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The Alamance gleaner | VQL' LIL GRAHAM, N, C., THURSDAY JANUARY 27, 1927. NO. 51. || WHAT'S GOING ON | NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Prewdent Justifies His Nica ? ragua Policy and Ac cuses Mexico. EXPLAINING and Justifying his Latin American policy. President Coolldge in a special message to con gress related the events that have led up to the administration's action In the case of Nicaragua, and directly accused the Mexican government of promoting the revolution In that coun try that, he said, Is endangering the lives and property of American dti aens and the interests of the United States In Nicaragua?the latter being the canal route rights and the lease of a navy base on the Gulf of Fon seca. These rights and American In vestments, Mr. Coolldge asserted, placed a "peculiar responsibility" on the United States In Central America. While disclaiming any desire of In tervention in their Internal affairs, the President declared that "the sta bility. prosperity, and independence" of the Central American republics "can never be a matter of Indiffer ence to us," and served notice on President Calles of Mexico and all others concerned that the United States will not tolerate "the Jeopardiz ing' of American Interests" and Im pairment of constitutional government In'that region. "It hqve tbe most conclusive evi dence,'"ihald President Coolldge, "that armjTani) muhitlons In Urge quan tities have been on several occasions since August, 1926, shipped to the rev olutionlsU In Nicaragua, "Boats carrying tbese munitions have been fitted out In Mexican ports and some ef tbe munitions bear evi dence of having belonged to the Mexi can government. It aleo appears that the ships were fitted out with the full knowledge of and, In some cases, with the encouragement of Mexican offi cials, and Were, In one Instance, at least, commanded by a Mexican naval reserve officer." The President told of the starting of the revolution and the election of Adolfo Diaz as president-designate by the congress, argufng that that elec tion was quite constitutional. On Wednesday Secretary of State Kel logg, appearing before the senate for eign relations committee, presented the samo arguments, amplified tbe ad ministration policy and then declared his department was In possession of documentary proof that the Mexican government had been active not only In arming the Nlcaraguan revolution ists but also In plotting the bolshevik - penetration of Central America to the Injury of the Dnited States. Senator Borah, chairman of the committee, was unconvinced and made a long speech attacking the adminis tration's policy. It wga predicted In Washington, however, that the mes *age and Mr. Kellogg's statement would serve to bring a majority of congress to the support of the Presi dent in the course he Is pursuing. Tbe house committee on foreign af fairs also undertook an examination of the situation but spent much of Its time in partisan squabbling. Meanwhile efforts were being made 'a Nicaragua to bring about peace. Leading liberals proposed a confer ?ce and the conservatives seemed willing to hold such a meeting with "ear Admiral Latimer as arbitrator. S>casa vetoed the plan but It seemed be might be ignored by a large faction of his party. Considerable reinforce ments to the American naval forces Nlcaraguan waters were on their , way, and Admiral Latimer established j ?ew nentral zones. ' PROM the Mexican government came a denial, in general terms, of ike accusations In President Coolldge'i g e concerning anti-American Wotting in Central America. With this flsdalmer was a suggestion that any American aggrieved by enforcement of '?he oil and alien land laws flle a claim ?t compensation with the Mexican American mixed claims commission ?""tltuted while Mr. Hughes was sec of state. However defiant he may aeem to be, It Is certain President Calles is not looking for trouble with the United States, for he has enough of that already within his own country. There was a new outbreak of Catho lic uprisings In various regions In which scores were killed In street fighting and other scores were exe cuted by the government. Bishop Pascual Dlax, secretary of the Catho lic episcopate, and other prelates were arrested on charges of sedition, and Monslgnor Diaz was taken to Vera Cruz, ? presumably to be exported. These ar rests Immediately followed tlte proc lamation, Issued In El Paso, Texas, of a state of revolution In Mexico, and the setting up of a government with Bene Caplstrano Garza, a Catholic leader, as provisional president Jose F. Gandara, "chief of military opera tions," said fifteen thousand rebels were under arms in Mexico, not In cluding various Independent groups in the