Newspapers / Everything (Greensboro, N.C.) / June 30, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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GREENSE ORO, -- : i - .... - - -..- :. PA GIT TWO tw n--i And C-t- : la the ct cn yt:r?iay the U TU U- mjs that ccehU i- a x a j I ui tit ra,i ai mr lv 7 f 4;-C l6 l u fcc!p the erfW.e dawn mh tccfi 13 the aits t lciV t.sea ari cm a few lui r7 IV oak it a terr li-sc iVJ fctt as ILs cm J Gcw.So there J Ur lt;amr men el "Th jV be they i iwfTt tf h ki isi l?tr rr Art3 i tU rcftuC ta l ;;cl ccr- -In U c runt i Wtf ra la c?r?tf .Tctr.ich. Itf ?:,r Uri U i t ,-r?t ,Jr c .Sr i. i-x-T. r-.xr.tr wmi r i-?,- Jsit Jce? t lU? cr-f K-f f th ft:'? t C f?c 1 -.rr Jf sit; t..rc 5t sr l lc4 i-y. T . (;V llftf fsT?r, Itt ta a?-1 ihr ttx" ti r t f t -ra Alt l rr ?rcf tf f r.! s-rf c'-"- rf tto-a ptft:f a5 isr-r K4f4C?rf If ihT tf rt a hfrr Uf. if ihey are Ir i i; ia lf n!,!', i r Ntsrt tha IsxV-t-"- fee r?"fT ""h Ck5 low tVr ?r v-;iy iCftn el ir earth Kr t-- cr-y.,. a?e es th-r wfT-f f?i : J 4s"i crt f 5 f it tfi-.c thr wt'.d $:. is r: tr tx a r;. :a I tr,xc iL, 4c3 t:t. :.:i?:."r. l-.-c the he? rf the At.sw r-y f ;fvj fee A4 it l rr'.y 1 re t'0 a th-i iftc-: rre ta i fi c h-i aa f 'j t.!..i-f4 as--! wetJ thjod jc-j ji e-wr Tra Sericf- J; t- Cifi2. fic;c a?r a rer-tX'5 c -r ;-e '-.-tti. in rvT i.-r a - . 5:i!hTra i'.x'.t j.ecf tf -.Kte!ea tfrea-4. a 5 t? " r-r 4 to I x wr t?e There . h-e r-i "ir rr.fi ?r ic7r-5 hy c-sejeate i thy ca a4et thftr:, ts'th-e &4r' fr the fi!j rt te a cc. "Thr rtkc h-ctuffa thu c-.:r i ! Wtr.:--s U!fta thU i!y ar,d lulfl t lh?t ilrrl, 0-T th-rrV-er rf Car,. trtit i V r af-rf t v-xi't?, aS the t th-? the r.:4y a t? y cter to f:c::.vf the ffrtiJ 4 ftr ew f?;tj el. Hr-weef. we ;" ! e -? i? ca iMrtfftJfX w.'.h the ; "f the fi !i; cl Ar.er4 ta ihetf wf c-?A!jt , feet .;:; e.f the t-fS riuy fa h- : I crt hi! raal he d-ce. a&! th; te.!iut i weel:e-x with ?Se f)-tefs-," Thty tf c ihxi tc-sMf. ! ef esf -;tr r---r ia ce w-.IJ t-e at la Fras-'c. tVt a? tf r the rtMra rr? tra.- r "w a tfte ia A?-er ca ws! t-e r, rf ? --J thr war -!. If ths i t rsr. t trfe a yfrTa?a c-st t.s-e'J ar-f ?e.h Caf " a"--e-t t to g"?e 3 f-4y tra. w r rr -t ct then cp. t we ce ST r-;? J!ar f-e the Kr-J Crti a? J the !he?ty firsts. 5. It t:a-i! l- rea-a that if the tra:i- mrtt e-'-srey rai.tr th-ry J ei-. le tale a off, t! er- r-..r-y e-atre. the ra:"r c. uc;! fc te f?et4 tr-sa thm as a &.. Th t At jr;a a a re4 r: e ea a heee artits't face. o M h! at t:5 !e that the Ca:a ffeet hihii-.c ts? ta"i t t-e rt nJ fsjfht cow. 1 trrr it ex flae to ft and c-a thiUsthr'ttt crTrrt a t;lc free. FooJ Saving Day. Suniay. July Tif;. w5:i b-e FocJ ating Day. Oa t.Vat day a!3 m;n;:er will be atked ta preach a trrrr. :a ca ts'l cantenatiea. Herter? Heeler i ak;sg that all prcple ia trrttt ther-.ele ia lY irr.pttant werk. The tdeA it la irr.pee ea.evrry maa. wemaa an 1 child the netr.;!y cf .attrg faod. A eleaa r'ate at the tat-e i to be the motto. The wan:;a wa:e mut ttcp if we wia the war. U it e.::ma:ri. cce?vt!itely. it t 4.;i. that a lh:.d m:re fccJ t crked every day thaa c?numed by human being-. The ca;l anl the p;g tsy gt eeao-.-h food to atAia m;Il;-t cf prcple. To ttapi thi wAtc will be the e:Tcet cf tha in:ere:ed. All thtt talk vJ etTn:ull!y da g! not only dsnng the war, but After the war. Amer ica hat been too long ca h.jjh ;eed and the mutt crme c:T her perch " The war will bring aS:uS th;t rctulf. The i it that Suniayj July Ktrtt. w-.ll e crowded churchet. and that cur m:n-.t:ee dnte home tr.e reaon wh we ah?'ild be leu waa:efuL t-j.; ra -7'-r t;rr wrrt i-rj ;r rc s tiro-w-.-x tfx. AS lhf-a Ihry a- the fftt- I I 5r:: t; lz!T Ut Ka' t-st a j tlra cs 7; t?r. tie a3 the b- i j I lien i the tfcisr. they get bchI Oc rfw.;!loa t!ui the fctc fcundftii nuhon dol i,:.hkh Dirfejccrti rn oceu?U0a us -!J te lit to the goTcnn:em-nl ihea ro:e to contisce h'm a rowrf TKit m t he c44 isoakey wrtoch thrown into ia all the townt and hjev .: t fwn where wc r.iu taaliy it wai Jeet er4 that money wai noi the Ur rocmt left u the oty hat made woo !etfal ithie. ar.4 jcrcthow cr other we i tfh cvocey to rua thine. ' Ai the ciuncei are thaUf LV.c e Sim were to ctmdade that fire hundred miUcm Jf rnsit he raie4 frtra other totrrcei it would oc raited. Ard within a year oe two thote coa invert who raid the liU would forget a!! Aisl it rwata'l lorx that the democrat were hw?!.