■ 1 L - f t.ir f i_i ■ ‘ , --.-. I- „ •
DEVASTATE FLOW SWEETS LAMAS AND OKUMMA
WEATHER
lk**rn and tki*4»n|« raw tIM
.. "»
■ ■ ■■
KinUBB B
FEDERAL RESERVE
RANKS WIN BEFORE
M SUPREME COURT
Suit Brought By the Georgia and the North Car
olina Banks Is Lost Before the
f Highest Court
- . „
washinoton j U m 11— The hu
**•»♦ court today la cuts b roue tit
state beaks of Georgia and North
defined Uw power or Fed
•f»l IfMrr* banka to Inaiat upon par
claaranca and collection of check#
It hold that the awthoda need by the
Atlanta Reserve bank 'isere lawful
hut that a atata could modify by leg
apounon lav rule, which require pay
neaU of check* In caah to provide
that banka could uae eirbutr In
pa yin# check* drawn upon them
It w»a contended by the American
Snnk and Treat Company and oth
ara of Oeor*ta that the Atlanta iw
aerre bank had Intended to accumu
late larpe quantities of check* drawn
■PM banks which made collections
or clearance chargee and to present
them at the paying teller'* window
with a demand for par payment in
onnb. This and other method* which
the Georgia banka not belonging to
the association asserted had been de
cided upon by the federal rearere
hoard la its par clearance campaign
would have the effect they contended
as driving them out of business
la disposing of the case brought
against the Atlanta bank, the court
declared the evidence disclosed that
Up bank wma not Inspired hr us ul
terior purpose to coarea or Injure
aep member banka which refused to
naan at par nod 4M not sustain the
charge thnt the fbderal reserve hank
Woe ekaretaing its rights so M to hr
Jure or oppress the Mats hank*
- .w.
Interafcttonal Conference Meet
ing In Deportment of Agri
culture «t Washington
WASH 1 NOTON. June 11.— (By the
Associated Press.)—Th* International
conference to determine what adjust
ments ar* necessary In the foreign
trade In American cotton as a result
of (It* new cotton standard get held
two kascutlve sessions today at the
department of Agriculture hut reach
ed no definite conclusion The con
ference. which will continue mmar
row. is the reeuM of S request of
British cotton Interest*, that tbay be
permitted to present their view* to
Secretary Wallace before the final
adoption of regulations for enforcing
ike new regulations
Secretary Wallace. In opening tbe
conference, brtefiy outlined the new
Uw find bl* responsibilities In enforc
ing It. He pointed out that be- bad
agreed with American exporter* to
permit them for the pieaeeit cotton,
nee of which is made mandatory by
the new law beginning Aug 1 on the
terms of He express
ed hope thfc 4b* conference
reeult in mutuilly a satisfactory ar
rangement In with the
new Uw.
ATLANTA. June 11.—A bill to re
neal tbe Qeorgta "bone dry profctbl
tton Uw approved U will be
Introduced In tbe neat legislature by
Representative Arnold of Lumpkin
county, according to an announce
ment made by Mr. Arnold here lodny
TREASURY TO STAND
PAT ON LIQUOR LAW
D
V /
WASHINGTON, June 11. The |
Ire usury will sUnd pat »n Its da |
termination to snforca rigidly the
rt Supreme court decision bar
beverage liquor from territorial
waters of the United States. It so'
Informed custom officers In nrw In
structions tonight Issued, and offi
cials declared, that further misun
derstanding with foreign governments
may be avoided.
The French government through Its
embassy here had suggested to the
treasury during tha day that each
o
THE GOLDSBORO NEWS
Wttk regard to tke charge that
large Juantltie* of checks were be
ing accumulated for presentation
With demands for cash, the evidence
Judge Braudels, who delivered the
opinion, aasrted, did not sustain the
allegation. The Atlanta reserve bank
bad disclaimed any Intention, he
■old. es demanding payment In cash
when presenting checks at tke baits
but was willing to accept payment In
drafts, collectable at ar drafu on any
solvent bank.
"No adequate reason is shown,"
Justice Braudel added, "why the con
current findings of facts by the two
lower courts should not be accepted |
by us. That the action contemplated
by the federal reserve bank will sub
ject the country anks to certain
losses' Is clear."' t
In the case brought by the Farmer*
and Merchants Bank of Monroe. N. (’..
and others against lbe Richmond Re
serve bgak. the court reversed .he
decision of the North Carolina *•
preme court which bad hid uncon
stltution the act of tbe state legisla
ture In 191 enultting tbe payment of
checks In exchange.
