Newspapers / Polk County News and … / May 14, 1925, edition 1 / Page 10
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Washington Sideli And What Will President Coolidge Do? WASHINGTON.? Miss Kuby A. Black, Journalist, Is not In clined to accept the proposi tion of Secretary Kellogg that she go to Europe labeled on her passport, as "the wife of Herbert 15. Little," and all the legal resources of the National Woman's party are going to be brought to bear In an effort to have President Coolidge alter the pass port regulations so that she aud any other married woman can sign their maiden names to the document. Miss Bluck brought the matter <o a head when she and representatives of the National Woman's party sougi.t "the right" to have a passport Issued in the name of Kuby A. Black, Instead of the customary "Mrs. Herbert B. Little." After being turned down by a num ber of passport division officials, the young woman and her supporters, Bur nlta Shelton Matthews, attorney for the National Woman's party, and Helena Normnnton. English barrister, went to the secretary of state, and after considerable discussion were told they could do the following: 1. Receive a passport for Miss Black, or Mrs. Little, made out to "Miss Ruby A. Black, wife of Herbert B. Little," which would serve for the time being. 2. Present a brief outlining their ar guments for the change In passport regulations for reference by Secretary Kellogg to President Coolidge. But Miss Black said she was not at all satisfied with the first proposition, as she did not believe it was really a concession. Furthermore, she an nounced that as she does not intend to go abroad until the first of next year, she will have "plenty of time" In which to fight for a "complete victory." Attorneys for the National Woman's party are engaged In drawing up the brief suggested by Secretary Kellogg. The brief will cite many laws affecting the u?e of a woman's married name, ?;nd will take up the whole question In Its general phases, as a principle, rather than as a personal plea for Miss Black, It was explained. "The secretary was very courteous and we were much pleased with the consideration he gave us," said Miss Blatk. Pure-Bred Cattle Now Going Into Beef MUCH of the pure-bred live stock ot the country Is flqding its way to the dinuer tabl? in stead of being kept on farms for breeding purposes only, the bu reau of animal industry has found in a survey which reached 653 farmers in 45 states. Answers to question naires sent out by the bureau devel oped also that the dairy industry is drawing many pure-bred cattle. Analysis of the replies, the bureau announces, has shown that about 62 per cent of pure-bred live stock is mar keted directly for meat purposes, swine being slaughtered at the rate of 75.1 per cent, sheep 62.6 per cent and cattle 41.8 per cent. The consensus of the farmers was that pure-bred meat animals cost slightly less than scrubs to raise to maturity, while dairy cattle cost slight ly more. Pure-bred animals were declared much more profitable to raise than scrubs, and somewhat more so than graded stock, the degree depending on the proportion of pure blood pos sessed by the grades. About 30 per cent of- the farmers who hud given the use of pure-bred sires a triul Tere found to adhere to the general pflnclpje of using thera for all classes of s%ck. Improvement of the quality of pure-bred live stock by ri^ld culling and selling only worthy animals for breeding purposes was urged by a number of farmers. The bureau learned that only one half of the pure-bred animals in the country eligible to registration are ac tually registered. Principal reasons given for not registering animals were intention to sell for slaughter, poor Individuality, little demand for registration papers when stock is sold and carelessness in attending to reg istration. The questionnaires produced a vir tually unanimous opinion that pure bred live stock was more profitable thun grade and scrub animals, with well-bred grudes a close second. A Nebraska stockman declared he had found that pure breds "are of more uniform type, feed out better and more quickly and therefore put on more gain with the same or less feed and In less time." Pan-America Doesn't Love Submarines ONE of the Issues of the World war ant! of the Washington arms conference of 1021 has been revived for discussion at the pan-Araerlcun conference of jurists, to be held this yeur at Rio de Janeiro. Application to sttbinarines of rigid rules of visit and search is contem plated In the draft convention on marl time neutrality prepared for consid eration at Kio as a part of a codi fication of American International law. '?Belligerent submarines are not un der any circumstances exempt from the rules." says the draft convention, after specifying that merchant craft overhauled by war vessels may not be attacked except on refusal to