Newspapers / Polk County News and … / June 18, 1925, edition 1 / Page 14
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Congress May Impose a Gasoline Tax WASHINGTON. ? Taxation of gasoline by the statea it spreading so rapidly as to threaten to become almost universal throughout the country. In formation assembled by the bureau of public rosds of the Department of Ag rlculture shows that SO states and the District of Columbia had gasoline taxes In effect during 1924. Of the thirteen states without this form of tax, two have enacted new laws since the beginning of the present year and three of the others have Increased their rates. In view of the effort of the federal government to abolish wartime taxa tion as rapidly as possible, treasury officials are closely observing this marked state tendency toward In creased taxation. That a federal tax on gasoline also may be Imposed 1? considered entirely within the realms of possibility, although members of congress from states where gasoline taxes are already In effect are Inclined to oppose any additional burden of this character by the national government A suggestion for a gasoline tax as a substitute for some of the taxes which have been considered obnoxious was before congress during consideration Why Sea Food Has SECRETARY HOOVER Invited the governors of all the mari time states from Maine to Texas to send representatives to a conference last week to consider the conservation of food fish in Atlantic and Qulf coastal waters. Simultane ously the Navy department announced forthcoming exploration and survey of the Oulf and tha Caribbean, and per haps of much of the Atlantic ocean, in order to study the problem of con serving and cultivating the food re sources of the sea. The coincidence is significant. Indeed, there Is need of prompt and vigorous action, if sea food Is not al most to vanish from our markets. It is easy to say, of course, that the At lantic ocean Is too big for man to ex haust, and that Its supply of edible fish Is Illimitable. But every one who has looked Into the matter knows that that is sheer nonsense. The cold fact Is that our supply of sea food is al ready sorely depleted, so that some, of the choicest varieties, once abun dant and cheap, are now scarce and costly objects of luxury. | of the last revenue law and Is certain j to be put forward afaln In the forth 1 coming revision. Congress last year enacted a gasoline levy law for the District of Columbia. The figures of the bureau of public roads show that the gross receipts from state gasoline taxes in 1924 amounted to $79,734,490. Of this $48, 711,792 was applied to highway con struction, the balance to other pur poses. The largest amount collected by any state was $11,993,222 by California with an impost of 2 cents per gallon. Next came Pennsylvania with $9,? 069,541, also from a 2 cent tax. In diana collected $4,925,872 with a 2* cent tax; North Carolina took in $4, 529,048 at the rate of 3 cents per gal lon; Georgia collected $4,527,471 with a S cent tax, and Texas raised $3,892, 769 with a 1-cent tax. Among the eleven states which are still holding out against the plan are some of those with larger Industrial cities, Including New York, Illinois, Massachusetts and Ohio. The others are New Jersey, Iowa. Minnesota, Mis souri, Nebraska, Wisconsin and Rhode Ialand. Some of them have the pro posal pending In the legislature. Become Expensive In 30 years the catch of shad along our Atlantic coast has decreased to only a quarter of what it was, and the price to the consumer has Increased fivefold. The catch of sturgeon in rivers and lakes has fallen to little more than one-eighth of what it was, and the price in the markets has cor responding increased to eight times what it was. The catch of lobsters is about one-third of that of former years, while the price is nine times as great These sre facts, officially obtained by Secretary Hoover, and re ferred to the governors of the sea board states for their consideration. The causes are obvious to ail. They are chiefly two: Wasteful and de structive methods of taking the fish, and pollution of rivers, bays and coastal waters generally with sewage, sludge, oil and other matter stupidly called "waste." Of course, It has seemed to short-sighted persons "the easiest way" to get rid of such stuff, simply to pour It into the nearest wa ter. But the easiest way Is sometimes the worst way, in economics as well as In morals. Changes in Departments at the Capital FURTHER changes in the organi zation of the government depart ments are looked for following the transfer of the patent office from the Interior department to the Department of Commerce. The trans fer affected 1,246 employees. The patent-office transfer carried oat one of the two recommendations with regard to changes in the Uneap of the Interior department bureaus recommended by the joint congres sional committee on reorganization of the executive departments. The other