Newspapers / Washington Daily News (Washington, … / March 2, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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MISIIKTBI HILT Itftl FCbLldHKi> IVUY AJTKRNOO* ??cm ?. mi.kt um i feehlastoe. N. 0.. mm d Mvm I. ltfl. ?t* Mota | .11 Womr Months l.H Ste Montha iM Om Tut iM 1 n n ? 1 ' ? " Subscriber* deal ling the paper Ata continued will p(MM notify till ?f~ lc* on dat? of aspiration. otfcetwtoe It will be continued at regular aab scrlptlon rat m until notloe t? atop la received. If 70? do not fat the D?Ur Km promptly telephone or Trite the manager, and the complaint *11] r* eelre Immediate attention. It |> our deelre to ?lesa* rta. All article? earn to tie Dally N.w. for publication mit be >l(ned by the writer, otherwlee they will not be published. TTE8PAY, MARCH J, HIS. Garden of Eden. The idea and Imagery of a Oinjn of Eden, an the cradle ef a race, came from th?i 8u merlana. who far mor? imagination than the Semite?, u the early t^fclcta prcve The Semite?, who a-?e frcu the northwest and trrve.-.-d eaai*an. pieced their Oar de; o Hi?n jn the upper Euphrates at ih? r ?. cra.lle of their race, b t*' an J liltt. a".d jjnirtiaia oi th-- di'is.o.'i i.Ttu fcui bra-clio* Ld the ?lam. In tho Frv.e cr. * j r > -*_a H?-e in h "M?: re4-o.) :or ?oc'tfty yr thtuuer. Otlier t/uoyke, Jr. reai lift- o- on lae '.better la reu .lfe, of course, ^ocause tbure x>e bat- to tal!* SacK). ran beat jull one du1 ol meseH hea one'* own *owors are utu'i |v Inadequate. When actual Cku-?m? of anxiety wfm overwhelming. 1? >ne can be made to forget 'bate faff ? rime. hoj>e come? Into the asceo dati* The beet of all remedies la perhaps the moet difficult, though not impossible. It Is to "rise superior" to your troublea?to ooDTtnce yourself, lift your.ielf. torcu yourself into the leel'ng of directorship?of competent and confident directorship of ali your affairs Add "with God'* help" If you -vant. to. fnr that ma* back up our wrrhy Intention? more even than our anc^tora began to reallre?-whatever ?hey professed to bellevt*. Thl:? u.e Ing of calm adequacy does much 10 ta ure cde-'.uacT, an'l v.ha; is c: perhaps lore importance, com^la poace ~Un . op llir TUvinw. advantages of good roads Energy of Farmer's Teams Conserved by Pulling Heavy Loada Over Com paratively Smooth Surface. There la no doubt that good roada tend to prosperity to the farmera who live on them Their teams are not *oru out with the effort to pull a IlKht load over a bad road, for they easily take a large one to market and Bave not oijly the strong'h of the team nnd wear of the wagon, but what la of more Importance still, toe time of the owner. He geta hla product to market more cheaply and that Item alone tends to more prosperity Then. too. the value of bin land 1b Increased by the fact' that It la on a well-made and well kept road, for the heaviest lax a farm er pays la bad roads. Everybody Benefited. flood ronds help not only the farmer by enabling hint to market his produce j when fhe market Is highest but tbey a 1*0 help the merchant, the railroad I company?In fact, every Individual In the ronnty Is either directly or Indl-! recti.) benefited. IS IDENTIFIED BY A suArtj Pennsylvania Woman Thua Estab-, Hshea Har Right to 8hars ' In Estate. Waynesboro. Pa?When an effort 1 was trad? recently to nettle the es tate of Mr* Rarbara Upas of this se>c-1 tlon. proceeding? were begun In the Orphans' court to declare Mrs Allca' Kohler Hooper, formerly of Hlghfleid.-1 and a legatee, dead. Mrs Hooper, ?ho left High field 20 years ago and had not returned nnd who, some year* nr", was married to a Mr. Ham, no ticed a few weeks ago an advertise nunt of the proceeding and Immedi acy wrote to the cleiii of the court# The only moans of Identification was a sear on her wrist which an nsHo with whom she had lived ss a glr| recalled. The Judges were satis fied wl'.h th?? Identification snd she will IKIDM Into her Inheritance. Regularity In Feeding, It Is equally as bad to ovsneed as It Is to underfeed poultry. There1 should be regular hours for feeding, and n??ver a feast today and a famine ir.rrr.r/ be allowed. A veld to? muob carb ne.ceoue food. Carbon fa oil, fat. starch, sugar, etc.