submit to visit and search after warning, or when they refuse to proceed as direct ed after seizure. "If a submarine can not capture a merchant vessel in con formity with these rules, existing In ternatlonui law requires It to desist from attack and seizure and to permit the latter to continue on its way." The rules also specify that merchant ships may not "be rendered unsea worthy until crew and passengers have first been placed In safety." The rights and duties of neutrals covering prize rules, Internment and other matters are set forth, but chief interest lies in an appended clause headed, "The American republics ex press the following voeux." The French word is translatedivariously in diplomatic usage to mean "hopes" or "recommendations." Among state ments which follow are: "That it be formally forbidden to maintain commercial blockade, In any manner whatsoever, of the ports of belligerents and the maritime zonea bathing their own coasts. "The inviolability of private prop erty at sea : merchant ships of bellig erents as well as of neutrals must Id no case be subject of confiscation, and still less be sunk for any reason or pretext whatsoever. "That the right of search be abol ished and that it be established that the local authorities of each American republic shall vise the papers of mer chant ships which depart from the said republic destined for a belligerent port. Belligerent ships -cannot stop the merchant ships of neutral Amer ican republics or those belonging to the other belligerent, except to de mand the production of the ship's pa pers thus vised. Belligerent ships may, In spite of the regularity of said pa pers, proceed to search of the mer chant ships. First- Aid and Rescue Work for Miners THE Fourth International First- J Aid und Mine-Ilescue contest, open to all miners, quarrymen, and workers in raatallurgical plants, will be held at Springfield, 111., September 10, 11 and 12, 1925, under the auspices of the bureau of mines. Department of Interior. These Inter national First-Aid and Mine-Kescue contests are held annually under the auspices of the bureau of mines, with the co-operation of the American Na tional Ited Cross, the National Safety council, and various mine operators' associations and miners' organizations, with the object of furthering the work of training miners in first-aid and mine-rescue methods, and the conse quent advancement of the cause of safety among the million miners of the United States*. The first-aid and mine-rescue con tests will be for International cham pionships. and international contest cups, medals and prizes will be award ed to the winners. Proficiency of con testing teams will be determined in accordance with bureau of mines' standards by Judges thoroughly famil iar with flrst-ald and mine-rescue work. A feature of the meet will be the awarding of the congressional medal which Is given annually to the team of miners adjudged to be most thoroughly skilled In first-aid and mine rescue methods. Another Interesting feature will be the awarding of the medals offered annually by the Joseph A. Holmes Safety association In com memoration of notable deeds of hero Ism performed by miners in succor ing their comrudes. More than 130,000 miners have al ready been trained in flrst-ald-to-the injured and mine-rescue methods by the bureau of mines, and this event promises to be an Important step to ward the promotion of safety and effi ciency In mining. Entries will close August 20. No fee Is required for en tering a team. Entry blanks, together with the general rules of the contest, can be obtained from the Bureau of Mines, 4800 Forbes street, Pittsburgh. It is expected that each team will pro vide Its own equipment. U. S. to Bar Daffodils and Narcissi DOOMSDAY for daffodils and narcissi is January 1, 1026. One more round of blossoming for these two major spring flowers, and they must go. The United States Department of Agriculture has de cided to lock the doors of the Ellis island of flowerdom, so that these im migrants from France and Holland can no longer enter this country after the first of next year. ?James If. IHirdett, director of the national garden bureau, doesn't like It. "The ban of bureaucracy has fallen upon the daffodil and narcissus," said Mr. Burdett. "The federal horticul lural board is a perfect example of bu reaucracy in its creation and usurpa tion of powers, as a result of which it now claims the right to shut off the ! Importation to this country of all plants, bulhs, and seeds produced in the rest of the world. It was created as a board of experts on Insects and plant diseases, with power to shut out diseased plants and dangerous in sects. Its powers were emergency cowers, to be exercised upon expert i Judgment, only In exceptional CHses." Since 1919, when the board took the revolutionary step of declaring that all plants and bulbs produced anywhere