Newspapers / The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, … / Nov. 5, 1929, edition 1 / Page 2
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Cleveland CLAYTON, Route 1, Oct. 31.— . At Oakland church on Sunday, October 27, Rev. Mr. Li like, sup erintendent of home missions of , Granville Presbytery, preadied a forceful sermon. Rev. Chester Alexander preached at 7:30 p. m. Rev. J. S. Kennison, of Dur ham, is conducting a series of re vival services at Oakland. Preach ing each evening at 7:30. All are cordially invited. Miss Margaret Wright, who has been critically ill recently is able to Ixi out again. We wish her a speedy recovery. Quite a nuniher of children of our community are having mild cases of diphtheria but are re covering, we are glad to say. Misses Hart and Melchion and Messrs. Turner and Booker made a trip to Raleigh recently. The six months schools opened on Monday, October 28. The cot ton is almost out so wo hope the children can attend regularly. •Mrs. C. C. Young and Mr3 II. L. Boney are teaching at Piney Forest school again this year. The public and especially Dr. K N. Booker will be delighted when Middle creek bridges are rebuilt, Dr, E. N. Booker attended the .Johnston County Medical Society at Clayton Tuesday. Friends of Mr. P(vu Ccats will be sorry to know that ho Was painfully injured in an automobile accident last Sunday afternoon. One arm was broken, a rib was broken and he suffered interna] Mr. Luther Thom, of Live fc Oak, was in our community Sun- j day night. Mrs. Annie Sellers, of Selma, I spent Sunday with her daughter, I ^ Mrs. L. S. Thompson. Master Verlon Brady, of the r Creech section, spent last Thurs- j day night with Mr. Edward West.) Mr. Elmer S. Johnson, of Keniy, I was in our community Saturlay. Mr. Corbett, of Corinth-Holder3, visited friends here Saturday. Bethany KENLY, Route 2, Oct. 31.—Mrs Tommie Durham and children, of Keniy, ami Mr. W. Y. Creech and family, of Wilson, spent the week end with their mother, Mrs. K. Creech. Miss Thelma Starling, formerly of Selma school, is living in this community and attending Glen dale school. t A number of our citizens at tended the Parent-Teacher meet ing at Glendale last week. The music was especially enjoyed. Miss Clyde Atkinson ,of Glen dale, visited Miss Beatrice Stir ling Sunday. Mt. and Mrs. C. Creech, spent Sunday with Mr. Charlie Wallace near Smith field. Mrs. \V. D. Stanch spent Sat urday evening in Selma with ho*r sister, Mrs. C. A. Corbett. Brogden BENTONVILLE, Nov. 3.—Rov. W. O. Henderson filled his re-irular mjumies, lie was taken to the j Johnston County Hospital by his physician, Dr. Booker, where he j is doing as well as possible. Misses Hart and Melchion and ; Mrs. .> Stephenson spent the week | ien<l at their homes. Mr. and Mrs. RaJph. Brim ley, of ! WiusUm-Salem, spcflit tlu; week K;nd at the home of M r. F. S.; Wood. Mrs. Brim ley, nee Miss j fft Cleveland. * Bv MRS. W. T. WOODARD U Mr. J. C. Diehl and family and ! gMiss *Freddie Oliver motored to | .Raleigh Saturday. j Misses Louise Robinson and Mary Neal Clement spent last.] week end with friends in Raleigh, j Mr. Don Bailey and sister, Miss Shellie, of Wilson, were guests of ■ Miss Freddie Oliver Sunday. Rev. L. W. McFarland, of High Point, spent last Saturday with Supt and Mrs. F. M. Waters. i Mr. W. G. Upchurch, of Ra! Jeigh, was the guest of Rev. and ’ Mrs. W. J. Crain Sunday. I* Miss Lula Deans has returned Mo her home in Wilson after i spending last week with Mr. and ' Mrs.. E. .Vj, Deans. Mr. Leslie Holland, of Langley Field, Va., spent last week end here with Mr. and Mi's. E. V ^Woodard. .Mr. Holland has bee a, Jwith thy fiyiiiK, corps for several -xyears and is a brother of Mrs Woodard. Mrs. Geo. Siler was operated on • for appendicitis Sunday at the] Johnston County Hospital id Smithfield. She stood the opera tion well and her condition at | present seems satisfactory. t“'- • Twenty-two ladies from Selma .attended the Woman’s Missionary jjJJnian which met in Princeton Thursday, October 24, in annual .session. A most interesting pro gram was carried out and splen did reports were heard from the various organizations all over . Johnston county. Lunch was , ’served • on the {grounds at the neon hour. Louise Wood, Was a former pupil * -f Selma Fitzgerald r j / PIN ELEVEN, Route I, Oct.1' |S1.