The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, February 08, 1918, Page SEVEN, Image 7
t SPY GOES ABOUT
FREELY IN PARIS
t
German Says it Is More Exciting
Than Running a Submarine.
. !
NET IS sm EVERYWHERE
American Tells Some Anecdctes Showing
the Extent of the German Spy
Svstpm?Pynpripncp of Amer
ican Girl in Leipsic.
By HERBERT COREY.
(Correspondent of the Chicago News.)
^ Berne, Switzerland.?Last week a
Hp German U-boat captain visited Paris.
? This story is told on the authority,
k of the man who saw the U-boat captain!
B there. I know the man. He is a con- !
servative, solid, reliable American. His i
word is worth 100 cents on the dollar
wherever he is known. For some
years he was in business relations with (
Germans, and learned to know many i
of them very well. >
"I was standing in front of the opera
house in Paris," said this man, "when
a green car whizzed by. I just caught
a glimpse of a familiar face. Beside j
^he man I knew was a Frenchman j
^n Klo/Vtr Konr/i Tirn mfrmfps i
VtTilllLlg a UV/U1U* Jt .IV> w^uv?.
later I remembered whom the familiar J
face belonged to.
" 'Yon Hutten,' X said to myself.
* 'Why?why?dang it?last I heard of
Yon Hutten he was commanding a Uboat
in the North sea.'"
Futile to Chase a Green Car.
The man puzzled over it for a moment.
Then, being a good American,
he told the American authorities in
Paris. He had not been able to get
the number of the car or a description
of the chauffeur. Chasing green cars
in Paris is like trying to catch wild'
rklnn /?OTT 1
geese uy uie &ait pmu. U?J mv
fcnan was walking down the Avenue de
l'Opera when the green car whizzed by
again. He tried to catch the number,
but that old oil and dust trick that
American speeders invented prevented
him. He walked on down to Ciro's for
lunch.
"I had So-and-so from the consulate
and So-and-so from the embassy and
o/\ -fl-irv TTnif/i^l Qfofoc T>fl \7T7 f} Q
OVailU'SU Ul liic uinitu Uiuivu 11U..T
my guests," said he, naming them. "We
had a good time together, for we were
;old friends. I told of seeing my German
acquaintance on the avenue. Next
day I came to Berne. Shortly after 1
met my German friend.
"1 like the looks of your naval attache
in Paris,' said he. 'Nice boy.
! Think I'll try to get acquainted with
him.' Then he laughed.
4,4I saw you there,' I gasped.
know you did,' said he. T sat
at the next table to you in Ciro's, be- J
hind tne pillar, ana neara you ien
about seeing me. Nanghty, naughty!
And sc you tried to get your old pal
pinched?'
The German told my American
friend that he had been in and out of
Paris ever since the war began. Ho
found it much more interesting than
running a U-boat, he said. There was
a danger, he admitted, but just enough
mo!:o ttift irih 1T1 f<>TV*<St i 11 IT. I
UCiAIfe^A IV "UlllV JW ,
Besides, he is a poor man at home. Ini
his wopk he has plenty of money to j
spend.
"I'm going hack next week," said he. j
. Extent of System.
A friend of n:ine who returned from,
Berlin after the United States declared!
war on Germany told a story, of which1
he had personal knowledge, to show!
the extent of the German spy net. An
acquaintance in Berlin obtained per
mission to go to Holland on business.
It is not easy to get such permission
'nowadays. Although an American, he
was forced to tell just whom he wished
to see in Holland and why. While in
Amsterdam he received a hurry call to
London from his correspondent there
and took the next boat, getting a vise
through the interest of the American
legation 111 The Hague.
"Why did you go to London?" he
Tras asked when he returned to Berlin.
He told the story.
" *We know of the telegram you received,'
was the reply. 'But why did
you go to room 303 of the Savoy hbtel
? ^ ?nrv>n?i>i nlnaAfa^ nrltli T.rtr-r? Plnhd.
iUlU iciuam tilicvicu mm uvi ?* .
berry there for three hours V
He was able to make his explanation
; convincing or there might have been
another incident to write a note about.
iThis was some weeks before the United
States was finally crowded into war.
