V,V'rto 9V Number 19V """ tlayi wecir.r
V ( l,.n8 XJ, luintv-r . partly cloudy
THE SUN-JOURNAL, NEW BERN, N. C.; TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1920.
EIGHT PAGES TODAY
Single Copy: Five Cents
WOMEN KILLED
THIS MODERN BLUEBEARJ)
E
ER
HAD TWENTY-SIX WIVES
AT
'4
HEAVY FIGHTING
CONTINUES ALONG
BERESINA RIVER
DANIELS FISK
MANDATE OV
IN AUTO ACCIDENT
OLD CONTROVERSY
Mill
URGED
II MIMPTflM
BEING
UPON
AMERICA
niLminuiun
of
to
i
t!
irrcro's Claim That "First
CI i ur" . Committed Suicide
Net S ".stainedBody of Slain
Pre IJcnt Taken to Mexico
City For Burial.
:XICO CITY, May 25. In ac-
nre with hi3 oft-repeated re
., rresident Carranza, slain last
s.'lay morning, was buried late
i 'ay afternoon in the Dolores
y, where the poorest of Mexi
ire for many years found their
vr-Ur. j places.--
3 body of the slain president ar
i i r;erjco City at 5: 30 o'clock
r ' ay morning, and was taken to
I .-.rally home, being escorted by
is and a delegation from the
.atic corps. , '
', -nel Rudolf o Merrero, leader of
evolutionary forces on whom has
1 ' 1 the responsibility tor the
i' cf Carranza, had telegraphed
-r :y authorities here that the
-it committed suicide rather
; urrervder. ' " -- vv: ,r -nel
llerrero has ' offered to
to Mexico City to prove his as
:,n that Carranza killed, himself.
1 r
v:;::a
i i Was Assassinated
CRUZ, May 25. Reports
; ;, performed on the body
I resident Carranza failed
,-lih the claim of Rudolfo
:. :t the president commit-
o t.
i .1 2 rather than be taken cap
is ; r t c 1 in official quarters
- ii who conducted ' the aur
t ii "declared, found Carranza
n i-truck by two rifle bullets,
v : '.eh penetrated his breast
" ' -r his abdomen. The bul
! from in front, and it was
:i c f those who. witnessed
t' t the president had
it .is, said.
. An Outlaw '' '
.-,,-May 25 Gen-
bidding defiance
... an government,
,i outlaw among
. 3 ...idit, with a small
. v. . , reported today be
1 and Jimenez, Chihua
tcd quarry of de facto
a price of 100,000 pesos
ll'C
: NAMED TO
GEORGIA STRIKE
sociated Press.) .
. I ON, D. C, May 25.
ell has been appointed
the strike of. Central of
,ro3d clerks, it was an
'.e Department of Labor.
raid, President of the
iks, has advised the de
at there was . danger of
J.
i
(.
r reading "all over the
i we.
r
a:;d rowdies in
CL SII IN ROME; 5 KILLED
' ociated Press.)
, ::.y 25. Four policemen
5 (
' . ::ian were killed in a clash
i. i .vdies and nolice during a
r .Ion celebratine the fifth,
r ry cf Italy's ejitry into the
world
v. :-.r cere toaay. .-
c::ai;ges made in f
nr.
IDZNCES OF BISHOPS
(By the Associated Press.)
DES MOINES. Iowa. May 25.-
Few chansea were made in the resi
dences among bishops of the Meth
odist Lpiaeopal church in the appoint
ments of those officially read today
at the- r aeral conference. ' Among
the cha: s were F. D. Leete from
Atlar.ti to Indiananolis. and W. F.
Thii build f rom New Orleans to' Mex
ieo City, r,lexico. . - v:4 5
I- Reducinc H. C. L.
