Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / July 18, 1913, edition 1 / Page 8
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tit rat Hi ii .J mm PRODUCTION OF ALUMINUM I North Carolina Will Do Its Share To ward Mooting tha Inoroaaa Do- mand For Aluminum. v; vuahd Or c; CTOM OF STATE'S ' prison c : ; : cts TO RAILROADS. AIDING PENITNTI." Raleigh. A special from Washing- ton states that tha offlclala of tho TJnt ted States geological survey believe (hat thla statelwilll during tho year 1913 do a great part In meeting the grow Ing demand for aluminum, through tha formation of tha Southern Aluminum I FUNDS SHORT Company, which hai commenced oper- atlona on the Yadkin river, in staniy county. In a report of the production of alu minum during the year 1912, Issued recently, the aurvey itatei that last year there was a notable Increase in the use of that meal, more than 66, 0000.000 pounds being consumed, com- pared with 44,125,000 pounds In the preceding year. Not only was there an increase In the domestlo produc tion, states the report, but there war a decided growth In the Imports of the metal. In commenting on the formation of the Southern Aluminum Company in this state, the report of the survey states: To meet in part the growing de mand for alumlnnm, the Soutnern The Cash Now on Hand la Insuffi cient For tha Running Expenses, Authorities Would . Accept Money Contracta For Convict Labor. Raleigh. If the wishes of the board .jf directors of the state's prison count for much, railroads In search of con vict labor will hare to go elsewhere than td the North Carolina peniten tiary to secure it In their report made publlo recently the directors and Superintendent Mann lnUt that Article V, Section 4, of the State Con- construction unless approved by the Aluminum Company, with a large cap- vote of the people. The council of state, however, stands firm on retaining the system as to fulfilling present contracts where - the promoters are meeting the terms required by legislaive acts tor such aid. The position of the directors is sim ply that the railroad stoi acquired throuKh hirtna of convicts falls to bring in the ready cash, and has of ten failed to bring any. They do not want to turn ddwn offers of cash for the prisoners' labor and run benina on prison expenses, as the present situation threatens to force them to da The orison directors report that , the prison la now absolutely without funds except the railroad stock that Is pronounced worthless. The run nlng expenses of the prison amount upwards of 115,000 a month and wltt no revenue except thla railroad stock for labor in sight until far into the fall, the state .will probably have to put up $93,000 or more for prison maintenance ' by January 1. On the other hand, there are numbers . o' applications for convict labor a $1.50 cash a day that would quickly created surplus at the prison, if the railroad stock contracts were terminated. A lengthy report by Supt Mann gives in detail the conditions t all these railroad camps. It pronounces the Atlantic and Transcontinental op erations a "sham 'and pretense" at the same time crediting its promot ers with honest Intentions. Hal has acquired a water-power site on Yadkin river, in tsiamj couuiy, North Carolina, and is now engaged in the development of the property. The projected operations of the com pany and the additional fact that the importation of foreign aluminum is being stimulated by a keen demand promise a sufficient supply of the met al In the future. IliEISIiOGIIGE THE APPOINTMENTS OF POST- ; MASTERS FOR NORTH CARO LINA STILL DELAYED. TO ENCOURAGE KC3 RAISING Southern Railway Issues Booklet "Hog Production ' and Conditions For Success In The South." MEN ARE UNSATISFACTORY Senator Simmon Holding up Nomina tlon of Postmasters at Laurinburg, Marshall and Reldsvllle. His Rea- aon For Thla Action Given. North Carolina New Enterprises. The Interstate Stores Company Greensboro, is chartered for the es tablishment of a chain of department stores. The charter specifies that the company has the power to do a gen eral department store business. The capital is $200,000 in $10 shares of preferred and common stock. The In corporators are L. J. Shaw, Carter Dalton and Dred Peacock. Another important charter Is to the Carolina Bridge & Iron Co., Lexington, capl tal $125,000 authorized, of which $10,000 is eight per cent preferred stock and $115,000 