It is easier to believe in the number oi
spies Germany has scattered about
j when one hears this story by an Ameri- j
;can girl, who for some years had stud->
'ied at Leipsic. This year she was re-J
fused her Th. D. decree, although it j
was due her. Then she was refused]
(permission to leave Germany. Forj
weeks she was promised and put off. i
-C 1 I
"JL>ecome a. spy iur us <uiu ,>uu ciwm
"have your degree," slie was told. "You
shrll have plenty of money to spend.
You need not worry about the danger.
We will always take care of you."
; She did not become a spy and even- j
tually she was given permission to!
leave for Switzerland. But the story
;puts one to thinking.
! New Way to Hooverize.
Milwaukee.?"I was trying to Hoov-!
erize." Th;it was the explanation giv-,'
en by Isnatz Poltoiski when haled into'
court on the charge of stealing meat i
from a packing company. 116 said he
had only taken a pound, but 7;" pounds
ef rr.ra* \vere found in his home. Ilis I
explanation didn't satisfy lite court, sc,
he was fined SiS.
OLD SEA PORTS
COME TO LIFE
Revival in Shipping Brings Prosperity
to Amarican Seaboard
Towns.
ONCE BUSY MARTS OF TRADE
Same Spirit That Made Old Salem
Rich Now Seen in Merchant Marines's
Development?New
Ports Springing Up.
Washington.?One effect of the present
rapid expansion of the American
merchant marine is a sudden and unprecedented
revival of business at certain
American ports which a few years
ago were thought to have passed their
Tnn ? f
I 1 LJLi.
Bath, Mo., is cited as an example.
In the prosperous nineteenth ceutury
days of sailing ships Bath was the
country's leading shipbuilding port. It
declined steadily after the introduction
of steel as a building material.
. Now Bath, building both steel and
wood vessels, is so prosperous that the
housing of the workmen taking jobs
there is a pressing problem. The same
is true of several other North Atlantic
ports, while ,in other sections ports
are springing up where none existed
before.
Close observers of the present revival
in shipping say that before the
United States shipping board's present
construction plan is completed?a plan
by which a vast new merchant fleet is
to be brought into'being?the development
of American ports will parallel
on a larger scale that which took
place in the "go<5d old days of the
square riggers."
in earner nines, ?? ?u vr*
body in a port touched by the prosperity
of seagoing was keenly interested
in shipping.. Present-day secrecy
about contracts, sailings and dividends.
had its prototype in the secrecy
that enveloped such matters more than
a hundred years ago, in a score or
American ports, notably in Salem.
Mass.
In those days, we are told, "rival
merchants sometimes drove the work
of preparation for voyages night rind
day. Ships which set out for forrlirn
ports were watched when they slipped
their cables and sailed away by night."
Persona! Touch in Voyages.
In those times there was a more personal
touch in voyages than now. as
every man making a voyage was allowed
a certain space in the hold for
goods of his own. People in the home
port of a ship outward bound intr -t
ed their savings to their seafaring
neighbors for ventures in far countries.
This spirit of commercial adventure i
is finding expression today on a larger
and less personal scale, say the experts
of the shipping hoard: and these students
of conditions trace the present
enthusiasm of the nation for seafaring
to beginnings in definite periods in
which our old-time ports were at the
height of their prosperity. In so doing.
they cite Saler^i as a good example
of what a venturesome people may
gain upon the sen.
Salem at one tinje stood at tnp bond
of the cities of the United States in
tho value of :ts imports
I;. 1 12 it had 12" s)ii!?s in the deep\v:;i
trade, and of these, ."s were
]/!<; T Mlinmcn. 'these vessels brought
home eai>ors of fabulous richness?
siihs. indigo. spices, ivory and other
products of the f.vr East.
There are old people living in Snlem
who remember when the city's ancient
warehouses were full ,of "hemp from
Luzon, pepper from Sumatra, coffee
from Arabia, palm oil from the west
coast of Africa, cotton from Bombay,
1- J -v, 4.U rv
QUCK anu irun huuj uitr dcxiuc. uuiov*
from Madagascar, salt from Cadiz,!
wine from Portugal and the Madeiras,
figs, raisins and almonds from tfie
Mediterranean; teas and srtlks from
China: rum. sugar and molasses from
the West Indies; Ivory and gum-copal|
from Zanzibar; rubber, hides and wool
from South America, whale oil from the
ArH-lr nnrl Antarctic, and thp sncrm
from the South Seas." i
Pioneers in Commerce.
