University of South Carolina Libraries
|l)e jjtrali) atiD Jems. i Ik-A ' : . I 1 Kitued at the Pottcffice at New- j Sc? . k - m 1 'wry, 8. C., u 2nd class matter. n ? ? ? I E. R AULL, EDITOR. , [ ? : ! Friday, January 21, 1921. | : ! A headline in The State says thatj, the penitentiary has plenty of food; stuff on hand for the use of the insti-! tution. That is entirely right and; good. There is no reason why the 1 state farms should not raise plenty^ food, and when we see the county; # chain gang wagons going out from j ti'attm Viott o r> aawi l?UWIJL luaucu >Tiwu ucijr aliu aau ( other things to eat we have often asked why it is the county does not. ? raise all -these supplies on the county ? farm. If we are not- mistaken the county owns a couple hundred acres of land and it wojild seem biat this amount of land should produce a ; : -V sufficient amount of food to feed thei ^ eftnticts and the mules of the coun-; Vtv. Better to raise the food with the i - -Convict labor than to buy it. T&ere is another statement in the: report of the penitentiary that shows1 V-' ?< mighty bad judgment on the part of j Some one. About one thousand bales' of cotton of the crops of 1919 and, 1920 are said to^be on hand. It was! tad judgment on the part of any one! v ' to hold cotton when the price was 40: cents and above and certainly the! * 1 * ^.1 1 .A i f\ ? penitentiary couia nave gotten ' cents for some of this cotton, and it j $ -ahould have been sold. ' . ! Bp^: r We take the li-betrty of publishing a letter we have received from Dr. T. fi. Dreher in response to our re marks on a communication we printed of his from The State. We agree with Dr. Dreher, that generally we would not favor the government going into business. It is wrong and eontrary to the principle upon which our institutions are founded, and, as ? he says, the government as a rule is a poor business man, but these are abnormal times and if there ever was a time when the gove$tment should do something to open tirade and start the wheels to moving that time is now. The other agencies to which Dr.'Dreher refers are the proper ' channels, but thev necessarily will r. _ - ? function, slowly, and will not be f ^ strong enough to extend the credit liecessary, and we believe -that good security can be giiven. Nodoabt the greatest trouble with the conditions is the fact that all of us lived too fast and spent too much while the making was good, and that the present crisis will eventually do good, but there is necessity that the channel be opened so that the stream may begins flowing. If not all the .fisfees lielow the dam will staff nate and die." 1 We always enjoy reading tfhat Dr. Dreher wt&tes, 'because he writes well v 1 -; * and he thinks well, and we -wish he would write ofterier. We hope to see him at all the commencements and if we ever get his way we certainly will give him no occasion to sever the ties of friendship,' which have existed foi C|?? many yearsi And we are glad . to Icnow that the neoole down that side are taking an optimistic view, and that means,a whole lot in solving the problems which we haVe at this time. In fact, a lot of it is psychological any way. ' Sm. . ,y1 Governor . Cooper in his inaugural address devotes the greater portion of it to education and strongly re com mends, that the amount asked for the rurai schools by the state: department of education i>e granted. He is cor/red. We^an afford to cut on manj of the itejiis but it would be very fatal to thq, schools of the state, especially the; rural schools, to cut this item. It will take two million dollars y to carry out the acts of the legisla ture, ar.d these acts have laid down certain cbndi?ions which have beei; met by the people in the voting of v special taxes for the maintenance of schools, and if the legislature should fail to keep the faith many" of the rural schools will be unable to run more than four or five months. It will take a pretty good sum, bul * ' t J ;2t snon:a De reraemueicu tax is different from any other ta> that is levied, because it is for the ?/" > tuition and education of the boys anc girls of South Carolina, and if all th( members of the legislature could anc would just take a few trips into thf rural dist with the county super intendents of education we do noi believe there would be a vote against this item..... '? - ? t The governor agrees so !i?