- carbonaceous ma terlal. _ No I'se tft Try end Wear (Hit Your Cold It Will We*r You Out Instead Thousand? Weep riff - suffering Coughs and <V?Ms ?f?rotigh eegWrt and delay. Why make yoursetf an easy prey to serious aTlfliants and ep Idemtos as tfcg retult o| a a?gl*oiM Cold? ^ 9?ur: strength and ?ttallty unless checked In th# tAartfi stages Dr. King's New Discovery 1? what yon need?the Sr*t doss helps. Tour head clears op. roo breathe frs?ly. and you feel M mk hatter Boy a bottle today GOOD ROADS WILL PAY WELL la Nlse Yurt Inoraae* In Amount Paid for Improving Highway? Hat Over 250 Par Cant. (Jty B. D. ROUII, Colorado Kxpcrtrnaet Station.) The following U clipped from tba Reclamation Record: Approximately 9204.ft00.000 traa spent last year oo public roads Id tba United JUates, according to ?tatlaMca prepared by tke United Stataa depart ment of a*rlcultara. In 1904 tba tout) was only >79,000.000. In nine veara. therefore, tbe Increase baa been over 250 per cent Of the 2,226,842 mllea of roads In tbe United Btataa. 223.774 mllea. cr ap proximately 10 per cent are claaaod aa Improved. To Improve tba remaining 90 per cent may well seeiii a blx job. It la. Id fact, only made poaalble because the work really pagra for Itself. FVom material fathered by tbe United Gravel Road. States department of agriculture, it is no*- possible to prove not only that seod rords are profitable Investments, but to determine exactly what divi dends they pay. An investigator as signed to this problem In any given locality firm ascertains the extent of the territory that Is tributary to any main road, much sb one might ascer tain the territory tributary to Bome river. The next step 1b an accurate estimate of the total products of this territory?so much grain, so much to bacco, so much garden truck, etc. Of this quantity a cortaln portion Is con sumed on the farm; tho rest 1b Bhipped over the road in question. The whole calculation can "Ui^n be checked by investigators at the ship ping point to which tho mad leads, in general It has been found that ihe two methods yield much the same in formation?the total amount of prod uce hauled over the road. Next the length of the average haul Is calcu lated. the size of the load permitted by the character of the road ascertained, and the cost of teams and drivers fig ured. With these facts before him tho investigator la now able to .state positively the coat of hauling a ton of produce on that road, to express in terms of these "ton-railes" the freight traffic on the road, audi finally the total cost to the community served by the road of hauling Its goods to market. Armed with these d?*a It Ik easy to decide how much money can be profitably spent In Improvise the road and what are the returns that the investment yields to the commtmlty. . Valuable Oresn Manure?. The ready adaptation and rapid de-1 r*?lopment of cowpsse and soy b?sns make them especially valuable aa| green manures In systems of soil 1st I provement. NOT WISE TO TAKE CALOMEL] Dod son's Live rTone is Just aa ^ sure In results and always safe plpaaant In taste and has no bad after-effects. Aa a remedy for a tor pid liver calomel has more than met It? match In Dodaon's Liver Tone. This medclne Joe? not roughly fore? the liver on to perform ita work. It acta gently but aurely. Calomel depends for Ita power upon exlcltlng the liver to do more work, and often the liver la too *?ak to aland such treatment, and after taking calomel you ar* as rt result sometime? worse off than b' fore. Dodaon's I,Ivor Tone cannot caus' any of the dangerou? effecta that of ten follow the uae of calomel. It la entirely vegetable and pleasant to the tante, and Is suitable for children and grown people. <3frt a large boMIe for fifty cent? at i^Lee' Davenport's drng store uhder the guarantee tMt If 1t doesn't sat isfy you that It perfectly taVes the plsce of calomel you will be given TQ|f money beck with a smile right aVstfra store where you bought Dod ROAD BUILDING IN OKLAHOMA State Superintendent of Public In struction Take* Step? to Teach Boys Art of Construction. "Ni:*. to be outdone