Salem ships were pioneers in opening
new routes of commerce. Salem
merchants were the first to bring pepper
from Sumatra, rubber from South
America and coffee from Mocha. The
Salem ship Recovery. Capt. John
Ropes, was the coffee pioneer, and between
the landing of her first cargo of
the fragrant berry In 1709 and 1805,
Salprw imported not less than 12.000,000.
pounds of Mocha coffee.
Salem men were perhaps no more
active than other American deep-water
sailors of the period but their records
" n?n lr?nt Tliov nhmi nil in
?? n c uv iui ? \ f' %.
stories of their adventures.
Examining the eause.^ of Salem's
great fame won upon the sea. a recent
historian of the merchant marine found
* - l t??i,??
mat IT was vnOT l[i ner ii;ui?wr ikm iu
her store of shipbuilding timber. . . .
It was Salem men. Americans
of the Americans who built up the romantic
commerce that left no sea unvisited.
no land unexplored.
Their business required iron will and
iron nerve, a noble uM-isrination. belief
!n themselves and in fh"ir fellow man."
The case of old ? ?? ?? and of the
newer ports now flourishing under the
impetus of the eoutiM-v - present corumercijil
expansion -:nees the tnari
- 1 - - - t : . 1.
U"on in ?"?-"???i ? ;:.? s ?-< n:rr11 mic,
! ' !i \ni< ric;?n eute;
''rise.
| BABY JOINS RED CROSS f f
| EVEN BEFORE ITS BIRTH | |
& Chicago.?-The honor of being i f
s? a memher of the Red Cross be- & J
? fore he was born goes to John ? ??
k Watson Winter of this city. zi |
8 John's daddy, who is an offi- << ^
>> cial of the National Artificial Re- g |
X frigerator company, bought a ?Z J
8 Red Cross membership for John ? ^
and presented it to his mother s?
V> r
before liie boy's birth. 4
<<> <>
FRENCH TAKE WHEATf
I (
Seven Ounces of Bread Daily Lim- j
it Except to Hard Workers. ' p
Sacrifice Accepted by French People ;
uncomplainingly on Government's
Explanation of Necessity. j L
Washington.?Only the very poor, |
and men and women doing the hardest '
kind of manual labor, may have more ;
than seven ounces <<f vvar bread a day *
in France from now on. the United '
States food administration has been 1 55
advised hy the French government. I
The entire French wheat crop has j
been requisitioned by the government. ! *
Tins sacrifice has been accepted hy ' ^
the French people uncomplainingly' <>n
the government's explanation thnt only | v
by such restriction can American re- i r
enforcements he transported in ships !
that otherwise would carry grain for J v
their bread, and that, in addition, this 1 J
grain for French bread can come from j
America only by virtue of t he actual j
saving of this grain by reduced con- j ^
sumption of bread by the American j
people. *
"These extremely severe measures," s
said the French statement, "especially *
the seven ounces a day. have deeply %
impressed public opinion."
Men who are very poor or who do
hard manual labor get about 21 ounces *
of bread a day; women who are very
poor or who are employed on hard a
work ge/about 17 ounces a day; every- t
one else gets seven ounces, which is j ^
iess than half of a pound loaf, or not j
- .. [ n
more tnan tour or nve snces.
This bread is made of flour compris- *
ing all the elements of wheat except
bran, with a heavy admixture of flour v
frnrn other pprpfl! trains. which is 11
obligatory.
The price of bread is fixed by vari- j c
ous government agencies all along the { *
line between producer and consumer, i
Baking of pastry or, biscuits from i ^
flour that is fit for bread is prohibited, i v
Confectioneries and other such shops ^
are closed two days a week. Eating
yUMIlCS UJ puuuv. 13 lui uiuuv-h. I I
PLAN SPRING GARDEN NOW *
Agricultural Department Says There
Will Be Need for Large Production
in 1918.
tl
Washington.?Take thought of the !
spring garden now. j 0
Notwithstanding the large produc- J a
tion of vegetables last year and the ^
great volume put into cans and jars s
for winter use, there is nothing to in- i
dicate that there will not be equal r:
need for production and conservation
in 191$, says the United States depart- 0
ment of agriculture.
Many gardens failed last year he"iiiico
m??r ?nil or rmnr nrpnn ration
or both. . 0
Tills is the lime in many sections ^
to break and to fertilize. Then in ?
the spring it will be easier to i:j:i?:
the seedbed and the soil will contain
plant food.