Explaining that tba stale statue bad
arisen out of tbe efforts of the federal
reserve hoard to latro/udu universal
par iterapc In th ceifeciton us check#
Justice prandei* said it was evident
offer rillTumk* Inducement adequate
He obt. r tkfr (on-.ht to par cixt*
ance. '
HNEST FIRES OUSE
Mfflt LITTLE LOSS
Report Saya Wnyoe Not Co-Op
erating With Geo. Survey
in Preventing Lmrm
The report on forest fires In North
Carolina for th* year 1922. In most
counties based chiefly on - Informa
tion from voluntary correspondents:
ho*’ recently been made public by
tbe Geological and Economic Sur
vey. The nature of the replies sent
Is precludes the possibility of any
great accuracy, but tbe results are
at least conservative. They show a
total for tbe sUte of 1227 fires whleh
burned 190.737 acre* and caused a
damage of (643.442 (0.
Reports from Wayne county show
that In 1922 this county bad 16 for
est Area which burned over 146 acres
snd caused an estimated damage of
(620. Usually only the larger fires
are noticed and It la more than likely
that tbe numerous small fire* In the
county did as much damage as the
fires mentioned In tbl *re port O
Only five of the twelve township*
In Wayne county reported on forest
Area. Ten of the fires occurred In
Ptkevllta township, three In Fork
township, and three tn Brodgen town
ship. Hunters started nine of them,
smoker* three, the railroad two and
two were of unkuown origin. It Is
probable that numerous other fires
•scaped tbe notice of tbe correapdon
onle. Wayne county is not cooperat
ing with tbe North Carolina Geologi
cal amt. Economic Survey In forest
fire prevention.
I .
pmmmmrnmm
member of the crew of the llnei
France In New York harbor should
lx allowed to have hts wine ration*
of one half a liter a day as required
by the French taw Inasmuch as tbs
ship bad left ber borne port prtoi
to June 10. the effective date of th<
regulation Krnfeaahy officials took
the position, treasury officials said
that after the liquor stores of ves
sels had been sealed by custom au
thorities. the former practice of open
ing tha store for Issuance of the wine
ration should he followed on this
trip.
• -«»V«
six run
SITE DHKENBI
in wit
, REPOPTS TO HITIS
. Roritw of Different Reports
1 *Bhew ViolathtOM of Vol
gtootl Ait DfferMstiiK
MANY ARRBBTS WERE
MADE DURING YEAR
WABHINOTON. June 11.—A sur
vey of "dry" America was laid be
fore tbe public today by Prohibition
Headquarters which gave out a sum
mary of tbe annual reports of State
Prohibition Directors coincident
with an annual review prepared by
(Yunmiealoner Haynes himself
Tightening up of prohibition en
forcement work, witji Increased re
sults lu securing obedience u> tbe
prohibition amendment and the Vol
stead Act was reported generally, and
( onmrtsaipner Haynes declared the
national situation as n whole moat
satisfactory. 0
Reduced withdrawals of spirit ignis
liquors was reported almost uni
formly. Tbe atata directors alto,
with the striking except lon of New
York, reported Increased coopera
tion by local officials In enforcament
I work. There was a wide disparity
In tbe number of arrests and con
victions, however, some ill rector* re
porting Urge increases while others
said Increased Uw observance bad
I resulted la decreases in prosecutions.
A large number of states reported
that substantial percentages of tbe
arreela made were of aliens or per
sona or foreign nationality.
Defalls of tbe seizure of thousands
of stills and "worms" and large
quantities of mesh, moonshine li
quor und beer together with the
ctoeing of many distilleries and for
mer saloons were related by the
stale directors. The Tennessee di
rector declared Ihpl 90 per cent of
prohibition vioUter* now were “ll-
UUtfStg and disreputable pexauu#.
whersas before tbe prohibition Uw*
became so effective moonshiners
/am* from a class considered hon
est and respectable In every other
respect.” Tbe "figures on arrests,
convictions, fines, and setsure* given
In the reports were not uniform or
complete, however, making It InipOs
aible to strike comparisons among
the atatea. In many caaes the di
rector only recited statistics which
had bOqn published previously. ,
The report on enforcement condi
tions In New York, prepared prior to
repeal of the Mullen-Oege elate Uw.
emphasised lack of co-operation from
local officlaU and alow progress In
prosecutions In both federal aud,
state courts. In 1922 outside of
New Yorfi city the number of per
sons convicted in state courts was
2,(42, with 1,172 more lu federal
courts, la New York (Tty criminal
courts, prohibition convictions de
creased from 1.023 in 1921 to 937 In
1922, and flnea from (96.(14 to (70.-
3(6.
