Newspapers / Everything (Greensboro, N.C.) / Jan. 6, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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: rvvo The New One. January first wc arc having new 'jflar pcc$ and aboul two wctcks - new twenty-five cent will appear. Just - should have new money every nc .:- we do not know. The old pieces look ood to uf although we do not see tteru It was long about the days of the vhen Mr. Kocniclt hired an artist to cold pieces with the buzzard on. The - Vs legs were draped in tnec breeches er.felt left o!t the word. "In Cod W e , ' and when he did it the first and only tunic this countr ever knew came. .e without cauc. With crops bounti ;th cvervbodv working full time, a mon V:c came" and almost put the country out sines. Scrip was issued; bank would ;y their dcpoMtors'only 50 much a day .? moment wc got back to our senses and commenced to trust in God put that j back on the money the panic disappear- c who are $0 blind that they cannot see :r.ay think this a remote suggestion. . But pencd. When wc quit trusting in God wc rebuked. Because there never was a : l-kc that one, and there is no other cx--.rion. at back to the subject. The new half dol cces will buy no more. Many people will t a few of them for the first thirty days and impair circulation to tha extent. They ho better than the old faces, and why we our money wc do not know. Perhaps t:s away from counterfeiters perhaps it . better! But we will continue to receive old ones on subscription we will take i for all private and public debts wc will c can get them o How We Failed to Connect, udgc Clark, of the Statesville Landmark. December 22, said : Col. Fairbrother believes in the gift-giv-j at Christmas. It makes a man feel etter, he says, whether it's a sack of flour -nt to a needy family or a diamond pin a friend. The Landmark will accept . Ith thanks cither the pin or the price of . sack of flour. The latter will be of more :rvicc if itVall the same to the Colonel. Unfortunately wc had bought the diamond . intcnding.to send it to the Judge. After ;ng his expressed desire for a sack of flour :cad of the pin, wc got busy trymff to swap pin for the flour. The diamond was worth y three hundred dollars a carat, but the :r was worth so much more that we couldn't ,c the difference. Wc tried to form a stock npany to get the kale seed, but Christmas : .u,. . cordingly wc are wearing the pin and hope next Christmas to raise the cificrencc and : a sack of flour up Statesville war .- -o " ThVAnnored Cruisers. acconnt teKing of the ramming of the iio4cvWA4Os2?r nSTim f? ma. the report aid the'bow of the Sono s truck the battleship above the water line. 1 went through the armor of the battleship though it were wood. Wonder what s the : to spend money for armor plate if it can- : resist the'average nose of a little tender? ondcr whj those in charge do not put on that i imiinrtrahlr ahovp and below the tc'r line. Because below the water line the it might sink but there should be more rc- tance to all parts of the ship than wood. wevcr, our navy has always been a big joke ; vill alwavs be. v veland first conceived the idea of building a x a w mm a a v,aav mm ma a a a V that firMir chnu'i'ii hirl a frv Hnat tubs and thev were worthless. Since then - - - - - " ions have been expended and billions more t be expended. Obsolete and worn out are ships built in Cleveland s time. It will not many years until the fleets novf the pride of r-v . 1 " t 1S.11UCIS niii uc in 111c s-anic cunui- But wc must have the boats. Wc do not vf when wc will need a navy and therc- they keep on spending money. Because : can't build a battleship before breakfast in the historv of nationsthcre come time :n you want to use one before breakfast. o The Divine Sarah. ,'c do not feel that it is at all out of place to )uncc in this department the fact that the ne Sarah Bernhardt is to viit Greensboro. will do her do in French but that makes liiTercncc. It will be just as interesting as jgh she did it in the North Carolina lan e. The greatest actress of the age now -Id woman, but they say as young as ever, ensboro will doubtless fill the house and rc : that it wasn't twice as large. o We Wonder When. . e wonder when newspaper publishers will Me to themtlv-i anH rrftic m .vtTrI of column the numerous nosrrums offered public? Great scare headings arc read by people who are ill: they sec the stuff in : and think it worth a trial. Some of the :s may be good but if we continue to run vvspaper "there will be no top column for exploitation. The publisher knows that y ot the advertised medicines arevprth-, -bat. the business office calls for coin and ublicity man takes the top of column and the home merchant with his wares down sensational stories about the man ..... r l. f .1 V. I - t , , uj in mv- i? ui uvrfiu