For the avem.ee householder it will
be sufficient to prepare ground enough 11
to produce the home supply for eat- *
ing in the fresh state and for can- ^
ning. drying or brining for use during n
the following winter. Producing veg- ^
etables for market should not be un- ll
dertaken without full knowledge of
horticulture and sufficient capital and P
equipment. x t!
s<
MORE AMERICAN MADE TOYS w
* aWar
Conditions Develop Industry to
Point Where Foreign Competf- F
tlon Is Broken Forever.
r
Washington.?America Is now first
in the toy making industry. Oeretoforp
the United States has purchased
the majority of its toys from Germany,
Nuremburg being one of the chief manufacturing
centers in former years. f<
Forced by war conditions to depend g
upon their own resources, the manu- e
facturers of this country have been ti
making toys and have been so success- ii
ful that buyers for large stores claim
the hold of other countries on this line tl
of business has been broken forever, fc
a fon- tnvs nro <still mining from
France, England, Switzerland, and Ja- p
pan. but the American toys have prov- v
ed superior, as they are more educa- l
tional. t;
WOMEN CUT OUT THE SWEETS ?
"Do Their Bit" in Conserving the Na- ft
tion's Food Supplies at
Ashland, Wis. H
Ashland. Wis.?In order to "do their
bit" in conserving the nation's food
supplies the women's advisory con
mittee of the Ashland defense con mi' rj
- . . A
has adopted resolutions asking a'*, ti
women to abstain from the use of iv.<?
cream, candy, sweet drinks and confec- n
tions in which hoot or cane sugar is an ti
ingredient. Womci's societies, which t
have been accustomed to serving re- c<
freshm^nts, are no longer doing so un- ?
less *h refreshments have been m:ide p
according To recipes approved l>v the .7
advisory conmittw*. tl
HELP! S. T |
CANARY. .. iES ? T
*9 the
~ *r
(By Internal : , - -rvice. > a or
Detroit.- i. vr oh. ^ ^
please, if y< li.mi;ine. \\
send coal r<> .. -aice." 4* ?l
This was ' ! .. hhpm! j? A
<?f a woman . ? .el. p!u>ne i/oi
to the fuel ;n, ?i > oil ice. ?s?
The coal w.i- ..vil and
fjQ 0
when pres.-. nation
: 11
the woman *?
<?>
"M\ pel ? t.iwinn^
younj: onos ^ nw.
^ H? T
2ETS i; OUOH ./
'rivals Rr.r; -^-Exam- XA
ph in C " - "ns. ..0i
.etter tc? Parent- r ler-.-es Cnmp Commender
rrtd Prvrre Is Civen
Leave oi AL ence.
Camp Meade 'v' i Private D. E.
lanibo, Three T!'--??!; ? <1 Fifteenth inantrv,
was sttnnl for the first time
ince ho left his homo to fight when ?
ie was ordered to appear before the
'old man," as Hris Gen. William J.
Cieholson is kno-'n throughout the
irigade.
"Private Rambo!" the General sudlenly
barked forth "Did you write
his letter?"
Private Rambo iookrrit cleared his
oiee of some of It? hnskiness and admitted
he had it read:
Dear Mother and Father:
"Am writing you a letter to let you
;now I received vour letter and also
he box (CI. -istmas box). You sent
lie box by express. Why don't you
end them things by parcel post?
Everything was fine, but the honey got
farm and ran through the box. The
alee was good. too. There's a fellow j
lere I knew up in the city. He thinks j
our cake can't be beat. We had a j
wne lime yesterday, entertainments ;
nd turKey dinner. Now all I want is j
o got home for a week and then I'm j
eady t? go anywhere. Maw, I never
elt berter in all my life than I do
ow. This Is sure a healthy life. Plen- !
y of work nnd all you can eat. . Now
Icn't forget to send a cake once in a
rhile, for a box of things like you sent
lakes life better. You can write and
pt me know when you send some more
ake. With love for all, your son, D.
3. Rarnbo."
"Well, Private Rambo," the general
oomec'l again, "you can have that
week's holiday home. I like boys who
ion't grumble all the time."
ERILS OF BIRD SLAUGHTER
lational Association of Audubon Societies
Points Out Danger of
Relaxed Game Laws.
New York.?Grave perils threaten
fie agriculture of the United States
trough the indiscriminate slaughter ?
f birds and of wild life, according to
statfment issued by the- directors of
le National Association of Audubon
ocieties.