<nwij ? with us and his views on the subject are so sound that we will print th? address in full in the next issue, an< regret that we can not give it to ou: readers while it is hot from*the lipj ' of the governor, who is more than an: K other governor in recent years th< sgjvyr ~ real and true friend of the childrei of this commonwealth who must a pr / necessity get all their education and i training for citizenship in the rural { and common schools of the state and t be denied even the privilege of the c high school.- 1 It will take around $25,000 of state J aid for -the rural schools inrthis coun- i ty that have met the requirements of 1 +>10 law hv voting additional tax to ] give the children even a minimum i term of seven months, and several of 3 the schools that have voted the special tax will not be able to apply for this aid because they may fall short a few pupils in the matter of enrollment , and average attendance, and we shall ] follow the letter of the law, because we realize that it is right and proper to have some limit and some rule by which to be governed. Hut we do not want to see the schools that have complied with the letter and spirit of the law denied the advantages to which they ^re entitled. <s> <e> <? A RETROSPECT <3> <3> > <$' ? <& <$>&<$ <$><$>'$>? V 1 _ * J?.? nrtn. i m + Vl O I ireau H lew uajro ag>^( m uut bia Record I think it was, that mv friend W. D. Grist had- celebrated his 20th anniversary as editor of ths Yorkvilie Enquirer, and that it represented the longest service of any newspaper editor on any paper in South Carolina, and that he is the third or fourth generation in the same Pnrwiiv in service on the same paper j in the same field. That is a fine record, and the old Enquirer used to be ja mighty good paper, and I reckon | still is, For some reason the Enquirer | ceased its visits to our desk, and after 1 sending the Eerald and News on for i quite a while, it also stopped -because j its visits were not returned. I am j sorry, because I always enjoyed readling this good poper. But the war and j the government regulations were so 'construed that many papers ceased ithat good old courtesy and custom ! of exchanging with one another. At | least a good many that I had read j for a quarter of a ecntury, if they had - - ? j been in existence so long, ceascuj | j and I missed them just as I would the i I coming of a friend who Had been in j.the habit of making regular visits to j J my honse. Lfc may be that some of jithem had fallen out with The Herald land News in one way and another, or for'one thing or another, and would j manifest their dislike by decliningto : come to see us any more. Just like j sonpe people I used to know, they i would show their dislike by refusing I to speak, and then- there are some - - * - > ?i... few right here m tms gooa couulv ui j Newberry who do not read The Ker! aid and News, or they claim that they | will not, .because they happen not to ! like me personally. I am sorry for I them. It always seemed to .me to.,tie a mighty poor way to manifest vcur | dislike. I would not be usrprised, if j the truth were known, that they do j read the paper, and I am pretty sure | that the. paper has done more for i them and theirs than they can disj credit, if they should continue to the third and fourth generation to fan j the flames of their dislike by refusing (j to read it. But this dislike only caus,] es them to lose a whole lot of mighty [good and helpful stuff, and does not i ftiiure the old paper in the least. I ' { V I- This is rather far afield from whet I took up my old typewriter to say. But before I return to -base I want j to sa^ that I think it is mighty poor i judgment for the newspapers of the J state not to keep uj^that old courte, | sy of exchanging with one another. > TVo Ttoor^inor nf ftfllPr TiflT>firS Will hj?ll) -A ilV- v-L w 4 ' you to make a better paper for your | own family. Mr. A. B. Williams used i to tell me that he always read the j country correspondence in the weekj ly newspapers as well as the editori! als and? that it was the best way to \ get an index of public sentiment that | he knew. He could tell generally what jthe fellows away, back yonder were jthinkiife about, and he knew what j their needs were, and he could the ; i better help them and the better edit ( his daily paper. The Greenwood pa ! per just positively refuses to ex1 j change with The Herald and -News, ' j and we do not get even the WinnsJ i bor#paper just across the river, and j the Daily Times at Union told me 'jthat it would come along, 'out the ?;only copy I have seen in years is the : j one the editor gave me when he said - >, he was going to place me on his exl i 1"?r AnH fh.P Orppnvillp d?i VUUil/^ V A?vw? V?*v v?