outside our borders were dangerous and barred them, with a few excep tions. Mr. Rurdett says, the board members have assumed the right to say what plants are necessary to the people of the United States. He de clares that Insect specialists are not equipped for such a task and that such power was never bestowed on them by congress. He says congress will be asked to make an Investigation. He explains that narcissi are pro duced in France and Holland, and not produced here commercially. About 90,000,000 bulbs were imported during last year. Narcissi bulbs bring In tlies that may attack onion fields, is the reason given by the federal board for locking out narcissi. It Is claimed that the fly Is already prevalent In this country. The board estimates that from 85 to 90 per cent of the real insect pest prob lems are doe to foreign Importation*. Frances Aden in Somaliland Jibuti Represent# Republic's Only Continental Terri tory in East Africa. Washington. ? French adventurers have recently made the first crossing of northern Africa by automobile from the coast of Guinea on the Atlan tic to Jibuti, in French So-ialiland, on the Indian ocean, :? distance of 3,750 miles. The little patch of French Somulllund, where the Journey ended represents France's only continental territory in East Africa, says the Na tional Geographic society, which de scribes the region In . bulletin Issued from its Washington headquarters* "French Somulilund Is a small real ity that France has held on to In northeastern Africa after the collapse of a jrean of empire in that region, when the famous Fashoda incident occurred. French troops camped at Fashoda on the Upper Nile l-i 181)8 and planned co-operation with Abys sinia In flinging a band of French ter ritory all the way across northern Africa. But the appearance of Kltch ner'8 forces discouraged the idea and the French expedition passed on to Somalilana, leaving the Sudan to un disputed British contrjl. "Parts of French Somallland have been in the possession of France since 1804 whe ' the port of Obok was bought ; but the place was not occu pied until 1884 when France became concerned over the occupation of the neighboring Island of Perlm ? the Gib raltar f the Red sea' ? by Great Brit' a In. W'thL? the next few years French control was extended to ter ritory^tn the vicinity of Obok. and the present region, about f>,800 square miles In extent, was marked out. * "A glance at the map shows the strategic value of the colony. Its coast forms one shore of the Strait of Bab el Mandeb. the gateway to the Red sea. Jibuti, which in 1890, super seded Obol; as the capital and chief city. Is a French Aden, and Is situ ated directly across the Gulf oi Aden and about 150 miles from that Impor tant British station. Into Jibuti put French ships of war and trade bound through the Suez canal to Madagas car. French Indo-China and other French possessions of the Fast Its function as a supply and coaling depot brought prosperity to the port. Port foi "Imperial Ethiopian Railway." "Jibuti's great economic Impor tance, however, arises from the fact that It is the salt water terminus of the only railway which taps the riches of Abyssinia. Started In 1896, the line was Incomplete for many THRIVES ON COFFEE cl/ Here is pictured Albert Schneider of j New York, who claims nil world's rec- I has averaged 2G cups of coffee daily I suffered no ill effects. years. extending only a relatively short distance Into Abyssinia. It waa pushed to completion during tbe World war, reaching Addis Ababa, capital of Abyssinia. Trade passing through Jibuti Jumped with the es tablishment of this steel highway, and in 1918 reuched $20,000,000. "The country traversed by the 'Im perial Ethiopian Hallway' Is still in habited by rather wild and unruly tribes. Its trains are operated only In the daytime. When the first loco motive ran over the line the Ignorant natives thought it a sort of super lion, and rushing In Its path, threw spears against its steel front and sides. The loss of legs and arms taught them tha^ the new 'beast' was invulner able to their weapons, but they still harbor a keen resentment against the railway and Its trains. The railway exists largely for political reasons and was built at a tremendous cost Be fore the World war tbe passenger fare was about 25 cents a mile. The Increase of business, however, Is put ting a different economic complexion | on the project. The products brought I out of Abyssinia consist in the main of coffee, ivory, hides and skins. "It took imagination ani the abil ity to look far Into the back country and into the future to see any eco nomic value In French Somallland at the time France began her acquisl | tions there. The coast and a coastal strip of considerable width Is one of the most desolate regions Imaginable, consisting of sand and volcanic rockt with here and there patches of low scrub. The Gulf of Tajnra. 