by Missouri aud Kuufiui. the stale of Oklahoma Is to ?ake up educational work In road .jii.Ui r.g." t?ald R. House of Mus uogec. while In Washington recently. "Governor Major of Missouri and Got* vraor Hodges of Kansas stirred the imagination and ambition of the boya of Missouri and Kansas by getting out on the roads and handling pick and shovel In the making of roads. Okla homa Is going to begin at the begin ning and teach the boy In the school how to build good roads. The state highway commissioner is co-operating with the state superintendent of puh lic instruction, and the latter lias taken up the matter wfth the county superintendents. "When t' ?? federal government had spent thousands of dollars to encour age BcleotiOc farming and when so few farmers adopted the methods ad vanced. the officials changed their planB and went after the boys in the schools. They sought to teach the new methods to the older persons through the boya In the schools, and u-> succee "If th>fi * farmers were made to real the advantages of better farming Methods through t'.ielr boys in the ?H'h.jo.a, H sccmB to me there is Utile d'.ubt they can be brought to apprec|> ute the great advantages that will re sult from improved roads. For that matter, however, the farmer ordinar ily understands that good >roads are An Improved Southern Road. advantageous. Education In the bene Ata of Rood roada pnrhapa would be more profitably undertaken In the pub 11c achoola of the big cities. It la the atate legislatures and the federal gov ernment that have failed to appreciate the profit* that will accrue from good roada. It la far better to apend money on food roada than on great armlen and navies, and U would aeem that the highways 'had better be mado parfaable before tUe government un dertakes to make the rlvera navigable, for there la more traffic over the coun try roada than on the rlvera." Otfor of Stale Fgg?. Ton cannot mlatake the odnr of ?tain or bad e*ga. To a certain ex tent egga like batter are auaceptlblo to bad odora. Bom? believe that tho egg abaorba odora after being laid by coming In contact with foreign aub stances For Instance a keroseno taste In e*gs would not neceaaartly Indicate that a hnn had been drinking knrosene Eggs that are expoae?l to odors of kerosene In some cloac back r*?oni' cr whoa? ahclle have become ?a.toratpd with the oil will hare a ker (w?.ip taat.e. Moat Helpful 8lgns. One of the moat helpful alyns of the present time la the attitude of the farmer and the hualneaa man towards greater permanency in building and Improvements. Thla la seen In road building. In the very widespread use of concrete on the farm and In the tendency to wards fireproof building* In all of the amall cltlea. Truly thei* are Nome places Where concrete ran be oafld to good advantage on your farm. Good Road Beneftta. Oood roada broaden our sympathy, teaaen distance and Increaae our uae tulneaa. Brings Market Nearsr. The good road brings Uie caarkwt hearer te y'ou^ SOME SWEET POTATO DON'TS Among Other Things Do Not Place All Your Egg* In One Basket?Sev eral Small Hills Ars Best. Ten good rules for the care of the sTrest potato crop, clipped from an exchange, are as follows: 1. Don't dig 'cm green; wait till the milk will not turn black when potato Is cut 3. Don't dig 'era when the ground Is wet; this la frequent cause of rot. we believe. 8. Don't let sour sap reach 'era; cut off vines the morning of first frost. 4. Let them dry b?fore hilling?In as far as possible. 6. Let them dry more after billing; cover lightly and bavo'vent for mois ture to escape. 6. Don't bruise them; carry to bills In cloth lined boxer 7. !H?n"t pour th--m: remove each ilmc *lth the hand^ 8. Pon't bed cut feed Ibem to the porkers I 9. Don't let the rat? destro> thera; break up their runs and beds | 10. Don't put all your eggs in one i basket; several small hills arc best. Filth breeds dlseaso. ? ? ? Keep the udder hair cut short. ? ? ? Never buy a calf from a grade ilro ? ? * Use vaseline ou the sbon-teated strippers. ? ? ? Isn't It time to burn the wash r... Use a brush. ? ? ? The dairy cow Is the suie.t t: 01.. maker on tbe (arm Itching cdws are noi com" ? .hey can't do their bi-s? The only way 1b to uii.l v<c:^u then'you know if she's a good n It Is not necessary to let the vail suck the cow more than a few days Daipy Note-s KindnoHs counts. Make beef 01* every grade bull. ? ? ? ?1 More cows will be fed on silage tbiB winter than over before ? ? ? 