Newspapers / The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.) / Sept. 21, 1906, edition 1 / Page 2
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--r- '- ' ' ' ' ' i i I 1 1 1 1 1 t r t i iT 5 - 4.. HI 5 By WALTER CHAPTER XL 11 Continued. "I know a mau," said Dittmer, "wlio -will lead ne five, or even ten shillings -oa Monday. My frieud will also pay me back two shillings out f my loan m the "same day. Perhaps our land tidy would take you into the house, bat she makes rules and will admit no ladies at, all to her lodgings. But it is Iupossibi( Katharine you cannot pass tie whole uight upon n bench. It is impossible," "We must." said Lily. "If you...lja ot any money, there is no help for it. If that were all, what matter?"' "In that ease," said Dittmer. "I shall pass the night upon the bench with .jroa. Himmel! Ckwrid I go home and leave you Jaere-by yourselves?" He tnroed and walked with them toward '"Sit. James's Park. . r - - "Oh. Katharine!" said Lily, "what a difference what a difference it makes to have a man with us! I feel some- mw as if we should pull thi-ough our troubles. I don't know how it is to be -Aane or whv we should think so. But T Be inspires confidence. Courage, dear, we bare a man with us. Oh! why don't 'tfeey keep a man at Haiiey House, only -in order to inspire confidence?" They began their night at about half .-past seven, when the place was full of people walking through, but ,the giiis were tired. They tied their handker--ebief s round their necks and sat close -to?rether. Lily on the outside and Kath arine between her and Dittmer. by bich means she was a little protect ,etl from the cold. A night in the open air in the month f October may be enjoyable under cer tain conditions, whicli must take the ifrtrm of thick blankets to begin with. TRut it cannot by any stretch of imag ination be considered warm. The re--volsion of feeling, however, with the -two jtfrls at meeting with a protector, -the change from despair to confidence -rbich Dittmer inspired, made them suddenly gay. They laughed and prat--tled; they made little slUy jokes which pleased them all -three; they seemed to passersby like a parry of young peo--ple perfectly happy and without a -care; just as if their limbs were not caching all over, and their feet were Tiot getting as cold as a stone, and as 'If tney were not desperately hungry. "It Is "nine o'clock," said Lily. "Time "for supper. . Herr Dittmer. will yon :JoIn tis? We have a beautiful supper, made altogether of the finest "wheaten-meal,- exquisitely prepared and most -delicately baked till it is a .beautiful trieh brown. It consists partly of crust and partly of crumb. Pray which por tion do you prefer, or shall I assist you to a little of both without the stufiC ling'i" and then these foolish girls (laughed. They were safe. Dittmer '3iad them in his charge. They were -qnite safe now. Dittmer refused to share in their sup er, because, he said, mendaciously, he 3iad already made a copious meal of 'Thread and sausage, which would serve Mm till the morning. Then the girls -at half tha bread between thenn and wrapped up the rest for .their break- At about ten the number of passen eera greatly diminished. About the czme time it grew much colder; a little ? -riad sprung up, rattling among the ; psarae leaves ot the trees. ' Katharine kept dropping off to sleep and . waking tiBSain with a start Lily seemed; sleep rSag. soundly, and, . Dittmer ,wa s snok-; 9ag: a cigar stolidly. . At last Katharine Iropped her head and fell iito a sleep which she did Dot awake till mid night, when she started into wakef ul- -ness, , Dittmer . Bock, still v sat . with a. -iigar between -his lipaC patiently-as'if mothlng was the matter." "You are cold," he said. "Take my liand and run a little, or jumpJoost Jomp.'p.Katharine tried just:td jump bat she waft too "tired either to 'run "or . -to-jump. She was desperately cold. Xaly. fpr her part, seemed to mind ; A j mothing. v AlsoKathkrine ponged fwith vi f i-iri, inteaeyearningto lie dowV-and3 rtretch herself out. ' Then Dimmer. showed.tthc ingenuity - -f man. Wi j i He made her lie aloncr the ipnilvvh?r.f ' Itead in Lily's lap. He wrapped her jB&irts tightly round "her feet. He found' r pair t glotes lii-:nis pdclBt-te!iwor.4 t twelves. i -think ad put them on -that she had''a double pair. V Andjthen -'I '- ff - Ponced-his wn handkerchief a " i large colored-"silk hjrodkercaiefb? a, . 