—Mr. and Mrs. Creamo Nar- j 1 iron, of Middlesex, were visitors £ dn our community during the I ijweek end. I Mr. Hamilton Holt, of Durham. jvisited at Mir. and Mrs. Lewis'* ^Thompson’s Sunday. | Mr. Robert Massengill a-.d v -'^Clifton Browning, of Four Oaks, I were in our community Thursday I flight. , a 'Mrs. Frank McLaughlin rhcp- F *ped in Smithfield Saturday. ii | Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Thomp son and Miss Edna Wiggs visile 1 j *1 fin the Holt Mild section Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. West had as their guests Sunday Mr. and w JMrs. Joseph Brady and children, n< <?/ Creech’s; Mr. and Mrs. Creamo | fKarron, of Middlesex; Mr. and I hi Mrs. Joseph West, of Pine Level; ce urea 01 Pine Level; and Mrs. Bud jar Oliver, of Smithfield. appointment at Mill Creek Sun day morning and night. A large crowd was present at each serv ice. Miss Julia Rose left Monday for Plainfield where she will teach this winter. Wo welcome Miss Rama Brantley of Zebu Ion into our midst as teacher of tho Mi’l ('reek school. Mr. Willis Rose i,s at home from Brooklyn, N. Y., where he has been confined in a hospital. He has been in the U. S. Navy for some time. Little Billie Toler, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Toler, has been quite sick with diphtheria but is much better. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Williams and son, of Raleigh, visited in this community last Sunday. The young people of the com munity delightfully entertained Misses Effie and Ila Williams at their home on Saturday night, October 12. The guests began to arrive at 7:30 each bringing some refreshments. After many inter esting games and stunts were en joyed, Misses Thelma Thornton and Effie Williams served delic ious candies and fruits. As the hour for departure drew near -ach guest declared he had spent x most enjoyable evening. Those present on this occasion were: Misses Flossie Adams, Kathleen and Christine A swell, Annie Dtunn, Amanda LarobcrJ, Luna and Ma mie Morris, Georgia Mae Stevens. Thelma and Erma Thornton, El ite and Ila Williams, Messrs. Gil bert Adams, I^onard Allen, Ed £ar and Weldon Bass, Jake Dunn, lari Holman, Samuel Lambert, Gardner Morris, John Stevens, Howard and Carlie Williams. ************ * Corbett-Hatcher £ * i * By MAM IB BAILEY A **#***#*###.* SELMA, Route 1, Oct. 30.— Several people from this com li unity attended the association it Creech’s church last week Misses Nonie Johnson and Sa ab McGeachy made a business rip to Smithfield Monday after Mr. W. T. Bailey attended hurch in Selma Sunday night at he Baptist church. Mr. W. A. Hawley, of Fayette ille, was a visitor here Monday, le formerly taught here in our chool and his many friends were lad to see him again. Mrs. Joe. Woodard Sr., of Glen ale, is visiting relatives here !iis week. ‘Miss Clara Fitzgerald spent the eek end at her home in I'ine evel. Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Bailey id son, Willard and Mr. Rufus hillips spent Monday afternoon j* i Wilson. S Miss Pauline Barbour spent!1 :e week end here with Miss j' el lie Hatcher. Mr. Clayton House, of Bethel, 1 as a visitor here Sunday after- - The spelling match at the school ■ ilding Friday night w as a sue- 1 ss and thoroughly enjoyed by - ise present. Mrs. A. J. Price t 3 Sfiss Matilda Brown are our a lampion spellers.” , . I Don’t forget to bring your a •lends out to Sunday school at \ airview Sunday morning at ten p ’clock. Christian Endeavor Sun ay night at seven o’clock. Every- 11 ody is invited. ’ Holt Mill i SM.ITHFIELL), Route 2, Oct. 2 9.—Mr. and Mrs. lister Worley, ]£ diss Rosa Capps and Mr. Wm. A. * Voodard made a trip to Golds- |* »oro Saturday afternoon. Mrs. J. C. Talton has returned * o her home near Princeton after ^ -pending a few days with Mrs. ^ (esse Worley. Those who attended court at ! Smithfiield Tuesday* were: Mr. an:l, VIrs. J. R. Capps and son, Frank. VIr. and Mrs. Herman Lynch, Mr. j' Mrs. Robert Webb, Mr. Je Worley and son, Wesley, Mr. Os-j' :*ar Creech, Art Wiggs and Pater Woodard, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Ty- j ner, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Worley, Mrs. Bud Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. | Leonard Capps and John Capps.; Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Thompson and little son, James Harold, and Miss Edna Wiggs, of near Pine] Level, visited in this section Sun- j day afternoon. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Worley October 24 a son. Mother j and baby are getting along nicely. (Mr. and Mrs. Lester Wor!cj, • Mrs. J. R. Capps and two daugh • j ters, Neda and Rosa and Mrs. Oscar Creech* visited Mr. and Mrs. j W. T. Hill of Sanders Chapel see- ] tion Sunday afternoon. MANY ADULTS ENROLL FLIC U. N. C. HOME STUDY CHAPEL IIILL, Oct. 23.—'Tha*; correspondence instruction in n3 longer an experiment but an as sured success is shown by some of the facts revealed by the Uni versity of North Carolina Exten sion Division and by the new cor respondence instruction catalog of that division, which has just come from the press. It is now possible to study any of 150 different University courses by correspondence. Practically all of these courses lead either to the A. B. or B. S. degree or to the ad vancement of teacher certification erdeit. There were 1G95 • individuals registered for University corre spondence work last year. This number represented a total en rollment of approximately 2500 due to the fact that many of | the students were registered for [more than one course. The enroll ment for last year showed a gain over that of previous years. fill A NTH AM DISTRICT BENTONVIDLE, P.oute 2, Nov. 3.—The fresh water has bothered many of the school trucks of this district this week, but it. is said to be about on a stand. Misses Frances Hood, of Golds boro, and Margaret Jinnette spent Sunday afternoon with Miss IIet tie Belle Cox. ‘Mr. and Mrs. George Price’s only child died last Friday mo*n inig about eight o’clock after about three weeks of illness. Misses Maude, Mildred ami Do ris Hellowell spent Sunday after noon in Goldsboro. Sanford Pennington happened to a had accident last Sunday after noon. He fell from a tree and sustained a broken foot. Misses Maggie Price, Maude IT oil oi weltl and Alvcrta Price and Mr. Seth Hollowed went to Golds ' boro Sunday afternoon. ! Miss Lima Stevens, of Greens boro, came to our community laist I riday to attend the funeral of her little niece. Miss Anna Outland, of Wood land, a teacher of Grantham school, spent last week end with the family of Mr. David Hollo wed. Misses Rosabcll and Dessie Lewis spent la»st week end with Miss Martha Price in Goldsboro. The grammar grades of Gran tham school gave a Hallowe’en play Friday night, Nov. 1 in the j Grantham school auditorium. Smith POUR OAKS, Route 4, Oet. 30. —Sunday, Mr. W. J. Hill delight fully entertained a number of friends at his home in honor of his thirty-eiglfth birthday. Tho quests began to arrive about 11 y’clock and kept on coming until one-thirty. Dinner was spread doout two o’clock. In the after- - loon, a song service was led >y Mr. Hill while a preaching 1 ervice was held by Cadnun J ?oats. Every one enjoyed the oc- ’ asion very much. Those present 1 vere: Mr. and Mrs. \V. A. Ste- < thenson and family, Miss Martha * fr.n Gordon of Cleveland. Mr. s nd Mrs. R. A. Langdon, Mr. ai d £ ilrs. Walter Langdon, W. L. t ,angdon and family, Mr. and It Irs. Jimmie Stephenson and lit- 1 !e daughter, Hazel Gray, Mr. s hd eulah Barbour, Mrs. John Creech • id daughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. ti . Jones and daughter, Veln.a, tl aymond Pope and family, Lon Le Langdon and family, Mr. p.r.d p [rs. Ira Dixon, Mr. and Mrs. ^ .lton Jones, Leon Stephenson *nd»j{ amily, Thaddeus Barbour, Cleve ones, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Jones, !n eb Lassiter, of Spilona; Mr. ,° nd Mrs. Cyrus Coats, Mr. and if| fra. Cadmus Coats, Rufus Costs f nd daughter, Ethel, Mr. and \& Irs. Kallie Cobb and son, Ray, ( lr. Harvey Cobb and family, of! P tehobeth; B. A. Langdon ard r amily, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert ireedlove, of Pisgah; and Mr. h nd Mrs. Dallas Byrd, of Piney ' irove. Mrs. B. A. Langdon shopped in)1 mi. ithfield Saturday afternoon, y Mr. Newbeni Cobb and family, H >f Spilona, spent a while Sunday ^ tfternoon in this section. Miss Oma Belle Pope spent, Sunday afternoon at Mr. Joel] Ldxon’s in the Spilona section.! 