Mr. T. Gilbert Pearson, the secreiry
of the association, in making pubc
resolutions adopted by the board
f directors, said that unless every ef-?rt
is made to enforce all game pro?ctior
laws, the resulting unrestrain(1
activities of gunners and po.t-huntrs
wr>uld soon destroy the natural
)cs of insects and of rodent pests and
f weeds.
?.rr-t. ; ,1,^. (Inn "
Ill" l.'jtljo will .-.,1 t i; UIC ikimwii,
ays Jin? official statement, "and the
rds vvill help 10 save the crops." In
lis national crisis, America is looked
pon by our aliies as the gianary of
lip world anil the source of food
Inch must sustain the fighters in the
jonths of struggle yet to come. ThereDre
every effort should be made to
lcrease the yield of our fields.
"This association points to the grave
eril which attends the relaxing of
he wise statutes enacted for conervirg
the wild life of this country,
rhicb is more and more recognized
s an important economic factor."
IRST NAVEL ORANGE DYING
arert Tree of California Citrus orchards
Planted 44 Years Ago, mm
Seems Near End.
Riverside, Cal.?The original Washigtoa
navel orange tree, planted here
jrty-four years ago, producer of the
rst navel oranges grown in the Unitd
States and parent of millions of
rees now growing in California, is be-'
eved to be dying.
Horticultural experts are studying
tie disease that threatens it in the
ope of prolonging its life.
This tree en me nriirinally from some.
oint fn'land from Rahia, Brazil. It
as planter! here in 1S73 by Mrs. C. L.
'ibbetts. who obtained it from the boinieal
gardens in Washington. Ef3rts
to discover in Brazil other navel
range trees have so far failed.
IEVi/ INVENTION OF MARINES
:'s Called a "Bazooka" and Will Make
Yeu "Shake Your Feet" When ^
in nnprrjtinrv
> w ~ w...
Pert Royal. S. 0.?Tnitefl States manes
at this station h:ive a new inven- ?=
on. It's called h "bazooka." No. it
:n't a cannon. nor a flying machine,
or a machine pun. inn when in opcraon
it will make yr.it "shake your feet."
he "bazooka" i< .t simple contrivance
:?nsistinsr of t ut two <>i pipe
nd ;i i nr.H. htir i< r!i plriym.
I' :> *! '*rh. A! rir?
ay:/, lutixi - < 1 ' '!,t world
mt boasts ui u " a"
TAX iLvrrsi'ss FJK m;
cr an authorized a?ent will t-e a' .
following places name! below M.
the pur rose of taking tux returnboth
real and personal propert}
fiscal year 1518.
ft
.irl in the Auditors office in the ?
irthouse until Feb. the 20th aner "
irh date " 0 per ceut .penait.. ?ii ^
4
aaded. The law requires a r note-;
mortgares and mone"
Inco:r.e tax on incomes ove
k
'heve is :i aptation tax on a!
iftv rents. !
|
.11 male persons hetyeen the a-t* ;
an:! en S3 re liable to pay a pel
of Sl.flO unles? otherwise exempt
11 persons on-ninp: propt. ty jr.
-e than one School Pbtriet wi'<
require:! to make returns for ear*J"
\-ir t, as the Tax Books Tvili i-e
*e up 1-v S'-hool Districts in-tea-'
Tcwn ships in 1 01$.
T. ft. Hilfa^e .
Connty Aiul**or ?
T'' ' J-? -xsas-v C""- i
t&fEV M
Jyi W* fej ^ ,<? Jfe A.
tiii Tv> ui ia^- u " Ci'oiui' &cunsc24 <!i!s
I
'lent la I a:
We are Selling M
All Competitor
TERE MUST B1
That Reai
We Are Selling
T1 r? D
man mey ua oe
Our Mules Are No H
Have Been the P
Newberr
IT"' ' * *
???MilW^llUM
iinAn Sfnrips ^
,lk/hV? AVU U|#Vl* M aww
?with high ideals
12 Glorious Serials or Group
Stories and 250 Shorter Stories
and ever}7 one witli "lift" in it.