'i- patriarchal- character and 1 tild " it ronnd her. neck and. pyer her . head. - v:, rstly; .h sat dowiaf fcer fet;a,hd laid. ne efiirtg of hisereat overcoat" over $ r hem,,so tl?at shetfight be sfilimore, itwtecieu ironv ine coia. "Xowhe,said. liatchen.?' ' 'schlaf en sic' ?rohL He. Righted another c!gar remem 1er that they were cigars of Hamburg, jaot of Havana and Katharine dropped tr to' sleep again, y . , - She did not wake up till Ave o'clock. The young German still sat patient and -resolute, his hands in his.poekets: he wasneariy. irozen with the cold;".he, Jiad turned up the'collar of his coat: nd he bad not slept for one single .Mjment during the whole night. . e- "Dittmer,'-' said the girL :"Ja; I am awake. ;sieepon, Katchen; rit is only five d'clock.".. - ' - Ko I have slept long enough.. And tfef sp-. f is very hard."- She ot up and' vAooVed about her. It was stilt uihi; ,,'""V BES ANT. i by the lamp light she saw that all the benches near them were similarly occu pied with sleeping figures. "Are these people all as poor as our selves, Dittmer? And, oh! you have put your gloves on my hands and tied your handkerchief round my neck. Oh! it is good of you, Dittmer." She took his hand. "Yesterday I thought I had not a friend in the whole world except Lily. And I forgot you. Forgive me. I forgot that you promised to be my brother. And you have thrown your sreat coat over - me and are sitting without it. Oh! it is a shame. Put it on directly." '"Katchen, you must not forget. It is true that at this moment I have no more than eightpence, arid tomorrow is Sunday, yet I will find something. Listen to m? plan. Trere is a man beis- from Hambtti'lievissed to work foimy father's Delicatessen-Handlung; he vcame to London to make his for tune, and has already a large baker's shop of his own. I will go to him; I will ask him, because he knows me. to take you into his house for a week or two until you can find a better place. The baker has a good heart; he will weep when I tell him your misfor tune. Katchen, it. was very wrong to forget you bad a brother." "I will never forget it any more." Dittmer kissed her fingers. "AH that I have it is not much is yours; li All' my brains, all my knowl edge, all my work is yours, Katchen. You are my sister, you are also the only womaa in the world whom I shall ever love. Ja, my sister I know. But for me there is not other women in tht worid." Katherine made no reply. The tears rose to her eyes. Perhaps, had he pressed her at that moment, gratitude would have suffered him to change the title of sister. But he was too loyal to take advantage of her emotion. All this time Lily made no sign at all of-being awake, or of hearing any thing. She sat motionless and appar ently sleeping, just as she had sat ali the nisht. Presently the dawn appeared, and grew gradually and spread, until an- other day was born. "On Sunday morning," said Dittmer, "bakers sleep late. I go to seek my friend at seven." "I do not know," said Lily, starting up with animation, "that I have ever passed a more delightful night. I mean it, JCatharine. It was cold, I dare say, but the past is now done with. . We .have broken with respect-; ability; we have spent a whole night out, sleeping in the park. Whatever happens now, we can never be gov ernesses any more. We have lost our character. Nobody would employ a girl for a governess who had slept out all night. I rejoice. We have got a man to advise tis. Let us eat up .all the rest of our bread, and then we will go to find the baker. We are already on a lower level; we can now dovany kind, of work. I feel as if I could marry the baker and take the money in the shop." She divided the bread "into three portions, but again Dittmer refused his share, and the girls finished it. "And now." said Dittmer, "I will go to prepare the mind of the baker. Wait for me here; In one hour I return. Thenryou will find repose while you look about and consider what is to be done next. In one hour . I ncome back; Remain here.-without moving and I return; intone; little hour t return. Ja. I komm." " . CHAPTER Xlt, . Iy THE Fog. . rnclsbode awaylnthe, yellow light of the' autumn morning;' , , . ,."He is gone' said Lily. "I feel as it "I was goin,o despair again." . , i'-He wiirbe 'back soon! let us walk about. TSut we will keep! near this place- for 'fear of missing iiim. T' '"" "Katharine" no one ever anticipate fid, prophesied and4realized the future so clearly i and go Vwhwlly &u Lily "L understand exactly what s going to happen. We shall go to the baker. He;, .will 6e, of course, a mastet baker, the Oueeh's chief baker, perhaps. 'He will be a friendly baker, and he vwill ! talk EngUsTT much worse than Dittmer r we ahalf stay' with him .for a eek rtwa," and -then we shall go Into the shop and 'tx&p n w(t)rrn1;,::oTpCThaps sell loaves and rolls and buns jicr.dss the counter. . L shall like selling .the buns better than, keeping "accountsiBut you will keep the accounts;- Either occupation will be much better than teaching horrid chit drejl ?And then", you know' when we. have, quite got used to the life 'and i forgotten? all about tHarley street, and remember only the misery of starv ing gentility, there .will come, along a, handsome young baker, sof Germain origins and .wo shall that is," I shall go off to church.