south. Durango and other towns were reported captured by the revolu tionists, and an American correspond ent says the rebel bands are burning bridges and ranch houses, wrecking railways and generally harassing the government forces. * I OVER In China, where our naval forces are active or ready to become so at need, matters seemed to have qnleted down a little pending the expected movement of the Can tonese armies against Shanghai. The foreign authorities In' that city have formally warned the Chinese against Invading the foreign concessions and their police force and volunteer units have been ordered to keep them oat by force of arms. Warcraft of the' several foreign nations concerned, in cluding the United States, are concen trating at Shanghai. Admiral Wil liams went from Manila on the U. S. S. Pittsburgh and resumed command of eight American destroyers already there, and Admiral Sir Reginald Tyr whltt arrived to command the British squadron. All up the Yangtse, whence foreigners were fleeing, the antl-for elgn feeling was growing stronger and the prospects for a serious conflict at Shanghai were good. > Eugene Chen, foreign minister of the Cantonese government, urges the United States to take no part In the opposition to the occupation of Shang hai by the Nationalist forces, saying the Cqntonese would enter that city, not as conquerors, but as conservers of the work done by the foreigners during the last century. The British authorities In Hankow are reported to have demanded the speedy return of the British concession there. Repre sentatives of the Peking government are said to have "suggested" that the foreign concessions In that city be handed over to the Chinese. v-v EFEATED In all their efforts for \J a "big navy" except a provision for the construction of a new dirigible, the advocates of strong national de fenses last week turned their attention to the War department supply bill, seeking to boost the budget bureau figures by about $8,000,000. Here Is what they wanted to do: 1. To Increase the army's enlisted personnnel from 115.000 to 118.750. v 2. To Increase the dally ratiop al lowance 5 cents a day per man. 3. To Increase the allowance for the National Guard establishment by $800, 000 and that for the officers' organ ised reserves by $460,000. 4 To provide Increased funds for the reconditioning of the army trans port grant and the purchases of 725 additional mnles and 15.000 horses. 5. To provide $310,000 for the erec tion of sorely needed buildings at West Point. > ?r The house committee rejected most of the budget bureau economies FL'LL Indorsement of the new Mc Nary-Haugen farm relief bill was laid before the honse agriculture com mittee by four farm organisations?the American Farm Bureau federation, the Cotton Growers* exchange, the Corn Belt federation and the execu tive committee of twenty-two. In rlew of this organised nctlon Chairman Haugen said his committee might not wish to consider fnrther either the Aa well or Cnrtls-Crlsp bills, particular ly since the equalisation fee. which has been the center of farm-relief con trocersy. was approved by a 13-to-d vote. ? I OSTENSIBLY btmuw of hi* coo oectlon with railway and coal companies, the appointment of Cym* E. Woods of Pennsylvania to the In terstate commerce commission wjis disapproved by the senate committee on Interstate commerce by a vote of 8 to 6. The contest thus was trans ferred to the floor of the senate, where It was expected the senators from Virginia, West Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky wonld lead the opposition to Woods and those from Pennsylvania would support the nomination. The committee held to be unfounded the charge, made by Senator Steck of Iowa, that Senator-elect Brookhart of Iowa had been a paid lobbyist for Woods. Mr. Steck already had with drawn the charge. THOROUGH Investigation of report ed graft and scandal In the opera tion of the "nnder cover" branch of the prohibition service will be made by the senate, which adopted a resolu tion to that effect Introduced by Reed of Missouri. Mellon, Andrews and Blair are Instructed to furnish all the correspondence In the department re lating to the special agenta, their or ders and their expenditures. This In quiry Is expected to bring out the facts concerning the operation by A. Bruce Blelaskl of a speak-easv club In New York to trap bootleggers and patrons, and also concerning the re ported operation of stills by dry agents. Governor Ritchie of mary land, on Mils third inauguration, reaffirmed bis stand for the rights of states against "encroachment of cen tralized federal government" and de cried sumptuary laws -regulating per sonal practices and relations. He didn't mention next year's Presiden tial campaign and Its possibilities, but all through the hall were gold banners bearing the words: "Ritchie for Pres ident." Governor Moore of New Jersey In his annnal message advocated a state prohibition referendum -and repeal of the state enforcement net. ? GOVERNOR PINCHOT of Pennsyl vania has refused to certify, in the usual form, the election of W. S. Vare as senator, according to a letter from him read to tfe senate. Certi fying "that on the faie of the returns Vare appears to have been chosen by the qualified electorate," Governor Plnchot expressed the gplnlon that his nomination was "partly bought and partly stolen" and that the election, as well as the primary, were tainted with frauds. