Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / June 24, 1926, edition 1 / Page 1
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OVERMAN'S MAJORITY IS PLACED AT 48,346 -Official Canva?* Shows Reynolds Carried 26 Counties Senator Lee. i>. Overman was renominated over Robert R. Reynolds by a majority of 48,346, it was shown by the complete official vote r?s announced last week by the state board of elections after it had cazv vnssed the vote ci^st in the primary of June 5. The vote was: Overman 140,260; Reynolds 91,914. The total vote of 232,174 was only 2,596 less than the vote cast in the Democratic primary two years ago. on ..r ?i,? inn <?. ? IIUIU.-I V.III IIVU Ui 1.11V 1 vv counties in the state and received* a larger vote than did J. W. Bailey when the latter sought the gubernatorial nomination two years ago The heavy vote, almost as heavy as that' of two years ago. came as a surprise, "off" years generally showing a comparatively light vote, both in the primaries and the general election. JMERE-MENTION t Mrs. M. JM- Mallettee and two small children wei-* burned to death at Benoiet, Miss.> tt-hen fire destroyed Ctheir home Senator Georgt? \V. JR^pper, defeated for feriommation iit the recent Republican senatorial pr'? mary Pennsylvania, has filed a campaign account of $1,020.0011 with the state board of elections...... Miss Sylvia fl. Gaines, student at Smith College, Northampton, Mass., was beaten to death by an unknown perso: in Seattle, Wash., last week. She had just arrived in that city for a visit Miss Pauline Bell, 13, representing Louisville, Ky., won first prize in the national spelling bee ii) Washington last week, sponsored by a number of newspapers throughout the country Expenses of the Republican primary "m PpniiRvlvfllilii IflU. month onnrnnrli el the $3,000,000 lifljtvk in figures compiled at Harrisburg fronl accounts filed with the state bureau of elections Seven persons were killed and 30 injured in the wreck of che Paris-Bordtehux express, which was derailed Sunday near Vouvray, seven miles from Tours. France President CVolidpe has withdrawn the nomination of William J. Tilson, brother of the Republican leader of the house, to be Federal judge in ; Georgia. A senate committee already had reported the nomination unfavorably Chicago last week extended its hospitality to 1,000.00(10 guests, pilgrims to Che Eucharistic congress of Catholics Ralph O. B>e\vsivr was re-nominated for gover, nor of Maine in the Republican primary of Tuesday Director of tbi Budget Lord asked for a reduc tibn of at least two per cent of federal employes ;it a meeting of the budget commission in Washington Monday night. The reduction has the approv.il of t'he president Western Republicans and Southern Democrats on IVionday defeated a move to adjourn congress on .June 80, as had been planned by Republican leaders. Those opposing adjournment* desire to prolong the session until the senate can act on the river and harbor bill and farm, legislation Will H. Hays was this .week re-elected for a period of ten years as president of the Motion Picture Podueevs and Distributors of America, at a salary said to be $150,000. a year Bishop Joseph F. Berry, of the Methodist Episcopal chprch has resigned from t'he Philadelphia SesquiCentennial committee on programs because the directors voted to open the exposition on . Sundpys. Prohibition enforcement in Pennsylvania with a special fund raised by the Women's Christian Temperance Union and the efforts of Secretary Mellon and other members of his.family tx> have a controlling hand in. Republican politics in that state divided the attention yesterday of the senate campaign funds committee investigating the recent* primary in the Keystone state.. ... . .Federal incomej wtA prt/iiieias one ,?iuuc xu win.,vyw?i about $440,000,000, or almost $70,I 000,000 mere than was received a year ago, it is estimated by the treasury. ... A SOUTHERN COMPANIES, TO OPERATE MUSCLE SHOALS Washington, .June 21?The Muscle Shoals Power Distributing Company today reported to the senate that it is capitalized at $12,750,000 with 19,375 shaves.of $80 par value stock owned entirely by the group.of 15 southern power companies which organized it to operate Muscle Shoals if their bid is accepted by congress. The information-was in response to the resolution of Senator McKellar, of Tennessee, asking for a report on the stock ownership. I'hc report shows the largest blocks of the stock are owned by the Alabama Power Company and the Georgia Railway and Power Company, which cwn 31,250 shares each and the next largest, 12,500 shares, are owned by the