-with him, and keep his shop for him. ever after." "It .will be an honorable life. And oh! what does It matter to you and me now whether we call ourselves gen tlewomen or not?" n ;-jotmn, , my dear. .-, But I wish I Dittmer would come back.' , u nere tne' log came from I know not. But it. fell upon them swiftly and unexpectedly. I-'irst It tuvned the sun into copper disk about the; size of a warming pan. and then It shut him but from view altogether. And first that fog. blurred the, branches of the trees, and then it clothed them, and covered tnem up with white clouds, and then it became yellow, and caused the peo ple who breathed , it to cough and choke, and then it became suddenly black yith the blackness of midnight. -Katharine, let j stay quite still. Let us sit here and not move for fear of losiug him. This will not last long". It was a terrible fog; it was the well known and historical fog when the peo ple could not attend the morning ser vice, or, if they found their way thither, they found that the fog had filled the church so that nothing could be seen except the nearest lamps, and if any were in the streets they either stayed where they happened to be, or they rambled miserably about losing themselves. It was not until 3 o'clock next morn ing that it cleared away, and peoplo were able to look about again, and to see the clear sky set with stars, and the ghosts all flying away, and one? more to hope. By that time, as you will" see. it was too late for Katharine and for Lily. They sat on their bench for an hour, hoping that Dittmer would grope his way back to them, with news from the bafcer. - , 'He was on his way back to them, with the best of news. But the fog fell upn him. as upon all the rest of the .town,, and caused him to stop and con sider. He who in a black fog stops to consider is lost, fpr he turns round and instantly Torgets the direction in which he was walking. Dittmer Bock dia this, and instead' of marching straight toward St. James' Park, which was not far from the baker's, and in a southwesterly direction, he turned north and walked off resolutely In the direction of Edinburgth. So that when the fog cleared he was already well on his way to York. The girls waited in the Park while the hours crept on slowly. "If we do not move." said Katharine, "the fog will lift and he will come back to us. Let us wait." "I am hungry," said Lily, who had the day before been so brave to face starvation. "I must eat. whatever hap pens. Katharine, will you sit here while I go and buy something? I am certain that I can find my way back. We will spend all our money, and then trust to Dittmer." "Oh. Lily, you : iust not leave me alone." "Then come with me, Katharine; we shall, not be gone five minutes. I'can find my way blindfold. To be sure, it is blindfold. We keep" quite straight along the railings, and we get to Buck ingham Palace Koad, where there are coffee houses." They kept along the railings without much difllculty. then they came to the corner and had to cross the open place before the palace. And now the trouble oegan: after what seemed to Kath arine half an hour they found them selves not in Buckingham Palace Road at all. but in front of more railings. The thick brown fog grew darker and thicker; then - a terrible bewilderment fell upon them; they knew not which was north, south, east or west; they knew not from what quarter they had come or where these railings -might be; and there was nobody to ask. They were lost in the fog, like Dittmer him self, and like every human creature out on that terrible Sunday morning when the wayfarers wandered in the fog like those poor lost creatures who wandered in the desert, round and round, only to come upon their own footsteps again, or those who are lost in a Canadian forest, and turn in a circle round and round, while they think they are marching in a straight line. "What shall we do, Lily?" "Let us walk along the railings; we shall find something." They stood beside the railings, not somewhere; it must be into the park; but what part of the park?" "We are lost, Katharine," said Lily; we must wait till the fog lifts." They waited, but it did not lift. "Where does Dittmer live, Kathar ine'?'' "I do not know." "Where is the offic in the city?" "I do not know." "Then we are lost indeed, if we can not find him." They stood beside the railings, noot daring to move. Nobody passed by; they were well off the pathway. The fog -deadened sound as well as sight. It wasj cold and damp; the f og was in their throats and In their lungs. ., , , m Presently lithe-: fog got - into their brains as welL ? Then one of them, the