Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / July 12, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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Mote SEEKS VAYS TO ABOLISH WAR Barones Bertha ton Suttner of Vienna, famous among other thing because It was she who lniplred th founding of the Nobel prises, U In America on a mlulon unique among those undertaken by women of the Old World among the women of the New, She la here to tell her sisters what she knows of the horrors of war and to appeal to the women of the United States to do their utmost toward the abollltlon of war. The campaign for peace undertaken last spring by Baron dEstournelles de Constant of France was noteworthy. For three months Baron d'Estour nelles, himself a Nobel prize winner, went through the country, and erery where bis arguments were beard with Interest So also In the case of Count Albert Apponyl people crowded to bear wbat the Hungarian parliamen tarian had to say about the cost of armed peace now prevailing In Europe. uut, much as these advocates for peace accomplished here, there stood arrayed against them continually the plea of necessity, the plea that erer Increasing armaments were an absolute essential. Neither the Frenchman nor the Hungarian cared to depart from parliamentary usages, and for this reason they permitted their arguments to go before the people exactly for what they were worth. The Baroness von Suttner comes to this country to try different tactic. She may agree with her fellow workers in Europe that the nations are bur dened with armaments to the breaking point, that the patience of the people themselves 1 well nigh exhausted, that the times portend that conditions cannot continue as at present; but she has something more effective at her command than International law and parliamentary argument Her most ef fective appeal will be to sentiment As one who knows from experience the horrors of war, the Baroness von Suttner will be able to make this appeal effectively. In Paris, on June 5, the Baroness made an eloquent address before the European section of the Carnegie Peace Foundation, In which she urged the women of the world to labor for peace. STIMSON APPROVES NEW BILL ' shall receive compensation at the same rate as the enlisted man of the cor responding grade of the regular army at the rate of 25 per cent of the Initial pay now provided by law for enlisted men of corresponding grade of the regular army, provided no soldier shall have attended not less than 45 regu lar drills during one year and a proportionate amount for attendance upon a lesser number of such drills not less than 20. No money is to be paid to any person not on the active list nor to any person not over 64 years of age, nor to any person who fails to qualify as to fitness for military service. In time of war, or when war is imminent or other grave emergency, the president may by order transfer to the army any portion of the organized militia re ceiving or entitled to receive, the benefits of the act to serve therein for the balance of their respective terms of enlistment or commission. Such part of the militia will be a part of the army. C. P. NEILL, THE Perhaps no man in the United States, or In the whole world, occu pies such , a happy position between the mighty Industrial elements capi tal and labor as does Dr. Charles P. Nelll, commissioner of labor, who has averted scores of large strikes, involv ing thousands upon thousands of men, through his remarkable tact and abil ity to solve economic problems Since 1906 Commissioner Nelll has been in strumental in settling 47 controver sies, directly Involving 163,050 em ployes and 605.880 miles of railroad. Born in Illinois in 1865, the future "strike fixer" was taken to Texas by his parents five years later. He now prides himself on the fact that he is a Texan, and in fact was known in col lege as "The Tall Mesqulte of the Rio Grande" After a brilliant college career. Dr. Nelll was appointed Instructor of polit ical economy at the Catholic Univer sity in Washington, and took an active interest In civio affairs, besides serving as recorder in several coal strike arbitrations. He had much to do with the settlement of the anthracite coal strike of 1902, the adjustment of the miners' strike troubles in Nevada in 190T, the averting of a nation-wide telegraphers' strike, and the story of his Intervention and mediation ha been the same in each case peace restored. The particular economic problem might involve race prejudice In Georgia, shorter hours in Texas, the reinstatement of employes on some western roads or a plain demand for higher wages in the east it wouldn't matter there is a satisfactory settlement thanks to Dr. Charles P. Nelll, messenger of industrial peace. ' HADLEY PREFERS LOG CABIN is more modest in his invitations and name those that he wishes to nave at his brush burning and other Jollifications. ' The log bouse is one step In the governor search for health and strength. When he came from the University of Kansas to Kansas City to practice law be waa frail and weak and bis condition gave promise of tuber culosis not far ahead. When he was elected prosecuting attorney of this county be used to saw wood for exercise. When be was elected attorney general of the state the work dragged him down and be went to a western ranch for health and found so much of it that when his friends besought him to r-a f -r governor he refused. He only consented to Make the race after T :"t 1 1 e T.