-c aSoct a refuh'.icaa coagTett h had r-t a bilhcn doJUr. It wit temble. Hit tvaw to fpcr.d three or four bl!oa, in lime cf peace. U r.oth!r.f. and to tpend ten bti:o ia timet cf war it eaiy. The hitkey feter.se it a mete bacatclle. It hou!d not he uied at a reatoin to coRtir.ce a traffic that cc rjafct in4 dchauchet our people. And the teener ti: men in the Senate understand th$t the teener we wiU have ahtclate catorul pro h hiSica. V o The Ed.toct, Dawti by the to-jr.d;rr tea thU week and liht ivow the cditoft. thove ha pry mortal who t.or to the Xfefth Carolina Ire Ao easka. ws;l erect, talk, bathe, eat. drink and be merer. Thit once a year vann i a good, thtrf. It rcitt the weaned man who hat paid ti censt a f-nj fof paper wxrth two. and it gitet the cce boy a chance to thow the od rr.aa w hat he can do on a' pinch. It wAt reter our t;:caufe to attend a meet-i-g cf the Noeth Carolina Pre Aiation. fcf oter a charter of a century we have la Uciri ia "Vur midt": we hate moulded ruMic r;;t;cn by the running yard year in and year cut: we hate handed down view on "jcrr.c! i.rn. but never er.ee d;d we get to attend a rreet;tg ef the cc'eetite qu;!I driver of Tar hre!ia. and it look lke we never will. Ia the other And happier day we dsda't agree w5',h Secretary Shemll abut tcme thing that the jear hate rendered inconsequential, but we A;d thea that to fang a 5hcrril wa ec retary we ww!dni -jine." and thi to highly f teamed the other membert that they have kept Jcha at tecrrctary ever tince. Not until a whi?e !ab in tome titent cemetery mark the f rx resirg place ef thit Old Man will fcha hht r;l quit the of -ecretary. Then. ttUrc that the tombttone will hold ut down. the Ire Aiaton will elect a new man. bus we will then le peacefully writing blank tc re in ea, and care nothing about the tttt lunch and free trip of Morehead City. o All Jfcght Hete. The r-asiceal committee which boh up e fenely eah tear to talk atxut a afe and ane IVrth cf July i already out with it procla- f-,a!;cr.t Ckd ?uff. all right, but here in Green lfa there will be a perfectly tane and doubt Irt a perfectly 4?e celebration. There will be- eth;rg eut of the ordiaary doing. The rer-j i bird ef tttt4on will not Ioe a tail leather t far a fecrram completed indicate. A few f.fecratker will be cld. a toy balloon cr two may be tent up. a few g!ae of red lerr.cr.a !e may he tent dawn, but no tearing the 4;f. Had Guilford county been atked to join in a big celebration it it doubtful whether it "zli hate happened thi year. But next year, A?irr the rxjterr.ment ha takm over the Bat tle Grr-snd. After the red tape ha heen wound an! reweund. we tyggett a rattling big ccle bra:ioa. Mrethirj: that will retemble the old dayt, the day when we gloated oter the fact that we ha I whipped Kr gland, now our allr. Chroma i the only dar left, unlet a i T?kienirg. ta celebrate. There ha been t much money raiting. o much rcgittration, iM teetty -ca three i to he to much con trtrt.oa. that ree are not thinking along j:-f ef p!eaufc. They are thinking cf other th-.rg Orer - ubteribed. The hundred million dollar wanted by Red Crot wrtker hat been oter-tubtcribed. the fund larrrr than atked fee. The hundred mil lion wi;l be ued by Red Crot worker, and pet hap ra uch fund wa cter before volunta rily gitea by any people. The chance are that the hundred m:ll: will not ro a far a rr-e think, but it will b eaiy to do the thing oter again. e The dg are mutrled and tuffering fcr water. See that your dog ha plenty of water and there will be no o-called hydrophobia. And rem ember that a d?g cia't drink water wish a murtle cn hi note. Treat him right and he will be right. o Still Talking. Emma Goldman, out on bond, tried to pull an anarch:! meeting in New York latt week, but the police got buty and foe once Kmma didn't face the aodven.ee. The hope i that the will be deported be-fore another meeting i booked. Vhile tin i the land of the free and incideusally the home of the brave, the time ha come when all people, regardle of pull or portion. mut repect the fia and hold their collective yawp, and if they do not like what it icoing oa in thi country they can reds!y 4;l for the hore which will give thera thelter. The Cenu Bureau now thowit thai it e timate of the number of ehrible to regitter wa jutt about right. Per hap a quarter of a million oter. but jut about it. The Centu Bureau for the f.rtt time ince w-e can remem ber in thi