Tennessee Electric Power Company, and the Mississippi Power Company. . . . A> - - wat/ An Independent Fair BOON RED CROSS WORKER BE HERE JUNE 28-3C Miss Kcmprr Will Address Norma Students on Educational Movement of Jr. Organization. Students At the Appalachian Stat't Normal will hear, June 2S-00, th< discussion of an educational move inent, international in scope, which i: receiving the careful attention oJ educators all over Che United States. The American Junior Red Cross an organization comprising- over 000,000 American school boys am mcic .. ai i? - ? ' "* & w io, n in uc SU UJCCl. OI QISCUS sion. which will be led here by Mis Cordelle Kemper. Red Cross fielt representative of North Carolina, whe is comings to Boone especially for this purpose An interesting feature of the pre sentation of the juniftr program t< the Normal students will be exhibit! f of the work of the American Juniors and also that of many foreign coun i tries. The Normal is one of 15( [schools in the country before whicl j representatives are giving lectures 01 I the movement this summer. Talks before the student body wil be supplemented with more detaile< | discussions in the various class room? when examples of how the work J1 i into flu? regular school subjects, RUCl ! are geography, English, history an< ! civics, will be given, "The ideals underlying the pro j gram," Junior Red Cross leaders de ; clare. "aim education in utiselfisl service, development of a spirit ol world friendship among children anc young people, and formation of hah its and ideals of health for the sake of living happier, more useful lives These ideals are given concrete ex pression through making: use of wort done in regular school classes to bring pleasure to others. Drawing classes make favors and greeting cards foi soldiers' hospitals and other insfitu tions. Sewing classes make garments for destitute children of other coun tries. English, gegraphy, history anc other classes combine in preparing messages for children of other coun tries. These are only a few exampleof the way in which the ideals are pul into practice. "Because the program is curriec on in such close co-operation wit! school systems, the Junior Red Cros: has drawn into its organization work era with educational training and ex perience. It is such workers that art put at the service of sunimet schools This summer, in all, 150 suhunei schools will include in their course; a study of opportunities offered t< schools by the Junior Red Cross/' RURAL AME&ICA- NOT LOSING POPULATION TO THE CITIES The common idea that rural America is losing ground to the cities ii upset by Robert W. Mctkrltoch in ?i recent issue of The Survey, in which he quotes figures compiled by the Institute of Social Religious Re search to prove his contention. According to the census, Mr. McGulioch writes, the rate of urban increase between 1900 and 1920 was 84 per ccrnt. In reality, he says, the urban increase was only 66.4 per cent and if the immigration from abroad since 1900 is excluded, the increase becomes*only 52.1 per cent. The discrepancy is shown to exist, because the census classifies villages as "urban" the moment they pass 2,500 in population. At the same time Mr. Mcculloch's survey shows that with the differonce in classification eliminated, the rural increase becomes 23.6 per cent, which is the normal increase of births over deaths and nearly twice as large as the increase based upon the ordinary census figures. "From 1900 to 1920," he writes, "the incorporated villages increased 41 per cent, both in number and in population. During the same period the population of the United Stnt*?? a whnla inrr#*n?;pd 39 per cent. During: these twenty yeaTs therefore, incorporated villages increased in population more rapidly than the nation as a whole." BUILDING ACTIVITIES A big crew of masons and carpeni ters are now at work on the new jail, with Mr. Gorman superintendent and inspector for Mr. W. H. Gragg, contractor. The building: will be entirely fireproof, built: as it is of brick and concrete, and will be completed, it is hoped, by the fall term of court. Contractor Gragg is pushing the brick work on the new Chevrolel garage to the rear of the Standard Oii Filling Station. Messrs. A. E. Soutt and L. L. Bingham arc the owners. Considerable progress is being made on the residence of Mr. Chas Lewis. The finishing touches are now be ing put on the elegnnt new home ol Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Hardin. GREYSTONE INN OPENED. Grcystone Inn, the handsome new S2n0,000 resort hotel at Roaring Gap Alleghany comity, was formally open ed Monday. JJGA lily