common stock. The incorporators are J. R. Hoffman of Burlington, G. F. Hanklns and J. C Bower of Lexington. There is also charter for the Catawba County Farm ers' Union Warehouse Company, New ton, capital $25,000 authorized and $1, 050 subscribed. Education Boars! Holda Meeting. The Iredell county board of educa tion heM ita flrat - maAttnz tvArft.' days' ago' tinder- 4he new administra tion which dates from July 1 and the members of the board Messrs. J. H. Hill, J. L. Bradley and W. G. Nichol sonand the new county superinten dent, Mr. R. M. Gray, all took the oath of office. The work of appointing new school committees was begun. It is announced that a numher of ladies will probably ' be 'named as member of the school committees. Commission State Guard Officers. Commissions are Issued to officers in the North Carolina National Guard by Adjutant Gen. Toung aa follows J. L Brown, Klnston, captain of Com pany, B, Second Infantry; J. O. H Taylor, lieutenant, William A. Faulk ner, second lieutenant, Klnston; R, E. Stevens, second lieutenant. Com pany I, Second Infantry; A. C. L. Hill, Klnston, captain and quartermaster; S.' E. Winston, Youngs vllle, captain and quartermaster, Third Infantry; William Westmoreland, captain, Com pany E, States vllle; w. D. Holland Dunn, first lieutenant, Company M Second Infantry; C. D. Loane, Ply mouth, lieutenant Junior grade naval reserves; V. E. Everett, Plymouth lieutenant naval reserves. Women on Guilford School Board. The Guilford county board of edu cation in appointing school commit teemen did not take so very enthusl- damage to the cropt While the storm iegt8lature at permits women to be was HOI sever l opriuB Xliu luerr . mBtnW nf .hnnl Mmn,lt.. 8torm Doe Damage in Halifax. A severe storm passed over Scot land Neck and vicinity doing much was considerable hall and a terrific wind and the rain fell In torrents for a few moments. It Is said the hail did but 'little damage, but the wind blew and twisted the corn and cottor badly. At Hobgood, a few miles south of here, there was a severe electric wind and rainstorm. Meets Death Under Southern Train Fred L. Smathers, for the pas three Tears a awltchman of thr 'Southern Railway Company, met in stant death on the Ashevllle yard when he was crushed beneath a re frigerator car, which was overturned The deceased wat horribly mangled and when physicians arrived an ex amlnation showed that he received In ternal Injuries which resulted in hi; death. , Wood Is President of N. C. R. R. Governor Craig announces a new directorate for tha North Caroline Railroad Company and names W. H, Wood, prominent banker and bust nes matt of-Charlotte, for president and J. P. Cook of Concord, state sen ator, for " secretary-treasurer. The new directorate follows: L. Bankf Holt, Alamance; W. T. Brown, For syth; J. M. Allen, Franklin; W. H. ' Wood. Mecklenburg; C. 8. Tomlln, Ire., dell; John P. Yo .t, Catawba; J. Q. Gllkey, McDowell; J. R. B. Carraway, Haywood. Mecklenburg C. i That Meek! : ' a thoroughly distant date ' sured as the r the board c several C -board t plans s teci" 1 f pir r ' a f il " rer ".-RP.1 would I ' New Jail. - county will have a , prison at ' nr to have been' as . cf the meeting of r commissionerr At that time the nd to accept the . Augusta archi ii , round a nty's bonds tn and $110,000. " the firm ex - a . purchaser i Meets. 'ncatlon met II. S. Rad ..beth'a term s was sworr .1. Harrison, c-eded by J. C. A determined tnn, county su )ols terminated v'ann. Prof. J. E g elected to sue i has bepn snper- due went rar enougn to give it a trial. Four Women were appointed in various parts of the county, as fol lows: Mrs. W. S. Dick, McLeans vllle high school; Mrs. t Laura Davidson Stockdale high school; Mrs. R. ' O. Gamble, Summerfield high school; Mrs. W. L. Gibbons, Colfax school. All of these are very intelligent and capable women and with one excep tion, college graduates.. Hookworm Campaign In Rowan. - The Rowan county board of com missioners has decided to put on hookworm campaign in this , county and appropriated $250 for the prose cution of the work, which will be un der the direction of Dr. G. T. Leon ard of the North Carolina board ol health. ' ,- . Tayloe to Succeed Watts.. Joseph F. Tayloe, of Washington, N. C, who will be clerk of the senate fi nance committee, succeeding A. D. Watts reached Washington, after hav ing spent two days fn his home town making ready to