instance showed tome real tervicc worth while- ! r a pui the tittlre !hocRd dollr year hcc woi!4 be to baily mined thit we coulua t get . - - 1 i Hifih Prctjure. Greensboro ha been under high pressure of late-so many things before e people a each item demanding money. The UDeny Bond buiiness was in investment ia ny Jtgm you may view it, Ut so are many other tmngs and unless a man has the wherew.thal he can t inveiL But the Bond issue was a ; Ptot afTair-erery man who invested felt that E u y impelled him .to make a' pe.sonal sacrifice m order to do his bit, and for that reason much ready money that doubtless K freely to the Red Cross campaign had already been appropriated, j j Human nature, as if Vtoher.Tav? times and as ten thousand philosophers nave &ed tbrochot e ages is a queer old rirL She disports hefelf ia many 5 earns manyrcams. As an illustrjation let a man have tea thousand likely plunks in cold JaOi-ten thousand ensp nonce treasury and be feels all right for the nonce SS Irt hint put those ten thousand dollars o a real estate investment that he knovys ts good -one that he can oh the morrow turn and make another thousand yet looking at nis ant balance in his bank look he fee I. poor lit sees that he has been JPYll.JT coin, and forfeit to see that he has joined I bun- self to something beitcr-that be h made a thousand dollars. But you can t con vince him. And let something come along atkicg alms and because he hasn't the ready rhino, the cash, he feels too poor. No reason for this excuse because. And we dare make the statement that had the Red Cross campaign came in ahead of khe Bond sale the amount wanted from old Ouiliora would have been subscribed in three days. However, we did very well, and the hundred million will soon be gone, and on the next call we will perhaps do better. ' o ; The School Situation. The Advisory Board hasnt, yet made any official report, at least none has been given to the public, and'the chances are that the city xhool situation is about where it was before the Committee. wis appointed, except, possi ble the waters are muddier than ever. It i said that Mr. Hammell has been waited on and aked to withdraw his application, arfd he ha refused to do this. Whether Mr. Koontz has been given a similar opportunity to come in out of the wet wo do not know. If both these gentlemen have been asked to side step and each i given to understand that he stands no chance whatever of being ap pointed, then both should get out of it and let the selection be made elsewhere. However, if Hammell ha been atked to make room for Koontr. then naturally he isn't going to with draw, and so the factional fight will intensifr. We think Profes-or Hammell has mad good. We think it unfortunate that in the school business it should be dragged into poli tic and handed out over the streets. But thi has bapoened, and it looks to us that if the Commissioners would sec nothing but the success of the city schools f hey would steer clear of all factional fights. However, the music is on, and joy will perhaps be uncon fined. o Ought To Be Glad. Of course "the principle of the thing" is what always rankles in one's breast, but with a day as hot a yesterday everybody should have been glad that there is no base ball now on. To find a place in the shade thit was comfortable was impossible, and yet those who look after such things tell us that the weather was not very warm. It was explained iht the eeeent lane? cold soells had so adjust ed our Mystems" that exceptionally warm weather appelred about ten degrees warmer than it wa. Maybe so, but we can't believe everything we hear. Yesterday was a hot day. o If It Happena. The story from Washington to the effect that the government will lake over factories making automobiles and start the manufac ture of hydroaeroplanes sounds like- there might be something doing. It is said that the government will go further and limit the sup ply of gatoline used by pleasure riders. The hope is to build thousand of machines and literally fill the air a'nd water with themto hate so many that a submarine will find it im potable to show its head or periscope in safety. If the automobile shops are taken over, then the auto business will lag. The stock on hand is not large, and if the manufacture of them ceaies for a period of a few months those who own machine will be the people. But it will be hard luck for the dealers. o m Released Them. The city courts