. ' WASHINGTON, May . 25.-rMeans
of reducing excessive living costs by
honet , wc:shts and measures was
one of the topics before the confer
ence of weights and measures offi
cials of the United States, opening
here today. : i
THIS LITTLE PIGGIE ,'
HAS TWO SQUEALS AND
SEES ;WITH THREE EYES
BAT AVI A, N. Y., May. 25. A
farmer living near here has discon
tinued using his dinner bell. He has
a substitute that beats a dinner bell
' all hollow. , f ,
Said substitute is none other than
a . young pig, but it is an extraor
dinary pig. - It was born with two
snouts, three eyes, two mouths and
two tongues, and it can squel out
of both mouths at the same time and
see with all three eyes. "
Three times dailv this youn
' porker grows hungry and he doesn't
hesitate to raise two loud, .shrill
squeals when , the time arrives, for
putting on the feed bag. So the din
v . bell isn't neerlPii fnf this pii
" waa born on . a small'i'farm "and
squeal can be heard from'any cproer
cf iz4 v
BECOMES PRESIDENT ' .;
OP GUATEMALA
4 'I
Following the enforced resignation
of Estrada Cabrera, .after a presiden
cy lasting twenty-two years,; Carlos
Herrera has been . made provisional
president of Guatemala. Herrera owns
the biggest sugar -' plantation in the
country, and, is one of that republic's
wealthiest' men. iHis children hava
been educated in schools in the Uni
ted States. . ' . ..
WILLIAM BSSffi
TAKES FLAT ISSUE
nil ,;riso!i
Declares His Opposition to Pro-
posed American : Mandate .
Over Armenia .
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, May 25.
William Jennings Bryan took flat
issue today with President Wilson on
the . question of an American man
date ' over Armenia, declaring in a
statement that "any mandate is im
possible." . -
The United States, Mr. Bryan said,
could do more ' toward making the
world safe for democracy,' "even for
democracy in Armenia, Dy recog
nizing the Armenian rRepublic and
entering the league . of " nations "as
the friend of all little countries.'';
WOMAN SUFFRAGE
E!
Well Known Woman Delivers An
y
' Interesting Address ?
. There
Pamlico county evidenced ' its ' In-M
terest in the woman suffrage issue by
crowding! the Bayboto court-house to
the doors Monday night to hear Miss
Lola C. Trax, field counselor of the
National American Woman Suffrage
Association speak upon the ratiflca
tion of the federal amendment.
Mr. Allen Babbitt presided, and
after a well-chosen introductory
speech, presented Miss Trax as
southerner, a resident of Maryland
one versed in the problems of the
south. She said: "That North Caro
Una will ratify the federal woman
suffrage amendment is conceded.
want to plead that you make the vote
unanimous so that your women may
feel that you whole-heartedly .want
their ; cooperation : and so that they
may enter upon their new political
duties, with' a spontanetyi which will
militate to the advantage , of your
state.; I am told that the men of
North Carolina stay somewhat closely
by the -party lines. I ask that .you
stand by your parties now in the sup
port of our federal amendment : ;
The meeting unanimously passed a
resolution, calling upon the ;General
Assembly to ratify the amendment. A
Pamlico county v ratification commit
tee was fqrmed, with Miss vEmma
Bobbitt as chairman. ',
SERVED DIVORCE NOTICE,
THREW INFANT TO FLOOR
nAMVITin 111 TITo OS It moln
urXr-A'Zt Z?m:Z wT:;
STSPAIICO
vu, -""-"'"r "r"away...
vyas servea wiin n' uuuw
uuouauu uau meu sun iui uituh.. iubi
she hurled her
lureB-wraw-wu. iu-
fant to the floor
The child 1b at tna
point of death In a hospital. - Mrs.
wilbur(. was immediately - arrested. .
Tzken to jail she continued to . rave
for three hours ..when 'police,, were
J able to quiet her.
Bolsheviki Troops Thrown Back
By Poles With Heavy
- Losses
5 .',' (By Associated Press.)
, WARSAW, 'May " 25'. Bolsheviki
troop s which succeeded . in crossing
the upper Beresina in several places
have been driven back across the
river with , heavy losses, including
more wthan four hundred prisoners,
according' to an official statement is
sued' here today. ' The enemy ia at
tacking 1 along the entire northern
Polish front, but have been checked
everywhere It is declared. ..
Fighting continues . along the
whole front and the Bolsheviki have
brought - up1 the largest number or
troops ever faced by the Poles. Six
teen divisions " have thus far ' been
dentified"; as ' taking ' part in the
struggle. Soviet cavalry is being used
in the swampy country, and it is
known that at least one mountain di
vision is in action. Both sides are
using airplanes', armored automobiles
and armored trains wherever possi
ble. . ' -
GOVERNOR HARDING WILL
NOT DEFINE ESSENTIALS
(By the Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, May, 25. Econ
omy in individual expenditures, re
duction of non-essential ; loans j by.
banks, increased production and im
proved transportation are needed to
reduce the cost of living and deflate
credits, Governor Harding, of the
Federal Reserve Board, declared to
day in responding to a Senate resolu
tion of inquiry.