take up the work. Senator Simmons said that his deci sion in Mr., Tayloe's appointment would not have the effect of hasten ing announcement of other appoint ments In Eastern Carolina, He said that he haa no Idea when selections for district attorney, collector and marahall will be made. Brings Suit Against Convict. Speculation as to how John A. Cam eron will conduct his defense In a $26, 000 damage suit while he Is aerring a 20-year sentence for j second degree murder was started ' at Greensboro when the complaint In the suit was filed with the clerk of superior court. The plaintiff is H. p. Oaks of High Point, administrator of the estate of the late P." C. Oaks of Raeford. The deceased was killed August $1 and Cameron is now in penitentiary (err ing his sentence received after plead ing guilty to second degree murder. Kappa Delta 8ororlty Meets. In order that tlh school girls, may be discouraged froa Joining sororities of small institutions of learnlis, In eligible for charters from the Nation al Sororities, the Kappa Delta Sorori ty, which la holding its convention at Ashevllle, passed a resolution forbid ding the initiation of any girl . who Joins a high school sorority after Sep tember 1, 1915. The organization went on record as oppod to Iht r-antlng of cl ,-. ti c ' " - fn"iri 1 ' " Raleigh. A special from Washing ton states that there ha been no ma terial change during tha past two weeks in the situation regarding the appointments bf postmasters at Laur Inburg, Marshall and Reldsvllle, where the men named by congressmen are unsatisfactory to Senator Simmons and he Is having their nomination f held up. G. H. Russell, who was recommend ed for appointment at Laurinburg by Congressman Page was in Washington going over the situation with his friends, and seeking advice as to thr best way to overcome Senator Sim mons' objection. He did not call on the senator. Senator Simmons said that he had not seen Russell and indl- dicated that it would be useless for Russell to call on him, as he was In tent on having E. H. James, appoint ed postmaster at Laurinburg, and did not believe be would change his mind any time soon. It Is understood that Russell's friends in Washington advised him to take up the matter with Senator Sim mons through a mutual friend of both, In an effort to reconcile the senator to the appointment of Russell and the defeat of James. . Senator Simmons has filed no charges against Riusell either at the postoffice department or with the senate poBtofflce commltee, and in fact It is not a question of his being opposed to Russell or hav ing anything in particular against Russell, but he wants James appoint ed and will not let any one else have the office. At Marshall, Madison county, the appointment of J. R. Swann as post master, on the recommendation of Congressman Webb,' is being held up in the postoffice department by Sena tor Simmons. The charges brought against Swann, and on which hit- ap pointment is being held up, are that he has talked too freely In an un complimentary way of a number of prominent North Carolina Democrats Atlanta, Ga. In the effort to en courage 8outher farmers to raise more hogs, the Southern' Railway, through its Live Stock Department, has Issued a booklet entitled, "Hog Production and Conditions tor Success in tha South." a eopy of which will be furnished on request by F. L. Word, Live Stock Agent, Atlanta, Ga, The booklet contains much practi cal and valuable Information aa to the car and feeding of hogs, selection of breeds, treatment of diseases; and cutting and eurlng meat. Chapters on each subject have been supplied by expert. That the South consumes more pork and raises less than any other part of the United. States despite the fact that pork can be produced more cheaply In the South than In the North or West, Is a well known fact and a condition that greatly Impedes the progress of the section. The long open season and the great variety of food crops at his command give the Southern farmer the opportunity to make more money raising bogs than is possible in any other territory. The Live Stock Department of the Southern Railway devotes Its efforts entirely to stimulating Interest In live stock raising In the territory along the Southern Railway and the services of Its experts are available without charge of any kind to any farmer or other person interested in live stock. Offer Reward For Murderer. Raleigh. With