--J blm Mat only with him as a candidate for governor could l3t . t to carry tie state. .. '-: iHElilf VS. .vii. '.: J i !i: :S Jm S ': M is T 'S A substitute for the militia pay bill has been submitted to Secretary Stlm son and has secured his approval The pay of officers of the militia in this bill Is a percentage of that of officers of like grade In the regular army, not Including longevity pay, as follows: Five per cent, to all general officers commanding a division or brigade, in cluding authorized officers detailed for duty therewith, the division and bri gade Inspectors of small arms practice. If any, the authorized aide chaplains; 20 per cent to commanding officers of companies, troops, battalions and am bulance companies and to adjutants and quartermasters of regiments, inde pendent battalions, squadrons and coast artillery districts, including med ical officers doing duty or assigned to 'regiments or smaller tactical units or coast artillery districts, medical offi cers serving with field hospitals and veterinarians. The enlisted men, it is provided. STRIKE FIXER Governor Hadley of Missouri live in a log cabin because he likes bet ter than a mansion. He ha the man sion, too to everybody In Missouri the governor's house In Jefferson City always has been known as "The Man sion" and Governor Hadley might live there all thettime If he wished to, and at no expense of rent But he prefers the log cabin In the summer time and be and his wife and three children live there from early May to late frost ; -. .. . Governor Hadley built the log cabin himself, that la, he planned It and, after the log were .cut and hauled to the site he stood around with hts hand' in his pockets and bossed the Job of house raising. ' He invited everybody In Jefferson City out to the old fashioned house raisin'. It was a blanket Invitation to the whole town and pretty nearly ev erybody went Including all the boys In town, and since then the governor aSxt $L?a V y TARIFF REF0RL1 IS' DEMOCRATIC GREED Leading Plank of Platform Adopted by Baltimore Coa- vention. FAVORS FIGHT ON TRUSTS Action of Republican Administration In Compromising With Standard Oil and Tobacco Combine Condemned View on . Other Subject. Following are th principal plank of the platform adopted by th Demo cratic national convention at BaltV more. The Tariff Reform. . "We declare It to be a fundamental principle of the Democratic party that the federal government under the Constitution has no right or pow er to Impose or collect tariff duties except for the purpose of revenue and we demand that th collection of uch taxes shall be Umited to the ne ceMltle of government honestly and economically administered. - "The high Republican tariff 1 th principal cause of the unequal distri bution of wealth: it is a system of taxation which makes the rich richer and the poor poorer; under It opera tion the American farmer and labor ing man are the chief sufferers; It raises the cost of the necessaries of life to them, but does not protect their product or wage. "We favor the Immediate down ward revision of the existing high, and In many cases, prohibitive tariff duties, insisting that material reduc tions be speedily made upon the neo essaries of life. Article entering in to competition with trust controlled product and article of American manufacture where sold abroad more cheaply than at home could be put upon the free list "We denounce the action of Presi dent Taft in vetoing the bill to re duce the tariff In the cotton, woolen, metal and chemical schedules and the farmer free list bills, all of which was designed to give Immedi ate relief to the masse from the ex action of the trusts, "The Republican party, while promising tariff revision, has shown by It tariff legislation that such re vision t not to be In the people' in terest and having been faithlee to Its pledge of 1908 It should no longer enjoy the confldenoe of the nation. High Cost of Living. "The high cost of living Is a se rious problem in every American home. The Republican party In its platform attempt to escape from re sponsibility for present conditions by denying that they are due to a pro tective tariff. We take Issue with them on this subject and charge that excessive prices result in a larg measure from the high tariff laws en acted and maintained by the Repub lican party, and from trust and com mercial conspirators fostered and en couraged by such law, and we assert that no substantial relief can be se cured for the people until Import du ties on the necessaries of life are ma terially reduced, and those criminal conspiracies broken up. . Anti-Trust Law. "A private monopoly la Indefensi ble and Intolerable, We therefore fa vor the vigorous enforcement of the criminal as well as the civil law against trusts and trust officials, and demand enactment of such additional legislation as may be necessary to make it impossible for a private mo nopoly to exist in the United States. "We condemn the action of the Re publican administration In compro mising with the Standard Oil Com pany and the tobacco trust and its failure to Invoke the criminal pro visions of the anti-trust law against the officers of those corporations aft er the court had declared that from the