1 Mrs. Ed Byrd, of Spilona, spend: lie week end with Mr. and Mrs. i( M. M. Byrd. Quite a number of our people]1 attended church at Hickory Grove ); Saturday and Sunday. Messrs. 01 lie Jones an<] Thadde iis Barbour spent a while Sunday afternoon in Spilona. Mr. Malcolm Johnson and fam ily, of Hopewell, spent Sunday | in this community. Mr. Hoover’s Manners. When Mr. Hoover declined the seat of honor at the banquet in honor of Mr. Edison, yielding the place to which his official posi tion entitled him, to the man j whom the gathering was to honor, he - did that which was seem1;, and at the same time set an ex ample that should count for something in Washington, where there is a constant exhibition of had manners and lack of breeding in the unseemly squabble about seats of honor. The President's position calls for him to have fir-: place an(j he usually takes it a* i a matter of course. So much of j a custom is this that it would or-1 dinarily disarrange matters if ho stood aside for another. But who 1 the President stood aside at the I Edison banquet it was not oni., a compliment to Mr. Edison, as! it is called, but it was an exhi-j bition of good taste and regard j for the proprieties of the occas ion, seems to us. The dinner was in honor of Mr. Edison, not in honor? of the President. Mr. Hoover was there to do honor to Mr. Edison, and when he stood aside for the inventor, Mrs. Hoo ver also yielding the place as signed her to Mrs. Edison, the President and his wife did that which was fitting. “In honor pre ferring one another” was one of the injunctions of St. Paul to the Roman Christians. Paul’s family connections and his education gave him call for the seats of honor. He was a Pharisee of the straitest sect before he saw the light on .the Damascus road, bu: after that he was willing to give others first place. But you couldn’t expect that either de mocracy or Christian charity would count among folks who count their position at table as of first importance and have no more manners than to make demands about where they shall sit when they are guests.—Statesville Land mark. A FEW OF THE FACTS AS THE PUBLIC GETS THEM So far as exporting on tobacco ■ is concerned, we have never ‘made any claims and do not intend to. And that means that we are for tunate in not having to explain what has 'been going on in re cent weeks. Consider a few of the facts which have reached the public. Tobacco growers of eastern North Carolina, who in their field are accustomed to rule the roost and are second to nobody, find out that the prices they are getting for their weed will not pay the cost of production, let alone yield any profit. They protest with suf ficient noise to reach not merely j the ears of every politician who knows anything about them, out most of the adjacent public a r well. They appeal to Senator Sim mons to save them, and the S ar dor arranges a conference at •vhich everybody talks and nothing j s done. And then they go home ’ n the hope that prices will be tome better. A few days later the big to bacco manufacturers, whose rep esentatives attended the wailing call conference, announce that hey have decided to stop fighting ach other and accordingly cigar ttes will be sold at $0.40 a thou and instead of $0. That is to sav, j s some of the experts figure it,: liey added about $40,000,000 or hereabouts to their income, and vcidentally all available figures low that they had a heady been tying quttfe well.v thank you. t l A few more days and the dis» ibutors of cigarettes announced iat the retail price of cigarettes ould be increased to 15 cents a l ackage, thereby enriching the .s tributes by the extent of the \ crease and depriving the ulti- ^ ate smoker of the satisfaction ^ : buying two packages for a 1 Liartetr or less than that if he pat- 1 anized some of the chain stores : rid bought by the carton. Another day or so, and the re- : orts from the great warehouse >\vns indicates1 that the prices of M'ed the farmers are about the : r.rne; maybe a trifle up on the ■hole, but when the better quah y of weed is considered not so ■ luch up as to mean anything and ! hen the prices for the poorer rades are taken into consideration here is quite as much new gloom s joy. What appears, then, is that .hen the farmers find themselves ; o such