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA may be relied on to keep the country sup piled with scandals. Just as the Almee Semple McPherson sensation died with the dismissal of the charges against her, Mrs. Charlie Chaplin be gan suit for divorce from the famous screen star, whom she accused of all sorts of things. Including cruelty and Infidelity. Charlie had left Los An geles, whereupon a court there ap pointed receivers for all his property and his palatial residence and movie studio. Mrs. Chaplin in her bill estl mated her husbantTa wealth at $16. 000,000. of which she declared $10, 000.000 Is community property; from which (t Is seen that she will demand approximately $5,000,000 If a decree Is granted? . < i . ii. DR. JULIG8 CURTIUS, former minister of economics snd mem ber of the People's party, has been ap pointed chancellor of Germany by President too Hindenburg and is try ing to form a new cabinet based on a coalition of the bourgeois parties. He bas the support of Foreign Minister Stresemann, the chief figure today In German politics, but Berlin Is skeptl cat about his prospects of forming n government that will stand up. SEVENTY-FIVE children were killed and many others Injured as the result of a blase In a moving pic ture theater In Montreal. When the flames broke out the children rushed In panic for a door leading from n bal cony, and In less than ten minutes the tragedy was over, most of the deaths being from smoke asphyxiation and suffocation. "o"' ?n Michigan to Save "Hiawatha Land" m k?r ,tate Park? l? section of , J*alfan'a upper peninsula called Hia l land may be purchased by the 7" to preserve a share of the In W If a project under way tae ?ute department of ceoserva JJ" 1? luccesafuL The altee. now pri on? owned' are Tahqaamenon falls. 7"?ured Rocks, Porcupine moun la the vicinity of Ontonafon. ^ "oat unique of all, Kltch-lt-i-kl-pl. the Big spring, which Is situated Dear | liantstit)ue. . The Immortal hunting grounds of Hiawatha, famed by Longfellow, hare changed little since the red men roamed the woods. The advance of civilization has not marred the lonely silence, and a primeval hush protects Its traditions. It was Henry Howe Schoolcraft, one time Indian agent at Mackinac Island and Sanlt Ste. Marie, friend of the OJlbwfya, who detailed Indian life and lore to Longfellow. To the northward broods the sol emn and overwhelming majesty of Gltchl-Guml, Big Sea Water, the mighty Superior. To the south stretch Michigan and Huron. Between these latter sparkles the northern jewel, the Fairy Isle, called S?lchlllmackinac by the Ojlbways. The Tahquamenon or "Black Water" falls are the largest of the northern falls. 90 feet In height and 200 feet wide. Far from the haunts of men,, as yet. they ara accessible only by riv er 'rip from Mew berry. SECRETS IN THE OLD DRUM By H. M. EGBERT (Copyright, by W. Q. Chapman ) JIMMY S PENCE looked wistfully at hit grandfather. He waa only five yeara old, and did not under atand many things, bnt he won dered especially why he most not speak to the old gentleman to whose house he went sometimes. Nobody would tell him that, not eren his grandmother, who was so kind to him. Bnt nbthlng had ever stood between Joslah Spence and his happiness except his pride. He was called hard, bnt It was the hardness Of a man ready to melt If the proper solvent conld be applied. If his only son, Tom, had been will ing to say he was wrong, Joslah would have forgiven him. But the boy had never said he was wrong, not even when he was a baby. So the two had lived within three blocks of each other, and had not spoken for ten years. Tom was married, and Joslah knew his wife quite well by sight, though I he never recognized her. He knew that his wife and Tom's met at Tom's house, and when little Jimmy began to be brought to his home Joslah said nothing. But he would not recognize the lad, or admit his existence. If Tom had only said he was wrong 1 Upstairs, In the attic, were Tom's playthings, the woolly horse, the brok en soldiers, and the big drum with the slip In It Sometimes Joslah went up and looked at them and thought of