recommendation Involved transfer of the bureau of mines to the Commerce department. Secretary of the Interior Work and Secretary of Commerce Hoover, who are represented to be in complete ac cord with the recommendations of the Joint committee, discussed the trans fer for several months before It was made. Doctor Work secured an opin ion from the attorney general as to whether the act of 1903 authorizing the President to transfer bureaus from one department to another with out specific authorization of congress was a continuing act He was la formed It was with regard to seien- ' tific bureaus, and !t was then left to ! the President to decide whether the I patent office was to be classified as a ' scientific bureau. The present intention of govern ment heads with regard to the bureau of mines has not been stated, although officials gave it as their opinion that the transfer of the bureau from the Interior department to the Commerce department would need specific au thorisation from congress. Inasmuch as the bureau was placed In the In terior department by congress. Extensive changes in the personnel of the patent office are not contem plated, Secretary Hoover said, adding that better organization of the gov ernment, to secure economy and effi ciency, requires that functions of simi lar major purpose shall be grouped to gether. Change in the procedure, with re spect to protection of rights of Ameri can patentees in foreign countries is forecast by Mr. Hoover. Three Major Problems of Next Congress THREE major problems will oc cupy the attention of the next congress. In the opinion of Sena tor Frank B. Willis of Ohio. The first of these problems. Senator Willis said, is tax reduction ; the second, such amendment of the rules as will facilitate public business and still pre serve the right of legitimate debate, and the third, the world court. The most important of tbese three questions, the Buckeye senator be lieves. is tax reduction. Tightening of tbq tax burdens of the people is made possible by the ?ery satisfactory returns from the tax laws now in force and by the substan tial economies that have been effect ed," Senator Willis said. "The $100, 000,000 surplus this year and the esti mated surplus next year of $800,000, 000 make certain Important tax reduc tion. 'A million a day of tax cut away,' will be the slogan of the next congress. "The ways and means committee of the house will begin preparation of Postal Service and RECENT increase in the flood of questionable matter offered for transmission through the malls has led to further tightening of the routine safeguards employed in the postal service for keeping it out and for prosecution of those violating the federal statutes in that regard. Thousands of complaints have come to the office of the postmaster general from parents and associations asking that the department augment Its ef forts to protect children from obscene literature and pictures. The close surveillance exercised over the character of matter passing through the mails, officials believe, has effected a material decrease In the number of dealers In pornographic matter. Federal courts have discour aged the efforts of such dealers by up holding the Post Office department in each Instance where rulings excluding ^obscene matter from the mails has been challenged. Foreign dealers, especially since the war and the return of American sol ders from Europe, have been active the new tax bill early In October, to that the measure will be ready for prompt action when congress meets. This plan will make unnecessary any special session of congress. General revision of the tariff Is not desirable and will not be undertaken. "Vice President Dswes Is not pro posing any specific change In the rules, as I understand," Senator Wil lis said, "but he Is calling the atten tion of the country to the need of re vision to eliminate filibusters and pre vent abuse of power by Individual members. In so doing, General Dawes Is rendering valuable public service." The world court problem Is to be taken up early In December for final decision, and Senator Willis said he will press for consideration of a reso lution he introduced' in the last regu lar session of congress and reintro duced at the special session of the senate in March, which embodies the reservations proposed by President Harding, Secretary Hughes and Presi dent Coolldge. In endeavoring to dispose of their products In this country. In many in stances foreign consignments are in tercepted at custom houses. The trade of these offenders has been crippled by the postal authorities returning to senders letters addressed to all known dealers In obscene mat ter, by confiscating great quantities of unmallable advertising circulars and the materials as well, and by acquaint ing those attempting to import such matter with their responsibility and liability to prosecution under the penal provisions of the lews. The numerous smsll magazines, de