released the sixteen suffra gettes who tried to picket the White House after being ordered to move on. Those women should have been sent to the work house for a period of not les than thirty days. They are the kind to incite riots, to cause lawless ness, and arc altogether a menace to Society. They are representing a Congressional Union composed of hysterical, half-witted women who think Congress, should stop everything cite to listen to them. They cjo not represent the real woman suffrage party. But because they arc women the courts let them go. Bet ter send them to the roads that is exactly where they belong, the same as any other law less and defiant disturber of.thc peace. o Roasting Sara. - They arc here. Plenty sweet enough and plenty big and plenty high priced enough out they have come. The season -changes rapidly now; the screen turns on new pictures of things to eat, and pretty soon again the grape, the last things of the season, will come, and then Christmas. Do your Christmas Shop ping cow. o , It may be possible to get the- Coler road. Bonds can be issued if the question is prop erly and intelligently presented to our people. Wc need the road and we can afford to give something, to get it- - . . iWwho do iot want to , " bibition t up the old toiy.M ing wine ind beer temperance J TW'tfiat-wnrt't d0. The XNeW iwtix uww. - . vxrt' writes Herald, with an eye to wet Nv York, writes this.plausible story: , -. N . ' . It seems to be the idea ot yn . members that Congress. should not per ; mit its right hind to know what its le hind is doing in matters 9l'S?1? Having constructed its war taxation bill on the assumption that the pvenment will have $30,000,000 i? spirituous and malt liquors, the House of Representatives proceeds to destroy most ifinot all of that revenue by the so-called "prohibition" amendment; which makes it a crime to use grain in the manufacture : of whiskey or beer. . The action of the House is a fair iUus- . tration of the hysteria rampant on Capitol Hill. Forces that riave attached them selves to the prohibition movement have seized . upon "the food control bill, as a means to fasten prohibition upon the na " tion. The country has reason to be suspi cious' of those forces, since.it is true of -many of them that .their thought is not of the nation but of their own political in terests. What they are attempting would be a blow at temperance, not a victory for it. .To those political charlatans, rather than to the sincere advocates of temper ance, may be attributed the misrepresen tations upon which the prohibition cam paign has been bolstered up. One of these is the assertion that Russia and France have "gone on the water wagon." Those nations have placed a ban against vodka and "absinthe; liquors containing a very high percentage of alcohol, but have not dreamed of going to the length of our own political prohibitionists who would abol ish light wines and beers. No real gain can be made for prohibi tion by misrepresentation. The cause is injured rather than helped by its political " hangers-on. Of all times a nation should be ruled with sanity when it is at war. There is merit in' the proposal that the President should be clothed with the power, to be used at his discretion, tcj coo serve the grain supply of the nation! He should not be compelled by legislation to take a leap in the dark. It is to be hoped the Senate will be found standing firmly for sanity. The politician for a long time greased his wheels by passing the hat of easy money in the prohibition tent. Time was when .0 fesstonal prohibition orators went from town to town and made big money. But in these days, when prohibition has proved itself all it claims, no longer does the professional grafter get in his work.. Out in Washington state when prohibition came the city of Seattle had a dozen breweries wonderful buildings and millions invested. The people of that state, by a rousing major ity, said they wanted prohibition and they voted out wine and beer along with John Bar leycorn. And that is what the Senate should do and will finally do. A drunk is possible on beer. It contains but little alcohol compared with whiskey, hardly ever over four per.cent., but the man who sucks the beer bottle long enough will get just as drunk as the whiskey artist. And if prohibition is the thing sought, why keep alive -the appetite of men with the lighter drinks. If you are going to put out a