Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Jan. 13, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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AT 1 VOL. XXVII. RALEIGH, N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13. 19IO. No. I EDITORIAL BRIEFS All the office-seekers will natural ly advocate good roads. Wonder what will be the fashion able disease during 1012? The State's trust-bustera seem to keep busy performing other duties. Governor Kitchin's enemies in his party are still after him as though they are being paid for their work. One argument in favor of run ning Bryan next time is the fact that he has become accustomed to defeat. When some of the politicians get elected to office they seem to forget their platform as well as the dear people. i The Greensboro Telegram wants to know what will cotton do. From the present outlook cotton will do as i it pleases. t :' It seems that J didn't get a new Senator Simmons idea while abroad this summer. If so. he hasn't ex- ploded it yet. Mr. Bryan will probably return from South America with a new issue for the next campaign but with the same candidate. An exchange asks what does the Democratic party need. Judging from the result of the last election, it needs more voters. SHOULD PLACE PRINCIPLE FORE PATRONAGE. BE- Mr. Hearst has selected a man named Ilamm as editor of his big New York paper. If he doesn't make j head was in no wise expected by this good, there is nothing in a name. The Position of The Caucasian in Endorse Must Xot Allow the Pat ronage Machine to Lead the Party to Ruin How to Build Up a Strong and Aggressive Republican Party Why the Machine Fights Grant and Morehead The JBilt more Post-office. Editor of The Caucasian: I con cur with the views expressed in The Caucasian that Federal office-holders should not go as delegates to conven tions, for since my first recollection the Democratic cry has been that the Republican conventions are packed with and run by Federal office-holders. We all know that this has hurt the party, and I hope that the Re buplicans of North Carolina will cut out this part of the Democratic press song, by sending other than office holders to the conventions as dele gates. We must break the everlasting hold of the patronage machine which runs and ruins the party for their own selfish purposes. We can never build up the Republican party and achieve success unless that Is done. Nobody wants to join a patronage machine except office-seekers. The fear expressed that if this ele ment were unhorsed It would knife the ticket, may be well founded; but its importance is over-estimated. Let us begin to look forward immediate ly for the purpose of organizing the party along progressive lines, and then the knifing of the ticket by the deposed machine would be reduced to a very few disgruntled individuals, and at the same time a hundred or more new recruits would be gained for every kicking, knifing, sulking deposed member of the machine. The defeat of Spencer Blackburn in the Eighth District was the knif ing by the patronage machine. The election of Grant and More- TAFT'S MESSAGE The President's Mestage Re commends Several Changes In the Laws. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COURT If the next legislature would pass; some laws that could not be so easily evaded there would not be so much valuable time wasted in the courts. The race between Judge Allen and Judge Manning for Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, give promises of a very warm spring and summer. With Power to Enforce All Order Other Than Collection of Money Would Compel Corporations Hat ins: on Interstate and Foreign Bus iness to Take Out a Federal Char terWould Also Prevent Corpor ations From Acquiring or Holding Stock in Other Corporations The Anti-Trust Law. Washington, D. C, Jan. 7. Pres ident Taft today sent to Congress his much discussed message on Interstate commerce and anti-trust legislation. In it he strikes at the existence of holding corporations, by which major trusts control their subsidiaries and at the watering of corporation stock. To insure the more complete control of railroads by the -government, he demands the formation of a court of commerce, to comprise five judges, having power to act as a court of ap peals from the rulings of the inter state commerce commission. The President dips into railroad