stronger, began to have visions, arid (to-jSfe spirits i which marched! past; a' procession of devils , who mocked, and oil omen wtbSvrurig their hands and wept, then' more devils and more weep-; lirig women. ' iShe kept -none. of, these visions to herself, but kindly communi cated, them to her companion, who had eUpped down and was. crouched, cling ing. to: the ralL; on, the, cold ; ground;"' ;."fhey are the women 'who seek f o? work and find lione, Katharine. Look at themjjthere is one as old 'as Miss Stidolph, and here are two like Miss Augusta and Miss Beatrice, but they haven't got their annuity, and "there are -two . like ourselves, vo The devils inock them and drive theha -with' whips. Oh Lit is dreadful to see them.' Do you , hear, what they are saying? This Is hat ydu were born for; nobody wants your there is liothinffHhat-yott-can dov ryou; will have to go on.Jike.this all your lives ; you, will live an immense time; every day you shall feel hunger and; privation : and disappointment. There is no love for you; there is not any hope for you of being 'cared for and carassed, with" strong "hands to work for-you." No! no! These things are for other women not a ' bit better than .yout Are you listening, Kath arine?" - - , r -Katharine moaned in reply, -1 . '. (To be Continued.) . '. During a wedding at Grafenbaum. Austria, lightning struck the church f. and .tore away the bridegroom's right Green Crop Fertilizers. Every, farm can be improved in fer tility, even when manure is not used, by turning in gTeen crops. The proper system is to use fertilizers when the manure is insuflicient, but any farmer who will plow under a green crop every year, and use lime on the land, will gradually enrich the soil. The sheep are good friends of the farmer, put if they are confined within poor fences they will be anything but friends, and will generally turn out to be a full-fledged nuisance. They will -not only aggravate the neighbors but will aggravate their owner as well. A little time spent on a poor sheep fence can generally be put in at good profit. The Witness. The Fence Corners. The farm on which the fence cor ners, and strips along the fence, are kept free and clear of weeds might not be possessed by an extremely prosperous farmer, but most certainly he is an intelligent one. The man who can see the value of such things as these is one who has the gift oftentimes acquired of looking a lit tle way into the future. The old say ing that "a stitch in time saves nine" hardly applies to this because of the fact that a weed that is killed before its seeds mature saves thousands, and in some cases millions, of the seeds which that plant would have produced from being distributed by the elements in all directions upon the farm as well as upon the farms of your neighbors. Now York Witness. Straw for Fodder. In the event of a short hay crop, horses may be made to fare well on either wheat or oat straw, or both. The straw' should first be cut, the chaff then wet, and bran and mid dlings added to it. There is more value of nutriment in sixty pounds of bran than in a bushel of whole wheat. The reason of this is because the bran contains the larger part of the pro tein of the grain, and that is worth two and a half times as much as the starch of it, which is mostly contained lri the grain and very little of it in the bran. As the same holds true ot middlings, they are likewise about equal to bran in value. Accordingly, when these can be bought at reason able prices, there is in many respects no more economical method of keep ing horses than on cut straw. Fred O. Sibley. To Break a Stable Kicker." The best means is to give him a sand bag to exercise upon. Fill a grain sack half full of sand and swing it up to the ceiling with a rope so the saclc will hang just where the heels of the horse will have good play upon it. Tie the horse in the stall with a good strong rope and let him kick. At the first kick the bag will swing away and return giving the horse as good as he sent. For the next few minutes there will be a lively mixup between the horse and sack, but the sack will hold its own, returning all it receives with interest. The horse, in bucking against the real thing, will soon come to a realization of the fact, and .