nn wno lUCKIiy a av ay-. m m a . ten ootues ot ur. tlankrm-rankems sky ; ing pills and the next day jumped a bill J and a board bill. " IfTrve. . the stories concerning the murder in Guil yesterday are true, the chances arc that county will have another electrocution :e d to it. The negro accused of murder U wife is still at large, but he will finally ; tured and the trial will develop the facts, e story runs it looks like a plain case of -r but there may be .some other cvi .rrrJt xt in. . . Not Much Hope. There is an omnibus bill a "pork bill, be fore Congress in which twenty-eight million dollars are appropriated for public buildings here and there and everywhere. The President has in advance told Congess that if it passes in the present form he will proceed to vote it. .It is not pointed out jut where objection lies, but it looks like the open track for public build ings is about closed. Greensboro once dream ed that it would be easy to land a four hundred thousand dollar government building here that all that was necessary was a bill introduc ed and a committee to talk nice to a Senator and a Congressman. But wc found out it didn't j work. Congressman Stcdman introduced the j bill he proved his case. i. e., that wc needed fashion wc have proceeded. And the chances arc that under this democratic administration and perhaps the next administration we will continue to proceed at the old stand, with the same old building. . The raids on the treasury and employing the word raid wc do so advisedly, have been frightful in the past quarter of a century. Cit ies have received public buildings costing mil lions. more for ornamentation than for use- but that happy dav has passed. It will hereaft er be necessary to prove beyond all doubting that a building is absolutely needed to transact the buihncss of the government. The days of public appropriations for ornamentation has passed. Business methods are cominir on and if Greensboro gets a public building within the next ten years she will do wonders. This in a mood and manner becoming a philosopher vho can sec through a ladder without his specs. nr. - ? r .... . . 1 nis, noi in a spiru 01 cross tie tnrowing be fore the car of progress but simply a recital of what wc see as wc look through our large Glass Crystal with which wc do our necro- o A little early to buy straw hats but you might as well be hgunng on an investment. o Simply a Reward. The Morning Xcwbcrnian has this editorial . paragrapn: A Bible class teacher in Greensboro and a pastor in Wilmington received nice auto mobiles for Christmas presents, from their friends. Santa Claus was surely good to them. In the case of the Bible class teacher in Greensboro the members of the ria (rt that they had received so much good from the la- knr. . - ! . I . .1 1 I I ' vt ttiv.11 11 i ji. i iu.ii incy coum uoi give him too much. They didn't know what Jo give mm, oui 11 me cwDcrnian edi;or could have make the gift, he would nave conciuacd that . I'm m m ania .iaus auin t do one hall of .what he wanted to do. Lou of Wool, It has been related that in shearing a hog iney gci lots 01 squeal and but little wool. In this Britt case there has been woo! am! thnrt has been squeal. The North Carolina newspa pers arc not agreed on the Uritt case. Some think Britt didn't ret a intiar dMLcnmo democratic papers, while others have froth in their mouths proclaiming the election of Weav er. The chances arc that fraud Was practiced by both sides in Buncombe. The general whis- jeringS arc to that cllcct. The general belief is that there should have been another election or at least all of Buncotnbc's vote should have been thrown out. However. It i tnn tat. Britt will never get his scat. Unless the pro k m . a. . grcsMvcs icci he hasn t had a fair show. It i JalBKaaaa- t a . siiu iai ncimer 01 me great parties meaning democratic and republican will control the house, that the balance of power is in the hands of the independents and progressives. It might occur to some of those fellows with republican leaning to seat Britt. At any rate it is a sorry mess and regrettable that it hap pened as it has. Too Hatty. That Associated Press story printed in this paper of where a Saint Louis policeman shot a minister by mistake, needs a little attention. It was stated that the minister had been point ed out to the policeman as a robber, and when the policeman commanded the preacher to hold up his hands, and the minister didn't comply, but proceeded to put some change into his pocket, he fired, thinking the minister was go ing after a gun. That might do to tell the im becile class of a lunatic asylum but it wouldn't go if wc were on the jury." m In the first place the policeman, with noth ing but some hearsay evidence, had no right to tell any man to hold un hie hanrf T it,. ond place he had no business to shoot until he -s sure nc saw a gun. I his thing of iolicc mcn roinc off the handle on a mnmom - ' - - iiiviiivill J IIUIIVC is altogether of too frequent occurrence. Just because the policeman has a gun and thinks he has authority to shoot on sight is no reason that he should be allowed to a cool headed man to be a policeman, and wc feci certain there is not one on the Greensboro police force who would command a respectable looking citizen to hold Iin his hinrle 1 U point of a gun. merely on hearsay evidence. 