employes' safety, also, urging new features of the liability law. State control of corporations is vigorously attacked; the President charges it with the responsibility for many corporation abuses and he takes a firm stand for centralized power. He demands that railroads be for bidden to control their competitors element, or doubtless, they would ana wula give the Interstate corn have met the same fate, or at least I merce commission sweeping Increases know that to be the case as to Mr. m POwer- Grant: and after beine thus sur- Declaring distinction getween good f prised, they went to work and tried and bad trusts to be impossible, the to embarrass the two Congressmen, resident says emphatically that if The wrangle kept up over the Bilt- tne trusts are to be kept within the more nnst-nfflrA thrnne-h thf machine iaw, new legislation, creasing na , The Charleston News and Courier thinks the Democratic party is sea- jsick. This condition is probably caused by going up Salt River so often. The professional politician is an adept in making the people believe they are getting what they want and at the same time handing them a stone. The Charlotte Observer wants to know who discovered the hookworm. Can't say, but: we know a lot of them who are trying to discover Mr, Rockefeller's millions. The cold spell Christmas week froze up the gas supply in Greens boro. And that is probably why we have heard nothing about moving the State Capitol recently. If you love jour neighbor as you do yourself, tell him about The Cau casian and asK nun to subscribe in order that he may, too, enjoy the o-ood things in this life. organ is for the purpose of embar rassing Mr. Grant and to try to bluff him out of making other recom mendations for removals, right here in Buncombe. That is all there is in it. Dr. Geo. W. Reed, whose wife succeeded as postmaster, was my cousin; we were schoolmates, office- mates, and the closest of friends un til nis death; but if-he were living I would not favor his re-appointment. The voters of this District will not tolerate third or fourth term ap pointments, and had Mr. Grant be gun by recommending them he would have been committing politi cal suicide, and it was in keeping with this understanding that Mr. Grant declined to recommend Mrs. Reed as her successor from the start. Bribery. Now, then, a word as to that. I do not think Mrs. Reed intended or expected her proposition to Congress man Grant or State Chairman Adams to be construed as bribery or as in the nature of offering a bribe, to be retained in the office; but taking what Mrs. Reed and Mr. Moore says she did artd said in the way of an of fer, has not Congressman Grant placed the proper construction upon the proposition, intended or not? What is bribery? The act or prac tice of giving or taking reward for the performance of that which is known to be illegal. The law says that any person hold- foreeaaent, instead of only it the home of the defendant. In leading up to his recommenda tion for a federal corporation char ter, the President, who elsewhere re ft m to "contain notorious trusts." ys: "It Is the duty and the purpose of the executive to direct an tnvestiga th n by the department of justice, through the grand Jury or otherwise, luto the history, organization and pnrpose of all industrial companies rrtth respect to which there If any reasonable ground for suspicion that they have been organized for a pur pose and are conducting business on a Vlan which is in violation of the anti-trust law. The question which I wish in this rawage to bring clearly to the con sideration and discussion of Congress is whether in order to avoid such a possible business danger something cannot be done by which these busi ness combinations may be offered a maDs, without great financial dis turbance, of changing the character, organization and extent of their bus iness into one within the lines of the law under federal control and super vision, securing compliance with the anti-trust statute." After outlining the proposed legis lation, he continues: "In dealing with many of the men who have used the methods con demned by the statute for the pur pose of maintaining a profitable bus iness, we may well facilitate a change by them in the method of doing busi ness and enable them to bring back Into the zone of lawfulness without losing to the country economy of management