the days when Tom had been hla little boy, before the stubborn nature developed In him. The mother felt that it was Tom's duty to make up with father. Joslah was growing old. If Tom would say he had been to blame I But Tom re fused, and It seemed likely that his father would go to his grave without a reconciliation. She had hoped that little Jimmy's advent would change the situation. But Joslah, although secretly mo.ved by the sight of the child, did not budge from his position. Let Tom say ha had been wrong, and he would open his house to him and his wife. In despair, the mother made a final ap peal to Tom. i "I won't aay I was wrong, because I wasn't," was Tom's- answer. There matters rested, and the years began to go by. Little Jimmy was sev en now, and still his grandfather had never spoken to him. Jimmy won dered more Ind more. Some day he would have to-'be told. Joslah Spence was seventy-five. He was growing weaker, and he was soft ening with age. However, he did not soften toward Tom. But he longed for a reconciliation as only a stub born nature longs for what It cannot obtain. He tu seated in the attic, where he often went now, thinking of the boy he had lost. He was looking over Tom's toys and ahaklng his 'head. "He wonld never say he was sorry," he mattered. "Let him say he was sorry. If he said that I'd forgive blm. Let him say it" As be fingered the dram the convex edge, brittle with age, parted in his hands. The dram csuja apart In his hands. To the old man's astonish ment be saw that the interior was filled with scraps of paper in a faded, childish writing. He recognised it aa Tom's. He picked op one of them. "Dere father," be read, "I am sorry that I broke the pane of glass yestld day." Joslah started. The pane of glass! He remembered that as well aa be remembered anything. Tom had thrown a stone and it bad gone smash through the window. Tom had bong his head when taxed with It, bat bad refused to say he had been wrong. Joeiah picked op another. "Dere fa ther," it ran. "I am sorry that I tor my trousls yeatldday." Joslah did not remember that Tom most have torn a good many pairs of ?trousls" In his boyhood. "Dere father," another read. "I am sorry that I got a bad repot from skooL" That Joeiah remembered. Tom had done very badly that term, and he had been wilfully defiant He had even bragged of it Joslah picked up scrap after scrap. There must' have been fifty of them, covering almost the entire period of Tom's boyhood. The latest of them, in the firm writing of a young fellow of nlqgteen, ran thus: "Dear Father: I have never been able to say that I waa sorry for any thing. and I am unable to do so now. I want to. But I cant Perhaps our natures are pretty much the same. Perhaps you would be able to under stand If you were ever to see this. But you never will. "You think me idle and worthless because I threw over that position in the bank. It Is not that, father. I am throwing It up boeauao I mean to start out (or myself In the electrical business. I would have told you if you had been willing to listen to rea son. But you would have It I was wrong. And so I hsve said nothing. For having wounded you I am sorry." Joslsh laid down the drum and put back the scraps of psper. Tom hsd msde good. Tom hsd been right 'And that was the one time where he should not have said he was sorry. Be, Joslsh, bad been wrong there. The tears came Into his eyes as he thought of the ten years of loneliness. Ten years of missed happiness, and not many more to come. At seventy live one does not look forward to a great deal. The old man wept. Presently, moved by an uncontrol able impulse, he took up a pen and paper. "Dear Tom, I am sorry for everything," he wrote, and thrust the scrap of psper Into the drum. He glued the broken ends together lightly and went out with bowed head. The next day a wonderful thing hap pened to little Jimmy. Uls grandfa ther gave him a drum. It was so amazing that he was quite Incoherent when he got home with his treasure. Be showed it to his mother. "What did he sayT" she asked, ex citedly. "Nothing, mamma. He Just put It In my band. Look what a line drum! Qlve me something to hit It with, mamma 1" That evening, when the little boy was asleep In bed, she told her hus band and showed the drum to him. Tom looked and looked at It. "It's my old drum!" he cried. "I recognise It Jean, do you suppose the old man means anything by It?" "We can't tell, dear," she answered. "Oh, Tom, If only you could say you are sorry." "And Td give everything In the world If I could, Jeenle," answered her husband. "But I can't It's a physical Impossibility for me now, be cause I've never said It I used to try to when I was ? boy, and never could." "Perhaps your father Is the seme way," answered Jean. "Well, there seems to be nothing we can do," said Tom. "But I wonder why he gave Jimmy that drum?" He took It in his hands, and as he did so the glueing came apart. The drum parted; out dropped the little heap of old letters. Tom stared at them speechlessly as the memory of them came back to him. "What Is this, dear?" asked his wife. "Look! Dere father, I am sorry I sat on yore bat'" "I wrote them," answered Tom grim ly. "1 used to slip them In there. I couldn't say It to his face." "Why, they are all confessions, Tom," said Jean. "And who wrote this. 