The board is not prepared to de
fine what are - essentianl and non
essential loans, Governor Harding
stated. This, he said, is a problem
for local bankers familiar with local
needs.
BOSTON WOMEN'S CLUB
OFFERS SET OF RULES TO
REDUCE COST OF LIVING
BOSTON, May 25. Here are some
rules for reducing the cost of living,
issued by the clothing information
bureau of the Boston Women's City
Club: .
'' 1 Women
Don't wear silk' gloves, stockings
or underwear. ' -
Don't wear shoes for style. .
Wear clothes longer. Don't be your
dressmaker's slave. ; v Y '
.Men 'A; ;r.:''?-;;v.-k';'
Don't wear stiff collars, cuffs and
shirts. . . :
Select "sensible" shoes.
Keep your coat on a hanger and
press your own clothes. '
Wear mended Bocks and polish
your own shoes. '
Even the kids can help by going
barefooted in the summer, so the in
formation bureau says.
PRESBYTERIANS ARE ON
SPEAKING TERMS AGAIN
(By Associated Press.)
CKENZIE, Tenn., May 25. For
the first time since the division arose
in .' the Cumberland; ..Presbyterian
Church South with the Presbyterian
Church U. S. A., the assembly of the
latter church in session at Philadel
phia and the Cumberland Presbyter
ian General ' Assembly, which con
cluded its session here today, have
exchanged greetings.
BOLD THIEF IBS
F 'LASSES
"Lifts" This From in Front Of
- Store on Pollock Street
Monday Night
NEW BERN, once referred' to as
the city . of mysteries, has another
deep, dark but bloodless enigma in
its midst, this time a barrel of the
finest " sort of molasses being the
Centre of attraction, said molasses
costing the owner, Mr. A. P. Fulcher
just seventy-five dollars. -
It happened thusly,- or" thisly,
whichever way one cares to put it:
Mr. Fulcher, who conducts a grocery
store at No. 224 Pollock street, had
purchased the barrel of molasses for
some of his select trade and, it being
rather heft and heavy, he had placed
it out on a small platform in front of
his store. All went well and serene
until about 11 o'clock Monday night
and at this point and that hour, the
plot, if not the molasses, thickens.
Chugging up the street came an
automobile. Two v men aiignted, re
qonnoitered "around and seeing no one
nearby, laid hold of the barrel, roll
ed it from its perch and managed to
get it in the car, then drove swiftly
. .. . r . ....
- set u m,ne car' lnen arove sw,,tlj
' Fortunately for Mr. Fulcher . and
iinr(,rri! lare v lor ine owner OI ine
automotive, tne molasses tnievear
weie seen and recoenized. Mr. Fulch -
t er refrained today from having a'
j warrant- sworn' out for the guilty
j parties, stating that he wanted to
give them an opportunity to return
the stolen goods.
.1.:
BARREL 0
Sad News Reaches Fayetteville
' Man at Convention of, '
'.Elks
(By the Associated Press.)
SALISBUKV May 25. Ar
thur C. : Coilocott, of Fayette
. villo, attending the grand lodge
' meeting of Elks here, received a
telegram shortly before noon to
day stating that . his wife and
daughter had been killed in an
automobile accident at Wilming
ton, N. C.-No details were given.
The daughter ; was attending
school in Wilmington. ' ,
OPPOSITION TO CATTLE t
DIPPING VERY GENERAL
;.( By Associated Press.)
"OKLAHOMA CITY Okla., May 25.
John A. Whitehurst, president of
the state board of agriculture, today
asked Governor Robinson to declare
si district of Sequoyah County under
martial law as a result of the destruc
tion of cattle dipping vats v: in that
county. Mr. Whitehur&t declared that
the farmers in three townships of
the county "were in open defiance of
the law , relative to the dipping of
cattle. "
mam file
EXPENSE AGCOUnTS
: II! seiiate probe
Edwards,'. Hoover and Owen
Sh'ow How Money is Being1:
. Spent . ..
. (By Associated Press.)f tv
WASHINGTON, May 5 .--Walter
W. Vick, manager of th presidential
campaign of Governor Edwards, dem
ocrat! ot New Jersey' denied before
the serfate : investigating committee
today that any liquor interests were
"underwriting" the governor's cam
paign. Mr. Vick was replying to questions
by Senator Reed, democrat, of Mis
souri. He naa testinea tnat tne. total
fund raised for his candidate was
512,900. i !