by which in our domes tic trade the cost of production has been materially lessened and In com petition with foreign manufacturers our foreign trade has been greatly increased." The plan of a Federal compulsory license instead of optional charter, which has been urged, the message declared unnecessary. Reviewing the history of the Sher man act, the message says that it applies "to many combinations in actual operation, rendering them un lawful and subject to indictment and restraint." WONDERFUL STATE North Carolina Hat Great Opportunities in Agricul ture & Manufacturing. HOW WE CAN PROGRESS tional corporations under charter, Is urgently needed. This, the main provision of the anti-trust section, was announced some time ago, as was many of the other terms of the message. Such a move, the President points out, is not to afford the trusts a re fuge, as the Sherman law's repeal is ELt . aoatoir i .li.2 . : . . . The proposed statute, according to the message, "is not to be framed so as to permit the doing of the wrongs which it is the purpose of that (the Sherman) law to prevent, but only to foster a continuance and advance of the highest industrial ef ficiency without permitting Indus trial abuses." Here are the steps he recommends: In anti-trust legislation: Grant Federal charter to combi nations manufactured and selling in interstate and foreign commerce. Protect corporations from State in terference. Prevent stock issues in excess of property values as ascertained by the Federal government. Compel complete reports of nation al corporations to the department of Commerce and Labor at regular in tervals. Prevent national corporations from acquiring or holding stock in others, except with Federal approval; this would do away with holding companies. Interstate commerce legislation: BRIEF NEWS ITEMS. Mr. J. W. Utley, a prominent cit izen of Chatham County died Monday at his home near Merry Oaks. Business men of Wilson are pre paring to erect a cigarette factory in that town. It will be an Independent ximrti. .v t -- The head of a new-born negro in fant was found in the woods near Wadesboro Saturday afternoon. A negro girl only 16 years of age is un der suspicion. Dr. Knapp Haya North Carolina Can Become One of the Greatest pro ducing and Greatest Manufactur ing States in the Union -lie Say We Are Using One-Si uh f Our State and Are Getting About One Third What We Should Out f Amount. Cultivated. Charlotte. N. C. Jan. 11. "Men of North Carolina, do yon realize what a wonderful State you have?" exclaimed Dr. Seaman A. Knapp in addressing a gathering of farmers here to-day. This address was In connection with his lecture tour through the Southeastern States, which he Is conducting In conjunc tion with the efforts made by the Southern Railroad to attract settlers along its lines. Dr. Knapp, whose work in the Department of Agricul ture has attracted wide attention, then unfolded a plan for the develop ment of agriculture in North Caro lina that seemed almost like a story from the Arabian Nights. Both drainage and irrigation were prominent themes of the speaker. "The total area of the State," he safd, "was 31,193,000 acres, while the cultivated area was only 5.769, 954 acres. The number of acres re quiring drainage was 2,7 4 8,160, or nearly one-half of the total area cul tivated at the present time. Let us take a little Inventory of our estate," suggested the scientist. "Over one-half Is timber, but mostly poor timber. A great deal of the best timber has been selected and sold for a trifling amount. One- fourth of the land is Improved. One- sixth is cultivated. That is, one sixth of the entire area must pay the taxes on the five-sixths and sup port your entire population." t Although North Carolina has an unusually good rainfall and mainly evenly distributed, at the same time there are seasbns of the year, he said, when certain crops would do a great deal better if there was a litt'.e more rttie, - Fr-. ttkt wssw. ?r-'ff( tion would be extremely valuable in the Old North State. ' He advised fol lowing the plan adopted by some of the Western States by which the main cost of drainage works would be assessed to the adjacent lands, be cause such lands would reap the im mediate benefit. Those lands, he said. once properly drained, would be worth from $30 to $100 per acre. ciitur i oit!;ai;it rt.xciioT Mtvi;t. The Vade Mecum Springs