Newspaper, Devoted E. WATAUGA COUNTY. NORTH Oi j THRILLS OF FRONTIER | DAYS ARE RECALLED Niece of President Pierce Tells o( | Indian Warfare in Southwest A stooped old woman, so crippled " she could scarcely ri.se from her ? chair, was huddled close to the small 4 wood heater #in a plain, bare room on Railroad avenue, Vancouver. Washington. Yet fbis same woman, Mrs. ? Gcorgiana McCullum, the grandEl daughter of a gallant soldier in, the i Revolutionary army, later a briga'diet general and governor of New Hampshire, and the niece of a senator from j New Hampshire who afterward became president of the Unired States, . has known great wealth and has been j the heroine of many adventures, say? } a writer in the Portland Oregonian. 5 Her mother was Mary Elizabeth Pierce, daughter of General Benjad:,.h, C U. . i? t-> iiuu jl ici v.v:, ntiv lviigiu hi cue v j ration at Concord, where the firsl - British blood was spilled, and al Bunker Hill as well, and who finally served New Hampshire as governor ) Her uncle was Franklin Pierce, four 7 t'eenth president of the United States x who attended college with Longfel low and Hawthorne, whent to con 1 gress in 1832, and in 1837. at th< j age of crhirty-three, became th< youngest member of the senate. H< ? was a general in the Mexican war ant ij AT.tcr that defeated General Winfieh j Scott in a strenuous presidential race MW. Mc Cull urn's parents havinj died whiJe she was very young, ai aunt in California reared her. Shi x was married to George Bvron StranS f field, a young man of wealth and po I sition, while she was not vei fifteei years of age, since her aunt wishec , to see her niece settled before hei own imminent* death. The Fairs, th< . Crockers and the old California . families were intimates of hers. f Years Spent in Travel ;l After her marriage there followed . years of travel abroad. There Georgi ana and her young husband had the . entree to interesting and exclusive . circles. She was presented to the [ pope and at the Court of St. James r as wen. uut tne beautiful young ' wife's greatest concern in those yean . of life in foreign cities lay in finding |. a hair dresser who could dross hci glossy black curls to her taste. I Back in San Francisco again, Mr , Stan, field made unfortunate invest* . ments until finally only $50,000 oi . his extensive fortune was left, and lw staked that in a speculative ileal , hoping to retrieve the re.se of hi* money. This venture, t'oo, was uh . lucky, so he secured a position a: 4 clerk of the commissary to a divisior , of the army making war upon tht noted Indian chief. Geronimo, heac uf the Chincahau band of the Apache Indians, who was pursued by Genera ; George Cook and afterward in the summer of 1880 by General Nelsor . A, Miles. Fired on Saviges t It was while riding a'cross the des , I ert between her husband and Lieut o..n: ij- .l /"? .'.A'a ..j . i oumvuii 11liti viuurguma tuuini our ni . first hand what Indian warfare* Id be. For suddenly, the main escort . of smdiers having: gone ahead, a bul. let whistled through the hat of hei ; husband and another a second later . through his sleeve, and the lieutenant on her other side had fallen from I his horse. Looking behind to see . what* had become of her companion, . she was forced to turn her eyes away - from the grisly sight of an Indian : taking the young ?ieutenant'? scalp i with his sharp knife. Their escort, hearing the shots, came back to them and the Indians fled. The colonel gave orders to go after them, leaving behind every fifth man to watch the horses. But Georgiana, of fighting stock herself, begged the colonel to allow her to take the place of a man at watching the horses, so that one more soldier would be free tto pursue the cruel Indians. Finally the colonel, after retmsuring himself from the flashing eyes and determined mouth in front of him that the comhiissary clerk's wife was capable of keeping tight hold of the bridled horses and would not release them at the firstf sight of an ambushed native, granted hfer wish. Indian* P*v Penalty "And we were certainly "revenged for pnoi Lieutenant Sullivan s death, | Mrs. McCullum recalled, "for mahy more than one Indian were left on the plains to pay for the lost life." Another time Georgiana was very * close to death. While journeying in ' a carriage, she and her husband got off the main road, and two apparently friendly Mexicans invited them to ' pass the night at their house, since they would be unable to go further 1 that night. "Once in the house," related Mrs. McCullum, "I felt that : something was wrong. As soon as the Mexicans left the house a woman who had been sitting there with downcast I eyes, and who, according to t'he men, 1 could not talk, spoke up quickly and advised us not to sleep in the room the Mexicans would offer us, and, above all things, not let them know T that she had spoken." Acting on the friendly woman's ad vice, Georgiana and her husband insisted on sleeping beside the fire* and DEMO ho the Upbuilding of North" \KOLJNA. THURSDAY. JUNE 21. 