1 his is tho time to pick up good heifer calves to reinforce the dairy ? ? ? The most economical method of growing calves depends largely upon conditions on Individual farms. ? ? ? Unclean flanks and udders are tbe most common sources of contamina tion in milk. ? ? ? N*o matter how good the cow, the ehances are ten to one that the calf from the grade sire will nowhere nee* equal the covr. Pigs After Weaning. For pigs after weaning that have the run of alfalfa nothing will help them and satisfy them so well as a good All plop made of shorts and about one-tenth of cottonseed meal. Feed them some kaflr or mllo on the iide as dry grain so as to save some of the expense of having to supply all the concentrated food In the slop, Record? Help Farmers. -If farmora kept books there would he a great msny better ones than there are today. SAVES DAUGHTER Advice of Mother bo Doubt Pro *enU Daughter'? Untimely End. v Ready, Ky.?" ? was not able to do anything for nearly six months," writei Mrs. Laura Bratcher, of this place, "and was down in bed for three months. I cannot tell you how I suffered with my head, and with nervousness and wofTjanly troubles. Our family doctor told my husband he could not do mt any good, and he had to give it up. We triec another doctor, but he did not help me. At last, my mother sdvlsed me to take Caraui, the woman's tonic. I thought it was no use for I was nearly dead a d nothing seemed to do me Sny good. But I took eleven bottles, and now I am able to do all of my work and my own washing. ' I think Card? s ttif b?*t medicine la tr.e world, toy weight has Increased, and I look the picture ok health. " If rou suffer from any of the allmenti peculiar to women, get s bottle ol Cardul today. Delay Is dangerous. We know it will help you, lor it has helped e* many thousands of other weak women In llfi past 50 years. At all druggists t9! OUaanoofa M?4Jdn? 0#.. La41m Doc*. Owtttnoon. Twin., lor Str*** ?*/#.# on twr mm ond #4 p??? book. Hotpi **f?r ^ ? 'sla wwwar. H a IM CONSTRUCTING A PLANK DRAG Road Implement Often Mad? of Lum bar Instead of Loga ? Two Horse? 8ufT1clent to Haul Device. Draga ara often constructed of planka Instead of loga. The pink should be atrangthened along the middle lino by a lz? inch atrip. A triangular atrip may be uaed under the lower edge of the blade to gl^e it the p ropar cutting elope. Usually two horaea are enough to r?H a drag over an ordinary earth roatL The team ahould be driven with one horae on either aide of the right-hand wheel track the full length of the portion to bp dragged and the return made over the other half of tlir roadway. The object of thle tr-iuiru-nt la to more earth toward N' e nter of the roadway and raise UTRdnall? above the aurroundlng While this ia being 'acoom -b. <: i?*1 tnudholea and ruta will b<s '" I. : M ? which trafTc will pack the earth. Horae Cara. Don't v hip the horae If he la afraid. Talk gently to him. Don't forget hla salt. Don't put a rough, dirty bit in hla mouth, nor a frosty one. Don't hitch hltn In the cold, unprotected by blankota, and hitch blm ao the wind will not be in hla face. Notice how Worses In a lot always turn tall to a cold wind. Give him enough to eat of a good, wholesome food, and all the good water he wanta. Harm by Bad Roads. Muddy roads always add to thn dis tance to inarxet anu cut the profit? on p.'oauc?. notice of sale. <?< bil r and by virtue of h Morij ?!*?- dnt?ert Si'pl^ml'fr 17. 1914. froi: l?~.!*v A Wall to ihe under^ighr . F T Wcolard. which Is recorded the Register's office of Beaufort ounty. North Carolina In Book 1 J nape 16. the undersigned will se1 | at public auction for cash before thf Court house door of Beaufort county, X. C.. on the 12 day of March. 