* < ...w 5! lies they do 110 longer recognize the 1 i country press, or at least so old a i paper as the one we edit, though Rion " McKissick said he was going to send ^ {the Piedmont. And even the old News t and Courier that we have read for forty years, and for which we were fifor many years the local correspondt ent, refuses any longer to come our i way. Of course, I suppose one paper 1 i frnm a town like Newberry is all j these big papers care for, and that 5 J one happens not to be The Herald f;and News, which is entirely all right, 2 and *we are not protesting, and I i reckon in this purely commercial age f it is the right thing to pay the cash ?or what you get, and if your price is j i ?2 and the other fellow's is $2 the'; ,hing is to send checks and not ex- ' hange courtesies, it would be too un-! businesslike to exchange. I am not a; j Pharisee but I am glad I am still just! i lif.Mp nld fashioned, at least enough i :o practice some of the courtesies and little amenities of the good old days in the south that are gone to return 10 more. But this article to which we refer makes the claim that Mr. Grist is possibly the oldest editor in South Carolina. today in continuous service on the same paper, ms service is long, and honorable, and we take off our' hat to him, because he has done good! and valiant service for South Caroli-j na, and has published a fine paper all the thirty years that he hal been with the Yorkvil'le Enquirer, and has the record of longer family service than any paper in these parts, because there are very few if any that have been handed down from sire to son for three generations in the same town. But as a matter of fact there are two or three newspaper men in South Carolina who have a record longer than Mr. Grist. Mr. N. G. Osteen, our good friend of Suniter, if I he is still connected with the paper in that town, as we suppose he is, dates his newspaper career back in the fifties of the last century and the last time I saw him he was young and active. Then here in Newberry my contemporary, Mr. W. H. Wallace, has been connected directly with the newspaper business in this town certainly back to 1876, and I believe a little further back than that, and he is still young and vigorous and virile. I know he was the editor of the Newberry Herald, published by Mr. Thos. F. Greneker, as far back as 1877, be-) cause it was then that I came to New- J f A \TttrKnwtr nA1 1 orro T>ni?k i UCilJf I \J J VVliV^v* x A WV} for a few years of that time he was professor in the Columbia Methodist college for women, and after that superintendent of the Newberry schools and for one year editor of the Daily Greenville News, ;but all the while he kept his interest in the Observer which was founded<? by him and Mr. J. H. M. Kinard and Mr. William P. Houseal in the early eighties. It is a long and honorable career. You will pardon me for being personal, but as "this is a sort of personal retrospect I may be allowed to mention that in 1887, on March'7, in partnership with Mr. William -P. Houseal we bought The Herald and News from Mr. A. C. Jones and that partnership lasted for several1 years, and if my mathematics is not incorrect it has been or soon will be thirty four, years since that took place, and I have been continuously and consecutively connected with the paper all {the years since that date as its editor. | During the time of this partnership i we published the Annals'of Newberj ry and did many things, that were ! not profitable financially to us, but as I see it, a good service to the county antf state. Of course this sounds l''ke ancient history .to many of the present generation, and especially that I succeeded as the owner (at least nominally) of the printing business. Just a few days ago a letter came to Newberry addressed to Auill - - * ' [and iiouseai puansners miu uuuivJ binders, and it was returned to the writer because the postoffice knew of no such firm in Newberry, and of course did net know that I was successor to the business, or it could have been delivered to me. It was simply an inquiry .about one of the several publications that we got out at a financial 'loss, I just mention this to show how soon we are forgot in this age. So far as I know I am the only one by the name who ever had ' -- so little sense as to gp miu cue vuuutry newspaper business, and yet I do not regret it, because I feel that I have been able to render a service to the people, and then I just like the Work. Of course my boys have naturally drifted into it. and I hope they may be able not only to serve, but to get more financial remuneration than I have. They are better prepared and equipped than I was or am, j and all they need is the sticking J plaster. I remember, as if it were but yesterday, when Mr. Houseal proposed that, we buy The Herald and News, and how I never had a cent and didn't know how I was going to buy anything, but with the help of friends ] was able to raise my part of the cash payment, and 1 have Struggled all the years, and had many ups and downs. 