. It haa heed reported that -tin- Teaaa farmers mesa te redact thW acreage if Bar senv wane Oklabeeia will, probably make ia tut pf tl per eeat. Advice from Alabama aay that tha Bute will probably reduce Ita acreage St per cent, aad, moreover, that St area leruiaer wiu ae aaeo. it ia aald that the farmere ef that State bad not meaat ta make ee large a eat, bat were urged to de ss by the merchants who sapply their, wants." Engineer The plaa af Government Read tVioslow ta snars; tha Waahlagt on-Atlanta high war with Vac da ef red. watte aad bias en the telegraph aad talephaaa petes to aa eaeetleat coe. Vourieta wnald thaa have ae difficulty la f-i Jawing tha highway aad would aot be aa tired off tha yiMtMi liaa Dy ''tha aeaay handser-a tute conductors, went about the Plate like burn ing evanel; spVeklngln every "couhty-teat and calling to. tha people to open the doors of knowledge to their children and their neighbor's children. This leaven haa been at work, and while It haa not permeated, even our own col letes. and hardly touched some great universi ties, aa it must do before the whole State is leavened, thia generation haa seen a marked change and in Alderman and Oraham 'we have the beat exponents of tha belief that the college must mix with men to prosper .. There waa at the University banquet this week a practical demonstration of democracy In col lege life, that la notable enough to be aignia- rant, and which illustrates the beet spirit of the University, the spirit which we will wish to are find deeper lodgment ta all our college and Institutions of learning. Whea the Governor aad other, distinguished vleitora and alumni aat down to dinner theywere attracted by the ap- pearanoe of the waiter dressed la sailor-like white, who deftly and swiftly brought la tholr trayt with thelr-varloua eeereea and aerved.th dlnera as If they had made It a atudy and ex pected to be waiters all their Uvea. Their mag nifloent appearance auggeated the Inquiry, "Who are thaea splendid youag chapa serving the re- freahmeaUT" and the answer waa They. are sixty-two students of the University who have voiuntiewed for this eei-vtae." And concerning them the Information waa obtained that one la a leader of hla class In Greek, another In rri at he matic; othara are leader la chemistry. Boi of thrra are tha anna of mea of meaaa. All of them ar young men of brain and stuff, who will make their way In the world, aad ef the whole number of matriculates ia the Uni versity those slaty-two mea have no u peri ore la eoholarahlp and everything elae that cnakea for tha right kind of collegian.' It waa a Una example that learning dignities labor aad there Isn't any service that mea per form that University etudente are-aot ready te perform aad , capable of performing- oa abort notice. It waa applied democracy? la educa tion which was sees ta thoag sixty-two youag mea whe exemplify the beet that the University can give te the Vtate aad tha eeuatry. be too busy to fill Individual orders la thla way. but maybe some middleman might be able to . aether la soms.allhe loose coin, while fiienda up North would appreciate a parcel of terries much more than a aouvenlr postcard. Public Wante To Know. Klnaton Free Preea. Quire Interesting is the Information that comes from Kew York, growing out ef th Harnea-Itooeevelt controversy. In which It de velops that frlenda of both contaetanta art Im portuning them to bury their hatcheta, for fear that a pulitlo investigation will bring' out po- lltkai secrets, the revelation of which may meaa their final political undoing. If there are such secrets the public ought to know about them. Iet the auit be pressed and let's view soma of the skeletoaa , " Voting Ay MalL i Winston rleatlael. I , Ia at least one state of the Union the plaa of voting by mall la to he given a thorough trial, aad the experiment along this line-Is sure to be watched with Interest throughout the country. For many years there haa beea la varloua gtataa