1915 I at 12 o'clock noon, the following de scribed real estate, to-wlt: A certain piece or tract of land ylng and being in Chocowlnlty town ship. Beaufort county. State of North Carolina, and described and defined as follows, to-wtt: That certain piece or parcel o' land on which Daisy A. Wall now re M'.des lying and beln* in the town of; CThocowlnlty, N. C-. the same beln* composed of four lota from whr Is known a* the Perry Place; two j of the said lots having been convev i ^d to her by W. E. F. Patrick and j the other two lots baring been con veyed to her by Hill and Jones, hot1- , ?he'lald deeds being recorded In thel Register's office of eBaufort county, j ard are herein referred to and mad? a part of this conveyance. This 11th day of Feb. 1916 F. T. WOOLARD. Mortgagee Harry McMullan, Atty. 2-12-4wc. NOTICE OP SALE FNDER DEED OF TRUST. Under and by virtue of the power of *ale contained In a certain deed of trust oxecuted on February 5th, 1909. by J. H. Qrelder to W. T. Hud nell. Trustee for Lona B. Hudnell, which said deed of trust Is record ed In Book 154, page 863, of the Beaufort county records, which is hereby refered to for particulars, default having been made In the payment of the debt secured "hy said Instrument, the undersigned mortg agen will, on Friday, the 12th day of March. 191B. at 12 o'clock noon, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door In Beaufort county, the following de scribed tract of land: A certain tract of land lying and i being In Richland townshlo. Bean I'ort rnnnty. herlnnlnr on the Sandy t .undine road at Wm. Mourning'* rorner. thence N. 2 1-2 B. 5 28 pole* ?o fr??fd Monrnlnr's corner, thence .V F ?9.8* nolo* to a ww*et rnm, T. n MMv??tte'? corner. ?hence alonr ??i(l MRohemon'* end Rop r>er's line N. 42 8-4 W 82? 4? pole to ? corner fn th* Savannah, thenc? wMb Poher?on's Bonner's and A. D Bearham'a line to a large pine In the ?'ead of Second Out. A. R Bench comer, thence 8, 8ft 1-2 W ,10 0? nole* to the T?lpVf??T ??osfl ^fb^ncft with ?ald road SS 48 F ?ei tn a corner In P. V -?on'? I'nn thenr? w'*h **'d I't"* *? -1 ?? 4 tr on note? fo re1 ?-?? r?f ?<iM V warren'* corner ?'?"nop with *(>?( 'lin ?UM ?* t?" 1-4 V "?A nnli>? to *he 9?nrtr T,*ni1lni l?oKd ?h?n with the Sandv T/end'n* road to the beginning, containing 2RR acre?. , It being the nahie land conveyed bv deod to J. H. Orelder by Mrs. Do na R. Hudnell on February 5th, 1*08. This Feb ?th. 1t1?. * W. T. HUDNFLL, Trustee. Mortgagee. Ward ft Orlmee, Atty?. l-l-4n MAKING PROFIT IN POULTRt Fowl Gives Good Account of Heroelf j When Brought to Block?CarMfnge of Two Barrod Rook Hon*. : - - ?? intnck? In the poultry raiting d opart moat o 11 tho Farm and flroaldo. B. F. W. [ Thorpo, aaaoclato editor of that p?k| Ucatton. writes a little article In whlcb be tells as follows what two hens earn Id the course of a lifetime and what they were worth when killed: "The dual-purpose hen gives a good account of herself when she comes to the block. Two Barred Rock hem recently uned for Sunday dinners real ized me $1.32 and $1.2G~ respectively, when sold direct to the consumer for 24 cents a pound. "One of these hens was two and one-th^fd years old, and the other five and one-third years old wfcen killed. * The younger hen laid $4.50, worth eggs (18 dozen reckoned at 26 I cents a dozen from November. 1912, to November; 1913. The older hen.| during her last two years laying. pro-| duced $8.31 worth of eggs (33*4 dozen ai 25 cents per dozen). ? The younger hen. after thorough i CMeful roasting, was said to be tender und toothsome with flavor to match. I "In addition to the returns obtained above mentioned from these two hens ?as fully a pint of oil. In value equal :o a pound of lard foi shortening pur V0A4S." PROPOSE MONUMENT TO CAT Residents of Old English Town Would Remember Feline That Saved | Soldier's Life. London.?The residents of the quaint old Pembrokeshire town^of Newport (In England) are discussing a proposal to erect In the grounds of its feudal castle a monument to the Frcncb cat which saved the life of Lieutenant Lloyd of the Grenadier Guards. After becoming detached from his regiment near the French frontier the officer found refuge in an outhouse, where he remained in an exhausted condition for three days When be was found a cat