1?. COOLIDGE OPPOSES^ ; FURTHER TAX CU' f ^ j Surplus at End of Fiscal Year Reach $290,000,000. But ML '2^ Be Smaller Next Year & 1 # Washington^, Juno 21.?AraSjPRc-; ing a probable $:it?0.000,000 ;.Jp|||ary- v surplus for this fiscal yoari^^ping I June SO and promising con^^/able j t 1 balances for the next lwg|g|?ear.-.1 ' | President* Coolidge tonight fl%rnedil : that another tax reduction must! 1 J await a full test of the new revenuejs , j law. i ^ ' i Outlining a program of "conserva-; ' j fcive economy" to department and bu- ( ; i reau chiefs of the government, in an 1 .'address to the semi-annual budget j . j meeting. President Coolidge said the , rf teasury should end next year with t 'a surplus of $ip,UUU.UOI) and the j | - following fiscal year wi.h a margin., J of $20,000,000. But it would be "unfortunate" to , f i promise additional tax reduction on .. i the basis of these figures, Mr. Cool- . _! idge declared, "until we are sure that , i I the state of our finances justifies it." This was the first official declarai jtloit hv the executive 011 the tax , 1 question, which has aroused consid- , ] i erablc discussion recently in congress j as the surplus for this year jumped r} far beyond the experts* estimates, jj "What the complete result of the 2 j >1.026 law will be," he cautioned, "is . still a matter of estimate. The cor. reclness pf the theory that reduction ! of tax ral-s economically applied wilt; 1 stimulate business and thereby inr I crease taxable revenue, is being de-I ?1 monstratod. To what if- further j 1 reduction may be carried cannot lie j stated until the next tax law has had i sufficient opportunity to become ful-; I iy effective and experience has shown . what revenue it will produce. ; t "The question is on the lips of j ? many as to whether there is pros- j | ; pect of another tax reduction in ihe j< j near future. I think the answer to* r this question should be delayed until , : we know definitely the revenue pro- , r during ability of the present revenue - act." Facing the necessity of public im-i , . provements such as the recently au- . . thoriyed buildings. program, thej, ;.} presmiMU said, the government could ? | not expect an "appreciable retluc- . , lion" in total annual expenses, and , i he proposed, therefore, a gradual re- , - duct-ion in personal. - ; , ; , CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS : , Postmaster Farthing announces j that' an open compet itive examination j 1 under the rules of the U. S. civil serv-) ice commission, will he held for the : ' * position of clerk in the postoffico at 1 Boode. Those who desire to take the examination should file applications] .before July 27th. Applications for the examination must be made on < ' the prescribed form which, with nc- ' ' cessary instructions, can be obtained 1 from Mr. Farthing at the local office, j ln?" down on the floor ttitlt their dog j beside' them. Soon they could hear a ' discussion in the next room as to j whether the dog would attack the , Mexicans wheil they knifed" their j, ersUyhile guests. j , "George and I had no way of 6'om- J ^ munieating with each other beeatt&e j; even a whisper would be audible in i the next room, so I calmly suggested! that we must not neglect to write in ] niir (tibrir Kofftrn wn ' j to aiccjj. t George -wote: T fear we are near death,1 and I recorded, 4Yes, but we'll ' not give up yet, I shall pray for help.' And pray I did, for I've always believed in prayer, and" I sent out calls ^ for help, for I believe in the thought* transference as well. And rightly too, for just as our dog's growls caused ^ us to look up and see the Mexicans r advancing upon us, long knives in t hand, a loud knocking was heard at the door, and the sheriff of Los Angeles county entered with a-posse of m?n. Strangely enough, he said, he r had planned to camp several ^miles c awayrbdt feeling strongly that someone needed help, he had come on to this place. In the kitchen,*' concluded-Georgiana, <fthere were seven saddles of as many men who had spent ^ the night with these bandits and never 'journeyed further." On another occasion Georgians was ^ shown to a room in a hotel where ^ again she felt something was wrong: She