'Dear Tom, I am sorry for ev erything*?" Tom took the paper In his father's writing and looked at It Gently he laid It down. When Jean looked at him she saw that his eyes were full of tears. "I guess wc were both the lame, after all," be Mid. "Tom, deareet?" "I'm going to him." And, twenty mlnotea later Joalah Spence, Implacable, nnawerrlng. opened the door, to see Tom and his wife standing there together. He con trolled his emotion with a violent ef fort, and waited. Bnt the words died on Tom's Hps. Then Jean stepped forward. "He can't My It, bnt I can," she said. "He's sorry. Tom, aren't yon sorry, dear?" ' Tom nodded. "And yon, father? Aren't yon a tiny little bit sorry r she continued, to Joslah. "Sorry? For what, madam?" de manded the old man. Jean wasn't feaxed. "Never mind your tongue?Just nod," she said. "You're both the Mme, yon men. Now ?arerft you a tiny bit sorry y "Not la the least," Joslah answered ?and nodded. And with a cry of hap piness Jsen drew the two men's bands together. Jimmy Is nine now, and he baa al most forgotten the days when bis grandfather did not speak to blm. They are the best of friends and spend boors together In the fields and coun tryside. Then there are the happy evenings by the fireside, when grand father tells wonderful stsrtM of Tom's childhood. On the wan hangs the drum. It fa cracked and broken, but sometimes grandfather will take It down and show Jimmy how Tom used to march when he was a tittle boy of his own age. Original Stamplmehnam Steeplechase U ? horse racs In which the competitors have to sur mount obstacles, such as hedfes and ditches. In order to reach the winning post The tlrst racs of the kind was ran In Ireland by a party of fox hunters, who actually mads a distant church steeple the goal of the im promptu race. Such matches soon grow la favor, and steeple^haslng bo came a recognised branch' of boras lidog. Mdfffife (?Wfc (Prepared by the National Geographic | Society. Washington. D. G) WHILE many Southern states j are feeling the burden of a huge cotton crop at low 1 prices. North Carolina, which not only raises cotton but has also < come to manufacture cotton goods on I a large scale, can see the other side I of the picture. 1 North Carolina Is passing through < a renaissance.' Dne to her steadily In- i tenslfylng 'shift from cotton fields to ' mill centers and from once-Idle J streams to throbbing dynamos, she has suddenly rediscovered herself on the threshold of Industrial power. ( The legendary North Carolinian who In the HOe called his three 1 daughters Rosin, Tar and Turpentine, would today be naming them after cigarette brands, furniture trademarks and cotton-goods patterns. Charlotte, situation between the big hydroelectric developments along the Catawba and Yjnikln rivers, Is a plexus of this new industrialism. In the last 15 years the number of tex tile mills operating within a 100-mlle radlns of that city has been Increased fivefold, with a present splndleage of 10,000,000. An hour's ride beyond Chsrlotte Is Gastonta, one of the largest textile centers In the United States. Of Its 20.000 people, about three-fourths are workers In the 42 mills whose tall stacks cnt the sky. Yet, In the town's brosd, tree-shaded streets, lined with neat cottages on well-kept, flower fringed plots, one feels no oppressive sense of concentrated Industry, but rather the rest fulness of some model suburb, widespread to run, air and surrounding countryside. With mill workers' cottages rentable at $3 a month, with water and electric light free, and a mild climate, neces sitating little fuel, which Is obtainable at cost. It Is not uncommon for moun tain families to work at Gastonla long enough to pay off their farm mort gage and then return to the Blue Ridge Gaston county contains 96 textile mills, which represent one sixth of the state's total splndleage and consume almost one-third of her cotton crop. Winston-Salem's Factories. Another center of importance In North Carolina's new Industrialism Is Winston-Salem. It has been designat ed "the twin city" since Its component towns were merged In 1913, hat no twins rrer showed greater dissimilar ity than old Salem and yonthfnl Win ston. Here one has the stsitely Eighteenth centnry