the family of the murdered officer offering a reward of $50 the, sheriff of Wake county $50 and application to the state to add the sum of $100 for the apprehension of Henry Jenkins, the negro slayer of James Glenn, a white man In the northern section of Wake, concerted efforts are endeavoring to effect the capture of the desperate character in brief town. Citizens from Barton's Creek township in attendance upon court here brought the news that 4C farmers were in search of the negro, and every home in which suspicion hovers that the negro might be har bored there is being searched. Land 8how For Big Exposition. Knoxville, Tenn. Realizing that fand is primarily the basis of all wealth and that from the land must come fod and clothing for the pres ent and future generations, the man agement of the National Conservation Exposition has prepared for the great est land show ever held In the South and for one of the greatest land shows ever held anywhere. Scientists say that the land of the United States must be conserved, must be nurtured and cared for, must be nursed an doctored and in no wise maltreated If the nation is to maintain Its present proud position at the head of all the nations of the earth. It is to teach the lesson of the necessity of con serving our lands aswell as of teach ing the - lessons of conservation other resources, that the National Conservation Exposition comes into being. In the big new land building on the exposition grounds the land show will be held. The land building, com pleted to the last nail, is one of six big exposition buildings erected for the conservation exposition. Attached to it is an annex with an auditorium that will seat 1,000 persons. The United States government display In the land building as well as state dls plays will tie particularly fine and comprehensive. The exposition will open on September 1 and will con tinue until November 1. WENT EAST TO AS!. FCH THE L1ZE0TY CELL -t I' i- These young women, representing the states of the northwest, have Just been on a trip to Philadelphia to ask that the Liberty bell be aent to the Panama-Paclflo exposition in San Francisco In 1S15. With them la Philip & Bates, publisher of. The Northwest, of Portland, Ore. . , ' THIEVES NEVER QUIT Once Started Continued Through Life, Say Detectives. The Tobacco Crop Goed. . Raleigh. Raleigh people who havf visited the Wendell section of .the county within the past two weeks say that the tobacco crop has the brightest outlook for being better this year than for the past five years. To bacco in that section is unusually ma tured for this time of the year and unless there is a visitation of some destroyer the crop will be of better quality and also quantity. In some places the weed Is waist high add al read topping.' ' Contribute to Central Highway. Lexington. The board of county commissioners held a very busy ses sion of two diys. Of the Important matters that came before the board at this meeting may be noted the revis ing of the Jury list, which took up practically all of a day, and the ap proprlation of Davidson county's share of the state automobile license tax tc the Central Highway. W. H. Hipp Succeeds Himself. Ashevllle. County Superintendent of Education W, H.i HIpps was unanl- mousry elected to succeed himself, at meeting of the Buncombe county board of education. Hie name was the ' only one placed in nomination Mr. Hlpps has been superintendent of the schools of this county for the past year, having been elected In 1912 to succeed A. C. Reynolds, resigned. He has met with a great deal of suc cess during the time that he has been at the head of the Buncombe county school system. County Board of Education Meeta. Yanceyville. The county board of education, in session here several days ago elected George A. Anderson coun ty superintendent of public Instruc tlon. This unopposed reelection makes the beginning ot Mr. .Ander son's fifth consecutive term of office statistical report of the school work in Caswell shows an increase over any previous year of S51 In en rollment and 189 in average of at tendance. This record was made -in the face of a smallpox epidemic dur ing the term. . John A. Ferre!! Promoted. Haleiga. Announcement Is 1 made that Dr. John A. Ferre!!, who has been director of tie state oompa!n for the eradication of hookworm dis ease for the Rockefeller Fonndatior tor several years, goes to Washington to