sp<>kc to the hotel manager, saying: "A'.d&t'd man has been taken out of this room this morning." The ho- j.j tel man denied this and Mrs. McCul lum lay down on the bed to rest; but almost at once, she said, "there appeared on the bed beside me the figure of a lng thin man with a black beard, who spoke to me and urged me to leave the room, as, he had passed away of a malignant fever, p which I surely .would take if I stayed J there longer. I told the manager this and he finally let me have his ^ bed.. And the next' morning there ^ were at least 500 people around to see the 'witch/ for a man answering to that description had died of a fe- * ver the day before/' FIVE CENTS A COPY FREE TRIP FOR 7TH GRADE PUPILS >upt. Hagaroan Says Those Completing Seventh Grade Will Go to Wins ton-Sal em July 1st All girls and bovs who passed the . seventh cradle examinations in the ounty this year will be given a free p to Winston-Salem, Thursday, luly 1st. Oue school truck will ieuve Cove fereek high school at 7 o'clock and wo or three trucks will ieave Boone it 8 o'clock. These trucks will pick up children all along highway No. !?0 from Cove Creek to the Wilkes county line. All children will take a blanket and enough food for four meals or enough money to buy same. Will camp overnight at Winston-Salem, returning CRAT west North Carolina. JKLAHOMA GIRL GIVES UP j MOVIE CAREER FOR RELIGION Jldinc Mabelle Utley in New York Planning for Revival*. J Written for The Democrat Through; Auto caster Service. > A chubby t'ourtee ray ear-old gm, vita iiaxep hair, cut in bangs. Ls' j aving plans to convert-New York < Jity. j t Her name is Uldiue Mabelie Utley. Jr. John RoaCh Stratfon describes! ter as "the most extraordinary per-'1 on in America" and as the ".I s>ai? of 1 Ire of the modern religious world/' j' Miss Ut'iey hails from Durant, 3kla., and first spoke as an evangc-' , ist at Fresno. Cai. Until two years { rears ago she was fired with a desire ' 0 go into the movies or on the stage. IVhile on her way to a rehearsal for ;r debut On the stage, she founu the ' loor of the rehearsal room locked. She strayed aimlessly info n revival! meeting. "Suddenly I realized that there was} a Divine Being/* she said, "because j people had been walking in and out . there all the time, and others walked i through shortly after. God had called to me and had shown Himself in this way. r "Then my grandfather took me to j a revival meeting, although at first I didn't want to go. The subject was: 'David and Goliath,' but I didn't un-j dci-stunl what ;t was all about. Uiit . when the' invitation came 1 felt suddenly that' I needed Jesu*. and before. 1 Could reason. 1 found I \v::j? t rying. 1 went down the aisle and knelt in prayer. A kind woman came and. asked me what 1 was going to be .d I answered without knowing why, 'I'm going to ho a little Goliath/ ( Miss' Utley has preached all over! the wert. At a recent meeting in} Palm Beach. Fla..- "strong men wet>t und forgot themselves completely isi j their new salvation," Dr. Stratton; -aid. ' i Her voice is strong and has developed the traditional evangelistic inflections and mannerisms "I would rather," she. cried at her first meeting in New York, "see one man or woman svaed than to travel iround the world as 1 first thought of doing as a movie star." Her meetings are being conducted ' at Calvary Baptist church, where she spoke for two hours at her first j service, and led the large audience in prayer. Men and women sobbed as; the girl exhorted them to live a good life. "And a little child shall lead them," says the New Testament. \ SIX DROWN AS YOUTH UPSETS SMALL BOAT, vSaitlt 8t. Marie, Mich., June 21-?! The joyous cries of youth which en- ! ouraged Artkui 1 easier as be dejnonstraced his championship Charles;on steps in a rowboat \vcre changed j 0 rca^in- or norror wiien me dancer, I cmu# his balance and upsettmg the J 1 ar. was drowned with five compan- i ons in St. Marie's river yesterday.i rhrce girls ar.tl four boys, ranging; from 13 to l(i and all living in Ca-j mdian Sault Ste Marie, attended an j excursion boat dance Sunday after-J loon and were returning home when i 1 he boat capsized with the result that ill in the boat were drowned. WHAT IS NEWS? Henry Justin Smith, managing edior of the Chicago Daily News and luthor of the famous book on newswiper life, "'Deadlines," in a recent* peech before the Illinois Federation 1 if Women's clubs, gave the following en definitions of news: "News is a revelation of things phieh few people know about, made or the benefit of millions who would lot otherwise know about those i hings. 