1 here should at least be a warrant for such procedure. Shoot Him on the Soot- The Kalcich New anH nK., : strained Jo say . m these joyous Christmas times: There arc some people who just nat urally make you tired. They go around with a perpetual grouch on them." These Dconle must tlv iinn. :.. n.irL this Christmas week wc have failed to see a TW" Jouc- ow there arc Old Mr. Ini Jfchtwad- We saw them this week and their faces were wreathed in smiles. There ZnCnMr 3rid "-Skinflint, they were o shopp.ng and paid the price without a groan There was Old Mr. Itcan'tbedonc-and 1 he "ill Cr louR would get the new hotel All of the old boys who usually have a grouch lost it for this season. We had hoped ltat5v.ni ma$ $p,r,.f fed. F'" the entire state, but it seems in Raleigh there were a few pouch totcrs who couldn't shake off their burden. : South Carolina Winner.' . .. ' North Carolina, including Charlotte rfnd Raleigh, lost out on the location of the federal arm loan bank. Columbia, South Carolina, was the winner. Well, just so it is in Carolina, is about all we care. Raleigh made a big.fight, as Charlotte did also, but as the bank belongs to a district composed of the states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, perhaps Columbia is a more . central point. Whether it is or not, the selection has been made, as recorded in our Associated Press dispatches therefore all people must be sat isfied. Many people arc in doubt about the farm loan proposition some claiming that the red tape and securities and other things .will not make it a success. However, other people arc enthusiastic over it, and believe it will prove of great worth to the man who wants to buy a farm and pay out on it. Naturally a new law will develop defects but these will be over- J come, and if the law is not a good one it can be repealed. o The Hotel. Assured. There is perhaps no 'better thing to print than the fact that Greensboro is to really have a new hotel a three hundred and twenty thousand dollar hotel, and this doesn't include the inside works the furnishings. The loca tion is .well up town; the building will have one hundred and sixty-six rooms besides ball rooms and palm rooms and other kinds of rooms. It will be a beauty. The articles of incorporation will soon be returned from Ral eigh; the officers will be elected; ground will be broken and within a year the building will be ready for the man who wants to sign up the register. There is no use perhaps to throw boquets. but it might be said in passing that K. P. Wharton and Eli Octtingcr were very live wires in this campaign and our esteemed contemporary put on pressure in black and while that helped some. Fact is everybody boosted, but those who put up the kale seed after all turned the trick. And as Doc Cook re marked, "there is glory enough for all" and when the building is completed we will all feel a sort of proprietary interest while only those who put up will draw dividends. . o une more day and it will all be ovcr- rx- cept the dinner. He Can Go Now. Now that Colonel Godbey of the 'stcemed News, whose lamentations because we had no hotel exceeded the speed limit of Jeremiah, has accomplished his worthy task the hotel is as sured he can hike to that pleasant river of which he spoke yesterday morning and cast for those l,argc mouthed bass which there abound. It was his regret that this Old Man was also employed with another -chore and could not join the anglers. Godbey 'can go now, and take a well earned rest-whilc we remain at home and perform our duty as "Chairman of the Cussin' Committee on the erection of the new press. o - ; . .JtTom.Lawson .conclude tbai;$c. needs more publicity he will g$ to Washington and" occupy the iront page lor a lew days. In the meantime he will set his rabbit gums for an other clean-up. Wc all know Tom. Weaver's Knowledge. The Ashevillc Gtizen quotes Congress- man Weaver as sayinglhat if JJntt carries the contest to the House be will disclose all he knows about the fraud and corruption in Bun combe county. Then .-The Citizen reminds Weaver that the press of Ashcville insisted all information should be forthcoming and that the district attorney called for those possessing knowledge of fraud to come into court and 4ct him know about it and Weaver held his peace. 