hotel and cottages and 340 acres of land in Stokes County were sold Monday They would be excellent for rice and by trustees for $5,479. off by W. R. Reid. Nora McDonald, the 3-year-old daughter of John McDonald, of Fay etteville, was horribly burned Mon day by lifting a lid from a stove. She is not expected to live. Burglars entered the ticket office of the Norfolk & Southern, also the stores of L. P. Mewborn and Frank Howard, at La Grange, Saturday night, but they failed to secure any money. State Convention of the Laymen's Missionary Movement Is in session Ratahli'e'h n ennrt nf five furl CPS to ing office who shall receive anything be known as the United States Court in Greensboro this week. Prominent nf noinTTierpA with nower to enforce churchmen from all over the South oil m-Awv nt intorctoto mmor "have been invited to address the con- rr-m m cc-r r-rt ntnoi tVl o frT fha rOV- I V Gilt I Oil ment of money; to review appeals from the commission's rulings: to Major J. C. Hemphill, for twenty handle the cases provided for in the years editor of the Charleston (S. C.) Elkins act, and other cases that now News and Courier, has resigned the go to the circuit court. re asking their party for local self would be retained in office she would gtf)ck or bondg without oug Qr simultaneous payment of the issuing company of not less than their par It was bid for truck farminer nurnoses. I apprehend, also," added the doctor, "that in North Carolina the making of the reservoirs in the mountains, the willowing of the small streams to prevent silt and the damming of the rivers where neces sary to secure waterfall, would cre ate sufficient power for all the pur poses of the State, heating, lighting, transportation and manufactures That is a strong statement, but I think it is correct." Fracucaiiy, he said, "you are using about one-sixth of your State and you are getting about one-third of the crop out of the onesixth, or only one-eighteenth of the crop you I"rrldrt Taft Oed-r4 !!U itwVl l4Somin the U4ic of Mr. ina ctive Letter in tlw Senate Mr. A. iX tf 1U kiwgUam. X. C, Al HUmiwd be lUlUajree. ilttcbot I vtrvt-r gei Win Hrt Victory. Whlxgtos. jaa. 7. GlSord Ha th ot, thief foret-r and Intimate friend of Theodon Koolt, to night a dtmU4 from the lervlc of the United Slates by Preaideat Tafi tor Incoordination. Aoctt Komter Otertcn W. Prift and A kUtant Law OCcer Aleiander C. Shaw, pinchoig itacsedUle aoctate in the fore try bureau, followed ibeir thief out of the government employ. Thoroughly indignant over the ac tion of Mr. Piachot in inducing Sen ator itolliver to read a letter from him ia the Senate yeterday, Presi dent Taft today would lU'.ea to no advice that the foreter's violation of executive order be overlooked ponding the inquiry ooa to be under taken by Congress. He di-clared the dignity of the odce he had been chosen by the people to fill was being attacked and he would be unfaith ful to his trust if he submitted long er. Mr. Taft undoubtedly realUe fully what the dltiul&&al of Foreiter Pinchot means in a political way. He has been convinced for Mime time that the so-called "Insurgents" and other critics of his administration had enlisted the services of Mr. Pin chot aud practically were defying him to separate Pinchot from his office. The latter's letter of yesterday, few here doubt, was written with the direct purpose of "putting it squarely up to the President." Political observers in Washington declare that the situation created by today's developments Is the most tense of many years. What the out come will be no one is willing to prophesy. Insurgents Win First Fight. In the House of Representatives today Speaker Cannon lost his first fight to the "insurgents" who, com bining with the Democrats, caused to be adopted an amendment to the Pallinger-Pinchot inquiry resolution so as to take from the Speaker the power to aproint the House mem bers of the joint special committee of investigation. The margin of vic tory was a narrow one of three votes, but the insurgents and Democrats alike are jubilant tonight. The dis missal of Pinchot has lent fuel to the flame of their celebration and they are venturing all manner of predlc- future. Three Republicans, not classed as insurgents, but who profess their friendship for Pinchot, voted with the insurgents and Democrats for the amendment which calls for the selec tion of