28 nclles wide at the month, bites Into the land to a depth of 36 miles. Glffs of vol canic stone form the shores of this gnlf for many miles, giving way In places to tumbled masses of volcanic debris. Some five miles Inland from the tip of the gulf Is Lake Assal, Somaliland's 'Little Dead 8ea.' The surface of this lake, five miles long by four miles wide, lies nearly 500 feet below sea level. Jibuti Coveted by Italy. "Supplies of underground water have been located and tapped by the French, and garden plots estab lished where before the French ad vent all was desolation. On the up land plains Inland antelope and other game abound. Lions and leopards are also found In considerable numbers. "Italy wanted France to cede ! Jibuti to her at the time she entered the World war on the side of the al lies. France would not part with her valuable coaling station and door to Abyssln' even In those trying times, but Instead made Italy a concession on the Tripoli-Tunisia frontier. Jibuti is a town of white buildings, for the most part one-story structures. It numbers less than 10,000 Inhabitants of which about 350 are Europeans, the remainder being a hodge-podge of Somali and other African natives, Ar menians, Jews. Arabs and East In dians." Dies at 116 Madrid. ? Ramon Gomez, living In the hamlet of San Vicente, died at the nge of one hundred and sixteen. He never left his native village, never saw an automobile, telephone, or railway. Mother Boasts of Ideal Daughters Never Spanked or Scolded Them ? Brought Them Up "Simply." Augusta, Me. ? This city boasts two good little girls who are still nn spanked, are never scolded and whose mother Is rearing them on the theory that a child is entitled to the same con sideration, dignity and courtesy as any grown-up visitor to the home. They are Miss Jean Abbott, seven years old, and Miss Carol Abbott who Is five. Their mother is Mrs. Grace P. Abbott, daughter of William R. Pat langall, the Democratic candldute for governor of Maine last year. Mother's Ideas on child culture are quite satisfactory and should be ex tensively adopted. Miss Jean and Miss Carol solemnly assured the reporter who Interviewed tbera. They are re markably demure young ladles, with quiet assurance far beyond their years. Both are accomplished housekeepers. Their Innocent knowledge of llf4 and Its mysteries Is startling, to say the least. Plan Own Affairs. Jean has been able to build a Are und get breakfast since she was four years old,- and now Carol can do the same. They plan their own affairs, make their own social engagements with their young friends and go about things generally like regular "grown ups." Self-reliance and responsibility are the foundation stones for her Interest ing theories on the training of chil dren. Mrs. Abbott explained. In fact, she doesn't believe In training at all. for she regards experience and ex ample as the only satisfactory teach ers for any human being of ordinary Intelligence, whatever the person's age may be. TREASURE UNDER SEA FOR 100 YEARS BEING SOUGHT London Syndicate It Hunting for Gold and Jewels Sunk Off the Cost of Greece. London. ? Searching for sunken treasure In . Navarlno bay, off the Greek coast, whsre the fleet of Turco Kgyptlan and Tunisian vessels went down nearly a hundred years ago, was begun recently by a London syndicate of Insurance brokers. Specially de signed salvage ships were sent to the scene with the hope of being able to carry out their purpose. Members of the expedition have come to London for additional supplies and diving ap paratus and, according to their re ports. 63 nhlps were lost on which there were gold, precious stones and statuary *hlch the Turks had re moved from Greek towns. The treasure had been taken on board the fleet for transport to Tur key when Admiral Codrlngton In 1827 enpaged the vessels In battle and sank most of them. The bay where the work has been started Is about four miles square, with a rocky bot tom and n maximum depth of water of approximately 180 feet. It has been estimated, however, by divers, that the sunken ships have been cov ered with several feet of mud washed down with the waters from nearby mountains. Soviets Allow Peasants to Hire Labor for Farms Moscow. ? The Soviet Russian gov ernment made a further concession to the peasantry by agreeing to allow them to employ salaried laborers on their farms. Heretofore, under the regulations governing nationalization of land and redistribution of property, the peas ants were forbidden to engage such > ? Those who quote: "Spare the rod and spoil the child." and who consider "children should be seen and not heard" as among the wisest of the old copybook maxims, are not on Mrs. Ab bott's visiting list at all. "Because the accident of birth has made one the parent of a child," she said, "does not give one the right to strike that child or to attempt by force