Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / May 16, 1913, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
mum otmet otmz f : I af-PfZ&&1 1 I tav.7,;.i jjl . HE greatest anti-fly crusade that the world has known la now set ting under way in a multitude ot American cities and smaller com inanities, reaching from Seattle and San Francisco to Boston. During recent years physicians, bacteriologists, sanitary engineers, and others concerned with ques tions of public health, have made ceaseless effort to arouse the American people concerning disease and death traveling in the tracks of the common housefly, or "typhoid fly," as the United States government does not hesi tate to call it in its official printed documents. Little by little the country has become ac quainted with the danger, and now entire com munities hamlets, villages, cities alikeare un dertaking systematic and complete extermination of the Insect The fly has been recognized as a carrier of disease for many generations, and ome authorities, like Jean Dawson, the Cleve land biologist, feel satisfied that it was so recog- , Blsed even in Bible times. But never before has practically an entire great nation awakened to , the absolute necessity of fighting the fly to the death,: of driving it out of existence. Moreover, it was left for a New York patholo gist. Dr. Ferdinand M. Jeffreys of the Polyclinic Medical school and hospital, to formulate a reply to the old question, "Of what use is the Ayr According to Dr. Jeffreys. It has 'a very Important use in acting aa a danger signal which cannot be disregarded with Impunity. ' "Wherever you find the fly," be says, "you also find filth. And where yon find filth, you find dis ease." - 4 Not merely typhoid, but other highly danger ous Intestinal diseases are now known to be spread by flies, and germs of tuberculosis, chol era infantum spinal meningitis, Infantile paraly-, sis, are likewise carried far and wide by the same little pests. 1 State boards of health, county com- . missions, municipal health departments, private organizations of men and women in all stations tit Ufa nrlnflnnr anri ritaf rlhiiHno- nomntilnta on the subject, having lectures delivered before audiences or couareu wen as oi aauiis, ex- plaining various, methods of poisoning, trapping, and "swatting" aflles. In many cities prises qf money have been offered for the largest number of flies killed in a given period. : In other cities and towns prizes are offered for the best essays written by school children aa to the dangers of 1 files and how to get rid of them. - ' North Dakota has issued two Important health department bulletins spread broadcast through out the state, one entitled "Fly Habits" and the other "A Fly Catechism," In which aanswerd ' in simple language questions ' concerning flies which the youngest child may understand. The Unlted States government, through its Farmer's Bulletin No. 412, makes out a complete case against what It terms "the typhoid or bouse ' fir." -n "Q.;'..- .:,.,-. ; 1 Virginia's state board of health has Issued at least three bulletins and circulars devoted wholly or in part to the subject In addition to quarterly publications, one well ' Illustrated, Iowa Issues shorter folders telling just how to deal with the fly nuisance : The Chicago board of health, through its school of sanitary instruction, publishes and distributes articles and cartoons on the subject, as well as a concise list of "Hints to Householders." . The Ohio state board of health has also been -busy In the matter and has reprinted large num bers of Dr. C O. Probst's practical paper, "The Fly as a Disease Carrier." Michigan's state board has come out with an Important quarterly document on "The Anti-Fly .Crusade." . - '.vi, t; '.. Pennsylvania devotes an entire Issue of Its1 large Health Bulletin to an essay easily under stood, which is called "The Common Fly: How It Develops,' Why It Must, Be' Destroyed, and How to Destroy It" . t South Carolina, Texas, and almost all the other ' states In the Union have been doing their utmost to educate the public concerning the dangers of permitting files to exist But with the exception of a single four-page circular the state of New Tork has done nothing In the matter that baa been pressed so vigorously by the country gen erally. This circular Is a brief document entitled The Filthy Fly." and is Issued by the Publicity and Education Department of the State Board of , Health. "- , . . ; :x s , - . It Is said that by means of a red powder scat tered over piles of garbage and otner filth flies have been traced in many cases directly into sick rooms, as well as to markets and fruit stalls ' where foodstuffs were, displayed, without being screened. By such means as this flies were traced during an outbreak of typhoid fever In Plattsburgh, N. T. The local authorities thought that drinking water, or milk, or some like sup ply was Infected, but an Investigator from New York went to the Saranao river, into which the sewage of Plattsburgh was carried, and from