the House Investigators by election from the floor. These two incidents, at Capitol and fVhite House, kept Washington in political ferment all day. BILK1NS IN HAWAII The Major Sr the liUndi Are Worth ihc Pice Paid. HONOLUIA THE CAPITAL CITY Ttr 1UmI Aw Jt4 C.rH TH Sugar tV i. rrT prrlnt Idtr7 -jmW rTtct CirwrfTtI In itnf. Honolulu. AGAINST IJLEACIIKI) FLOUR. Ir He Wiley Says Bread Should Amber Color, Xot White. Washington, Jan. 9. "It is just to please the eye. No good can come from making flour white," declares Chemist Wiley, of the Department of Agriculture. "You cannot find any great amount of bleached flour going into Interstate commerce now. I can tell the change by the bread. Every time I cut a loaf of bread I rejoice because instead of having the white ness of a corpse it has the beautlfu delicate amber tint that all bread Correnondcr. of li.r c!!. Knterpriw, Owla to the Ci.rs:.A ho! Jj an' the loot Jump trM t; r& theiM? Ulattdt. 1 fail J to u ;m In time for your Cm n Ji.n. ary. To make mt!r if,r i h, bin quite unwell frr f !, t-t am no feelin' l-ttrr The HaatUu !. t,tttr eight, not to spek . etl Esll patches in the rt...f u.! ui air hardly worth rountu lUu. th largest In the bunch, hn Mi r of 4.200 mll'S and a iiU!:un or about 50,000. Mil,., n,. r 1 u.n In site, li located on tl. uiah ! t.i he a population or a! ..-jt :,0a) Honolulu, the Capital rt:. l stsied on the Inland ov Chahu. whhh hrt a population ov about Cuk Tt City ov Honolulu h x al-jut o.uo people. These islands sir fr fr uu t!.e mainland ov any ountr? and from ny other island that th- awar to be a mere kperk ui;ti tl.f ait ocean. i et itiey in-y prf-st r. i.iin- tains upon them, on I" ins 14,00') eet high. Most ox thou- !,. ;:.t't are, or nev bin volcano a num- tain called the "Punch I ar.4 ocated In the suburb ?? J! .a.! s!iS. wuje once an active oi -!., i it iai z not active no Vtir UH. a eper colony li loeatrd ns or. o th slands an al ptron h m afflicted air carried th-r to find a Ivln' tomb az lor.g at t l.-y !. which iz not for long The Hawaiian Islands r dUtov- ered by Caut. Cook in 177v T! natives did not tar mi,h in !! war ov rlnthla' in tLcni li they were not FSTmrea, neiiMii ; they cannibals. Th-y er orderly an" seemed tor melrome i: .r--n-e ov the American ani t. rss .u who visited them. Atn-rl.m uV,- ence soon oecame uorn.rirua :n Islands and we finally i:;." ' -ers ov them, they Lein' -n uisy valuable to our country oin tu their location midway btfn us an japan, inina an ou.-r i-m'(u territory. Now that e on the Philippines the Hawaii. Island air even more imporiam. i i'uu'i air represented in t. I.ot Hou ov Congress In recent .an? He I. or wux known In Uh- Man1 ax Prince Cupid. Dut In Washington he Iz Just a plain, hard worktn' Con gressman, such az North Carolina an other States send !hcr-. or at any rate, she thinks they air that sort. The sugar crop Iz hy far th mot important product ov the tlacd. But rice iz raised. al.o coffee, ba nanas, pineapples and roroanut. The landowners on the Ulanda do not i .r. w H-r.rW I y it r n t. work mucn. me u-j -- - An eneha nge says there is money i-n r.iisins: mules. The Democratic iu - party has not made anything out o the venture, but it may be that they have been experimenting with an in ferior breed. The Democrats in Richmond, Va., whatsoever of value, or the promise thereof with the understanding that his official action is to be influenced thereby, shall be guilty of felony. That any person offering a bribe, whether it be accepted or not, Is guilty of felony. Now, was not the offer made to Chairman Adams, that if Mrs. Reed government, carried such they sold years ago. Didn't know the party a thinir in stock, for out in this State several fter having been absent and un heard of for twenty years, an Indiana man returned to his parents on Christmas day and presented them ..