pending for their popularity on the pornographic mt.terlal in them, are the source of continual complaint, and the exclusion of many of them from the mails curtails to a considerable extent their widespread , circulation. These publications have been responsible for increasing the work of the Post Office department's legal forces. The maga zines when excluded from the malls find their way to news stands through other channels. the IS <T m 11 ? ? % <1 Tali-fa, Scene of Latest Chinese Earthquake, U Little Known. Washington. ? "Tall-ful, latest Chi nese city to suffer from earth quake, lies almost at the southwest corner of that huge country," says a bulletin from the Washington, D. C. headquarters of the National Geo graphic society. Tall-fu, next to Yunnan-fu, Is the most Important city In Yunnan, the re mote border province that adjoins Burma on the west and French Indo Chlna on the south. A railroad, built by the French, reaches Yunnan-fu, but Tall, nearly 200 miles farther west, can be reached only by horse and mule caravan over execrable roads. Prog ress Is slow and the Journey from the rail-head normally requires a month of more. The latitude of Tall Is ap proximately that of the southern tip of Texas, but it lies nearly 7,000 feet high and has a pleasant climate with warm days and cool nights. City Has Ideal 8ettin0. The setting of Tall Is almost IdeaL It lies on the west shore of a beauti ful blue lake about 80 miles long, while to the west and north tower high, snow-capped mountains. Among | the foothills to the north are fertile little plains and hillsides where rice, wheat and beans are grown. More and more, too, the opium poppy Is coming back Into cultivation. Yunnan province was the best poppy country In China In the past, but about 15 years ago an anti-poppy edict went forth, and its sudden enforcement nearly ruined the Yunnanese farmers. Enforcement of the edict baa grown lax lately and poppy fields are now to be seen along the main roads. The city of Tall Is situated about eight miles north of the foot of Tall lake. At the foot Is the town of Hsla Kuan. The relation between the two communities Is very roughly that be tween Gary, Indiana, and Chicago, If mercantllo activity Is substituted for Industrialism. Hsia-Kuan Is the mer> csntlle town, while Tall is the official and residence city. Between the two, along the lake shore, Is a road paved with cobblestones that, through long use, have become polished to glasslike smoothness. Over them the caravan horses pick their way gingerly at the slowest of paces. Turbulent Times In Yunnan. "Revolutions. local uprisings, and bandit raids have combined to make Yunnan province one of the most tur bulent placet on the map to recent years. If conditions become stabilised It Is probable that Chln^ will at last h?ve railroad, connection with India via Tall and Burma. A Burmese rail* way now runs to within about 80 miles of the Yunnan border at Lashlo. Brit ish Interests have considered the fea sibility of extending this road to Tall, Yunnan-fu and some port on; the Yangtze river. I "The mountains and hills near Tall are covered with a profusion of rho dodendrons which give the country an aspect of loveliness In spring and sum mer. An expedition of the National Geographic aoclety led by Joseph F. Rock recently brought Into the United States from Yunnan an extensive col lection of these beautiful flowering shrubs, many of which will be Intro duced here/,' Uses of Weather Forecast Varied Apparently No Limit to Useful Application of Of ficial Prognostications. Washington.? There is apparently no limit to the practical uses that may be made of forecasts and weather data generally. The Corpus Chrlstl station of the weather bureau of the United States Department of Agriculture re ports two unusual Instances: A teacher of expression planned as open-air recital. As her pupils were small children whose voices were weak, she ascertained from the weather bt>->| rean office the probable wind direction during the evening of the recital and placed the audience to leeward of the performers, who were beard without difficulty. ' Trainers of fox hounds frequently call on this station to learn the prob ability of fog or dew in the early hoars of the next morning. As hounds work best on still, damp mornings, such times are selected for sending them oat in quest of coyotes. Helps Candy Maker. A local candy manufacturer at Au gusts, Ga., found that on certain days the bard candles, that are very popu Airplane Makes Nose Dive in Swamp The two passengers were seriously injured hut the pilot escaped with a few scratches, when this plane of the Syracuse Air line took a nose dive into a swamp on the Indian reserva tion eight miles south of Syra cuse, N. Y. SURVEY OF PHILIPPINE COASTS AND WATERS IS BEING PUSHED United 8tates Expects to Complete Teek 8tarted 27 Years Ago In Few More Years. Manila, P. I. ? The United States -oast and geodetic survey expects to 4>mplete within