and th? industrial Twentieth century side by side, with a mere street or so acting as the hyphen. Snlem signifies that "peace" which was sought by the persecuted Morav ian* who founded It In 1753. And that "peace" has never forsaken old Salem. Cross a few streets and one Is amid Winston's humming bee hives of Industrialism, where 15X100 wage-earners are turning out their dally tralnloads of manufactured to bacco, furniture and textiles on a scale that leads Cncle Sam to rate Wtnston-Salem as the South's second Industrial dts. A circle enclosing Winston-Salem with the denims center of Greensboro and the furniture center of High Point delimits an Industrial patch 30 miles across, representing an annual prod acts value of more than 1300,000,000. Winston-Salem's stamp-sticking ma chines consume annually the most ex penal va meal In the world?a matter of $100X100X100 worth of Undo Sam's hunt* Mae Imprints. That Is the wmm of her federal tobacco taxes, which represent one-half of those paid by North Carditis. Worn the tobacco standpoint. North Carolina's dvtc twins are really Win ston and Durham. At Durham the Irst perfected cigarette-rolling ma Mne waa used, and ber fame for tbe 'makings" dates back to the CI Til ear. Durham finely symbolizes education ipringlng out of Industrialism, for tt s tbe seat of Duke university, which s destined by recent bequests to bo tome one of the country's greatest renters of learning. Social welfare iprlnfctng out of education Is as finely ?ymbollzed by the nearby state nul lity at Chapel Bill. Land of the Sky. But all Is not Industrialism In North Carolina. In the west Is AshevUle. the gateway to what North Carolinians have well named the Land of the Sky. Never was an altitude of a half mile above sea level so nnobvlous. In all but tbe tonic atmosphere. Set In a vast bowl, Ashevllle Is encircled by mountains whose 20 highest peaks top all altitudes In the Eastern states. It was on tbe Blltmore estate, near Ashevllle, that, with tbe founding of a forestry school, the first 'steps In American forest conservation were taken. Today there are established in this region, for the protection of watersheds and hardwood 'reserves, tha Cherokee. Nan ta ha la. Cnaka and Ple gah national forests With a boundary which encloses more than 1.700X100 acres, the government had acquired, up to July, 1928, somewhat less than a fourth of this area. In tbe Ptsgab; established In 1910 as a game pt? serve, native bear and deer roam, trout streams are stocked, and herds of bison and elk have been emplanted. Surrounded by the modlshness of Ashevllle. one scarcely realizes that' only SO miles away mountaineers are living a ruggedly simple existence be hind hand-hewn timbers and on small "switchback" farms, with revolution ary looms and spinning-wheels along side their chimney pieces of native rock. The Coastal Region. A totally dlffernit part ot the stats Is tbe coastal region with Its low lands. Its numerous sounds and chan nels and Its off-shore tslsnds of sand? ?'the Banks" For centuries wild lioi ses hare been roamtng the Banks, and current tradition has It that they are descended from Barbery ponies which were brought over by Sir Wal ter Raleigh's colonists. From time to time these "hanker ponies" are round ed up and driven Into corrals made of timber from old wrecks. It la a scene with a far Western tang, flying booth, swinging lariats, and tbe flash of branding Irons. After tbe branding and calling oat, the likeliest animals are auctioned off. They bring bow only tfl a bead. A few years ago these putative descendants of Raleigh's lit tle Barbery ponies" were bringing from $50 to $123 apiece. On the ocean side of the Hatteras banks one finds the greatest wreck area on the Atlantic coast. Along the beach are the skeletons of what were once ships, now blanched victims of the sea and sand, their upstanding ribs resembling flies of grsi rut nuns. their forests of protruding spikes hs lng the grisly grass of the desert like expanse. At one point there are 14 wrecks within 100 yards. Off the great apex of the Bunks ana those dreaded quicksands, the Dia mond shoaL They are tbe mote te be dreaded because og Battens, dsn to the enormous tonnage of steel kails embedded In tbe Diamond, there is n magnetic deviation sometimes amount Ing to eight degrees The farther northward one Rills? the Banks the more remote and re source! eat seems the life of the peo ple. Often it appears to be mere ex istence. ss of castaways who haws taken root on this two-mile width hf I sand has 40 mOes aC shorn ' " kffl1 i ? Wild PonlM of tho Bank*.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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Jan. 27, 1927, edition 1
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