-.. s nnnn. This is an entirely new record for the "prodigal son." fpiiows cot alter contribute, and was not that offer made to Mr. Grant, an offer to con-1 tribute more than the other appli cant if she was retained? Now, who is responsible for this whole wrangle? It Is not Mrs. Reed, and it is not her friends. Of course, she would have liked to have stayed in the office, and many of her per sonal friends would have liked to have seen her keep it; but many of value, or, if the issue is at less than par, of a reasonable market value. Empower the interstate commerce commission to approve the amount of stock and bond issues on re-organization, to prevent the Issue from be ing in excess of the fair value of the property. Prohibit interstate roads from ac- ousht to have. The electricity was ought to get, and you are trying to tne agent which produced the bleach get ncn by using one-eighteenth oflfng material your resources. I "Several cases are nendirc aeainst Summing up the character of work millers now, and I do not betray any to be done for the development of the I confidence of the millers when I say State, Dr. Knapp continued: I that the fight on this caso is made Thus equipped North Carolina chiefly by the men who are selling would become one of the greatest tne machinery. The millers tnem- I c a iL.icp t u,-nnin nm n p-n T it tor a ran- editorship of that paper, and will greatest manuiaciuring states oi inei"t"fc " - Union. It would be possible under meu who are making this bleaching such conditions to produce a billion I machinery have been hurt. The dollars worth of nroduets unon the bakers of the Lnited fetates were al- farms and a billion dollars from fac- ways opposed to bleached flour. They tories in a sinele year and sunnort a I knew the flour was Injured by the population of 10,000,000 of people become editor of the Times-Dispatch of Richmond, Va., after February 15th. her nersonal friends have changed their positon. and now are in favor of Quiring capital stock or purchasing XTr first's hands. This or leasing any rauroaa or any oxner The pure food the ice-cream makers after the sea- . - a a. . Vnw will the Siaie son was over. ... x ot after the ice uusi &v. over? Kemem- authorities even if the season is ber that it is better late than never, is because they have seen that cer tain machine Republicans who care nothing for Mrs. Reed have gotten behind her back and are using the Democratic Senators and the Demq eratic nress to make an attack on Congressman- Grant. And why? Because they do not want any inde- ?n pendent Republican Congressmen. The castor of a tfapufci ,UAV U-, iront tn hnnrtl thft natronasre . . w on nrrl pr that I . . i - .i. ji New YorK nas i"cu , I Oi niS aisinci auu every oiuci uis- nlv silver or neiier, mci in me cunc, - - . t. - fh0 contribution dox. i puDiican luiisicmuicu ceptao.e iu de- better they like it. This is the square This order will doubtless cause a that has now been Ised. and, mand in New York for smer u4.i tneTefore, every Republican who is a ; Republican from principle and who corporation, which competes with it. Corporations may, if they own, when the act is passed, at least half the capital stock of a competitor, acquire the rest of it. - x Give the shipper the right to select a through route. Empower the commerce commis sion to investigate new. rates on their announcement, instead of after they go into effect. - A mortgage of $200,000,000 given by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad to a Northern trust company, was recorded in the register of deeds of fice at Fayetteville Saturday. This enormous sum will be used In retir ing the old bonds, in double tracking and in other improvements. A passenger train on the Seaboard crashed Into a freight at-Weldon Monday afternoon. No one was in jured but the fireman, who received a slight bruise; a box car loaded with cotton was wrecked and set on fire. and three freight cars were burned before the fire could be extinguished. The wreck was caused by an open switch. SECTARY BALLIXGER SUSPENDS FOUR. REPORT OP COTTON GINNED. Brown Predicts 20 Cent Cotton. i,,if o candidate ior Xlliucci". cratic nomination for Congress in the hhird 'district. But if Congressman Thomas sent out his quota of govern ment seed last fall it may be hard to wring, the nomination from him. . empower me commission to m- New Orleans. La., Jan. 8. Frank vesugaie on us own mmauve any B. Hayne. for more than a decade rate or condition ana to pass on one of the biggest factors In the cot- ciassincation oi commodities for fix- ton future market, left for New York ing rates. with W. P. Brown, the bull leaders. Compel carriers to quote rates In It is understood that the campaign wants to see his party succeed should J writing to shippers on request, with for twenty-cent cotton will be waged the I not only In New Orleans and New t gov- York, hut also in