a few years the work if surveying all the coMts and sdja cent waters of the Philippine Islands And bring to a close a task that has been under way since American occu pation nearly 27 years ago. Com mander W. E. Parker, chief of the di vision of hydrography and topography, declared recently upon bis arrival from Washington. Commander Parker comes as the personal representative of Colonel E. Lester Jones, director of the United States coast and geodetic survey, and expects to remain In the Philippines several months. "It is the desire of the government to complete the surveys of the Philip V pine coasts and waters,** said Com mander Parker. "The areas which have not yet been charted axe the west coast of Palawan, the southern half of the Sola sea to Borneo, the Sulu archipelago, south Mindanao, northern Luzon to Bash! channel, almost to Formosa, and the weat coast of Luxon from Cape En fano to Caslguran bay. The most Im portant of these areas, judging from a commercial standpoint, will be sur veyed first "As to the importance of the task we are about to undertake. It cannot be overestimated. It Is likely to re sult In the change of steamer routes.9 will make navigation safer In these waters, and will change the status of the areas from one of unknown waters to one well charted and entirely safe to navigation." These waters not otily will be chart ed. but a complete photographic record 3,325 PH. D. DEGREES CONFERRED IN DECADE IN UNITED STATES New York. ? During the ten-year pe riod from 1912 to 1921, there were printed In the Uittted States a total of 8,325 doctoral ? dissertations pre pared by candidates for the degree of doctor of philosophy In the various colleges and universities throughout the country. Although the conferring of the de gree does not always occur in the same year as the publication of thesis, either preceding or following it by. a few years In many cases, the average of degrees conferred would be about the same as the number of disserta tions printed in any one year or long er period. It follows, therefore, that In the ten years from 1912 to 1921 there were created In this country, 3,825 new doc tors of philosophy to Join the nation's swelling ranks of learned doctors, at an average rate of 832 per year. This figure of 8,325 is undoubtedly an understatement, however, according to : *A the librarian who compiled It from re ports Issued by the Library of Con gress. It takes Into consideration only those dissertations which are recorded annually In the list drawn up In the catalogue division of the Library of Congress. Finds Historic Church Papers in Unused Desk New York. ? In a drawer of an old desk, among discarded Christmas tree ornaments, at St. James' Lutheran church, historic records, some of them declared to be priceless, have been found by the pastor of the church, Kev. Mr. William F. Sunday. He hat beety unable to explain their presence 1 11 er e. The authenticity of the find Is guar anteed by the National Lutheran coun cil. Most valued of the papers Is the original ordination certificate of Rev Justus Falckner, said to be the first Thomas Blackburn of Los Angeles holding an odd kind of fowl? a cross between a chicken and a turkey. It has been named the turken. lar at this time, would "sweat" Md lose their luster When laid out on the trays to harden. On the advice of the weather bureau official the candy com pany purchased a sling psychrometer and is making practical experiments in Insuring tjumidlty in its factories. While It is likely that the company will eventually install air-conditioning apparatus, it Is now producing these candies satisfactorily and with little added expense b f making them only on days when the humidity Is low. Watched by Ministers. Ministers keep an anxious eye on the weather, as it frequently Influences the sire of their congregation. The pastor of one of the largest churches in Can .ton, N. Y., consults the forecasts for ^another reason ? to save coaL , In ar ranging for heating his church for Sunday service he calls the local of fice of the weather bureau for the fore cast made Saturday morning and prob able temperature during the night and Sunday morning. He then instructs the janitor as to* time of fttfrrting fires snd amount of heat required. In this way a more satisfactory temperature Is provided and fuel Is saved. 'j,ffr i )!? - ? > ? 