-will be thoroughly cowed. Leave the sack be hind him4 for a week or so, -and then remove it. If he even shows a ten dency to get into his old habit of kicking, give hiin another punch bag to exercise with. Joshua Huriible. Feeding Horses. Farmers generally do not give the feeding of their horses the attention they should. The cow and sheep are carefully examined and discussed, but the feeding of the horse is usually all the; hay he can eat and various quanW titles of; oats and corn, according to the amourit of work being done. If a horse is expected to do extraKafd" work, heshould be liberally and -frequently; fed" The horse has ; a small stomach in proportion to his?size. and L frequent feeding when at hard work is necessary. v Oats; and hay are 'ideal horse J food v and , L think, the ?best, but because; they are . the best is no rea sonwhy they should be exclusively used; variety , is Soften much1 relisid by the horse. Good timothy hay, ea??y cut' and well cured, is the best hay for horses. Many farmers feed too much hay; v a less amount of hav!and more grain is much better. .Opinions differ a: great deal as to the watering of horses. I prefer waterinar onlv a th. horse comes in vfrom work ' or before feeding; horses should not be watered soon after, meals as the stomach be ing Bmaii is liable to be nartlallv mn tied of the undigested food " causing bowel trouble or loss of food. Louis (jampbelL ,. Sheep Notes. . AS a lamb is perhaps the most diffi cult of all animals to recuperate aftar once stunted, It pays to keep thrifty." Wool ; is a - product that ; does not take fertility ; from the soiV f or gralri ' growing. ' , It does not take such a large sum to buy a flock of good grade. ewes while a thoroughbred mutton ram does no cost anything at all. as his lambs w:lt bring about one dollar per head more in the market than the lambs from a wmmnt. ram. while the similarity of all the lambs' fleeces both in staplo ai.d weight would cause the fleeces to bring a much larger sum of money in the wool market than, you get of a common ram. Therefore, on lambs hased from a nure-bred ram there is 4 enough clear gain over and above those from a common ram to pay. for c thoroughbred yearling ram, as the male is half the flock, now extreme unwise it is to use a' poor male. Mutton breeds of sheep do not de pend on waste lands and hillsides 1o become profitable. Good sheep re quire good pastures, and pay well. Wool is simply a product of the sneep, and no farmer can make sheep pay who depends on wool only for hia profit. To make earlv lambs grow, provide a pen into which the lambs can go but which restrains the ewes from en tering in the pen. Place a pan of ground oats and let the animals help themselves; the ewes should also be fed on ground oats The Epitomist. Corn as a Feed for Hens. On the average farm, the cheapest ration is usually corn, and I know of nothing the average hen will prefer for her mainstay in cold weather. Uuder ordinary farm conditions, the hen is cheaply wintered when she has just corn enough to keep her in good flesh a little fat, but not overfat and ready to hunt the barnyards over on mild days for any waste grains from other farm stock. In her corn supply should be included all the moldy and damaged ears, for several reasons. First, she takes it, a grain at a time, and so need not eat any that is totally unfit, as other animals may do. Sec ond, some observers have thought that their hens actually did better on damaged corn than on sound grain, probably because of its softness, and since even the damaged grain should be put to some use, the hen which is on a maintenance ration should have a fair trial as to her ability to get more out of it than animals to which it is evidently distasteful. It may some times happen that some other grain, or even some nitrogenous substance like skimmilk, may be available and even cheaper than corn, and in this case winter eggs may be laid whether or no, and i so, will be had at the greatest percentage of profit. The point is that the average farmer cannot afford to buy nitrogenous foods to stimluate egg laying under the condi tions which normally surround him in winter. The hen which has had enough corn, but not too much, is usually in good shape to give a large and profitable egg yield as soon as na ture gives the hint by sending up the first blades of grass, or even before. Correspondent Country Gentleman. Cost of Feeding Hens. During the last week in January I weighed all the grain and other kinds of feed my flock of 205 chickens con sumed, and estimated its value at what might have been outlined for It in the local market. Although the ag gregate sum amounted to more than one who had never Investigated the subject might-have expected, yet for each individual it was surprisingly small. I selected this particular time because I was then feeding only ; ma ture stock, and because there .waa then nothing to be obtained from out side sources. For these reasons I ex pected to be able to make a fair esti mate of what it cost me to keep my poultry during the winter. The re sults quite agreed with those obtained from former estimates based upon similar investigations nnri t fou luatt. (fled inf computing ! the entire, year's cost tnererrom. Of rye I fed 30 -P?.11!18' which was then worth 45 cents 1ef bushed