1 he Citizen thinks that it is Weavers duty to tell all he knows, no matter about whether Britt goes to the House with the V a a case or not. ror a good strong democratic paper to thus turn a point so neatly, causes us to wonder what kind of a box Weaver finds himself occupying. . Looks like it is now up to him to come into court and name the men. In fact to do otherwise would be the admission of a bluff. Chicago has been spending freely in all de partments of city life and finds that it is some thing like four million dollars in the hole. A general reduction in expenditures U planned. A twenty per cent, reduction in lights alone suggests that the electric companies have been liberally patronized. 4 O ' The Next Move. The next move is for a new court house. There is still plenty of space on that Wright property tor a court house; there are a dozen sites available and whart our rood oeonle must do is to commence acitation. The Deonle of the county may not want a new court house but a campaign will show them. Dur ham didn't particularly want a new court house, but now that it has a splendid building all the folk in Durham countv are clad of it and proud of it Wake countv broke awav anr! built a most magnificent building the pride of every live man down that way. It may take a camnaip-n of education A campaign where live men may be obliged to go into the country and' by fieart to heart talks enthuse the farmers but they will enthuse. They arc not blind and they havb god sense. Once started they will fall into line. The old court house is inadequate. It is an eye sore. It is a back number. Let the live ones, now that the hotel is assured, get behind the court house project. Dismiss matter pf lo cation and go to the main facts. It can be put over and put over in this year. o All About Peace. The foreign news these days is all about peace. Therefore it seems that Wilson's peace note is being taken seriously, and but little doubt remains. All the warring countries want peace, the only thing to do is to find out how to get it. Like trading horses, there may be some dickering, but peace is no doubt assured. Wilson put in not only an entering wedge, but a wedge that looks lite it will split he war wide open. . ' If" "'iel'i 1 t' If some legislator this winter, some rhftn-wnd; didn't care which war the fur was 'rubbed,' would introduce a bill in the legislature to abolish the office of Commissioner.'of , Labor and Printing, a whblly.useless and unnecessa ry existence, he would do his state some good, and. more than earn his salary. If some legislator who doesn't care anything at all about what "the party" or "the people" think, if he knows he is right, would get a bill to stop the waste of white paper in reports from many of the departments, and much of the dope coming from the State; Board of Health, he would be, a hero. He would have served his state iweH and at the same time sav ed the tax payers marry thousands of' dollars; But no statesman will arise to do this chore. There will perhaps ; be additional : appropria tions for additional waste .of time and money. They talk about a commission form of gov ernment to run a city; they say the city mana ger is best of all and if it is, why not have a State form of government and knock about one half of the needless positions? Why? Because the pie is found in these places. It takes en thusiasm to run a party and it takes money to make the mare go. Cut out the pie and the party wouldn't have a corporal's guard. Men who enthuse, ninety-nine out of the hundred are patriots who see directly or remotely a job in the waiting either for themselves or their friends. ' '- We venture to say that the State of North Carolina annually squanders, needlessly, thou sands and thousands of dollars. But it will continue to be the same as long as business is run by politicians instead of busmess men. And now they, are photographing sound. They say certain words produce vivid lights while others produce the soft giow. Wonder if there is any difference between the North Carolina language and cussin. v o Again:. Some Advice. We were talking recently with a citizen of this town, a man well known, who for a couple of years has been suffering. with a severe case of bronchitis. He has been advised tochange climate, and he came to us to ask us about Arizona, that place having been suggested. It is our advice to men who have throat trou ble or lung trouble to keep away from the des ert no matter where it Is. In the desert coun try the middle of the day is very warm. The nights are very cold. We know men who had. no catarrh who contracted it there. We know men whowere never troubled with their throats who went there and came back sufferers be cause of-bronchitis. W'e saw there hundreds of men who were disappointed and dishearten ed and who disappeared died we were told. We