take the direction of the work for the whole country, being appointed to (his high position because of htm remarkable Buccess in North Carolina. r is to be succeeded in the North work by Pr. C. L. IW-n -'iril-ior - Aervia ' Through With Bulgaria. Belgrade. Tha Servian government has addressed a note to Bulgaria for mally breaking off diplomatlo rela tione and announcing the recall of her minister. - Servian troops have entered Kotchana. A semi-official statement claims that Servla has pre vented Bulgaria . from executing her plan ot gaining possession of the Mac edonia territories which she wished to occupy pending arbitration. The statement '. says thaat Servians suc ceeded in repelling the Bulgarians ad vance. The Servian army gradually assumed the offensive and the Servi ans forced the Bulgarians right wing back over the river Bregalinltz. An other seml-fflocuU communication says battles cost the Servians 15,000 killed anad wounded;. the Bulgarians 20,000. Town Destroyed By Fire. . Nashville, Tenn. A special says Sturgis, Ky., a town of about 2,000 people on the Illinois Central Rail road, 40 miles south of Evansville, Ind., was practically destroyed by lire several days ago. The fire started in S. E, Graves' drug store. All the bus! ness houses were in ashes and about 20 dwelling houses had. been destroy ed and the fire was still raging. The town had 'no t waterworks and the people fought the flames with a buck et brigade. Charlton Muat Go to Italy. , Jersey City. Porter Charlton will start for Italy soon to answer for tha (killing of his wife, Mrs. Mary Scott Castle Charlton. Pierre P. Garven who haa represented, the Italian Gov ernment in the case, : had received from Washington the decision and mandate ot the United States Supreme Court that Charlton must be surrend ered to Italy. Mr. Garven has sent the papers to the Federal District Court tn Trenton and will communi cate at once with the Italian consul in New York. "Conscience Fund" Decreased. Washington, Fewer penitents, tor tured by the "sttn small voice" con fessed and surrendered "conscience money" to the Federal Government during the fiscal year 1913 than for many years. The "conscience fund" received, totalled only $2,814.44, the lowest amount ' since 1901 and com parable with a hundred-year average of $4,200. That fund Is the only offi cial index to scruples but no Treas ury official attempts to explain the decrease In money received from the Government by f aud or error. Republicans F!ai Attack on Tar!."?. Washington. publican men " rs of the Senate 1 we been quiutly r re paring for tr i wecLa for the attack that is to be l .a.ie on the Underwood- Simmons tariff bill when it gets back into the Senate. While a program of tariff policy had not been laid out by the Republicans, leading representa tives of the party la the Senate have prepared a" inents, substitute :!'!ies ana irotection igunr,' 1 st r t of tv t'v ' : f ; 8leuth Tells of Apple, Chewing Gum, Secret Packet and Dog Collar ftchemes In Storeer-Loas From . This Source Heavy. New York. Four Years ago Lottie Gross married. Her husband knew that she had served a term in Moy amensing for shoplifting. But aha promised him and she meant it that she would never steal again. And then the baby came. "I wanted pret ty things for ber." said Lottie. "And so I went back to the old game. It I couldn't quit for the best man in the world I guess I never can quit. Stealing Is like a disease except that it can't be cured." That's about what the xletecUves think. Once a man or woman gets well started at stealing and he or sne is a thief for Ufa. "The bigi stores lose more by am ateur shoplifters than by profession als," said'D. J. Botter, manager for the criminal department ot a detec tive agency. "A woman steals some trifling thing, that catches her eye- ana geta away with It, ' Then she comes back and keeps on comlnc back. They never let up," Cotter takes the professional thief- catcher's view of the defense of klep tomania. Now and then there may be a kleptomaniac ' Most kleptomanlaca are Just thieves. ' They get started to stealing and It's like rolling a snow ball down hill the stealing grows. "There waa the woman we may can Anna Eva," he said. "She is one of the most dangerous professional store thieves and shoplifters there is a dtffernce in the terms in the country. Her husband is a captain of a lake vessel. So ia one of her sons. They