of 6atsHMwmnds $$ -cents - per bushel wheat 20 -pounds a$u cents.'per; Da8heUoft,rn-1 bushel worth 35 cents, "and "ground feed, 20 pounds at $1 per 100 pounds, I also fed a generous quantity, ot ground bone and chopped vegetables, besides what skimmed milk they would drink every day, which I esti mated at 10 cents per 100 pounds. Altogether, the total cost for the week was about $1.65 for the 205 chickens, or about 4-5 of one cent fox each individual, or a little less than 4 cents a month, which, at the same rate, would amount to something4 near 45 cents for an entire year. This esti mate seems Incredibly small, but in reality it is. still too large;. for during the summer months the flock obtained enough from the range "to I materially lessen the cost of their maintenance yet, as little as it cost for on a ,,! . have cost me for the 205 at least $G iur me saiame grain they consumed. V Well; "suppose : it did costl vmt tsc Lin cold cash to feed 205 chicken ,t x nai is , omy 33 . cents each pe f oppose it cost you 80 cents a year to feed a hen. it she .lav 150, eggs in the year, If half of them are . laid between September 1 and uxuvu a, as mey snouid be, her egg will bring you $3. Household Realm In Urief A MINO? MATTERS OF INTEREST The convention of the Tndfp dence League, which is backing Ham Randolph Hearst, began nomination of a straight full ticket iiie ciwiiuii in jiduic was pro. tive ot many surprises and the suit is construed according t0 y, annaiipns. William.. J. uryan beau Ins ern tour .with three iir.pr0l speeches at or. Louis. Senator Dick is' believed to control of the Republican Stale vention iu- Ohio. Ift Clay Pierce was a-ain o: witness stand in the Ouster gn St. Louis and told of usurpation authority by the Standard Oil any. Addresses showing rapid grot bomepathy were delivered at Homeopathic Congress in At; City. Another change has been mi the secretaryship of the interna' policy holders' committee. The cruiser Des Moines has for Havana to protect Am eric terests m Cuba. Director Eustace B. lingers is paymaster general of the arm Col. Culver C. Suiilcu paymaster eral of the navy. Secretary' Avilson explained number of railroad men the ments of the new Meat-Insj law. The names of Chinese citiei be romanized according to a u: scheme, in order to facilitate and telegraph service. A lion attacked Leah Airae woman lion tamer, in a circus j; folk and badly injured her Mr. Robert Burns fell bene; road roller near Culpepper, Vi was crushed to death. John Orr, accused of the of George Jones, is on trial it tol. Dr. M. Smoot and his two so charged with burning a store m at Damson, W. va. Plans are on foot for a syl, to acquire the famous White h and greatly improve the resort. Wm. J. Bryau arrived in Lot and was welcomed with adure; Henry Watterson and Senate mack. He also made an add The Independence League Hearst convention, in New Vo ter a noisy session, reeomme; State ticket. Vice-President Fairbanks it an address on the State Fair in Concord, N. II. The Connecticut Democrat Convention named a tieket, be 30 mention of Bryu m the pi The movement started by J; Colgate in favor of the Mate! administration ticket resulted formation of an association will work for the slate. The Unlited Fruit t'ompai been sued by the American Comnanv for $6,000,000 unfl 1 v ' Sherman Anti-Trust law. The run on the Hibernal in San Francisco, slackened ing a statement by tbe SW' examiner. A Kansas City mau was t four months as dead is saia be on his honeymoon. President-MacColl. of the M Association of Cotton Manu&l in his semi-annual address, urn the South; be aided to mam 5Utmacy' in the cotton made some valuable sugscsw British War Minister Hal sued an order formally cH a creneral staff, according t mendsitions of the Esther 4 iion. Emneror WJlliam was Pl gracious to the American ofM areatending' the German General v Moeller-Sakomel been.. aDooin ted . commander fcrdons At Warmaw and wilf $ tlntiVi-vxinrr the $1 Tti- triri EwKn' assismateo I Min at Peterhoff on Au The Humbers, bose rations netted them m UlioJ 1 Paul O. Stansland, fonfl dent of the wrecked MuWl jantBanV in7 Chicago, from Tangier ia ! u8t0fl teotives. f:The Duchess of Fife- iV Iting -Edward, has ben oij Hope that peace will be ri Cuba is now very laiw, efforts in that dilution ' Troops have been in Siedlct for terrors scenes are described. ' ( Plans -hive been ma J fense,. of Havana in case tack;:fe.insurgent9. - At 'tHV session of ?ress it , was announced Vf tions to the South Polef North Polo are plannw- m At the.Ueman i"- ae5 infantry was marcbea cavalry and artillery' 2i
The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.)
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Sept. 21, 1906, edition 1
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