undisputed facts in the record they had violated the criminal provis ions of the law. "We regret that Sherman an tl -trust law has received a Judicial construc tion depriving it of much of its ef ficacy, and we favor the enactment of legislation which will restore to the statute the strength: of which it ha been deprived by such interpretation. Income Tax and Popular Election of '. Senators, "We congratulate the country upon the triumph of two Important reforms demanded In the laat national plat form, namely, the amendment of the federal constitution authorising an in come tax and the amendment provid ing for the popular election of sena tor, and we call upon the people of all the states to rally to the support of the pending propositions and secure their ratification. "We note with gratification the unanimous sentiment ' In favor of The Old-Fashioned Fire. Could anything be more refreshing than the smell of the old-fashioned wood fire In late spring or early au tumn T There la something grimy in the reek of coal, and the odor of gaa la nauseating. Modern Inventions may have brought their 'conveni ence" but a staid old senator, who lately passed beyond. Insisted that when he wanted a real night of com fort, after the family had all, gone south for the winter, he would hie himself home, build an old-fashioned Death Shun Man Who I Prepared. Ernest Feldklrch, a Gottingen (Ger many) carpenter of 86 year of age, baa cheerfully looked death In the face tor 26 year. Hi first Illness, which came when he was 60, suggest sd to him that, having no relatives, he should provide for his burial him self, and as soon as he recovered he set to work and made himself a coffin, which be placed conveniently beside his bed. After a number of years it began to decay, and he was obliged to make another. The second la now In . . - , . 1 publicity before th election of cam paign contributions a measure de manded in our national platform of 1908 and at that time opposed by th Republican party, and we commend the Democratic House of Representa tive for extending the doctrine of publicity to recommendation, verbal and written, upon which presidential appointments are made, to the own erthlp and control of newspaper and to th expenditure mad by and in behalf of those who aspire to presi dential nomination and w point for additional Justification for this legis lation to the enormous expenditures of money ra behalf of the president and his predecessor in the recent contest for the Republican nomination for president Presidential Primaries. The movement towards more popu lar government should be promoted through legislation in each state which will permit the expression of the pref erence of the elector for national can didate at presidential primaries. "W direct that the national com mittee Incorporate In the call for the next nominating convention a require ment that all expressions of preference for presidential candidates shall be given and th selection of delegate and alternates be through a primary election conducted by the party or ganisation In each state where such expression and election are not pro vided for by state law. Term of President "We favor a single presidential term, and to the end urge the adoption of an amendment to the constitution making the president of the United States Ineligible to re-election, and w pledge the candidate of this conven tion to this principle. Railroad, Express Companies, Tele graph snd Tslephone Unas. - "We favor the efficient supervision and rat regulation of railroad, ex press companies, telegraph and tele phone line engaged In interstate com merce. To this end we recommend the valuation of railroads, express companies, telegraph and telephone line by th Interstate commerce com mission, such valuation to take into consideration the physical value of the property, the original cost the cost of reproduction, and any element of value that will render the valuation fair and Just - Banking Legislation. "We oppose the so-called Aldrlch bill or the establishment of a cen tral bank, and we believe the people of the country will be largely freed from panic and consequent un-employmont and business depression by such a sys tematic revision of' our banking law a will render temporary relief In lo calities where such relief Is needed, with protection from control or dom ination by what 1 known as the money trust. Parcels Post and Rural Delivery. "We favor th establishment of a parcels post or postal express, and also the extension of the rural de livery system as rapidly a practic able. The campaign contributions plank pledge the party to the enactment of a law prohibiting any corporation from contributing to a campaign fund. It also limit individual contribution to a "reasonable maximum." The Democratic congress la heartily commended for its long list of law foe the benefit of the people after a generation of unlimited power by the Republican party. - The next plank arraign the Republican party for waste of "the money wrung from the people by oppressive taxation." A plank on rural credits Is of im portance. It is recommended that an investigation of agricultural credit so cieties In foreign countries be made looking toward devising a suitable sys tem for the United States. A water ways plank provide for federal con trol of the Mississippi and other wa terways. The plan la to maintain an