precarious condition that hey are considering the old co-! perative idea again—and only a tally precarious condition could nake them consider that—and eel it necessary' to implore pa itical power and federal govern-1 nent for aid, at that moment the cbacco manufacturers take teps o insure themselves an increas- i •d income of some $40,000,000 or ■ to and the distributers follow that ip by taking additional steps to, nsure their getting some more and he farmers find themselves get dog less and less. Well, we started out by saying hift we did not undertake to ex plain anything and we end o>n the same note. But what with one thing and another, the only prob ability that stands out is that if the farmers take any further r-teps to help themselves, they will make everybody else in the to bacco puzzle the richer by so much and themselves the poorer by so much again.—Greensboro Daily News. Rural Libraries. The General Assembly of 1 ‘*01 in making the $100,000 Equalizing Fund appropriation provided that $2,500 should be set aside for tnc purchasing of books for trie pub lic libraries. This first library appropriation was distributed on the principle of local effort plus state stimulation. Whenever vhe patrons of a school and the coun ty board of education each raised $10.00 the state would also pro vide $10.00. In 1903, the General Assembly increased the annual appropria tion for libraries already estab lished. The law provided that $5.00 • should be contributed by the state for this purpose, when ever patrons and county board of education each had raised a like amount. i ms metnod ot aistrioutio.i wa. followed until 1921, when lV. gen eral assembly doubled the amount which any school could receive frofti the state appropriation for both original and suprhemenial li braries ami made po.'.siVe -.he buying of a $00.00 new library or $30.00 worth of additional books. Chapter 130 of the lu23 law changed the law of 192l by pro viding that the State Boirj <f Education should dona 13 §50.00 for the establishment of a library in a union school whenever t lie patrons of the school and the county board of educatin', each bad provided a like amount. From 1901 to June 30, 1923 the state aided in establish! i? 4,995 original Libraries and 2,3!4 sup plemental libraries. The appropri ation for each biennium after the first remained the $3,750,.. 00, until 1927, when the General Assembly of that year made ar. appropriation of $10,000.00 an nually for establishing rural li braries under the provisions of the 1923 law.—State School Facts. Enter our subscription cam paign and win valuable prizes. Farmer! Don’t worry about your flour anil hog feed. We will exchange flour and feed for corn in shuck or shelled. We can save you money. Corn shucked and shelled free. If preferred, we will pay highest market price ' cash. ' / Consumers Milling Co, j (At Old Lowell Mill) ] J. W. DARDEN, Mgr. j KENLY, N. C. R. F. D. No 1 County Manager Plan. ^ Nine counties to date—six in J forth Carolina and three in J ’irginia—have adopted the conn- ^ y-manager plan of government 1 nd it is said that greater ef- J iciency and reduced costs have, i\ exulted. Robeson having been . inder the county manager form * ince last May—and it seems to ( >e working excellently well—the 1 ( ollowing from the National Mu- J ricipal League is of special in-. ' erest to the majority of Robeson- j I an readers: Nine counties to date, six in ; ''forth Carolina and three in Vir- ; pnia, have adopted the county manager plan in various modified forms. It is interesting to con sider the possibilities of ’this new :ype of government for Ameri can counties, adapted from cur most successful form of municipal i government, the city manager jlan. According to Wylie Kilpatrick, associate research professor of the University of Virginia, who; investigated the success of the j plan in these counties, greater | efficiency in administration has j resulted and in a majority of cases, the unit costs of govern ment have been reduced. Look at the experience of Au gusta County, Virginia, which nas been operating under the manager plan since April, 1927, when the clerk of the board of supervis ors was given new powers and became, virtually, county mana ger. Through a complete financial statement submitted