New Yorfc|e repealed enforcement
law, tbe report aaid. was enforced
by state troopers, sheriffs and city
police.
"The state troopers baye not con
centi'ated their special effort upon
the enforcement of tbe elate prohi
bition act," tbe report said. "Tba
sheriffs sad deputies made arrests
up-state outside of cities In seversl
hundred cases, hut mostly when
| complaints bad been made as to
' open, flagrant or notorious vlola
j tlon# Tbe sheriffs ord|HurlTy-,do not
I consider It their 1 dUtyTto do E»V po-
I lire or sleuthing work lu
i with prohibition rases / although
1 many sheriff* are peraonanjt and of
ficially strongly In favor of enforce
, ment. Nearly 90 per cent of all ar
. rests made under tbe state probl
' bit lon act have been made by tbe
i police departments of the cities of
tbe state.”
Tbe New York report added that
while only about 10 per cent of per
sona arrested In New York City for
alleged liquor violation* were held
for grand juriea. the percentage up
state was 76. It was said that about |
. half of the defendants In prohibi
tion cases In New York city were
’ aliens S
Tbe report for MasaaCnuaetts,
which also baa no local euforcehient
taw. said that while there were about
tbe same number of prohibition pro-!
secutinn* during the last three year*,
since January 1. laat. tbe number j
' "Increased to a marked degree."
Convlcttoos also Increased, and there,
i was said to be Increased cooperation
' from local officials.
"The niaaaea of tbe population are
obeying tbe law." said tbe M»**n
. elm set l* report. “The hostility
against the present administration
baa been reduced
The Connecticut report aaid that
M per cent of prohibit!— prosecu
tions were agalnat alien*
,i (Continued on FWffe Three)
- „
UOLIMBORO, I. Co Tt KnDAY k&SISh, 41 JPfifi
urns home is ,
.rh min
; PHUT HMDI
Engineers Say Tfiffl Should Be
, Made of the Befit Hefere
It b Ufied
TRIP WILL BE MADE
TO SOUTHERN WATERS
WASHINGTON, June 11.—Presi
dent Harding waa said today to have
given formal approval to pinna for
the Voyage after reports of naval
constructors and other expert ship
ping men had town presented to him
by Chairman Lasker. These repprt*
were said by shipping board officials
and officers of ship under service
conditions could be forecast except
by a try-out under similar condition*
It was especially desirable, the'
engineers held that n test to he made
•f the auxiliary equipment, such as
tbe supplementary motor*, circular
tag system and rlevxtora the
vessel was used In traus portal 100 of
passengers.
Installation of oil burning power
generators In tbe pltfce of the coal
boilers used by tbe former German
owners, and rplacement of the rud
der and propeller equipment at ikm
ton. were said by board officials to
have Injected vital unknown qunu
*ft lea Into the handling of the Leila-!
than which could only be kacertalo-!
ed by actual trtal. The effect of
100,000 horsepower upon the 56.000
ton mass also could be considered
only n theory, the experts bald, un-;
til reduced to explicit formulae by
the operating force.
Selection of the South ren route
for the trial waa made. It waa said I
la order to give circulating equip
ment as difficult n test as possible ’
Ordinary sea watjg I* used for con-'
denalng and It waa decided that If'
tbe leviathan'* machinery function- i
ed In tbe warm latitude there could'
be a little possibility of failure on!
the more favorable Math Atlantic ,
route »*»
Tbe presence of a large number of
persona on board would be desira
ble. tbe engineers also reported In
order that equipment designed to
serve the Individual passenger might
be thoroughly tested but It was with
the recognition of th (possibility of
minor in I sirups that the tnvtlatons
were restricted to men. fj
■ , ■ i "T-n.