Liverpool- Mr. process. This wheat flour case will be fought by the best talent In this country, and the most celebrated lawyers. A fund of $100,000. I un derstand, has been raised to defeat the Government's contentions. We Official Heads of Superintendent of I would not be surprised If that trial the Five Civilized Tribes of Okla- would cost us $5,000 or $10,000. noma Dropped for "Disgraceful j Conduct." Washington, D. C, Jan. 9. Secre tary Ballinger of the interior De-j partment to-day suspended from of fice Superintendent John D. Benedict of the Five Civilized Tribes of Okla homa and three supervisors as the re-J at Washington, Issued Monday, shows suit of an investigation which has J that &.646.2S5 bales of cotton, count disclosed "a disgraceful condition" I ing round bales as half bales, were affecting the material and moral wel-1 ginned from the growth of 1109. to fare of the schools. (January 1, 1910, as compared with As a result of the investigation 1 12.46S.298 bales for the crop of - I - - ... . A A which the Interior Department has lus; a.soi.aua ior tne crop oi isw, been earrvlne on for some time past and 11.741,039 for the crop of 1906 and which will be continued, other The report shows 606,19$ bales officials -of the Indian service may ginned in North Carolina to January . iita n ftut Ar Snnerin. 1st. as against 64.d0 ginned in Crop May He Even Shorter Than Pre dicted 000,100 Bale Ginned In North Carolina to Jantary 1st. The report of the Census Bureau Mr Rudolph Duffy has announced t benind Congressman Grant and! $25 fine as penalty for damage to 1 ' - nritriate for the Demo- UDh0ld his hands and go to work to shipper, the fine to go to the g i tendent Benedict and the three su pervisors suspended to-day. N The suspended supervisors are Cal vin Ballard of the Choctaw schools 1908. The Divorce Evil. - If divorces are easier to get else- rinilinflte him and the party ana con-i ernmenu i tirown upon nis return iw ew vr . . i .o-nnminiittnirr diva ttio pnmmicsiAn tha T-fcrif trtllainc ciArtlr hof nr Plirlirfinafl mM demnA1f7;r hv a bieeer ma- compel unilorm construction of. car he was confident that cotton would at McAlester; Frederick Humholtz of where than they are In North Caro- ana re-cicvuu6 - - , tt ..1.. sehoois. Ardmore. and ; Una all they must nave io oo is to jority than heiore. TTts ota tJ0 ,fDrctofQ m.tn York T-rchanl Walter Falweil of the Creek school walk up and ask for them Durham at Mnskoeee. ieraio. CLk JENKINS. Biltmore, C. ployers" liability act open to easy ten-j with Hayne Monday morning. by Japanese. Chine and Korean. In late vears a large number ov Por tuguese people hev located on the Islands an' hev proven very aatufac tory az farmers. Honolulu hex ?veral Kood ho!U an good food iz plentiful here. The population ov the Islands is no icr oughly mixed, practically 1 coun- trles beln represented itn aciuai residents, that al foods air known and In uae. and with a good misture ov Japanese snd Chinese reis3ent. they It no carcity ov s.oqq cwhh . something one cannot aay in favor ov some countrier- The language In u on tu m ands iz very much like the nativity the noDulatlon--rather bun. But the native hev a language I learned the mt-anm ov on "aloha." which itands fer "wel come" in English. Some good schools her nm lished on the Islands, fome by natire rulers, others by foreigner. In time they will accomplish a wr ; The fih found In tfc '-r the Wand, air a curLoslty They hev awl the color o 1 ,e r -bow, and some ov th. m air tr3-i.f shaped, hardly lookin lip J; There Iz one railroad on ands. Hit iz seventy miles in length Hit passes near Pearl Harbor, which U the Place the United State Gov ernment iz preparin' fer a ll an' commercial has. The lalaad. air on a direct line between the Ith dqs of Panama and the OnenU countries and that make nit im portant that our government be n e lookout fer the future Trouble may never come from this quarter, but hit U well ter be prer-ared. Durin' the administraUon ov Pres ident Harriaon he sent a m ease to Congress in which be b steps be taken to annex the Hal! an I.landa. .A bill wuz introdn.ed to that effect, hut failed to pa froa - (Continued from Page 2.) r- -4 If V. V
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
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Jan. 13, 1910, edition 1
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