The^ut^s |
Indispensable m quality, iavisn m quanu
?no other publication in the world like
THE 1918 PROGRAMME includes tb
by the world's brightest men and acknov
Nature and Science, Family Page, Be
Page, Doctor's Corner and a constant ru
52 Issues a YearTHE
YOUTH'S COMPANI
F??^
w i Send this coupon (or the name of
V, v I 1913 anc
TUIC 1. 52 ISSUES oi
2. All remaining 19
OUT 3. The Companion
1 SUBSCRIPTIONS RECETV
J ~
I
An Ambition and
J < 'y HE n*:eds of the South are iden
y ? of the Southern Railway: the growth a
f the opbuildin? of the ether. ^
J\ < The Southern Railway asks no ravotrC
i accorded to others.
V ( i The ambition of the Southern Railway
y J unity of interest that is born of co-operatioi
I ' the riiiroads; to see perfected that fa;r and fr:
| nient of railroads which invites the con:
I aecricifs; to realize that liberality of trcatn
\/* to obtain the additional capital needed for tb<
^ - ? -I J in/t
| cnLiigrd facilities l'lnucm w u*.
A. scrvic^ and. finallj?
f T>i take its niche In the body politic c
I other treat industries, with no jaorc. but %
) lights Mid cijaai opportunities.
^ 4' The Southern Serves
'-^ * A -n * ??? dai iQM " * Aiv?-. ; '
i Exrfento XedichieOo.,
, H'f A'lsjta. Ca.
t\*it .tf^JngtSSjil n: B- ? >*> T n??4
. '- ; "+ '** yx^ Exelonto Quinine
dfc ' ' jffjSoffit? Po?ade ray b.r v:j
7$.4g!SB&J short, oi>arso and narributoow
it has fTovmtofrl
-V iucho? lone, and is so soft
- 'jTij.'j and s;Ii.y that 1 enn it
*-$y up any wiy I wac? to. I
,*.J? am Mi:d.ti voo fc:f [ <
Viro V> s':av you k? \v
y ' pretty Exelcnto his r-.:kea
it. SAi.ME KEKU.
Don't let some fate Kink Remover fool
you. You ry c.- .-.'t strairhtcn your hair
until it is nice and lonir, That's what
EXELENTOIomade
does, removes Dandruff, feeds the Roots of
t!:i hair, and rr.a.es it grow long, soft and
B..k y. Aft. rusL.j? a few times yoacan tell [
l>.a<2!lx. rcn^e. a..d af'.er a little while it jl
trill be so pretty and Ion-? t^atyou can fix
it up tosuij If LxctanCo d jr.'t do as
we claim, we wHI^lve your money back.
Prrce ZSc by mail on rcceipt c? stamps
cr coin.
' 2iYZ3 .*AWJZQ ZVEHYWHE^-,
** "'V?'^fcr oartiouin^. ? \
. w 4 . JSv.<V?M OO., CJU*W i
Tjjjijad
' - i? ?i.4?r- v. >+ !*T"' *
^ Fv:*T\ ?
n A * p\\l '- i
v & i %ji
-J ?
JjS />, *"* jt *3fe
i.Oc- . I
1
nu I
a |iip|ac
v lf?UJwd
ore Mules Than
rs Combined
I A REASON
son is:
Ifcem Cheaper
Bought Elsewhere
w
TI"i3.n Xtiey
ast Ten Years.
\ I ' i B %
a ^ M ' A ' if
fa \J| ?? :.*'? H *>?
R I ? 1] fl * 'J -4 ^
&hJ? i ZxJJ \z>y %
V f* .
V, .^ .
ty
it. IUl?miiuauiuil:i:imiiiiiii"i:i;Ullll?I'
2 ablest Editorials written, Articles
,-ledged authorities, Current Events,
>ys' Page, Girls' Page, Children's
:n of the world's choicest funv
-not 12?$2.00
ON, BOSTON, MASS.
this paper) with $2.00 for Xia Coapanioa for
I we will send you
r 1918.
17 WeeKly Issues FREE.
Home Calendar f^r 1918.
??Knawmrn m ? ?fa . t - r <-t
a Record j V>
tical with the needs \
ad success of one mcanj 1 1 /
-no ipecial privilege sot J 1/
' ^ '
Company is to ses that I?~*r"'
i between the public and
ink policy in the manage- I J
licence of fcvernmental I S
lent which will enable it J f
: acquisition of Dcucr ana c r j
for increased and bcacr IJ I
A the Sootfi alongside o1 | J
ritb equal liberties, oqu>I
the South."
,
T-i J***
wav Byztem