4 Longfellow AH Wrong; Hesperus Never Did Sink I Boston. ? The schooner Hesperus, made forever famous by Longfel low's ballad, "The Wreck of the Hesperus," was not wrecked at alL Instead of goldg to lis doom on the reef of Norman's Woe. the vessel lay In safety In Boston harbor and suf fered only the breaking of t, bowsprit when buffeted by the gusts whldh reached It " (i|;V The historical mistake Is revealed In a study of newspaper files of the period' of the great gale which inspired the poet . . . r ir On December 17,* 187?; the news papers printed an account of a sad disaster, jaJUng.hqw 17. bodies w^ere washed aahb&"Ink the saine column was a paragraph telling bow a gust drove the Hesperus from Its moorings in Boston harbor against the sh.'p William Badger, carrying away its bowsprit A trifling misfortune like this won the schooner Hesperus un dying fame. Perusal of Longfellow's diary for the 17th shows that he must have read both items and confused them. of them li to be made by airplane. When the actual work begins the sur vey party will be accompanied by alt forces of the army, who will prepare for photographing the entire coast by airplane. Marksman Wastes Shots, but Fails to Shoot Seals Dublin. ? A Blsley marksman may be good at shooting at targets, but pretty poor when It comes to ahootlng seals. The minister for fisheries disclosed In the Dall, when dealln^fflth complaints of the destruction of gsh by seala, that the ministry had engaged a Blsley marksman to shoot, seals and kept him at work for three months In the es tuary of the Snlr. He expended 1,000 pounds of ammunition, but was honest enough to say he was not sure whether he had killed one seal. The United States army has devel oped a .75-mm. gun which shoots near ly three miles farther than the fa mous French .76-mm. gun used In the World war, but weighs the same. clergyman regularly ordained In the western world. The ordination took place on No vember 24; 1708, at the Swedish Lu theran Gloria Del church, In Wlcaco, Pa., now part of Philadelphia. Other documents discovered and placed In a vault by Doctor Sunday ln cludo a petition of the Lutheran church to Thomas Dongan, governor of the colony prior to 1008, In which the congregation asks for Immunity from taxation, on the ground that "those of the Calvlnlst opinion are exempted." There also is a letter dut ed October 27, 1704, certifying to the character of Rev. Mr. Falckner and asking aid from the Church of Eng land for his support More than one hundred establish* ments In tlie United States are now engaged In the manufacture of wash ing machines and their combined out put has a value of more than $40, 000,000 a year. Something like 10, 000,000 pounds of copper Is annually consumed in the manufacture of the tanks or tubs of the washing ma chines. IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS AND OTHER NATIONS FOR 8EVEN DAY8 GIVEN THE HEWS IT THE SOUTH What It Taking Place In The South, land Will Be Found In Brief Paragraphs Foreign ? Five hundred troops entrained at Halifax, N. S., fully equipped and steel helmeted, for duty in the Cape Breton coal fields, where clashes be tween striking coal miners and cor poration police resulted in the death of one miner, the serious wounding of another, injuries to two score and the repulse of the police. Striking mine workers are in un disputed possession of the streets of New Waterford, N. S., after a strug gle of several hours, in which one of their number was killed by gunfire, a second was shot and seriously injur ed and a large number of miners and police employed by the British Em pire Steel corporation injured, somp of them severely The necessity of settlinK the prob lem of Inter-alHed debts was the point on which M. Calllaux. minister of fi nance, insisted when he appeared be fore the finance committee of the French chamber of deputies recently The condition of Gabrlele D'Annun zio, the poet-soldier, is reported at Gardone, Italy, as considerably Im proved. He hag been suffering from Influenza. Americana have been included In the denunciations contained In hand bills distributed by Chinese strike leaders endeavoring to carry on a gen eral strike at Shanghai. For the first time in history, re cently, a French chief of government, accompanied by a retinue of aides, has flown to a war zone, trailed through the air by a corps of inter national newspaper correspondents. The subject of a security took a new angle at Geneva when Italy went on record as favoring the Franco - British - Belgian pact with Germany. Italy is temporarily excluded from this, but her spokesman voiced the hope that she would be permitted to participate in a pact if ihtended and applied to all German frontiers. In search of adventure and treas ure, the 26-foot yacht Stlngaree left Toronto island bound for the Spanish main, with Cocas island as its more or less immediate objective. The crew, leaving Toronto, Canada, com prised William John Beach, his wife and five-year-old son. The Nicaraguan cabinet has resign ed in order, it Is announced, to give President Soloriano a free hand in reorganization. Washington ? The forty-eight States of the Union 1 paid ont $1,310,332,793 for general op- I erating expenses in 1923, a per capita I expenditure of 11.95 and received in J revenues 1,247,304.821, or $11.38 per I eapita. - ? ? During the first four months of this year, the bureau of mines reported 737 employees _ of coal mines had been killed by accidents which is a fatality rate of 3.85 per million tons compared with 5.11 for the same month last