and coercion to mold that little body and developing mind to the parent's will. School System Wrong. "1 think our school system and our conventional Ideas on the rearing of children are all wrong. Perhaps I am all wrong, but I am willing to rest my case on the success of my ideas on guiding my own little girls." The questions Jean and Carol ask are always answered truthfully, and j in words their minds can grasp, Mrs. Abbott said. Their greatest ambition te to grow up to fie clever, healthy women and to have homes of their own and big families. They are never ' told they mustn't eat this or do that. I The simple truth about the effect on their health of the wrong diet and on their character and future of unwise 1 actions Is all that Is needed to secure the desired results A reporter, who spent several hours with Jean and Carol in their home and elsewhere In Augusta, was amazed by their simple and unaffected manner, I their quiet assurance and dignity, their quaintly "grown-up" conversation and their gentle, well-modulated voices. They play outdoors Just as hard as any other children In the neighborhood | and get Just as much fun out of their j dolls and toys. "It's all very simple," explained a neighbor; "Jean and Carol are such good little girls and they ; never need to be spankled or scolded." ' But their mother Insists it is Just the other way around. labor, because of the government's be- i lief that this might lead to the accu mulation of large areas of land In the ) hands of certain peasants. The pres- ! ent Soviet land law specifies that no j one shall possess more ground that i he is able to work himself. Attempts have been made In the i past by the government to apply to j villages the same labor regulations as govern the Industrial workers in the cities, but it was found that this was ! not only incapable of enforcement, but caused much dissatisfaction among the peasantry, who insisted on employing farm hands at their own terms. The new labor regulations give the peasants the right to extend the work ing day beyond the statutory eight i hours, to conclude agreements with ! their workmen for 12-month periods, I and to pay them either in cash or J goods. \j From Antwerp comes the story of a Mme. Curlier, who has given birth | to six sons In one year ? the CTSt set ! of triplets In January and the sec- i ond in the following December. This Illinois Doctor Is Fully Up to Date Dr. Herman J. Neubauer of Hinckley, 111., Is the Qrst doctor In the United States to parchase and .or making calla of anj distance, Xfce doctor eowloya ft regular pilot tor bis Diane. Comet to Life as He Hears Funeral Plans Madl8onvl!le, Ky. ? Roscoe Quails, nine, lying In Ms bed unable to move, heard his par ents give him up for dead und plan his funeral. Now he Is re covering after hours of near dis traction at the thought of being buried alive. Roscoe fell while skating. Paralysis devolped. He lost his speech and was kept alive sev eral days by administration of liquid food. Then apparently he died. Parents and relatives mourned and began planning the funeral. Roscoe said he heard It all. A physician was called for a final examination and found the hoy still breathing. Now he Is able to sit up In bed. STARVING GOAT EATS UP CHECKS Novel Caper Proves Cottly to Eastern Financiers. New York. ? The appetite of a goat in Asia, which ? several weeks ago showed a fondness for paper, led to th#? necessity of a strict watch on all checks cashed by one of Wall street's larger banks. Also, It caused a con siderable waste on the part of Ameri ca's largest International commercial house of money, which was expended in cabled messages between New York and the Far East. The International commercial house had made out a $25 check, drawn on the Bank of Manhattan company, for the account of a Far Eastern firm. The firm In question received the che< k and was prepared to cash it. But tlie goat got It. The animal apparently had such an appetite, it was explained by Raymond E. Jones, president of the New York bank, that It found the piece of paper In some unexplained manner and ate It. The International commercial house was promptly Informed and. after close Investigation, It made out a du plicate check for $25, which it for warded to the proper address. It then had to cable full Instructions to New York, giving the number and se ries, the bank upon which drawn and the amount of the* check. This infor mation in turn was relayed to the Bank of Manhattan company, which, as a matter of policy, put in operation its full machinery to safeguard against the possibility of the original check coming through. This, however. Is regarded unlikely. It was sworn by the proper authorities that the goat had masticated the check as thoroughly as If It had been torn into bits. The totnl cost to all persons con cerned in time and money, was esti mated by one authority on