Colonel Hutchinson
/
Talks Interestingly ,
»
On Most Everything
* —■— ——J]
H* M. H. rtrims
While President Harding was giv
ing the glad hand, perdctp the Amer
icanism please, to the rest of the
, ' ■» ... (r.«a. iimulu u» inv
recent press convention at Atlantic
t ity, our favorite Upldsboro morn
ing paper was being entertuined by
Colonel Oraham Scion Hutchinson.
Major Pierce brought the dlatln
gutebed Kiigllsh soldier and news
paper man down to the office last
night and It devolved on tho new
managing editor to play host. Now
the managing editor has always en
joyed hearing the lion roar, and Inat
night was no eaceptlon
The Britisher la a young blond
beaded chap who talks with a de
lightful Kugllsh accent and at tile
same time talks good American. He
knows the newspaper game and
there the talk started. Gradually H
drifted to many tblnga and Anally to
the South In partlculn-r,
"Now Colonel, how do you like the
South, how does It compare with the
North r
"Do you |pnt me to be very
frank r
"01 huh."
"Well. It seems that the South la
the place where the hard work of
America la done Up North they do
swift business Most of them up
there are hangers-on or parsqltes."
Then came tbe' Inevitable ques
tion. “W hat Impresses you moat
about America T’
Tb*-.reply came quickly. "Tbe
fri« ..olliusa of everybody. Why your
business men bave scraps, and then
Pnl "» out of the ofllce and are the
boat of friends. Everybody Is frlend
;ly.
| “Os course the general topic of
1 conversation now la the 'l*oote‘ ques
tion. One never UUks for any length
of time without having the liquor
question come up. I wouldn't mind
j seeing tjie prohibition law applied
|to England' so far as spirits are
“What do yon moan by spirits
( I and brandy
GUMKHTHER GETS
lUBMIFW
: PEff STITT M
1 , 0 ' ♦,
i Ha* Twelve GrendchiMren and
B. a Degree Te Her
Credit at IT
WAS A WIDOW FOR
Ij TWENTY-THREE YEARB
STATE COLLEGE. Pa., Jufia 11.—
i A grandmother of twelve children la
.to be graduated from Pennsylvania
[ State College today. She is Mm.
Sarah Shoemaker Kubv of fiwartk
-11 more. Pa., and has ’beViT'bertifiad for
i a bachelor of actauce decree In tke
i ‘ botany course by tke college senate
. alter three aud oue-half year* of
study: She was peat fifty years of
lag* when toy stytpd studying la
, the four year courqe in bortktullure.
She was but of college (of fiver a
11 7**r and later became a special §Tud
ent. electing to apeclalSe la the
stedy of botany due to her love for
outdoor life. Twefiktkr,* hft>
Mr*. Farley waa *,ft a window In
moderate mean# with four young
children to rataa and educate. Shk
saw three boy* graduate from col
lege, two of them from Pennsylvfiala
State and sent her daughter to
Kwarthmore College After the mar
riage of her children the decided to
(Continued on Page Tree)
PRESIDENT NEARLY
GETS HEAD BUMPED
WASHINGTON. June 11.—(By (he
Associated Press.)--With the return
o( -President Harding's fiarty, it was
i learned that the Delaware Irljr
j ‘■am# s near reaulting In a **-
rloua accident early yesterday at
, lavn. Arriving at the dock there the
j party waa placed on a band-propelled
car for tbe trip out to Uw and of (fig
pier. Just aa tke oar waa getting vo
der way nna as toe aeeret aaiTfgfi mm
I wag struck oa tke head Iff a efill}
stretch arrow the pier Ilia Presi
dent. standing Juat behind him. saw
tbe cable JUet In time to avoid it by
durklng bia head. Secretary Chris
tian and Mrs David Todd, of Youngs
town. a member of thw party, also
were struck but were not Injured as
1 tbe car waa moving slowly.
f
that p roll I bit lon I* the veaaral dte-j
mm of drtnk. You'can't legislate'
morala into a people, It baa to grow.
"It mwint to we. that you In Amer
lea have much the Mine problem
that Knaland baa In her douUt AfH>
can colonial and ber other terri
torial poeeeeilona. You are Just In
Ihe great atage of development and
'*o are the colonlea. And It eeema
to me your great commercial future
ila trade with the Kngltah colonlea.
That la particularly Irua with re
gard to cert. You Awerlcaea make
cart and we Kngliah make heavy
' care. How the American could well
I afford to lom money for a while put
ting cars Into the provlncee end H
eatabltab a trade there. The heavy
Kngltali car la not aultable for the
colonlea ami In my mind there la.
one of America's great commercial
•eld#."