have been pretty well over the United States. There is no state in the Union in which we have not lived and in most of them we have passed the four seasons. We boldly say for the well man or the invalid there is no country bet ter than this Piedmont Section. And we are glad to say that most all .doctors are now in sisting that climate has very little to do with throat troubles and June: troubles. The man fwhoJsafflfctusri&Htfe rules for living must be strictly adhexed.tol' apd it-is easier to observe them at home among friends than in a distant state, among strang ers. If you are ill get a doctor and do what be tells you to do as to rest and quiet and habits and food and you will stand as much chance for recovery right here in this section as any place. on earth. Distance may lend enchant ment to the view; you may think that to get away you will escape the disease but remem ber, if you are diseased, you tarry the disease with you, and homesickness and worry only ag gravate it. This is advice given in the spirit of brotherly love. We have tested the propo sition and dearly paid for the information we are here imparting. o- More Trouble. It is given out from New York that the strike situation, is very acute that it is just about as grave a situation as it was in Septem ber, when we all expected a universal tie-up. The railroad people havesaid they would wait for the decision of the Supreme Court before recognizing the Adamson Taw and the broth erhoods have intimated that if they didn't re xognize it there might be something doing. It is also said that President Wilson has said if the Adamson law is unconstitutional another law will be passed so it would seem the strike question is still open. The chances are that Congress will not be in a hurry this time.' It will perhaps pass the law requiring arbitration, and if it does, this will prevent a tie-up. That bill proposed will make it lawful for the President to call all trains into service under the pretext of military duty and draft men to run them. This would settle forever the fear of a general tie-up of commerce. In the meantime January first is about here and we will then know more about what the railways and brotherhoods will really do. An Acute Stage. Congressman Wood is up in the air. Demo cratic leaders refuse to .assist him in his de mand for an investigation of the leak on the peace note. Tom Lawson fires him in a tele gram which is most disconcerting. Tom says he will answer all questions and when he gets through there will be some knowledge im parted which will be interesting. Tom says if it was really believed that there would be an investigation there wouldn't be a quorum hi either Senate or House. , He intimates that all the representatives have been gambling and profiting by inside information. Of course we all know how to take Tom. Most of us have read his Frenzied Finance and other weird and spectacular books written by him, and just now he is happy playing on the front page. Congressman Wood, however, is dismayed. He swears by all the fabled gods of war that he will insist on his resolution call ing for a complete investigation; that he will go to the floor of the House and demand its adoption and if the scenery isn't artificial there is going to be something doing about the third and fourth days of the Glad New Year. Let it come we need something like that to" add a little spice to the after the ball feeling produced by the holidays. .1 ? :" 'The Stateiville-'Laruimark;lias:fitKrYeto :speak out irrmeeti facing a four million dollar deficit and the ;sal-5 ary ajsing going on the time, ibe Laffri!-,-- ( mark says: ' .'t.v-v. . r v. , Bpb Page handed it, to. .'em strajgHt.V ' . ' about'' that government salary f increase. Hi ' Some, of the . government employes ay 1 .not De paid any too .mucii, uui au lv'A.& - .. V.', there are numerous folks wiUing;ah4,anx;; ' ious to take the jobs for the amount paid, the increase of " salar'.' isi.0Jr, rr'anttd.: " And the worst of ijs"; there are.armbttwb;;;.:;, or .hreg'j employes! .ptjongregs attacheqto the payroll -for eyerjy iOne! thAt fs rejally . Yes, but the Congressmen,: not 1 agavc.tr. rV ffcrti:plvfH an in&rVak&lni two thousand five, V hundred a year. : Generally ; trie3 empfo'whrf gets a'frajjse of fhree hundred a year tbiiikxfe2$ ha.f3oh?isTyell, but at a single bound th Gon gressmen ailowed the;y should ake !f en-fiyejr hundretTrnore, and pf urse thfpok it- &rid naturally, as it costs them; nothing, they Vote to increascthe salaries of .all, peoples-making an expense; of millions in a few years, absolutely, . unnecessary, for, asthe Landmark weJl J sayjs..: therie were plenty of'eople eager and anxidus'.