banking and commercial practice to have been $450. Dope Users Increasing Among Professional Men Philadelphia. ? "If Director Butler has done nothing else, since tJiking charge of the police department In tlds city, he has made dope so hard to get that the 'bootleg' price has advanced from $35 to $150 an ounce," A. (). H. He la Gardia, chief of the Federal nar cotic office here, said. The report of the narcotic office for the last year, Mr. de la Gardia added, will show an Increase In the number of arrests of drug addicts. "Addiction to drugs is fast disap pearing among the Chinese in this country, until now It has become an American evil, particularly with refer ence to opium smoking. "American professional men are be coming the greatest addicts to the drug habit. The percentage of drug addicts among physicians and druggists Is greater than among any other profes sional class. The theatrical profession also Is permeated with drug users." It -Year -Old Lad Saves Infant From Drowning Brescia, Italy. ? The heroic rescue of a two-year-old baby by an eleven-year old boy recently was enacted here. The child had wandered away from Its governess and fallen from a ter race on the border of a nearby lake Into the wnter, which at that place was about twelve feet deep. Hearing the cries for help which the nurse maid set up on discovering the baby's plight, Pletro Negrinelli, eleven, rushed to the scene and, not stopping to idisrobe, threw himself Into the water. He seized the baby's dress with his teeth and struggled with his burden to a nearby rock, where he held on, exhausted, until bystanders were able to lift the pair onto dry land. Kills Matt; Sleeps Hammond, Ind. ? Thirty minute3 after he had shot and killed John Mnstlnez at Indiana Harbor Vincent Gomez signed a written confession, the police say. The killing was the outcome of a trivial quarrel. After the shooting Gomez went home to bed, where the police found him. Fall is Fatal Chicago. ? Mrs. Euedlnla Athens, for ty, of 7673 Exchange avenue, lies dead as the result of Internal injuries whlcb she suffered when she fell on the stairs In her home. Mrs. Athens was near the top of the stairs when she fell, ?nd rolled to the bottom. Death Toll , 26,000 Washington. ? A death toll of 26,000, of whom 10,000 were children, and property loss of between $700,000,000 and $1,000,000,000 resulted from traf fic accidents last year, according to Department of Commerce figures. Folding Bed Kills New Y'ork. ? Miss Clara King, fifty jwo, of Morristown, N. J., was suffrv cated when she was trapped in a fold ing bed, which closed up on her when she laid down to take a nap. The S, ?f the H u?r% \v 1 ; i v ,y<-i Rev. J or \ The supreme reif(j rt i>vha! <?'. U'liflcr^ ;t rv N ?, fi?r-s? ?:.? Th?'iv .a. . . WHtcl.lrn Ti. I;!. , prjiyor f.<r >? \V..rl.?'s I'nr:.:;.:, I'V'Icral < ,r. it'll. t !:?* t '! ;:v|, jin<! tin- I '.si AliU't irsi, ! avt IssiimI urji-r.r r?*vi\:i!. I !.< 1'. <l:it?* in i> ? ? to <'|,rjsfia!.s f?Y<TV U lii'p'. ?? - "con' tTto: ; r.;\ newin^' "f wnrM " '1 !:.) (Irp.Mt i ni,.!. . tn ins this ; , npo sc;t !?< ??!> doll's jMMtJi',1- f. church's n*v! v;;' voirfs :i r?- i a* f?rin^' i f I" (Mllph:isiz?*?i. T' its m?intli!\ '! *r to Soliif 7?MI !'? in;: .liinniir- a ? of t)n?- by |. :in'l !i i I hut <?!:?? coil I 'I I ? : f M-* m. What is a reviva'1 [? ?i abounding *; ? <? . j am runic," v-|i([ < ? , might f i ;| V ? have if -.'-.J Hirlsiian* J are con.--' : < -u < ' ? ?. than o\ iTllou '? ? " ? 'J condition is r?-.(-r< I ing life in ?VNt ? ; new pnsvji.r: ;'.r ? lost, 11 fiett o f worship. a r.t u | greater f . I testify to tin- :i.;r. light in the ! Christian ft-;.. .>? . ?<( of this, sice; i-r In the chun-h ^ j Ished. world!. I.'** > "?J I art1 ronvirti i) an.! "? >"<'4 j A spiritual r? , about by cimi.iriL' I Influences, in ?r > effect of one ??<-ul <i rather a con-i.t.- n ; ' rect pow er <>:' : 'l *,J! through tin ! i ? s article entitle'!. "I!'*1 ? ' "* ? f -v appeared In a r?- ~ Presbyterian. r' Boyd, whet: pas'"' ago, had n '? ' h *\ blessed with a . i ? ' ? of souls. At T "? 1 ,r . i '5 morning sen << ?- *? r " so far as I or. ? ? been a com <?.?>>*? the past f"iir i 1 who are coin-?-r ? ? ? ? * '? the lost to nn-f' *" special prayer." \ : with the p:!"'. r ' ' '' In that sen ? 'r/ was convent d. pel ism \\ as God Takes ?o & Hod t a K ? - ? ?" whole heirs.1 '* whole 1 1 1 ? I r : tlonally is trusted To Persona Persona' ' : quires fe! !? \ himself <>r the full 1st. American I ? ? Dee^' Deeds V prisinu. 1-' are kindl> effect s w Friend. A Frien^ Love and rr . Love c.i' frlendshil Therefore is to he p, tcrff??nat!? ? Detent hut insist' : Western < Ch> Making It Is the ! ' ?r make chura? '?
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
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May 14, 1925, edition 1
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