there he traced flies as they went into a moving picture show attended by a large audience, and . he traced the files as they went from the "mov ies" back to the river. Countless Instances of the spread of various diseases have been recorded all over the country, and as a result. Instead of being regarded merely as a harmless, though annoying little pest, the house fly Is today considered one of the dead liest enemies man has to contend with. Far more dangerous than war, for the fly la every where every summer, excepting in enlightened communities, like Cleveland, Ohio, which is rap idly becoming pretty nearly a flyless city. . Last year experiments were undertaken in a number' of places to exterminate files. Newspa pers of Worcester, Mass.. offered money prizes for the largest quantity of files caught, and the results were astonishing. One enterprising lad of ., twelve years won the first prize of $100 when he delivered nlnety-flve quarts of files. But it was found (out later that in order to succeed he had . actually gone Into the business of breeding flies In heaps of fish offal. Altogether the city of Worcester caught and killed forty bushels of ' flies In a few weeks. For obvious reasons those Interested In fly extermination are not offering prizes In the same way this year for dead flies. In a good many communities prizes are offered for flyless blocks of houses or for farms or barns that have no flies on or In them. Organizations like the Woman's Municipal League of Boston are paying for steropticon lec- tures delivered before all -sorts of audiences, and are getting Boy Scouts, District Nursing as sociations, school children, and others at work in the effort One of the scientists most actively Interested Is C. F. Hodge, professor of biology at Clark university,, who has accomplished, re markable results by screening houses to keep files on the outside, by killing winter flies when they awake in early spring and crawl out of cracks, picture moldings, and other dark placet where they spend the cold weather, and by catch ing In traps of his own design millions of young files before they can get to kitchen, dining-room 'or restaurant One of the most effective steps taken in the campaign of education Is due to Mr. Hatch, who sent a man to London, at his own expense, and there had made microscopic photographs of files and their dangerous activities from which a mot- ' ing picture film was constructed. The film, shown all over the country. Is believed to , have dona more than any other one thing to bring millions f people to realize how great Is the danger from flies, and how necessary to remove It. ' ' : One of the most Ingenious methods for teach-. Ing children facts regarding flies Is seen In a small pamphlet prepared by Jean Dawson of the Cleveland Normal school, who has adopted the . question and answer plan of Instruction. : After explaining. In this way, why flies are dangerous, how .they spread disease, where they spend the winter and what they do in spring, the little book . tells, about their breeding, their food, and how they carry dirt as well as disease. The closing questions and. answers are as fol lows: -: '-:'..' : . 20. Can a family escape the dangers from flies by screening them out of the house? - No, not if they use food over which flies have swarmed 'or fallen into. . 21. Do flies carry sickness and death to many people In the United States? There are nearly live hundred thousand cases of typhoid fever yearly In the United States, and nearly 60,000 deaths., Much of this distributed by flies.. Forty-nine thousand Infants die an nually of enteritis or summer complaint the germs of which are probably all carried to the milk by flies. Files are now known to be the most deadly enemy of man. They kill more peo- pie than all the Hons, tigers, snakes, and even ware. 22. Have files always been such an enemy to mankind? - . ' Yes, but a great many have died. About four out of five children in Cleveland live to be five years old. Many of these deaths are due to files carylng disease germs to their food. 24. How Is' It possible to protect ourselves more from flies than we already have? ' When we thought flies were merely annoying, we could afford to hide ourselves behind screens; now that they have been proved to be our deadly enemy, we must come out and light them in the open. , 25. How can this be done? '. ? ,' , ' ; In three ways: , (a) By killing all the winter flies that have been hiding in buildings as fast as they come (b) By cleaning up all manure and filth in which flies may breed. lL (c) By keeping traps set in covers of garbage cans and on porches where the flies are thickest to catch them before they can enter our homes. 26. What particular good would come from killing winter flies? i -v Killing the flies that live over winter means killing the mother flies before they can lay eggs in the spring. 