was curled round his neck, and hli rescuers say that but for this cat he would have per ished from the cold. Weaning a Colt. To keep the foal growing well after it Is taken from the mare, means that it must be taught to eat long before it is weaned from Its mnthsr. It Is a fQry sitnplo matter to teach a colt to eat from the mother's feed box. If it Is low enough for the smsll colt to reach. When It has learned to eat a 1 little grain, nibble at the bay In the monger and pick green grass from the pasture, the mare's milk may be taken from It with very little trouble. Fresh Blood. Fresh blood In your flocks Is neces sary If you expect to raise strong chicks next year. Inbreeding will soon ruin a flock. Know the Piano ?and the man yon bay It from 11 does not pay to Jump baphar ??rd In the matter of selecting a piano?you have too much ?it Htako. money and ftztnre satis faction. You know our reputation for Integrity and fair dealing. We arr here to stay and make xoorl Your Interests and oars ?r? identical; consequently, rou ? an rely upon oar repre 4*ntMlona- - ?'Vv- :j Make the home circle as attrac ' ve as possible; give It the CHARM OF MUSIC, that restfnl, elevating <hartn which creates purity of thought And Induces hlflier Ideals. Chas. M. Stieff Leon S. StttU. Mgr. Barred Rock Hen. w Business Cards B. W. OABRK. M. k \ ? WlU.IOUal - - ' AM> t -h? rrwnfcwr 0? im ?r?r Inn'a Bo ?T?? to II riRRmnrmi w a >aufhlji4 -ko?w Bid?, fhamm uT P. a Box Mt\ M.?N; _ 'Umno. M C. DR. KBKK? * "? "Vm. OSTEOPATHIC PHT8IOIAW. 0ATARRHA1/ x DKiFNttS, Oil r o Die and Ntrro. ? Bfealilfy Daalfl-Wmn Bid 14 ,nf <?7 and FH(S% '* Hour*? ll.lf to IS.SO* 1 10 4* Phone S8S. H. 8 Ward. J o nima J). Qriaxw. WARD A OBDUT, Washington. N. 0. Wa practice ta l be Court ?i the Kini Judicial Diairici moo the Federal court* W. C. RODMAN Attorney-at-Law. Washington, N. C. BARRY McMULLAN. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Attar January 1st, 191?, Lauf hlnghouae Bulldln?. Corner Second and Market 8ta E. A. Daniel, Jr. J. B. M.nnlnr L. C. Warren W. W. Kltchto DANIEL A WARREN. MAN. NINO * KTTCHIN A11 orney ?-a t - law Practice In the 8uperior P*der a! and Supreme Court* of *hi> State A. D. MacLeaa, Waablniton, N. C W. A. Tbonpaov, Amrora. N. C. McLEANA THOMPSON AtfOraryi^at-Law, Aurora and WashtaftdB, N. C. EDWARD L. STEWART A t torney-a t-La w, Waahlnfton, N. 0. Norwood L. Rhnmoni W. Ii. Vnnsrtian SIMMONS A VArnHAN A t t nrvey a- at-La w Waahlnfton. N. C. Jno. H. Small. A. D. McLean ' Stephen O. Bragaw, W. R. Rodman, Jr. ? SMALL, MaeViEAN. DRAG AW ' A RODMAN ? Attorneys-at-Law. Office? ot erf J. F. Tayloe'a 8tore ? Washington, North Carolina. ? G. A. Pmi.I.IFB A BRO. FIRE INSURANCE W A SHINOTON, N. O. ? ? ? ? e * ) ? e GEO. J. BTUADBRT A t torn ey -at ? La w. Market Street Waahlnfton, N. C. JOHN H, BONNER. Attorney.?*-Law Waahlnfton, N. 0. I In a RuNlin Church, n,. Interior of a Ruanlan church la ?utapokonly oriental, (or It cooalata merely of a (orgeoua ba'l and a aano tuarj?, without an> a^ate, an that la tha ruatom In other te;7>ple?" Thera in neither an organ nor * pulpit In the fluaaiun church and th* T?t>iplr' cr? ?nony la one rooHfly of musk*. rhaqV >ng and apecUcnlar kina hloh remind one of a&c* ;j? Kicyp Mani dancing In their teipplea For mua|e there la a choir of br>ya and 'dan In aU the Ruaalan aerrldea. Feme the Dominant FaeUr. In, n apefch dalWered In 1IH, Lord Dnfferin aald: "Ona oonrlctlon ha* been borne la upon \?e darluf my 'on*1, contact wjth the auUldc wotjd? that In aplte of ChHtUliiky, dTlfita ?Ion, of humanitarian phfloeophfaa, of ?he teaaAna of hfttory and the httt* ?1 oerltnce of the mora naapt paet, force and not right U tha dominant factor In human affair * L* , U would ha madnaae on oof part to ha ao mlalad .?riT?<ta4?l br ft*? Mi of ?nttffe otttfctote >bM ?!??*? mrilk aooh? p?4lt ?k> km M a*.** 4oncl *zp*Tton? of tha ml, kwi rrwl condition? of udoMl njatane* m not to mttliln I? fan rigor. Wr 'm m? lan?, tb? prcptntlaM i -n * .m?j
Washington Daily News (Washington, N.C.)
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March 2, 1915, edition 1
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