year. Applications undei which the Sea board Air Line proposes to extend Its railroad from Fort Myers in Flor ida south and west to Naples on the west coast of th?r same state have been filed with the interstate com merce commission. The airship Shenandoah, during its flight to Portland, Maine, July 4, for the governors' convention, will go as far north as Bar Harbor and moor to the tender Patoka there, it is an nounced at the navy department. Tax revision at the coming session of congress is predicted by , Senator Smoot of Utah, chairman of the sen ate finance committee, who, at the time, declared his opposition to any attempt at tariff revision. Production of milk, butter and chelae in north central states may be somewhat reduced this year in th< opinion of department bf agriculturf officials by the poor condition of pas tures. These states produce the bulk of the country's creamery butter and cheese. The postoffice department an nounces that beginning August 1 mail ers of parcels must guarantee return postage In event of non-delivery, or renounce all claims to the parcel. ? * The MacMlllan expedition when it departs for the Arctic June 17, Secre tary Wilbur says, will carry no spe cial instructions concerning the course it should pursue in claiming any lands which may be discovered or in flying over disputed territory. The capital has gone mad over baseball pools and is betting $30,000 a week on tickets costing 60 cents each which are secretly sold through agents working in practicaly all government departments and In many office buHd ings. according to an unofficial in vestigation made here. The old earth is slowing down, un able to keep up the terrific pace which 1t set in its youth eons ago. It is slow ing down one-thousandth of a second per century, according to Prof. A. S. Eddington of Cambridge university, in a repott published by the Smithsonian institution. This means a pace that loses one minute each six million years. Once the earth's day was three or four hours. It was during that pe riod that the moon probably was thrown off, says Professor Eddington. It may have come out of the Pacific OCttn. Im0DPO""'>? . 0f nn 10 iKh->?i?, i KR,r>n jn " !:ho !(t'n ,aken j ( harlr-s j( S",i!hsonian I ?hp 'onrij, jeral r?urt.s Was "isrUsi! j f'Tlf-f. .1 I-";: !:?'?=' I "ar?i"tlR. |fre u. j '"""i-n, I domestic. " Mint, ? * ! *?v to p,r. 81 j n,an, nt !0r,w?. ?i, ! ?""r h<.,s?l(' ?"? |07r ">?>?,> IW? t|^s j Thf' ^0^^ a, ? to";, W3S ?fficia|^ I a CPSI h^Mpof th;T^ iassf"iarj0n Tw? div?^ Mi I l"on I"1 '?OS Aug,!,, ^ ^or """ion plclur <"vo'? frotn Ki?, spr'in"' "?kiCR f0 ?y rr ,beir **2J Tl" StandaM oi J a"a has ""Iwj.iJj "r,: aM th" P'irpoj* of 21 bu?"^? cow,i,f?7l J,? ?' !h'' A?Plfflfc|J ?m acromM? r "I " ?V'?t?'!l?n', Art^ lie from tt'|? "ve" ?' <!>? -W Sq?am,,m?Mas, lf Philadelphia * imriy-two men ^ J at Clinton. Maf? lt ;l| riot after an outdoor J ku klux klan. Virginia militia J tioned at the hosj-itjj^l Va.. where Lew:? r-:^l leged to havp killed rj F Smith on J;r> l, u from wounds h? counter with the r^l Fiorenz ZieRfetf >u J ments with a tobacco ? the distribution of pjJ glorifb <1 plrl- of rh? -J arettp packaprc'Ht w|J seeing a col!*ri<ir cf jj tur^s at th?* p'ibi'.r :iajl First forma! ul prosecution of ["jcrial been involved ir, resulted in the fa''X1| Ssvin.g bark of Jarbti tak? v. n th th*1 "-iM J for the arr^t of Thai former executive re jm M. Carroll. hi? son utl assistant cashier, ui 111 a lumber dealer and oil Opponents of lepMl gambling adopted i wj Illinois when ropr'"^ state orRarizations nrW| Collier's Weekk of J?l each member of th* Oi ture. which has confiiflR favoring Vetting I Telephone service in Bfl recently demoraliied *toi a blazine construction Hi of the Ch^sapeak' H*! ephone compare l-sSSfl telephone operator5 Wj bringine all busto**' 'n exchange to a stand**! Mrs Paulina daughter of th* W* ""J thaler. Inventor of granted an absolute p Perkins in rirntt 1 more on the ground Possibility that ax. which W1H Isiana state uni^fjl structor. at Baton r" 1 intended for anntM J given consideration "JJ vate investigator^ ? "1 unceasingly on ' e .1 The Jury *t>>fh !^Jl William DarliW ^?1 hls ????"? McClintock. ?n?" J pleted at la11' ve ' T were declined I A. H Woo* V' J cal producer. ^^3 signed a f,VP"u Mabel Normand- J ture actress ?? J comedy ro.e> 8" ( j: ? ?ppearance AM1''' * \ Bills of in-l":n^Tl Cooper. form,'r c<4 Mount. N ( | camp. B. H Byntim. f camp. (^ar>:invlTf b*1 J on prisoners *' the Edgf'('0,n ' I Jury. f A.j*J J. S and ' of 1'in(knl>V?hW J gun battle ?t c^fl vln Williams ?f land City. Ai tv?*l was .bo. 'l'r0 J j T |vn4W ' >1 tor of er. a n?r;; r"!V r 'J a, Beldsvill' which *" I them a reqi;;';:rnat^: ^ Rotary I" ' r. , * "J members ttl" . changing - '"J. .itv J| dress from "n be present^ tors, meet?? liminary to t i tbat city. j I
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 18, 1925, edition 1
14
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