more or leaa. agitation for the adoption of a system that will enable traveling mea aad others forced to be away from home at eleotioa time to register their preference aa te candi date aad lesuea The new plaa ia designed to supply such a need and there Is no reaaoa why. with proper regulations. It ahould not prove decidedly successful. , bond If It U Crwei. ' " : Ureenehore Record. - The Harrison law controlling th aale of nar cotics Is curing agreat evil, but It is most erueL e e It's a hard cure, a harsh method, but a necessary ems. ' It may be painful to think af auictde, raaniaca and rtvtnc fiends Ja stralt jBrkets. la tha trail of a national law, but it ta aaaier ta roatemplate thaa ta think of the thou sands pa I house Mia who la another genera tloa would have gone to the dope Head's grave, who would have acquired tha unbreakable habit through negligence of a government that per mitted the sale of poisons. , , With eottoa nearly at tea cents it doea not I SDoear that It wilt ba lone before thoaa wha rw1e- Which fraea time te time wiU as ballt I Invested ia the "Buy a Bale" pwrchaee ef cotton l-i the big highway. Raleigh ahould gtve I at tea eente a pound will ba able to sell, aad rrompx ana aBort ee-eperauea te cap Wla. I pernapa at a profit. But the eottoa farmer who l-r la tha saave whtaj, aaaaaa -aauah fee th I alaata fat a big crop for thla year ahould re- r,i--. Tet,rit trl Will be hV h.l !hl imt I aiambw the, 1. f.n ..a mt i... i. r from Nrrlh Bsiilli tn4 fltraighlaweh bulh aa ta trive dewa the price of the s-.'s tt fc.fe H tat aeakkt ehtth wilt aeeeae. I lilt ares. What la Eaoagh Mower? ' Atlanta Constitution. , i-- ; . The history af money -ma king discloses fw instance af mea whe have solved the prob lem of eaough money. Omitting eaaaa of ea farced retirement from active monay-wtattng through advanced age w declining health. An- aneial history records few mea who "have with draw a from bualaeaa activity m middle life be cause they felt they had money enough. The matter Is, appareatly. aae of taetvtdual vteer point: wlthvMoat maney-gwttsrs there at ae limit but the tersnlnatloa of effort that cornea with th grave. -- ... Cornea new aad hitherto unpublished story of Joha IX Rorketelrer and hat eonveraatton with a former, standard Ot official who deetd. ed to retire, and. aa be pat itr to-par a whUe." gtltl vigorous and aetive ta hie middle life, he felt he had eaough and thov!t: t? re about I-ET THE QAM BE CLEAN u? - seeing aad enjoying tha world. "Why can't you fclay and work at the same time? Haven't yoa young mea In your office te whom you cat turn aver aad entrust your responsibilities T" Mr. Rockefeller la reported to have aeked. "No, I cannot work aad play at the same time," waa the reply, "for 1 would feel that I waa shirking responsibility." "And you feel that you havt enough money to play on and Juatify your ces sation of effort te accumulate 7" To which question Mr.. Rockefeller received emphatic af. firmetlve reply. "Well. I havea't." was Mr. Rockefeller's retort, whleh eloeed the conversa tion. It all goes back to the question of Individual viewpoint. With moat big money-makers the word "enough" know no limit; their money getting become a fixed and Insatiable habit It la Just aow ami then, scare aad far between, that there ia fouad tha maa capable of big money-making, wha knows aad appreclatee other and "higher thtnga tn tlfe and whoee 4la cernment and reaaoa teach him he haa a com petence, and more. 7w Tic cj nt6U4u tBy B. Bawarda.) A Big Egg. Enfield Progress. Mrs. T. A. Maker, ef route No. 1 sent to thia ofllae last week a large Minorca ban egg that weighed three ana one-half ounces, it measured T -l Inchee around the long way and e .