average depth on the big river so It will be navigable, and construct docks to prevent further floods. This plank also favors draining of all swamp land. The platform favor post roads. It reaffirms Its declarations In the 1908 platform in regard to labor. It holds there should be a modification of the Injunctions! law. It also recommends a department of labor with a cabinet officer. The conservation plank Is also of Importance and hold that conserva tion and development should proceed for the benefit of all the people. Im mediate action 1 favored to make available the coal deposits of Alaska. A pure food and public health plank declares for the union and strength ening of the various governmental agencies relating to pure food, quaran tine, vital statistics and human health. This department should be. adminis tered without partiality or discrimina tion in favor of or against any school of medicine. ' The civil service law should be honestly and rigidly en forced. Legislation Is favored to pro mote law reform. The. "policy of em perialism" In the Philippines 1 de nounced. It favor th declaration of the independence of these ' Islands. Arisona and New Mexico are wel comed to the sisterhood of states. ,' wood fire In the cook stove and sit around a In his old boyhood day on the farm. "What memories ft re calls," he would ay, "to hear the crackle of the wood and sniff the smoke that seems to be purifying rather : than ' oppressive!' "Affairs and Folks," Joe Mitchell Chappie, In Joe ChappWs New Letter. Insinuation. "Fish la a good brain diet" sew -W. - !.-'. T k 4 i uayinsej uu lew w uiu ivr your.- . j the same condition as the fist, and hi friend are urging Feldklrch to discard it for a third. The old man,, who is hale and happy a ever, declared that he will make one more, and If be find It decaying, he will give the busi ness up a a bad Job. Berlin' Disposal of Sewage. None of the sewsge of Berlin la aV lowed to empty Into the river or oanala of that c:ty. It Is all pumped through large pipes to th eltj sw ag farms. mi for im Little Communities Located Belgian Cities In Party of Tourist Attempt to Enter Sacred Village With Auto and Are Stopped by NunMaking Lace Is Chlsf Industry. Ghent Belgium. I cannot imagine the dwellers in my "women's towns" feeling in th least oppressed because they have no votes; and yet the key note of their lives. Is a deslr tor self support and honorable independence, they have merely stepped aside from the course of ordinary life into abiding places that they rule and control and that are shut away from the haunts of men by wall and gate and moat; toy cities so spotlessly' neat cir cumspect, so Imbued with the hush of perpetual afternoon that time seems to stand still In their sunny precincts. Nevertheless, on my first visit to a women' town I was eyewitness to a surprising act of elf-assertion by one of Its gentle guardians Under con duct of a friend long resident in the old F"emlsh city of Ghent Which forms the outer shell of this women's town, a little party of ua In a motor car turned In one summer morning from the street and ran without stop or par ley through the arched gateway Into the broad, clean road leading to the In terior. There a little, black robed, white coifed woman, with flashing syes and a flushed countenance, dashed di rectly Into the path of the advancing car and peremptorily ordered us to stop and go back. Once we were safely across the moat and In our proper place outside the walls our rebuker changed her manner. In silvery accent she beggeu u to walk In; then, recognising our chauf feur, she explained that in the tour ist season all motors were excluded be cause of their noise and reek. The Begulnage they call It this lit tle community founded by a woman for women. They are two of the kind In Ghent one In beautiful old Bruges and the others scattered throughout Belgium. The Institution dates from the thir teenth century. But the present build ings are modern, for the Begulnage was in 1875 transferred by city order from It ancient site, which was re quired for the laying out of new streets ANsomplete miniature city it stands today, with streets and squares. and entrance gates in the encircling 50O0C it N Where All I Pesce and Rest. wall, and a church, round which clus ter a picturesque congeries or little two-storied brick dwellings, each with the name of Its patron saint inscribed above the dor. The Beguines here number about 700. Their chief Industry is the mak ing of lovely spider web lace, over which you may see them at work on all side. And as accident will oc cur to those costly laces and valued old-time specimens will wear out In unexpected places, It is to the Beguln age that the owners, from royal ladies down, send, their treasures to be re paired, i ' WOMEN CLOTHED IN SMILES tlcn, Rare and Racy I Current Num ber of Harvard Undergraduate Publication. ) 1 Cambridge, Mass. The editor of the Harvard Lampoon, the undergrad uate' humorous fortnightly publica tion, are momentarily expecting a call to the president's office to explain why they countenanced the issue of such a paper as the "Improper Number,'' which was placed on sale. The sale of the magazine started with a rush and before noon it was almost impos sible to obtain a oopy for love or money. Article that are rich, rare and racy, with Illustrations that are piq uant and suggestive, find