11 was just in the act of accepting an offer I had received from Florence when I got Mr. Houseal's proposition. Some day or night I am going .to finish this story. There may be some i who will not be interested in the readins, .but I opine there are others whe will be, and it is well sometimes t'c take a retrospect. Though the files oi The Herald and News and its immedate back to the fifties of the last century and ever : into the forties I hav-e 'had longer coni tinuous service on the paper than anj other one person. It is now like aj member of my family, and I hope j that the boys will be able to take up! the work of getting out the paper i after I am gone, and that for the next two or three generations there may be some one or more of the name connected with it. I have the files of the paper back to 1849 in my library and almost continuously down to the! k I present. They contain a very valu- j able history of the county and much j that pertains to the state. Some day. when I get where I will not be soj busy with the daily grind I am going | to get them 'out and publish some no- j tices and items from these old pap-. ers. But enough for this time. E. H. A. j I V j k ??AXTr> rur crurtrtt c A : c Aiviunu i nc< v i/ . <t \ rairview According to his promise Mr. A. j H. Counts came to Newberry on Wed- j nesday and we drove down to Fair- j view reaching the school about ten j o'clock or a little earlier. It was the; i. coldest day of the winter so far. and.1 even a Ford going part of the time j in low did not keep yotfr feet any tr.n warm Rnt the roads are not bad and much better than I expected to find them, and we made the trip right along. If the roads had a machine like the town machine to be run over them after -the rains they would be fine for the country as roads go in this county. The school at Fairview is taught .by Mr. Willie Hack Derrick ' " n ? r ? tt ana ivuss sammie j-iou nttre aau there is an enrollment of around fifty, but the school will scarcely be able to Keep up the average attendance necessary to participate in the I equalizing fund, though an eight I mills tax lias been voted. A new school house has been erected herej within the last couple of years and; it needs a little more to complete it T3ii+ ?f 4c vorv rrtomv and rClil/l 1 y -u u u xKt iu * v* j * ; comfortable. ;j[ j spent a couple of hours with thg school and the work; seems to be .getting on well. The; . children are iibright and interested; and I believe Adding good work. Two; of the trustees,Mr. M. A. Hammi . and Mr. S. P/Mills, came over while! we were there, 1 ..'.j , r<r"- ! . i From Fairvicfw we drove over to j i tfop nee-ro school which fe a joint j school for Fail-view and V/heelandj j districts. It is taught by M. G. Hare, I-and the"bui!diW? is small and uncom-j j fortable, very Similar to all tKfe negro,^ I schools in the?1 county. The room is ! about 14' by 1$ and thefce are 90 chil-.;, \ R '* I dren enrolled $nd they are packed in | | the small room, with scarecely room.' ! to do proper ^ork, though the teach-'j J ing by Haiys seemed to be of the right i I kind and the iWfaft of order prevailed.J.I, { One of the colored trustees, named | ? I Dominick, own! some land adjoining!, I , 1 . 1 , ' " ! the church property on which the j ^ I present building is located, and he of-j^ j fers to sell four acres for a school at j ^ ja very reasonable price and to con-!^ | tribute $100 toward the building,).. i and I tihink we may be able to get j n I some other contributions down that;. j side, and I am going to try to do so! and get some of that Rosenwald mon-1 ' ey and put up a .building here during; ^ the coming summer. It seems to me j ^ almost a prodigal .waste of money to j undertake to have school in some of j the buildings for the colored folk j the county, and while we can get the j ^ j money from these northern philan,- j ^ i thropists who seem anxious to help ^ | the colored people, I am going to get I -11 il..i T ? I Uli IIIUO X I ' j r ' 1 - ^ ^ | Q Mount Pilgrim In going over to the negro school;^ we undertook a near road and as a! i r result got stuck. There were several jA ivery bad mudholes and the ground a being partly frozen and partly not we could not tell how the mud was, and so at one of them the wheels went j g 5 ?J r\ J down to the anxies