27. If we did clean up all the manure and filth from the neighborhood would not flies swarm In from other parts? v - 1 A fly seldom travels over 500 yards from Its breeding place. i 28. With what are the traps baited? If used In the cover of a garbage can the garbage is the bait If used otherwise, bread and milk is an attractive bait 29. Will all the flies go Into the trap? ' Yes. If there Is no other food about 80. ,Has any one ever succeeded in keeping bis house free from lilies without screens? .. Yes, a number of people have used the method above Indicated, and have done away with screen windows and doors. 81. Will the city of Cleveland ever be free from flies? Yes, Just as soon as every one does his part In his own house and yard Cleveland will be a city of flyless stores, markets and homes. One of the most Interesting experiments made last summer was a highly successful effort to teach children the truth about the necessity of exterminating the typhoid fly. . Among those furthering this specific plan of education was Mr. Hatch, who offered two sets of prizes In each of a number of cities, Including New York, Milwaukee, Kalamazoo, Salem, Mass.; Wichita, Kansas City, Kan.; . Memphis and St Louis. . To children In the seventh and eighth grades of publio schools he offered a prize of . f 10 and to pupils In the fifth and six grades he offered a first, prize of $5 and a second prize of $3. In the aggregate he spent in this way some $700, many thousands competing. One result Is that an army of children have acquainted them selves with the fly and what It does to -man. : This, of course, was the main object sought Secondly, the fact that a New Yorker was offer ing his own money In this campaign, and suc ceeded In arousing the spirit manifested among children all over the country, caused local news papers, health bodies, educational Institutions, and other Individuals in many places to go into the matter on their own responsibility. This year it is not necessary for Mr. Hatch or any one else to offer prizes to the country In general. The leaders of public opinion and publio spirit In one city after another are offering prizes themselves, ". - r--'. ;' As a result of all the agitation, this year sees a fly crusade throughout the land such as was probably never seen before In the history of the world.!- .' BACK YARD FARMER Interesting Pointers on Garden ing for the City Man or Suburbanite. WHAT TO PLANT AND WHEN HAS NO LCVE FOB THE DANCE Vise Ellen Trry Admits She Is Prej udiced, and Incidentally Qlvea Her Reasons for It Miss Ellen Terry has ' written a ehermtng book on "The Russian Bal- 1 " f i cf t'as ard srprf'atlon. '. " t I J (' .' f ' I t f I tort v...a c, , ; 1 r r frankly cotiitsa," t-,- a. that I have a dislike to ordinary dancing on the toes. 9 It may be because In my youth It had degenerated into some thing so stilted, distorted, and un rhythmical that It conflicted with all my Ideas of beauty. And when the Russians give some of their older bal lets, such as 'Giselle which bears the mark of Italian Influence it was, i i . srr' 1 ly an Italian maltrt: t ' I : 1 t t a'l the l:nprov ' -it t t, 9 I ' ."if : s have made In t- J ""'J V '"V dniic't'? can not uttwt ny i .c, a!.ioufih they can, and do, modify It The Rus sian ballerinas accomplish the feat or being fluent on their toes. They do not hammer out stepsIt is a false motion of rhythm that there Is a hammer-stroke on every strong beat but take a collection of steps, as a singer takes a collection of .notes, and calmly and gracefully phrase them In the manner of a bird beating the air with Its wires rather than that of a black smith tampering on his anviL Still. I doult boher the Russians would have conquered Europe bad they come to us merely as revivers of classical dancing before it became mechanical and ugly. They owe this revival to a great extent to Tschalkowsky." .',..' Werdsl ' "Here's where my friend and I are going to have a few words over noth ing," fcald the wireless operator as he prepared to manipulate his Instru The fewer out wants the nearer we resemble the gods. Socrates. . Advice by an Expert on Agricultural Matters Garden and Plant Pests Dwarf Tomatoes Flower Bed Notes. By PROF. JOHN WILLARO BOLTE Practically all ot the domestic gar aen pests can be killed without dif ficulty by the proper treatment Yet few people seem to realize this and everywhere we see plants and house flowers struggling, for existence and supporting a host of parasites when lust a little Intelligent treatment would turn these plants from sickly weaklings Into hardy producers. Some of the commonest pests, together with the proper treatment ' to ' eliminate them, follow: Aphis,' or green lice, is a parasite about one-half the size of the head of a pin green In color and shows but little activity. They are found partic ularly on the cucurbits, that Is, the vines of the cucumber family, and on all sorts of house plants. If ants are present on your outside plants, look out for these green lice. They are sometimes called ant's-cows, for the ants seem to tend them, stroking them with their feelers, when the Aphis gives out a sweet secretion, of which the ants are fond. The treatment for