niche in the pages of the current Lampoon. Perhaps the most sensational article of all Is a story by Robert W. Same ness, presumably Robert W. Chambers. Chamber himself could have done no better. Snggestlveness plays tag with love snd passion throughout th whole story, and the situations are, to say th least delicate. It is : Chambers out-Chambered. Another article which finds apace In the, Lampoon 1 an Interview with Mi Tillie Touralne, presumably Miss Lillian Lorraine, the actress. The ar ticle itself is nothing startling. A photograph of Miss Touralne in tights, one series of curves, 1 labeled as a picture of that delightful- actress In street costume. Another photo Is of three beautiful young women clothed In smiles. The picture is cut short, leaving a lot to the Imagination. Thief Find Field In Prlcon. Moundsvtlle, W. Vs. -Clever steal fng put Edward Hlnkle In the peni tentiary for five years, and cleverer thefts within th prison walls are go ing to keep him here many years more. With officials of th peniten tiary almost at his elbow, Kinkle bas shipped to his home more than 13,000 in leather goods manufactured at the orison plant , If ILLt.liluiAN L.I,li HILE th newer Havana ho tels seem Americanised the older are true to their Span ish origin. I think of on In particular. It la In th heart of th lower city away from me fashionable Prado. Instead of making every Inch pay in mall rooms and cor ridors, it b built around a spacious Datio. or central halL running up two or three stories aid buttressed with massive pillars. Th corridor are merely balconies carried around th four side of the patio on each floor. Instead of glaring white walls here are wainscot of Bpanlsh tiles In delicately modu.ated yellow and blue, writs a correspondent of th Outlook. The American legation ha long been housed In an edifice with such a noble court; but now that the legation must be moved, there Is difficulty In getting In a new building, as dignified and appropriate architecture, no mat ter bow great the advantage of modern conveniences, and more appropriate lo cation. Our consulate 1 well lodged on the top floor of the new Bank of Cuba building. But though such a modern place 1 efficient In labor sav ing, as on looks at th homely stories superimposed on th really fin facade of the lower stories the effect Is only one of an architectural aberration. In this hot place much attention Is necessarily given to cooling off. Th tiled floor of your room helps to that end. The room itself, with a celling twenty feet high, helps. Of course a bath helps, and the best hotel I know advertises "every room with a bath.' Even a cigar albeit a hot and not a cold thing helps, one reason being, I fancy, that It costs about half as much as In the United States. But most of alL a plna fria helps a plneappleade, to coin a word. There are other seduc tive drinks; for Instance, orchata (mil.: of almonds) and naranjada (orangeade). But the plna fria caps the climax. Cheap Trsnslt Another way to cool off 1 to drive, or even better to take one of the tram go to the end of th line, and come back. As few lines are double through the same streets the Journey presents the greater Interest going out through one set of .streets snd returning by an other. The tram system offers sur prisingly quick and cheap transit to most of Havana and Its suburbs For instance, you go from Jesus del Mont, the highest point south of Havana, through the city Vedada, th fashiona ble resort of the sea, a distance of some ten miles, for 6 cents And st Vedada there arc suburban residences worth seeing. They are often embow ered In gorgeously flowering vines, even better worth seeing. Tte harbor unites the - strenuous with the serene. Unloading and load ing means a lot of labor. And yet th labor seems to go on unnervously, per haps because of the tropical climate, which discourages overexertion. Alongside there Is one of the good old buildings characteristic Of Cuba or Spain, well adapted to a southern cli mate, with dignified proportions, with two high ceillnged floors, with balcon ies and broad windows The building is painted a cool gray. A little further along the new Ha vana Jostles the old in the shape ol a structure several times as large, with at least three times as many floors, not as high between Joints, snd with narrower windows,- some arranged In groups of two or three and with hot looking mahogany colored shades, the building itself being painted a warm olive. v"..':'--,:' ';:-'. Furthermore, instead of the usual flat roof,' appropriate to the tropica, this particular roof Is surmounted by a red dome over which aways a gilt and doubtless disgusted Diana. Now there are reds and reds And some may be a grateful color feature even In the South. . For Instance, take the soft reds of the tiled roofs of the dock sheds, or the marvellous reds, as time has de veleoped them, splashy, and well-nigh Iridescent over there on the long Ca bana wall, a fascinating old wall in any light, and, like the bills along th Nile, apparently preserving sunset color at noonday. ,. ,. . Sailor Are Spanish. "Ar yon a Cuban r I asked of th Bailor who was, taking me about Ha vana harbor. ,..