- mcnee aroune. "Cook and hew." Hoke County Journal That tha girls are taking more in tereat in domestic acienoe la a plala fact and wa are -leased to aee IL To be able to cook aew well are rare arcompllahaisaU. And the ladlei will aid the health aork in thla UUtte nq tune wnoo iney an learn to cook. A BUSINESS MAN WHO KNEW HU SHAKE 8PKARK. , FEW weeks after the death of J. Pier s pont Morgan, Chauncey M. Pepew re lated to me several anecdotes which served to show how Intimate the relatloa of Mr. Morgan with the Veaderbllta waa. saying also that it began whea Mr. Morgan had barely reached the prime of life. To Mr. Morgan Is due the sueeeea of tha transfer from Wttttam M. Vaudsrbttt to eng. Itsh capilalisla of a large block of Mew Tork Central stock of tha par value of a little over llteto.tvf," aald aenator Depew. 'The trans action was the largest of the kind which up to that time had taken place representing a sale of American aeeuritiea of which oae person waa the owner to English capitalist.' Mr. Morgan handled It with wonderful aklll. and waa able te keep the plaa secret until It waa successfully oompleted. The money difficulties, as well aa tha aklll and strategy which a negotiation of that kiad. would Involve, were well understood by Mr. Vaaderbllt. aad the manner la which Mr. Morgan handled the transaction galaed for him the absolute confidence t4 the Vaadarbllta, and It waa a "confidence which waa never la the lightest shakea. It wa also the first of th great transactions te financing with whleh Mr, Morgan waa Identified aU hla Ufa "But whila Mr. Morgan handled th tranaac tlon there were an infinite number of details te he worked out. These were committed to K. D. Worcester.- who for years waa secretary of the New Tork Central Railroad Company. Aa error la the papera. a mistake ia figuring, aa over sight of any kind might have seriously Impaired the aegotiaNene aad possibly have spoiled everything " I "Mr. Worcester worked out every detail. His papera were abeolutely perfect. He wtnt tn London to supervise the transfer of the stock. and be performed that work with a akiil aad facility which matched the quell ilea of that kind shown by Mr. Morgan himself." - What Senator Depew told me reminded me of aa anecdote associated with Mr. Worcester which was related te me by the late Charles Plnaey Cos, who waa for many years the treaa- arer of tha Vanderbllt Haas that ran west from Buffalo. Mr. Coa waa speaking of tha extraordinary literary attaiaaaenu-whteh f haracterlaed - Mr, Worcester, aad said: -I a ever eould understand how aa busy a maa aa Worcester haa fouad the time te gala familiarity with the great writers Hla 1 k Bowled g of ghakeepeare waa wonderful aad be waa aa adept at quoting him aa waa Col. Ingersoll. "Whea Mr. Worcester went to London to tu aecvteo the traasfer of the Vaaderbllt atock, a tranaaraoa which would compel most mea ea sluatrely t concentrate their mlads upoa It, he took a volume of hakeapeare along with hire.- Oa th steamer aad while be waa dress ing In ths morning after he reached Loadoa be read a page or more of ghakeeaeare, and fro. queatly made marglaal notea poa hla -copy. It waa because be waa able to aave a few mo meaa from big business undertakings aad te give them to a atudy of oar English literature , that he amassed a urn a great amount of in for matlwa upoa that subject tnd, heetdea, be found that atudy of thst kind waa a mental recreation and exhilaration." - , (Copyright. 111. by M J. Edwards. All rights "- reserved.) . " Three) Tone to Acre.- Bt at Seville Sentinel K. Jl. Burke, who Uvea a -short distance eaat of town, haa a magnifi cent field of oata aad Canada aa The crop waa sown in Pebruary and tha promise now la for three tone of hay to the acre, according to good! judges. Pay a To Raiae Peedstnff'i. Yanceyville Sentinel. A good market can be -found right here at home for nearly everything our farmers can grow In the way of feedstuff a. Mr. Doras Page, who years age got away from tha one- crop system, had promised us bushsl of potatoet on subscription, but be cam In Monday and gave ua a dollar, explaining that he had sold all hla potatoes at home for fl.lt a bushel. Mr. Page aaya growing pota toes peats growing tobacco. 