green lice is tobacco tea, which Is readily made by boiling tobacco stems In water. Spray the plants with a spray gun three or four times at two or three day Intervals. Red Spider. The red spider is a lit tle red bug. It moves rapidly over the plants. Merely a spraying with tobacco tea or plain, clear water will get rid of this pest Its size is about thq same aa the green lice. Striped Beetle. The etrlped beetle is one-eighth of an Inch long and the fact that it can fly makes it a danger to any garden. It Is found In the soil at the base of the stems of the cu curbits. It kills the young vines. But after the vines begin to send off run ners they are safe from this peBt The treatment is powdered white helllbore scattered around the hills and on the plants, or the plants can be sprayed with water and the helle bore dusted on, or a suspension solu tion may be made and the , plants sprayed. Another treatment is air slacked lime In suspension solution, or cow manure plastered over the ground near the vines. Cut Worms may attack any plant In the garden, cutting it bff under the ground. They have a special liking tor peas and beans. If young,- tender plants die quickly, or you find that the plants from seed are not appearing above ground, look out for cut worms, Mix one pound ot bran with enough water to make a dough; add a table- spoonful of some sirup and another tableepoonful ot white arsenic; mix well and scatter a little about the plants. The cut worms will eat this and die. Potato Bugs. This familiar pest can be quickly gotten rid of by spray ing the potato plants with a suspen sion solution of Paris green. Spray two or three times to kill the young. Paris green contains arsenic, and in using this or the white arsenic, care should be used, aa It la exceedingly poisonous. e Tomato Worms. If you find your tomato plants are losing their leaves, lock out for these worms. They are anywhere from three to six Inches In length and aa large as three-fourths ot an inch in diameter.. It is seldom that more than two or three appear in the earden at one time, and they are quickly killed by hand. For Cabbage Worms, dust the plants with powdered hellebore before the heads forar- Later dust the hellebore on the outside leaves as the worms appear -- ''", :' : i A little attention to getting rid ot garden pests will well repay in the increased production of the garden. Dwarf tomatoes. Tomatoes are one of, if not the most, popular summer vegetables, This world-wide favorite is of com paratively recent use as an edible. It was originally cultivated for its deco rative features only, the fruit being called "Love Apples," and people con sidering them to be" poisonous. This singular error was probably due to the fact that tomatoes belong to the Nightshade" family, several of whose members are deadly poison to human beings. . ' : -jk' . ' ' ' The popularity of tomatoes is due largely to the great variety of ways in which they can be prepared for the table. No other vegetable can be eat en raw or cooked in such a variety of forms. No other vegetable has wider range ot growth, is easier to grow, or produces more from the land. Tomatoes were originally divided into the tree and bush classes, after their manner of growth. ; About 60 years ago a French market gardener noticed a sturdy low-growing tomato bush in a field of ordinary vines. We say bush advisedly, 'because it had a short, strong stalk and stood right up, holding its branches and fruit off the ground. From his original plant "sport" has been developed a great variety of dwarf tomatoes. This peculiar occur rence has never re-occurred, and if this bumble gardener had not pre served his remarkable plant, the world would' be without a race of commercial tomatoes that bids fair to put the larger sorts out of busi ness, so far as the large grower is concerned. We have long been famil iar with tomatoes which are dwarf as to the size of the fruit and they need not be considered seriously. - The new dwarf has full-sized fruit of the very best quality, and while each plant bears fewer tomatoes, the dwarf .will produce a great many no re tomatoes from a given area than will tha Uner bushes, because It spreads less and may be planted closer together. Where ' the large varieties will go about 2.700 to the acre, planted four feet apart, and will yield about 450 bushels of good fruit, the Olant Dwarf may be planted 2 by SH feet apart, nearly 6,000 plants to the acre, and has frequently yield ed 600 bushels. Even if this were to be overlooked entirely, the fact that the dwarf to mato plant does not have to be tied or staked up, makes it much better for both the small garden and the market garden. The fruit Is naturally kept off the ground and ripens with out rotting In the attempt Handle them Just as you have handled the large varieties and plant them closer together and forget about the stakes, The Olant Dwarf Is the most com mon dwarf variety In this country and we advise you to try a few plants this year or next Thorough cultiva tion is necessary, as with