ana we ;i?u ^ help to get out. I walked on to the j t school so as -to save time, and ^oon _ Mr. Counts came along, hut it threw us a little off the schedule, but we , drove up to Mr. S. A. Quattle'oaum's :' a little after 12 o'clock and soon had I I one of those gool old country dinners! !for which this county is so famous. Ii * i ' ? !j enjoyed very much the hospitality of j A , j Mr. and Mrs. Quattlebauim and the; j " J? Uori VkPPn nrpoared. I t '' nnc amner waitu n?u vw*. ?A( | After dinner we drove over td the | 1 . i school and I was delighted to see j i j some dozen or more of the men of! ! the community at the school waiting < , for us. Whenever you can get the fa-1 * i thers of the children to meet you at! j the school house it is a good sign that; i . there is a good modicum of that line j I school spirit which is so necessary w ! the building of a good community ^ centre, and the only kind that is real- i > ly worth while is a good school. f This school is taught this session : j by Mrs. Annette Long Brooks, a ( - teacher of experience and the chil i 11 dven are bright and there is fine work I 1 i being done by Mrs. Brooks. 1 There is need here for a new r school house, and it would be well to : I 1 Haltiwang* v p. I ou u Saturday, Janui h AT ONE-HALF PR ^^0+ Qm'lo WUCIL kJU.ll/O Skirts Shirt Waists Furs Ladies 'Silk Underwe Ladies' and Children' Ladies' and Children' Sweaters Pepperal Sheeting Jersey Petticoats Pa jama Checks . AT BI< Silk and Cotton Umb Silk and Cotton Hos< . Spool Cotton Brassiers Corsets * S Silks '' - Wool Dress Good^ ... Romper Cloth Cheviots . ;; OOuting Gowns Muslin Underwear Men's Wool Shirts /..Men's Work Shirts Curtain Draperies *' > ; ' * ' ' * ' _ . . Haltiwang The Grow ; . ave an arrangement by which the m a igh school children ^could attend thei *" igh school at Prosperity, as many of I -'l hem are now doing, but to send all;he children there would not be to j heir best interest, and it seems to; Cct le that there is need for the build-! ng of a new school house away from; he church and somewhere out on the j A lain sn as t.rt hp P.asilv accessible! nrir ? j o all the children and the people as yea /ell. And a part of the district migftt',e(iJ ell go to Midway and I think will.! ^ I am going back, some time soon to an(j ake the business part over with the the; len and women o? the community, j ^ Vherever you can find -the people j ^ uffic-iently interested and not too! g0u iusy so that they may come out to j " neet you at the school house on an j**." ccasion like ray visit, there is greatncouragement to do something and, and o undertake something with the fine j ton rospect of accomplishing results, 0W1 nd this is the case here. E. H. A. - ?- ? j hog Chinese women are adopting our' oat: tyle cf footwear. That's all right,' 0U? J - >i ? ^ 4-u^.v, Las o long as tney aon t go iaiui? wau he feet.' ! tho j f00, Hastings Seeds J 1921 Catalog Free ise' It's ready now. 116 handsomely it* 0? ustrated pages of worth-while seed ?r md garden news. This new catalog, ^ ve believe, is the most valuable seed gur jook ever published. It contains rep wenty full pages of the most popular jur] regetables and flowers in their natu- mQ. al colors, the finest work of its kind Bpe ;ver attempted. j .< With our photographic illustrations, ' ttie md color pictures also from photo- tlie graphs, we show you just what you jrow with Hastings' Seeds even be- ^ 'ore you order the seeds. This cata- or og makes garden and flower bed out >lanning easy and it should be in ev- j ;ry single Southern home. Write us : gup i |)ost-card for it, giving your name j Bur md address. It will come to you . caE jy return mail and you will be mighty i jlad you've got it. ! 8ay Hastings' Seeds are tne stanaara ; )f the South and they have the larg- j sst mail order seed house in the world jack of them. They've got to be the I jest. Writd now for the 1921 cata- "be log. It is absolutely free. ; H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, ' g ATLANTA, GA. { Qf , i ?r & Carper f in Buy ! arv 22nd. And y * ,s Lots Last ICE AT LESS THA OLD PI Outing Dress Gingha Ladies' and C Remnants Co aV, , Goods , s Coats Percales s Long- Cloth Laces Oil Oloth ' Cotton Pettic Embroideries G PRICE REDUCTIONS rplla.s Cotton and I e mask Bed Spreads 'Towels .Men's Winte: Women's Wii Children's 1 wear Bath Robes Wool Blanke Cotton Blank TTT ? ni. women s <jii Children's G Window Sha > ' ;> <> ; mnmmmm?mmmammmmamm mmmmmmBsmtntmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmm er & Carpei ing Store of New 4iF YOUR LIVING :? SMUT MONEY COST ' <8> <$> <8> ton Production Costs Can Be Cut. Mr. in .Half By .Food And Grain livered Making And Saving ' T:M .tlanta, Georgia?