'fell 6TRB THINa, My aew spriag tat ia of kettle Jshh gray; How about the srmament, ra y deert I talak three hatplat la a plaarty.'. JIUDB awaken nr a. Didat yea ask mt t tasge through lift with yeat I did, Aad aew yoa espeet ms te put ta a good part af the time la cook ing, sweeping and dh waahlag. What f alaa wr tehee yea maa are. , i mis' i INCS. "I have Just beea dowa ia Colum bus eounty." aaid. Dr. W. A. Harper, of Elon College, who had made an addreaa at Bolton on the preceding day. "The thing that impresssds me moat In Columbus waa a great drain age project that waa shown to me. A tract of land thirty thoueaad acre In extent - la being drained and the work la one of the blggatlnlnga af the sort that I have ever seen. It win reclaim land that la ImmeBealy fertile and that will product abundant crape. r "I obtained a aew conception of what drainage meana for Eastern North Carolina from what I aaw thi week la Columbus, " added Dr. Harper. aee "Spring cleaning I tne style now. ae I gueea It anil do ae harm for the accountant to go. over the books of the county commissioner af Wake," aaid Commissioner E. C Beddlngfleld Wedneeday. "Of course there may be nothing te finds but It wea't hurt the publlo to know H. Ton know It used to be a oommoa saying among the folks ia the country that everybody ought to scald far bedbugs la . th spring time. While everybody did aot ex soot to find any of .the peatlfer-. i oua things, they held that aceldlng eould peasibly do no harm, and, then It might serve to scars any ef tha night workers away who ahould be thinking of coming. - "I doat know why what promised to he tqch a storm has become to quiet. It may ba a preceding calm;! or if may be the storm haa already paased. We shall aee whut wa a hall Jr -"The - Alabama law' f orblddlng the J advertising of liquor either by eigne or newspaper space baa had some pe culiar result in that Bute," aaid Mr. R. 8. Strfagfeflew, af Montgomery. "In Montgomery the ether day I paaaed a aaloon on the" sign of erhlcw tha words referring te. liquors had been marked out aad In their place were the words, 'Wi pay high P- but. we cannot tell yoa what wo bare to sell.' On the aita la front of another saloon were tha words, ToaiUvely no dry goods sold ' .17 "I heard eg a saloon-keeper hat-tag cash reglerer on which the word "bar appeared. The authorities In stated that under the law the word had to be effaced. It was concealed by pasting a place of paper ever ft . ?be Hquor law doea not go lata ef fect until July I, but the law placing advertisements under the baa ta el ready la operation.' Mr. H. I Wilkeraoa, ef Greene county, waa a Raleigh visitor Thure- i us -rveryoooy eiae wno tu"1 Weat yea fa from Greens la these times be had a ta the Charity Ban with met No, thaaka. Pro aot that chert V able. Tomorrow Pr. Cdwarda Bill tell of "A Wuce oa of Forged Signature." 3 OOOD START. Aad haa that tyeaag promster aeraered y t a r heart? No: but he la Mglaalag te head at that "one ef ear repreeeata tvt will call pea yea" Hat of r. - If- . etory ef progreaa to , relate. Tof Greene le 'building road and eetab lUming school on a acale that la giv- . lag the people of the county strong talking polata. . ' ' ; "Every township but one." aaid Mr. Wilksraon. "has voted bonds foe Permanent road Improvement aad wa have eAm f tha nnee sand -clar tharottghfarae that you will Sad any where. "Qreeae at going' 4e de Itt part' aid Mr. Witkeraon. "la reducing tha eottoa acreage. - I ea-timate that there will be a third fewer aeree la ootteer than there was last year. t The farmers Intended te phvn more tobacco, but tha shortage - or plants I going to result ia only abeec three-fifth of the eeetomary acreago In tobacco. Tranaplantlng of toaaoea will be fully twenty gey lata. There la an increase In the mi-reaa la erev it t oa.ta, 4a4 rye," . ;
The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 23, 1915, edition 1
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