any other tomato, and you must break up the surface after every rain. Another ex cellent forcing plan Is to sink a bot tomless tin can In the ground by eaoh plant and pour liquid fertilizer, or even plain water, into it twice weekly, Laying Out Flower Beds. Why do people plant flowers ' in beds? Everyone does it, and there Is hardly one in a hundred that knows why they plant them In beds Instead ot singly and scattered or some other way. They do It because everybody else does It Planting flowers Is a good deal like growing whiskers in some ways. Right after the Civil war every man grew a full beard, because so many of the returning heroes had beards through necessity that they made whiskers fashionable. That's why we plant flowers In beds. Because the other fellow did, and still does. But fortunately there are mighty good underlying reasons for so doing, whether we understand them or not In the first piaee, the herbaceous or soft stemmed plants usually look bet ter In masses, lines or other groups. large or continuous mass of color makes a strong impression upon the ob server where a few scattered blooms would be Ignored. A single soldier is unnoticed, but the marching of a reg iment thrills the very soul. So It Is with flowers, and this cumulative ef fect is the biggest reason for massing them together. Perhaps the only other immediate al ternative would be to scatter them about over the lawn as they occur in nature a group of blue here, a single pink there, etc This Is all very well for the yard that Is kept in a wild state, but It will never do for the fin ished city or suburban lot It makes a fair, smooth lawn impossible and the combination of natural flower ar rangements and polished gardening ac cessories spoils the effect of each one, As far as possible, the beds should be kept at the outer edges of the lawn to avoid cutting it up and making it look small. The old-fashioned, formal beds round, square, star-shaped, dia mond or crescent are not in good taste now, and the lines of the beds should be Irregular, although clearly defined. This applies to every walk borders, to a lesser degree, although we personally like a straight lined bed near a straight lined walk. If it is necessary to place small beds out In the lawn, the round or oval bed is probably the best in form and it should contain low flowers, so as not to hide the landscape back of it Beds should be dug deep, thorough ly fertilized and pulverized, and the edges cut clean and smooth with an edging tool. The earth should be gen tly crowned from the edges to the cen ter, to provide drainage. Do not plant the flowers so close to the grass aa to Interfere with clipping the grass at the edge ot the lawn about the bed. to How Turks Captured Galllpoll, Gallipoll, where the severe fighting occurred between the Bulgarians and the Turks, became the possession of the latter In a manner that recalls the Biblical description of the fall of Jericho. This happened nearly a cen tury before the capture of Constanti nople so that Gallipoll, or as the an cients called it Callipolis, the Beauti ful City, was one of the Turks' first European acquisitions. .:.- Invited over to Europe by Christians take part in their quarrels, the Turks crossed the Dardanelles and seized the Castle of Tzympe. Then In 1358 came a terrific earthquake, which shattered the cities of Thrace. The walla ot Gallipoll fell down, the In habitants deserted the place, and the Turks marched In over the ruins and stayed there, In spite of the remon strances of the Emperor., Cantacu zenua. The Sultan Orkhan replied that Provldxce had opened the city to hla soldiers, and he could not be guilty ot the impiety of disregarding such a manifestation of the Divine will...- .. . .- Cement Floor. In making cement hog floors, It is advisable to arrange a slat frame or woven wire device in one corner when placing a sow In the house at farrow ing time. The frame should rest flat on the floor, being higher on the outer edge than In the middle, to prevent the ' nesting from being - scattered about and to guard the pigs crawling off onto the cold floor and chilling- very common occurrence unless something is done to prevent It - Kill Prairie Wolves. Prairie wolves are becoming so nu merou in eastern Washington and destroying so many small pigs and poultry that farmers are forming hunting clubs to destroy them. One farmer near Palouse, Wash., lost 17 pigs in one night, all of which wars destroyed by wolves. ' Sign of Carelessness. . Whenever you see a lot of chickens roosting on the farm machinery lying around, unprotected in the fence cor ner you may be sure that the ownet will have a hard time getting hlsmote renewed at the bank. -,TT 1 7T arm &r --r .r' 'Ail . .1 . . -. u (" (Conducted by th National Woman' f 'h H bHu n T-. ( I ( , ., " VMIVM.r HtiriNU JU f AT iHt DILL Next to Heredity Principal Cause of Insanity la Use of Alcohol, Bays Dr. Ferrla, ', ,. America la not Infrequently accuaed of worshiping the "almighty dollar" to the exclusion of higher Interesta and pursuits, and