have a good home at Cleveland, where the daughter is married to a good man. But Anna Eva began to steal She haa been a professional thief for years, and now haa a prison record. Mind you, she has no criminal as sociates. I do not suppose she knows another thief to speak to, though she may know them by sight She has nothing to do- with other crooks. She Just steals. She travels most ot the time, living at good hotels. She la a kindly, placid, pleasant woman of mid dle age and a ' professional 'thief. Like all the others, she began as an amateur. - " I don't know that there are any particularly . new schemes ' against which store managers should be on the alert," said Cotter. "Every one knows the old trick with' a hunk ot chewing gum. The stirs t thief sticks a ring under the ledge of the counter with the gum. Then the other comes along and runs his hand under, the counter eage ana gets the ring and vamooses. Open umbrellas are often used as .receptacles. The neatest trick turned lately was in the west, when a good looking, well dressed man sauntered Into a Jewelry store with an apple In his hand. He looked at a tray filled with valuable rings. ., , "Wah!" he suddenly sputtered. "This apple la- wormy." Whereupon he threw the apple Into the street The confederate, on the lookout picked up the apple and the gem which had been hidden in It and made off. An almost equally nifty de vice is to equip the collar Of a pet dog with a secret pocket When the stolen ring haa been placed In the pocket while the operator is petting the animal, it leaps to the floor. "Catch my dear UtUe doggie." yelps the bereaved shoplifter. Every one hurries to oblige. The dear little doggie fits Its little tall Into the groove and scampers for home, as It has been trained to da The shoplifter profits by the tact that the managers ot stores hesitate to prosecute. They believe that hott est customers are inclined to shun stores In which such arrests are fre quently made, fearing that an entire ly Innocent action might lead to an unpleasant seizure and search. But the total loss by shoplifting and by store thieves Is so great that the Na tional Retail Dry Goods association waa recently formed tor co-operation in protection. DOG SACRIFICES ITS LIFE Little Canine Makes Vain Attempt to a Save Owner In Burnlno ; t House.' London. A touching story of a Po-' meranian dog's vsln atempt to save the life of its owner, who waa fatally burned in a fire at Grosvenor-gardens-mews recently, Is being told here, The victim of the tire waa Mrs. Southgate, young wife of a chauffeur in the service of Count ApponyL She waa aeen by a policeman standing at a window with her clothes In flames. . While- the officer and a chauffeur were breaking down the front door the little dog waa seen Jumping up at the window, barking frantically! He then rushed back to his mistress and apparently attempted to put out her . burning clothing with his paws. When an entrance waa effected the woman waa found to be tn a dying condition and the little dog waa dead. IN THE THICK OF THE FIGHT One of the Thrilling Scenes from Hardest Fought Sporting Contest Ever Witnessed. ! New - York. Those who have fol lowed the international polo match played between the English and the OFFERS CHILDREN FOR SALE Poverty Stricken Mother Advertise Two Girls and Baby Boy for . $750 Each. . Berlin. For several days various newspapers of Thuringia and else where in central Germany have con tained an advertisement stating that a mother offers to sell "a beautiful girl Of fourteen, a handsome girl of fly and a bonny baby boy aged one" for $7B0 apiece. " S An Investigation shows that . the woman la a divorcee, who, despairing f making a livelihood tor herself or her children, conceived the idea of selling them. Only the eldest girl ia child of her divorced husband, the two younger children having been born since ahe lived apart from him.' The authorities have decided . ' to withdraw the children from their moth- era car ana u piece in em in insti tutions. :v.Y ; v.. :-'r. Orange Restores Man's Memory. New York. -Found, wandering aim lessly about the streets of Brooklyn Chauncey Rogers, fifty-seven, ot West Orange, N. J, was unable to remem ber his nau.e or address. As he en tered the- police station he spied an orange on the lieutenant's. desk- Orange," ha said. "Ah! TLat's It where I 15ve." Further investigation confirmed L!s discovery. . i