Expenditures of $66,332 exclusive
of the California -primary expense
have beeni made in the campaign of
Herbert Hoover for the republican
presidential . nomination, John F.
Lucey, manager for Mr. Hoover, tes
tified today. Total receipts were
placed at $62,185. .:...:
J. W. Beller, of Washington, ap
pearing for Senator Owen, democrat,
of Oklahoma, was the first witness
todayk Oklahoma's supporters for the
senator, he testified, raised $7,810
for the campaign and $2,600 was
given through the Washington head
quarters. Samuel Untermeyer, of
New York, who gave $1,000, he said.
was the only - large contributor,
though a cousin of the candidate
gave $500 at the start.. ; .
REDUCE PERSONNEL OF (
Insurance bureau
WASHINGTON, May 25. An
nouncement is made by Director R. G
Cholmelev-Jones tha. through the
adoption of improved methods . and
equipment, a plan to achieve an an
nual saving of approximately $8,500,
000 in the administration of the bu
reau of war risk insurance has been
inaugurated and, by" June 30 of the
present year will have become an
established regime. The bureau not
only has now reached a current basis
in its work, but the improved meth
ods which have been installed have
made possible at the same time'a re
duction of the personnel from 15,000
as of last July, to approximately 9,
000 as. of date, with a schedule of
further reduction ahead which, car
ried into effect, will reduce the per
sonnel to approximately 7,500 by
June . 30, ' thus virtually cutting in
half the bureau's basic payroll in the
course of the fiscal year.
ONE-PIECE SUITS
TO BE PERMITTED
Washington Officials Will Allow
Girls To Go As Far As
They Like
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, D. C.. May 25.
Bare legs and scanty one-piece bath-
" " ycimilieu luio Bum
at Che8peake Beach, the capi-
tal's seashore resort
' v Officials today agreed to disregard
simh nroncrloTita ao iho n,ii;h;nri
orders issued at Conev Island and
1 Atlantir- ntv np-aint oritur hnthit,
costumes
It is silly to put the ban on bare
legs," they said, "a'nd if any of the
girls want to . cut the high cost - of
dressing.the police won't say a word.
BARE LEGS AND
'4' . '' . '--.i
ISl p " - ii
It ' 11
i( '
It- . L
Charles Newton Harvey, also
known as Richard Huirt, is accredit
ed (by-police officials with having .mar
ried twenty-six wives. Harvey, or
Huirt, was recently -arrested in Loi
Angeles on suspicion of having acted
as a fence for bond and jewel thieves.
After hi3 arrest he made two at
tempts to kill himself. -
SENATOR SHERMAN
AMERICAN LEGION
Says Attempt ! to Loot Federal
' Treasury is Disgrace to '
Soldiers
; (By the Associated - Press. ) , '
WASHINGTON,"- May V 25. Sena
tor- Sherman, Republican, ot Illinois,
speaking today in the . Senate da
tfounced the proposed "Soldier' r relief
bill as a "disgraceful deterioration of
the patriotism . of a great ' country."
If the. impelling aim of the American
Legion is to "loot the federal trtas-
ury, he said, it a disgraceful or
ganization.". . . ..- ' ; '
Senator Sherman declared that for
20 years he had never allowed the
American Federation of Labor to dic
tate to . him and that he did not in
tend, to permit the American Legion
to do so. . - , .
The- atick was precipitated by a
telegram received by ' the : senator
from an American Legion post inquir
ing as to his attitude toward the bill.
BUILDING HOUSES FOR
UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS
CHAPEL HILL, May 25 Work
has been- started on the construction
of the group of ten houses which the
University of North Carolina is build
ing for members of the faculty on the
edge of Battle Park at an approxi
mate cost of $ 5 0,000 and business
manager C.' T. Woollen said
today
that the whole ten would, be ready
for occupancy by next September.
Their erection will be a welcome re
lief from crowded housing conditions
which University professors have
had to live under for the past two
years. "There is not in the town to
day so much as a comfortable room
to say nothing of a house in which
any new member of the faculty could
be installed, said President Chase
in his last annual report. "Further-
more, six faculty families are living I
in houses which they must vacate at
the end of the yar,; and no one of
them has been able to make any ar
rangements." INDICTMENTS AGAINST
CHAS. MORSE DISMISSED
NEW .YORK, May 25. Indict
ments against Charles W. Morse and
other defendants charged with ille
gal sale of the steamship John J. Mc
Cullough were dismissed today r by
Federal Judge Hand by order of At
torney General Palmer.