1 '"News is a synthetic food, deliver- 1 d for the purpose of satisfying a Teat human hunger. J "News is the telescope and micro- i cope of social laboratories. 1 "'News is an unrhetorical essay on * lie. It is poetry without form and '< rt without artistic intention. '"News is like the explosion of a idden mine on a peaceful sector of < he battle front. "News is a record of the good and j hp had. but hnrdlv pvpi* nf thp in- i ifferent. ] "News is a statement, not always J t the new, but sometimes of the new *] lade old; a statement not merely of I he unusual, but often of the cruel i "News, which is sometimes spoken f as history, is rather an ingredient f history, and one which does not always stand the test of science. "News is an implement wielded by j profession which is not respecter of x ersons, hut' tries to be a respecter j f human conventions, according to j he standards of a given time. t "News, at its best, is the compreensive and credible the enterprising ut. judicious, the eternally circum- < pect. but above all, the fundamental- i 7 fearless disclosure of what* the hu- p lan race has been doing for the last < kventy-four hcurs." . r i naay. The girls will be in charge of Miss Eula Todd, and the boys will -be in charge of Mr. Dean Swift. The county suDpfhtendent and others will accompany the children on the trip. The boys who drove the trucks during the school term will be expected to drive on this trip. ^ The teachers of the county are requested to get this information to all the children of the several schools. All children who want* to go on thi> trip must forward their names to me at once. Otherwise you will nor be provided for. X SMITH HAGAMAN, County Superintendent! REVENUE COLLECTIONS f ARE NEARLY DOUBLED Raleigh. June 21?With the end of the present fiscal year only eight daws auflv North <* ->? #?!;?? .'- ? nue collections arc almost double what they were for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1025, Last year's total collections were $t?,240.SI6.20, while collections for the present fiscal year, through today. totals $11,050,171.29. These figures are exclusive of automobile license and gasoline taxes. This month's collections to date total $.482,882.90 with inheritance and license taxes making up a big portion of the total. MAGNUS NOMINATED FOR ^ GOVERNOR OF MINNESOTA St. Paul, Minn,, June . 22.?Once more Magnus Johnson is an oustandirg factor in Minnesota politics, for the former United States senator staged a comeback in Monday's primary that gave him the farmer-labor gubernatorial nomination. Johnson will oppose Governor Theodore ChrisHanson, Republican, and Judge Alfred Jacques, Democrat, in the fall election. Johnson sought the Republican gubernatorial nomination several years ago before his senatorial aspiration bore fruit, but he was defeated. . . AVERY COUNTY WOOL Between 8,000 and 10,000 pounds of wool was shipped from Avery county at 40 cents a pound, by County Agent C. B. Baird, last week, according to a report made to J. W. Goodman, district farm extension farm agent for western North Carolina, says the Asheville Times. Avery ranks third in the production of wool in North Carolina, Mr. Goodman said. Ashe county ranks first and Watauga second. Next to poultry growing, wool production is the quickest* and most lucrative farm project that is being promoted in this section, Mr. Goodman said. MINISTERS GET CERTIF1CATS Durham,-June 22: With the awarding of 200 certificates to ministers who completed the required courses, :he annual North Carolina pastors* school closed a two weeks' session at Ovike University today. There were t hundred other Methodist ministers from the two state conferences who ittended the school but who were un- ' ible to complete their courses LIFE'S MIRROR 3h, it was so cheap, so queer, so small, \nd yet with love endowed; could not make a better gift f I were but allowed, gave to you a selfish heart, PVlOf- hocrcrflfl l'All 1a?o in -A**' ? - ? &*" Jut now, oh, now I'd give my life rhough you that life would spurn. ?Panne. CITY DELIVERY FOR BOONE Says a Washington dispatch of last Friday: "Representative Doughtan vas notified today that the postofice department, effective September l, will give village delivery service L;\? o Boone." J. A. Steelej former superintenicnt of ?red el! county schools, has )ecn elected luperin** ndent of the ifttchcll county schools, succeeding Superintendent Jason 1 Jetton, who v ecentlv resigned.
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
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June 24, 1926, edition 1
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