Thrilling Moment. ' American teams at -Meadow Brook, Long Island, have little conception of TAUGHT ROOSEVELT TO DANCE the strenuous game polo, when played as these champion pololsts play It. really is. The photograph vividly por trays an Intense moment of the sec ond game of the International match) played June 14, when the following players (left to right) Waterbury, Freake and Mllburn (Americana in white shirts. English In dark shirts) were engaged in a hair raising scrim mage aa Captain Freake aent a smash ing drive, but failed to make a guaL YOUNG BRIDE SUES PARENTS Damping Master Who Died at Eighty- - Eight Waa .Also Instructor ta -Many Other Notables. , . New York. John H. Trenor. who died at his home in New Rochelle at the age of eighty-eight years, boast ed that he had taught Theodore Roose velt William K. Vanderbllt Chauncey M. Depew and James Gorden, Bennett how to dance. Trenor for many years taught members of New York society the art of dancing and accumulated a large fortune. He claimed to bare built the first apartment house In New York, at the corner of Sixth avenue and Forty-eighth street ' . . ..Four Years Without Water. Hemet Cel. Charles R. Relckehoff ot this place haa touched neither wa ter or any other kind of liquid than the Juice ot fruits for tour years. Relckehoff, who Is the son of a mil lionaire living at Orange City, la., came here some years ago determined to live on nothing but fruit and nuts. He says he la in perfect health. -1 . "j flu: Cemoct.- 3 Cant" .'..tee In George town, Ky, Promise Hat to Use Money In Campaign. ; Georgetown, KyAAfl of the twenty- re Democratic candidates for offices in Scott county assembled here and pledged themselyes In resolutions either to "tr"f r r to u a montj In efforM t ' '!-. !i Ancient Kin at Wedding.' Lead Hill, Ark. r".a Wagoner attended the we2l:i..s cf her great- rreat-great-rrandJm;;:hter here. Dosle Clarkson, who . nianied to John CpvKaw. . ; . -.'.'.-'; in r--it, t: y -reed to wot " J an C j t i cf the e' e"en. jro-v-.-1 f ..t a,.,-. who tmld cot then ffihke oath U.at be had krt the pledge ahould withdraw from the race. . . ' Wife of Seventeen Years Takea Play things of Childhood to Her -, New Home. Denver, Cola "Three dolls and a. teddy bear." ' E As Constable Sam C. Dorsey of Jus tice Rice's court called off these ar ticles from a long Hat of children's . playthings, Edith V. Chase, a seventeen-year-old bride, sorted them from a pile heaped high In the outer office. She waa to take them to ber home her new home following a decision of the court in a replevin action that She waa entitled to the playthings ot her childhood, even though her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Willis, attempted to retain them when their daughter became the wife ot S. L. Chase, aon ' of Adjutant General Chase, laat De cember. The marriage waa object ed to because of the girl's . tender . years. '. . :' '':' 'v '. . -'.-;r I" Other things is the lot were a little red wagon, a post card with soldier; buttons on It a maglo lantern, one school cook-book, two skirts for a doll, one picture of Cupid, and other things, with . a ; value only to tbe ode who haa possessed them in child hood. "' ---V. COY HELD AS CLAClC.AILCt : Burglars Commend Householder. Peterson, N. J. Thieves who vis ited the home of Thomas Mahoney here wh!?e he and bis timl'y were In e'"n,:a gnt no"rj. Thry I ' a Telegraph Runner, Aged Fifteen, Con- : fosses to Attempted Extortion , In London. r Paris. A telegraph boy, aged fif teen, was arrested on a charge cf at tempted blackmail. lie and b'r, Ti rades at a branch poeto-Tlce b&l ' en In the habit of opentrg telejrsn nf reading them.'. In t'.ls way t" e toy learned of an lnt;-'.: t'..ut wss t- x carried on by a n ar.is'd won-hn. L wrote demanding :d m f .e price of bis s!'"-n"9, bnt-t'S 1 'r fuU iuto the ': of the tww'i v-' who gave Li. a in chars. T?e li i ce. ed, but the woman t :atl to jrc-- cute. ;,, I , V )!1 ( J f ' " -T J. f r ;. J -, -IT l i t i I 3 : i t , e. s, t . ..e t..e C.-tS tf ila s. ; railway eiesUiyes. After a stru; ,j.a cf three hours, however, the manipula tion, brakes and other missiles proved) to be too much for them, so they c. 'u Improve! t'-r Tv r o!s of Pax' a ft
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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July 18, 1913, edition 1
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