The colonel thumped bia cigar out
the window and took out a cigar
ette. He a looked one o( North Caro
liua'e prides and It. J.- Keynold'e
particular pet. We would recom
mend to the Colonel that he try
ChesterAaldg. they eatlafy.
“I'll tell you something 1 am really
keen on. and that ts co-operation
between America and Knglaod. 1
want to Bee U amona all tbe net lona,
but at present It looka Impossible
with France acting, like ehe la la the
Itliur." ,
“Wbat do you think of tbe Hbur
(Continued on Page Two)
> ' " ... ' .
14M01.1K 4 WISH
CMAMM»rTKMVII.I.K, June
It#- Haltnea frvm Ike t. <*f
M. ('. pounced upon Welland
r Ilia maddv Meld here lodaj, -f
collected 14 bilk and wan thy
, «aa»e 111 to g f
The learn* will meet again
I lemerrww al Chapel Hill.
Nceret N. C. If rna*. 14 bWa,
, • error*. Ilrgiala S reus 1
kit* and • error*.- Hatlrrte*
Jtrjkoo and Worri*i Holland
«4mi VmtiUh.
t ,m a I ■ ' -
j * r •***
MX PAG Eh
•* v ' »
Six Persons Believed
i To Hove Lost Lives
In Sweeping Waters
WITCHITA. Ran.. June 11 «t*
persons ar* believed to ham lost
their Uvea tn the fiood waters of the
Nlnndacah Elver near WltchtU. (e
- cording to report* reaching hem this
> afternoon The water ta aaid le be
> sixteen feat deep over th* entire val
. ley at that plane
Timothy Shea, his wife, and two
eons and two email children of Mika
i Cane are believed to ha the victims.
> Nothin* has been heard as then*
since Uw waters swept oVer the vkl
' ivy although neighbors ham bean
> searching for hours for them.
The northern hair es Ok interna
virtually is covered with water, with
tba loss running into million*.
Homih IfcjliilfJ
Resident* la th* low lands of the
1 Trinity Rimr at Poitb Worth. Texas,
early this morning earn prepaying
to abandon their honuu after heavy
i rain* in west Tela* caused the rimr
to rise twenty-seven feat with It con
tinued rise of seven laaiw*. Kansas
<*ny sad Winfield. Kansas, suffered
greatly from tka Hoods. Three thou
oaad person* ware declared hoaw
leas In Arkansas city ip an appeal
sent by Uw mayor for outbids aid.
He estimated the fiood damage them
at ffl.ooo.Md. .
Both the Arkansas aaJ Walnut
Rivera era out their hanks there
and a large reeldediial seettea la
Inundated. One thousand persona
war* marooned last eight ta a school
boasa aud other buildings.
Winfield reported several hundred
families homeless Early today ea
ter from Walnut River waa running
through the center of the city. The
water naJ tight plant them, on wall
JJ £££££** *•*!* **“ •“»
SMITH MD BUI
STILL MHXING«
MEW QUESTION
Al Smith ami 818 Brvan Are
Still Affatec Voi-
AI.BANY. N y„ Jua* ll.U’Uti
, rrjtulNilnn the ptnoMl conduct of
> the individual have only boon sue-,
manful whan they have paralleled a
Irtvlne commandment" and Ilka “In
herent diabeneaty of tha Voletead Act
taada to promote dlahoneaty In an*;
forcemeat." Coventor Smith aatd la
a itatemant aneoerln* Sva question*
on prohibition naked by the Maw
York Ttmea and anawarad by WH
llaoi Jennlaga Bryan Is which ha
criticised the Ooversot-'a attitude on
tha liquor and atate right* question
"The Near Tart Tima# has ra
qneatad me to anawor William J.
Bryan'a article In IU edit tod of fiun
dayi June IS. wherein Mr. Bryan aa
dartook to reply to Sva qneetiona
auhmtttad to him by that aewepoper,"
aatd Oovarnor Bmlth.
# *>
“Tha Brat question ha aaked la
'will prohlbltloa be a leddiag laane
la the next Democratic coo vent ton
Hun nine true to form, hp naaa a
thousand word* In replying and aaya
nothing
“No living peradna could dnawar
tha aecond quaatlon, ‘what . atreagth
will tha wet* and dry a be able In
command r Mr. Bryan attempts M
aad aaya laaa than ha did about the
Aral quaatlon.