fire in the stove you don't keep adding ccal you, let the fire die. Why should this nation play a game for brewers and wine makers as against the whiskey makers? There is no rea son. Prohibition by the Nation will be along in a few years now, and those who defend the saloon will wonder why they did it. Food Essential. It seems that food and plenty of it is essen tial to make a successful fight against tuber culosis. In talking on the subject of increased death rates from this disease among the sol diers the New York Herald savs that "one of the rather striking features of the mortality lists in the warring countries is the increase in the death rate from tuberculosis. This has been noted everywhere; but particularly in France. The reason for it is tiie reduction in nutrition consequent upon food limitation as well as certain changes in diet. "Reduction in the amount of food consumed below the normal nutrition limit does not cause tuberculosis, but it favors strongly the reawakening of the disease wherever it al ready exists. In recent years it has been dem onstrated that the old tradition 'every one has a little tuberculosis' is a fact. ' Pathologists have shown by careful autopsies that more than ninety-seven per cent, of all bodies, even those with no tuberculosis history, contain tuberculosis lesions. ' "Here then is the greater danger of a reduc tion in the amount of food normally taken or of such an upsetting of diet as will limit the amount of fat or of the starchy substance usually taken. Fat is the most important die tary factor for protection against tuberculosis. However, any change in the ordinary starch ration as, for instance, from wheat to corn may have an effect in favoring tubercle growth similar to that produced by reduction of the fat ration." , . ' ' Look Good. It certainly at last looks like "Uncle Sam was really going to take a harid and stop the pirates of commerce in their raids. If the price of coal is fixed it follows that the price of bread "will be fixed. And when it is known that the government has the power to do these things, then your Mr. Cold Storage Man is going tovbea bit particular about -hoarding supplies. The Chicago man, for instance, who put away six million eggs would have a care. Because Uncle Sam might.some day say eggs were worth but so and so, arid that Would be the undoing of the conspirators. In all the lines, from the onion trust to the wheat trust and the coal trust, Uncle .Sam has a fine op portunity to serve all the people. And it looks now as though something was going to hap pen. ; j . ; . . Flammarion;;the' noted,. French astronom and - one of the, most delightful writers this age - has known, brietime wrote; a story 0t ?Ther East DiyXl ) Being an astronomer de:alt' with ;' the (condition of the heaye bodies" :whenitte;bldworld;c;ad to be, a; his illustrations showed the last man, the 0ni one left, gaunt and pale and starving. Heh-i been the strongest of his race and he suniV! for a: longer period than any .of his brother The French artist presented a terrible pctu; of,this giant dying invagbny because he b run out of water. fWhen the water failed ' jig was up -,i-- - And on Saturday,: according to the gencr understanding; the-bone-dry . law goes into ' f ect in this state, and naturally we wi!' , booking for pictures" in-real life like ,Flai rion put.ih his Dobjc. The bone-dry lav frightened many people, but after all it mean, but little. The one section that brings ne hope, that makes a man dream that he struck an oasis; in V great' desert, is that lat section which reads: J . , : ."Whosoever shall" order, purchase or caus, intoxicatingdiquors to be transported in inter, state commerce, except for. sacramental, sciea tlfic,. medicinal and mechanidal purposes intc any state or territory the laws of which statt or territory prohibit. the sale or manufacture therein of intoxicants for beverage purposes shall be punished as aforesaid, provided that nothing herein shall authorize the shipment of liquor into any state contrary to the laws ot such state' .' . ' v Now, if that means any thing, it means that a scientist can order -likken And what is j scientist? . Suppose a gentleman with a sub lime thirst concludes that he wants to experi ment on the tissues of the stomach. He want to see whether or hot a gourd full of whiskej taken on an empty stomach will have more effect on the nervous -system than a gourd full of "whiskey taken on a full stomach. TL can't he send and get a quart of likker and make the tests in his. barn; or laboratory? flt can. Suppose the man who now and then feel; ! like thirty cents; who gets up in the morning with a. seal-brown, taste in his mouth because offlrinking. the i moonshine of the day before, concludes that hesis ill, that he needs whiskey formeTcinal purposes. The question is, shall he go to a ' physician-and get a prescription and send it to the mail order house or simplv sit down and tell the reluctant shipping clcri .that he wants, p.'d. q.express paid, one quart of good old rye to be jised on, a sick man, an why can't the mail order man conclude that the: fellow really needs it?. It isn't possible that the patient must be compelled to iournev to the mail order house, have his temperature taken, his tongue examined, his pulse felt by the elevator boy of the establishment before judgment is passed. Certainly not. In not telling how to determine the illness the gate is open. Had the law said for medicinal pur foses upon the prescription of a regular!; icensed physician then there might have beer some doubt about getting, the prescription. But under this section each man writes bis' own prescription. And in these day ing upon all the inv try to contrive sorri submarine warfare., what's the matter with tb man who wants a jag by mail imagining that he needs a Sacred Quart to be used mechanic ally? For instance, in the airship planned by him there could be a receiving cup, and the di rections could say that this cup must always and invariably be filled with a quart of likker' or the machine wouldn't run. .Well, naturally the quart of likker would be permissible, be cause it is dangerous to run an airship with out following directions. - In this state the Quart law obtains. There fore any man who is" willing to make a state ment tcsuit his fancy can order just as much likker as he ever ordered under the law which has obtained for, a long time. All he need do is to specify whether he is going to use the stuff for medicinaf, scientific, mechanical or sacramental purposes. And if a man wants a drink very badly it is really easy to imagine any or all of the imposed conditions. The only feature about the bone-dry law that makes it a little hard to get around is the section which prohibits manufacturers or deal ers from sending thjeir literature into dry terri tory. But we take it that that will be very easily gotten around. For instance, the law against sending green goods literature is very strict, but hundreds of thousands of pieces of it are mailed every week from the big cities. So the wet goods will have easy sailing: The dealer can make a trip to a town like Greens boro and verbally explain what is happening tell a dozen- fellows and the glad tidings i great joy will spread throughout the wet dis trict like a prairie fire on the Kansas plains. Verily, the bone-dry law isn't much better than the law we now have; in fact, no better. Had the prohibitionists done their duty last winter and knocked out that Sacred Quart clause, then the bone-dry law would hare sealed North Carolina tight. But so long as the state law permits the possession of a quart just that long the likker and the possessor w be found. Done In A Hurry. The organization of the ; Ambulance Corn pany, one hundred and nineteen strong, in this city was done in a hurry. Just two or three citizens -Foust, Hendrix and Long got busy and, behold, before any of us knew what was going on the company is ready and will start Friday or Saturday, for Allentown, Pa-: t0 commence work. That is the way to do things do them right now. . ' : O " Big Thiings Going. .. The City Commissioners are now c0 -V ing a bond issue under the new law, niC will increase the . special school tax. hoped to makeit possible to secure something like fifteen or twenty thousand dollars a yea increase.in revenue in order to make neCJssa2 improvements on : sohool buildings and P -teachers a living salary. 'ti lt the selection of the teachers and uPcrljS tendents and all connected with the schools wisely made, if there is no factional Vxt ence shown, the bond issue will carry ;Gl ise it will be defeated. s, when Uncle Sam is call entive genius in the ccurl ethihor thit will stop ink wi A
Everything (Greensboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1917, edition 1
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