FIRE EXTINGUISHERS
NOW1 MAKE FIREWATER
GLOBE. Ariz. The Arizona East
ern Railroad is obliged to keep a
strict watch on the fire extinguishers
in its offices since amateur, moon
shiners have discovered that they
make the finest kind of stills.
Recently several of the extinguish
ers were stolen and the officials were
at a loss to account for their disap
pearance until the federal officers
gathered in a bunch of "white mule"
manufacturers at Miami and found
.u .t.t.i,. Anin:Ant
1.1 B Lie CA...,fcU.ouv..
the underground caverns wnicn the
ni!i!t limmr makers had constructed
beneath a house.
More than 200 cases of moonshin
ivsK are to be heard at the next term
of the Federal court here. This sec
tion of Arizona is, becoming as cele
brated for illegal' distilling jas : the
mountain regions of Kentucky, :
URLS GAUNTLET AT
Daniels Charges ' Officer With
' Wanting to PrussU" ?e
American Navy ,
(By the Associated Pres, &
... WASHINGTON, May 25.-1 old
controversy between Secretary Dan
iels and Rear Admiral BradlA.
Fiske was revived today before . we-i
Senate committee inyestigating
navy's conduct of the war.
Chairman Hale gave . natice tlference here..- v i "
Admiral FLke would be called to rw- .Doctor Wilbur strongly urged 'an
ply to charges' made by Mr. Daniels
under cross-examination by the chair
man that the admiral had sought to
'Prussianize' the navy;
Secretary Daniels said summoning
Admiral Fiske would be satisfactory
to him, but that he would insist, upon
r l7ta " "' rr'rr.i
had testified.
Replying to the chairman, Mr. Dan
iels said he had, never paid much at
tention to Admiral Fiske's plan to re
organize the navy department. : .
Boreil to Extinction v ; V- v
"He bored me to extinction," de
clared Mr. Daniels. "He was a monu
mental egotist. He thought the Ger
man general staff was the best in the
world and wrote about one letter a
day urging me to approve, its adop
tion for our navy. ' ':. '. .-
"His favorite illustration of tha,
way the system worked in Germany
was a story that when the Franco
Prussian war broke out Molke was
asleep. ; When told that war was de
clared Molke merely rolled over and
told hi? advisors to look in the top
2
drawer of his desk and get t.he plan
the war, and then went back to
sleep." ' -f - : !-. r r i .' " ': '.-Vs ' ,
"I do not want a chief of naval
operations who would go to sleep
after war was declared." r
WHEAT AND FLOUR EXPORTS
FOR IiAST TWELVE MONTHS
'' WASHINGTON,', May s 2 5. Exports
of wheat and flour, July; 1,- 1919, to
May 14, 1920, amount to 99,683000
bushels of wheat and,1832M00 bar
rels of flour,- making a total equal to
182,123000 ,bushels t wheat, com
plied' with 154,717,000. bushels of
wheat and 24,010,000 barrels of flour
last year to May 14,. which makes a
total of - 262,762,000 'bushels, of
wheat, last year's total flour exports
including" American Relief Adminis
tration and American Expeditionary
Force shipments. The first fourteen
days of May last year are prorated
from the monthly report. ;
AMERICAN LIFE
Attitude of Capital Might Bring
Curse of Russia to Free
America
(By the Associated Press.)
BOSTON, May 25. William Shaw,
general secretary of the United So
ciety of Christian Endeavor, and pub
lisher of the v Christian Endeavor
World, said in an address to the Pil
grim Publicity Association today that
the greatest menace to the industrial
life of America "is the director who
enriches himself and his fellow stock
holders by voting stock dividends
based on exhorbitant prices for their
Droducts." ' .- - - v. vv
Mr. Shaw asserted that the recent
cash and stock dividends in many in
stances, represented . exhorbitant
profits extorted from the people while
they were under the stress and storm
of war. "r .;; -?-v- '
"Such manifestations of selffish
ness and greed," he said, "such utter
disregard of the principles of justice
and equity as the representatives of
capital are giving us today, will ao
more to bring on the curse of Russia
than all the ravings of the 'reds' of
which so many stand in fear.