“Mr. Bryan could aanwer the third
quealton. 'Do you be<Hevo prohibi
tion will continue to ha an tasue In
nuilonal polltlcar by aaylag that It
never bean an tasue and tha ques
tion of repealing the eighteenth
amendment probably never will be;
but la quite poaaible that a sane and
aenalble definite of what eonatUutaa
an Intoslcatlpg beverage might be a
prominent taeue. ’
"Tbe fourth queatlon. 'what edact
baa Governor Bmith'a action on tha
('iillllver bill bed on tha national sit
uation? Mr. Bryan anawara by mak
ing a reference to ‘King Alcohol
ami to woman auffraga.
“When ha anawera tha fifth qnaa-!
itlon. what of bla (meanlns my> aa
. aertloa of state* rlghta In conaee
| lion with hla action** Tha Great
) Commoner rlsea lo tha helghta of ab-
I aurdlty. According to Mr. Bryan
j there la apparently no such thing aa
| atatea rlghta. If that la not a fair
! Infereaee In taka from bla remark*
I one mual take tbe only other poeal
ble. and that la. that Mr. Bryan him-1
aelf doea not unde rata ad what stata
(.Continued oa Page Two)
[MEMBER OF
ASSOCIATED PRESS
- .. n.
y 4 _ |
K* porta from *lmhagn am,
were that fannera dwelling in the
lowtanda of Arhanana. Caagdtea and
llllnota River* ware met In a their
famlltoe In the hllla .thrnniened by
tha rapidly rising tend water*. Msay
were attempting In drive their Mve
aadeooahr —a . a n. ...
■tors Miort mm. •
Near Webber* mils, vufctrn lit
throe riven oca verge. flip fggmgra
*•« “Iggtag ihir Minin evape yrn
tarday. racing with tha mamfm.
-w** .J i J
**um m up i J,.|
’UN Creak, which fiowa hy
huaka. Oklahoma, wag rising Mk
•aahea an hour ft l:*g a'eteeft mjL
mornlM. gad was only Cgay Itat
from ihp lop of the levqe vhikll BTo*
tecta the city Should M ' v«a+>e
levee top the city wonid hg •ddiA
There le no Mannar of idaßTst
!i , .r*-!:» , .. , “r! | y.» » < y.
u ‘“~ i "yvS
rising. The Km* In y«MttSd Mm
around Topeka and fiflud* am tagJq#
along the upper parts at thd A|
Train* generally an nfprtud Bfcb
time today, with tho i 7||lmi 1
dlatrtota of Kansas,
thorn paaalag I h rough tf* •#
Train, hi Taipei h
peka. and Santa m train
by Sood water* neer wSBhCTS
removed Ist* tact night In rnaTlMg
til 1| rpllitf lpftlli awMS awed
*a* City. .. ' T-GEfrafa
Tha OUsatf ftoek l«taad. M
I'adllc Railroad la«t stag* anemtaM-g.
I fl
0 GIFT TO fiSft
and Dgmgim.
white robed
KnlghU of Ihe Ku KhTa
ed silently lata the ItUle “r*|--|)-|
mtoeina at Yam* ffnaday' Htsmsmi
and handed ta the B«V. Jang*
Cook, archdeuon of Ihto dteanao, whn
wa. conducting aervtann titan, gg eg.
velope entatatag iso agd a hsfigf affta
aeklag that the money fe| end Ini 1 (he
beet late recta of the to tacit
itoved that tha Klaa*WM 'trying
do Ood'* work, that M tat
"Ight Rev**< omTtald «mS» JSrS#
alee tatd es the work of thd miasma
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only numbers 14 or 11. hh gMto tdt B
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on In that aaettan. ha Igjpl
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Th. donation frop fhS fp Ail
that It vsald ho uaad for Uta WUer
ment of tha comma**. T<to Mg
which accompeatad the gift Is uta
towa:
improvement fund of tgg Onlyary
the Gag the muee of yigsdig Clta
tlenity la our onuMMnpp. *
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bine their efforts ta fartltar fharMti
of Jeaua ("hrtat on thto earth aid
work tho henofM ad torfMffdfa|
tbe spirit la which It tMtaSPSIMta
H for the heat Interest* gs
in Waragw.
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