-;;';-; . l a answered mv aueation with an other: "Can a Cuban sail a toatr . Then he added, "No, senor; we bsve to come over her from Spain to sail th Ruhana' boats for them. And there are many of ns in Cuba for that and tor other labors more tnan a nunarea thousand.' Some come from Gallcla, where I come from; some from1 th Canary Islands." All this Is Castllian Bpanlsn. i naa suspected as ' much. Looking mors closely st the sailor I saw that his lean face resembled those of the north of Spain. There are, as he said, very many Spaniards still In Cuba and, for their benefit to boating hereabouts, It is not to be regretted. Every day about noon a breexe springs np here, it cools you a bit after the great heat of the city much too hot for most northerner and yon sit for a long time in your sailboat, tack ing about th two and a half mil wide inner harbor. . - Mil ' U2 Then you sail back to Havana, and opposite the landing place enter a quaint restaurant Mounting to th second story esplanade, you order your fish In a paper bag and other sea deli cacies, and then, looking out. from amid the potted shrubs, settle down to the enjoyment of s new vlsw of to harbor. In It ar craft of all sorts from tranAtlsntio Steamer and th great Standard Oil boats to the Coastal steamer and freighter, the harbor lighter, th motor boat and yachts, th sailboats and rowboats with that fascinating cover over th aft part, like the craft on the Italian lakes, to keep off the southern sun from the too sensitive voyager. Of course, th negro element 1 strom. In Cuba, and summer evening their quarters are redolent with the thrum of mandolins and guitars. Ju liets occupy balconies In rickety two story frame buildings with flowers all about for they're great flower lovers, the people and Romeo, In his Sun day suit comes meandering down be low, thrumming "La Paloma." The hot countries snd clothing have hardly gone band In hand, except In fiesta time, snd In th little courtyards the youngster run about even as Na ture made them. , . GETTING RID OF THE BORE Rsally Clever Scheme This, on Which, It May B Mentioned, Thsrs . Is No Patsnt . Th new boarder's first request was . for a bracket to be placed on th wall -against th telephone. The bracket being provided, the boarder Installed thereon a clock of powerful tone. On morning Just after the dock had struck 10 she was called to tbe tele phone. After a short conversation the clock struck 11. ' In the afternoon of the same day, the new boarder, being again st the telephone, that whimsical clock struck 4 about ten minutes after S. The landlady observed that tbe boarder's clock must be crasy. "Oh, dear, no," said tbe boarder. "It Is L not the clock. I turned the hand and made It strike. It is the only way I can get . rid of tiresome acquaint ances. They talk snd talk about noth ing, and I Just can't shut them oft But when that clock strikes right up against the telephone they see a light " Was that a clock striking T they ask. ' "I say It was Time will fly, yon know.' Ten they take tbe hint and ring off. Really, considering all th telephone bores I know, I don't see how I could manage without that dock." . ' Pineapple as a Pepsin. ' The properties of the pineapple are eitremelv healthful, its contents of pepsin being of so high an average that of all the fruits, it takes tne highest rank among those possessing the qualities that aid digestion. If pineapples were not so artificially high priced It Is a certainty that the Htizana nf the United States would discover in them a hlghry beneficial tooa meaicine, as wen u auoiiguuui fruit A quarter of a pineapple taken at breakfast would afford mqVe tonic than two grapefruit A glas of the Juice of fresh pineapple, taken? during a heavy meal, would furnish Apepsin enough to make the after-dlnner. pep sin tablet unnecessary, claims an au thnrttv. PineaDnle lulce is a tlrlnk practically unknown to Americans, but the people of - Boutn America whAM th nlneaDnles often sen fo less than 1-cent each, drink vasirquanV title of the fresh pineapple Juice, -'" ". fiood Old Times. " "Now, old man, make yourself com- fnrtnhle and let's talk over the good old times. We haven't seen each oth-, af Binr-A we were boys together. I' told you I was married, dldnt IT By the way, did you ever live In Palnes-r vUler . ' ' . "Yes. I lived there three years- , "Ever meet Miss KatlshT ' "Ha! Hal wny, i was nss w ... herl But that's nothing all the fel low In my crowd were engaged to her at one time or. another. I see you've lived In Painevllle. Why did yo ssk about her In particular f Come confess 1" ' "Why, I er I married her." Two of Diverse Opinions, ' ,-. Under the headline, "Many Men of Many Minds," a Paris paper refer to ths last wills of two of us citisens. One Pere Hyacinth Loyson requested that ministers of tbe various faiths at tend hi funeral, and that they appear at that function In their clerical robe. Tbe other Parisian said: "I want no priest to say the usual things at my funeral, which must not take place in a church, but If priest wishes to speak on that occasion In the garb of a eitlsea and without any church ln ignla, let It be done." - Where Twin Are Desirable. ' In China women carry their chil dren from baskets that bang from a bar that crosses the mother's shoul ders Twins are desirable as preserv ing the balance of we'tt. If not for other reasons. .
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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July 12, 1912, edition 1
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