REALTY MEN SAY
Assert That The Value of Farm
- Lands Has Not Reached
Zenith
With the price of real estate in this
section greater than has ever before
been the case, local realty dealers are
voicing the opinion that the value or
some varieties of land, particularly
farm land, will go even higher.
back to the
farm" movement now than ever be
PR NG S
GREAT MENACE TO
PRICES GO HIGHER
fnrp. thAstA realtv men sav. and thial Already, however, a few Xnsh po
. . - J.
means mai ilbio ui6 ueuiauu iui
Not only aoes mis conuuion pre
vail In' this locality, they assert, but
information they have received from
other sections ' of this and nearny
state is to-the effect that the same
status of affairs is ' prevalent there
also.'-' - ,
Dr, Wilbur Declares No Other
. "Nation Could Successfully ',' 1
Administer It.
(By Associated Press.)
GREENSBORO, May 25. An ad
dress by the Reverend C E. Wilbur,
of Pittsburg, on the "Challenge of
the. Near East," held,.' chief Interest
at the - morning's sessir i ,of the
Methodist ' Protestant general c con-
American mandate over Armenia, de
claring , that no nation except the
United States could successfully, ad
minister a mandate over, Armenia. '
. Doctor Wilbur, who had hia -impressions
'first, hand in Armenia, as
serted that the cost of the mamlato
would be comparatively small . arid
that only a small force of American
troops - would be necessary to carry
it out. . .
ATLANTA'S RICH CHILDREN :
ARE NOT HEALTHIEST KIDS
-ATLANTA; Ga., May 25. Atlan
ta's children of, the rich, are not as
healthy as Atlanta's poor children,
f one judges the entire city by the
pupils of a publicschool patronized
almost exclusively by the well-to-do,
as compared to the Inmates of an or
phan asylum, where children are car-
ed for at less than 30 cents --a'day
apiece. . " .' . . -
Six- groups of Atlanta hildrpn
were examined by the American IU
Cross ia the course of a diatetics i -
stitute conducted, by Dr. W Ii. r.
Emerson, noted child welfare spe
cialist, of Boston. The highest per
centage of malnutrition was 1 in a
high school attended by girls front
fourteen to eighteen : years of a ga.
Among younger children from 6 to
12, the highest percentage was in th
fore-mentioned "rich man's school."
The lowest percentage of all - was in
the Home for the Friendless, v. hero
hundred orphan children are shel
tered. (The Home, According to Dr.
u.merson has the healthiest children
he has found anywhere in the Uci!a
States. .
.Dr:, Emerson says that'malnu:. i-
tion among children is caused chl:
ly by physical defects such-as bad
teeth, lack of home control, overfa
tigue, improper food habits like "bolt
ing breakfast," and improper nealth
habits, such as sitting up late.
INTER-I
WORE DMOVEBIT
Great Debate Scheduled by Pres
byterians for Late This v':1
Afternoon ,
CHARLOTTE, May 25. Interest
at the sessions of the general assem
bly of the Southern . Presbyterian ,
Church today are converging toward
the three o'clock afternoon meeting-
when the Question of the denomina
tlon'8 relation ' toward the " Inter-
church World . Movement will reach
the floor of the body and there, pro,
duce -what; is admitted generally the
greatest controversy and division of
sentiment to be developed. ' -
It is evident the debate over what
the Southern Presbyterian, Church
will do with the Inter-church World
Movement will be somewhat impas-
ftiOTiPd The linen hate been" rnther
sharply drawn. . " . '.:
Opposed to World Movement "
PHILADELPHIA, May 25. Rec
ommendations were, submitted today
to the Presbyterian general assembly,
in session here, that it withdraw from
the Interchnrph World Movement, A
report embodying this suggestion was
made by the executive commission
of which the Reverend John Willis,
Bae ris. chairman., . -. .
EXPECT NO RUSH .
Tniini piiinnnrMTP
IKUUlYontmO
Railway Men Do Not Think
Farm Products Will Go; V
f
North Rapidly
Local railwaymen are not; antici
pating any extensive shipments of
truck from this section' this season,
having the opinion that the farmers
are to disnose of a goodly portion of
their crops locally instead of rush-
- hng all these to the northern markets
,0 hpPil. Hfi
tatoes have beeu sept north and as
soon as the season opens tne Bnip
ments will doubtless grow in size, but
it is not believed that they 'will be
;i5 large as has been the Case in ome
j year im- -!',
r- The demand .tot t&tm produce .in
the city and, small towns is at the
'present time very heavy, ..
Mill
CAUSES RICH!
v
' v
-i ,