-'.. for jobstt the old salaries. '. ..; v t , : But: the men in poweri are not voting away v their1 own money. "Thiey' arc playing ..the'ii.', vorites"uoffen they 'attach ; to ..themselves; a" crowd, of useless hangers-on and letthe people,; pay the freight, pay tnet freight. tS. 1 The 'government ?employe; ;was already, ,anv'i eight hour a day ; he was better paid than nost. people, r iAnd yet the, poor old .women who : scrub the floors, who are down on theirhands.. .. and kn;ees?"all day, they are government em ployes and are but half paid. The fancy1 clerk the useless vermiform appendix of the Con-'; " pressman sometimes" inanimate i - eretsf- his, i 1 hand in; and has a good time Hqweyer it is o the wbrid's-way and 'democracy . )vhiijh Vva3- :. once the great party of reform has acted like alii other'parties in'pbwer.. -.' ' . " I! , Will No? Happen. 'it Now and then a voice is raised in this" statej ' ' for the Australian ballot. But it ; will : lie Vers: corned "Why? Because the4 .Australianbai&r:'' insures an honest and a fair elecclonThe; Aus-" tralian ballot has printed on it all the names, ofT. -all the people running for office. . All on -one . ticket. The voter takes that ticket, arid goes in a booth, and there alone- with his jGtiancl his lead pencil he marks off ,7.by a : ceck tef ' names of those for whom 'he; wh'tpfyp.lf , vt he wants to vote for a republican for ovei nor and a democrat, for Attorney jGeneraldir. vice versa, he does so, and no; living, nan; . knows' what he did. In other wcrds-;itHout r nprriannt without intimidation: Jmnlfed or.' expressed, without knowledge ohe;rootec5( booster he expresses himsdf ju4ti as he-ees: vSj' That is.an honest way to secure ihe . verietjpfc n-MTor-nrnortt-LL-. tVit-n'r f wVliHh' litripr'Knftl et-orw1 . There : will rie5rrty.Austr!ainbt?M . -!r-":7-N'-V 'Best Thing' to bo.';' r-." XfhWe the banks bT our city Idvertise for members fqr, the CjsXjpfs SavingClusand 1 while. in' a'measure ttjs a private coriTmefcial ' proposition, it becc2mes"broadeT and is pf conj- munity -rinterest. . rjJ.fa.cttfiat. PrenspY people " had .; saved" something over a htinred ; thousand-dollars aitft t&eref ore had ; miieyb :. spend on ChristmaIyt which otherwise thtj would nothave had-caiises us tof eel that ev ery' citizen should make it his duty to exploit the savings plan, aiiaSjhelp, not only the banks,. cj hut tht individiials-oi the entire community.-' : serving colored ma-mis town ww was , spending- all his rri0oyc-WM v.'i?.""-"11.:; x. . the Christmas savifigplan and this yearfhej&s to hi s credit $50 and will keep on-saving. Foff a long jife he had given up every penny he man1 Hp is orotki rhis vsavinsrs-hevfeels that whenfhe gets msnroney in the rVank it is sacred, and some day fie will. haye'ehoaglittfb something with. There is not a bettei thing going than the: Christmas savings ptan, and" we are glad there are bankers in Greensboro who : push it. ;1 .... , h '0 -' ' - A Christmas Tree.j.r ;;;ry The Statesville' Landmark regrets .that ; Statesville didn't have a Community Christmas - tree this year, and .wants to . have one next ; year, it is tne tning. ureensDoro nas naa xne Community Christmas tree for several years ' and it has always proved a great success arid'-1 Statesville will make ho mistake. !n1intraduc-:" ing it to her people. ' " i o -: ." . '.. v ---- . - . : -. " ' Paderewiski in Raleigh. The Rotary Club' will bring Paderewiski 'to Raleigh on January 23. He wiU come with his wealth of hair and his wonderful -genius. . He will doubtless have a full house, because in all the world there is but . one of hira. . He? can certainly get the mtisic out of .anythihgi hV J touches muic such as- the -aiigelg rtrrade-hr'V heaven. The greatest artist in his linefthis ; world has known nd, Raleigh is to bfeonJ gratulated on his coming. "' ; ''ffy : t-;Jp. o ;-t4V!&i 1 The Season FadSi mnmgm . . -... The average merchant finds himself irra pickle after the season's rush is oyejf. 4He; has : toys left on hand; he has goods that must be : disposed of, and therefore he gets 'busy. Hd1 must have a clearance' sale and he goes to it with a will. In the dry , goods line, he under stands that something in this styleisyarf won't be in style a little later on, and when'he- a concludes it is better- to get less than cost 6ut; ,of what he has than to lose it all, and adver tises accordingly marry people think it strange i that an article costing ten dollars last weejc ' should be offered fotrfive this week.":. There ife . nothing strange aboiiV it, vr The merchant! i l .simply getting something, while heinf or iffi -1 ne..man,.wno putfouiiiygpra; iiyjcc . doesn't. miss it; IKwe.sdvtnf-btlill knows what he sm?&&, ep$-: haps tried'It once. &&Shappen tdk) aib4i! ne waits too long he loses all of it. - At ' J
Everything (Greensboro, N.C.)
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Jan. 6, 1917, edition 1
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