(Sp6clal.)?"High r arT for entton. such a3 we had'-ai 'Mew r ago cannot reasonably ,be expectCor a long time to come. European , ntries that normally use half our sc0 p are so thoroughly disorganized' day, J* paralyzed in a business.way-tlUrt Outlaw y will not be able to take tl? ^ , al quantities and pay high prices .y many years to come," said' H; G. stings, President of the great1 play tl itheastem Fair. - . .. ?.. j jpj. Thi3 situation which we cannot | . * , troi, calls for lower costs of mak-j cotton as well as reduction in cot- j "ay> acreage. The quickest; safest; urday, ! most effective way to reduce ccftriviy Jan. making cost is to produce on one's 1 acres.every pound of food, grain . forage needed for family, tenaiiCs WIGH [ laborers and live stock. The situation requires cfciqkens, ^ant* ;s, milk cov^s and acres of corn, s, wheat, forage and miscellanecrops from which to feed them. it, but not least, in importance, is News i home vegetable garden: which is q0 quickest and cheapest source of , , 4 to the. world. j W?htl Most folks here in the South don't 'tsve gu p fhp hnmp. carden seriously and has all reby make a great mistake.' There jsjj. too many of the 'lick and a prom- i , sort of gardens and mighty few ! ir& the real sure enough kind. j Seco We have been told repeatedly by fare ar se who plan and prepare for a real ^ion den, plant it, tend it and keep it j TJ. lanted through the season, that it j aishes'half the family living at no { To '> aey cost except the small amount presenl nt for the seeds needed. i for a i The garden is, or rather should be, earliest planted. It brings food quickest. It starts cutting store every j s for food the first week anything other s ready to use. A little later, half officers more needed for the table comes . . of the garden. j ' If rightly tended and replanted It over u: plies food all summer and fall, the ing1 ma plus above daily needs goes. into is or is dried for winter use. Yes, right kind of garden is a lifeer, and we all need a life-saver of Dire j kind in 1921." is pro] may s i* J V!, i . 'resicient-eiect* naraing ana nu j union st minds" of the senate will hav?; would whole-hearted* support o| Count ns,torff in hacking up the treaty Subs Versailles. News, * iter, Inc. Here ' ' * * \f 4 . ... , ,, . > ' i As Long ' r: V ... j - /- ; . V N ONE-HALF RICES *""** ' ' :K 71>V . rvriiv,- , ? ' 7*1 fi?: C-'.'.t; I ma,,,,' ,?>I Children's Hats tton.and ;;Wool . v ~:o) r fmrti't j i 'ii i 10 V j/itj* cl \ .vj .v/ia rJ;jo .>, : > lv^rrsiaii 9.?jv - v -Mm .f o&ts v ^ | i- UtfoHe ffftrfl t'.r ;v. *> .*' 'f "**> -7->ru Tt>> - J ..V' * ' - *v : <<- tvv.tf; ^ : - i inen-'Table Da- | f?xtf J&.U : < 't-nsn*&b }* ' \ : 'i. iisv ?.& n J*' p Underwear <- /. . ? IT V J?' J-' Liv. ~ A ^ : # iter u,?ua we?x . N Winter .Und6rr ... >> *f ?' **. its ' ' ' , rets ' % .igham Dresses i | > ingham Dresses des : r Ima f LltCI, Hit* 'L . 1 v h * +r' ' - - > <. ;r -j \ *1. j* berry V- -'' - ^ W }' *7 ' ' ' : - I 3> 3> ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ COLLEGE NEWS :. I >0v <?><$><&.$> <?>.<& & <&<?><$<!? &$<& E. J. Green of Newberry dean interesting address to the C. A.. Sunday afternoon, Januberry defeated B. M. X -in a ^ ball game Friday, Jan; 14 by re of 42 to 29. Then on Tuesm. 18, Newberry .defeated the rs from Columbia, the score S3 to 23. The basketball squad ?ave Newberry Thursday, to te Pacific \MiIls "Y" in Colum om fthere it will ga to Charlesplay Charleston College* Fri-. im 21, Hiiil the Citadel on Sat the 22ndr;j.T -< "l J 19, l&lco B. J. C. TMAN ^fiiON WARPATH "A fe- ' . . < ~ #? '. "? State rl&ffhway Cotomiwion Moliihed. ijrwrrr?? ind Courier, lumbia,i: r.Jtan. 18.?Senator nan of'.Saluda got his Iegislatn into idttion again today. He ready introduced .bills to abol- . s the tax commission. nd, the aboard of .Public Wei- ^ id today he .proposed the aboli cS?r\ ?.' . d, the '.Highway Commission, supplement, his bills today he < ted a general resolution asking / detailed. report on all salaries. r ntral idea is to get exactly what ) >tate officer, clerk, professor or itate employee is being paid. If are paid from two sources he the details. The resolution went ntil tomorrow an objection be^ ^ !?*** Avlin4?A AAnav/lAMflATI UC tu nmucvuatc August Kohn. ct telephonic communication mised with Cuba, so that we oon be 2'ole to talk to her. unately, many of our citizens r? <n _ _i.: ?<.?> V>?>^ preici luunuig <n? scribe to The Herald and Newa $2.00 a year. _ , - 1 - \ - . . . . . > -im