monthly to the board, active administration of bust ness and a tnorougngomg budget, he 155 able to provide a centralized financial control never j before accomplished. But results rather than meth-1 ods are what count. The county has regularly borrowed money at 4 3-4 per cent while its sinking j funds are earning 6 per cent. At | the end of the second year of man- j ager-clerk regime, all debt had i been wiped out except long terms 1 bonds for the repayment of wtvch ! provision was definite. “During his first fiscal year, j 1927-1928, the debt was reduced I §57,605 in addition to the in crease of the sinking fund. Dur- j ing the present year, a county | debt of $18,600 has been absorb-! ed, §20,000 road notes paid off. , ; and three minor obligations re- i deemed. And the debts were retir-' jed, it is significant to note, in the ! year following a decrease in the county and road tax rates that1 ' lowered taxes in all of the seven i ! districts of the county.” i Prom 1923-4 to 1926-7, county: expenditures jumped from $550,-1 1579 to $737,910. From this point ! they dropped gradually to $012, 482 in 1929-30. Thus good man- j agement, among other improve ments, actually saved the county $125,334 in a three-year period when local governmental costs generally throughout the country were increasing! Is this the beginning of a movement which will spread throughout the country? Certain ly the majority of the more than | 3,000 counties in the United j States are struggling along un- j der the handicap of inefficient; organization and ignorance of the \ best administrative governmental methods. It seems not improbable that the prophecy of Richard S. | Childs will come true—that within j the next decade the county man- j ager form of government will loom as important in the affairs | of local government as the city! manager plan does today. In any event, the increasing in terest in the improvement oi gov ernment machinery is an encour aging sign.—Lumberton Robeson “Shirts That Laugh at Laun dories” are advertised by a cer tain firm. One of ours has such a keen sense of humor that it ar rived home the other day with its sides split.—‘Pathfinder. ‘the Home of Better Bargains” Smithfield, N. C. LADIES DRESSES $4.98 up Ladies and Misses Silk Dresses at— Ladies wool -Jersey Sport Suits at— Ladies Smart Silk Dress es in latest fashions at LADIES’ COATS $7.95 u* Ladies Sport Coats at $ 7.9 ^ $ 9 & 9 LADIES’ HATS Ladies' FRI.T HATS—styles for misses, women and matrons, at. 98e Ladies’ I-TILT HATS— in all the smart style brims and leading fall Ladies Gloves New fall Gloves of Chamoisette. in noVelty cuff styles at, pair— Ladies’ F a n c y! Cuff kid gloves. at pair 3 vjr Hand Bags 98c Latest shapes in lad ies leather bags at 98c, $1.95 and $2.35 Ladies Neckwear 48c All new styles in lace collars at— 48c and 98c GINGHAMS Sc YARD Dress Gingluims, special at.sc yd. Dress Ginghams, special at . 10 yd. Chambrays, special at . 10c yd. Play Cloths, special at.15c yd. Dress Prints at.15c and l!)c yd. Mattress Ticking at . 10c yd. Feather Ticking at .20 yd. Shirting C'hambray at. 15c yd. DRESS GOODS 25c Yird .'Hi inch Fast Color Prints . 25c yd. 36-inch Tweed Suitings . :!0c yd. Best Quality Sateens.25c, 20c, 45c yd. TABLE DAMASK 59c Yard G4-inch Cotton Table Damask special at, yard . 39c WINDOW CURTAINS and SHADES Window Curtain with colored ruffle borders and tie backs, special at 36x72 standard size Window Shades, special at . 98c SILKS, 98c Yard Beautiful Rayon Dress Prints at, yarn . 56-inch Crepe de Chine in all the Fall shades, van! TOILET GOODS Dollar box Rose Joncaire Face Powder special for . _ Dollar valiu—Two tubes 25c Colgate Tooth Paste and 50c Toothbrush— all ior . OCTAGON SOAP. :s cakes for .10r 98c 98c 25c 45c Hosiery SpcciaJs Ladies Rayon IToae, sptcial at pair . . . Ladies’ Rayon Hose in pretty colors Ladies’ Fancy Rayon Hose at, pair. Slipper-heel MEN’S, WOMENS and CHILDRENS SHOES Men’s Tan and Black Oxfords with broad A AQ blucher toes and rubber heels, all leather m6w Cl Men’s Scout Work Shoes, at, pair. Ladies’ Patent One-Strap Pumps, pair ._ __ Children’s Shoes .98c. $1.48, $1.98 1.98 1.98,2.98
The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 5, 1929, edition 1
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