the accusatldn Is not en tlrely unjustified. But at times one is forced to doubt whether the nation, aa a whole, really has a clear conception of the value of that all-powerful coin. It la said on good authority that ap proximately $21,000,000 Is paid by the reople ot this nation every year for toe support ot the Insane, and rarely do you bear any taxpaper or decent citizens objecting to this enormous tax for the care of these unfortunates. Yet Dr. Albert Warren Ferris, well fitted to speak with authority, says that "next to heredity the principal cause of insanity is the use of alcohol, not necessarily In excess but most fre quently in moderation" an evil which society not only tolerates but 'upon which it sets the seal of Its approval by legalizing the business of making and selling drink. Every tax-payer should consider the question from the viewpoint of the writer in Oood Health who says, "When you see your flAlflrhtuir AnmA nut nt 1ium rom Am ber that his whisky Is but partly paid for and that you pay the rest" WHO IS THE GUILTY PERSON?. Young Men 8tand Brunt' of Their Crimes While Man Who Is Moet . - , . Responsible Goee Free. No one knows better than the men who preside over our courts of Justice that the criminal who should be on trial before them Is, In the majority of cases, the legalized liquor traffic. "Every day,"says Judge Plnckney of the Chicago Juvenile court, "there are cases brought before me of young - boys who have broken the law while under the Influence ot liquor. They stand the brunt of their actions, while the one upon whom the greater re sponsibility should fall goes free." And upon whom falls the responsi bility for the legalized liquor traffic? Ot the drink-made criminal it may be said, as good Bishop Myrlel in Hugo's story said of Jean Valjean. "This soul is full of darkness and sin is commit ted, but the guilty person is not the man who commits the sin but he who produces the darkness." In dealing with crime then the question to be ness? ' ; ' . " GOOD CONDITIONS IN MAINE Rev, Twomey Is Finally Convinf td That Treatment of 8aloons In That, State Is Right Kind.. "If a rattlesnake crossed my -path," said Rev. Joseph Twomey of Portland, Me., In a recent sermon, "I wonld ndt stop to argue with It, or platf to find an excuse for Its existence, I would kill it at once. The saloon Is a dan ger that must be wiped out We pun ish the murderer whom drink has crazed so that he takes life, in his drunken frenzy, but we do not touch ' the man who sold him the drink, nor do we attack the state that licensed him to sell It I have lived- In Maine over six years. ; I came with a preju-' dice against the prohibitory law. It took a great deal to convince me that it was worth while. But I now say what I have said many times, 'Port-' land, in proportion to its population. compared with those places with whose life I am Intimate, is the cleanest place, so far as the evils from the liquor traffic are concerned, of which I know.' Maine's treatment of the saloon Is the only one whiclj can be defended." ' Looks Silly. Professor Nichols aBks this perti nent question: "Is it common sense to license a man to sell liquor, then lock up another man for buying It, and levy a tax on the citizen to take care of the man who buys?" - He says further that serosa the face of every tax receipt there ahould be printed In red Ink, "The liquor traffio la a direct enemy of every taxpayer lu the land." Cauae of Wealth. The last census shows that Kansas , Is the second richest state - In the Union, and that while the per capita wealth of its neighbor, Missouri, is $300, that of Kansas Is $1,700. When banker of another state asked for an explanation why Kansas had so much larger per capita bank deposits than his own state the reply was, Kansas puts her money In the banks. while you put yours In the saloons." , Why He Changed His Vote. "I was an antl a long time, but one day I heard some little children talk ing, when one of them, whose father had ben ruined ; by . liquor, said: Mamma says men that vote for Sa loons are to blame for us having such hard time. It stung me, but I fcnew was the truth,, and I vowed that I would wrong no more women and children by voting for saloons." . The first and most seductive peril to a young man is the drinking ot liquor. Andrew Carnegie. Select One Dairy Breed. ' It is better to select one tn!ry breed than it is to try to combine the good points of all. Command Big Prices. Well matched teams are the one that command t; e t's prices. Wine Was Untouched. At a recent banquet given by the officials and employes of the local ( - vision of the Lake Shore road, f ; - the Ashtabula (Ohio) Beacon, a t of rare old wine was placed at t plate, but when the guests left & banquet ball the wine was as the waiters had left it untouch -mute testimony to the r', Z 'y cf r road ' '! 1'rior laws. well r your 1 a ever kuow ".?t-i that 7' - f vi to r f i (
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 16, 1913, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75